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Senators Jeanne Shaheen and Lindsey Graham said Ukraine must avoid giving its critics more reasons to question international ...
There are signs the pressure is already working. At a meeting with top law‑enforcement officials on Wednesday, following the ...
Opponents of a new law they say strips Ukraine’s anti-corruption watchdogs of their independence called for a third straight day of street protests across the country ...
President Paul Kagame has replaced Rwanda's long-serving prime minister, naming the deputy governor of the central bank, who ...
Despite having an office with hundreds of attorneys, Ken Paxton frequently opts to hire private lawyers. One cost taxpayers ...
Pierre Boulos, a businessman born in New York to Haitian parents, previously renounced his U.S. citizenship to run for ...
That sound you hear from City Hall these days is a political leader hastily returning to his roots as an NYPD cop. With less than 90 days until the start of early voting, Adams is staking his ...
Serbia's student protest movement set out to demand justice, rejecting ideology in favor of broad democratic values. But as internal divisions emerge, could diminishing unity undermine the movement's ...
Ukraine has called for a peace summit to be held between Russian president Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelensky by the end of August, urging Moscow to show it is serious about wanting to end the war.
Ukraine’s president pledged a new course after protesters criticized his signing of a bill to strip anticorruption agencies of power.
Senators Shaheen and Graham raise concerns over a new Ukrainian law affecting anti-corruption institutions, emphasizing the need for continued progress.
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