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In The News

Russia Targets Kyiv Again, G7 In Hiroshima, NYC Cabbie On Royal Chase

Buddhist monks stand in front of the Kenothap Memorial in Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park

Buddhist monks stand in front of the Kenothap Memorial in Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park on the eve of the May 19-21 G7 summit in Hiroshima, which will host the seven members of the G7: Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, United Kingdom and United States.

Marine Béguin & Jeff Israely

👋 Hæ hæ!*

Welcome to Thursday, where Russia launched its ninth missile barrage of the month on Kyiv, world leaders converge on Hiroshima for the G7 and a New York City taxi driver has the real scoop on the Harry and Meghan paparazzi “chase.” Meanwhile, German daily Die Welt’s Jan Küveler obtained exclusive access to Russian author Dmitry Glukhovsky, who is on the run in Europe after harshly criticizing Vladimir Putin.

[*Icelandic]

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🌎  7 THINGS TO KNOW RIGHT NOW

• Kyiv targeted with more Russian missile attacks, with most intercepted: At least one person was killed as Russia launched its ninth wave of missile attacks of the month on Kyiv. According to authorities in the Ukrainian capital, 29 of the 30 missiles launched by Russia were intercepted in the sky, but debris is also dangerous.

• Thai opposition parties form coalition to take on military: Opposition parties in Thailand have joined forces to create a coalition to challenge the decade-long rule of the military establishment. After the leader of Thailand's Move Forward party Pita Limjaroenrat emerged victorious in Sunday's elections, seven other parties announced Thursday that they’ve joined his coalition that would constitute the necessary majority to rule.

Central Asia summit in China: Central Asian heads of state converged in China's historic city of Xian on Thursday for one-on-ones with Chinese leader Xi Jinping to seal pledges of "enduring" friendship, paving the way for a summit expected to result in a regional pact with Beijing.

• Ecuador President Guillermo dissolves Congress: Ecuador President Guillermo Lasso dissolved the parliament to avoid impeachment, pledging to hold new elections within six months. Lasso is accused of embezzlement in a country already facing ongoing political crisis and social unrest.

• Four children found after a plane crash in the Amazon: Seventeen days after a plane crash in the Amazon, reports indicate that four children, including a baby, have been found alive. Three adults appear to have been killed in the crash.

• Deutsche Bank agrees to pay $75 million to settle Epstein lawsuit: Deutsche Bank has agreed to pay a $75 million settlement in response to a lawsuit brought by women who accused Jeffrey Epstein of sex trafficking, which Deutsche Bank is alleged to have facilitated.

• Tiktok banned for the first time in the U.S.: Montana is about to become the first U.S. state to ban the use of the TikTok app on personal devices. The law signed by Governor Greg Gianforte will go into effect on January 1, banning the app for hundreds of thousands of users according to a statement from Tiktok.

🗞️  FRONT PAGE

"Underwater" titles Rome-based daily newspaper La Repubblica, as deadly flooding continues to plague northern Italy. Evacuations are still underway after two days of extreme rainfall caused landslides and flooding. At least nine people have been killed, with estimates of billions of euros of damage. Formula One has canceled this weekend’s nearby Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix.

#️⃣  BY THE NUMBERS

$38 million

In New York, a Hebrew Bible that is more than 1,100 years old, dating from between 880 and 960, and one of the oldest surviving biblical manuscripts was sold for a record $38 million at a Sotheby’s auction. This nearly complete Hebrew Bible was purchased by a former U.S. ambassador to Romania, Alfred H. Moses. The bible will be sent to Tel Aviv to become part of the collection of the American Friends of ANU - Museum of the Jewish People.

📰  STORY OF THE DAY

"The Idiot Has Started A War" — A Secret Meeting With Exiled Russian Author Dmitry Glukhovsky

Dmitry Glukhovsky, author of acclaimed futuristic fiction including Metro 2033, is currently standing trial in absentia in Moscow after blasting Vladimir Putin just after the invasion of Ukraine. Glukhovsky has gone into hiding, but German daily Die Welt’s Jan Küveler managed to meet up with him in a secret location in Berlin.

📖 Glukhovsky’s Metro novel series and the computer games based on them have sold millions of copies and made the 43-year-old famous. They take place in a future version of Russia, after a nuclear apocalypse. The first novel was published in 2007, when Putin had been in power for seven years.

⚖️ When the Russian invasion started, he wrote an online piece expressing his anger towards those who’d started this war. In response, his apartment in Moscow was seized. Since last June, he has been the subject of an international manhunt. His trial in absentia began in March.

❓ The whole world is wondering what is going on inside Putin’s mind, why he is doing this. Glukhovsky believes it is a combination of cowardice and the fear of not having achieved anything that will secure him a legacy.

➡️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com

📣 VERBATIM

“There's police stations, cops on every corner. There's no reason to be afraid in New York.”

— Following a statement about a "relentless … near catastrophic car chase" from a spokesperson for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, the BBC spoke with Sukhcharn Singh, a New York taxi driver who had driven the royal couple in Manhattan during a portion of the would-be “chase” Tuesday evening. Singh confirmed that paparazzi did surround his cab at one point when it was blocked behind a garbage truck. "They looked nervous, I think they were being chased the whole day or something.” But Singh downplayed the supposed life-threatening drama. “I think that's all exaggerated,” he said. "New York City's the safest place to be.”

✍️ Newsletter by Marine Béguin & Jeff Israely


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Geopolitics

Why China Has Bet On A Bigger (And Nastier) BRICS To Challenge The West

The BRICS economies' inclusion of new members like Iran may not make business sense, but it fits with the Sino-Russian strategy of drawing states of the Global South into their orbit in open confrontation with the U.S. and the rest of the West.

Photo of Chinese President Xi Jinping and Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi

Chinese President Xi Jinping meets with Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi on the sidelines of the 15th BRICS Summit in South Africa

Marcelo Cantelmi

-Analysis-

BUENOS AIRES — Last month's summit in Johannesburg of BRICS nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), leading to a decision to expand the club, felt like geopolitical déjà vu. It recalled the 1960s Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) of Third World states that refused, apparently, to take sides in the Cold War, either with the capitalist West or Soviet-led communism.

NAM neutrality was limited, often deceptive, and became obsolete with the fall of the Communist bloc in the late 1980s. The dilemma of what was then called the Third World — now, the Global South — was in the stance it should take toward Russia, the successor state to the Soviet Union that shared few of its traits and goals. Ideologically, the end of communism confused NAM: It didn't know what to do with itself.

That is until now, with an apparent resuscitation of its spirit in BRICS (formed in 2009). Yet the idea of equidistance ends there, as BRICS is led by Russia and communist China and increasingly a part of their open challenge to Western hegemony.

Its founders include Brazil, which has its own agenda, and India. Both states have adopted their own versions of neutrality in the Ukrainian crisis, first in 2014 when Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine,then after its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in Feb. 2022.

So far, says Oliver Stuenkel, a professor at Brazil's Getulio Vargas Foundation, the two states have resisted Russia's systematic bid to use an explicitly anti-Western vocabulary in BRICS documents. This, he says, would explain the vague tone of the group's resolutions.

South Africa, the last member to join the group (in 2010), is a lesser power in terms of economy and political clout. But it symbolizes the worldwide spirit the group would come to embody.

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