TheBrief Dispatch 夏取 ia in 亡 e grip 0f a deadly season 0f fear a 取臧夏 oa 亡 i 取 g しゞ語三ッ By Mirren Gidda/Meerut ON A GOOD DAY, THE AL-SAQIB SLAUGHTERHOUSE IN Meerut, a city in lndia's northern Uttar Pradesh state, can butcher 600 buffalo—more than one every minute. With grim regularity, trucks arrive at the complex's iron gate s and drive the animals to an outdoor holding barn. The workers lead them under a shower and intO the slaughtering room where their throats are cut with an lslamic utterance tO render the meat halal. Weighing around a thousand pounds each, the buffalo then emerge on an overhead conveyer belt that spans the length ofthe adjacent processing room. They dangle by their ankles, their heads lolling back. ln the space of a few minutes, the time it takes tO move them across the room, they are decapitated, dehooved, skinned and sliced in half. Blood trickles intO gutters as the buffalO become carcas S e S. A few rooms down, the buffalO meat, cut-up and vacuum- sealed, is packed intO boxes for export tO Muslim consumers in the MiddIe East and Southeast Asia. Overseeing the opera- tion is the owner's 23-year-01d son Saqib Akhlaq, a designer watch flashing on his wrist. For years, says Akhlaq, business was good—enough t0 buy him that watch and a Mercedes. Those good times may be over. Last March, Prime Minister Narendra MOdi's BharatiyaJanata Party (BJP) won elections in Uttar Pradesh, lndia's most populous state and one ofthe country's most politically influential. M0di, 67 , named a local BJP politician, the hard-line Hindu cleric Yogi Adityanath, 45 , as Uttar Pradesh's chiefminister. lt's illegal in the state, as in most oflndia, tO kill COWS, an animal sacred tO lndia's majority Hindus, or t0 eat beef. BuffaIo meat is supposed to be permissible and Uttar Pradesh is the heartland ofthe industry, which is worth about $ 5 billion t0 lndia. Yet one ofAdityanath's first orders was to temporarily shutter Al-Saqib, which is government-approved, and other slaughterhouses to check, offcials said, ifthey were operating legally. Akhlaq believes there's another reason: "We are MusIims; it is a MusIim business. The BJP shut the slaughterhouses so they could get the [Hindu] voters onside. ” ONCE, MUSLIMS, WHO MAKE UP about 14 % oflndia's 1.3 billion population, were also courted as voters, particularly by the Congress party, which fought for lndia's independence and is currently in opposition. Historically Muslims have played a big part in lndia's development. But today, many feel marginalized, especially after Modi and the BJP, whose ideology iS Hindu nationalism, came tO power in 2014. lt's not just the slaughterhouse crackdown in Uttar Pradesh. Since 2015 , gangs ofHindu men have killed or injured more than 150 people whom they accuse 0f harm- ing COWS or eating beef. Among the more egregious incidents was the June 22 killing ofJunaid Khan, a 16-year-oId Mus- lim. Khan was on the train home from a day's shopping in 12 TIME October 16 , 2017 0 0 New Delhi when an argument broke out An 加市れ ma れ over a seat. Hindus on the train began leads bu. 0 taunting Khan and his tWO brothers , in Meerut, Uttar calling them Pakistanis and beefeat- Pradesh, where ers. As the insults escalated, people in abattoirs have the crowd pulle d out knive s and began been shut down stabbing the three boys, fatally injur- ing Khan. His death shocked lndia, both for the senseless brutality ofthe killing, and for how young the victim was. After Khan's death, the Hindustan Times launched an online "hate tracker ” to record the number Of attacks 、 against Muslims and, tO a lesser extent, Other minorities. The tracker recorded 149 attacks dating t0 September 2015 , 40 of which were fatal. Critics ofthe BJP blame the party for emboldening radical Hindus. "The BJP's whole ideology is of Hindu nationalism, ' says Saba Dewan, a docu- mentary maker and the founder 0fN0t in My Name, a movement opposed to violence against minorities. "Hindu nationalism equates being lndian with being Hindu. SO there is Ⅱ 0 space within lndia for MusIims. ” Adds Arman Dehlvi,
allegiance t0 ruling-party agendas. " her vegetarian food, saying she must Journalists have been labeled have COOked it in pots used for meat. presstitutes ” by BJP offcials, and While watching lndia play Pakistan at have received threats ofrape and death cricket, her friends tell her she must, 丘 om party supporters. ln late April, as a Muslim, be supporting Pakistan. Reporters Without Borders dropped Another friend told her to cancel a cab lndia three places to 136th ⅲ its annual When the driver's name revealed him tO World Press Freedom lndex. On Sept. 5 be MusIim. "We've been feeling that over the Bangalore-based journalist Gauri the last three tO four years the situation Lankesh, a vocal critic ofHindu nation- has been gettingworse; we are tOld that alism, was killed by three gunmen while we don't belong here , ” says Dastango. entering her home. Meenakshi Gan- "NO one used tO say this so openly. NOW guly, the South Asia director for the it's become one's right tO beat someone New York—bas ed organization Human who is named Fouzia [ or] Arman. Rights Watch recently wrote that the open declaration 0f vigilantism by BJP MODI MET with Muslim leaders in affliates or supporters is a sad and ter- May t0 say the BJP was not behind the rifying prospect for an lndia that wants violence. "We treat all communities tO appeal tO foreign investors as a safe equally. We don't believe in any preJu- society that adheres to the rule oflaw. ” dice on the basis ofreligion or caste, the Prime Minister said, according tO a cleric whO spoke tO the Hindustan RATHER THAN MOVING FORWARD, lndia seems to be sliding backto old Times. And after the death ofteenager communal and cultural hatreds. The Khan, Modi said publicly: "KiIIing peo- most horrific manifestation Of such ha- ple in the name Of protecting cows is treds was during the subcontinent's par- not acceptable ... Violence never has tition in 1947 intO Hindu-maJority lndia and never will solve any problem. ” But and Muslim-majority Pakistan. Up to the Prime Minister did not comme nt 2 million people died during the rupture on the assassination ofLankesh, and ofthe British Raj intO these two main na- his critics say he is not dOing enough tions. Partly tO mark the 70 th anniver- tO stem the hate. ln particular they cite a Muslim musician who has performed sary 0fPartition, partly t0 spotlight the his 叩 pointment 0fAdityanath t0 lead at a NOt in My Name rally: "There is a current religious violence, Dehlvi, the Uttar Pradesh. Adityanath has a his- sense Offear among Muslims. ' musician, is partnering with oral story- tory 0f making public speeche s against Contemporary lndia was not sup- teller Fouzia Dastango in a public stag- Muslims, saying in 2014 , "lfthe other posed to be this way. When Modi came ing 0f a well-known tale refle cting the side does not stay in peace, we will tO power, he propagated a vision Ofa savage aspect ofPartition. At a rehearsal, teach them hOW tO stay in peace. We modernizing, tech-savvy, globally ori- as Dehlvi plays his harmonium, Fou- will teach them in the language that ented nation on the move. lnstead the Zia widens her eyes and launches intO they understand. ” A year later he told a crowd: "lf given a chance, we will install economy, once the world's fastest- the gory story Ofan ice-cream vendor growing, recorded the lowest GDP statues Of [Hindu deities] Gauri, Ganesh who is stabbed and left to die beneath growth rate ⅲ three years for the April- his cart, which drips cold water on the and Nandi in every mosque. t0-June quarter. And lndia's de mocracy, While that hasn't happened, Muslims blood, congealing it. After the man is are intimidated. At Al-Saqib the work- the world's biggest, is provmg illiberal ⅲ taken away, a small child sees the blood parts. Journalists, writers and academ- and tells his mother, his mouth watering, ers operate in silence, their heads down. ics have faced hostility and abuse from After the plant's monthlong closure ⅲ "L00k,jelly! ” Says Dehlvi: "ln a sense, the BJP base when they have criticized Partition is still ongoing. This deep sense March, they fear another suspension or ofembedded hatred—it's seeped down even a ban. Akhlaq, the owner's son, says the party or spoken in favor ofsecular- another slaughterhouse was recently ism, WhiCh iS enshrined in lndia's consti- intO my generation. ordered tO stop operating because one Of tution. ln 2015 more than 40 top lndian Though Dastango doesn't wear a its security cameras was broken. Still, he hiJab or anything that identifies her as authors began returning prestigious Muslim, she s ays she has encountered remains defiant. "They need something state awards tO protest what they saw t0 shut us down; ” says Akhlaq. "Now that as a l'lse in Hindu nationalism encour- daily instances Of prej udice —micro- we're aware they're looking for things, aged by the government. The same year, aggressions 仕 01n even her educated, we don't give them chances. " For now, 200 academics issued aJOint statement cosmopolitan friends that make however, Muslims and many Other cit- that read: "Centres and institutions Of her feel unwelcome in lndia. At the izens are on the lOSing end oflndia's universitywhere She once lectured, higher learning are being handed over Hindu colleagues refused t0 share deadly culture wars. to those who qualify only through their 4 ロ 13
0 も 0 g linesfor gasoline, 石た e this one in Sa れ 1u0 れ 0 れ Sept. 30 , were 0 common sight after the storm; president Trump tosses 0 ro れ 0 工を aper towels intO decade, people have been leaving in historic num- Puert0 Rico began September ⅲ its usual place, bers; more PuertO Ricans Ⅱ 0 、 live on the mainland on the dim edge ofAmericans' awareness. Just after Maria made landfall, a poll found that nearly halfof than on the island, and Maria will accelerate the ex- odus. The Climate lmpact Lab estimates that the Americans did not know Puerto Ricans were U. S. citi- storm could knock back per capita economic out- zens. That likely wouldn't be true a month later, but put by 21 % over the next 15 years. the confusion is understandable, given the island's lt's possible the storm will underscore the mes- muddy history with the mainland. sage many Puert0 Ricans have already absorbed: that Claimed for Spain by Christopher COIumbus a population 0f brown-skinned, Spanish-speaking on his second trip tO the New World, Puert0 RiC0 Americans counts forless. Yet senior Puerto Rican Of- ("Rich Port ” ) was taken along with Cuba and other is- ficials reckon that, along with sea cows, the storm can lands by the U. S. in the 1898 Spanish-American War. also produce a fresh start. Trump himself provided lt has remained part ofthe U. S. ever since, in no small the first evidence of the transformation during his part by ch0ice. Repeatedly if narrowly, voters have trip. Speaking ofthe territory's $ 73 billion debt, the opted tO maintain the status quo as a U. S. territory, President said, "We're going tO have tO wipe that out. ” though with 10 times as many people as the 0ther A White House offcial later disavowed the promise, four U. S. territories combined. Puerto Ricans are in- and a recovery package is only just taking sh 叩 e ⅲ deed citizens, but they have no voting representa- Congress. But it was wind at the back ofthose urging tive in Congress and cannot VOte for President. The both sides, supplicant island and historical master, commonwealth arrangement leaves PuertO RiCO in tO escape a shared history. the gray zone that is familiar in bOth Latin America and the Caribbean, where economic, political and in- IF PUERTO RICO 、 A STATE, it would rank in termittent military domination by the U. S. has been area near Connecticut, the nation's richest. But in a fact oflife ever since the Monroe Doctrine. Only in terms ofincome, it would displace Mississippi as the PuertO RiCO, it's more direct. poorest ofthe poor. The poverty rate is about 45 %. When the U. S. Navy needed a bombing range, it "lfwe're going tO rebuild and reconstruct, it has set one up on Vieques, an islet Off the main island's t0 be for the right reasons; ” says Cruz, the San Juan eastern shore. ln 1976 , Congress gave PuertO Rico mayor. "We have tO reshape our society. As awful as a financial boon by allowing companies tO operate this has been, it's an opportunity." ln her baseball there tax-free. Twenty years later, Congress began to cap and glasses, Cruz has been at the vortex 0f the phase out the law. The island's government contin- political storm that followed the meteorological one. ued to spend, however, bridging the growing chasm She called out FEMA and parried the fusillade from by issuing bonds it could not pay off. Legally unable Trump. Yet even she hesitated to publicly broach tO de clare bankruptcy, it surrendered control of its the issue Of whether the emergency could restore finances, again by an act of Congress, to a federally the island's autonomy. 'We are all shying away from appointed oversight board. "This board is strangely that, because we don't want the discourse to change, reminiscent Of the Executive Council, which ruled she tells TIME. "We don't want it to be about politics, the island between 1900 and 1917 , " writes Jorge we want it tO be about 1 ⅳ es. ” Duany Of Florida lnternational University. PuertO "Of course; ” she adds, 'politics affect lives. ” Ricans call it the "junta. ” NOTE: DAMAGE IS A HIGH ・ RANGE ESTIMATE. IRMA ESTIMATE INCLUDES DAMAGE TO GEORGIA, PUERTO RICO AND THE U. S. VIRGIN ISLANDS. SOURCES: MERCATUS CENTER; BLS: MOODY'S ANALYTICS; CENSUS A population already i ng DEBT Per capita S20 , 366 PU ERTO R ℃ 0 $2 , 144 U. S. UNEMPLOYMENT August 2017 10 上 PUERTO R ℃ 0 4 IJ. S. WAGES Average weekly S509 PUERTO R ℃ 0 $1 , 121 U. S.
REVIEW 2049 is a love letter tO Blade れれ er SO MANYMOVIES TODAYHAVE A million near-endings, each promising, "But wait, there's Ⅱ l()re ! ” There are a million near-endings ⅲ Blade Runner 2049 , Denis Villeneuve's sequel t0 Ridley Scott's 1982 future-noir BIade u れ and some are 0. K. Sh0t by cinematographer Roger Deakins, this iS alSO a handsome picture.• it echoes the first movie's somber, rain-misted L. A. , onlywith additional strata of despair and wistfulness. But there's enough story here for three sequels, and not even the capable shoulders ofits star, Ryan Gosling—as K, a future-world LAPD offcer charged with seeking and destroying androids, or replicants— can carry all 0fit. Early on, K endures a bone-crushing encounter With one Ofhis targets (Dave Bautista, WhO maximizes just a few slender minutes ofscreen time); reports back tO hiS no-nonsense, no-makeup- wearing boss (R0bin Wright, groovy in her sternness); and goes home tO his hologram girlfriend (Margaret Keane—eyed Ana de Armas), a charmer programmed t0 genuinely care about what kind ofday he's had. She's prepared a meal ofmake- believe steak frites tantalizingly superimposed over hiS real dinner, a bachelor's bowl ofdrab brown noodles. Later Harrison Ford reprises the role of Rick Deckard, though he t00 eventually gets lost in endlessly breaking waves ofplot. That's not tO say there aren't some inspired touches. The best ofthem is a retro-modernjukebox that lOOks like one ofthose 01d Victorian glass bells with a mini hologram of one of the great singers Ofthe 20th century inside. His crooning is like the signal from a ghostship calling through the years. 01d movies send out those types ofsignals t00. Ourj0b, when watching a sequel, is tO sort ofremember and sort offorget what came before. 2049 doesn't make us sort offorget enough. —STEPHANIE ZACHAREK 47 Clockwisefromfarleft: The earth's atmosphere な po 〃砒 ed thickfog 0 〃 d ram 盟 advertising; ・ the world's 工ås ん 0 れ reflects its unstable weather; thefilm relied 0 れ practical effects—built sets 0 れ d vehicles—to maintain continuity with the 0 ⅱ gi れ behavior: you don't walk the same way, There'S a scene where you see a car inside you don't talk the same way, you don't a penthouse—that was real. There was a think the same way. real vehicle that came inside the room. I feel that CGI is very strong when it's helping reality, helping real shots. But HOW did yo 収 deal with the t0 startjust from CGI is not something I nnprovements ⅲ special-effects technology? lt's important tO underline wante d to do. the fact that RidIey Scott and D ouglas Trumbull's special effects in the original These movies envision a future movie are a work ofgenius. I didn't have Of decay. But their visual ma,j esty t0 struggle with the s ame technological conveys a certain optimism. ls this challenges as they did. This movie is a an optimistic fi 販期 ? I think SO. For me, blend ofvery 01d passionate 叩 proach one Of my goals was tO create a bleak and high-end technology. We built all the world with strong sparks ofbeauty sets first, constructed all the vehicles, did coming out 0f it. That's why the first a11 the rain and the snow and the fog with sequence, where Offcer K (Gosling) practical effects. AII the streets, all the is flying toward LOS Angele s, is a gray, exteriors—we constructed everything. overcast, dark, austere landscape with winter light. Suddenly you have sparks oflight coming out ofthe landscape's 'I wanted the atmosphere technology, and that creates beauty. t0 carry the beautiful The humanity Of the characters creates beauty. lt's a movie that I feel has, in a melancholy that was strange way, an optimistic ending. And SO powerful in the first l'm glad about that, because I need t0 movle. have that kind ofoptimism ⅲ the world DENIS VILLENEUVE, director tOday. —NASH JENKINS
TheBrief prescribed way to do it; ” he chided. "lt's called leg- islation. ” ln a religious-liberty case, Gorsuch tOOk on ChiefJustice J0hn R0berts, who wrote the major- ity opinion. ln hiS concurrence, WhiCh argues for a broader reading ofreligious liberty, Gorsuch wrote that, "respectfully; ” he harbored doubts about an aspect ofthe chief's opinion. "He has not been shy, says J0hn Malcolm, vice president Ofthe lnstitute for Constitutional Government at the conservative Heritage Foundation. "He's acting as ifhe's been sit- ting on the high court for years. ” Gorsuch iS drawing criticism for hiS actions offthe bench as well. ln September he appeared with Senate maJority leader Mitch McConnell at an event in Kentucky, McConnell's home state. The following week Gorsuch gave a speech at the Trump lnternational H0tel in Washington, the symbolic focal point ofthe President's business entanglements. Progressive activists held a protest outside during his remarks. AII this recalls the nasty political battle that preceded hiS nomination. He occupies a seat on the court that sat vacant for over a year afterJustice Antonin Scalia died in February 2016. President B arack Ob ama picked Merrick Garland, a moder- ate liberal, to 6 Ⅱ the spot, but congressional Repub licans refused tO consider the nomination during Obama's final year in offlce, stalling until Trump was inaugurated and then quickly confirming Gorsuch over objections from Democrats. At 50 , Gorsuch lOOks poised tO cement a conser- vative majority on the court for a generation. More immediately, he may shape the outcome ofsome ofthe most significant cases the court will hear this term. A veteranjudge whO spent a decade on the IOth Circuit Court ofAppeals ⅲ Colorado, Gorsuch has already signaled that he's sympathetic to religious-liberty claims, which could put him on the side ofthe baker who refused to make a wedding cake for a same-sex couple in the case Masterpiece Cakeshop Ltd. v.. C010rad0 CiviI Rights Commission. And he voted to block a Texas court's ruling that new districts drawn by the state legislature had t0 be redone, which may provide a clue to his thinking on the gerrymandering case GiII v. Whitford, which the court heard on Oct. 3. ln some ways, Gorsuch's style on the bench makes him a natural heir t0 the volublejurist he replaced. "From the get-go, Justice Scalia changed the tenor Ofthe court dramatically because he was such an avid question asker; ” says Carrie severino, chiefcounsel ofthe conservative Judicial Crisis Network. "I know some Justices viewed that a little askance, like, 'Where's this little upstart coming ! from?' ” The forceful manner ofthe court's new member doesn't make Gorsuch unique, Severino says, adding, "I think that's always how the old guard reacts. 6 TIME October 16 , 2017 ロ TICKER MiIIions sa 田 shady ads on Facebook About 10 million people in the IJ. S. saw politically divisive ads on Facebook bought by Russia-linked accounts in the months before and afterlast year's U. S. presidential election, the company revealed on Oct. 2. MOSCOW denied involvement in the ads, which cost $ 100 , 000. U. S. expels Cuban diplomats The U. S. ordered 15 Cuban diplomats tO leave the cou ntry, after a series ofapparent sonic attacks on the U. S. Embassy in Havana thatleft at least 21 U. S. diplomats with hearing and vision ailments. The U. S. earlier pulled 60% of its embassy staff from its Cuba mission. FinaI report on missing MH370jet 旧 theirfinalreport on the incident, Australian investigators said it was "almost inconceivable ” that MaIaysia AirIines Flight 370 , which disappeared with 239 people on board in 2014 , had still not been located. Atlanta votes to decriminalizepot The Atlanta city council VOted tO decriminalize mari 」 uana, makingthe penalty fO 「 possession Of 1 OZ. orless a $ 75 fine. Elsewhere in Georgia, offenders can still bejailed fO 「 six months and fined $ 1 , 000. BUSINESS The new gold rush for our e-waste 」 apanese company Mitsubishi plans tO invest about $ 108 million tO expand operations tO sift through discarded computers, cell phones and otherelectronic devices tO recycle rare metals such as go and palladium as glObal supplies dwindle. Here's what tO know. ー「 a John 1.1 million within a decade. traded a year, set tO rise tO tons Of recycled metals are price tag. Currently 700 , 000 ofconventional mining's high recycling urban waste because Metal producers are turning tO WORLD TRADE in 100 tons ofgo ore. circuit boards iS the same as go in a single ton Of printed average mine. The amount Of landfill than can be found in an recycled from e-waste in a More valuable metals can be COST SAVINGS from recycled urban waste. go medals will be forged the Games' bronze, silver and 2020 TO 0 Olympics said February organizers Of the this kind Of recycling. Last 」 apan is leadingthe way in GOLD STANDARD DIGITS ト 〒 110 , 000 Number Of t 「 a 可 e 得 due to be flown home by the British government 0 e 「 tWO weeks that began Oct. 2 , a 代部 British company Monarch AirIines declared bankruptcy; officials called it the U. K. 's largest-ever peacetime repatriation mission
し 190 , NO. 15 ー 2017 2 ー Conversation 4 ー For the Record News 斤 om the し S. and around the Ⅳ 0 「 / d 引 NeiI Gorsuch acts as ifhe's been on the U. S. Supreme Court foryears 引 Spain faces a constitutional criSiS with Catalonia 8 llan Bremmer: The danger of tinkering with the lran deal ユ例 Remembering rocker Tom Petty ユ 2 llndia's deadly culture wars 1 引 China wants tO lead the charge on battery manufacturing The Brief The View ldeas, opinion, innovations 1 引 What athlete s stand tO lose as the feds probe NCAA basketball coaches ユ引 Canadian Thanksgiving's A. merican roots 1 引 Bjarke lngels designs a campus for Dubai's space program The Features American Tragedy The deadliest mass shooting in recent U. S. history renews questions about drawing the line on gun rights Philip Elli0tt 0 れ d H Sweetland Edwards 18 Puerto Rico's Future Maria laid waste tO the U. S. territory but also gave the troubled island a chance at a fre sh start ByKarI c た 28 Breast-Cancer Awareness HOW care iS becoming more personalizedByAlice Park and Alexandra Sifferlin 36 Ron Chernow's Grant The biographer discusses his new bookonthe 18thU. S. President B. ア 0 市 ma れ 40 Time Off What tO watch, read, see and dO 4 引 Q&A with Blade れれ er sequel director DeniS Villeneuve 4 The 0 d “ Project, a magic kingdom 4 引 WiII & Grace returns to the small screen 50 lJennifer Egan's latest novel 5 ー Susanna Schrobsdorff: How to help victims of mass tragedies 52 ー 6 Questions— illustrated—by cartoonist ROZ Chast A ~ 0 〃 waits near 0 damaged bridge ⅲ Morovis, 2 . on Oct. 1 Photograph Andres Kudacki forTIME ONTHE COVER: The deadliest mass shootings in modern American history, based on a database collected by MOth er Jones; ・ the incidents date back to 1982 and include on ツ indiscriminate shootings that occurred in public places TIME Asia is published 可 TIME Asia (Hong Kong) Limited. TIME publishes eight double issues. Each counts as two of 52 issues in an annual subscriptlon. TIME may 引 so publish occasional extra issues. ◎ 2017 Time Asia (Hong Kong) Limited. AII rights reserved. Reprcxiuction in whOle orin wt wlthout wntten EHmission is prohibited. TIME and the Red Border Design are protected 物「 ou trademark registration in the U. S. and in the where TIME m a 乙 circulates. MemtH, Audit Bureau Of Circulatlons. Su地0h2博: lfthe postal services alertusthatyourmagazine is undeliverable,we have no 和「ⅱ ga も on unlesswe receive acMrected addresswithintwoyears. F 24 / 7s ⅵ , 池 am 0 浦′ e a s 回 0 ′ 9 online, pleæ v 忙徹 / / 、、 w. 朝引äsu . / ′ⅵ 8. p わ p. You may 引 SO email our Customer Services Center at eれqⅵ村儕@物ne田ね.* 0 「 call ( 852 ) 312 & 5688 , orwrite tO Time Asia (Hong Kong) Limited, 37 / F, Oxford House,Taikoo PIace, 979 King's Road, Quarry Bay, Hong Kong.ln 」 apan,these aree れ 4 ⅵ村角れ le れ 00E0 「 0120666236 (Free DiaI) 0r2-51-27FA ね go , MinatO-ku,Tokyo 1056227. A 部 t : Forinformation and rates, HongKongTeIephone: ( 852 ) 312 & 5169. Orvisit: 廿h冶航0.com/n面ねk肥 Reprint: lnformation is available at ine. 0 ゾれ肥 / hep . To requestcustom reprints, ⅵ sit ゼれ lerep .8 皿 Mailinglist: We make a ⅲ on ofour mailing list available to reputablefirms. lfyou would prefer that 、肥 not include your name, please cnntact ou 「 Customer Services Center. TIME Asia is edited in Hong Kong and printed in Singapore and Hong Kong. Singapore MCI ( 円 NO. 06 〃 08 / 2017. Malaysia KKDN permit no. PPS 676 / 03 / 2013 ( 022933 ).
TheBrief THE RISK REPORT ans could even decide tO continue tO honor the Trump's desire for a deal's terms , vindicating lran and creating a rift between the U. S. and Europe evenbigger better deal with lran than the one that followed George W. Bush's co 収ー住 isolate the U. S. decision t0 invade lraq in 2003. (Though Bush, at least, had backing from the U. K. By lan Bremmer Tony Blair. ) Trump may feel he has enough on THE IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL IS IN REAL TROU- U. S. allies his plate with North ble. Signed inJuly 2015 by lran, the U. S. , Brit- don't want ain, France, Germany, Russia, China and the Korea without pick- tO see their E. U. the agreement waived nuclear-related ing another fight hard work econom1C sanctions on lran in exchange for with few good op- tions. But he might limitations on itS uranium-enrichment pro- torn up. If ] ust instruct his gram. lnternational inspectors say lran is Trump walks keeping its end ofthe deal. But the Trump Ad- national-security away, he'll team tO refuse tO ministration must certify the country's com- probably issue a formal certifi- pliance every three months , and the president walk alon e cation ofcompliance, has hinted that he won't recertify the agree- even while holding ment by the next deadline 0fOct.15. back from killing the deal completely. He can Trump wants a better deal. He wants tO extend the time frame on lran's compliance. then demand that lran Offer concessions by a given deadline, while promising tO continue tO He wants expanded acce s s tO military sites. He says it must stop testing ballistic missiles, waive sanctions ifit bargains in good faith. which were not part ofthe deal, and halt its lran's leaders have good reason tO compromise, whatever they say publicly. The support for organizations that Washington lifting Of sanctions has given the regime an classifies as terrorist groups, like Hizb011ah and Hamas. P01iticaIly, Trump wants to show extra $ 17 billion per year in Oil revenues, and that Obama made a bad deal and he can make foreign investment has begun tO return tO the country. Risking new sanctions at a time Of abetter one. The President's key Cabinet members don't still-high unemployment is not an appealing agree. Defense SecretaryJames Mattis told the prospect, and lran doesn't want blame for Senate Armed Services Committee on Oct. 3 breaking the deal. that he thinks the U. S. should stick with the But lran could call what it sees as Trump's blu 圧 lts leaders can see the Europeans aren't deal. Trump's bigger problem is that U. S. allies don't agree with him either. They say that lran h 叩 pywith him, and that even some members has kept its side ofthe bargain and don't want of his own party would criticize him for put- t0 see their hard work torn up. If Trump walks ting a diplomatic milestone at risk. That's hOW away, he'll probably walk alone. The Europe- the deal could still fall apart. ロ TICKER TO 々リ 0 governor won't cha llenge PM TO 0 Governor YurikO KOike ruled out running against Prime Minister ShinzoAbe in 」 apan's Oct. 22 election. Koike launched her new Party ofHope on Sept. 25 , just hours before the national election was called. は is thought she will run in the next election instead. Ⅳ 0 lawsuitsfor Black Lives Matter A Louisiana judge ruled that Black Lives Matter iS a social movement— much like the civil rights, Tea Party and LGBT movements— and therefore can't be sued. A police officer had anonymously tried tO sue the movement after he was injured by a small Object thrown during a Black Lives Matter protest in 2016. Refugee charged ⅲ Canada attack A SomaIi-born refugee, 30 , was charged with five counts Of attempted murder in connection with a car and knife attack on a police officerin Edmonton, Alberta. Prime Minister 」 ustin Trudeau had called the incident a terrorist attack. L()e not 0 computer simulation Despite what fans Of The Matrix may believe, a team of Oxford University scientists claimed tO have proved itwas ・・ impossible in any physical setting fO 「 human beings tO be unknowingly living in a computer simulation. FASHION Cameos on the catwalk Spanish fashion house BaIenciaga turned heads on Oct. 1 when it sent models down the runway wearing platform Crocs ( わ e Ⅳ , the much イ idiculed CO 汁 u gs. Here, Other unlikely items that have appeared during fashion weeks. —Kate SamueIson JELLY SANDALS The plastic shoes belöved by ' 90S kids made a comeback duringAIberta Ferretti's Milan Fashion Week show in September, where they were worn by models Gigi Hadid and Bella Hadid. IKEA BAG DHL T-SHIRT Balenciaga SO When French design made headlines on house Vetements showcased a $ 330 the PariS runway in 」 une 2016 when it version Of the debuted a $ 2 , 145 yellow T-shirt worn large blue leather by employees Of bag that bore a German courier giant striking resemblance DHL at Paris Fashion tO lkea's iconic 99 Week in 2015 , it Frakta tOte. quickly SO out.
TheView 第物 'ARE YOUREALLYIN CONTROL OF YOUR OWNMIND?' —NEXT PAGE An emerging criminal investigation has embroiled college teams, coaches 0 れ d companies governme nt-backed reminder Of the THE CRIMINAL COMPLAINT UN- veiled in late September contained all hypocrisy at the heart ofbig-time A corruption sorts Of unsavory details about college college sports. probe intO The NCAA, which governs most basketball's underground economy: five-figure bribes t0 coaches, six-figure intercollegiate sports in the U. S. , re- college OOPS quires that athlete s maintain their ama- payouts t0 high school players and teur status in order tO play. That means their families, and the alleged com- exposes more plicity 0f employees at some 0fthe na- they can't accept any compensation beyond an athletic s cholarship and a tion S most prominent universities. than shady meager cost-of-living stipend, or profit The 10 defendants "allegedly ex- deals from their likeness in any way. ploited the hoop dreams of student- The NCAA and the colleges where athletes around the country; ” said Joon these athletes play, however, are free H. Kim, the acting U. S. attorney for t0 cash in. And boy, do they: Under the Southern District ofNew York. Armour is paying UCLA roughly The FBI opened a tip line, and offlcials $ 18.7 million per year t0 be its exclu- suggested more bombshells t0 come. sive shoe and apparel sponsor; the COI- lt was a public service but not lege Football playoffsold its broadcast only ⅲ the ways federal investigators rights for more than $ 7 billion over 12 intende d. lndeed, the lasting legacy years; while TV rights for March Mad- Ofthe probe intO the corruption Of nes s , the men's basketball tournament college hoops may turn out t0 be a SPORTS By Sean Gregory S39VbNl ト 39 15 PHOTOGRAPH BYJOE ROBBINS
Time Off Reviews MOVIES MOVIES ト気ゞを Faces Places: A slice Of Two artists c il 00d hit the road heaven in the Sunshine THE 89-YEAR-OLD BELGIAN- born filmmaker Agnés State Varda (The GIeaners 〃 d C 0 om 5 to 7 ) , one ofthe THE IDEA OF CHILDHOOD few female directors to be wonder was invented, associated with the French after the fact and in their New Wave, has been worklng typical, boring way, by steadily since she began adults. Kids have no idea making documentary shorts they're feeling wonder—just ⅲ the 1950S. Her latest, feeling it is the thing. That's Faces places, co-directed the lightning in a bottle with 34-year-01d French captured by director Sean street artist JR, is as vital as Baker in The Florida project. anything she's ever made. Six-year-01d Moonee (the lt's a wondrous workthat preternaturallyjoyous connects people with the Brooklynn Princ e) is an landscape they inhabit—and ebullient kid living with her carves out a small place in chronically une mployed that landscape for the artist. mother Halley (Bria Vinaite) Varda and JR travel the in a purple budget motel on French countryside in JR'S the fringes ofOrlando. lt's truck, a roving mini portrait called the Magic Castle, a studiO outfitted tO print non-copyright-infringing very large pictures, meeting riffon Disney World's Moonee is played with infectious c ん旧 hood glee 妙 Prince people and listening t0 their nearby Magic Kingdom, stories. Thejumbo portraits though it may as well be a they snap are then mounted t00. Baker makes us feel the The Magic Castle's long- continent away. byJR and his assistants— suffering manager, B0bby Moonee has no idea same protectiveness: you re with Varda's eye as a guide ー likely to watch The Florida (Willem Dafoe in a sturdy, about that, and shelives on the sides ofbuildings, or understated performance), project anxiously, waiting her days as childhood around giant water tanks, or for the inevitable terrible days are me ant tO be lived, feigns exasperation with even, in one case, on a former thing t0 happen. But trust scampering around the this scrappy yet fragile Baker (director ofthe Nazi bunker lying askew on a sunny asphalt neighborhood family, but he guards them beach in Normandy. Through glorious 2015 working- with her best friends Scooty it all, the seasoned artist and girl comedy Tangerine). and Jancey ( Christopher the young one banter and He's tOO openhearted a Rivera and Valeria COttO), spar. The affection between sassing the grownup S and filmmaker t0 punish us them is the film's heart and its With unleavened realism. cadging free ice cream at the The Florida Project is both motor, a story OftWO people 10Ca1 soft-servejoint. Halley, looking at the world, facing radiant and unsentimental. a tough-talking sylph with a When Moonee takes Jancey forward together. —s. z. robust scattering oftattoos on a day-trip adventure, and cellophane-blue hair, the afternoon is almost is practically a kid herself. spoiled by rain—but then She covers Moonee with the sun comes out as they sunbeams oflove, even stand before a field of while she can barely take placid, mooing COWS. care ofher. TO get by, Halley Moonee tells her friend. sells cheap perfume, bought "I tOOk you on a safari. ” wholesale, tO rich tourists, This magic kingdom ofher and when that doesn't making becomes ours t00. work, she turns tO selling something else. —STEPHANIE ZACHAREK 48 TIME October 16 , 2017 し THE GANG'S ALL HERE Director Sean Baker encouraged his cast tO improvise, using Hal Roach's "Our Gang" shorts as an example Of what he wanted. 0
<0 CookingLight diet THISIS FICTION SO MUCH MORE THAN A DIET. A heroine for 0 収 r time JENNIFER EGANJOINED THE WHO'S WHO ofAmerican letters in 2011 when she won a PuIitzer forA VisitFrom the G00 Squad, an interlinked-story- collection- as-novel that bucked more than a few conventions. Her new novel 1) イ 0 hat れ Beach is more conventional in that it's a linear, historical narrative set circa World War Ⅱ . lt's a less inventive book, but many readers will find it more satisfying. Ma れ h 砒 ta れ Beach, named for the neighborhood ⅲ Br00klyn, begins when Anna Kerrigan iS almost 12 years old, tagging along with her father t0 a mysterious man S seaside home. Already there is a plucky danger about her. When the narrative shoots ahead seven or eight years, we find her at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, working along with the other wartime women tO measure construction parts. Soon, she becomes the first female diver t0 repair ships. The work is risky and physically punishing, but also exhilarating: "like flying, like magic—like being inside a dream," Anna thinks during her first dive. (Some 0fEgan's descriptions ofbreathing under a 200- lb. suit are just as breathtaking for the reader. ) But all is not so lovely: Anna's father has abandoned the family, her mother is solely devoted t0 Anna's severely disabled sister, and the mysterious man resurfaces in an unexpected way. Though the prose is exquisite, Egan never lets it get in the way Ofthe story. ln bouts Of glamour, adventure and violence, She gives the narrative a cinematic feel, while grounding it in Anna's realistic frustrations with society. She wants tO be "a different kind ofgirl," but not 砒 kind of girl. Though "maybe those kinds of girls were simply girls who'd no one t0 tell them they were not those kinds of girls. ” Anna is indeed a different kind of girl. Though she is rooted ⅲ her historical set- ting, readers oftoday will find her story 0f daring and persistence deeply resonant. —SARAH BEGLEY can't not eat delicious 厄 Od , that's never been 届引 am. llove to C00 llove to try out new recipes.lt's 0 ays been part Ofmy 嬢 . Andl feellike the C00 ng Light Diet fits 50 seamlessly with that. " —Amanda. [ 05t 80 ” Join today at: diet. cookinglight ・ com/save2017 See how the Cooking Light Diet can help you eat healthier andlose weight with easy-to-follow, customized mealplans! **Members following the Cookin Light Diet lose more than halfa pound pe 「 wee , on average ・ ' Fo 「 new Cooking Light Diet subscribe 「 s. ◎ 2017Time 旧 c. COOKING LlGHTis a trademark ofTime 旧 c. Lifestyle Group, registered in the lJ. S. and othe 「 countries.