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This aerial view shows Ullum Dam in San Juan, Argentina on April 25, 2026. The ever-blue sky of San Juan is no longer reflected in many of its rivers: the Argentine province is facing a persistent water shortage due to climate change, while mining advances across the Andes and its thousands of glaciers. (Photo by Luis ROBAYO / AFP via Getty Images)
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This aerial view shows a bridge spanning the waterless channel of the San Juan River, taken on April 19, 2026, on the outskirts of San Juan, Argentina. The ever-blue sky of San Juan is no longer reflected in many of its rivers: the Argentine province is facing a persistent water shortage due to climate change, while mining advances across the Andes and its thousands of glaciers. (Photo by Luis ROBAYO / AFP via Getty Images)
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"People fish at Ullum Dam in San Juan, Argentina, on April 25, 2026. The ever-blue sky of San Juan is no longer reflected in many of its rivers: the Argentine province is facing a persistent water shortage due to climate change, while mining advances across the Andes and its thousands of glaciers. (Photo by Luis ROBAYO / AFP via Getty Images)
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A woman looks at her mobile phone with Ullum Dam behind her in San Juan, Argentina on April 25, 2026. The ever-blue sky of San Juan is no longer reflected in many of its rivers: the Argentine province is facing a persistent water shortage due to climate change, while mining advances across the Andes and its thousands of glaciers. (Photo by Luis ROBAYO / AFP via Getty Images)
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Workers collect pistachios at the Piste factory in San Juan, Argentina on April 24, 2026. The ever-blue sky of San Juan is no longer reflected in many of its rivers: the Argentine province is facing a persistent water shortage due to climate change, while mining advances across the Andes and its thousands of glaciers. (Photo by Luis ROBAYO / AFP via Getty Images)
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This aerial view shows glaciers in the Andes near Iglesia, San Juan province, Argentina, on April 23, 2026. The ever-blue sky of San Juan is no longer reflected in many of its rivers: the Argentine province is facing a persistent water shortage due to climate change, while mining advances across the Andes and its thousands of glaciers. (Photo by Luis ROBAYO / AFP via Getty Images)
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Consumers walk past a newsstand with daily newspapers and magazines in a shopping mall in Budapest on June 17, 2026. The once popular tabloid Bors has been off the market since last week. The paper's publisher, Mediaworks, announced a reorganization of its portfolio, including the closure of some newspapers. The company is affiliated with the nationalist Fidesz, the former ruling party that was ousted from power in the April elections. Mediaworks is facing a loss of revenue after the new Tisza government led by Peter Magyar decided to no longer support Fidesz-friendly media with advertising. Before the election in April, then ruling party Fidesz is said to have directly or indirectly controlled about 80 percent of the media market in Hungary, while the press freedom of the few remaining independent media outlets was systematically obstructed by the government. (Photo by Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP via Getty Images)
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A kiosk vendor shows the traditionally conservative Hungarian daily newspaper, the 'Magyar Nemzet' (Hungarian Nation) at a newsstand in a shopping mall in Budapest on June 17, 2026. The once popular tabloid Bors has been off the market since last week. The paper's publisher, Mediaworks, announced a reorganization of its portfolio, including the closure of some newspapers. The company is affiliated with the nationalist Fidesz, the former ruling party that was ousted from power in the April elections. Mediaworks is facing a loss of revenue after the new Tisza government led by Peter Magyar decided to no longer support Fidesz-friendly media with advertising. Before the election in April, then ruling party Fidesz is said to have directly or indirectly controlled about 80 percent of the media market in Hungary, while the press freedom of the few remaining independent media outlets was systematically obstructed by the government. (Photo by Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP via Getty Images)




