Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte formally apologized on Monday for the Netherlands' role in the slave trade, but many activists said the speech did not go far enough.
The big picture: The Netherlands played a key role in the transatlantic slave trade during the 17th to 19th centuries, with Dutch slave traders shipping an estimated 600,000 African men, women and children mostly to former colonies.
A shooting just north of Toronto, Canada, left five people dead and another person with serious injuries in a local hospital Sunday evening, police said.
Details: The suspect, a 73-year-old man, also died in the shooting that happened at a condo in the city of Vaughan around 7:20 p.m., per a statement from York Regional Police.
The FBI issued a public safety alert Monday about an "explosion" of financial "sextortion" schemes targeting children and teens.
Why it matters: The agency said it has received more than 7,000 reports of financial sextortion against minors over the past year and has recorded at least 3,000 victims of the crime — primarily boys. It also linked more than a dozen suicides to such schemes.
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said Sunday evening FIFA prevented a message he wanted to have broadcast before the soccer World Cup Final in Qatar about his proposed Global Peace Formula Summit this winter.
Driving the news: Zelensky wanted his video message to be broadcast before the final that Argentina won against France in a penalty kick shootout, which was watched by hundreds of millions of people worldwide, CNN first reported. But Zelensky said his message still got through.
Pope Francis revealed in a wide-ranging interview with the Spanish daily newspaper ABC published Sunday that he signed a resignation letter "in case of impediment due to health reasons" after he was elected pontiff in 2013.
Why it matters: Francis, who turned 86 on Saturday, said earlier this year after a pilgrimage to Canada that "the door is open" for him to eventually resign or retire.