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Nations Denounce Venezuelan Election, Demanding Transparency
The United States and many Latin American countries said President Nicolás Maduro cannot claim victory without the full release of vote counts.
By Frances Robles
The United States and many Latin American countries said President Nicolás Maduro cannot claim victory without the full release of vote counts.
By Frances Robles
Venezuela’s presidential election was riddled with irregularities and was disputed by the opposition.
By The New York Times
Stark irregularities and suppression efforts could plunge the country back into instability and economic decline.
By Anatoly Kurmanaev
The result, which would give Nicolás Maduro six more years as president, was disputed by the opposition, and the United States said it had “serious concerns.”
By Anatoly Kurmanaev, Frances Robles and Julie Turkewitz
Grudges from the World Cup and rugby union have spilled over to the Games. But is this new sports feud even real?
By Rory Smith and James Wagner
Sunday’s vote could end a generation of control by Venezuela’s socialist party. It could also usher in a period of profound uncertainty.
By Anatoly Kurmanaev, Frances Robles and Julie Turkewitz
About a third of the buildings in the mountain resort town have burned, raising questions about preparedness and the role of climate change.
By Ian Austen
Here is what we know about the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee’s views on issues like migration and the wars in Ukraine and Gaza.
By Eve Sampson
The improbable arrest of Ismael Zambada García, who for decades had evaded the authorities, at a small airport outside El Paso appears to be a tale of subterfuge and betrayal.
By Alan Feuer, Natalie Kitroeff and Emiliano Rodríguez Mega
Most soccer fans long ago internalized the idea that truth is a slippery concept.
By Rory Smith
Blazes that generate such stormy conditions can be nearly impossible to put out and pose special dangers to firefighters.
By Austyn Gaffney
Fast-moving fires have destroyed a third of the buildings in the picturesque town of Jasper, Alberta, and its national park. But the mayor hopes to rebuild.
By Ian Austen
A Lincoln Center retrospective puts the spotlight on midcentury movies aimed at the masses that continue to influence filmmakers.
By Carlos Aguilar
The U.S. said it had arrested Ismael Zambada García, a co-founder, and Joaquín Guzmán López, a son of another co-founder. Both are accused of involvement in fentanyl trafficking.
By Andrés R. Martínez
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Ismael Zambada García and Joaquín Guzmán López helped run the Sinaloa Cartel, one of the most dominant criminal groups in Mexico.
By Alan Feuer and Natalie Kitroeff
Fires have burned hundreds of thousands of acres in the western United States and Canada, prompting evacuations and blanketing cities in smoke.
By The New York Times
As much as half of Jasper, Alberta, which lies inside one of the country’s most-visited national parks, has been destroyed, officials said.
By Ian Austen and Vjosa Isai
Thousands of tourists and local residents have been evacuated from the park in Alberta, Canada.
By The New York Times
Wildfire smoke from the Western United States and Canada is blowing across the Northeast, lowering air quality and endangering vulnerable populations.
By Austyn Gaffney
Active wildfires have forced communities to evacuate as the blaze left much of the region in ashes, including parts of Jasper National Park.
By AFP and Reuters
The authorities arrested a man believed to have started the fire north of Sacramento. A second fire in eastern Oregon, affecting more than 268,000 acres, is now the largest in the country.
By Heather Knight, Mike Baker and Amanda Holpuch
Scientists found an unexpected aging pattern in a mostly intact juvenile mammal skeleton from the paleontological period.
By Jack Tamisiea
Spurned by the country’s authoritarian president and even her own colleagues in the opposition, María Corina Machado has built the most significant voter mobilization since Hugo Chávez.
By Julie Turkewitz, Isayen Herrera and Adriana Loureiro Fernandez
Surveillance footage shows the moment of an explosion at a Jose Cuervo factory in Tequila, Mexico.
By Reuters
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The explosion on Tuesday in the city of Tequila, near Guadalajara, killed six workers and left two others wounded, the authorities said.
By Miriam Castillo and Mike Ives
Large blazes in the province have led to the evacuation of thousands of people.
By Qasim Nauman
View the location of the quake’s epicenter and shake area.
By Matthew Bloch, William B. Davis, Madison Dong, John Keefe and Bea Malsky
James Brett Clibbery and his wife, Sarah Justine Packwood, had left Nova Scotia on June 11, bound for the Azores. The authorities recovered remains believed to be theirs earlier this month.
By Derrick Bryson Taylor
China and India have been accused of exploiting the opaque nomination contests of Canadian political parties to meddle in elections.
By Norimitsu Onishi
In Tapachula, Mexico, migrants en route to the United States are being forced to reroute their journeys after President Biden’s executive order suspending and limiting asylum requests, and human smugglers are profiting.
By Alex Pena, Benjamin Alfaro and Amy Marino
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