Egypt: Mubarak's Defiance Makes Life Harder for Obama
The U.S. sees its interests in the region best preserved by encouraging reform and a gentler regime in Egypt, but its long-term client strongman may have other ideas
The U.S. sees its interests in the region best preserved by encouraging reform and a gentler regime in Egypt, but its long-term client strongman may have other ideas
The suicide assault on an upscale grocery patronized by foreign residents in the capital may be the beginning of a violent new phase in the war in Afghanistan
A TIME reporter recounts a day in Egypt that began peacefully but was quickly interrupted with tear gas and thuggish behavior, mostly by cops but also by angry gangs of young men
As friends, family and supporters bury Ugandan gay-rights activist David Kato, they say it was an anti-homosexuality bill and the hatred it promotes that led to his murder
In Cairo, TIME's correspondent notes that the government seems to know only how to send out police, batons and tear gas. Even after the President finally appeared, the regime did not seem to have anything useful to say to its angry people
President Obama spoke out Friday evening against the violent protests in Egypt, calling for the people of the Arab nation to be allowed to peaceably assemble without threats.
In April, France will ban Muslim women from wearing the niqab, or face-covering veil, in public. Activist Kenza Drider calls the law unfair and Islamophobic, and says she will defy it.
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The world's most brutal off-road race runs in South America for the third year in a row
Eighty contestants gather in Birmingham, England, for a whole lotta shakin', moanin' and rockin'
Photographs by Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images
TIME photographer James Nachtwey photographs the men of Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 214th Regiment
Photographs by James Nachtwey for TIME
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