CHRISTIE’S SALE A WARHOL GOES FOR $82 MILLION THE BEARDED WHAT WORKS IN THE BOARDROOM ROGER COHEN MERE HUMAN BEHAVIOR G-20 SUMMIT WHERE HOPES ARE STALLING PAGE 8 INSIDE PAGE 7 INSIDE | CULTURE | SPECIAL REPORT | OPINION | SPECIAL REPORT .... FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2014 Obama plans to protect millions from deportation Russia to cut cooperation with U.S. on nuclear sites WASHINGTON WASHINGTON Ignoring Republican ire, president looks to order overhaul of immigration Move could undermine decades of work to secure potential bomb materials BY MICHAEL D. SHEAR, JULIA PRESTON AND ASHLEY PARKER BY MICHAEL R. GORDON President Obama will ignore angry protests from Republicans and announce as soon as next week a broad overhaul of the nation’s immigration enforcement system that will protect up to five million undocumented immigrants from the threat of deportation and provide many of them with work permits, according to administration officials who have direct knowledge of the plan. Asserting his authority as president to enforce the nation’s laws with discretion, Mr. Obama intends to order changes that will significantly refocus the activities of the government’s 12,000 immigration agents. One key piece of the order, officials said, would allow many parents of children who are American citizens or legal residents to obtain legal work documents and no longer worry about being discovered, separated from their families and sent away. That part of Mr. Obama’s plan alone could affect as many as 3.3 million people who have been living in the United States illegally for at least five years, according to an analysis by the Migration Policy Institute, an immigration research organization in Washington. But the White House is also considering a stricter policy that would limit the benefits to those who have lived in the country for at least 10 years, or about 2.5 million people. Extending protections to more undocumented immigrants who came to the United States as children, and to their parents, could affect an additional one million or more if they are included in the final plan that the president announces. Mr. Obama’s actions would also expand opportunities for immigrants who have high-tech skills, shift extra security resources to the nation’s southern border, revamp an immigration enforcement program called Secure Communities, and provide clearer guidance to the agencies that enforce immigration laws about who should be a low priority for deportation, especially those with strong family ties and no serious criminal history. A new enforcement memorandum, which would direct the actions of Border Patrol agents and of judges at the Department of Homeland Security, the Justice Department and other federal law enforcement and judicial agencies, would make clear that deportations should still proceed for convicted criminals, foreigners who pose national security risks and recent border crossers, officials said. White House officials declined to comment publicly before a formal announcement by Mr. Obama, who will return from an eight-day trip to Asia on Sunday. Administration officials said details about the package of executive actions were still being finished and could IMMIGRATION, PAGE 4 ANINDITO MUKHERJEE/REUTERS Sterilization deaths A woman recovering at a hospital in Bilaspur, India, on Thursday after sterilization surgery. Post-mortems on several victims suggested that tainted medication given after the procedures at a ‘‘sterilization fair’’ was the most likely cause of the deaths of at least 13 women and the hospitalization of dozens more. PAGE 3 Report on World Cup bids is contested SOCCER Investigator says FIFA distorted facts in clearing Russia and Qatar to host BY SAM BORDEN Soccer’s governing body has found no significant evidence of corruption in the bidding among nations to hold the next World Cups, clearing Russia to stage the 2018 tournament and Qatar to do so in 2022. But the conclusions were immediately contested by the investigator who collected the evidence. The conclusions were included in a summary of the investigation released on Thursday by FIFA’s head ethics judge, who noted ‘‘potentially problematic conduct’’ by several of the bidding nations but largely dismissed broader questions about corruption in the voting process, eliminating the possibility of a revote. The judge, Hans-Joachim Eckert, a LYON, FRANCE BY AURELIEN BREEDEN MARLENE AWAAD FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES A menu at a bistro in Lyon, France, with a sticker encouraging diners to ask for a ‘‘gourmet bag’’ if they fail to finish their plate. The tag line reads: ‘‘It’s so good, I’ll finish it at home!’’ Saving Brazil’s river giant Call to arms against anti-Semitism Efforts to save the pirarucu, one of the world’s largest freshwater fish, have been a success while offering a strategy for fending off a broader freshwater extinction crisis. nytimes.com/world The American ambassador to the United Nations said Thursday that an increase in anti-Semitism poses a threat to Europe’s values and urged it thwart anti-Jewish sentiment. WORLD NEWS, 4 Republicans focus on the budget Deal clears way for global trade pact Taking Alaska by storm Get in the mind of Angel Collinson, a 24-year-old big mountain skier who is making waves in the traditionally male dominated sport. nytimes.com/video Latin America and Catholicism A panorama taken by the Philae lander from a comet’s surface. The lander bounded up about a kilometer back into space before falling to the surface again. nytimes.com The Roman Catholic Church’s claim on the region is lessening as a younger generation turns to Protestantism, a Pew study finds. nytimes.com/upshot NEWSSTAND PRICESINFORMATION, CALL: FOR SUBSCRIPTION CURRENCIES EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY, VIA EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY BUMPY LANDING Lithuania LTL 15 Luxembourg ¤ 3.00 Macedonia Den 150.00 Malta ¤ 3.00 Montenegro ¤ 2.00 Morocco MAD 25 Mexico N$ 26.00 Moscow Roubles 110 Nigeria NGN 390 Northern Ireland £ 1.50 Caymanat Is CI$ 2.00 Estonia ¤ 3.20 Italy ¤ 2.80 or e-mail us inytsubs@nytimes.com Chile Ps$ 1,550 Colombia Cps 1,875 Costa Rica US$ 2.50 Croatia KN 20.00 Cyprus ¤ 2.90 Czech Rep CZK 110 Denmark DKr 26 Finland ¤ 3.00 France ¤ 3.00 Gabon CFA 2.500 Great Britain £ 1.80 Greece ¤2.50 Germany ¤ 3.00 Gibraltar £ 1.35 Ivory Coast CFA 2.500 Jordan. JD 1.50 Kazakhstan USD 3.50 Kenya K. SH. 200 Kosovo ¤ 2.50 Latvia ¤ 3.25 Lebanon LP 4,000 Fabrice Moya, a chef with a boyish grin who opened a restaurant of the same name here 12 years ago, has no problems with doggie bags. ‘‘We’ve always been used to letting people take what they haven’t finished,’’ he said on a recent morning in his kitchen, where several of his cooks were chopping fresh carrots and filling buckets with chickpeas for the day’s lunch service. But it rarely happens — one doggie bag per week at most, out of 500 customers, he estimated. They were much I NSIDE TODAY’S PAP E R With their new power and majority in the Senate, congressional Republicans have plans to transform Medicare and Medicaid and to cut taxes for high earners. nytimes.com/politics Cameroon CFA 2.500 Ecuador US$ 3.35 Hungary HUF 800 00800 Canada 44C$ 4.5048Egypt78 27 EGP 15.00 Israel NIS 13.00/Eilat NIS 11.00 FIFA, PAGE 13 ’:HIKKLD=WUXUU\:?l@b@l@e@a" WALTER BIERI/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY Michael J. Garcia, who collected the evidence, said he would appeal the decision. Doggie bags for French run up against some leftover attitudes ONLINE AT INY T. COM Andorra ¤ 3.50 Antilles ¤ 3.50 Argentina US$ 5.00 Austria ¤ 3.00 Bahrain BD 1.20 Belgium ¤3.00 Bermuda US$ 3.50 Bolivia US$ 2.75 Bosnia & Herzegovina KM 5.00 Bulgaria ¤ 2.55 German who heads the adjudicatory arm of FIFA’s ethics committee, released his 42-page summary after reviewing the work of Michael J. Garcia, a former United States attorney and the head of the investigatory chamber of the committee. But soon after Eckert released his report, Garcia harshly criticized his decision, saying in a statement that the adjudicatory chamber’s report contained ‘‘numerous materially incomplete and erroneous representations of the facts NEWSSTAND PRICES Norway NkrFrance 28 Senegal 2.500 ¤ CFA 3.00 Oman OMR 1.250 Serbia Din 250 Peru US$ 3.50 Slovakia ¤ 3.30 Andorra ¤ 3.50 Poland ZI 12.20 Slovenia ¤ 2.50 Antilles ¤ Spain 3.50 Portugal ¤ 3.00 ¤ 3.00 Qatar QR 10.00 Sweden Skr 28 CFA 2.500 Republic of Cameroon Ireland ¤3.00 Switzerland SFr 4.30 Reunion ¤ 3.50 Syria US$ 3.00 Gabon CFA 2.500 Romania Lei 11.50 The Netherlands ¤ 3.00 Saudi ArabiaIvory SR 13.00Coast Tunisia Din 4.300 CFA 2.500 Turkey TL 6 Ukraine US$ 5.00 United ArabMAD Emirates25 AED 12.00 Morocco Venezuela US$ 2.75 Senegal CFA 2.500 United States $ 3.00 Other US$ 2.00 Tunisia Din(Europe) 4.300 U.S. Military US$ 1.75 Reunion ¤ 3.50 IN THIS ISSUE No. 40,955 Books 9 Business 15 Crossword 14 Culture 8 Opinion 6 Sports 13 s t t s Euro Pound Yen S. Franc NEW YORK, THURSDAY 12:30PM PREVIOUS €1= £1= $1= $1= $1.2470 $1.2440 $1.5720 $1.5780 ¥115.640 ¥115.470 SF0.9640 SF0.9660 Full currenc y rates Pa ge 18 India and the United States reached an agreement that removes a key obstacle to the implementation of a landmark global trade pact. BUSINESS, 15 Amazon and Hachette end dispute A new accord allows the publisher to set prices on its e-books, a major issue in a battle that lasted all year and even crossed the ocean. BUSINESS, 15 Myanmar needs more time The country is in the midst of changes unparalleled in its history, but there are things that cannot happen overnight, writes U Soe Thane. OPINION, 7 STOCK INDEXES THURSDAY s The Dow 12:30pm 17,652.98 6,635.45 s FTSE 100 close s Nikkei 225 close 17,392.79 OIL +0.23% +0.37% +1.14% NEW YORK, THURSDAY 12:30PM t Light sweet crude $75.37 –$2.47 more likely to take home what was left in their bottle of wine. ‘‘What’s important is to cook well,’’ Mr. Moya emphasized, and an empty plate will follow. ‘‘If you do it with passion, people will eat.’’ That is not to say nothing is ever left behind. Though the French remain resistant to taking home leftovers, a small movement is afoot to change attitudes. It has been encouraged by difficult economic times, rising consciousness about food waste and an environmentally minded younger generation that is more familiar with takeout culture. As part of a wider drive to cut down on food waste, authorities in the south-cen- FRANCE, PAGE 4 Russia has informed the United States that it is planning to reduce its participation next year in a joint effort to secure nuclear materials on Russian territory, a move that could seriously undermine more than two decades of cooperation aimed at ensuring that nuclear bomb components do not fall into the hands of terrorists or a rogue state. Sergey V. Kirienko, the head of Russia’s state nuclear corporation, has told senior Obama administration officials that no new projects in Russia are ‘‘envisioned’’ in 2015, according to American officials. The officials still hope to persuade the Russians to continue work next year on some current projects, though Russian officials have yet to agree. The reduced cooperation is a byproduct of the general downturn in relations between Russia and the United States, which has been compounded by President Vladimir V. Putin’s decision to intervene militarily in Ukraine, and again this week by a Russian announcement that its longrange bombers would fly missions into the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico. Both moves have raised specters of a return to Cold War-type tensions. But the move also stems from longstanding concerns among Kremlin hard-liners about a program that brings American nuclear experts to Russia’s nuclear sites and that, they fear, may create the impression that Russia is in need of outside help. Russia also announced last week that it was planning to boycott an international security summit meeting that is to be hosted by President Obama in 2016. But the message delivered by Mr. Kirienko represents the first time that the rising tensions between the Kremlin and the Obama administration have threatened to disrupt some of the practical efforts that the two sides initiated at the end of the Cold War to help Russia safeguard its nuclear materials. ‘‘There is a real danger that 20 years of U.S.-Russian cooperation to secure nuclear material will simply stop at the end of this year, and some of the gains we have made could slip away,’’ said Matthew Bunn, a Harvard professor who, during the administration of Bill Clinton, supervised a classified government study on protecting nuclear materials in Russia. A senior Obama administration official said the United States still planned to work with the Russians on nuclear security efforts in third countries and hoped to persuade Moscow to continue cooperation in Russia. ‘‘We would hope that the door can be left open to any and all forms of cooperation in this important area,’’ said the administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss diplomatic exchanges. ‘‘If a reasonable projRUSSIA, PAGE 4
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