Four candidates vying to lead the United Nations have spent hours being grilled about their views on issues from restoring global peace to ending escalating poverty. The U.N. General Assembly president calls it one of the toughest job interviews in the world. There was no clear victor after the candidates fielded questions from U.N. ambassadors this past week. Plus, other candidates could wait until after the initial auditions to jump into the race to succeed U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres on Jan. 1. All four said they would focus on peace, development and human rights in what are pillars of the U.N.

Pope Leo XIV is heading to Equatorial Guinea for the final leg of his four-nation African journey. The former Spanish colony on Africa’s western coast is run by Africa’s longest-serving president, Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo. He has been in power since 1979 and is accused of widespread corruption and authoritarianism. The discovery of offshore oil in the mid-1990s transformed Equatorial Guinea’s economy virtually overnight. Yet more than half of the country’s nearly 2 million people live in poverty. And rights groups have documented how revenues have enriched the ruling Obiang family rather than the broader population. For Leo, the visit marks perhaps the most delicate diplomatic challenge of his four-nation Africa tour.

Pope Leo XIV is marking the halfway point in his four-nation tour of Africa with a day focused on encouraging Cameroon’s young people. Leo was travelling Friday to Douala, Cameroon’s main port city, to celebrate Mass. The Vatican predicted some 600,000 people would turn out for the liturgy, the biggest crowd Leo is expected to draw on his 11-day, four-nation trip through Africa. Later Friday back in the capital Youande, Leo had an appointment with students, professors and administrators at the Catholic University of Central Africa. Popes have often used such encounters, especially in the developing world, to rally young people to persevere in the face of poverty, corruption and other challenges.

Denis Hayes, national coordinator of a group called Environmental Action, said at a Washington D.C. news conference, Sept. 2, 1970, that the group is urging the defeat of twelve members of the House of Representatives in the fall elections. They were judged, he said, on their records on environmental matters and in the areas of civil rights, the war, education, anti poverty and general domestic priorities. (AP Photo/Henry Burroughs)

Denny Blodgett, founder of a firewood bank project through Interfaith Caregivers of Burnett County, is seen Oct. 3, 2025, in Danbury, Wis.Â