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President-elect Donald Trump on Monday announced plans to travel to Paris this weekend in what would be his first trip overseas since his November election win. "President Emmanuel Macron has done a wonderful job ensuring that Notre Dame has been restored to its full level of glory, and even more so. The trip marks the president-elect's first known trip outside of the U.S. since May 2023, when he visited his golf properties in Ireland and Scotland. While restoration efforts will likely be ongoing for years, Notre Dame is set to welcome visitors on Dec. 7. French President Emmanuel Macron is expected to deliver remarks that day and attend the consecration of the altar during a Mass presided over by the Archbishop of Paris Laurent Ulrich on Dec. 8.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Emmanuel Macron, elect's, Archbishop, Paris Laurent Ulrich Organizations: Monday, Notre Dame Cathedral, Notre Dame Locations: Paris, France, U.S, Ireland, Scotland
When asked once in a question-and-answer sit-down with the school to describe St. John’s, Carnesecca said: “home.”It was home where he coached St. John’s to 18 20-win seasons and 18 NCAA Tournament appearances. Carnesecca coached St. John’s to the NIT title in 1989, although by then the tournament had long been a poor cousin to the NCAAs. In 1958, he took an assistant’s job at St. John’s, his alma mater, where he had played baseball but not varsity basketball. Essentially, St. John’s was getting ready for a road trip to Pittsburgh in January and Carnesecca was under the weather. After he retired, Carnesecca was succeeded by a parade of coaches at St. John’s, Mullin among them.
Persons: – Lou Carnesecca, John’s, Carnesecca, Carnesecca “, “ Looie ”, Chris Mullin, Mark Jackson, Walter Berry, , John's, Lou Carnesecca, Paul Burnett, egos, Mike Tranghese, , ” Carnesecca, Jim Calhoun, ” Lou Carnesecca, Ed Betz, Luigi P, Tony Lazzeri, Joe DiMaggio, , Archbishop Molloy, Joe Lapchick, Mullin, Lapchick, Rick Barry, Red Storm –, Jim Boeheim, Rollie Massimino, John Thompson, Patrick Ewing, Red Storm, “ It’s, Mary, Enes, Gerard Organizations: St, Big East Conference, Big, NIT, Basketball Hall of Fame, , Boston College, Big East, Madison, UConn, Hartford Courant, New York Yankees, Coast Guard, New York Nets, American Basketball Association, ABA, City College, NYU, Red Storm, Garden, Syracuse, Villanova, Georgetown, New York Daily, GQ, NCAA, Southern, North Carolina State, West Regional, – Georgetown, Villanova –, Hoyas, Red Locations: York, St, New York, Queens, ” St, schoolyards, Bolognese, Tuscany, St John's, Manhattan, East Harlem, Madison, Georgetown, Pittsburgh, Italian, Southern , Arkansas, Kentucky, Lexington , Kentucky, Memphis
Notre Dame is back – but not quite as you knew her
  + stars: | 2024-11-30 | by ( Joseph Ataman | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +15 min
Five years after the flames roared and the world held its breath, Notre Dame cathedral is coming back to life. CNN teams have visited Notre Dame several times since the fire, even as the work ploughed on through Covid-19’s stranglehold on France. But for those soon to revisit Notre Dame, this improbable victory is best seen by looking up. The oak frameworks and lead roofing of the nave, choir and transept of Notre Dame were reconstructed to look exactly like the originals, according to Rebuild Notre Dame. “We use the same materials, oak and stone, and with the same techniques.”The nave of Notre Dame cathedral.
Persons: Paris CNN —, Paris ”, , ” Philippe Jost, “ There’s, , Benoit Tessier, Notre Dame de Paris, Jost, Sarah Meyssonnier, Emmanuel Macron, Mark Esplin, Saskya Vandoorne, Eugène Viollet, , Ed Jones, Virgin Mary, Patrick Chauvet, Louise Delmotte, Macron, ” Jost, Stephane de Sakutin, Viollet, Louis XIII, Marie Parant, Christophe Petit Tesson, Guillaume Bardet, Saint Louis, Sylvain Dubuisson, Brigitte Macron, Laurent Ulrich, Anne Hidalgo, King Louis the IX, It’s, it’s, Thomas Hubert, SIPA, Joel Saget, Geoffroy Van der, Ian Langsdon, Geoffroy Van Der, Nicolas Liponne, Notre, Notre Dame – Organizations: Paris CNN, Notre Dame, Notre Dame de, CNN, Notre, Workers, Reuters, National Forestry Office, Carpenters, Getty, Paris, Shutterstock Workers, Dame Locations: Notre, Paris, Covid, France, AFP, France’s, French, Geoffroy Van der Hasselt, Geoffroy Van Der Hasselt
Macron was joined by his wife, Brigitte, and Laurent Ulrich, the archbishop of Paris, as he made his way around the restored building. Bright winter sunshine lit up the stained-glass windows and creamy stonework gleaming in place of huge charred holes. In the square outside, Macron was surrounded by crowds of cheering artisans, architects, business leaders and donors. The charred oak ceiling that was punctured by the spire that crashed into it has been replaced with new wood. “It was a challenge many deemed impossible, yet one we will have met on,” Macron said.
Persons: Macron, Brigitte, Laurent Ulrich, Jesus Christ’s, ” Macron, France’s Organizations: Notre Dame, Notre Locations: Paris, Macron, France
AdvertisementNotre Dame Cathedral in Paris is set to reopen on December 7. Take a look at new images of the restored cathedral below. Notre Dame Cathedral, one of Paris' most iconic buildings, is set to reopen its doors on December 7, more than five years on from the devastating fire that ravaged its roof and toppled its spire. In a post on X, Macron shared a photo, writing alongside it: "Achieving the impossible together. Business Insider has compiled some images of the restored building below.
Persons: It's, Archbishop, Emmanuel Macron, Macron Organizations: Notre Dame Cathedral, Notre Dame, That's Locations: Paris, That's France
The world got its first glimpse on Friday of the newly renovated Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris. President Emmanuel Macron of France took viewers on a live televised tour of the cathedral's dazzlingly clean interior and rebuilt roofing, five years after a devastating fire that was followed by a colossal reconstruction effort. “I believe you are seeing the cathedral like it has never been seen before,” Philippe Jost, the head of the reconstruction task force, told Mr. Macron. The French president and his wife, Brigitte, gushed with admiration and craned their necks as they entered the 12th and 13th-century Gothic monument alongside the mayor and archbishop of Paris. More than 450,000 square feet of cream-colored limestone inside the cathedral have been meticulously stripped of ash, lead dust and centuries of accumulated grime, leaving its soaring vaults, thick columns and tall walls almost startlingly bright.
Persons: Emmanuel Macron, , ” Philippe Jost, Macron, Brigitte, gushed Organizations: Notre, Dame Cathedral Locations: Paris, France
He raised no substantive concerns about Trump’s proposals to deport migrants, despite Pope Francis making welcoming migrants a persistent theme of his pontificate. Simone Risoluti/Vatican Media/ReutersThe different responses point to the challenge facing Pope Francis and the Vatican as it seeks to navigate the second Trump presidency. Robert Nickelsberg/Getty ImagesTrump and Francis divided on key issuesNevertheless, Trump and Pope Francis’ visions couldn’t be further apart. While Trump proposes mass deportations of migrants, Francis describes driving migrants away as a “grave sin” and their exclusion “criminal”. While the Biden administration and the pope had their differences, Francis and the Catholic president had a warm relationship.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Timothy Broglio, Broglio, Pope Francis, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Trump, Parolin, , Volodymyr Zelensky, State Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Simone Risoluti, Francis, Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, Robert Nickelsberg, Pope Francis ’, couldn’t, Pope, Mike Pompeo, Fr, James Martin, Jose Luis Gonzalez, Harris, , JD Vance, ” Mary Jo McConahay, , McConahay, Reagan, Martin, John Paul II, Benedict XVI, ” Martin, Donald Trump, Melania, Alessandra Tarantino, ” McConahay, Francis ’, ” David Gibson, Gibson, It’s, Antony Blinken, Biden, Blinken Organizations: CNN, Catholic Church, United States Catholic Bishops ’, Word Television Network, Trump, Catholic, State, Vatican Media, Franciscan Friars, “ America, Reuters, Catholic Bishops, autocrats, Washington DC, Francis, Los, Religion, Culture, Fordham University Locations: Michigan, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Wisconsin, New York City, China, Vatican, Beijing, Ukraine, Mexico, Ciudad Juarez, Trump, Central America, Los Angeles, Fordham University , New York
LONDON — Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, the spiritual leader of the global Anglican church, resigned Tuesday after an investigation found that he failed to promptly report serial physical and sexual abuse by a volunteer at Christian summer camps. Welby said in a statement that he was stepping down "in sorrow" and "having sought the gracious permission of His Majesty The King." In his resignation letter, Welby acknowledged “personal and institutional responsibility” for “wrongly” believing that there wasn’t a need to make a formal report to police on the case in 2013. The church should have “properly and effectively” reported Smyth to the relevant authorities, the report found. A petition calling for Welby's resignation, created by members of the national assembly of the Church of England, the General Synod, had reached over 13,000 signatures at the time of his announcement on Tuesday.
Persons: Canterbury Justin Welby, Welby, , , John Smyth, Smyth, Stephen Cottrell, Keir Starmer Organizations: LONDON, of England, British Locations: United Kingdom, Africa, Canterbury
The apology follows a report by a public inquiry in July that found some 200,000 children and vulnerable adults in state and faith-based care experienced some form of abuse from 1950 to 2019. “Today, I am apologizing on behalf of the government to everyone who suffered abuse, harm and neglect while in care. A bill to include a range of measures to improve safety in state care was to have its first reading in Parliament on Tuesday. The inquiry detailed a litany of abuses in state and faith-based care, including rape, sterilization and the use of electric shocks, which peaked in the 1970s. It also called for new legislation, including mandatory reporting of suspected abuse, including admissions made during religious confession.
Persons: Christopher Luxon, Luxon, of Organizations: Zealand, , Royal Commission of, New Zealand Locations: Wellington, , New Zealand, New, of Canterbury
CNN —Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, the most senior leader in the Church of England, has resigned over his handling of a child abuse case, according to his official account. “Having sought the gracious permission of His Majesty The King, I have decided to resign as Archbishop of Canterbury,” Welby said in a statement on Tuesday. Pressure had been mounting on Welby in recent days, following an independent review into “sickening abuse” committed by John Smyth, a deceased British lawyer considered the worst serial abuser linked to the Church of England. The pair exchanged Christmas cards and Welby donated small sums of money to his “missions” in Zimbabwe. Until now, there’s been no historical precedent for an Archbishop of Canterbury resigning over child abuse.
Persons: Canterbury Justin Welby, , of Canterbury, ” Welby, Welby, , John Smyth, Smyth, Justin Welby, Newcastle, Helen, Ann Hartley, George Carey, of Lincoln, there’s, Canterbury Organizations: CNN, of England, Makin Locations: British, England, Zimbabwe, South Africa, ,
Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby resigned "in sorrow" on Tuesday, saying he had failed to ensure there was a proper investigation into allegations of abuse by a volunteer at Christian summer camps decades ago. "The last few days have renewed my long felt and profound sense of shame at the historic safeguarding failures of the Church of England," Welby said in a statement. "I hope this decision makes clear how seriously the Church of England understands the need for change and our profound commitment to creating a safer church. As I step down I do so in sorrow with all victims and survivors of abuse." The Anglican churches in African countries such as Uganda and Nigeria are likely to welcome Welby's resignation, after saying last year they no longer had confidence in him.
Persons: Canterbury Justin Welby, Welby Organizations: of, of England Locations: North America, Britain, Africa, Uganda, Nigeria
As well as heading the Church of England, the Archbishop of Canterbury acts as the “first among equals” leader of the worldwide Anglican Communion, which includes the Episcopal Church in the United States. Although Smyth sought ordination to the Church of England, he was refused and moved to Zimbabwe in 1984. The report estimates he went on to abuse 85 to 100 male children aged 13 to 17 in Africa. During his time in office, Welby has demanded accountability from those accused of mishandling abuse, including his predecessor, Lord Carey, and the former Bishop of Lincoln. A resignation by an Archbishop of Canterbury over child abuse would be without any obvious historical precedent and there is no mechanism with which to remove an archbishop.
Persons: Canterbury, John Smyth, Justin Welby’s, , Welby, Smyth, Welby “, Justin Welby, , Newcastle, Ann Hartley, Marcus Walker, St Bartholomew the Great, Bishop, Guildford, Andrew Watson, ” Smyth, Lord Carey, of Lincoln Organizations: London CNN, of, of England, Episcopal Church, British, Church of England, BBC, CNN, Eton College Locations: of England, United States, Makin, London, ” Lambeth, South Africa, , Zimbabwe, Africa, Britain,
Now scientists say skeletal remains found in a well at Norway’s Sverresborg castle belong to the mysterious figure mentioned in a medieval saga. "If one would anticipate to finding historical accuracy in some sagas, Sverris Saga would be the best contender." Recent scientific developments provide a range of advanced methods to analyze skeletal remains in greater detail, such as genetic sequencing and radiocarbon dating. via iScienceAdvancements in technology also allow skeletal remains to be linked to characters from Norse sagas, blurring the lines between legendary myths and historical facts. And this is not the first instance of a saga character’s skeletal remains being found.
Persons: Sverre Sigurdsson, , Mike Martin, , Stefan Brink, King Sverre of, Karl Jónsson, Brink, Anna Petersén, Martin, Elizabeth Rowe, Jesse L, Egill Organizations: Norwegian University of Science, Technology, NBC News, Department of, University of Cambridge, Norwegian Institute of Cultural Heritage Research, National Institutes of Health Locations: Norway, Nidaros, Eysteinn, England, King Sverre of Norway, Oslo, Sverresborg, Trondheim
Sydney Reuters —Britain’s King Charles and Queen Camilla met large, cheering crowds in Sydney after attending a church service on Sunday, the first event of their Australia tour. The royal couple were greeted at St Thomas’ Anglican Church by the archbishop of Sydney, Kanishka Raffel, and children from the church’s Sunday school who waved Australian flags. Traveling across Sydney Harbour, Charles visited the New South Wales parliament, marking the 200th anniversary of Australia’s oldest legislature. He will attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Samoa after the six-day Australia tour. King Charles III, Queen Camilla and Anglican Archbishop of Sydney Reverend Kanishka Raffel attend a church service at St. Thomas's Anglican Church on October 20, 2024 in Sydney, Australia.
Persons: Sydney Reuters — Britain’s King Charles, Queen Camilla, Kanishka Raffel, Camilla, Anna Valentine, Ellie Mantle, ” Camilla, Charles, Australia’s, , King Charles III , Queen Camilla, Sydney, Dean Lewins Organizations: Sydney Reuters —, St Thomas ’ Anglican, New South, Church, Association of Commonwealth Universities Locations: Sydney, Australia, Britain, Australia’s, Sydney Harbour, New South Wales, Samoa, St, Thomas's, Pacific, Commonwealth
The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has reached a historic $880 million settlement over hundreds of child sex abuse claims. The agreement in principle announced Wednesday settles 1,354 child sexual abuse claims, the plaintiffs’ attorney said in a news release. It is the largest single child sex abuse settlement with a Catholic archdiocese. In 2007, the archdiocese settled child sex abuse lawsuits with 500 victims for $660 million. No designated donations to parishes or schools will be used to finance the settlement, the archdiocese said in a statement issued after the settlement announcement.
Persons: , Morgan A, Stewart, José H, Gomez, Organizations: Catholic, Archdiocese, Angels, Google Locations: Los Angeles, California,
Los Angeles, California (AP) – The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has agreed to pay $880 million to victims of clergy sexual abuse dating back decades, in what an attorney said was the largest single child sex abuse settlement with a Catholic archdiocese, it was announced Wednesday. Attorney Morgan Stewart, who led the negotiations, said in a statement that the settlement is the largest single child sex abuse settlement with a Catholic archdiocese. “These survivors have suffered for decades in the aftermath of the abuse. The settlement will be funded by archdiocese investments, accumulated reserves, bank financing, and other assets. According to the archdiocese, certain religious orders and others named in the litigation will also cover some of the cost of the settlement, the Times said.
Persons: José H, Gomez, , , Morgan Stewart, ” Stewart Organizations: , Catholic, Los Angeles Times, United States, Attorneys, Times Locations: Los Angeles , California, – The, Los Angeles, United,
CNN —Pope Francis has chosen 21 new cardinals in a move that once again shows his determination to reshape the group of churchmen who will elect his successor. Also among the new cardinals announced by the pope on Sunday are bishops from Indonesia, Algeria, Japan and the Ivory Coast. At the time of the pope’s announcement, there were 122 cardinals under 80 and able to vote in a future conclave. Church law technically limits the number of such cardinals to 120, but previous popes have also gone over that number. Cardinals are second only to the pope in the church hierarchy, hold senior positions in the Vatican and act as the pope’s main advisers.
Persons: Pope Francis, Francis, Dominique Mathieu, Francis ’, ” Francis, Mykola Bychok, Frank Leo, Timothy Radcliffe, Organizations: CNN, Ukrainian Greek Catholic, Cardinals Locations: Israel, Belgian, Iran, Australia, Ukrainian, Oceania, Italy, Indonesia, Algeria, Japan, Ivory Coast, Toronto, British, Gaza, Lebanon
VATICAN CITY Associated Press —Pope Francis took the unusual decision Wednesday to expel 10 people – a bishop, priests and laypeople – from a troubled Catholic movement in Peru after a Vatican investigation uncovered “sadistic” abuses of power, authority and spirituality. It was announced by the Peruvian Bishops Conference, which posted a statement from the Vatican embassy on its website. The statement was astonishing because it listed abuses uncovered by the Vatican investigation that have rarely if ever been punished canonically — such as hacking someone’s communications — and cited the people the pope held responsible. Victims of Figari’s abuses complained to the Lima archdiocese in 2011, though other claims against him reportedly date to 2000. The investigation, published in 2017, found that Figari sodomized his recruits and forced them to fondle him and one another.
Persons: CITY Associated Press — Pope Francis, , Francis ’, Luis Figari, , Figari, Pedro Salinas, Paola Ugaz, Sodalitium, Jordi Bertomeu, Charles Scicluna, Martin Mejia, Jose Antonio Eguren, Francis, Salinas, Organizations: CITY Associated Press, Peruvian Bishops Conference, CNN, South, Catholic, Maltese, Associated Press Locations: Peru, Vatican, America, South America, United States, Lima, Rome, Spain, Malta, Lima , Peru, Figari, Piura, Ugaz, Eguren’s, Peruvian
CNN retains full editorial control over subject matter, reporting and frequency of the articles and videos within the sponsorship, in compliance with our policyCNN —If its ancient walls could talk, Sümela Monastery in eastern Turkey would have quite a few stories to tell. “The Virgin Mary is a holy person for the Muslim people also. “The sultans considered Sümela a sacred place and helped the monastery by giving the monks donations and more land,” he adds. Sümela was popular with Christian and Muslim pilgrims, and an active Greek Orthodox monastery, until the early 20th century. Many of the Greeks living in the Pontic Alps and nearby Black Sea coast chose to relocate to Greece, including the monks of Sümela Monastery.
Persons: “ We’ve, Levent Alniak, Senol Aktaş, Virgin Mary, Sümela, Jesus, Mary, St, Ignatius, Öznur, who’s, Sümela’s, Barnabas, Sophronios, Luke the, ” Alniak, Soumela Organizations: CNN, Ottomans, Turkish, Rock Church, Turkey’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism, van, Turkish Airlines, Ramada Plaza, Radisson Locations: Sümela, Turkey, Roman, Trabzon province, , Sofia, Istanbul, Ottoman, Black, Greece, Sümela Monastery, Altindere, Nea Sumela, Constantinople, Altındere, Trabzon, Coşandere
SINGAPORE — Pope Francis on Thursday urged political leaders in Singapore, a leading global financial hub, to seek fair wages for the country’s million-plus lower-paid foreign workers. “These workers contribute a great deal to society and should be guaranteed a fair wage,” he said. Many of the migrant workers come from nearby countries such as Malaysia, China, Bangladesh and India. A Singapore NGO that provides services for migrant workers, Humanitarian Organisation for Migration Economics, welcomed the pope’s remarks, saying they were in “full agreement” with his call for fair wages. The Vatican said Francis’ Mass drew some 50,000 people to Singapore’s national sports stadium.
Persons: Pope Francis, , Francis, Francis ’, Tharman Shanmugaratnam, Lawrence Wong, Tiziana Fabi, Getty Images Francis, Singapore’s, John Paul II, Singapore, ” Francis, Taylor Swift, Connie Rodriguez, , Cardinal Stephen Chow Sau Organizations: Singapore NGO, Organisation, Migration Economics, Tiziana, Getty Images, Getty, Catholic Locations: SINGAPORE, Singapore, Southeast Asia, Oceania, Malaysia, China, Bangladesh, India, Philippines, Papua New Guinea, AFP, Hong Kong, Indonesia, East Timor, Rome
CNN —New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon expressed regret on Wednesday after a public enquiry found some 200,000 children, young people and vulnerable adults were abused in state and religious care over the last 70 years. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon speaks during the release of The Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care report on July 24, 2024 in Wellington, New Zealand. Hagen Hopkins/Getty ImagesThe report by Royal Commission of Inquiry spoke to over 2,300 survivors of abuse in New Zealand, which has a population of 5.3 million. The inquiry detailed a litany of abuses in state and faith-based care, including rape, sterilisation and electric shocks, which peaked in the 1970s. Those from the Indigenous Maori community were especially vulnerable to abuse, the report found, as well as those with mental or physical disabilities.
Persons: Christopher Luxon, ” Luxon, Hagen Hopkins, Pope, of, Charlotte Graham, Luxon, , Tracey McIntosh Organizations: CNN, Zealand, Royal Commission of, Royal Commission, Safe Agency, University of Auckland Locations: New, Wellington , New Zealand, New Zealand, of Canterbury
CNN —Yet again, tens of thousands of people in Gaza are on the move, as the Israeli military issues fresh evacuation orders for a number of areas in Gaza City. It’s unclear how many people in Gaza City have heeded the latest evacuation order. The IDF confirmed to CNN that the evacuation order for parts of Gaza City was the third in the past 10 days. On July 2, the Israeli authorities clarified that the European Hospital in Khan Younis was not included in the evacuation order. Now, one of the main hospitals in Gaza City – the Al Ahli Baptist – has also closed its doors.
Persons: CNN —, Khan Younis, don’t, Khader Al Za’anoun, Wafa, Al Za’anoun, , ” Al Za’anoun, OCHA, Deir, Dawoud Abu Alkas, – Jonathan Whittall –, Tedros Ghebreyesus, , Nasser, Al, Hosam Naoum, Rasheed, Saleh, ” Saleh, ” OCHA, , Maysa Saleh, Khan Younis “, Louise Wateridge Organizations: CNN, Israel Defense Forces, UN, UN Office, Humanitarian Affairs, IDF, Reuters, European Hospital, World Health Organization, Cross, Nasser, WHO, Episcopal, Facebook, Norwegian Refugee Council, NRC Locations: Gaza, Gaza City, Shujaya, Old City, Daraj, Khan Younis, Rafah, Al Mawasi, Khan, Al Ahli, Jerusalem, Deir al, Deir
CNN —Italian Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, a former papal ambassador to the United States who became an ultra-conservative critic of Pope Francis, has been excommunicated for schism. As a Vatican diplomat, the archbishop was tasked with serving the pope, which makes his excommunication for schism highly unusual. The Vatican explained Friday that Viganò was excommunicated following an “extrajudicial penal process,” although the archbishop has said he did not “recognize the legitimacy” of the process. “I don’t know what happened,” Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Holy See’s Secretary of State, said recently about the now-excommunicated archbishop. The Vatican said Viganò had been told of the excommunication and that only the Holy See could lift the sanction.
Persons: Carlo Maria Viganò, Pope Francis, Viganò, Francis, Theodore McCarrick, Francis ’, Kim Davis, , ” Cardinal Pietro Parolin Organizations: CNN, Vatican, Catholic Church, Roman Catholic Church, State Locations: United States, Washington, DC, Francis, Vatican, Kentucky
CNN —Armenia will leave a Russia-led military alliance, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan confirmed Wednesday, accusing members of the bloc of plotting with bitter rival Azerbaijan to start a war against them. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought two wars over the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region, which Azerbaijan reclaimed in full by force in September. Russia has traditionally allied with Armenia, but their relations have soured in recent months while Moscow’s ties to Azerbaijan have deepened. Pashinyan confirmed to lawmakers that Armenia will withdraw from the Russia-led military alliance. Azerbaijan has also demanded that Armenia change its constitution to remove a reference to Karabakh independence, but Pashinyan has so far resisted the calls.
Persons: Nikol Pashinyan, Pashinyan, ” Pashinyan, Karen Minasyan, , , Vladimir Putin, Pashinyan –, Azerbaijan –, Ilham Aliyev, Armenpress, Bagrat Galstanyan, ” Galstanyan Organizations: CNN, Security, Organization, European Union, Getty, AFP Locations: Armenia, Russia, Azerbaijan, Moscow, United States, Soviet Union, Karabakh, Yerevan, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Soviet, AFP, Nagorno, Aliyev
This week, the pope is due to make an historic intervention in the debate around AI at the G7 summit in southern Italy’s Puglia region. AI, the pope believes, can make the world a better place only if it serves the “common good” and does not increase inequalities. European Union lawmakers have already passed a law regulating AI, while a bipartisan group of US senators have set out plans for AI regulation that could lead to federal legislation. “AI and emerging technologies are on Pope Francis’ radar screen,” Larrey, now a professor of philsophy at Boston College, told CNN. It’s clear that Francis sees AI as part of what he called the “epochal change” taking place at the beginning of the 21st century.
Persons: Pope Francis, Francis, Joe Biden, , , Paolo Benanti, Benanti, ” Benanti, Vincenzo Paglia, Giorgia, Francis ’, Father Antonio Spadaro, Philip Larrey, Larrey, Pope Francis ’ Organizations: CNN, Catholic, Pontifical Academy for Life, Microsoft, IBM, Cisco Systems, United Nations, Food, Agriculture Organization, Union, Philosophy Department, Pontifical Lateran University, Boston College Locations: Italy’s Puglia, ” Italy, Puglia “, Puglia, Rome, Nevada
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