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In The News

Aung San Suu Kyi Partial Pardon, Moscow Building Hit Twice, Endangered Venice

Aung San Suu Kyi Partial Pardon, Moscow Building Hit Twice, Endangered Venice

A firefighter in front of one of the buildings hit by a drone attack overnight in Moscow.

Emma Albright, Chloรฉ Touchard, Anne-Sophie Goninet, and Valeria Berghinz

๐Ÿ‘‹ Allo!*

Welcome to Tuesday, where Myanmarโ€™s junta reduces former leader Aung San Suu Kyiโ€™s jail time, a skyscraper in Moscow is hit by a drone attack for the second time in as many days, and UNESCO suggests adding Venice to the list of World Heritage sites in danger. Meanwhile, in Italian daily La Stampa, Franco Giubilei looks at how Italyโ€™s nightclubs and discos have been slowly but surely replaced by โ€œnomadicโ€ parties on the beach and in villas.

[*Seychellois Creole]

โœ…ย  SIGN UP

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๐ŸŒŽย  7 THINGS TO KNOW RIGHT NOW

โ€ข Myanmar junta partially pardons Aung San Suu Kyi: Myanmar's ruling military pardoned jailed former leader Aung San Suu Kyi on five of the 19 offenses for which she was convicted, although she will remain under house arrest. Meanwhile, the countryโ€™s military has officially postponed government elections originally set for this month, after extending a state of emergency, citing ongoing violence as the reason for the delay. The state of emergency was first declared in November 2020 when the military seized power after arresting Suu Kyi over allegations of electoral fraud.

โ€ข Drone hits same Moscow building twice in two days: A skyscraper in Russia's capital Moscow has been hit by a drone attack for the second time in two days. According to Mayor Sergei Sobyanin, several drones were shot down overnight but โ€œone flew into the same tower at the Moskva City complexโ€ that was targeted on Sunday. Russia released a statement on Tuesday saying three Ukrainian unmanned boats tried to attack Russian naval ships in the Black Sea and had been destroyed. Kyiv has not commented on either issue.

โ€ข Burkina Faso and Mali juntas issue war warning: The military juntas in Burkina Faso and Mali have said any forcible attempt to restore President Mohamed Bazoum in neighboring Niger will be seen as a declaration of war on them. This follows a threat from a regional bloc that it would "take all measures" if the president was not reinstated. Both Burkina Faso and Mali have severed ties with the West, in particular with France, and embraced new alliances with Russia.

โ€ข Taliban, U.S. hold first official talks since Afghanistan takeover: Taliban leaders have met officials from the United States in Qatar for the first time since their return to power in Afghanistan, two years ago. A spokesman for the Afghan Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the two sides discussed confidence-building measures during the two-day talks โ€” including the lifting of sanctions and travel bans, as well as the return of Afghan central bank assets held abroad.

โ€ข Record floods kill 11 in Beijing: At least 11 people have died and 13 others are missing as torrential rains hit Beijing. The remnants of last week's super storm Doksuri flooded the Chinese capital for the fourth straight day on Tuesday even as another typhoon approached the eastern coast. More than 50,000 people in the city have been evacuated so far.

โ€ข UNESCO recommends adding Venice to endangered list: The UNโ€™s cultural agency has recommended that Venice be added to a list of World Heritage sites in danger. The Italian city is at risk of โ€œirreversibleโ€ damage from overwhelming tourism, overdevelopment and rising sea levels due to climate change, the UNESCO report says.

โ€ข Euphoria star Angus Cloud dies at 25: Angus Cloud, who starred on HBOโ€™s hit series Euphoria, has died at age 25 in his family home in Oakland, California. According to a statement released by his family, Cloud attended his father's funeral in Ireland last week and โ€œintensely struggled with this loss.โ€

๐Ÿ—ž๏ธย  FRONT PAGE

As the Danish and Swedish governments are looking to de-escalate tension after a series of public demonstrations that involved the burning of religious texts, Copenhagen-based tabloid Ekstra Bladet has proclaimed a state of โ€œKoran Panic.โ€ The Danish government has said it will explore legal means of banning such protests in certain circumstances, citing security concerns.

#๏ธโƒฃ BY THE NUMBERS

248,901

According to Panamaโ€™s Deputy Director of Migration, an estimated 248,901 people have crossed the treacherous Darien Gap migration route since January โ€” surpassing the record total set in 2022. This sliver of land between Colombia and Panama was once considered uncrossable due to the danger it posed, but this year has seen an unprecedented number of migrants risking the journey to reach the U.S, hoping to find a better life. Approximately 20% of them are thought to be children, half of them under five years old.

๐Ÿ“ฐ STORY OF THE DAY

Italy's legendary clubbing scene gives way to the nomadic dance life

Four decades ago, there were 9,000 dance clubs in Italy. Today, there are just 3,000. Where is everyone going instead, and why? asks Franco Giubilei in Italian daily La Stampa.

๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡น๐ŸŽง As the sun sets on one era, a new one comes, at least for the dancing bodies of young Italians: they dance on the beach, on agricultural sites, or in villas rented out and made available for partying. They dance wherever there is a DJ, space to move and enough isolation so as not to anger any neighbors. Whilst the spirit of dancing wherever reigns victorious, there are casualties: โ€œTwo out of three nightclubs are closing down nowadays," says Gianni Indino, national director of Silb, an association for club management.

โช โ€œThe real explosion of nightclubs, or discos, occurred from the end of the 70โ€™s through the 80โ€™s and all the way until the new century," DJ Cirillo says. "We really experienced clubbing culture at its height in Italy, but in the last few years that energy has depleted. Nowadays, only Ibiza can hold its head up in the game. The truth is that there were too many options, and most of those options were lacking in quality.โ€

๐Ÿ•บ๐Ÿ’ƒ This is an irreversible trend, and a sign of decline that, as always, will nevertheless move us forward, and where people will continue dancing, says DJ Cirillo, โ€œItโ€™s impossible to turn back time and live in the past. Fortunately, it is possible to adapt, like my club the Cocoricรณ did, renovating to fulfill the requests of the modern music scene. We must also consider the impact of social media, ever-evolving and intruding, that plays a role in the lack of creativity in many venues.โ€

โžก๏ธ Read more on Worldcrunch.com

๐Ÿ“ฃ VERBATIM

โ€œAny military intervention against Niger would be tantamount to a declaration of war against Burkina Faso and Mali.โ€

โ€” The military governments of Burkina Faso and Mali have issued joint statements on their national broadcasters warning that they would take any military intervention against the leaders of last weekโ€™s coup as a โ€œdeclaration of war,โ€ the consequences of which โ€œcould destabilize the entire region.โ€ West African leaders threatened force against the junta in response to the military coup that deposed Nigerโ€™s President Mohamed Bazoum last week. The coup is also condemned by international powers including the African Union, the U.S., the UN and the EU, who fear instability in the region and opportunities for actors like the Russian mercenary group Wagner.

โœ๏ธ Newsletter by Emma Albright, Chloรฉ Touchard, Anne-Sophie Goninet, and Valeria Berghinz


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FOCUS: Israel-Palestine War

Why The U.S. Lost Its Leverage In The Middle East โ€” And May Never Get It Back

In the Israel-Hamas war, Qatar now plays the key role in negotiations, while the United States appears increasingly disengaged. Shifts in the region and beyond require that Washington move quickly or risk ceding influence to China and others for the long term.

Photograph of U.S Secretary of State Antony Blinken  shaking hands with sraeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.

November 30, 2023, Tel Aviv, Israel: U.S Secretary of State Antony Blinken shakes hands with Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.

Chuck Kennedy/U.S State/ZUMA
Sรฉbastien Boussois

-Analysis-

PARIS โ€” Upon assuming office in 2008, then-President Barack Obama declared that United States would gradually begin withdrawing from various conflict zones across the globe, initiating a complex process that has had a major impact on the international landscape ever since.

This started with the American departure from Iraq in 2010, and was followed by Donald Trump's presidency, during which the "Make America Great Again" policy redirected attention to America's domestic interests.

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

The withdrawal trend resumed under Joe Biden, who ordered the exit of U.S. forces from Afghanistan in 2021. To maintain a foothold in all intricate regions to the east, America requires secure and stable partnerships. The recent struggle in addressing the Israeli-Palestinian conflict demonstrates that Washington increasingly relies on the allied Gulf states for any enduring influence.

Since the collapse of the Camp David Accords in 1999 during Bill Clinton's tenure, Washington has consistently supported Israel without pursuing renewed peace talks that could have led to the establishment of a Palestinian state.

While President Joe Biden's recent challenges in pushing for a Gaza ceasefire met with resistance from an unyielding Benjamin Netanyahu, they also stem from the United States' overall disengagement from the issue over the past two decades. Biden now is seeking to re-engage in the Israel-Palestine matter, yet it is Qatar that is the primary broker for significant negotiations such as the release of hostages in exchange for a ceasefire โ€”a situation the United States lacks the leverage to enforce.

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