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In The News

West To Arm Ukraine, Deadly Brazil Rainstorm, Nadal Tears Up

West To Arm Ukraine, Deadly Brazil Rainstorm, Nadal Tears Up

Spanish tennis champion Rafael Nadal emotionally celebrates his victory over Novak Djokovic at the French Open

Lisa Berdet, Joel Silvestri, Lila Paulou and Bertrand Hauger

👋 Салам!*

Welcome to Wednesday, where the U.S. and Germany announce new military aid for Ukraine, at least 100 are confirmed dead as floods and landslides hit Brazil, and an iconic movie vehicle gets an ecological update. For Worldcrunch, Anna Akage also writes about the dire situation in Russia’s overpopulated detention centers, where Ukrainian “spies and traitors” are locked up without trial.

[*Salam - Kyrgyz]

✅  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.

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🌎  7 THINGS TO KNOW RIGHT NOW

• Western nations announce new military aid for Ukraine: As Russian forces push further into Severodonetsk, the United States has revealed that it will in fact be sending Ukraine long-range precision missiles as part of an expected $700 million weapons package. This decision reverses yesterday’s announcement that the U.S. would not be sending rockets to Ukraine which could reach targets on Russian soil. Germany, whose government has been criticized for being slow to provide support for Ukraine, will also be sending anti-aircraft missiles and radar systems to Kyiv to help Ukrainian forces to fend off Russian aircraft.

• Eritrean forces shell school in northern Ethiopia: After two months of peace in the conflict between Ethiopia and Eritrea, which had begun in November of 2020, the UN now claims that Eritrean forces have shelled a school in northern Ethiopia. The attack killed a 14-year-old girl and has left 18 people injured.

• Elon Musk tells workers to go back to work or leave: The billionaire CEO of the Tesla e-vehicle company has sent a directive to staff that remote working is “no longer acceptable,” and those not complying should leave the company.

• U.S. Supreme Court blocks Texas social media law: In a 5-4 ruling, the United States Supreme Court has blocked a Texas law that would prevent social media companies with more than 50 million users from removing political speech from their platforms.

• Deadly weather across Latin America: At least 100 people were killed, following severe rainstorms that triggered landslides and floods near the city of Recife in northeast Brazil. Around 1,200 rescue personnel were deployed to the area and will continue their search for missing people. This news comes as 11 people are reported dead and at least 20 missing from landslides and flooding from Hurricane Agatha in Oaxaca, Mexico.

• Trudeau government issues secret cabinet orders: The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reports that Canada’s current administration has issued 72 secret cabinet orders since Prime Minister Justin Trudeau entered office in 2015, more than twice as many as the previous administration.

• DeLorean is back (to the future): The car made famous by 1985’s hit film Back to the Future made its return this week. Images of the new vehicle, called the Alpha5, show that it will feature design elements from the classic DeLorean, like its signature gull-wing doors, while also honoring its legacy as a symbol of the future by entering the market as an electric vehicle.

🗞️  FRONT PAGE

Today’s Shanghai Daily’s frontpage celebrates the return to “normal” life in China’s financial hub, as most lockdown measures start being lifted this week after two months of strict zero-COVID policy.

💬  LEXICON

Jeu vidéo en nuage

Au revoircloud gaming,” bonjourjeu vidéo en nuage.” The Academie Française — France’s linguistic watchdog — has introduced alternative terms for the gaming industry’s reliance on English words. The aim is to preserve the French language against the growing use of anglicisms, denounced by the Academie. This means “eSport” should be called: “jeu vidéo de compétition.” Rolls right off the tongue.

📰  STORY OF THE DAY

Ukrainian “spies and traitors” dumped in Russia's already crowded prison system

Russian jails were already struggling thanks to long investigations and an arrest bias. But the conflict in Ukraine has made a bad situation worse in detention centers around the country, with so-called Ukrainian "spies and traitors" locked up without trial, Anna Akage writes for Worldcrunch.

🇷🇺 From 2006, since the middle of Vladimir Putin's second term in office, the hunt for traitors, spies, and enemies has enveloped the entire Russian Federation. From peaceful protesters to journalists and human rights activists, thousands of people are being held in detention centers where they spend weeks and sometimes months without charge or awaiting trial. The situation has worsened since the beginning of the invasion in Ukraine and now, in almost every region of Russia, the pretrial detention facilities are overcrowded.

⚖️ Lawyers and regional ombudsman described the problem as chronic and attributed it to delayed investigative actions and the "arrest bias" of justice when the penitentiary system hesitates to bring charges and delays pre-trial investigations. Igor Vedinyapin, head of the department of execution of sentences and special registration of the Federal Penitentiary Service, pointed out that 44% of all detainees held in pre-detention centers are accused of crimes of small or medium gravity, and only every fourth detainee is sentenced to a penalty not involving actual imprisonment.

🇺🇦 Eva Merkacheva, a member of the Presidential Human Rights Council, believes that Ukrainian citizens who were captured during the hostilities and then became suspects are brought to such facilities. According to Igor Omelchenko, the head of the Rostov Oblast pre-trial detention facility near the Ukrainian border, "Many people are unreasonably detained in pre-trial detention facilities — old people, sick people, young girls, suspects not under any violent and serious articles.”

➡️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com

#️⃣  BY THE NUMBERS

77 square miles

One single plant covering 77 square miles (200 square kilometers) underwater: That’s the discovery made by scientists in Shark Bay, off Australia’s western coast. The 4,500-year-old meadow of seagrass — Posidonia australis — is the biggest plant ever discovered on Earth.

✍️ Newsletter by Lisa Berdet, Joel Silvestri, Lila Paulou and Bertrand Hauger


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Muslim Call To Prayer, NYC-Style: A Turkish Eye On New York's Historic Azan Law

New York Mayor Eric Adams has for the first time allowed the city's mosques to broadcast the Muslim call to prayer over loudspeakers. A Turkish correspondent living in New York listens in to the sound of the call ("cleaner" than in Turkey), and the voices of local Muslims marking this watershed in their relationship with the city.

Photo of a man walking into a mosque in NYC

Mosque in NYC

Ali Tufan Koç

NEW YORK — It’s Sept. 1, nearing the time for the noon prayer for Muslim New Yorkers. The setting is the Masjid Al Aman, one of the city's biggest mosques, located at the border of the boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens. WABC, Channel 7, one of the local television stations, has a broadcast van parked at the corner. There are a few more camera people and journalists milling around. The tension is “not normal,” and residents of the neighborhood ask around what’s happening.

This neighborhood, extending from East New York to Ozone Park, is not the Brooklyn that you see in the movies, TV shows or novels. Remove the pizza parlors, dollar stores and the health clinics, and the rest is like the Republic of Muslim brothers and sisters. There are over 2,000 people from Bangladesh in East New York alone. There’s the largest halal supermarket of the neighborhood one block away from the mosque: Abdullah Supermarket. The most lively dining spot is the Brooklyn Halal Grill. Instead of a Kentucky Fried Chicken, there's a Medina Fried Chicken.

The congregation of the mosque, ABC 7, a clueless non-Muslim crowd and I are witnessing a first in New York history: The azan, the traditional Muslim public call to prayer, is being played at the outside of the mosque via speakers — without the need for special permission from the city. Yes, the azan is echoing in the streets of New York for the first time.

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