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Aujourd’hui — 30 juin 2024NYT

Black-Clad Ultras Are a Fixture at Euro 2024

27 juin 2024 à 11:25
Hard-core fan groups, embracing a strong nationalistic streak, have provoked pushback from soccer’s authorities at the European Championship.

© Olivier Matthys/EPA, via Shutterstock

Members of the Carpathian Brigade, a Hungarian ultras group, at a match between Hungary and Switzerland during Euro 2024 this month. The group often echoes the rhetoric of their country’s prime minister, Viktor Orban.
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What to Watch For in France’s High-Stakes Elections

30 juin 2024 à 06:01
French voters are heading to the polls after President Emmanuel Macron called for unexpected parliamentary elections that could put the country on a new course.

© Sarah Meyssonnier/Reuters

Voters in France’s parliamentary elections will determine the future of President Emmanuel Macron’s second term, and potentially force him to share power with political opponents.
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Mulling Reparations, California Sets Aside $12 Million as a Start

Par : Alan Blinder
30 juin 2024 à 02:06
Direct cash payments are not imminent, but under the state’s new budget, the money could go toward other reparations-related proposals pending in the Legislature.

© Pool photo by Rich Pedroncelli

California lawmakers set aside $12 million in the state’s new budget toward reparations-related proposals.
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13-Year-Old Boy Shot and Killed by Police After Chase

Par : Hurubie Meko
30 juin 2024 à 00:53
Officers in Utica, N.Y., believed the boy had brandished a handgun. The police chief said on Saturday that it was a pellet gun.

© Daniel Deloach/Utica Observer-Dispatch, via USA Today Network/Reuters

Chief Mark Williams and Mayor Michael P. Galime of Utica, N.Y., addressed reporters and a large crowd of angry residents on Saturday after a local boy was shot and killed by a police officer.
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Oklahoma Law Criminalizing Immigrants Without Legal Status Is Blocked

Par : Kate Selig
29 juin 2024 à 22:45
The ruling by a federal judge is the latest setback for G.O.P.-controlled states that have passed their own laws on immigration.

© Sean Murphy/Associated Press

A group outside the Oklahoma Capitol in April protested the measure that would impose criminal penalties to immigrants in the state illegally.
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Years Later, Philippines Reckons With Duterte’s Brutal Drug War

29 juin 2024 à 16:25
A president’s vow to fight drugs unleashed violence and fostered a culture of impunity. But the crimes are finally getting a look, including from the International Criminal Court.

© Ezra Acayan for The New York Times

Mary Ann Domingo visiting the tombs of her partner and her son in Caloocan, Philippines. They were fatally shot by the police in 2016, among the thousands to die in extrajudicial killings under murky circumstances during the years that Rodrigo Duterte was president.
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Latin America Has a Rich Tradition of Religious Pendants

28 juin 2024 à 11:02
Collectors say that relicarios, made from whatever the artisan had at hand, are often overlooked in the study of colonial-era art.

© Adria Malcolm for The New York Times

A relicario from 19th century Mexico. The art pieces, which consist of depictions of religious figures set in metal bezels under glass, first rose to popularity in medieval Europe.
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At Trump’s Post-Debate Rally, Unease Among the Faithful

29 juin 2024 à 22:48
In Virginia, Donald Trump and his supporters reveled in the moment, and mused about a shadowy Democratic plan to shift candidates.

© Tom Brenner for The New York Times

Gov. Glenn Youngkin of Virginia, who at times has held Donald J. Trump at arm’s length, gave a full-throated endorsement to the former president at a rally on Friday.
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With Macron and Biden Vulnerable, So Is Europe

Par : Roger Cohen
29 juin 2024 à 14:51
The U.S. presidential debate and Sunday’s snap election in France have emboldened nationalist forces that could challenge NATO and undo the defense of Ukraine.

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

President Biden with President Emmanuel Macron of France at the Élysée Palace in Paris this month.
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Hier — 29 juin 2024NYT

Facial Recognition Led to Wrongful Arrests. So Detroit Is Making Changes.

Par : Kashmir Hill
29 juin 2024 à 09:00
The Detroit Police Department arrested three people after bad facial recognition matches, a national record. But it’s adopting new policies that even the A.C.L.U. endorses.

© Sylvia Jarrus for The New York Times

Robert Williams sued the city of Detroit after being wrongly identified by facial recognition technology and arrested for a crime he didn’t commit. His suit has led the police to change their practices.
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A Wish From All Sides to Move On Gives Freedom to Julian Assange

29 juin 2024 à 15:03
The WikiLeaks founder spent years in captivity in London before talks accelerated this spring, allowing him to go home to Australia as a felon, but a free man.

© Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters

Julian Assange pleaded guilty and told a court he believed he had been “working as a journalist” when he obtained documents from Chelsea Manning, while adding that he now accepted that it had been “a violation” of U.S. law.
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7 Deaths, 5 Hours: Drug Overdoses Surge in Western New York

29 juin 2024 à 09:00
Rising cocaine use and a drug supply tainted by fentanyl have become a deadly combination in Erie County, which includes Buffalo.

© Brendan Bannon for The New York Times

Christopher Harzynski, driven by the deaths of friends, leaves opioid antidotes around the streets for those who need them.
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