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In The News

Zelensky Says He’d Accept Ukraine’s “Neutral” Status

Zelensky Says He’d Accept Ukraine’s “Neutral” Status

In Kyiv, Ukrainians cover the monument of political and civic leader Petro Konashevych-Sahaidachny with sandbags

Anne-Sophie Goninet, Lorraine Olaya and Bertrand Hauger

👋 Tungjatjeta!*

Welcome to Monday, where Ukrainian President Zelensky calls for a referendum on Ukraine’s neutrality after Russian troops leave, Shanghai goes back into full lockdown and Will Smith’s slap steals the Oscars spotlight. Meanwhile, following U.S. President Biden’s provocative words about Vladimir Putin, we look at what would be needed for regime change to actually happen in Russia.

[*Albanian]

✅  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

• Ukraine ready to discuss neutral status, new round of negotiations: Three days of direct Ukrainian-Russian negotiations have begun in Turkey after President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukraine will be ready to discuss “neutral status” as part of a peace deal with Moscow. The talks come as U.S. officials are forced to declare that President Joe Biden’s remark in a speech Saturday night about Vladimir Putin was not a call for regime change in Russia. Meanwhile, Ukraine announced it would not open humanitarian corridors to evacuate civilians on Monday, because of potential Russian “provocations” along the routes.

• Israel gun attack leaves two police officers dead: Two gunmen opened fire Sunday night at a bus stop in the northern city of Hadera. The Islamic State group took responsibility for the attack which killed two 19-year-old police officers and wounded four other people. Undercover officers nearby shot both gunmen dead.

• Israel holds historic summit with Arab and U.S. leaders: Foreign ministers from Morocco, Bahrain, Egypt, the UAE and the U.S., meet in Israel for the Negev Summit. The historic meeting will focus on regional threats, Iran nuclear talks in Vienna and the Russia-Ukraine war.

• Shanghai on lockdown: A full COVID-19 lockdown — China’s largest lockdown in two years — began today in Shanghai and will last until April 1. The lockdown has been implemented to conduct mass testing, and help curb the spread of COVID-19.

• Residents flee volcano in Portugal: More than 14,000 small earthquakes have hit the island of São Jorge this past week. Experts fear the earthquakes could lead to a volcanic eruption — the first in 214 years — or a much more powerful, devastating earthquake. At least 1,250 people have already fled the island.

• Canada’s first World Cup qualification since 1986: Canada qualified for the 2022 FIFA World Cup for the first time in 36 years after the national football team beat Jamaica 4-0 in Toronto.

• Academy Awards results + The Slap!: In an Oscar first, actor Will Smith slapped presenter Chris Rock in response to a joke the comedian made about Smith’s wife, actress Jada Pinkett Smith’s shaved head. A few minutes later, Smith won the award for best actor and apologized to the Academy. Here’s a full list of winners, including the surprise best picture award to drama-musical Coda.

🗞️  FRONT PAGE

Moscow-based daily Kommersant features Joe Biden’s “bad polka dance” on its front page today, after the U.S. president seemingly called for regime change in Russia in off-script remarks on Saturday.

#️⃣  BY THE NUMBERS

$438 million

Joining the many brands stopping businesses in Russia following its invasion of Ukraine, Dutch brewing giant Heineken announced it would withdraw from the country at an expected cost of $438 million, after initially saying it would only pause new investment and exports. Heineken is the third largest brewer in Russia but sales in the country account for just 2% of the company's worldwide total.

📰  STORY OF THE DAY

Regime change inside Russia? What it would take to push Putin out

A perfect storm must come together with deepening troubles on the battlefield in Ukraine, Kremlin insiders turning on Putin, popular opposition and (not least of all) ideas for what comes after. More and more signs of all these factors are starting to show up.

🇷🇺 Most of those neighbors in the region, along with much of the international community, would like to see someone else take power in Moscow — starting with Ukrainians who are suffering one month into Putin’s unprovoked invasion. Yet, experts agree, it is only Russians who would have the power to remove the strongman from power. Regime change in the short-term is still considered unlikely, yet the military’s failure to obtain a swift victory in Ukraine and growing domestic popular opposition to the invasion could loosen Putin’s grip.

✊ More and more people, including prominent public figures, are gathering momentum to push for the end to Putin’s autocratic regime. Although Putin had hoped to stamp out political antagonism by condemning vociferous critic Alexei Navalny to another nine years of high-security imprisonment on Tuesday, faith in Putin’s government may be wavering. “We are united so that the voices of Russians who are resisting this war could be heard all around the world,” said former lawmaker Dmitry Gudkov.

❓ Russia is now faced with the political and economic suicide of the Putin regime, isolating Russia to the same level as North Korea or the USSR. Some political commentators and politicians have made suggestions that a regime change is coming. What this may look like, though, remains unclear. But in a time where Putinism is becoming ever more aggressive, it is important to remember that beyond bad people, it was bad ideas widely shared that drove Russia to its current state.

➡️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com

📣 VERBATIM

Oh, wow! Wow! Will Smith just smacked the sh*t out of me.

Chris Rock, upon being slapped in the face by Will Smith on live TV, after the U.S. comedian poked fun at Smith’s wife Jada Pinkett Smith and her shaved head, while the actress had previously shared her struggle with alopecia and hair loss.

✍️ Newsletter by Anne-Sophie Goninet, Lorraine Olaya and Bertrand Hauger


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Economy

Forced Labor, Forced Exile: The Cuban Professionals Sent Abroad To Work, Never To Return

Noel, a Cuban engineer who had to emigrate to the faraway island of Saint Lucia, tells about the Cuban government's systematic intimidation techniques and coercion of its professionals abroad. He now knows he can never go back to his native island — lest he should never be allowed to leave Cuba again.

Forced Labor, Forced Exile: The Cuban Professionals Sent Abroad To Work, Never To Return

Next stop, Saint Lucia

Laura Rique Valero

Daniela* was just one year old when she last played with her father. In a video her mother recorded, the two can be seen lying on the floor, making each other laugh.

Three years have passed since then. Daniela's sister, Dunia*, was born — but she has never met her father in person, only connecting through video calls. Indeed, between 2019 and 2023, the family changed more than the two little girls could understand.

"Dad, are you here yet? I'm crazy excited to talk to you."

"Dad, I want you to call today and I'm going to send you a kiss."

"Dad, I want you to come for a long time. I want you to call me; call me, dad."

Three voice messages which Daniela has left her father, one after the other, on WhatsApp this Saturday. His image appears on the phone screen, and the two both light up.

The girls can’t explain what their father looks like in real life: how tall or short or thin he is, how he smells or how his voice sounds — the real one, not what comes out of the speaker. Their version of their dad is limited to a rectangular, digital image. There is nothing else, only distance, and problems that their mother may never share with them.

In 2020, Noel*, the girls' father, was offered a two-to-three-year employment contract on a volcanic island in the Caribbean, some 2,000 kilometers from Cuba. The family needed the money. What came next was never in the plans.

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