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How Washington delivered the final blow to Cuba’s weakened tourism industry

3 June 2026 at 10:19

The clock keeps ticking. The United States waits patiently after its latest checkmate against Cuba. The move has shaken a country that is already held together by pins, plunged into a severe crisis that has only worsened this year as economic strangulation by Washington intensifies. And all of this is unfolding in the shadow of a possible military intervention. Adding to this climate of extreme tension is an ultimatum: Friday, June 5, 2026. That is the date when a White House executive order of May 1 will take effect. The order threatens to freeze the assets on U.S. soil of any foreign companies or individuals that are still doing business with the Cuban regime.

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© Ernesto Mastrascusa (EFE)

Facade of the Hotel Inglaterra this Monday, in Havana (Cuba).

Chimpanzees vs. a mega railway

3 June 2026 at 09:01
A massive railway project, The Simandou corridor, in Guinea is cutting through one of West Africa’s most important ecosystems. The Simandou corridor is fragmenting forests that are home to the largest population of endangered western chimpanzees, putting their survival at risk. But why is this massive railway project being built? Deep within Guinea’s forests lie the world’s largest untapped iron ore deposits, and they require infrastructure to enter the global supply chain. However, as tracks slice through the rainforest, wildlife is pushed into smaller, isolated areas, making survival harder than ever.This article was originally published on Mongabay

De la Espriella’s and Cepeda’s paths to Colombia’s presidential runoff run through abstainers

2 June 2026 at 10:35
Voting stations at Corferias during election day in Bogotá this Sunday.

Abelardo de la Espriella’s unexpected victory over Iván Cepeda on Sunday, in the first round of Colombia’s presidential election, shows that right‑wing voters are now almost entirely united behind the penal lawyer, while left‑wing voters are fully consolidated behind the senator. The 653,000‑vote margin the far-right candidate held over the senator seems small in an election where 24 million people cast a vote and more than 3 million voted for other candidates. The challenge for the runoff would appear to be persuading those voters — but given the candidates’ profiles and recent history, the path necessarily also runs through the mobilization of people who did not go to the polls on Sunday.

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What will happen to tourism in Cuba? Inside GAESA, the military conglomerate on Washington’s radar

When a Cuban person on the island wants to refer to “those in charge,” they lightly tap their shoulder with two fingers. The subtle gesture, shaped by nearly seven decades of censorship, is a reference to the epaulet of a military uniform. In Cuba, people do not speak of the government or the party (the Communist Party of Cuba, the only legal one), but rather of the “country’s leadership.” It is a euphemism that points to the real political and economic power: the Revolutionary Armed Forces (FAR).

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Once booed at Cannes as ‘frivolous’, it’s now clear that ‘Marie Antoinette’ foresaw the rise of the influencer

27 May 2026 at 19:55

Since finding out that I’d be writing this article, every time I mentioned that 20 years have passed since the premiere of Marie Antoinette, people’s reaction has been the same. “It can’t have been that long ago,” they say, their faces full of terror and shock, whether they saw the film in theaters or are among those who have discovered it much after the fact via Tumblr, Pinterest or TikTok.

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© UNIMEDIA INTERNATIONAL / PATHE D (Photojournalist/Cordon Press)

Sofia Coppola and Kirsten Dunst on the movie’s set.
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