Baltazar Ushca, Who Kept Andean Ice Harvesting Alive, Dies at 80
He trekked up Ecuador’s tallest mountain twice a week for six decades to hack ice off a glacier with a pickax. He is believed to have been the last of his breed.
By Richard Sandomir
He trekked up Ecuador’s tallest mountain twice a week for six decades to hack ice off a glacier with a pickax. He is believed to have been the last of his breed.
By Richard Sandomir
The industry minister closed TikTok’s offices in Toronto and Vancouver over security concerns, but Canadians can still download and use the app.
By Ian Austen
The incoming president has promised the largest deportation effort in U.S. history. Now migrants are weighing a new Trump administration in deciding whether to trek to the United States.
By Julie Turkewitz, Emiliano Rodríguez Mega and Genevieve Glatsky
Foreign leaders have rushed to ingratiate themselves with Donald J. Trump in recent days, nervously recalling the clashes, insults and feuds of his first presidency.
By Mark Landler, Matina Stevis-Gridneff and Marc Santora
Disillusionment with the world that emerged from the Cold War has fueled a long-gathering revolt against the established order.
By Roger Cohen
Lessons from a London bridge.
By Amanda Taub
The innkeeper at this luxury hotel on Newfoundland’s Fogo Island hopes other places might draw inspiration from an economic model in which tourism is in service to the community, and not the other way around.
By Paige McClanahan
Argentina has been known as one of Latin America’s most socially progressive countries. But President Javier Milei’s austerity measures have cut programs aimed at helping women.
By Leila Miller, Natalie Alcoba and Anita Pouchard Serra
While Canadian lawmakers are publicly sanguine about the incoming U.S. administration, several experts say that Canada faces significant challenges.
By Ian Austen
Tall waves lashed at the shores of Havana as strong winds knocked out power across the island.
By The New York Times
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