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Friday Briefing: Strike Kills 51 in Ukrainian Village
2023-10-07 00:00:00.0     纽约时报-亚洲新闻     原网页

       

       Russia-Ukraine War Updates Photos Maps Ukraine’s Unseen Snipers China’s Role in Drone War Who’s Gaining Ground?

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       Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

       Friday Briefing: Strike Kills 51 in Ukrainian Village

       Plus the Nobel in literature.

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       By Justin Porter

       Oct. 5, 2023

       Image

       Ukrainian military and police gathering remains at a playground in the Ukrainian village of Hroza yesterday. Credit...David Guttenfelder for The New York Times

       Russian strike kills 51 in a Ukrainian village At least 51 people were killed yesterday when a rocket hit a group of people gathered for a wake in the village of Hroza in northeastern Ukraine, Ukrainian officials said.

       The strike, which hit a shop, was one of the deadliest wartime attacks on civilians since Russia’s full-scale invasion began more than 19 months ago. Images verified by The New York Times show that a building was almost entirely destroyed.

       The tiny enclave had no obvious military or industrial targets nearby. “Almost half of the village was killed by a single strike,” said Dmytro Chubenko, a local official.

       Photos and videos from the scene released by the Ukrainian authorities showed bodies on the ground and rescue workers clambering over piles of debris. Ukraine’s State Emergency Service warned that people could be trapped under the rubble.

       Quotable: President Volodymyr Zelensky condemned the strike as “a demonstrably brutal Russian crime.”

       Details: There was no immediate comment on the attack from the Kremlin. In the past, Moscow has denied purposely hitting civilian targets.

       In the U.S.: The drama in the House of Representatives over the last week, as Republicans pushed the government to the brink of a shutdown and then deposed their own speaker, also highlighted a sharp decline in G.O.P. support for aid to Ukraine.

       The shift is striking for a party that has long promoted a military that defends democracies. Republicans stripped billions in aid requested by President Biden, and could challenge the administration’s promise to support the Ukrainian military for the long haul.

       Elsewhere in the war: The U.S. sent munitions it had seized from Iran to Ukraine, and President Vladimir Putin claimed that Russia had successfully tested a nuclear-powered missile.

       Image

       Armita Geravand in a social media photo.

       Iranians suspect police for a girl’s coma Security camera footage broadcast on Iran’s state television showed 16-year-old Armita Geravand entering a subway car in Tehran on Sunday with her short black hair uncovered. Minutes later, she was dragged out unconscious.

       Armita has been in a coma ever since, guarded by security agents in a military hospital. Exactly what happened to her isn’t clear, and the government hasn’t released footage from inside the train that may reveal why she collapsed. But the circumstances have fueled outrage and accusations that agents enforcing Iran’s dress code must have harmed her.

       Comparisons have been drawn to Mahsa Amini, who died last year at 22 in the custody of the morality police after being accused of violating Iran’s hijab rules, which require women to cover their hair. Her death set off nationwide protests.

       Image

       A seller livestreaming at a store in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Wednesday. Credit...Tatan Syuflana/Associated Press

       TikTok ends its shop feature in Indonesia Indonesia banned e-commerce on social media platforms last week, forcing the app to shutter TikTok Shop in the country. It was a setback for TikTok’s ambitions in Southeast Asia, where it has about 325 million users, 125 million of whom are in Indonesia.

       The measure is meant to protect local merchants, prevent algorithms from dominating the market and stop the use of personal data for business purposes, Indonesia’s trade ministry said. The country’s rapidly growing e-commerce market was worth about $52 billion last year, and about $2.5 billion of that was on TikTok, according to one consulting firm.

       THE LATEST NEWS Asia Pacific

       Image

       Liu Yiqian is one of China’s best-known art investors. Credit...Jonah M. Kessel for The New York Times

       The largest auction of a single owner’s art collection ever held by Sotheby’s in Asia raised less money than expected.

       Chinese electric car companies are pulling ahead, thanks to government support that allows them to withstand losses and keep growing.

       Big chip makers are pushing back on President Biden’s China agenda.

       Around the World

       Image

       Jon Fosse in Stockholm in 2021. Credit...IBL/Shutterstock

       The Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to the Norwegian novelist and playwright Jon Fosse. Here’s where to start with his work.

       In a significant reversal, President Biden’s administration waived regulations to expedite the construction of a border wall in southern Texas, where millions of migrants have reached U.S. soil.

       Donald Trump’s lawyers asked a judge to throw out an indictment accusing him of conspiring to overturn the 2020 election on the grounds that he should be “immune.”

       To protect its flocks and its foie gras from the ravages of bird flu, France has begun a mass vaccination of 64 million ducks.

       Elon Musk, the founder of SpaceX, said the company could land a spacecraft on Mars three to four years from now.

       Other Big Stories Uganda’s top opposition leader said he had been seized at the airport and put under house arrest.

       At least 80 people were killed in Syria by drones targeting the graduation ceremony for cadets of a military academy, according to Syrian state media.

       Climate change means American summers may never be the same.

       A Morning Read

       Image

       A still from the 1978 film “Days of Heaven,” showing a house that Jack Fisk built for the movie. Credit...Alamy

       In a film industry dominated by soundstages and C.G.I., Jack Fisk stands apart, preferring to build his sets from scratch. Fisk, the genius behind “Killers of the Flower Moon” and a relatively small set of visually iconic films, makes believability his art: He brings the past to life with landscapes, buildings, paint and props that absorb the audience into a world that they instantly know is real, though they’ve never seen it before.

       ARTS AND IDEAS

       Image

       A. Altannar practicing a sand mandala ritual with monks in September. Credit...Khasar Sandag for The New York Times

       The boy at the center of a fight over Tibetan Buddhism A. Altannar, who was born into a wealthy mining family in Mongolia, seemed destined for a life of earthly pursuits. Then his father brought him to a monastery in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, where he was given a secret test. He passed.

       The monks had found the 10th reincarnation of the Bogd, one of the three most important figures in Tibetan Buddhism, and, for many, the spiritual leader of Mongolia. The naming of a Mongolian reincarnate ensures the country will be drawn deeper into the political chess match between China and the Dalai Lama.

       And the Bogd, who is eight years old and likes TikTok and video games, faces decades of theological training, a lifetime of celibacy and the grave responsibility of having to defend Mongolian Buddhism against Chinese pressure.

       RECOMMENDATIONS

       Image

       Credit...David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.

       Cook somen noodles with poached egg, bok choy and mushrooms.

       Drink a Zinfandel made from heritage grapes.

       Watch what happens when events outside a New Zealand antiques shop turn into a horror show.

       Read some of Banana Yoshimoto’s favorite authors.

       Play Spelling Bee, the Mini Crossword, Wordle and Sudoku. Find all our games here.

       That’s it for today’s briefing. See you on Monday. — Justin

       P.S. Here’s how our podcast “The Headlines” comes together.

       We welcome your feedback. Send us your suggestions at briefing@nytimes.com.

       Justin Porter is an editor on the Briefings newsletter team at The Times. More about Justin Porter

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