Europe
Monday
Sunday
Prime Minister Boris Johnson poses with his wife Carrie Symonds in the garden of 10 Downing Street following their wedding at Westminster Cathedral on Saturday in London. Rebecca Fulton/Getty Images hide caption
Saturday
Friday
Germany Formally Acknowledges Colonial Genocide In Namibia, Will Pay Reparations
German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas addresses the media Friday in Berlin. Germany has reached an agreement with Namibia that will see it officially recognize as genocide the colonial-era killings of tens of thousands of people and commit to spending $1.3 billion, largely on development projects. Tobias Schwarz/AP hide caption
Spain's postal service is feeling a backlash from its effort to highlight racial inequality. The company this week issued a set of four stamps in different skin-colored tones. The darker the stamp, the lower the price. Correos/AP hide caption
Smoke and flames rise after Israeli fighter jets' airstrike hit an area in Khan Yunis, Gaza on May 13, 2021. Abed Rahim Khatib/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images hide caption
Thursday
Giuseppe Dave Seke (center) plays a superhero who helps save his neighborhood from gentrification in Netflix's Italian-language series Zero. It's Italy's first TV series with a predominantly Black cast. Francesco Berardinelli/Netflix hide caption
In New Italian Netflix Series 'Zero,' A Black Hero Makes Invisibility His Superpower
Family photographs of some of those who died hang on display in an exhibition in 2019 at the Kigali Genocide Memorial centre in the capital Kigali, Rwanda. France and Rwanda are hoping to reset ties scarred by a quarter century of recriminations over the 1994 Rwandan genocide when French President Emmanuel Macron visits the central African country. Ben Curtis/AP hide caption
Ex-Johnson Adviser Paints Devastating Picture Of Britain's Pandemic Response
Wednesday
At 81, William Shakespeare, or "Bill," became the second person in Britain to receive a COVID-19 vaccine in December. Jacob King/AP hide caption