In a crowded Wuhan beer hall, Zhang Qiong wipes birthday cake from her face after a food fight with her friends. 'I feel like I'm living a second life,' the textile worker who lives in the city says reut.rs/2KA2GVW 1/6
Outside, maskless partygoers spill onto the streets, smoking and playing street games with toy machine guns and balloons. Nightlife in Wuhan is back in full swing almost seven months after the city lifted its lockdown 2/6
The revival of the city's hard-hit nightlife economy offers a glimpse into a post-pandemic lifestyle that many hope will become a reality in 2021, after the global rollout of COVID-19 vaccines 3/6
In scenes unimaginable in many cities around the world reeling under a resurgence of the pandemic, young Wuhan residents during a recent night out crowd-surfed, ate street food and packed the city's nightclubs as they looked to make up for lost time 4/6
Wuhan hasn't reported a new locally transmitted case of the disease since May 10, after undergoing one of the strictest lockdowns worldwide 5/6
Despite the thriving night scene, Wuhan business and restaurant owners say it could still be some time before the surge in turnover makes up for massive losses during the lockdown. More 👉 reut.rs/2KA2GVW by 📷 Aly Song and @catecadell 6/6
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These refugees fled to Sudan after fighting broke out in the country’s northern Tigray region last month. More than 50,000 people now live in camps like this one reut.rs/3aoy8S3
Fighting erupted on Nov. 4 when forces loyal to the former ruling party in Tigray launched simultaneous attacks on military bases across the region, killing soldiers and seizing military hardware, according to the government
The Tigray People’s Liberation Front, the movement fighting the government, denies starting the conflict but says it is fighting back on a number of fronts
For months, thousands of young Thais took to the streets to protest Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, who seized power in a 2014 coup.
More remarkably, they were criticizing King Vajiralongkorn, who is protected from insult by a strict lese majeste law reut.rs/3ap84Gg 1/
Meet the young leaders risking criminal prosecution and tearing up societal rules centered on devotion to its monarch reut.rs/3ap84Gg 2/
Songphon 'Yajai' Sonthirak is a boxer who knows how to face down a stronger opponent. He was shocked to discover, on the day of his arrest, how little his training mattered and how fear seized him. 3/
President-elect Joe Biden named the team he wants to spearhead his response to climate change. Take a look in this thread 👇 reut.rs/2Wonrqf
Michael Regan, a North Carolina environment official, is Biden's pick to run the EPA. He would be the first Black man to run the agency reut.rs/2Wonrqf
Representative Deb Haaland is Biden's choice to head up the interior department. She would be the first Native American Cabinet secretary, in a department whose jurisdiction includes tribal lands reut.rs/2Wonrqf
The subject line on the email received by @Reuters reporter @stecklow last week said simply, 'Test'. It contained the results of a private blood test he had undergone the day before reut.rs/3p3T9po
He opened the attachment with excitement and some trepidation - he believed it would likely reveal whether he was already vaccinated against COVID-19, or if he received a placebo
As a volunteer in a late-stage clinical trial for an experimental vaccine for COVID-19, he had already received two injections. He experienced no symptoms after the first shot, which he received in late October
Q2: The International Criminal Court refused to look into the Uighur situation in China as China is not a party to the Rome Statute setting up the ICC.
Is Myanmar a party to that statute and is there any chance of politicians being prosecuted?
As diplomats gathered at the African Union’s headquarters earlier this year to prepare for its annual leaders’ summit, employees of the international organization made a disturbing discovery. Someone was stealing footage from their own security cameras reut.rs/34fxDG0
Acting on a tip from Japanese cyber researchers, the AU discovered that a group of suspected Chinese hackers had rigged a cluster of servers in the basement of an administrative annex to quietly siphon surveillance videos from across the campus in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia’s capital
The security breach was carried out by a Chinese hacking group nicknamed 'Bronze President,' according to an internal memo reviewed by @Reuters. It said the affected cameras covered 'AU offices, parking areas, corridors, and meeting rooms'