Erdogan Claims Vast New Powers After Narrow Victory in Turkish Referendum
The main opposition demanded a recount and warned that the vote might cement authoritarian rule within one of the critical power brokers of the Middle East.
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The main opposition demanded a recount and warned that the vote might cement authoritarian rule within one of the critical power brokers of the Middle East.
By PATRICK KINGSLEY
Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s advisers depict him as a kind of French Bernie Sanders, but with no strong party establishment to block his way.
By ADAM NOSSITER
The women of Bihar State, one of India’s poorest, have enthusiastically welcomed a strict prohibition law, and often take matters into their own hands.
By GEETA ANAND
The Walled Off Hotel, opened by the British artist Banksy across an alley from the West Bank wall that separates Israelis from Palestinians, bears witness and whimsy.
By IAN FISHER
Our reporter Patrick Kingsley describes the source of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's popularity in this last installment of our State of Emergency series.
By PATRICK KINGSLEY
What happens to a country battling ISIS and an insurgency? In Turkey, it means thousands of traumatized Kurdish families, and young people afraid to go out at night.
By PATRICK KINGSLEY
Since 2015, migration between Turkey and Greece has fallen sharply, and a smuggler says he has left the business. Homeless in Turkey, a Syrian refugee boy must continue to roam for work.
By PATRICK KINGSLEY
Meet a neighborhood leader who became a hero and the family of an imprisoned journalist in the second part of our series about besieged Turkey.
By PATRICK KINGSLEY
Our correspondent Patrick Kingsley shares the story of a curious gift he received from Turkish diplomats that sets the tone for this tumultuous moment in the country’s civic life.
By PATRICK KINGSLEY
Watching Russian television and hearing journalists’ war stories, I wondered if I had arrived through an alt-right wormhole.
By JIM RUTENBERG
Throughout the countryside, once graceful buildings are being targeted for their antique architectural elements. A mayor is fighting to save them.
By ALISSA J. RUBIN
Demographers in Europe say lower birthrates in the south will mean weaker growth and productivity, producing fiscal problems.
By LIZ ALDERMAN
The inquiry, which targets many prominent Americans, was announced a day before a national referendum to expand the powers of Turkey’s president.
By PATRICK KINGSLEY
German officials believe that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose power could be expanded by a vote on Sunday, is using a decades-old arrangement between the countries to spy on opponents.
By ALISON SMALE
As the standoff grows under a new American president, a mix of national ambitions, personal ego and deadly weapons is creating opportunities for miscalculation.
By DAVID E. SANGER and WILLIAM J. BROAD
President Trump’s national security adviser urged Pakistan to crack down on militants as the administration reviews its role in Afghanistan and the Taliban resurgence there.
By MUJIB MASHAL
At a recent military parade, North Korea displayed several missiles at a time of heightened tensions with the United States. Here's a closer look at what some of them are designed to do.
By MARK SCHEFFLER and DAPHNE RUSTOW
The prime minister stopped construction on a $10 billion plant, aiming to prevent a spill like the one last year at another steel plant that caused an environmental disaster.
By REUTERS
Video showing the man apparently being used as a human shield heightened tensions with Kashmir’s separatist movement, which has repeatedly called for election boycotts.
By SAMEER YASIR and ELLEN BARRY
Aya Hijazi, who founded a nonprofit to care for street children in Cairo, was accused of human trafficking in a case rights groups called “a travesty.”
By DECLAN WALSH
The group, which calls itself the Shadow Brokers, said the agency had broken into the international bank messaging system called Swift.
By NICOLE PERLROTH
The bomb attack interrupted a deal between the government and the rebels to evacuate people from four villages that have suffered prolonged sieges.
By BEN HUBBARD and HWAIDA SAAD
Attacks on two churches that killed 45 people remind Copts of a 2011 bombing that has never been solved.
By DECLAN WALSH
A mountain of evidence has been compiled against Syrian officials for war crimes from torture to summary killings. But there is no clear path to justice.
By ANNE BARNARD, BEN HUBBARD and IAN FISHER
“Come From Away” has brought together an actress and the real-life pilot who broke barriers and whose flight was diverted to Newfoundland on 9/11.
By MICHAEL PAULSON
Remembering a World War I battle fought by Canadian troops in France, which some believe helped bring Canada together as a nation.
By IAN AUSTEN
The bill, which is expected to pass, would make Canada the second nation to completely legalize marijuana as a consumer product.
By IAN AUSTEN
A storage freezer in the Canadian Ice Core Archive failed this month, resulting in the loss of millennia-old samples gathered from around the Canadian Arctic.
By TATIANA SCHLOSSBERG
Readers find their most interesting and memorable dining experiences not just in pricey special-occasion restaurants but also in unassuming bistros and coffee shops.
By IAN AUSTEN
The former governor of Veracruz state, accused of diverting millions of dollars meant for social programs, was found in Guatemala after disappearing in October.
By KIRK SEMPLE
The number of Mexicans kicked out of the United States actually fell at the start of President Trump’s term, but politicians and others in Mexico have seized on the issue.
By ELISABETH MALKIN
As a microbiologist, he found that the drug Lamivudine was effective against H.I.V., and he later became a global champion of AIDS treatment and awareness.
By RICHARD SANDOMIR
The mission, often a source of embarrassment to the world body, is arguably best known for introducing a deadly strain of cholera to the country.
By SOMINI SENGUPTA
The Globo network’s suspension of José Mayer was applauded by an increasingly active movement that has long denounced deep-seated sexism in Brazil.
By DOM PHILLIPS
Two people were held in connection with the murders last month of officials sent to investigate a rebellion, although one suspect subsequently escaped.
By STEVE WEMBI and KIMIKO de FREYTAS-TAMURA
Despite government promises, more than 200 girls kidnapped from their school in Chibok, Nigeria, are still prisoners of a marauding, murderous terror group.
By IBRAHIM SAWAB and DIONNE SEARCEY
More than 100 were injured in the blaze, and others were still missing, after the government had warned religious leaders about potential fire hazards.
By JAIME YAYA BARRY
The country’s top prosecutor sought this week to use a colonial-era law to commit a prominent critic of President Yoweri Museveni after a series of Facebook posts.
By KIMIKO de FREYTAS-TAMURA
On President Jacob Zuma’s birthday, tens of thousands of people protested outside his office in Pretoria, South Africa, calling on him to quit.
By ALEXIA WEBSTER, VEDA SHASTRI and KAITLYN MULLIN
The South Pacific nation has recently been running a municipal program to lure more coders and engineers from the United States and around the world.
By PUI-WING TAM
A program to offer developers jobs was flooded with more than 48,000 applications as many in the field look for distance from the political polarization in the United States and Europe.
By JACQUELINE WILLIAMS and DAVID STREITFELD
A nation working to be a tech hub is finding that part of what makes it attractive to potential hires is its distance from some of the world’s frustrations.
In this week’s newsletter, a Sydney professor returns from confinement in China, Australia struggles with race, and we ask readers: How should we cover food in Oz?
By DAMIEN CAVE
The Australian city may not seem to rank as a top food destinations, but its marketing offensive was first-rate.
By BESHA RODELL
The success of nations involves a mysterious alchemy that leaves space for civilized disagreement.
By ROGER COHEN
Don’t listen to the critics. Turks are voting for democratic reforms.
By GULNUR AYBET
With the surrender of stockpiles of arms comes a chance for lasting peace.
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
L’entreprise de sape menée par le Kremlin en France est un travail de longue date.
By CÉCILE VAISSIÉ
Computer breaches, propaganda, disinformation, campaign financing — Putin’s efforts to influence French politics are a vast, long-running project.
By CÉCILE VAISSIÉ