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[The New York Times](
[The New York Times](
Tuesday, December 26, 2017
[NYTimes.com »](
Europe Edition
[Your Tuesday Briefing](
By PATRICK BOEHLER
Good morning.
Hereâs what you need to know:
Evgeny Feldman/Navalny's campaign, via Associated Press
⢠Russian election officials [barred the opposition leader Aleksei Navalny]( above center, from running in the presidential election scheduled for March. The decision was no surprise.
âWe wonât have an election because Vladimir Putin is horribly afraid,â Mr. Navalny said, calling for a boycott and street protests. Mr. Putin is widely expected to win.
_____
Wael Hamzeh/European Pressphoto Agency
⢠Our correspondents have the exclusive [back story on the bizarre November resignation of Saad Hariri]( Lebanonâs prime minister.
The episode sheds light on the brash style of Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi crown prince. His gamble backfired: It failed to weaken Hezbollah, backed by Iran, and Mr. Hariri remains in office with new popularity.
Meanwhile in Syria, the last phase of the U.S. campaign against the Islamic State is relying heavily on warplanes that are [focused on an area half the size of Manhattan](.
_____
Adem Altan/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
⢠President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey [has been conducting a vigorous purge]( within his governing party, pledging a âserious renewal.â
Most of those who were pushed out had failed to deliver a yes vote during the April referendum that approved constitutional changes that would give Mr. Erdogan expanded powers if he is re-elected.
(Political rivals suggest that Mr. Erdogan may even be preparing to call early elections in July, if it appears that his popularity is slipping.)
_____
Osservatore Romano, via Reuters
⢠Pope Francis used his annual Christmas Day address to warn that the âwinds of warâ and an âoutdated model of developmentâ were [taking a toll on humanity and the environment](.
Felipe VI of Spain in his Christmas message [sought to calm]( the Catalan crisis, which, our correspondent writes, [is there to stay](.
And 60 years after her first televised Christmas message, [Queen Elizabeth II of Britain offered solace]( to victims of terrorist attacks this year. (Her speech included only a gentle reference to Prince Harryâs engagement to Meghan Markle, the American actress.)
_____
Ed O'Loughlin/The New York Times
⢠This past week, Ireland was stirred by the [story of two men in Dublin]( above, who married for tax reasons just before Christmas.
The two close friends may not be lovers, but they make a nice couple.
âIf two people can live together and help each other, that is the most important thing in life,â said Matt Murphy, left.
Business
Susan Wright for The New York Times
⢠Workers at Melegatti, the Italian maker of pandoro cakes, have staved off layoffs [by urging Italians to eat more of the seasonal âgolden bread.â](
⢠Germany has spent $200 billion over the past two decades to promote cleaner sources of electricity. That investment is now having an unexpected impact: [Consumers get paid]( when electricity prices occasionally dip below zero.
⢠Rupert Murdoch and President Trump have traveled in the same circles since the 1970s, but they became close only recently. [Hereâs a look at this new friendship]( of convenience.
⢠Vice Media built itself from a fringe magazine into a nearly $6 billion global company. But employees describe [a workplace that was degrading for women](.
⢠From themed mugs to nightclub tours: Britainâs monarchy can be big money, and tour groups and other companies [are already preparing to capitalize on next yearâs royal events](.
⢠Hereâs a snapshot of [global markets](.
In the News
Gordon Welters for The New York Times
⢠Germanyâs most notorious far-right politician recently declared Berlinâs Holocaust Memorial a âMonument of Shame.â So artists built one to scale right outside his home. [[The New York Times](
⢠In Warsaw, our new bureau chief retraces the roots of the Polish governmentâs defiance of the European Union. [[The New York Times](
⢠In Ukraine, grenades from its front lines are becoming an increasingly common feature in crimes, including domestic violence. [[The New York Times](
⢠Travelers to Ireland have been carrying white tags on their Christmas journeys to remind people of the women who have to leave the country to get an abortion. [[The New York Times](
⢠The Trump administration praised a cut in the United Nationsâ budget and linked its continuing financial support to compliance with U.S. demands. [[The New York Times](
⢠Human rights lawyers in Peru have criticized the pardoning of Alberto Fujimori, the former president who has been imprisoned for rights abuses. [[The New York Times](
⢠Guatemala is the first country to follow President Trump in deciding to move its embassy in Israel to Jerusalem. [[The New York Times](
⢠Today, Liberians will pick a new president in a delayed runoff. Their choices: The former soccer star George Weah and Vice President Joseph Boakai. [[Bloomberg](
Smarter Living
Tips, both new and old, for a more fulfilling life.
Paul Rogers
⢠Here are some tips to [winterize your dog](.
⢠Learn how to to be happier, safer, healthier [and smarter in 2018](.
⢠Celebrate Kwanzaa, the annual celebration of African-American heritage that begins today, [with these recipes](.
Noteworthy
[Kaitlyn Mullin/The New York Times. Technology by Samsung.]Kaitlyn Mullin/The New York Times
⢠Rimur are Icelandic epic ballad poems. Watch one of Icelandâs most prominent rimur singers [perform in our latest 360 video](.
⢠In memoriam: Arseny Roginsky, the Russian human rights leader who helped identify more than three million victims of Soviet persecution, [died at 71]( and Don Hogan Charles, the first black photographer to be hired by The New York Times, [died at 79](.
⢠At the Vatican Observatory, Brother Guy Consolmagnoâs work is to convince the world that [faith and science can coexist and complement each other](.
⢠The soccer professionals of FC Barcelona [are much in demand]( throughout the world of soccer, from England to Silicon Valley.
⢠From an all-gray apartment in Copenhagen to a neo-Classical home in Milan, T Magazine features one-of-a-kind homes this year. Here are [our editorsâ favorites](.
Back Story
Evening Standard/Getty Images
Itâs a mystery that endures in Australia.
Fifty years ago this month, Prime Minister Harold Holt went swimming at a beach near Melbourne. Mr. Holt, 59, was undeterred by high surf and a minor shoulder injury. He told friends, âI know this beach like the back of my hand.â
A friend later said the water around Mr. Holt âappeared to boilâ and conditions seemed to âswamp on him.â
He was never seen again, and his body was never recovered.
A police inquiry the next year determined that it was nothing more than an accident. An inquest in 2005 officially [ruled Mr. Holtâs death an accidental drowning](.
But his disappearance spurred a wealth of conspiracy theories, including that the prime minister had committed suicide or [was assassinated by the C.I.A](. One even claimed that Mr. Holt was a lifelong [spy]( for China and had faked his death by boarding a Chinese submarine.
Those close to him say the sensational manner of his disappearance has overshadowed his legacy. Mr. Holt strengthened Australiaâs alliance with the U.S., among others, and he is credited with being the countryâs â[first 20th-century prime minister](
His legacy also lives on in another, if slightly macabre, way: at [the Harold Holt Memorial Swimming Center]( in Melbourne.
Isabella Kwai contributed reporting.
_____
This briefing was prepared for the European morning and is updated online. [Browse past briefings here](.
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