For the third week in a row, thousands took to the streets throughout France to protest the federal government’s well being move legislation, which bars these with out proof of vaccination or a latest destructive check for Covid-19 from many indoor venues. It was handed by Parliament however nonetheless wants a closing greenlight from a prime constitutional council, anticipated subsequent week.

Greater than 200,000 folks marched in Paris and in different cities, together with Marseille, Rennes and Strasbourg, based on the French inside ministry. Throughout France, three law enforcement officials have been injured and 19 folks have been arrested.

The protests come because the authorities attempt to stem a brand new wave of infections that’s beginning to put stress on France’s hospitals, the place 85 % of Covid-19 sufferers are unvaccinated.

Politics: The demonstrators are united of their mistrust of the information media and of President Emmanuel Macron’s authorities, and so they embrace far-right and far-left activists, Yellow Vest members and vaccine conspiracy theorists, in addition to vaccinated individuals who argue that the well being move is oppressive and unfair.

Belarus tried to forcibly send sprinter Kristina Timanovskaya home after she criticized her coaches for registering her for the incorrect occasion on the Olympics. She introduced on Instagram that the hassle had failed and that she was underneath the safety of the Japanese police.

“I’m afraid that in Belarus they could put me in jail,” she instructed the impartial Belarusian information portal Zerkalo.io. “I’m nervous about my security. And I believe that for the time being it’s not protected for me in Belarus.”

The Belarusian Nationwide Olympic Committee, which is run by Victor Lukashenko, the eldest son of its strongman chief, Aleksander Lukashenko, stated that it had withdrawn Timanovskaya from the Video games due to her “emotional and psychological state.”

In different Olympics information:

Monitor and subject: The Italian sprinter Lamont Marcell Jacobs, who was born in El Paso to an Italian mom and American father, won the 100-meter dash with a time of 9.80 seconds. Within the males’s excessive bounce, Gianmarco Tamberi of Italy and Mutaz Essa Barshim of Qatar matched one another all night till each did not clear 7 toes 10 inches on three straight tries — and agreed to share the gold medal.

Gymnastics: Nina Derwael of Belgium, a two-time uneven bars world champion, took the gold in her specialty. Rebeca Andrade won the vault, and with it, Brazil’s first gold in ladies’s gymnastics.

BMX freestyle: Charlotte Worthington of Britain landed a 360 back flip, a primary in ladies’s competitors, and gained gold within the new Olympic occasion.


Days earlier than a brand new hard-line president is about to be inaugurated in Iran, Biden administration officers have turned sharply pessimistic about their probabilities of rapidly restoring the nuclear deal that President Donald Trump dismantled.

Worldwide inspectors have been nearly blinded. At Iran’s main enrichment web site at Natanz, centrifuges are spinning at supersonic speeds, starting to counterpoint small quantities of nuclear gasoline at close to bomb-grade.

Biden’s aides make no secret of their issues that the Iranians are studying a lot from the work now underway that within the close to future, maybe as early as this fall, it might be unattainable to return to the previous accord.

Context: The Iranian authorities, together with Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme chief who has the ultimate phrase, is demanding the U.S. present a assure that it’s going to not stroll away from the pact the way in which Trump did. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has stated that in a democracy there is no such thing as a technique to tie the palms of a future president. However the Iranians have discovered some sympathy, even amongst America’s European allies.

One night time in Minnesota, shortly after the killing of George Floyd, somebody set a hearth in a Goodwill retailer. That motion led to a world seek for the culprits — and it uncovered a growing system of global surveillance.

Who will get to determine which outfits are applicable for athletes? It’s often not the athletes themselves. However this yr, some have rebelled.

Simply earlier than the Video games, the European Handball Federation fined members of the Norway ladies’s staff for wearing hot pants reasonably than the required bikini bottoms. (Their male counterparts put on voluminous shorts.) In Tokyo, the German ladies’s gymnastics staff defied custom by wearing ankle-length unitards to ship a message “in opposition to sexualization in gymnastics.”

Their protest registered as “a subversive sensation,” the sports activities columnist Sally Jenkins writes in The Washington Post, and “tells you simply how little Olympic opponents personal their in any other case highly effective kinds.” The Instances vogue critic Vanessa Friedman factors out that related questions come up in lots of workplaces. “People have more and more rebelled in opposition to the standard and extremely gendered gown codes imposed on them.”

Rebecca Liu, writing in The Guardian, describes how she was drawn as a toddler to the dazzle of rhythmic gymnastics. “Did I, at 6 — at 7, at 8, at 9 — ever sit down and suppose, ‘Sure, I need to embody a standard imaginative and prescient of femininity within the uncanniest and most unsettling of the way?’” she writes. “No. I had merely needed to be fairly.”

This three-course vegetarian dinner brings dwelling one of the best of the market.

Nadia Boulanger was generally known as music’s biggest instructor. A brand new competition —  and a Instances playlist —  invites a reconsideration.

In “Pastoral Song,” James Rebanks, a farmer in England’s Lake District, tackles the confounding drawback of how you can earn a living from land with out wrecking it.