![]() A beach in Fass Boye, Senegal.Seyllou/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images |
| Dozens of migrants believed to have died off Cape Verde |
| More than 60 people are believed to have died after a boat carrying them from Senegal capsized in the Atlantic Ocean off Cape Verde, the authorities said this week. A Spanish fisherman found the boat floating about 150 miles north of Sal, one of the islands that make up Cape Verde, according to the country’s national police. |
| The boat capsized after leaving Fass Boye, a fishing village about 90 miles north of Dakar, the Senegalese capital, on July 10. Thirty-eight people survived the accident, including four children, a spokeswoman for the U.N. migration agency said, adding that seven people had been confirmed dead and 56 others were still missing and presumed dead. |
| Smugglers have been piling migrants into poorly constructed or overcrowded boats to make the crossing to Europe from their home countries in sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere. Many of the migrants take immense risks to escape war and poverty at home, while European countries seek to block the migrants before they reach their shores. |
| Context: At least 778 migrants died along the West African route to Spain during the first half of the year, according to the Spanish migrant advocacy group Walking Borders. |
![]() Preparing to perform a necropsy on a dolphin, in Odesa, Ukraine.Laura Boushnak for The New York Times |
| Ukraine’s case of ecocide against Russia |
| Droves of harbor porpoises are washing up dead on the shores of the Black Sea in southern Ukraine. Ukrainian officials say their plight speaks to the savage toll that Russia’s war is taking on marine life and on the environment more broadly — something they want to document for prosecution. |
| Currently, four specific acts — genocide, crimes against humanity, aggression and war crimes — are recognized as international crimes. Ukraine would like to add a fifth: ecocide. It is setting out to build its case against Russia, conducting autopsies of the dead porpoises while also investigating tens of thousands of registered Russian war crimes. |
| Quotable: “The environment is often called the silent victim of war,” said Maksym Popov, an adviser to the prosecutor general of Ukraine, who is specifically focused on environmental issues. Ukraine is trying to change that, since “the environment has no citizenship, no borders,” he said. |
| In other news from the war: |
| Fierce fighting has been raging in recent weeks around the Ukrainian city of Kupiansk, the only area along the front line where Moscow’s troops are making noticeable gains.A civilian cargo ship sailed safely through Ukrainian waters in the Black Sea yesterday, for the first time since July 16.Ukraine will not receive F-16 fighter jets from its allies this year as it had hoped, a spokesman for the Ukrainian Air Force said. |
| Israel plans to sell Germany a missile defense system for $3.5 billion, as Berlin aims to upgrade its military. |
![]() So far, 111 people have been confirmed dead from the wildfire.Go Nakamura for The New York Times |
| Maui officials defend their response to the fire |
| Emergency officials in Maui have defended their decision not to use outdoor alert sirens last week to warn locals of the fire as it headed toward the town of Lahaina, saying that the sirens are intended for tsunamis and would have sent residents to the hills and toward the flames. So far, 111 people have been confirmed dead, but only five have been publicly identified. |
| The devastation from the wildfire in Maui, the deadliest in the U.S. in more than a century, reveals the flaws in Hawaii’s efforts to adapt to climate change: The state has left huge areas of land covered in highly flammable invasive grasses; failed to adopt wildfire-resistant building standards; and shut down dams, reducing the island’s ability to store water. |
| In Canada: As a wildfire barreled toward Yellowknife, the capital of the Northwest Territories, the city’s entire population of about 20,000 people was ordered to evacuate by Friday afternoon. |
| THE LATEST NEWS Around the World |
![]() Atta Kenare/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images |
| Ahead of a key anniversary, the Iranian authorities have detained at least 12 rights activists, 11 of them women, over the past two days, according to rights groups and Iranian media.Amid clashes between influential militias, at least 55 people have been killed this week in fighting in the Libyan capital of Tripoli.Voters in Ecuador will decide on Sunday whether the country will ban oil operations in part of the Amazon.Four Australians and two members of their boat’s Indonesian crew were rescued after floating on surfboards for 36 hours at sea. A third crew member is still missing.At a U.N. Security Council meeting, officials gave harrowing accounts of rights abuses in North Korea. Russia denounced the discussion, and China questioned its validity. |
| Other Big Stories |
![]() Kenny Holston/The New York Times |
| The leaders of Japan and South Korea will join President Biden at Camp David today. The meeting is a diplomatic milestone for the countries, which have a bitter history.The authorities in Georgia are investigating online threats against the grand jurors who voted this week to indict Donald Trump and 18 others.Brian Houston, the founder of the megachurch Hillsong, was acquitted in Australia of a charge connected to failing to report his father’s sexual abuse of a child.Nothing like Ozempic and other drugs that treat obesity has existed before, and much about the drugs remains shrouded in mystery.The International Chess Federation introduced regulations that can bar some transgender women from partaking in women’s competitions for up to two years or more. |
| The Week in Culture |
| Britney Spears’s husband, Sam Asghari, filed for divorce after a little more than a year of marriage.Two people were sentenced to six months in prison in Iran for screening their film “Leila’s Brothers” at the Cannes Film Festival without state approval.About 50 percent of Americans watch videos with subtitles on most of the time, according to surveys. This is why (and it’s not because they’re hard of hearing).A teaser for a forthcoming biopic about Leonard Bernstein has ignited criticism about a prosthetic nose.Read our critic’s picks from the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. |
| A Morning Read |
![]() Ellie Smith for The New York Times |
| The British singer Lily Allen, now sober, has a new life in New York and a new string to her bow: acting. She is currently playing a lead role in a West End revival of “The Pillowman,” running at the Duke of York’s Theater through Sept. 2. |
| “I still get to play with the human experience,” she said of this career transition, “but I don’t have to put my heart on my sleeve as much.” |
| Lives Lived |
| The British broadcaster Michael Parkinson, known for his interviews with hundreds of the world’s most famous actors, musicians, athletes and politicians, has died at 88. |
| SPORTS NEWS FROM THE ATHLETIC |
| Mason Greenwood’s second chance: His Manchester United return. |
| “The Lionesses”: Building England’s women’s soccer team as a brand. |
| Projecting the U.S. Ryder Cup team: Which golfers will secure the final few spots? |
| From The Times: Vlatko Andonovski, the head coach of the U.S. women’s soccer team, has resigned, ending a relatively tumultuous tenure. |
| ARTS AND IDEAS |
![]() Grant Cornett for The New York Times |
| Forever chemicals |
| PFAS — chemicals found in countless consumer products — have been found to damage rodents’ immune systems. Yet they lurk in so much of what we eat, drink and use, and scientists are only beginning to understand how they’re impacting our health — and what to do about them. |
| “I’ve heard some people say, ‘Well, if everybody is exposed to PFAS, how come we aren’t all dead?’” said Jamie DeWitt, a professor of pharmacology and toxicology at the Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University. In fact, she said, “People actually are dying.” |
| RECOMMENDATIONS |
![]() Nico Schinco for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne. |
| Celebrate the weekend with frozen watermelon daiquiris. |







