When the world gets closer.

We help you see farther.

Sign up to our expressly international daily newsletter.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

You've reached your limit of one free article.

Get unlimited access to Worldcrunch

You can cancel anytime.

SUBSCRIBERS BENEFITS

Exclusive International news coverage

Ad-free experience NEW

Weekly digital MagazineNEW

9 daily & weekly Newsletters

Access to Worldcrunch archives

Free trial

30-days free access, then $2.90
per month.

Annual Access BEST VALUE

$19.90 per year, save $14.90 compared to monthly billing.save $14.90.

Subscribe to Worldcrunch
In The News

Turkey Run-Off, Zelensky In UK, Long Live The Weeknd

Photo of ​Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky with UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak after landing in helicopter.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky met with his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron in Paris last night, before heading to the UK today where he was greeted by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.

Yannick Champion-Osselin, Emma Albright, Sophie Jacquier, Chloé Touchard and Anne-Sophie Goninet

👋 Avuxeni!*

Welcome to Monday, where Turkey’s presidential elections is headed to a run-off, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is in the UK after meeting with France’s Emmanuel Macron last night, and The Weeknd is The Weeknd no more. Meanwhile, soldiers on the Bakhmut front tell Spanish media Ethic’s Patricia Simón that they have no illusion about the possibility of peace.

[*Tsonga, South Africa and Mozambique]

✅  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.I

t's easy (and free!) to sign up to receive it each day in your inbox: 👉 Sign up here

🌎  7 THINGS TO KNOW RIGHT NOW

• Zelensky in the UK after a visit to Paris: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky met with UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak this morning, continuing a tour of European capitals ensuring military support for Kyiv’ looming counteroffensive. Germany has already pledged additional military aid worth almost $3 billion, Italy has reaffirmed its alliance and Zelensky’s yesterday's visit Sunday to Paris, France will send more light tanks and armored vehicles.

• A run-off looms in the Turkish elections: With 49.42% of the votes so far, incumbent President Recep Tayyip Erdogan came out ahead of top challenger Kemal Kilicdaroglu’s 44.95% in the first round of the country’s presidential election. But with 99% of the votes counted, Erdogan has not reached the 50% threshold that would prevent a second round. The decisive second round is slated for May 28.

• Thai opposition wins elections in face of military parties: Thailand's two main opposition parties agreed on Monday to form a ruling coalition after winning a weekend election over military-backed rivals that have controlled the government for nearly a decade. Any new government must still be certified by the traditionally conservative military-appointed Senate.

China jails U.S. citizen for life: A Chinese court has sentenced a 78- year-old U.S. citizen to life in prison on spying charges. John Shing-Wan Leung, a permanent resident in Hong Kong, was jailed on Monday. He "was found guilty of espionage, sentenced to life imprisonment [and] deprived of political rights for life," according to the statement from the Intermediate People's Court.

• Vice Media files for bankruptcy in the U.S.: Vice, once a darling of online media upstarts, has filed for bankruptcy protection. The group, which includes Vice News, Motherboard, Refinery29 and Vice TV, said that it will continue to operate and produce news during the bankruptcy process.

• Cyclone Mocha hits Myanmar: At least six people have been killed and more than 1,000 buildings damaged as Cyclone Mocha tore through already stricken western Myanmar. Refugee camps in southeast Bangladesh that include many Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar, avoided the worst, but communications have been disrupted as emergency aid arrives.

• The artist formerly known as The Weeknd: Canadian singer-songwriter The Weeknd is now Abel Makkonen Tesfaye on social media, as a part of a larger “cathartic path” to “kill the Weeknd.” The multi award winning artist is “statistically the most popular musician on the planet” according to Guinness World Records, with 111.4 million monthly Spotify listeners.

🗞️  FRONT PAGE

Turkish daily Hürriyet devotes its front page to the first round of the presidential election, which is likely to result in a runoff in two weeks. It will "not be over in a day." Almost all ballots have been counted but delays are expected as overseas votes are still being gathered.

#️⃣  BY THE NUMBERS

$196 million

A 700-piece jewelry collection once owned by late Austrian billionaire Heidi Horten has fetched a combined 176 million Swiss francs ($196 million) at a Christie’s auction in Geneva — smashing the record of the most expensive private jewelry collection to be sold at auction. The sale went ahead despite calls from the American Jewish Committee to put it on hold to investigate the source of the Hortens’ wealth, describing the heiress’ first husband Helmut Horten as one of the “unscrupulous businessmen” who “took advantage of aryanization laws and the desperate needs of Jews fleeing the Nazis” during the Nazi era.

📰  STORY OF THE DAY

Bakhmut confidential: Whispered fears, endgame visions

In the ambulances transporting the wounded to the field hospitals, in the vans traveling to the front or in the trains returning them home for a few days' rest, the soldiers stationed on the Bakhmut front do not talk about military victories or war strategies. They talk about death, and life, reports Patricia Simón in Spanish media Ethic.

🇺🇦 None of the dozens of people I interviewed in Ukraine have any hope that peace is near. Even less in the Donbas region, where the main fighting is now happening, and where the war began in 2014, following Russia's annexation of Crimea and the clash between pro-Russian groups and the Ukrainian Army. Many of those who now fear the Russian troop suffered for years from the siege of the Ukrainians.

💥 The people in the areas most affected by the war are exhausted from rebuilding their country every day, from shoring it up again after each blow, from putting all their energy into maintaining the electricity and drinking water supply, keeping the public sanitation, garbage collection and health centers running. It is a daily and silent battle to ensure that Ukraine remains a livable place.

➗ The unity brought about by the invasion is cracking as the war drags on. And that is happening, especially, with the population that has relatives at the front. "Russia has 140 million people and Putin doesn't mind sacrificing all those lives. Wagner doesn't even bury or repatriate its dead soldiers — what can we do against all this?" asks Alexey Bulava. A year ago, this graphic designer from Kyiv longed to fight on the front lines. Now he fears getting the draft call at any moment.

➡️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com

📣 VERBATIM

“Freedom does not come easily. You have to snatch it. You have to sacrifice for it.”

— Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan has called nationwide demonstrations for "freedom" following his arrest on Tuesday, which sparked deadly protests throughout the country. Imran Khan shared this statement during a speech broadcasted on YouTube a day after he was released, thanks to the intervention of Pakistan’s supreme court. Several top leaders of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party still remain under arrest.

✍️ Newsletter by Yannick Champion-Osselin, Emma Albright, Sophie Jacquier, Chloé Touchard and Anne-Sophie Goninet


Let us know what’s happening in your corner of the world!

info@worldcrunch.com

You've reached your limit of free articles.

To read the full story, start your free trial today.

Get unlimited access. Cancel anytime.

Exclusive coverage from the world's top sources, in English for the first time.

Insights from the widest range of perspectives, languages and countries.

Society

Maestro Messi: Soccer As A True Art Form

The Argentine Lionel Messi is the personification of soccer sublime . He has come to move fans in ways that art lovers are moved by a painting.

photo of messi making a move

Messi makes his move during a MLS match, September 3, 2023, at the BMO Stadium, in Los Angeles, CA. Inter Miami FC defeated LAFC 3-1

Jon Endow/Image of Sports/Newscom via ZUMA
Luis Vinker

This article was updated on Sep. 8, 2023 at 4:35 p.m.

-Essay-

BUENOS AIRES — Lionel Messi, that giant of soccer, is entering the twilight of his career by joining an American team, Inter Miami. He has received all the praise and glory anyone could in the world of sports, not to mention an ocean of publicity, online and offline, and all the money you could hope to earn. A while back, Marius Serra, a journalist with Barcelona paper La Vanguardia, counted 564 press articles on Messi in Spanish alone.

One is reminded of the "perfect beauty" evoked in one of Shakespeare's plays, mentioned in the novelist Stendhal's (1829) travel diary, Promenades dans Rome. Indeed, beside Messi's status as an icon for soccer fans from Buenos Aires to Bangladesh, is there an artistic dimension to this personage? His followers speak of him in superlative terms that suggest inspiration bordering on dizziness. That is how Stendhal felt viewing works of art in Florence.

One of his biggest fans is the Englishman Roy Hudson, a former footballer now based in Fort Lauderdale close to Miami. Recently he compared the exhilaration of watching Messi live to watching a Shakespeare play with the writer himself or watching Rembrandt paint. Millions of people living in Florida could now watch the greatest soccer player of all time, he said. In 2016, when Messi was in Barcelona, he compared him to the magician Houdini.

He has been a subject for at least two contemporary artists, Damien Hirst and Takashi Murakami. Hirst's triptych, Beautiful Messi Spin Painting for One in Eleven, sold for €448,000 for charity a decade ago. Though still young, he already boasts several biographies. One writer, Jordi Puntí, the author of Todo Messi, sees in him the concepts of lightness, speed, precision, visibility and multiplicity, which the Italian author Italo Calvino foresaw decades ago as shaping art and literature this century.

Keep reading...Show less

You've reached your limit of free articles.

To read the full story, start your free trial today.

Get unlimited access. Cancel anytime.

Exclusive coverage from the world's top sources, in English for the first time.

Insights from the widest range of perspectives, languages and countries.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

You've reached your limit of one free article.

Get unlimited access to Worldcrunch

You can cancel anytime.

SUBSCRIBERS BENEFITS

Exclusive International news coverage

Ad-free experience NEW

Weekly digital MagazineNEW

9 daily & weekly Newsletters

Access to Worldcrunch archives

Free trial

30-days free access, then $2.90
per month.

Annual Access BEST VALUE

$19.90 per year, save $14.90 compared to monthly billing.save $14.90.

Subscribe to Worldcrunch

The latest