Staggering photos show how this world-famous city has become a rubbish dump
Photographs show an iconic city has become overrun with garbage.
Photographs show an iconic city has become overrun with garbage.
New York Times: Museum officials seizing golden opportunity for a grand refurbishment.
Rodin's towering contemplative sculptures can be seen again in person.
Thousands of theatre workers protested Covid closures and inadequate aid packages.
Virus spells end for Hemingway and Jocyce's bookshop bolthole.
France has confirmed 33,300 Covid deaths, the fourth-highest death toll in Europe.
Floating cinemas and pop-up testing centres are part of Paris's post-covid festival.
Judith Collins: No place for "revolting behaviours" in Parliament.
COMMENT: A year after the Christchurch call, it's clear the only way forward is together.
Pop icon says she tested positive for antibodies after coming down with "a bad flu".
Reminiscing about Paris and why we're still dreaming of visiting ... one day.
Comment: The City of Lights has lost its sparkle as the spectre of Covid-19 grips hard.
Comment: An "internet for good" should be our response to March 15, says Jordan Carter.
The Parisian tower my be an eyesore but a delight to look out of.
A candidate in the Paris mayoral race bows out after a leaked video.
Amsterdam is on his wish list, but Paris was a disappointment.
Paris landmark so fragile after this year's fire that it might not be entirely saved.
New York Times: In Paris, one never steps into the same city twice.
Police used tear gas as protesters tried to smash windows and enter a shopping mall.
New York Times: Painting a security hazard and not even a satisfying bucket-list item.
New York Times: Police missed warning signs about employee who killed four colleagues.
A French comedian gatecrashed the Chanel show and tried to strut her stuff on the catwalk.
Courtney Whitaker stays at the renovated Hotel Lutetia, on the Rive Gauche, Paris
New York Times: Dangerous dust scattered onto Paris streets at Notre Dame burned.
New York Times: Five squalid acres are home to France's largest open-air crack market.
Parisian police have declared they are facing a new reign of terror.
New York Times: Firefighters were going in "without knowing if they would come back out".
The photos reveal grisly scenes reminiscent of an Alfred Hitchcock horror film.