Edition: U.S. / Global

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Americas

Officials found 106 firearms and more than 8,000 rounds of ammunition inside a prison after a riot last month, the country’s top prison authority said Thursday.

In Chile, Video Appears to Show Sailors Vowing to Kill Foreigners

The spread of the video comes at an awkward time for Chile, traditionally among Latin America’s largest arms importers, as the country faces territorial disputes with Bolivia and Peru.

Bond Set at $11 Million for Spanish King’s Son-in-Law

Bail was set for Princess Cristina’s husband and his former business partner as the investigation deepens into whether they embezzled millions in public money.

Op-Ed Contributor

When the Music Stopped

The calamity in Santa Maria revealed the best and the worst of Brazilian society.

After Fire, Some Brazilians Fault a Nation’s Sense of Fatalism

The nightclub fire in Santa Maria, Brazil, that killed more than 230 people Sunday has set off a debate about how — or even if — the country can prevent such disasters.

Guantánamo Lawyers Seeking 48-Hour Visits

The request for access to five men accused of participating in the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, criticized as unreasonable by prosecutors, is part of preparation for possible sentencing.

Recent Features on the Americas
A victim of a nightclub fire that left more than 230 dead in Santa Maria, Brazil, was buried on Monday. The city seemed to be in shock after the blaze.
Mauricio Lima for The New York Times

A victim of a nightclub fire that left more than 230 dead in Santa Maria, Brazil, was buried on Monday. The city seemed to be in shock after the blaze.

Accounts from survivors describe a stampede by clubgoers and a panicked push to open exit doors in a tragedy that left more than 230 dead.

Rio’s Exploding Manholes Menace Residents and Highlight Aging Infrastructure

Rio de Janeiro, which will host the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Summer Olympics, faces criticism for not doing enough to curb the deadly problem.

Memo From Cuba

After Decades, Cuba Eases Travel Rules to Maintain Ties

Islanders can spend more time overseas before forfeiting their residency, a concession that reflects the government’s desire for closer ties with Cubans abroad.

Caracas Journal

A Celebration That Accentuated an Absence

President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, recovering in Cuba from cancer surgery, had no presence on Thursday at an inaugural event tailored for him.

Chávez, or at Least His Sash, Is Set for Venezuela Inauguration

President Hugo Chávez’s health crisis and decision to proceed on Thursday with a quasi-presidential inauguration that he is unable to attend is producing national angst about who is in charge.

With Chávez Ill and State in Flux, Videos Offer an Image of Stability

As Hugo Chávez’s health presents political uncertainty, state television plays polished videos of the Venezuelan president in an apparent effort to reassure loyalists.

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The Saturday Profile

After Years in Solitary, an Austere Life as Uruguay’s President

José Mujica, a former guerrilla who took office in 2010, shuns opulence, donates most of his salary and lives modestly, as he says a leader of a proper democracy should.

Mexico City Journal

A Factory on Bicycle Wheels, Carrying Hope of a Better Life

Amor Muñoz’s mobile sewing factory is about community and “the experience of art” as much as economic development.

Brazil Expands Mines to Drive Future, but Cost Is a Treasured Link to Its Past

A mining company is proceeding with a project that could help revive Brazil’s economy, but it would also destroy caves treasured by scholars of Amazonian prehistoric human history.

The Saturday Profile

A Willing Explorer of São Paulo’s Polluted Rivers

José Leonídio Rosendo dos Santos has been diving into the polluted Tietê and Pinheiros rivers for more than 20 years, bringing to the surface a list of items that is eerie and bizarre.

Cuba’s Free-Market Farm Experiment Yields a Meager Crop

Although the government has liberalized many aspects of agriculture, inefficiencies caused by central control mean that many Cubans are actually seeing less food at private markets.

Swallowing Rain Forest, Cities Surge in Amazon

The torrid expansion of rain forest cities is alarming scientists, as an array of new industrial projects transforms the Amazon into Brazil’s fastest-growing region.

Memo From Colombia

Displaced Residents Grapple With Hurdles of Going Home

The government has made bringing people back to rural towns a priority, but logistics and fears of violence have complicated matters.

A New Leader Pushes a Different Side of Mexico

In a meeting with President Obama, Enrique Peña Nieto, the Mexican president-elect, highlighted a more prosperous Mexico where high-skilled jobs were increasing.

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Battle Between Argentine Media Empire and President Heats Up Over a Law

A law championed by President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner will force Clarín to divest most of its lucrative cable operations starting in December.

Reopening an 18-Year-Old Wound in Argentina

Jewish leaders have been angered by moves to improve ties with Iran, accused of shielding people who prosecutors in Argentina say authorized a 1994 attack on a community center in Buenos Aires.

Easing of Restraints in Cuba Renews Debate on U.S. Embargo

A new argument is gaining currency, even among many Cubans who had stayed on the sidelines: that more assistance from Americans could speed up tentative moves toward capitalism.

Crackdown in Quebec: ‘Le Gap’ Won’t Do

A reinterpretation of the province’s 1977 language law has led to stricter rules on company signs not rendered in French and to a lawsuit by six American retailers.

Already Desperate, Haitian Farmers Are Left Hopeless After Storm

Haiti is slipping deeper into crisis, officials say, after the huge blow from Hurricane Sandy to the tiny nation still struggling to recover from the devastating earthquake of 2010.

Mexico City Journal

Statue of a Foreign Autocrat Sits Uneasily With Some

A statue of Heydar Aliyev, an Azerbaijan leader faulted for a poor human rights record, has raised concerns in Mexico City, a capital aspiring to be progressive.

Antigua Journal

In Guatemalan Tourist Haven, Corruption Case Is Talk of the Town

In Guatemala, where corruption is ingrained, a case against the mayor of Antigua is being viewed by many as a major step toward tackling the kind of political malfeasance long taken for granted.

Mexico City Journal

On These Soccer Fields, a Brief Respite from the Killing Fields

This year’s Homeless World Cup, in Mexico City, drew young people whose lives have been affected by the particular pain of the country these days: drug violence.

Easing Path Out of Country, Cuba Is Dropping Exit Visas

The move by the government would allow many Cubans to depart for vacations, or forever, with only a passport and a visa from the country where they plan to go.

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U.S. Rethinks a Drug War After Deaths in Honduras

A series of deaths involving a United States antidrug program in Honduras show what can go wrong when war tactics are used against a problem that goes well beyond drugs.

Colombia Tries Again to End Drug-Fed War

For the first time in a decade, rebels and the government of Colombia came together with the goal of ending the longest-running war in the Western Hemisphere.

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Guatemala Shooting Raises Concerns About Military’s Expanded Role

Guatemala has forged closer military ties with the United States as it fights drug trafficking, but the fatal shooting of protesters and revelations of ties between former soldiers and drug gangs are worrying human rights groups.

Brazilian Corruption Case Raises Hopes for Judicial System

In a country where elite citizens are often shielded by the courts, a scandal where prominent politicians and bankers may be punished has caught the public’s imagination in Brazil.

Slow-Burning Challenge to Chile on Easter Island

Inspired by other parts of Polynesia that have obtained political autonomy or are seeking independence, leaders of the Rapanui people are mounting a rebellion against Chile.

Mexico Kills a Drug Kingpin, but the Body Gets Away

The death of Heriberto Lazcano, known as El Lazca and the main leader of the Zetas, was confirmed through fingerprint analysis, the navy said. But in an odd twist, the corpse was quickly stolen.

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Brazilian Corruption Case Raises Hopes for Judicial System

In a country where elite citizens are often shielded by the courts, a scandal where prominent politicians and bankers may be punished has caught the public’s imagination in Brazil.

Dunvegan Journal

Canada Puts Spotlight on War of 1812, With U.S. as Villain

The Canadian government’s enthusiasm for the conflict has puzzled and angered many in the country, where shows of patriotism are more subdued than they are south of the border.

The People’s Love for Chávez Continues

While President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela lies ill in Cuba, his many fans still flock to the streets at home in support.

Swearing In Postponed for Ill Chávez

The Times’s William Neuman reports on the quasi-presidential inauguration in Venezuela that President Hugo Chávez is unable to attend.

Relocation in the Andes

Perched in the Peruvian Andes is a new town built by a Chinese mining company to which 5,000 people will be relocated.

The Cost of Biofuels in Guatemala

The expansion of biofuels has contributed to spikes in food prices and a shortage of land for agriculture in poor corners of Asia, Africa and Latin America. Nowhere, perhaps, is that squeeze more obvious than in Guatemala.

Bolivia’s Unorthodox Approach

The Times’s William Neuman discusses how Bolivia’s experiment has led to a significant drop in coca plantings.

Series
Immigration Upended

Articles in this series explore the changing dynamics of migration in Mexico, Latin America and the United States.

Letters From International herald Tribune

A Symbol of Progress, or Villainy?

The battle between fans and foes of oil exploration is being acted out with the greatest intensity in the fight over the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, which would stretch from Canada to the Texas Gulf Coast.

Times Topics in the News

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