Miami exiles cheer as Havana streets stay quiet; Secrecy shrouded details of Castro's health; Castro clan torn by dysfunction and disagreements; Trump's presidential duties, private interests may become intertwined; Election recount to get underway in Wis. after Green Party's Stein files petition; At Mar-a-Lago, a new world of security, gawking tourists and a president-elect; Palestinians and Israelis are at odds over a new issue: Corpses; | | | | The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors | | | | | Cuban dictator, a spiritual beacon to the world's political far left, dies at 90 | Although Fidel Castro was beloved by a legion of followers, his detractors saw him as a repressive leader who turned Cuba into a de facto gulag. He taunted 10 successive U.S. presidents, who viewed him variously as a potential courier of Armageddon, a nuisance, a dangerous dictator, a fomenter of revolution, a serial human rights abuser or a sideshow who hung on after communism collapsed almost everywhere else. | By Kevin Sullivan and J.Y. Smith • Read more » | | | | Major HIV vaccine trial in South Africa stokes hope | The need is dire in South Africa, where nearly 1 in 5 people are infected. If the test — the world's first in about a decade — is successful, the vaccine could be adjusted for viral subtypes that circulate elsewhere, including in the U.S. | By Ryan Lenora Brown and Lenny Bernstein • Read more » | | | | | | | | | | ©2016 The Washington Post, 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071 | | | | | | | |
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