San Pedro Sula is one of the deadliest cities in the world. Times journalists spent weeks there, recording the struggle of a group of young men trying to protect their patch of turf from other gangs, including MS-13.

Their fight to protect the neighborhood encapsulates the violence that both entraps and expels millions of people across Latin America.

Here’s what else is happening

Myanmar: Two prizewinning Reuters journalists were released from prison on Tuesday after more than a year in detention for covering the country’s deadly crackdown on the Rohingya minority group.

Moscow: Investigators looking into Sunday’s fiery Aeroflot crash, which killed at least 40 people, are focusing on pilot error, equipment failure and bad weather.

U.S.-China trade tensions: President Trump’s sudden threat on Sunday to expand tariffs on Chinese goods, aimed at forcing Beijing to agree to a trade deal, sent global markets reeling on Monday.

Mueller report: The House Judiciary Committee will vote on Wednesday on a recommendation to hold Attorney General William Barr in contempt of Congress after he appeared to miss a congressional subpoena’s Monday deadline to negotiate the delivery of the full report with key evidence.

Brunei: The country has said that it will not carry out executions by stoning for people convicted of adultery and gay sex, after widespread protests over the brutality of the Shariah-inspired measures that the sultanate put in place last month.