Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Asia and Australia Edition

Raqqa, Kirkuk, Marawi: Your Wednesday Briefing

Good morning.

Here’s what you need to know:

Image
Credit...Andy Wong/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

• “The outlook is extremely bright;the challenges are also extremely grim.”

That was President Xi Jinping as he opened the first Communist Party congress since he assumed power five years ago. He is expected to enshrine his authoritarian vision, which he sees as a guarantee for the party’s survival.

Analysts will be looking for signs about who is primed to join Mr. Xi’s inner circle, and, as one said, of how far he “can and will go in reshaping the norms of Chinese politics to get his way.”

_____

Image
Credit...Bulent Kilic/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

• Cheering and celebratory gunfire erupted in the streets of the Syrian city of Raqqa, above, after U.S.-backed forces said they had seized it.

But the U.S. Central Command stopped short of declaring that their allies had complete control over the de facto capital of the Islamic State’s self-declared caliphate.

And Iraqi and Kurdish forces appear close to all-out war as Baghdad intensifies its suppression of the Kurds’ independence movement. Iraqi troops drove Kurdish fighters out of the crucial oil fields near the city of Kirkuk.

_____

Image
Credit...Robinson Ninal Junior / PPD, via European Pressphoto Agency

• In the Philippines, President Rodrigo Duterte was on the front lines to declare Marawi “liberated from terrorist influence” five months after Islamic extremists stormed the southern city.

The military said some 30 militants remained, and possibly among them Mahmud Ahmad, a Malaysian who is believed to have helped finance the insurgency.

_____

Image
Credit...Tom Brenner/The New York Times

• President Trump’s third attempt at a travel ban was blocked, for now, by a judge in Hawaii just hours before it was to take effect. The ban would have indefinitely stopped almost all travel to the U.S. from seven countries, including most of the Muslim-majority nations included in Mr. Trump’s original plan.

And our magazine takes a deep dive into the state of the administration’s foreign policy. With Secretary of State Rex Tillerson increasingly isolated and the diplomatic corps demoralized, some believe the U.S. is adrift in the world. Above, a cabinet meeting on Tuesday.

_____

Image
Credit...Ali Lapetina

• The U.N. released video of thousands more Rohingya Muslims fleeing violence and persecution in Myanmar and crossing into Bangladesh, where more than half a million others are already living in overcrowded camps.

Above, an image by a photographer who explored the lives of about 400 Rohingya families that have been resettled in the U.S., on the north side of Chicago.

“Right now I just think, one day we go back to our country and tell them we are American, educated people,” said a 20-year-old woman, whose 5-day-old American-born daughter is the first in her family to hold official citizenship of any country.

_____

Video
Video player loading
The evolution of battling sexual harassment in the workplace has developed from naming the problem in the 1970s, to bringing it out of the shadows in the 1990s, to a growing sense of accountability today.CreditCredit...Paul Hosefros/The New York Times

Harvey Weinstein’s fall opened the floodgates. Across Hollywood, on social media and even in France, accusations of sexual harassment are pouring forth.

We looked back at how the issue unfolded across generations, starting with how the term “sexual harassment” came about.

And our Australian bureau looked at a related issue: persistent gender pay gaps, brought to the fore by the sudden resignation of a TV host, Lisa Wilkinson, whose salary was rumored to be about half that of her male cohost.

_____

Image
Credit...Stephen Jaffe/IMF, via Getty Images

• Developing countries’ debt is hot, thanks to rock-bottom interest rates — a trend evident at packed investor conferences on the bond market held last week in parallel with meetings of the International Monetary Fund. Above right, the I.M.F. director Christine Lagarde last week with Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, a former Nigerian finance minister.

• Chinese scientists developed a salt-resistant rice that can grow in diluted seawater, a breakthrough that could increase China’s rice production by nearly 20 percent.

• Netflix added 5.3 million subscribers in the third quarter, 4.5 million from global markets, and reported revenue of nearly $3 billion, a 30 percent increase.

• Uber and other ride-hailing apps may make traffic worse by reducing reliance on public transit.

• The Dow Jones Industrial Average passed 23,000 for the first time. Here’s a snapshot of global markets.

Image
Credit...Reuters

• In Afghanistan, at least 23 police officials and civilians were killed and more than 190 others were injured when Taliban fighters stormed a police station after ramming it with a bomb-laden vehicle. [The New York Times]

• Dire warnings of damage to democracy rippled across Europe over the car-bomb assassination of a journalist, Daphne Caruana Galizia, who had exposed Malta’s links to offshore tax havens using the leaked Panama Papers. [The New York Times]

• Ophelia’s destructive power is partly explained by the storm’s unusual route across the Atlantic. [The Conversation]

• The U.S. Department of Justice indicted two major Chinese drug traffickers for making and selling fentanyl, a highly addictive opioid, over the internet. [CBS]

• The Australian Football League ruled that a transgender player, Hannah Mouncey, was not eligible to play on its women’s teams. [ABC]

• The U.S. and Japan are about to face off in a duel between giant robots, each over 13 feet tall and weighing nearly 10 tons. You can watch live on Twitch at 10 a.m. Sydney time. [CNBC]

• North Koreans once risked three years’ hard labor for gambling. Now betting on horse races is encouraged as Pyongyang scrambles for hard currency. [Reuters]

• A zoo in Nagano, Japan, has a new star: Karl the “meticulous” raccoon. [The Asahi Shimbun]

Tips, both new and old, for a more fulfilling life.

Image
Credit...The New York Times

• Yes, you can have a better relationship.

• We see others’ failures as courageous. We see our own as shameful. Why?

• Recipe of the day: Midweek dinner can be as simple as pasta with burst cherry tomatoes.

Image
Credit...Oh Suk Kuhn

• Park Chan-wook of South Korea has delighted global moviegoers and fellow filmmakers with his mix of painterly composition and gallows humor and gore. He is one of the subjects of our T Magazine’s Greats issue.

• The discovery of the Arabic words “Allah” and “Ali” on Viking funeral costumes has provided new insight into the influence of Islam in medieval Scandinavia.

• Fish get depressed — offering a model for studying depression in people. “The neurochemistry is so similar that it’s scary,” one scientist said.

Image
Credit...Associated Press

As the U.S. national anthem played, they bowed their heads and prayed they wouldn’t be shot.

It was this week in 1968 when two African-American sprinters raised gloved fists in a black power salute during a medal presentation at the Summer Olympics in Mexico City.

The demonstration by Tommie Smith and John Carlos, who won the gold and bronze medals in the 200-meter dash, drew a quick reaction.

Under pressure from the International Olympic Committee — which wanted to avoid the politicization of the Games — the U.S. team dropped the two runners, who received death threats.

The silver medalist, Peter Norman of Australia, knew of his fellow Olympians’ plans; on the podium, all three wore badges of the Olympic Project for Human Rights, which was organized to protest racism in sports. Mr. Norman was ostracized after returning home.

In a memoir published in 2011, Mr. Carlos wrote: “If I shut my eyes, I can still feel the fire from those days. And if I open my eyes, I still see the fires all around me. I didn’t like the way the world was, and I believe that there need to be some changes about the way the world is.”

Thomas Furse contributed reporting.

_____

Your Morning Briefing is published weekday mornings and updated online. Browse past briefings here.

We have briefings timed for the Australian, Asian, European and American mornings. You can sign up for these and other Times newsletters here.

If photographs appear out of order, please download the updated New York Times app from iTunes or Google Play.

What would you like to see here? Contact us at asiabriefing@nytimes.com.

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT