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In The News

U.S. Drone Incident Video, Credit Suisse Lifeline, Lunar Fashion

U.S. Drone Incident Video, Credit Suisse Lifeline, Lunar Fashion

NASA has unveiled the first prototype for a newly designed next-generation spacesuit specially tailored and accessorized for the first astronauts expected to go back to the moon’s surface in the following years.

Ginevra Falciani, Renate Mattar, Emma Albright, Anne-Sophie Goninet

👋 Sannu!*

Welcome to Thursday, where the U.S. releases a video of the drone incident with a Russian fighter jet, Credit Suisse borrows big, and we get a first look at NASA’s new Moon spacesuits. Meanwhile, Rubén M. Perina in Buenos Aires-based daily Clarín lays out why Latin America should be wary of China’s economic might in Argentina.

[*Hausa - Nigeria]

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This is our daily newsletter Worldcrunch Today, a rapid tour of the news of the day from the world's best journalism sources, regardless of language or geography.

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🌎  7 THINGS TO KNOW RIGHT NOW

• U.S. releases Black Sea drone crash footage: The Pentagon has released a de-classified video showing Russia's intercept of a U.S. military surveillance drone downed over the Black Sea two days ago. In the video, a Russian Su-27 fighter jet comes very close to the U.S. MQ-9 drone and dumps fuel near it. Meanwhile, fierce fighting continues on the ground in Bakhmut, with combat appearing to be focused around a sprawling plant in the eastern city. Fewer than 3,000 people remain in the embattled city.

• Credit Suisse’s $54 billion-lifeline: Credit Suisse said it would borrow up to $54 billion from Switzerland's central bank to shore up liquidity and investor confidence, after a slump in its shares intensified fears about a global banking crisis. The bank's announcement, which came in the middle of the night in Zurich, prompted a 24% rise in Credit Suisse shares in morning trading, and helped reverse some of the heavy losses across stock markets driven by investor fears over potential bank runs across the world.

• Japan-South Korea summit: South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol met his Japanese counterpart Fumio Kishida in Tokyo for the first visit in 12 years between top leaders of the two Asian neighbors. The countries, which have been virulent enemies in the past, today are seeking to come together to address common threats from China and North Korea. Indeed, just hours before the trip, Pyongyang fired a long-range ballistic missile into the waters off the east coast of the Korean peninsula.

• Tons of natural uranium missing in Libya: UN nuclear watchdog inspectors have found that roughly 2.5 tons of natural uranium have gone missing from a Libyan site that is not under government control. The finding is the result of an inspection originally planned for last year that "had to be postponed because of the security situation in the region" and was finally carried out on Tuesday. The International Atomic Energy Agency said it will investigate the circumstances of the uranium's removal from the site, and try to locate it.

• U.S. announces $331m in new aid to Ethiopia as Blinken meets Abiy: U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has announced $331 million in new humanitarian assistance to Ethiopia during a visit to Addis Ababa aimed at improving the United States’ relations with the East African country. Washington has imposed wide-ranging restrictions on economic and security assistance after criticizing the central government for alleged atrocities committed by Ethiopian forces and their allies during the recent conflict against rebels in the northern Tigray region.

• Farmers’ party wins shock victory at Dutch elections: A farmers' party is set to be the biggest party in the upper house of parliament after provincial elections. The Farmer-citizen movement (BBB) was only set up in 2019 in the wake of widespread farmers' protests and aims to fight government plans to slash nitrogen emissions by dramatically reducing livestock numbers and buying out thousands of farms.

• China fossils reveal 70-ton dinosaur had 15-meter neck: Analysis of bones found in 1987 suggest that the Jurassic-era sauropod known as Mamenchisaurus sinocanadorum sported a neck 15 meters long, or one-and-a-half times the length of a doubledecker bus.

🗞️  FRONT PAGE

"Naples in hell for a game,” titles southern Italian daily Corriere del Mezzogiorno, featuring an image of yesterday’s clashes between soccer “ultras” (hooligans) supporters and the police, ahead of Napoli’s Champions League match against Germany’s Eintracht Frankfurt

💬 LEXICON

Whenua

New Zealand’s latest edition of the Oxford English Dictionary has introduced a new batch of 47 words and phrases — most of them in Māori, one of the countries’ official languages. The additions include words that are used in everyday life like the common greeting “Kia ora e hoa!,” “koha” (a gift or offering), “kōrero” (a conversation or chat) but also Māori concepts that do not have an easy English equivalent such as “whenua,” which designates land, and in particular, a Māori person’s native land. The term has been used in English since the 18th century.

📰  STORY OF THE DAY

How Argentina has become China's foothold in Latin America

China has become one of Argentina's most important trading partners and is increasing its military bases in the country. As China seeks to challenge the liberal world order, Argentina risks rifts with other key allies, warns Rubén M. Perina in Buenos Aires-based daily Clarín.

🇨🇳🇦🇷 There was a media furore worldwide in February over the sighting and subsequent downing of mysterious Chinese balloons by the U.S. coastline. Here in Argentina, currently run by a leftist administration with leanings toward Russia and China, we might pertinently wonder whether or not the secretive Chinese base set up in the province of Neuquén in the west of the country in 2015-17 had anything to do with the communist superpower's less-than-festive balloons.

💰 Broadly speaking, China has duly established itself as a significant actor in Argentina's economy. China is our second trading partner after Brazil, while the total value of bilateral exchanges rose from U.S. $3.2 billion in 2003 to $14 billion in 2020. The value of ongoing or projected investments between 2005 and 2019 has been estimated at $30 billion (or 40% of all investments in South America).

⚠️ China's strategic presence in Argentina and Latin America has the potential to cause dependency and give China an undue level of influence over those countries. At stake is the national sovereignty of states and democratic security on the continent. Its presence, as a challenge to U.S. regional hegemony, could also fuel rifts and tensions between Latin American states and the United States, which can hardly benefit states like Argentina.

➡️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com

 📣 VERBATIM

“We will do our part. We will keep our promise.”

— Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has suggested that Turkey could soon ratify Finland’s NATO membership, as the Finnish President arrives in Turkey today. Last year, alarmed by the war that was starting in Ukraine, Finland and Sweden applied last year to join NATO together. For now, all NATO members have ratified their accession, but Turkey and Hungary. Turkey’s potential ratification would allow Finland to join NATO separately from Sweden.

✍️ Newsletter by Ginevra Falciani, Renate Mattar, Emma Albright and Anne-Sophie Goninet


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Society

Genoa Postcard: A Tale Of Modern Sailors, Echos Of The Ancient Mariner

Many seafarers are hired and fired every seven months. Some keep up this lifestyle for 40 years while sailing the world. Some of those who'd recently docked in the Italian port city of Genoa, share a taste of their travels that are connected to a long history of a seafaring life.

A sailor smokes a cigarette on the hydrofoil Procida

A sailor on the hydrofoil Procida in Italy

Daniele Frediani/Mondadori Portfolio via ZUMA Press
Paolo Griseri

GENOA — Cristina did it to escape after a tough breakup. Luigi because he dreamed of adventures and the South Seas. Marianna embarked just “before the refrigerator factory where I worked went out of business. I’m one of the few who got severance pay.”

To hear their stories, you have to go to the canteen on Via Albertazzi, in Italy's northern port city of Genoa, across from the ferry terminal. The place has excellent minestrone soup and is decorated with models of the ships that have made the port’s history.

There are 38,000 Italian professional sailors, many of whom work here in Genoa, a historic port of call that today is the country's second largest after Trieste on the east coast. Luciano Rotella of the trade union Italian Federation of Transport Workers says the official number of maritime workers is far lower than the reality, which contains a tangle of different laws, regulations, contracts and ethnicities — not to mention ancient remnants of harsh battles between shipowners and crews.

The result is that today it is not so easy to know how many people sail, nor their nationalities.

What is certain is that every six to seven months, the Italian mariner disembarks the ship and is dismissed: they take severance pay and after waits for the next call. Andrea has been sailing for more than 20 years: “When I started out, to those who told us we were earning good money, I replied that I had a precarious life: every landing was a dismissal.”

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