ਕੈਟੇਗਰੀ

ਤੁਹਾਡੀ ਰਾਇ



ਪ੍ਰੇਸ ਰਿਲੀਜ਼ ਅਤੇ ਸਟੇਟਮੇੰਟ
Monday Briefing: Putin extends his rule
Monday Briefing: Putin extends his rule
Page Visitors: 21

Monday Briefing: Putin extends his rule

Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

March 18, 2024

 
 
Author Headshot

By Amelia Nierenberg

Writer, Briefings

Good morning. We’re covering Russia’s elections and the aid deliveries to Gaza.

Plus, Afghan women in the U.S. learn to drive.

 
 
 
People waiting in line outdoors.
Voters lined up outside a polling station in Moscow at noon yesterday, part of a protest against Vladimir Putin. Nanna Heitmann for The New York Times

Putin extends his rule after a predetermined vote

President Vladimir Putin claimed another six-year term in a presidential contest in which he faced no real competition. He is expected to hold a Red Square rally to formally declare victory — and to portray the vote as a public endorsement of his invasion of Ukraine.

Here’s the latest.

Some Russians quietly registered their dissent yesterday. They turned the rubber-stamp election into a startling protest: Many formed long lines at polling stations to register their discontent with Putin as he prepared to take his fifth term as president.

Aleksei Navalny, the opposition leader who died in prison last month, had urged his supporters to vote at noon local time. Lines formed quickly at polling stations in major cities, and several people in Moscow told The Times that they had come to express their support for Navalny.

One woman, who gave her name as Dayana, 22, said she was heartened to stand among fellow Putin critics and feel “that I am not alone, that there are a lot of us.”

But there was no sign that the protest would deter Putin, who has ruled Russia since 1999. He extended his rule until 2030 and, if he serves until the end of his next term, will have the longest tenure of any Russian leader since Catherine the Great in the late 1700s.

A predetermined outcome: Even Putin’s spokesman said last year that the elections were “not really democracy,” but “costly bureaucracy.” In the occupied regions of Ukraine, armed soldiers watched people vote for president.

What’s next: Many fear that a new wave of mobilization may soon follow the election.

Updates from the war:

 
 
People standing on a beach and looking at a ship in the sea.
A barge with about 200 tons of humanitarian aid off of Gaza last week. Mohammed Hajjar/Associated Press

With aid limited, malnutrition persists in Gaza

A maritime shipment of aid reached northern Gaza’s shores this weekend, the first to do so in nearly two decades, and another batch of aid is expected to depart from Cyprus soon.

But experts and aid groups said that diversifying the methods of delivery had not relieved hunger and widespread malnutrition. They said that the main method should be over land, and that the best way to stave off a famine was a cease-fire.

There could be some movement toward a pause in fighting after Hamas softened a demand for a permanent cease-fire. The new proposal would allow the release of hostages in exchange for a phased pullback of Israeli troops.

Risks: On Thursday, an attack near aid trucks in Gaza killed at least 20 people. Gazan officials accused Israel of a “targeted” attack; Israel blamed Palestinian gunmen. The U.N. human rights office has documented 10 attacks this month on Gazans waiting for aid.

The U.S.: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu responded to Senator Chuck Schumer’s criticism yesterday: “We’re not a banana republic.”

 
 
A man in a suit stands in front of metal shelves holding several plaques.
Di Sanh Duong said he saw himself and his community as a bridge between Australia and China. Abigail Varney for The New York Times

Did Australia catch a Chinese spy?

In 2020, Di Sanh Duong became the first person charged under Australia’s foreign interference laws. Late last month, he was sentenced to almost three years in prison, although he is expected to serve a year.

In the case, the government fought Duong, a suburban tombstone maker, over interpretations of two words (“us Chinese”), and a $25,000 donation to a hospital that — prosecutors said — would at some point have become the basis for a pro-China pitch to a lawmaker. The question at stake: Was Duong a savvy operator for Beijing, or merely a bombastic braggart?

In his only in-depth interview since his arrest, Duong — who is ethnically Chinese — told The Times that he was a scapegoat of geopolitical tensions, saying his prosecution was intended to send a message: “Don’t walk too close to China.”

Continue
©2012 & Designed by: Real Virtual Technologies
Disclaimer: thekhalsa.org does not necessarily endorse the views and opinions voiced in the news / articles / audios / videos or any other contents published on www.thekhalsa.org and cannot be held responsible for their views.