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Tuesday Briefing: Death toll rises in L.A. fires
Tuesday Briefing: Death toll rises in L.A. fires
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Tuesday Briefing: Death toll rises in L.A. fires

 
Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

January 14, 2025

 
 

Good morning. We’re covering a forecast of more wind in the Los Angeles wildfires and the fate of South Korea’s impeached president.

Plus, what’s going on with TV credits?

 
 
 
A basketball hoop and a completely burned car are among the remains left behind by a fire in a residential area.
Destruction in the Pacific Palisades yesterday. Loren Elliott for The New York Times

L.A. is braced for dangerous winds

A forecast of rising winds yesterday threatened the progress that firefighters had made to contain the destructive wildfires in Los Angeles. At least 24 people were reported to have died, and at least 16 people were missing in the areas of two of the blazes. Follow our live coverage here.

A rare fire danger alert was put in place through tomorrow, the same warning that was issued last week when strong winds stoked some of the deadliest fires in California’s history. Fire crews were being deployed to at-risk areas in anticipation of the winds, which may not be as powerful as last week’s. Still, the gusts’ duration could pose a problem.

An investigation into what started the fires was underway, with officials looking into nearby power lines as a possible cause, but arson has not been ruled out.

There were some signs of a return to normalcy. Some local schools reopened after campuses across the city were closed last week, and the production of some television shows resumed.

Disparities: As local and state fire crews struggled against the flames in entire neighborhoods, private firefighters hired by wealthy residents for thousands of dollars a day kept watch on individual homes.

 
 
People dressed in black gathered behind a banner and held up protest signs
Protesters in Seoul demanding the arrest of President Yoon Suk Yeol. Ahn Young-Joon/Associated Press

Deciding the fate of South Korea’s president

South Korea’s Constitutional Court is beginning deliberations today on whether President Yoon Suk Yeol should be removed or reinstated after his impeachment. Last month, Yoon declared a short-lived martial law that launched the country into its worst political crisis in decades.

Rival groups of citizens have protested for weeks for both outcomes, with some hard-liners warning that a civil war could break out if the court does not rule in their favor.

What’s next: If Yoon is removed, he will be the third conservative president in a row to be ousted, imprisoned or both before or after the term of office ended. A reinstatement could set a precedent for future leaders to use martial law as a political tool.

 
 
A man pushing a wheel toward a military vehicle as a soldier walks by.
Ukrainian soldiers repairing a vehicle near the border with Russia. Finbarr O’Reilly for The New York Times

A territorial bargaining chip behind Russian lines

In the Kursk region of Russia, the Russian and Ukrainian militaries are fighting some of the most intense battles of the war so far. The area, pivotal to both sides, could play a key role in any potential cease-fire talks: Ukraine hopes to use it as a bargaining chip.

On the ground: With the aid of North Korean reinforcements, Russia has managed to recover some of the territory that it lost over the summer. Ukrainian soldiers say the North Koreans are part of the reason the fighting has been so ferocious.

“They are pressuring our fronts en masse, finding weak points and breaking through them,” Jr. Sgt. Oleksii, a platoon leader, said.

Related: A video of captured North Korean soldiers being interrogated seemed to reveal that they knew very little about the war they were fighting in.

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