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Thursday Briefing: An impeachment motion in South Korea Inbox The New York Times Unsubscribe Wed, Dec 4, 11:00 PM (7 hours ago) to me View in browser|nytimes.com Ad Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition December 5, 2024 Author Headshot By Gaya Gupta Good morning. We’re covering an impeachment motion in South Korea and France’s prime minister failing a no-confidence vote. Plus, what’s your most cherished holiday tradition? South Korean lawmakers protesting on the steps of the National Assembly holding white signs with red writing on them. Members of South Korea’s opposition parties protesting on the steps of the National Assembly in Seoul yesterday. Chang W. Lee/The New York Times South Korea’s president is facing an impeachment vote Members of South Korea’s political opposition yesterday moved to impeach President Yoon Suk Yeol. The motion could be put to a vote as early as tomorrow, and comes after his declaration of martial law on Tuesday ended in spectacular failure. Several opposition parties filed the impeachment motion together. If the vote is successful, Yoon would be suspended from office and Prime Minister Han Duck-soo would become the interim president. Yoon’s fate would then go to the Constitutional Court, where the justices could uphold the impeachment and remove him from office, or reject it and reinstate him. Here’s how the process could unfold. Collateral damage: Yoon’s defense minister, chief of staff and other top aides had tendered their resignations, South Korean news media reported. Yoon will address the nation today, according to an official familiar with his plans. Context: Yoon’s surprise declaration of martial law on Tuesday was the first effort to impose military rule in more than four decades. The audacious move was an attempt to break a gridlock in government that has hobbled Yoon’s nearly three years in power. Several people in suits walk down a hallway carpeted in red. Prime Minister Michel Barnier of France, center, after the no-confidence vote yesterday. Sarah Meyssonnier/Reuters France’s prime minister lost a no-confidence vote French lawmakers passed a no-confidence measure against Prime Minister Michel Barnier and his cabinet yesterday, sending France into a fresh spasm of political turmoil. Barnier is expected to resign soon. France’s lower house of Parliament passed the measure with 331 votes — well above the required majority of 288 votes — after Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally joined the chamber’s leftist coalition. The move leaves France without a clear path to a new budget and threatens to further unsettle credit markets. It could also create a wider opening for the far right. What’s next: Barnier is likely to remain as a caretaker until President Emmanuel Macron names a new prime minister, but weeks of instability are on the horizon. Context: It was the first successful no-confidence vote in France in over 60 years, making Barnier’s three-month-old government the shortest-tenured in the history of France’s Fifth Republic. A head-and-shoulders portrait of Pete Hegseth. Pete Hegseth after meetings on Capitol Hill yesterday. Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times Senators waver on Hegseth for defense secretary A small but pivotal group of Republican senators expressed concern yesterday about Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to be defense secretary. Hegseth has been accused of sexual assault, public drunkenness and mismanagement while running veterans’ nonprofits. “Some of these articles are very disturbing,” Senator Lindsey Graham, one of Trump’s closest allies in Congress, told reporters. “He obviously has a chance to defend himself here, but, you know, some of this stuff is going to be difficult.” Trump yesterday named a senior counselor for trade and manufacturing and a possible overseer of NASA. Here are his latest picks. What’s your most cherished holiday tradition? For many of us, the holidays are full of traditions. Which ones are you most looking forward to this year? Maybe it’s something your family or friends have been doing for decades or a more recent creation that you can’t wait to repeat. Either way, we’d love to know about it. To share your thoughts, fill out this form. We may use your response in an upcoming newsletter. We won’t publish your submission without contacting you first.
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Tuesday Briefing: Syrian rebels rush to establish order
Tuesday Briefing: Syrian rebels rush to establish order
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Tuesday Briefing: Syrian rebels rush to establish order

Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

December 10, 2024

 
 
Author Headshot

By Gaya Gupta

 

Good morning. We’re covering Syria’s rebels beginning to govern and a massacre in Haiti’s capital.

Plus, a lawsuit for trans rights in China.

 
 
 
People wave flags and fill the streets of Syria’s capital, Damascus.
Celebrations in Umayyad Square in Damascus yesterday. Daniel Berehulak/The New York Times

Syrian rebels are in control, but their plans are yet unclear

The rebels who took over Damascus announced yesterday that a new government would begin work immediately, as millions of Syrians and the wider world struggled to process the stunning end to the Assad family’s decades-long reign. Rebel fighters took up positions outside public buildings and directed traffic in a show of their newly claimed authority. Here’s the latest.

Times reporters in Syria yesterday saw abandoned Syrian military tanks, empty checkpoints and ripped-up posters of President Bashar al-Assad littering the ground. There were early signs of the lawlessness — broken windows of cars and shops — that many fear could spiral and grip the country, as well as euphoria at the ouster of a brutal leader.

The rebels now face the complex task of extending their control over a country with deep ethnic, sectarian and religious divisions.

I spoke to Alissa Rubin, a senior Middle East correspondent, for some context.

Can you explain the regional factors that played into the fall of the Assad regime?

This certainly happened in large part because of Israel’s weakening of Hezbollah, whose troops were supporting Assad. That made it more difficult for Iran, which is close to Hezbollah and worked with them in Syria, to operate there. Russia was also busy elsewhere. So there were all these international factors that created this moment, but those factors — and powers like Turkey — will also be part of creating the future.

What are the biggest challenges heading into that future?

There’s going to be an enormous number of military and security developments, and a lot of questions about how people will both be safe and also able to make it their country again.

There is no plan yet for how to rule or control the country. What happens in Damascus, which is pretty far west, has a limited amount to do with what happens in Aleppo, and certainly nothing to do with what happens out on the Iraqi border or down south near Jordan. All of that is going to be up for grabs, and there are a lot of different actors, including the Islamic State, which is present and has been resurgent there in the last couple of years.

Iran has actually broached the idea of a sort of national conference to figure all this out, which would include all Syrians. I hope there will be someone to come and organize that. But it sounds daunting at the moment.

 
 
An armored vehicle on a dusty street, where several people can be seen riding motorbikes.
An armored police vehicle in Port-au-Prince in May. Ricardo Arduengo/Reuters

A massacre in Haiti’s capital

Nearly 200 people were killed in a massacre over the weekend in Cité Soleil, one of the poorest neighborhoods of Port-au-Prince, the U.N.’s human rights chief said yesterday.

A leading Haitian human rights group described the killings as the personal vendetta of a gang boss who had been told that witchcraft caused his son’s fatal illness. Older people who practiced Voodoo appeared to have been targeted: Nearly 130 of those who were killed were over 60, according to the U.N., which added that gang members had burned bodies and flung them into the sea.

Mass deportations: Desperate Haitians who fled to the Dominican Republic are now being sent back in cages. Dominican officials have said their goal is 10,000 deportations per week.

 
 
Adèle Haenel, in a blue-striped shirt and jeans and wearing a ball cap, sits and gazes out of a window. Flowers are seen in the foreground.
Adèle Haenel in Chatham, N.Y., in 2023. Lauren Lancaster for The New York Times

France’s first big #MeToo case goes to trial

Five years ago, the French actress Adèle Haenel shocked the country’s film industry when she accused the director Christophe Ruggia of grooming and sexually assaulting her when she was 12 and he was 36.

Yesterday, the case went to court, marking the first major #MeToo accusation in France to proceed to trial. Ruggia, 59, is charged with aggravated sexual assault against a minor. Ruggia has repeatedly denied the allegations. In his testimony, he characterized the accusations that he had touched Haenel sexually as “pure lies.”

 
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