Academy Awards, North Korea, millennial socialism
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[The New York Times](
[The New York Times](
Sunday, February 24, 2019
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Europe Edition
[Your Monday Briefing](
By PENN BULLOCK
Good morning.
Venezuelaâs opposition looks for its next move, âGreen Bookâ wins the Oscar for best picture and socialism rises among Britainâs millennials. Hereâs the latest:
[Protesters captured a suspected Venezuelan militia member who was supposedly trying to block aid from entering the country.]Protesters captured a suspected Venezuelan militia member who was supposedly trying to block aid from entering the country.
Meridith Kohut for The New York Times
Opposition falters in deadly Venezuelan aid standoff
At least four people died over the weekend in clashes as Venezuelaâs opposition movement tried to clear the way for humanitarian aid to enter the country.
Juan Guaidó, the opposition leader who declared himself the legitimate president last month, promised an âaid avalancheâ that never arrived. The Venezuela National Guard fired tear gas and live ammunition at protesters on the borders with Colombia and Brazil. Just one aid truck made it through.
Hoping to break President Nicolás Maduroâs blockade and hasten his downfall, the opposition instead found his image damaged by the violence but his hold on the military firm, [leaving them to grasp for a Plan B](.
What next? Mr. Maduro severed diplomatic ties with Colombia, ordering his countryâs envoys to leave within 24 hours.
Mr. Guaidó and the U.S. vice president, Mike Pence, are [scheduled to meet with the Lima Group of Latin American nations today]( to discuss new ways to pressure Mr. Maduro. The opposition has been talking more about the possibility of foreign military intervention.
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[Vendors in Hanoi, Vietnam, on Sunday, anticipating excitement over the U.S.-North Korea summit meeting this week.]Vendors in Hanoi, Vietnam, on Sunday, anticipating excitement over the U.S.-North Korea summit meeting this week.
Carl Court/Getty Images
U.S. and North Korea prepare for second summit meeting
The North Korean leader Kim Jong-un [is en route to Vietnam]( where he will meet with President Trump on Wednesday to discuss the Northâs nuclear weapons program.
Mr. Kim has chosen a vintage mode of travel: a train journey south through China, followed by a winding, mountainous road trip to Hanoi.
The U.S. perspective: The discussions in Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam, will be [a major test of Secretary of State Mike Pompeoâs leadership](. He must prevent Mr. Trump from giving away any leverage the U.S. has over North Korea, while remaining in the presidentâs good graces.
Goals: After the last summit meeting, Mr. Trump declared that âthere is no longer a nuclear threatâ from North Korea, an assessment U.S. intelligence agencies rejected. This time, the U.S. is trying to extract a timetable for denuclearization.
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[Alex McIntyre, center right, in October celebrating the series of walkouts and strike actions that he and his friends have organized at a pub chain.]Alex McIntyre, center right, in October celebrating the series of walkouts and strike actions that he and his friends have organized at a pub chain.
Mary Turner for The New York Times
The rise of millennial socialism in Britain
Britons who came of age in the wake of the global financial crisis of 2008 will, in many cases, be worse off than their parents. Raised under austerity, angry at losing the huge state benefits their elders enjoyed, burdened with student debt and seeing few prospects for advancement, [many millennials are turning to socialism]( fracturing the Labour Party along generational lines between renewed radicalism and an older centrism in retreat.
Alex McIntyre, 19, was raised on budget cuts. A university student with big debt and precarious employment, he has gone on strike, dived into trade unionism and joined the young left in Brighton, a university town of anticapitalist workshops, âred gymsâ and rent strikes whose spirit is embodied by Jeremy Corbyn, Labourâs socialist leader.
Go deeper: Here is [a guide to Britainâs austerity program]( introduced in 2010, and its profound effects, including [cuts to the police]( that many police leaders say have led to rising crime.
In other British news: Brexit is [stirring up old resentments in Ireland]( against its former colonial master. No country stands to lose more than Ireland from a messy departure, especially if unresolved questions over the status of the border with Northern Ireland tear at the Good Friday peace agreement of 1998.
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[âGreen Bookâ won the Oscar for best picture.]âGreen Bookâ won the Oscar for best picture.
Noel West for The New York Times
A surprise win for best picture at the Oscars
Hollywoodâs stars [gathered for the 91st Academy Awards]( in Los Angeles, this year without a host.
Rami Malek won best actor for âBohemian Rhapsody,â and Olivia Coleman took best actress for âThe Favourite.â (We have the [story behind her gown]( Alfonso Cuarón won best director for âRoma.â And defying [our predictions]( âGreen Bookâ won for best picture.
Hereâs a [complete list of winners]( and [our live chat and commentary](.
The red carpet: Our columnist [talked to stars and moviemakers]( and here are the [photos](. Despite the Oscars suffering diminished ratings and a general loss of cultural traction, our critic saw a red carpet that was [surprisingly diverse and welcoming](. And it was also [gender fluid](.
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Hereâs what else is happening
[A service at the Vatican on Sunday, the fourth and last day of the Roman Catholic Churchâs unprecedented meeting on child sexual abuse.]A service at the Vatican on Sunday, the fourth and last day of the Roman Catholic Churchâs unprecedented meeting on child sexual abuse.
Giuseppe Lami/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
The Vatican: Pope Francis, closing a landmark meeting on clerical sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Church, called for â[an all-out battle against the abuse of minors]( but didnât offer the concrete policies demanded by many of the faithful.
Israel: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, his future imperiled by prosecutors and political challengers alike, has enraged Jewish leaders in Israel and the U.S. by [making a pact with a racist anti-Arab party]( whose ideology was likened by one influential rabbi to Nazism.
Trade war: President Trump [delayed his own March 1 deadline]( to increase tariffs on Chinese goods, citing âsubstantial progressâ in talks, though few details have been released.
India-Pakistan: Seven decades after the British divided India to create Pakistan, [the first museum devoted to the chaos]( that followed â mass migration, murders, riots and rapes â opened in Amritsar, a city near the border. Curating its exhibits was fraught with risks.
Afghanistan: A U.N. report shows that 2018 was the [single deadliest year for civilians]( in the war-torn country, with children dying in record numbers, and 24 percent of casualties attributed to Afghan and American forces. Meanwhile, [the Talibanâs deputy leader arrived in Qatar]( for what could be the highest-level negotiations yet with American diplomats on ending the Afghan war.
Sex trafficking: A vast investigation in Florida and New York uncovered [a multimillion-dollar prostitution operation]( in which women who the police believe were brought from China on false promises of jobs were trapped in brothels sometimes visited by the rich and famous.
Switzerland: A former Swiss soldier was [found guilty of violating Swiss neutrality]( by fighting against jihadist forces in Syria. Hanna Johannes Cosar was fined for commanding a private army whose aim was to defend Syriacs, one of the worldâs oldest Christian communities, against Islamic State forces.
R. Kelly: The R&B singer was charged with 10 counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse involving four women, [three of whom had been minors at the time](. He resolved earlier such cases with nondisclosure agreements, but his actions have come under fresh scrutiny after BuzzFeed and a recent documentary reported on his apparent sex cult.
Charles Dickens: The famed novelist and journalist not only sought to banish his wife of two decades, Catherine, after their separation in 1858 but also tried to have her imprisoned in an asylum, according to [newly revealed letters](.
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Smarter Living
Tips for a more fulfilling life.
David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
Recipe of the day: This [creamy turmeric pasta]( uses mostly pantry staples.
Digital wellness: Are you addicted to your smartphone? Our tech columnist decided to kick his habit. [Hereâs how he did it.](
Remodeling? Software, like free floor-plan apps and augmented-reality tools, [could help you sketch out your ideas](.
Back Story
One edition of our [Friday Morning Briefing]( included a photograph of the actor Sidney Poitier standing in front of the Apollo Theater and said that he was in Midtown Manhattan.
Sharp-eyed readers asked whether we didnât mean Harlem, where [the storied theater on 125th Street]( has been a cultural institution for the African-American community in New York City and beyond for 85 years.
[Left: Sidney Poitier and the Apollo Theater in Midtown Manhattan. Right: The Apollo Theater on 125th Street in Harlem.]Left: Sidney Poitier and the Apollo Theater in Midtown Manhattan. Right: The Apollo Theater on 125th Street in Harlem.
Sam Falk/The New York Times; Tyrone Dukes for The New York Times
But there was also an Apollo Theater on 42nd Street. [The Times reviewed its opening production]( in 1920, a musical comedy called âJimmie.â
The Apollo in the picture with Mr. Poitier fell into disrepair but [reopened in 1979 as the New Apollo]( to differentiate it from the one uptown. It was demolished in 1996, and [the Lyric Theater]( currently home to âHarry Potter and the Cursed Child,â stands in its place.
Thereâs also [an Apollo Theater in London](. Why such a popular name? Apollo was the Greek god of music and poetry.
Chris Stanford, on the briefings team, wrote todayâs Back Story.
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