El Salvador, Prizing Water Over Gold, Bans All Metal Mining Environmental activists said the country was the first in the world to impose a nationwide ban on the mining of gold and other metals.
Donald Trump, ‘Brexit,’ Mosul: Your Wednesday Briefing Here’s what you need to know to start your day. By CHRIS STANFORD
Devin Nunes, American Airlines, Oakland Raiders: Your Tuesday Briefing Here’s what you need to know to start your day. By CHRIS STANFORD
Agustina Castro, Sister of Fidel and Raúl, Dies at 78 Agustina del Carmen Castro Ruz, the youngest of seven Castro siblings, never served in the Cuban government and kept a low profile.
Trilobites They Mixed Science, Art and Costume Parties to Reveal Mysteries of the Sea The expeditions of William Beebe and his coed Department of Tropical Research are remembered at an upcoming show at The Drawing Center in New York. By JOANNA KLEIN
Strikes Shut Down French Guiana, With Effects Resonating in Paris Presidential candidates scrambled to address the unrest as residents of the French territory in South America protest high crime and economic hardship. By AURELIEN BREEDEN
Thieves Take a Chunk of Change, All 221 Pounds of It, From a Berlin Museum The police say robbers broke into the Bode Museum and made off with the Canadian Big Maple Leaf coin, the world’s largest. By MELISSA EDDY
United States and Allies Protest U.N. Talks to Ban Nuclear Weapons The United States and most other nuclear powers boycotted the talks, saying that the time was not right and that a ban would be ineffective. By SOMINI SENGUPTA and RICK GLADSTONE
Republican Party, Russia, Tar Heels: Your Monday Briefing Here’s what you need to know to start your day. By CHRIS STANFORD
TimesVideo Seaside Solace in an Ocean of Pain Juana and Miguel Rosa’s daughters were murdered in 2015. This fish market in Lima, Peru, is their workplace but also where they come to heal and move forward. By KASSIE BRACKEN, VEDA SHASTRI and KAITLYN MULLIN
Conservative Protesters in Brazil Tilt Further Right as Turnout Thins The number of protesters at demonstrations has dwindled since the impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff, but their demands have hardened. By DOM PHILLIPS
Renegotiate Nafta? Mexicans Say Get On With It Uncertainty over the trade deal is hitting the country hard, pinching off foreign investment and lowering growth expectations. By AZAM AHMED
Refugees Welcome Canadians Adopted Refugee Families for a Year. Then Came ‘Month 13.’ Everyday Canadians spent a year embracing Syrians in the world’s most personal resettlement program. Letting them go might be the biggest test yet. By JODI KANTOR and CATRIN EINHORN
Canada Today: Restaurant Resentment and Cardboard Trudeaus A growing ferment on Twitter about the new restaurant at Montreal’s government-owned casino, and an end to a life-size cardboard cutout. By IAN AUSTEN
Toronto Schools to Cease Field Trips to U.S. The school board cited concerns that some students might be turned away at the border in the wake of newly implemented “extreme vetting” procedures. By CRAIG S. SMITH
Argentine Ex-President Faces Trial in $3.5 Billion Fraud Case It is the first time a trial has been ordered for Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who has faced many accusations of wrongdoing since she left office in 2015.
As Mexican State Limits Surrogacy, Global System Is Further Strained A Tabasco State law barring surrogate mothers from bearing children for foreigners reflects a troubled international system that, in one view, is “not sustainable.” By VICTORIA BURNETT
Brazil Meat Scandal Is Called ‘a Punch in the Stomach’ Dozens of federal inspectors have been arrested and charged with accepting bribes to ignore the adulteration or expiration of processed foods and falsifying sanitary permits. By DOM PHILLIPS
U.S. General Urges Nuclear Upgrade as Russia Grows ‘More Aggressive’ Lt. Gen. Jack Weinstein of the Air Force said the United States’ nuclear policy toward Russia “has got to be some behavior that gets them to the table.” By RICK GLADSTONE
Barred From Canadian Embassy Parties: Cardboard Trudeau Canada’s diplomats in the United States have been ordered to no longer set up cutout replicas of Mr. Trudeau at promotional events. By DAN LEVIN
El Salvador, Prizing Water Over Gold, Bans All Metal Mining Environmental activists said the country was the first in the world to impose a nationwide ban on the mining of gold and other metals.
Donald Trump, ‘Brexit,’ Mosul: Your Wednesday Briefing Here’s what you need to know to start your day. By CHRIS STANFORD
Devin Nunes, American Airlines, Oakland Raiders: Your Tuesday Briefing Here’s what you need to know to start your day. By CHRIS STANFORD
Agustina Castro, Sister of Fidel and Raúl, Dies at 78 Agustina del Carmen Castro Ruz, the youngest of seven Castro siblings, never served in the Cuban government and kept a low profile.
Trilobites They Mixed Science, Art and Costume Parties to Reveal Mysteries of the Sea The expeditions of William Beebe and his coed Department of Tropical Research are remembered at an upcoming show at The Drawing Center in New York. By JOANNA KLEIN
Strikes Shut Down French Guiana, With Effects Resonating in Paris Presidential candidates scrambled to address the unrest as residents of the French territory in South America protest high crime and economic hardship. By AURELIEN BREEDEN
Thieves Take a Chunk of Change, All 221 Pounds of It, From a Berlin Museum The police say robbers broke into the Bode Museum and made off with the Canadian Big Maple Leaf coin, the world’s largest. By MELISSA EDDY
United States and Allies Protest U.N. Talks to Ban Nuclear Weapons The United States and most other nuclear powers boycotted the talks, saying that the time was not right and that a ban would be ineffective. By SOMINI SENGUPTA and RICK GLADSTONE
Republican Party, Russia, Tar Heels: Your Monday Briefing Here’s what you need to know to start your day. By CHRIS STANFORD
TimesVideo Seaside Solace in an Ocean of Pain Juana and Miguel Rosa’s daughters were murdered in 2015. This fish market in Lima, Peru, is their workplace but also where they come to heal and move forward. By KASSIE BRACKEN, VEDA SHASTRI and KAITLYN MULLIN
Conservative Protesters in Brazil Tilt Further Right as Turnout Thins The number of protesters at demonstrations has dwindled since the impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff, but their demands have hardened. By DOM PHILLIPS
Renegotiate Nafta? Mexicans Say Get On With It Uncertainty over the trade deal is hitting the country hard, pinching off foreign investment and lowering growth expectations. By AZAM AHMED
Refugees Welcome Canadians Adopted Refugee Families for a Year. Then Came ‘Month 13.’ Everyday Canadians spent a year embracing Syrians in the world’s most personal resettlement program. Letting them go might be the biggest test yet. By JODI KANTOR and CATRIN EINHORN
Canada Today: Restaurant Resentment and Cardboard Trudeaus A growing ferment on Twitter about the new restaurant at Montreal’s government-owned casino, and an end to a life-size cardboard cutout. By IAN AUSTEN
Toronto Schools to Cease Field Trips to U.S. The school board cited concerns that some students might be turned away at the border in the wake of newly implemented “extreme vetting” procedures. By CRAIG S. SMITH
Argentine Ex-President Faces Trial in $3.5 Billion Fraud Case It is the first time a trial has been ordered for Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who has faced many accusations of wrongdoing since she left office in 2015.
As Mexican State Limits Surrogacy, Global System Is Further Strained A Tabasco State law barring surrogate mothers from bearing children for foreigners reflects a troubled international system that, in one view, is “not sustainable.” By VICTORIA BURNETT
Brazil Meat Scandal Is Called ‘a Punch in the Stomach’ Dozens of federal inspectors have been arrested and charged with accepting bribes to ignore the adulteration or expiration of processed foods and falsifying sanitary permits. By DOM PHILLIPS
U.S. General Urges Nuclear Upgrade as Russia Grows ‘More Aggressive’ Lt. Gen. Jack Weinstein of the Air Force said the United States’ nuclear policy toward Russia “has got to be some behavior that gets them to the table.” By RICK GLADSTONE
Barred From Canadian Embassy Parties: Cardboard Trudeau Canada’s diplomats in the United States have been ordered to no longer set up cutout replicas of Mr. Trudeau at promotional events. By DAN LEVIN