Week in Pictures
The Week in Pictures: A kiss for Joe and slain officer honored
Punxsutawney Phil predicts more winter, a snowstorm hits East Coast, Britain mourns a hero and more.
Moscow
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny aims a heart-shaped gesture towards his wife Yulia from inside a glass cell during a court hearing in Moscow on Feb. 2.
Putin's most prominent critic was jailed for almost three years for parole violations that he called trumped up, a case that the West has condemned and which has spurred talk of sanctions.
The Capitol
An urn with the cremated remains of Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick sits at the center of the Capitol Rotunda on Feb. 3.
Lawmakers paid their respects Wednesday to Sicknick, who was killed during the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and was given the rare distinction of lying in honor in the building's Rotunda.
Uganda
Mohammed Olanyia, left, who lost his whole family in a 2004 massacre, listens to the radio with his neighbors in Lukodi, Uganda, on Feb. 4 as the verdict is delivered by the International Criminal Court on Dominic Ongwen, a former child soldier who became a commander of the rebel Lord's Resistance Army.
Ongwen was convicted of dozens of crimes, including widespread rape, sexual enslavement, child abductions, torture and murder, including killings of babies.

Pennsylvania
Punxsutawney Phil's handler A.J. Dereume holds up the famous groundhog during a socially distanced and remote event at Gobblers Knob in Punxsutawney, Pa., on Feb. 2.
Phil predicted six more weeks of winter.
Washington, D.C.
Michael Regan, nominee to lead the Environmental Protection Agency, is hugged by his son, Matthew, after his confirmation hearing before the Senate Environment and Public Works committee on Feb. 3.
Regan is currently the head of the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality.
New York City
A snow-covered street in Midtown during a winter storm on Feb. 1 in New York City.
Istanbul
A woman is arrested by police during a protest against the appointment of a new rector at Bogazici University on Feb. 2 in Istanbul.
Some 600 people have been detained since January 4 after protests spread in Istanbul and Ankara, authorities have said. Most have been released, despite repeated statements from officials that the protesters are terrorists.
Syria
A civilian carries a young victim at the scene of an explosion in Syria's Azaz region on Jan. 31.
The car bomb attack killed five people and wounded 85 others, a local hospital in Syria and Turkish state media said.
Azaz has been under the control of rebels backed by Turkey since Ankara's first incursion into Syria in 2016, in an operation that aimed to drive away Islamic State militants and the Syrian Kurdish YPG militia from its border with Syria.
France
A truck-mounted water cannon sprays a protester during a demonstration against a security law on Jan. 30 at the Place de la Republique in Paris.
France's lawmakers passed a bill that increases the government's surveillance tools and restricts rights on circulating images of police officers in the media and online.
London
A woman plays the violin as a tribute to Capt. Sir Tom Moore in Piccadilly Circus, London, on Feb 2.
The British World War II veteran who walked into the hearts of a nation in lockdown as he shuffled up and down his garden to raise money for health care workers died after testing positive for Covid-19. He was 100 years old.
Last week's gallery: Impeachment delivered and a Covid snowball