Is retirement officially dead in Japan?

Jobs

An increasing number of elderly people in Japan are a part of the workforce. Some are looking for a sense of purpose, while others need to work to make ends meet. Rebecca Rosman profiled three older workers as they shared the jobs they hold into their golden years.

Growing number of governments using counterterrorism to justify targeting dissidents abroad

Justice

North Korean troops are suffering heavy casualties in Russia

Ukraine

Escape from Bamban: One man’s scam farm nightmare in the Philippines

Uncategorized

In Canada, university and college officials hope for an end to upheaval for international students

Ten years after Washington’s historic deal with Havana, Cuba remains adrift

Global Politics

Ten years after two US officials brokered a secret deal with Cuba, relations between Havana and Washington remain strained, marked by lingering tensions and limited progress toward normalization. The World’s Host Marco Werman speaks with former top national security officials Ben Rhodes and Ricardo Zúñiga about how the Cuba deal came about and why it ultimately collapsed.

Exclusive: A conversation with the commander of the US-backed Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces

Syria

The World’s Shirin Jaafari speaks with Syrian Democratic Forces commander General Mazloum Abdi in an exclusive interview about what’s next for the Kurdish group as Syria transitions into post-Assad rule.

Holy Catholic relics from shuttered institutions are preserved on a New York campus

Sacred Spaces

As Catholic establishments shut down across North America, holy relics once housed inside them are making their way to Manhattan University, where they’re being collected and preserved for the faithful.

Israel to expand Golan Heights settlements as Syria goes through political transition

Israel-Hamas war

The Golan Heights is recognized by the international community — except the US and Israel — as Israeli-occupied territory captured from Syria during the 1967 war. The World’s Host Marco Werman speaks with Joshua Landis, from the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma, about the significance of this contentious area.

Syrian prison offers a glimpse into Assad’s brutal rule

Syria

Sednaya prison in Damascus was once synonymous with death and disappearance. Yet over the past week, thousands of families rushed to the prison in the hope of finding their missing loved ones. Many left with no answer. 

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