Stay informed faster with NewsCard® Daily — your world news update in minutes. Each episode brings you the biggest global stories, explained simply and clearly, with insights that go beyond the headlines. Tune in to understand what’s happening — and why it matters.
This is NewsCard Daily for Sunday, November 16, 2025 ... your briefing on the stories shaping our world ...
We begin in Sudan, where a humanitarian emergency deepens as fighting in Darfur claims hundreds of lives. The United Nations calls a special session after paramilitary forces reportedly target a major hospital in el-Fasher. Blood is visible from space, aid workers say, as civilians are trapped with limited food and water. The world watches in alarm, fearing this could trigger wider instability in the region ...
In Europe, Kyiv suffers another deadly barrage. Russian strikes on Ukraine’s capital early Friday kill at least six and injure dozens more. Explosions rock residential neighborhoods, damaging more than a dozen buildings and leaving families in shelters once again. Officials warn attacks could escalate as winter sets in, making survival even harder for millions caught in conflict ...
Now to South Asia, where tragedy strikes in Indian-controlled Kashmir. A police station blast has killed at least nine people and wounded more than thirty. Authorities say the explosion came from confiscated explosives stored inside the building. The blast rattles a region already on edge after recent security crackdowns and underscores the dangerous volatility along the India-Pakistan border ...
Meanwhile in South America, Brazil’s Supreme Court hands down a major ruling with political tremors. Eduardo Bolsonaro, son of former President Jair Bolsonaro, must stand trial for obstruction of justice. His case is tied to alleged efforts to shield his family from investigations into corruption. The decision shakes a country still wrestling with divisions from the Bolsonaro era and raises the stakes for accountability in Brazil’s democracy ...
In the Middle East, diplomatic efforts intensify as Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister appeals directly to Iran to help broker a ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel. The push comes as violence along the Israel-Lebanon border threatens to spiral. American officials, through the UN, share new peace proposals, but with rockets still flying both ways, regional leaders warn of the tremendous human toll if diplomacy fails ...
That's your NewsCard Daily briefing. For more top stories and quick summaries that keep you informed in just minutes, check out the NewsCard app, available in the App Store.