• “Never forget.” The Holocaust is fading from memory in the U.S. Many Americans do not know basic details, like the number of people killed or what Auschwitz, above, was. [The New York Times]

• The first woman to lead the Swedish body that awards the Nobel Prize in Literature was forced out, the latest twist in a sexual misconduct scandal that has reached the highest levels of government. [The New York Times]

• The Swedish authorities arrested a Tibetan man on charges of spying for China. Suspected of gathering information on Tibetan refugees, he faces up to four years in jail. [The New York Times]

• A Greek fighter jet crashed, killing the pilot, after an encounter with Turkish aircraft that violated the country’s airspace, Greek officials said. Ankara denied that any of its jets had been in the area. [The New York Times]

• The British scientist who created Dolly, the first clone of a sheep and a key to new research into Parkinson’s, revealed that he has the disease himself. [The New York Times]

• Italian charities accused the French border police of falsifying migrant children’s birth dates in order to send them back to Italy. [The Guardian]