The Washington Post - 21.10.2019

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Demonstrators return Pro-democracy rallies


in Hong Kong were violently dispersed by


police using tear gas and a water cannon. A


Another game, another loss The Redskins’


record fell to 1-6 as the San Francisco 49ers


won 9-0 on a rain-soaked FedEx Field. D


STYLE
Great expectation
On the 500th
anniversary of Leonardo
da Vinci’s death, the
Louvre manages to
capture the excitement
of his mind. C

The illuminators
Robert Pattinson and
Willem Dafoe discuss
their comedic thriller on
lighthouse keepers. C

In the News


THE NATION
A bulletproof marker
in memory of Emmett
Till was rededicated at
the site of the Mississip-
pi lynching that helped
spark the civil rights
movement. A
An accident during a
training exercise at a
U.S. Army base in Geor-
gia led to the deaths of
three soldiers. A

THE WORLD
After Parliament
voted to withhold sup-
port for a Brexit deal,
Prime Minister Boris
Johnson was forced to
seek an extension. A
India and Pakistan ex-

changed fire across the
line dividing the disput-
ed Himalayan region of
Kashmir, killing nine
civilians and soldiers,
authorities say. A

THE REGION
The District’s opioid
program has connected
only a small number of
patients with treatment,
according to records
and interviews with
District officials and
outreach workers. B
More Maryland resi-
dents favor than oppose
statehood for the Dis-
trict, says a Washington
Post-University of
Maryland poll. B

THE WEEK AHEAD

MONDAY
Vice President Pence
discusses the U.S.-Mex-
ico-Canada trade agree-
ment at a Pennsylvania
glass manufacturer.

TUESDAY
Japanese Emperor
Naruhito is enthroned
in Tokyo.
Turkish President Re-
cep Tayyip Erdogan vis-
its Russia’s Black Sea
resort city Sochi.

WEDNESDAY
Facebook CEO Mark
Zuckerberg testifies be-
fore the House Finan-
cial Services Committee.
Russian President
Vladimir Putin co-
chairs a Russia-Africa

summit with Egyptian
President Abdel Fatah
al-Sissi in Sochi.

THURSDAY
Durable-goods orders
for September are seen
falling 0.7 percent.
Jobless claims for the
week ended Oct. 19 are
estimated at 214,000.
AFL-CIO President
Richard Trumka speaks
at UDC’s law school on
trade and labor rights.

FRIDAY
The Washington Na-
tionals host the Hous-
ton Astros in Game 3 of
the World Series.
The funeral for the late
congressman Elijah E.
Cummings (D-Md.) is
held in Baltimore.

Inside


ED JONES/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

BUSINESS NEWS ....................... A
COMICS ....................................... C
OPINION PAGES.........................A
LOTTERIES...................................B
OBITUARIES ................................ B
TELEVISION ................................. C
WORLD NEWS............................A

CONTENT © 2019
The Washington Post / Year 142, No. 320

BY ROBERT SAMUELS
IN SYRACUSE, N.Y.

When Ryedell Davis heard the 1.5-mile stretch of
elevated highway slicing through this city might be
torn down, he had a vision about what could emerge
from its dust.
He could open a restaurant, near the one his
grandparents had before it was bulldozed to make
space for Interstate 81. Surrounding it could be
other black-owned businesses, largely absent from
the city’s south side because banks historically
refused to give loans there. Maybe, he thought, the
state would give them all tax credits or offer
financial assistance to address the past injustice.
“We could have a little Africa,” said Davis, a
34-year-old liquor store owner who lives a few feet
from the highway. “A black liquor store, a black
grocery store, a black shopping center — places that
SEE SYRACUSE ON A


A crumbling highway sparks a new challenge


In Syracuse, African Americans want officials to atone for the damage inflicted on their community


JAHI CHIKWENDIU/THE WASHINGTON POST

BY DEBBIE CENZIPER, EMILY CORIO, KELLY HOOPER AND DOUGLAS SOULE
PHOTOS BY SALWAN GEORGES IN CHARLESTON, W.VA.

T


he ward of the state was barely 16 inches
long. He slept in a bassinet with a monitor
that tracked his heart rate and a heat
lamp that warmed his limbs. The isola-
tion room was hushed. The doc-
tors wanted it that way because the three-
pound patient in the bright blue T-shirt
fussed at even the dullest sounds.
“I’m a boy,” read a note posted in June at the
baby’s side in the neonatal intensive care unit in
Charleston. He was comforted by a nurse who
learned long ago to recognize the high-pitched cries
of newborns suffering from opioid withdrawal.

The 2-week-old was among thousands of children
separated from their parents and forced into state
care by an opioid epidemic that fractured families in
every corner of West Virginia, claiming 5,200 lives
over two decades.
Time and again, state officials vowed to
seek justice for the devastation and despair.
In 2001, at the dawn of the crisis, West
Virginia became the first state to take OxyContin
manufacturer Purdue Pharma to court. Officials
would go on to file three more high-profile lawsuits
against opioid distributors, demanding the compa-
SEE OPIOIDS ON A

THE OPIOID
FILES

‘An easy target’


After being ravaged by the opioid epidemic, West Virginia learns
that fighting drug companies doesn’t always balance the scales.

A 2-week-old boy addicted to opioids is monitored at a hospital in Charleston, W.Va.
Lawsuits have recovered “a drop in the bucket” of the money needed to cope with the damage.

BY ERIN CUNNINGHAM
AND STEVE HENDRIX

istanbul — Kurdish fighters in
northeastern Syria withdrew
from a flash-point city as part of a
cease-fire agreement with Turkey,
a spokesman said Sunday, a move
that could ease tensions amid
U.S.-led efforts to quell a spiraling
conflict.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi,
meanwhile, led a surprise con-
gressional visit to neighboring
Jordan over the weekend, high-
lighting her sharp disagreement
with President Trump’s decision
to remove U.S. troops from north-
ern Syria and Turkey’s subsequent
attacks on Kurdish enclaves.
U.S. Defense Secretary Mark T.
Esper, in Kabul on Sunday, said
the cease-fire in northeastern Syr-
ia “generally seems to be holding,”
despite reports of “intermittent
fire.” He said the U.S. withdrawal
was proceeding as planned.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan had threatened to re-
sume a military offensive in north-
eastern Syria if Kurdish fighters
didn’t retreat from designated
border areas by Tuesday evening,
the deadline in the cease-fire pact.
A spokesman for the Kurdish-
led Syrian Democratic Forces said
they were keeping their end of the
deal.
“As part of the agreement to
pause military operations with
Turkey... today, we have evacu-
ated the city of Ras al-Ayn,”
spokesman Kino Gabriel said. “We
don’t have any more fighters in the
city.”
Turkey’s offensive this month to
rout Kurdish militants from the
Syrian frontier has drawn interna-
tional condemnation and set off a
scramble for territory.
Vice President Pence traveled
to Turkey last week to negotiate a
SEE SYRIA ON A


BY TOLUSE OLORUNNIPA,
JOSH DAWSEY
AND DAVID A. FAHRENTHOLD

President Trump was forced to
abandon his decision to host next
year’s Group of Seven summit at
his private golf club after it be-
came clear the move had alienat-
ed Republicans and swiftly be-
come part of the impeachment
inquiry that threatens his presi-
dency.
In a round of phone calls with
conservative allies this weekend,
Trump was told Republicans are
struggling to defend him on so
many fronts, according to an ad-
ministration official who spoke
on the condition of anonymity to
discuss internal matters.
Democrats, meanwhile, con-
tinued to blast Trump for award-
ing the massive government con-
tract to his own company and said
they might add the alleged “emol-
uments” violation to the articles
of impeachment they are prepar-
ing.
The White House has been
struggling to explain Trump’s G-
decision since it was announced
Thursday. The president’s oppo-
nents quickly seized on it as an-
other example of Trump abusing
his office for personal gain. Even
many Republicans seemed reluc-
tant to offer political cover.
Acting White House chief of
staff Mick Mulvaney tried to de-
fend the decision during a news
conference but caused a new con-
troversy when he was asked about
SEE TRUMP ON A

BY GREGORY S. SCHNEIDER

suffolk, va. — The path for
Democrats to take control of the
Virginia legislature runs through
the Food Lion parking lot here
and directly into Bennett’s Creek
Pharmacy.
Republican Chris Jones has
owned the shop since he was a
boy-wonder vice mayor who
wore sneakers at Suffolk City
Council meetings, rising to may-
or and then state delegate. Today,
at 61, he’s one of the most power-
ful lawmakers in Virginia.
But his political fortunes
changed overnight when federal
judges approved a new Virginia
electoral map earlier this year,
saying the old one was racially
gerrymandered. His district went
from a 12 percent edge for Repub-

licans to a 15 percent edge for
Democrats. It looks like an easy
flip from red to blue.
Yet the way the race is playing
out shows a difficult path ahead
for Democrats, who need to turn
two GOP seats in both the House
of Delegates and the state Senate
to take full control of the legisla-
ture. All 140 seats in the House
and Senate are on the Nov. 5
ballot.
The party almost failed to
secure an opponent to run
SEE VIRGINIA ON A

Va. Democrats fear key


race will defy the odds


Trump


bowed


to GOP


on Doral


ALLIES’ ALARM LED
HIM TO DROP G-7 PLAN

Many struggled to rebut
allegations of self-dealing

Shatiek Lawrence, left, and Carlito Aldamuy hit
the court on a summer day at Wilson Park, near
Interstate 81 on the south side of Syracuse, N.Y.


With balance of power at
stake, GOP delegate has
a hold on his blue district

Kurdish


forces quit


key city


in Syria


Pelosi leads delegation
to Jordan, highlighting
rift over U.S. withdrawal

Advisers defend president
Mulvaney continues to back away
from quid pro quo, as Pompeo calls
Giuliani’s role “appropriate.” A
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