Brexit, 52 Places, a stranded plane
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[The New York Times](
[The New York Times](
Thursday, January 10, 2019
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Europe Edition
[Your Thursday Briefing](
By PENN BULLOCK
Good morning.
U.S. shutdown talks collapse, Britainâs Parliament takes up Brexit, and Belgium debates a law on animal slaughter. Hereâs the latest:
[President Trump and Vice President Mike Pence on Capitol Hill on Wednesday.]President Trump and Vice President Mike Pence on Capitol Hill on Wednesday.
Erin Schaff for The New York Times
On the 19th day, the president pounded a table
President Trumpâs frustration boiled over as a partial government shutdown in the U.S. lurched into its 19th day. He [stormed out of a White House meeting]( with congressional leaders after Speaker Nancy Pelosi again said she would not fund a wall on the southern border even if he agreed to reopen the government.
Democrats accused the president of throwing a âtemper tantrum,â while Mr. Trump dismissed the meeting on Twitter as âa total waste of time.â Democrats have been [emphasizing the costs of the shutdown]( â farmers missing crop payments, national parks trashed â rather than delving into the question of a barrier.
Possible end game: Mr. Trump again raised the option of [declaring a national emergency]( and ordering the wall constructed himself, which could be a face-saving way out but [could also be a violation of constitutional norms](.
Go deeper: A border is rarely just a border. Here are some of the most contentious [frontiers around the world](.
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[Anti-Brexit demonstrators outside Parliament in London on Tuesday.]Anti-Brexit demonstrators outside Parliament in London on Tuesday.
Matt Dunham/Associated Press
Brexit: a game of brinkmanship
The British Parliament [resumed debate on Prime Minister Theresa Mayâs Brexit plan]( â which is virtually certain to be rejected in a crucial vote next week.
Developments: Parliament has already dealt Mrs. May two setbacks in as many days. First, lawmakers limited her ability to block the exits and run down the clock, requiring her to return within days of a lost vote with some new plan. (Lawmakers could also then submit their own alternatives.) And they passed a measure making it difficult for Britain to leave the E.U. without a deal.
What now? Mrs. May might be gambling that a so-called no-deal exit, looming ever larger, will force a divided Parliament to support her plan in the nick of time. But that strategy only works through heightened national tension and economic uncertainty â and those who believe a no-deal exit can be managed might be immune to pressure. As for persuading the E.U. to renegotiate terms, analysts say that Mrs. Mayâs hopes of that are misplaced.
Alternative paths: The prospect of a second public referendum on Brexit is growing, and there is also some talk of delaying the March 29 departure date.
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[A rescued migrant from Nigeria on a rescue ship in the Mediterranean Sea near Malta.]A rescued migrant from Nigeria on a rescue ship in the Mediterranean Sea near Malta.
Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times
Rescued migrants finally reach shore
A group of 49 migrants who had been stranded at sea after being refused entry to European ports was [allowed to dock in Malta](. Our reporter went [aboard the rescue ships]( and saw the human impact of Europeâs hard-line policy shift on migration, which has sharply fallen at sea.
Details: Most of the asylum seekers had been rescued from a faulty rubber dinghy off Libya on Dec. 22 by the Sea-Watch 3, a ship owned by the private German rescue organization Sea Watch. But that ship and another were then forced to wander the waves, in often-challenging weather, as they were punted between ports.
Future: Nine E.U. member states will receive the migrants, according to Prime Minister Joseph Muscat of Malta, which, like Italy, has been blocking private rescue ships.
Brazil: The new far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, [withdrew the country]( from a U.N. migration accord signed last month.
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[A sheep on its way to slaughter during a Muslim holiday in Brussels.]A sheep on its way to slaughter during a Muslim holiday in Brussels.
Eric Lalman/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
Belgium debates a law on slaughtering animals
A fight over religion, politics and animal pain has broken out in Belgium in response to a new requirement that [animals be stunned before they are killed]( which Muslim and Jewish leaders say is prohibited in their faiths.
Debate: Muslim and Jewish religious leaders argue that stunning can cause great suffering, and that their ritual slaughter â carried out with a sharp blade to the neck â is intended to minimize pain. Belgium is now considering whether to create a religious exemption like the one the U.S. has.
History: In 1933, the Nazis prohibited slaughter without stunning, citing animal cruelty, and because many on the right have joined animal rights activists in supporting the ban, some people see dangerous anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim overtones.
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Hereâs what else is happening
U.S.-China trade war: Three days of talks between midlevel officials [ended on a positive note in Beijing]( helping clear the way for potential higher-level talks aimed at averting a major escalation of the trade war on March 2, the Trump administrationâs deadline for raising tariffs on a slate of imports from China.
Democratic Republic of Congo: Hopes for the countryâs first undisputed transfer of power foundered when Congolese election officials announced that Felix Tshisekedi, a candidate favored by the departing president, had won the presidential election, defying [independent assessments that he overwhelmingly lost](.
[Rod Rosenstein has been a central figure in the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.]Rod Rosenstein has been a central figure in the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.
Tom Brenner/The New York Times
Rod Rosenstein: The U.S. deputy attorney general, who has been overseeing the special counselâs Russia investigation, is expected to step down after President Trumpâs choice for attorney general is confirmed, [according to administration officials](.
China: New research shows how an institute funded by Coca-Cola and other multinational beverage and snack companies [has influenced Chinese health policy](.
Saudi Arabia: The young Saudi woman who barricaded herself in a Bangkok airport hotel room to avoid deportation was [granted refugee status]( by the U.N., Australian officials said, clearing the way for an asylum request.
Women in power: There are now more women over the age of 50 in the U.S. than at any other point in history â and theyâre becoming more visible and powerful, [our gender editor writes](.
Norwegian Air: The low-cost airline was forced to land a flight in Iran because of a technical error. A month later, the [American-made jet is still stuck]( there because U.S. sanctions have made it difficult to get spare parts.
Fiat Chrysler: The automaker is said to have [agreed to pay $650 million]( to settle U.S. lawsuits over rigging emissions tests, without admitting guilt.
52 Places: Hampi in India, Eilat in Israel and the Setouchi Islands of Japan are among the destinations on The Timesâs list of [places to visit this year](. We also announced the [lucky traveler]( who gets to see them all.
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Smarter Living
Tips for a more fulfilling life.
Julia Gartland for The New York Times
Recipe of the day: Salty-sweet, crisp-soft [kitchen sink cookies]( are a great way to use up extra candy, baking chocolate and even pretzels and chips.
â5Gâ is the next leap in wireless communication, and itâs already making its way into smartphones and other devices. Hereâs [why itâs different, and what it means to you](.
Whether you travel for business or pleasure, you can get some mileage from [these resolutions for better travel in 2019](.
Back Story
Tintin, the natty young reporter and adventurer created by the Belgian cartoonist [Georges Remi]( (better known as Hergé), turns 90 today.
The intrepid lad made his official debut on Jan. 10, 1929, in a young readersâ supplement of the Belgian newspaper Le Vingtième Siècle.
[One of the renowned Tintin comic books published in 1930.]One of the renowned Tintin comic books published in 1930.
Julien Warnand/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
Like other comic book characters, Tintin sprang from the page into other forms: Belgian theater, cartoons and movies, including â[The Adventures of Tintin]( the 2011 animated film directed by Steven Spielberg.
(A [Times article]( about the movie suggested pronouncing Tintin the French way: âTanh-tanh,â and not as a rhyme of âwin win.â)
Neither Tintin nor his creator was without controversy. One adventure was deemed anti-Communist, while another was viewed as anti-American.
The cartoonist took it all in stride: âFor years, the left has said Iâm right, and the right has said Iâm left. I donât like to contradict either.â
George Gene Gustines, an editor who has covered the comics business since 2002, wrote todayâs Back Story.
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