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U.S.-Taliban Talks, China-Taiwan Tensions, Coconuts And Prayers

U.S.-Taliban Talks, China-Taiwan Tensions, Coconuts And Prayers

Tunisia: Demonstration against President Kais Saied's coup

Anne-Sophie Goninet, Jane Herbelin and Bertrand Hauger

👋 Hallo!*

Welcome to Monday, where American and Taliban negotiators sat down for the first time since the U.S. withdrawal, Taiwan's president pushes back on China threats and a couple is accused of selling nuclear submarine secrets. We also look at the migratory path of the international bubble tea craze.

[*Norwegian]

🌎  7 THINGS TO KNOW RIGHT NOW

U.S. and Taliban talks: Delegates from the Taliban and the United States have held "candid and professional" talks in the Qatari capital in the first face-to-face meeting since the hardline group took over Afghanistan, according to a U.S. official. Over the two-day discussions, the Taliban called for international recognition. Meanwhile, the U.S focused on security, "terrorism concerns", women's rights, and evacuations from Afghanistan.

COVID update: Sydney celebrates the end of 107-day lockdown as Australia aims to begin "living with" COVID-19. Cafes, gyms, and restaurants welcomed back fully vaccinated people after almost four months of closing. In the U.S., drugmaker Merck announced it has asked the Food and Drug Administration to authorize emergency use of its experimental antiviral pill to treat COVID-19.

Protests in Poland amid Polexit fear: More than 100,000 Poles rallied in support of European Union membership after the country's constitutional court ruled that parts of EU law are incompatible with their constitutions. This decision, refusing any European control over Polish laws, could mark the first step towards "Polexit."

Iraq's election turnout was 41%: Polls have closed in Iraq's parliamentary election with some 41% of eligible voters casting their ballots. This is the lowest turnout since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003, highlighting the growing disillusionment among Iraqis who view the political system as dysfunctional and their leaders as incompetent.

Nobel Prize economy: The Nobel Prize for economics was awarded to three U.S-based economists who used "natural experiments" in their work. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences cited David Card, Guido Imbens, and Joshua Angrist for having "completely reshaped empirical work in the economics sciences."

U.S. couple accused of selling nuclear submarine secrets: A U.S. Navy nuclear engineer and his wife have been charged with trying to sell nuclear secrets to what they thought was a foreign state. Jonathan Toebbe and his wife Diana were arrested in West Virginia on Saturday, the Justice Department announced.

Coconuts and prayers: Lost at sea for 29 days, two men from the Solomon Islands have been rescued off the coast of Papua New Guinea 400 kilometers (250 miles) away from their starting point. The duo said they survived on coconuts from the sea, oranges they had brought, rainwater they collected, and prayers.

🗞️  FRONT PAGE

"Exchange of chancellors saves the coalition," titles Austrian daily Salzburger Nachrichten, reporting on the resignation of Chancellor Sebastian Kurz this weekend following revelations he was under investigation for corruption. He will be replaced by Austria's Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenberg, to save the governing coalition between his conservative party and the Greens.


📰  STORY OF THE DAY

Taiwan to Hong Kong to L.A., birth of bubble tea culture

Originating in Taiwan, bubble tea is an internationally beloved, tapioca-based drink is about more than consummation — it's an entire culture, reports Zhang Yan in Chinese-language digital media The Initium.

🥤 According to Alan Yu, founder of Lollicup, a restaurant chain as well a major supplier of North America's raw tapioca material, at least 20,000 stores in the U.S. specialize in this drink, and the tea is also sold in an additional 30,000 restaurants. Even fast-food chains such as Sonic Burgers, Chilli's and Taco are Mr. Yu's clients for raw materials. They all aim to profit off boba tea which has gone far beyond the Chinese-speaking diaspora to become a trendy drink among mainstream American yuppies and young people.

🧑🤝🧑 Considered "bars for minors," boba tea stores are places where youngsters from migrant families can gather with their friends after school. "Most of the boba tea stores' customers are teenagers. After going to SAT classes, they meet up there. This is a place to cram for exams, but also a place for dates and being broken-hearted. In this space, they can feel a sense of belonging, which surpasses the meaning of milk tea itself as a drink," says Clarissa Wei, a foodie writer born in Taiwan but who grew up in Los Angeles.

🌏 Born in the U.S. in 1984, Philip Wang is a second-generation Taiwanese American and a renowned YouTuber. He still recalls his teenage years when the term "Asian pride" was on everyone's lips. It was the moment when Japanese animation and South Korean pop music entered the U.S., and Asian Americans were increasingly asserting themselves as the export of Asian pop culture confronted a mainstream American culture that was overwhelmingly white. "For the first time, boba tea made me feel there was a cultural product belonging to the Asian community in the United States", said Philip Wang.


➡️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com

📣 VERBATIM

"There should be absolutely no illusions that the Taiwanese people will bow to pressure."

— During National Day celebrations yesterday, Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen pushed back on recent aggressive words and actions from mainland China. Tsai warned that Taiwan is facing the "most complex situation" since the end of the Chinese civil war 72 years ago. Her speech came days after China flew record numbers of warplanes near the island nation and Chinese President Xi Jinping vowed to pursue what Beijing called "reunification" with Taiwan by peaceful means. Tsai said that Taiwan will not "act rashly," but will do whatever's necessary to defend its sovereignty.

✍️ Newsletter by Anne-Sophie Goninet, Jane Herbelin and Bertrand Hauger

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Society

In Northern Kenya, Where Climate Change Is Measured In Starving Children

The worst drought in 40 years, which has deepened from the effects of climate change, is hitting the young the hardest around the Horn of Africa. A close-up look at the victims, and attempts to save lives and limit lasting effects on an already fragile region in Kenya.

Photo of five mothers holding their malnourished children

At feeding time, nurses and aides encourage mothers to socialize their children and stimulate them to eat.

Georgina Gustin

KAKUMA — The words "Stabilization Ward" are painted in uneven black letters above the entrance, but everyone in this massive refugee camp in Kakuma, Kenya, calls it ya maziwa: The place of milk.

Rescue workers and doctors, mothers and fathers, have carried hundreds of starving children through the doors of this one-room hospital wing, which is sometimes so crowded that babies and toddlers have to share beds. A pediatric unit is only a few steps away, but malnourished children don’t go there. They need special care, and even that doesn’t always save them.

In an office of the International Rescue Committee nearby, Vincent Opinya sits behind a desk with figures on dry-erase boards and a map of the camp on the walls around him. “We’ve lost 45 children this year due to malnutrition,” he says, juggling emergencies, phone calls, and texts. “We’re seeing a significant increase in malnutrition cases as a result of the drought — the worst we’ve faced in 40 years.”

From January to June, the ward experienced an 800 percent rise in admissions of children under 5 who needed treatment for malnourishment — a surge that aid groups blame mostly on a climate change-fueled drought that has turned the region into a parched barren.

Opinya, the nutrition manager for the IRC here, has had to rattle off these statistics many times, but the reality of the numbers is starting to crack his professional armor. “It’s a very sad situation,” he says, wearily. And he believes it will only get worse. A third year of drought is likely on the way.

More children may die. But millions will survive malnutrition and hunger only to live through a compromised future, researchers say. The longer-term health effects of this drought — weakened immune systems, developmental problems — will persist for a generation or more, with consequences that will cascade into communities and societies for decades.

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