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In The News

Zelensky Goes To Washington, Taliban New Women Ban, Santa Swims In Bangkok

Photo of ​a diver dressed as Santa Claus waving to children at Bangkok's Sea Life aquarium.

A diver dressed as Santa Claus at Bangkok's Sea Life aquarium.

Renate Mattar, Laure Gautherin and Anne-Sophie Goninet

πŸ‘‹ Haia!*

Welcome to Wednesday, where Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky arrives in Washington on his first trip abroad since the Russian invasion, Taliban ban female students from university, and Lionel Messi becomes an Instagram world champion. Meanwhile, Russian-language independent website Vazhnyye Istorii/Important Stories reports on the situation in Chechnya, where strongman Ramzan Kadyrov’s strong pro-Russian rhetoric is at odds with the country’s real commitment to Moscow.

[*Welsch]

βœ…Β  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

β€’ Zelensky in Washington: Ukraine’s President Vladimir Zelensky will be in Washington today for his first foreign trip abroad since Russia’s invasion 10 months ago. Zelensky will meet his American counterpart Joe Biden today and is expected to speak to Congress. The White House also confirmed that the U.S. will supply Ukraine with a Patriot missile battery.

β€’ Taliban bar women from universities: Afghanistan’s Taliban government has issued a new ban on female students attending university. Young girls have already been forbidden from returning to secondary schools since March 2021. On the same day, Talibans also released two detained Americans in a β€œgoodwill gesture.”

β€’ Trump tax returns to be made public: A committee in the U.S. House of Representative has voted to make public six years of former President Donald Trump’s tax returns. The panel’s vote comes just one day after the House Committee issued a recommendation for criminal charges against Trump for his alleged role in the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol.

β€’ Peru orders Mexican ambassador to leave: Peru has ordered the Mexican ambassador to leave within the next 72 hours, after Mexico has granted asylum to former Peruvian President Pedro Castillo’s family. The deposed president remains in jail.

β€’ Fiji elects first new prime minister in 16 years: Sitiveni Rabuka becomes Fiji’s new Prime Minister, putting an end to Frank Bainimarama’s 16-year mandate. It will be the second time that Rabuka will hold this position, as he already accessed power through a coup in 1987, remaining in power until 1999.

β€’ Musk says he’ll quit Twitter when β€œfoolish” remplacement found: After a majority of Twitter poll respondents voted for Twitter owner Elon Musk to step down as CEO of the social network, the tech billionaire replied that he will resign as soon as he finds β€œsomeone foolish enough” to replace him.

β€’ Messi’s World Cup post becomes most-liked Instagram photo ever: Lionel Messi breaks yet another record! A new photo gallery he posted on Instagram celebrating Argentina’s World Cup victory just became the most-liked Instagram post ever, with 67 millions likes.

πŸ—žοΈΒ  FRONT PAGE

β€œOut!” Peruvian daily Correo relays the expelling order for Mexico’s ambassador to Lima Pablo Monroy Conesa, issued by Peru’s foreign minister on Tuesday. The diplomat has been declared β€œpersona non grata” on the ground of β€œunacceptable interference in internal affairs.” The decision follows his announcement that his country had granted asylum to the family of removed president Pedro Castillo. The ambassador was given 72 hours to leave.

#️⃣  BY THE NUMBERS

379 million

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration announced it has seized 379 million potentially deadly fentanyl doses this year β€” enough β€œto kill every American,” its administrator said. This includes the interception of 50.6 million pills laced with the potent synthetic opioid, which is more than double the amount seized by the DEA in 2021. The agency described fentanyl, mostly trafficked into the U.S. from Mexico, as the deadliest drug threat facing the country.

πŸ“°Β  STORY OF THE DAY

Kadyrov's bully tactics won't help Russia recruit more soldiers in Chechnya

A skirmish between two law enforcement officers in Chechnya turned deadly last month, and ultimately led to a widespread crackdown by authorities. Strongman Ramzan Kadyrov taking sides in the dispute raises deeper questions about the lack of Chechen soldiers showing up for the war in Ukraine, reports Russian-language independent website Vazhnyye Istorii/Important Stories.

πŸ’₯ A small dispute recently broke out between a Rosguardian soldier of the National Guard of Russia and a local traffic police officer in the Chechen town of Urus-Martan. What appeared to be just a minor skirmish quickly escalated, turning into an all-out attack on citizens who don't support the regime of Ramzan Kadyrov, Chechnya's longtime strongman ruler. It is yet another attempt by Kadyrov to show that he keeps complete control over Chechnya. But it's also clear that the situation is aggravated by the fact that many Chechens refuse to go to war in Ukraine.

πŸ›‘ Kadyrov is taking this story further to show that he has Chechnya under control. Urus-Martan, like other mountainous regions, has always been one of the most opposed to the central authorities in the capital of Grozny. People here have always resisted the Kadyrovites [Kadyrov's followers] most fiercely, and Kadyrov wanted to show people that he will terrorize anyone who is critical of anything β€” for example, even the actions of a local traffic officer.

πŸ‡·πŸ‡Ί Kadyrov uses the topic of the war in Ukraine as both scaremongering and another method of fighting any dissent and legalizing the killing of opponents. β€œWe will send you to war, to the front, to the front line, and there you will die...” Since the beginning of the war, there has been an issue with the fact that both Kadyrov and Vladimir Putin expected Chechnya to go to war, but Chechnya had not forgotten its recent history: Russia had bombed Chechnya in the 1990s to crush an independence movement. The pain from this is still very much alive throughout the republic.

➑️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com

πŸ“£ VERBATIM

We must act quickly.

β€” Wang Guangfa, a respiratory expert from Peking University First Hospital, told China’s state-run Global Times that the country has to prepare β€œprepare fever clinics, emergency and severe treatment resources” and expand ICU beds as he warns Beijing could face a severe jump in COVID-19 infections, following the recent easing of restrictions. China has officially reported only five COVID-related deaths this week.

✍️ Newsletter by Renate Mattar, Laure Gautherin and Anne-Sophie Goninet


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Society

Sexual Violence In War: Listening And Healing β€” And Never Again

Three women who were victims of sexual violence during the Colombian Civil War recount their stories of struggle and survival. They speak up in the hopes that the judiciary will open a new case to bring justice to them and many more survivors of sexual abuse perpetrated during the conflict.

A gloved, raised fist contrasts against feminist artwork on a memorial monuement

Feminists protest against Colombian president Ivan Duque Maraquez and the police brutality that killed at least 45 during demonstrations in Bogota, Colombia on May 28, 2021.

Camilo Pardo Quintero

BOGOTA – Jennifer, Ludirlena and Diana suffered a living death at the hands of their aggressors. It was their self-love and resilience that saved them, after experiencing sexual violence during the nation’s civil war.

The Colombian government forgot about these women. But now, they are champions in a battle towards justice and dignity. With different perspectives, they manage to find a connection, something that will unite them forever: advocating so that no one else experiences what they endured.

All sides in the war perpetrated sexual violence. But in the case of these three women, it was specifically the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and United Self-Defences of Colombia (AUC) paramilitary groups who exerted power over their bodies, through the cruelty of their crimes.

These were not isolated incidents and, to the shame of our society, they remain a massive, forgotten outrage.

According to official records, during the war in Colombia there were 15,760 victims of sexual violence. Of that total, 61.8% were women, and another 30.8% were young girls and teenagers. Unfortunately, underreporting plays a significant role in these numbers. Organizations such as the Network of Women Victims and Professionals, the collective Focal Groups - Men Victims of Sexual Violence and the British organization All Survivors Project estimate that the real number may be as much as three times higher.

The three protagonists in our story show how armed conflict has marked the lives of thousands of women in Colombia. They are three voices among many that have come together to demand the opening of a "macro-case," or investigation into sexual violence through Colombia’s Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP), which would uncover the patterns of sexual and gender-based crimes among armed groups which have devastated entire communities.

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