Wednesday Briefing: U.S. Businesses Say China Is ‘Uninvestable’
Also, a legal victory for Imran Khan.
Only 1,400 people out of 11,000 have left the Kupiansk area since regional authorities issued evacuation orders this month, Ukrainian officials say.
Also, a legal victory for Imran Khan.
Prosecutors used the death penalty provision of a newly passed law to charge a 20-year-old man. The measure has sown widespread fear among gay Ugandans.
The government ruled out a cyberattack as the cause of the technical problems, which forced airlines to cancel about 5 percent of the flights in and out of the country on Tuesday as they tried to catch up.
Luis Rubiales has defied calls to resign, now echoed by his own federation. Soccer’s world governing body has suspended him, and prosecutors have opened an investigation.
Details about the funeral for Yevgeny Prigozhin, who died in a plane crash last week along with nine other people, were murky.
Gina Raimondo, the commerce secretary, emphasized U.S. concerns over harsh treatment of foreign companies and national security issues in a meeting with top officials in Beijing.
The mercenary group boss, who led June's aborted armed rebellion, was killed in a plane crash last week.
The Holy See sought to calm an outcry over comments that some critics said were too close to President Vladimir Putin’s justifications for invading Ukraine.
The United States is trying to lessen its dependence on Chinese goods, but research is showing how tough it is to truly alter global supply chains.