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In The News

China’s Missile Drills, Taliban Doubts On Al-Zawahiri, Good Great Barrier Reef News

a chinese helicopter fliying above a bridge on Pingtan island ahead the largest military exercises China planned following Nancy Pelosi's visit to Taiwan
Lila Paulou, Lisa Berdet, Laure Gautherin and Anne-Sophie Goninet

👋 Alii!*

Welcome to Thursday, where China launches missiles in largest ever drills near Taiwan following Nancy Pelosi’s visit, Germany braces for a potential energy gas crisis next winter, and there’s good news from Australia’s Great Barrier Reef. Meanwhile, Die Welt visits Germany’s Baden-Baden, which went from the destination of choice for wealthy Russian tourists to a tourist ghost town.

[*Palauan, Republic of Palau]

✅  SIGN UP

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.

It's easy (and free!) to sign up to receive it each day in your inbox: 👉 Sign up here

🌎  7 THINGS TO KNOW RIGHT NOW

• China kicks off military drills:China launched missiles near Taiwan in unprecedented live-fire military exercises due to run until Sunday. This comes as a response to U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan earlier this week.

• Ukraine update: According to Ukrainian officials, about 6,000 civilians trying to evacuate Russian-occupied areas in eastern Ukraine are stuck on the road to the city of Zaporizhzhia due to floods hitting the country. Meanwhile, U.S. officials now believe Russia has fabricated evidence linked to last week’s explosion at a prison that killed Ukrainian prisoners.

Taliban raises doubts about al Qaeda leader killing: A Taliban official declared that an investigation is under way “to find out about the veracity of the [U.S.] claim” that the leader of al Qaeda, Ayman al-Zawahiri, was killed in a U.S. drone strike.

• Myanmar junta charges Japanese journalist: The Myanmar junta charged Japanese journalist Toru Kubota with breaking an immigration law and encouraging dissent against the military. Kubota was arrested in early July while covering a protest in Yangon and faces at least two years of prison.

• Panic buying in Germany: Sales of electric heaters soared in Germany as the country braces for a potential energy gas crisis next winter. Germany turns towards alternative sources of energy as Russia is reducing gas supplies.

• Great Barrier Reef’s record coral cover: Australian marine scientists have recorded the highest levels of coral cover in 36 years on some parts of the Great Barrier Reef, a positive sign that coral is expanding. Global warming continues to be the Great Barrier’s biggest threat

• Sailor survived 16 hours in capsized boat: A 62-year-old French sailor survived 16 hours in his capsized boat in the Atlantic Ocean by using an air bubble. He was rescued by the Spanish coast guard that received a distress signal on Monday, which described the feat as “verging on impossible.”

🗞️  FRONT PAGE

Lebanese daily Al-Akhbar commemorates the two-year anniversary of the blast that killed more than 200 people, when 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate ignited in a warehouse in the port of Beirut. Lebanon’s investigation into the explosion has met political interference, with the country’s politicians filing more than 25 requests to dismiss the judges in charge of the probe. A civil case was filed in the U.S. in mid-July by a Swiss-based organization to seek $250 million in damages for the survivors and to uncover new evidence to push the investigation.

#️⃣  BY THE NUMBERS

708,000

More than 708,000 people across the world tracked U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s flight on Flightradar24 when it landed in the Taiwanese capital of Taipei — making it the most tracked live flight in the website’s history. More than 2.9 million people tracked at least a portion of the flight, amid uncertainty that Pelosi would actually land on the island nation due to threats and warnings from China, which doesn’t recognize Taiwan’s independence.

📰  STORY OF THE DAY

Baden-Baden postcard: Haven for wealthy Russians reduced to tourist ghost town

For 200 years, the Black Forest spa town of Baden-Baden has been the destination of choice for Russian tourists, with oligarchs shopping in the luxury boutiques and buying up swathes of property. Now Putin’s invasion of Ukraine has changed all that and the town's once-bustling streets are empty, writes Hannelore Crolly for Die Welt.

🇩🇪 The small spa town near the Black Forest is home to around 1,150 Russian citizens, and a similar number of people with dual nationality. There are around 750 Ukrainians living there, and in recent months, almost 1,800 Ukrainian refugees have arrived. There is also an unknown but significant number of people of German origin who emigrated from Eastern Europe after the Second World War. People like I.T. expert Schneider, who was born in the North Caucasus region 43 years ago and has lived in Germany since 1994.

💸 The quiet streets are an unfamiliar sight in a city that has grown rich from the Russian tourists who have poured in over the last 200 years. Since 1793, when Princess Luise from Baden-Baden married the man who would later become Tsar Alexander, the fashionable spa town has attracted nobility and diplomats, literary greats and wealthy people from the East.

🇷🇺 Baden-Baden is twinned with both Yalta in Ukraine and Sochi in Russia. The Festspielhaus – the largest opera house in Germany has distanced itself from star conductor Valery Gergiev due to his connections to Putin, although Gergiev saved it from bankruptcy about 25 years ago. At the end of the day, a politician says, Baden-Baden is cutting off its nose to spite its face. “Many Russians invested in the town when it was struggling.” And its economy is dependent on the affluent Russian clientele. “Many people don’t seem to appreciate that.”

➡️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com

📣 VERBATIM

We are seeing these excessive, outrageous profits from the oil and gas industries at a time when we are all losing money.

— During a press conference, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres slammed the “greed” of big oil and gas companies amid an economic crisis he said was caused by Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Guterres also called on national governments to tax the companies' profits and use them to help the “most vulnerable.”

✍️ Newsletter by Lila Paulou, Lisa Berdet, Laure Gautherin and Anne-Sophie Goninet


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FOCUS: Israel-Palestine War

After Abbas: Here Are The Three Frontrunners To Be The Next Palestinian Leader

Israel and the West have often asked: Where is the Palestinian Mandela? The divided regimes between Gaza and the West Bank continues to make it difficult to imagine the future Palestinian leader. Still, these three names are worth considering.

Photo of Mahmoud Abbas speaking into microphone

Abbas is 88, and has been the leading Palestinian political figure since 2005

Thaer Ganaim/APA Images via ZUMA
Elias Kassem

Updated Dec. 5, 2023 at 12:05 a.m.

Israel has set two goals for its Gaza war: destroying Hamas and releasing hostages.

But it has no answer to, nor is even asking the question: What comes next?

The government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected the return of the current Palestinian Authority to govern post-war Gaza. That stance seems opposed to the U.S. Administration’s call to revitalize the Palestinian Authority (PA) to assume power in the coastal enclave.

For the latest news & views from every corner of the world, Worldcrunch Today is the only truly international newsletter. Sign up here.

But neither Israel nor the U.S. put a detailed plan for a governing body in post-war Gaza, let alone offering a vision for a bonafide Palestinian state that would also encompass the West Bank.

The Palestinian Authority, which administers much of the occupied West Bank, was created in1994 as part of the Oslo Accords peace agreement. It’s now led by President Mahmoud Abbas, who succeeded Yasser Arafat in 2005. Over the past few years, the question of who would succeed Abbas, now 88 years old, has largely dominated internal Palestinian politics.

But that question has gained new urgency — and was fundamentally altered — with the war in Gaza.

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