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> The terrorist threat persists in Sri Lanka. Thursday, Apr 25, 2019 | Supported by Good morning, We

> The terrorist threat persists in Sri Lanka. [The New York Times]( [nytimes.com]( [The New York Times]( Thursday, Apr 25, 2019 | [View in browser]( Supported by Good morning, We start today with flashbacks to the dark days of war in Sri Lanka, Kim Jong-un’s visit to Russia and a fatal encounter with a giant cassowary. By Stephen Hiltner and Katie Van Syckle Victims of the Easter Sunday bombings were buried near St. Sebastian’s Church in Negombo on Wednesday. Adam Dean for The New York Times Terrorist threat persists in Sri Lanka The American ambassador warned of [“ongoing terrorist plots,”]( following the deadly bombings in Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday that killed at least 359 people. Officials said that the nine suicide bombers were all Sri Lankans, from mostly educated, middle-class backgrounds, and that other people involved remained at large. The authorities are investigating whether the Islamic State, which on Tuesday claimed responsibility for the blasts, had provided more than symbolic support. Muslims in some areas of the country are [facing a rising backlash](. Sri Lanka’s president asked two top security officials to resign, amid anger that the government had ignored multiple warnings that churches could be attacked. Go deeper: For [older residents]( of Colombo, Sri Lanka’s capital, the security measures after the bombings are a flashback to the country’s dark days of civil war, and for a younger generation, they are entirely disorienting. Listen: In the latest episode of “The Daily,” Jeffrey Gettleman, the South Asia bureau chief, discusses the [terrorist attack](. The North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un, arriving in Vladivostok, Russia, on Wednesday. Shamil Zhumatov/Reuters Kim Jong-un prepares to meet with Vladimir Putin North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, is [scheduled to meet with President Vladimir Putin of Russia on Thursday]( as part of an effort to counter American pressure to give up his nuclear weapons arsenal. After a daylong journey in an armored train from Pyongyang, Mr. Kim, who arrived in the Russian port city of Vladivostok wearing a black fedora and black overcoat, gave a rare, short interview to the Russian television network Rossiya 1. Notable quote: “I hope this visit will be successful and fruitful,” Mr. Kim said. “I hope that during talks with esteemed President Putin, I will have a detailed discussion of the settlement process on the Korean Peninsula and the development of our relations.” Background: By securing a meeting with Mr. Putin this week, Mr. Kim sought to reaffirm his image as a global player despite his failure to reach an agreement with President Trump during a meeting in Hanoi, Vietnam, in February. It also sent a signal to Washington that Mr. Kim was expanding his diplomatic chess game. Democrats are divided on impeachment House Democrats are [wrestling]( with duty and politics in the wake of the report from the special counsel Robert Mueller. Prominent left-leaning members are pressing for action. Mueller report: In [one overlooked part of the special counsel’s investigation]( President Trump asked Attorney General Jeff Sessions to have the Justice Department prosecute Hillary Clinton — a request that shows the president trying to use law enforcement to target a political rival, which is a step that no president is known to have taken since Richard Nixon. Coming soon: Mr. Trump’s advisers [have signaled]( that the administration will resist efforts to obtain his tax returns and to force his former aides to testify. The refusals could lead to constitutional clashes in court as Mr. Trump seeks to stave off further inquiries into his personal and political matters. A centralized surveillance room in Ecuador. Jonah M. Kessel/The New York Times Ecuador’s surveillance state: Made in China In Ecuador, police officers spend their days poring over computer screens, watching footage from 4,300 cameras across the country and scanning the streets for drug deals, muggings and murders. [A Times investigation]( found that this footage also goes to Ecuador’s feared domestic intelligence agency, which under a previous president was known for intimidating and attacking political opponents. Ecuador is one of 18 countries using Chinese-made monitoring systems that are increasingly sophisticated and cheap. After vastly expanding its domestic surveillance, Beijing is now sharing its know-how and equipment with other governments, which critics warn could lead to a future of tech-driven authoritarianism. Watch: Is Chinese-style surveillance becoming normalized? “China’s goal is political control; that’s what these systems were designed for,” our reporter says in [a video analysis](. “In effect, China is exporting more than cameras. They are exporting the way they use their cameras.” If you have 7 minutes, this is worth it The big, bad wolves of Germany Lena Mucha for The New York Times Germany’s wolves, extinct for the best part of a century, have returned, slipping into the country from Poland. The way that politicians talk about the fairy-tale baddies sounds strikingly similar to the debate about immigrants, thrusting the animal to [the center of the country’s broad culture wars]( between urban elites and the rural left-behinds, between those who welcome wolves — and immigrants — and those who fear them. PAID POST: A MESSAGE FROM CAMPAIGN MONITOR Email Marketing 101: Never Sacrifice Beauty for Simplicity A drag-and-drop email builder, a gallery of templates and turnkey designs, personalized customer journeys, and engagement segments. It's everything you need to create stunning, results-driven email campaigns in minutes. And with Campaign Monitor, you have access to it all, along with award-winning support around the clock. It's beautiful email marketing done simply. [Learn More]( Here’s what else is happening Facebook: The social network [expects to be fined up to $5 billion]( by the Federal Trade Commission for privacy violations, in what would amount to a record penalty for a technology company by the agency. Hong Kong: A court [has sentenced democracy activists to prison terms]( of up to 16 months for their roles in what came to be known as the vast Umbrella Movement democracy protests in 2014. Afghanistan: For the first time since the United Nations began keeping count a decade ago, [more civilians are being killed]( by Afghan government and American forces than by the Taliban and other insurgents, according to new report. New Zealand: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has said she will meet with French leaders next month in hopes of forging an agreement aimed at [eliminating violent extremist content online](. U.S.: Almost a year after the Trump administration imposed tariffs on European steel and aluminum, [the actual damage to European exports has been surprisingly mild]( according to a new study by the European Central Bank. Boeing: The aviation giant has announced that [revenue for the first quarter slumped 2 percent]( after its 737 Max jet was grounded worldwide last month over two deadly crashes. Germany: A woman who suffered brain damage in a car accident in 1991 [woke up in a clinic]( after 27 years of unconsciousness. Iran: The country’s foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, [proposed a prisoner exchange with the U.S.]( in what seemed like an overture in a worsening relationship. Konrad Wothe, via Alamy Snapshot: Above, a giant cassowary. One of the hulking, flightless birds — indigenous to Southeast Asia and Australia, with daggerlike claws on their feet — [killed its owner in Florida this month](. Now it’s up for auction. I think, therefore I speak: Scientists have developed a virtual prosthetic voice, a system that decodes brain signals and [translates them into mostly understandable speech]( with no need to move a muscle, even those in the mouth. What we’re watching: [This TED Talk]( by Mariah Gladstone, a member of the Blackfeet nation. “She’s also a cook with a degree from Columbia,” says our national food correspondent, Kim Severson, “who started a cooking show called Indigikitchen to help people remember what food was like before colonization: locavore paleo.” ADVERTISEMENT Now, a break from the news Julia Gartland for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne. Cook: The flavors of Korean barbecue inspire this [easy meatball recipe](. Watch: Lizzo, a flute-playing, twerking rapper and singer, built [a song that packs all her joy and charm into three danceable minutes](. Listen: In his “Ring” cycle, Wagner uses musical themes to create a world of gods, heroes, dwarves and giants. [Here’s how](. Eat: At Wayan in New York City’s NoLIta, Ochi and Cédric Vongerichten (the son of Jean-Georges) nudge Indonesian cuisine in new directions. [Read our review](. Smarter Living: Apologies are complicated. The urge to be polite undermines your confidence, critics say, and underscores your own insecurity. But, [context matters and saying sorry isn’t always a bad thing](. And know that there’s nothing to be sorry about when eating what you want. [Especially if it can change your mood](. And now for the Back Story on … He-he-helium This is the International Year of the Periodic Table, so [named by the U.N.]( honor what is considered the 150th anniversary of a crucial discovery by a Russian chemist, [Dmitri Mendeleev](. In 1869, he published the first recognizable periodic table, arranging the 63 elements then known by increasing atomic number — the total number of protons in an atomic nucleus — and in vertical stacks that corresponded to recurring patterns or properties. The Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev. Getty Images That concise organization revealed and predicted many elemental dynamics, and the table became the foundation for chemistry, nuclear physics and other sciences. The periodic system is considered one of modern science’s [most important achievements](. But it can also help to explain the chemistry behind a popular party trick: inhaling helium from a balloon to make your voice sound funny. Helium is lighter than oxygen, enabling the vibrations of your vocal cords to travel more quickly, which [shifts the resonant frequencies]( in your vocal tract to the higher end. That’s it for this briefing. See you next time. (And don’t worry: We won’t be bidding on the cassowary. It’s all yours.) — Stephen and Katie Thank you Chris Stanford helped compile today’s briefing. Mark Josephson, Eleanor Stanford and Kenneth R. Rosen provided the break from the news. Katie Van Syckle wrote today’s Back Story. You can reach the team at [briefing@nytimes.com](mailto:briefing+pm@nytimes.com?subject=Briefing%20Feedback&te=1&nl=morning-briefing&emc=edit_MBAE_p_20190424§ion=endNote;section=endNote). P.S. • We’re listening to “[The Daily]( Our latest episode is about the attacks in Sri Lanka. • Here’s our [mini crossword puzzle]( and a clue: Tapped, as a cigarette (5 letters). [You can find all our puzzles here](. • [“Caliphate,”]( a New York Times podcast series that followed our reporter Rukmini Callimachi’s work on the Islamic State into Iraq, won a 2018 Peabody Award. Were you sent this briefing by a friend? [Sign up here]( to get the Morning Briefing. [Today's Front Page]( [nytimes.com]( [Subscribe to The Times]( You received this message because you signed up for NYTimes.com's Morning Briefing newsletter. Want to change the time you receive your briefing? Click the time zone more relevant to you: [New York]( [London]( [Sydney]( [Unsubscribe]( | [Manage Subscriptions]( | [Privacy Policy]( | [Contact]( | [Advertise]( Copyright 2019 The New York Times Company 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018 ADVERTISEMENT

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