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South Korea Tries to Curb Anti-China Protests Ahead of Xi Visit

The recent surge in demonstrations by far-right groups presents a challenge for the South Korean government, as it prepares to host both Xi Jinping, the leader of China, and President Trump.

© Yonhap/EPA, via Shutterstock

Tourists in Myeongdong, a tourist hot spot in Seoul.
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You Can Kill a Democracy Without a Dictator

What happens when the state doesn’t curb predatory private powers?

© Angela Ponce/Reuters

The interim president of Peru, José Jerí, in diagonal sash, with cabinet members. Three of his predecessors within the last five years have been impeached.
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German Company Launches Ad After Its Lift Is Used in Louvre Heist

The brazen daylight robbery of the Louvre on Sunday has turned into a marketing opportunity for Böcker, a German maker of cranes and elevators whose product was used in the heist.

© Erol Dogrudogan/Reuters

Alexander Böcker, the chief executive of the German crane manufacturer Böcker Machine Works, poses in front of a crane in Werne, Germany, on Thursday.
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With Power Move on Rare Earths, China Plays Both Victim and Bully

In weaponizing its dominance over the crucial minerals, Beijing is using tactics that it once denounced, potentially alienating nations it wants to court.

© Erin Schaff/The New York Times

China’s leader, Xi Jinping, is expected to meet with President Trump in South Korea next week. China has shown that it is ready to use its chokehold over rare earths against any country that stands in its way.
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India’s Most Valuable Export: Tens of Millions of Workers

India plans to send its vast work force abroad to countries with labor shortages, like Germany and Japan.

© Atul Loke for The New York Times

Students studying Japanese in New Delhi. Schools like Furusawa Academy and Learnet Institute of Skills offer language classes to students who hope to get jobs abroad.
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Trump Says He Will Not Seek Authorization for Cartel Strikes

The president said he would bypass Congress rather than ask for approval for his military campaign against drug traffickers, even as he said it would expand from sea to land.

© Doug Mills/The New York Times

President Trump in the state dining room of the White House on Thursday.
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Suspect in Palisades Fire Pleads Not Guilty to Setting Blaze

Prosecutors say Jonathan Rinderknecht deliberately set a fire in January that led to one of the most destructive blazes in California history. If convicted, he would face up to 45 years in prison.

© Mark Abramson for The New York Times

The Palisades fire in January grew to burn more than 23,000 acres, and it destroyed thousands of homes in Los Angeles. Twelve people died in the blaze.
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Protester Who Played ‘Star Wars’ Song Sues After Arrest in Washington

Sam O’Hara was playing the “Imperial March” theme from the movie while protesting the deployment of National Guard troops in the capital when he was handcuffed by city police officers.

© Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

National Guard troops patrolling around the Washington Monument in August.
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A Girls Basketball Team Gives Up Its Title After Spotting a Scoring Error

The team in Oklahoma City forfeited its district championship earlier this year after the coach verified that a scoring error had incorrectly crowned them as winners.

© Miranda Kitchen

The girls high school basketball team of the Academy of Classical Christian Studies, displaying their districts trophy, before they returned it. Their coach, Brendan King, stood on the far right.
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Tensions Mount as Agents, Including Gregory Bovino, Clash With Chicagoans

Mr. Bovino, a Border Patrol leader, appeared to use tear gas during a confrontation with residents on Thursday. Plaintiffs in a suit over federal tactics say that violated a court order.

© Ashlee Rezin/Chicago Sun-Times, via Associated Press

Gregory Bovino, at center, with federal agents during a confrontation with residents in the Little Village neighborhood of Chicago on Thursday.
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After Remark About Mamdani and Sept. 11, Cuomo Faces Democratic Rebukes

When a radio host suggested that Zohran Mamdani would celebrate another Sept. 11-style attack, Andrew Cuomo chuckled. Democrats denounced the exchange as Islamophobic.

© Adam Gray for The New York Times

As Mayor Eric Adams announced his endorsement of Andrew Cuomo for mayor on Thursday, he warned that Islamic extremism could harm New York as it has other countries.
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Trump Official Says U.S. Can House Migrants at All of Its Overseas Bases

A Justice Department lawyer made the claim in response to a challenge to the administration’s use of the base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, to hold detainees designated for deportation.

© Doug Mills/The New York Times

Migrants being escorted off a military plane at the U.S. base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, earlier this year. The Homeland Security Department has been using the base on and off in President Trump’s second term to house migrants awaiting deportation.
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Trump Calls Off Federal Operation in San Francisco

President Trump said he had halted a planned federal deployment of immigration agents to the city. It was not clear what that meant for the rest of the Bay Area.

© Gabriela Bhaskar/The New York Times

Members of the progressive organization Bay Resistance rallied on the steps of the San Francisco City Hall after President Trump called off a planned federal deployment in the city.
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NBA Gambling Scandal: What We Know

Two indictments detailed schemes involving sports betting and rigged poker games, prosecutors said. The link was current and former N.B.A. players and coaches.

© Steph Chambers/Getty Images

Chauncey Billups, the head coach of the Portland Trail Blazers, was among the former and current N.B.A. basketball players who were arrested on Thursday in connection with two illegal gambling investigations.
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U.S. Charges N.B.A. Figures in Gambling Schemes That Tainted Games

Terry Rozier, a Miami Heat guard, and Chauncey Billups, coach of the Portland Trail Blazers, were among those arrested. Two indictments spanned the worlds of professional sports, Mafia families and online betting.

© Angela Weiss/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said one mark lost $1.8 million at cards.
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Here Are the Defendants Named in the N.B.A. Gambling Indictments

More than 30 people were charged in what prosecutors said was a gambling scheme involving N.B.A. players and coaches.

© Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times

Federal and local law enforcement officials announced on Thursday dozens of arrests into what they described as illegal gambling schemes.
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