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In The News

Xi In Moscow, Banking Shares Sink, Bangladesh Bathing

Photo of hundreds of people taking part in the Mahabaruni bathing festival in West Tootpara, Bangladesh.

People flock to the Mahabaruni bathing festival in West Tootpara, Bangladesh. About one million pilgrims are estimated to have taken part in this 200-year-old “sacred bath” ritual.

Emma Albright, Ginevra Falciani, Inès Mermat, Hugo Perrin and Anne-Sophie Goninet

👋 Sawubona!*

Welcome to Monday, where Chinese leader Xi Jinping lands in Moscow for talks with Vladimir Putin, banking stocks and bonds hit a new low despite UBS’ rescue of Credit Suisse, and about one million pilgrims take part in a “sacred bath” ceremony in Bangladesh. Meanwhile, Paul Molga in French daily Les Echos looks at the vicious circle between climate change and earthquakes.

[*Zulu, South Africa]

✅  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

• Xi Jinping in Moscow after Putin’s visit to Mariupol: China’s President Xi Jinping is in Moscow for a two-day visit with Russian President Vladimir Putin. This is the Chinese leader’s first visit to Russia since the beginning of the war in Ukraine. Meanwhile, Putin paid a surprise visit Sunday to Mariupol, the Ukrainian port city captured a year ago by Russia. This is believed to be his first trip to a newly-occupied Ukrainian territory.

• Central banks rush to keep cash flowing: Central banks have rushed to keep cash flowing through the world’s financial systems after the failures of two U.S. banks and the rescue of Credit Suisse by UBS group. Still, banking stocks and bonds hit a new low as the trading week opened, with UBS shares falling by as much as 16% in early trading.

• Netanyahu announces softening of judicial changes plan: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced a softening of his hard-right government's judicial overhaul plan in an attempt to calm more than two months of nationwide protests. This came after a call with U.S. President Joe Biden to seek compromise and consensus in order to avoid a constitutional crisis.

• French government faces no confidence vote today: The French government will face a no-confidence vote today, as several members of Parliament said they feared for their safety as anti-government protests continue to spread. Opposition politicians have filed two no-confidence motions in protest of French President Emmanuel Macron’s decision to push through an unpopular rise in the pension age without a parliamentary vote.

• India manhunt for Sikh separatist: A manhunt for Amritpal Singh, a hardline Sikh preacher in India, has entered its third day as authorities shut mobile internet across Punjab state and arrest more than 100 of his supporters. Singh, who advocates for the creation of Khalistan, a separate Sikh homeland, led a raid last month on a police station together with some of his supporters.

• Ex-Australian soldier charged with war crime over Afghan killing: A 41-year-old former member of the Australian military has been charged with a war crime over the killing of an Afghan civilian following a joint investigation between the Office of the Special Investigator (OSI) and the Australian Federal Police. If found guilty, the veteran, who is the first serving or former member of the Australian military to face war crimes charges, could face a life sentence.

• MET under fire: An investigation coordinated by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists identified more than 1,000 artifacts owned by New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art linked to indicted or convicted traffickers — including 309 currently on display. While the Met has voluntarily returned some items, governments and law enforcement officials have seized others.

🗞️  FRONT PAGE

Swiss daily Le Temps devotes its front page to the takeover of Credit Suisse by Switzerland’s largest bank, UBS, in an emergency rescue deal for the sum of 3 billion Swiss Francs ($3.25 billion) amid severe financial panic generated by the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank earlier this month.

#️⃣  BY THE NUMBERS

15.68 million tons

Russia surpassed Saudi Arabia as China's top oil supplier with 15.68 million tons of oil imported in January-February, up 23.8% from the same period last year. This shift highlights China's growing reliance on Russia for energy and Russia's increasing share of the global oil market, partly due to cooperation with OPEC. The significance is also underscored by China's rising demand for oil, while tensions between China and Saudi Arabia have been on the rise in recent years.

📰  STORY OF THE DAY

How climate change may be triggering more earthquakes — and vice versa

Researchers have identified a possible link between climate change and the frequency of earthquakes — and the quakes may also start a vicious circle of accelerating climate change, reports Paul Molga in French daily Les Echos.

🌍❄️ Scientists are wondering about the impact of glacial melt on the Earth's mantle. "The ice is holding back large parts of the Earth's crust locally," says geophysicist Andrea Hampel. Together with her colleagues from the Ruhr University in Bochum in Germany, she has discovered that the weight of the large glaciers on the earth slows down the movement of the continental plates.

⚠️ According to the team’s simulation, the vertical pressure exerted by the ice could have prevented the spontaneous sliding of continental plates along geological faults. But like a spring, the mechanical tensions due to the movements of the earth's crust continued to accumulate and were released when the ice melted, causing more frequent and intense earthquakes in Northern Europe.

🌡️ Can the same phenomenon occur more widely today with global warming? Some researchers say so and speculate that this mechanism has already begun to take place, notably in Alaska. It is there that we find the largest glaciers in the world extending over several hundred square kilometers and hundreds of meters thick. In 200 years, they have lost more than 5,000 km2 of ice.

➡️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com

📣 VERBATIM

“We will not allow them to continue sowing anxiety and terror.”

— Colombian President Gustavo Petro announced on Twitter that he was suspending a bilateral ceasefire with the country’s largest drug cartel, Clan del Golfo, that had been agreed in December. The president is accusing the criminal group of violating the ceasefire, citing violence on police forces and inciting protests from gold miners.

✍️ Newsletter by Emma Albright, Ginevra Falciani, Inès Mermat, Hugo Perrin and Anne-Sophie Goninet


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Future

The European Union v. AI — Good Luck On That!

The European Commission has asked digital platforms to create an "Artificial Intelligence label" to alert users of AI-generated texts, photos or videos. But will it be able to stop the tsunami of misinformation?

The European Union v. AI — Good Luck On That!

Artificial Intelligence Robots Market

Pierre Haski

-Analysis-

PARIS — How can we continue to trust a text, an image, or a video in the age of artificial intelligence? The question of trust in information has been around for a long time, as we know, but the emergence of powerful tools such as Chat-GPT for text, or Midjourney for photos, and many others, transforms the question into a potential nightmare.

The European Union's executive body, the European Commission, wasted no time in raising the question of how to regulate these technologies, which risk transforming the information space into a jungle. Yesterday, even before the major European law that is being prepared – the AI Law – the Commission took the lead.

It calls on digital platforms to define an AI label that will enable users to know whether a text, photo or video has been generated, in whole or in part, by artificial intelligence. The aim is to limit the explosion of misinformation that could result from these new, unregulated tools.

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