This Monday, Socialists win Spain election amid far-right breakthrough, Sudan’s military and opposition agree on joint council after Bashir ousting, Algeria’s army chief a top target in 10th week of protests, synagogue shooting keeps religious leaders on edge: ‘No one should be gunned down in worship,’ and Iran says leaving nuclear treaty one of many options after U.S. sanctions move.
Spain election: Socialists win amid far-right breakthrough (BBC)
Sudan's military and opposition agree on joint council after Bashir ousting (The Guardian)
Algeria’s army chief a top target in 10th week of protests (AP)
Synagogue shooting keeps religious leaders on edge: ‘No one should be gunned down in worship’ (NY Times)
Iran says leaving nuclear treaty one of many options after U.S. sanctions move (Reuters)
Indonesia election: More than 270 election staff die counting votes (BBC)
Xi: China wants to expand sprawling infrastructure project (AP)
Saudi fugitives accused of serious crimes get help to flee while U.S. officials look the other way (ProPublica)
TurboTax deliberately hide its free file page from search engines (ProPublica)
Syrian refugees toil on Turkey’s hazelnut farms with little to show for it (NY Times)
“No one feels safe here”: Life in Alabama’s prisons (NY Times)
Pakistan’s war on polio falters amid attacks on health workers and mistrust (NY Times)
Partisan bickering over Puerto Rico aid strands farmers devastated by extreme weather (NY Times)
1 big thing: Youthful minorities will drive elections (Axios)