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Your Monday Briefing: Russia Strikes Key City


Russia fired 20 missiles at residential areas in Zaporizhzhia in southern Ukraine, killing at least 13 people and injuring 60, Ukraine’s foreign ministry said.

The strikes have come after an explosion on saturday destroyed part of the Kerch Strait Bridge, the only bridge connecting the Russian mainland with the Crimean Peninsula, which Russia illegally annexed in 2014. A senior Ukrainian official said explosions organized by Ukrainian intelligence agencies.

The 12-mile-long bridge is the most important supply route for Russian troops fighting in southern Ukraine, and destroying part of it is a personal insult to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has presided over its opening in 2018 and described the explosion as a “terrorist attack” on Sunday.

What’s next: Russian news reports say some road and rail traffic has resumed, but trucks are still being backed up on either side of the bridge. After the attack, celebrations in Kyiv have given way to apprehension about possible Russian retaliation.

The 19 coffins line the entire wall of the temple Wat Rat Samakee. A long white rope, a Buddhist symbol of purity and protection, runs on their tops. Surrounded by each coffin are items to transport young children to the afterlife: a Spider-Man suit, a plush kitten, a juice box, roast pork and a toy truck, many of there.

Uthai Sawan Town on Saturday Official start of mourning 36 victims, 23 of them young children in a day care center, who died after former police officer being attacked them in rage on Thursday. The funeral had to be divided into three temples, and monks from neighboring provinces came to the town to help with the rituals.

The body of the gunman, Panya Kamrab, was cremated in Udon Thani, after there was no temple in Nong Bua Lumphu province where the attack took place, ready to perform his last rites, media reports local news.

Related: Access to guns in Thailand is uneven, with looser rules for those in the police and military and stricter rules for civilians. The disparity, coupled with guns smuggled across borders, has resulted in a thriving black market and gun ownership rates much higher than in most Asian countries. A 3-year-old child escaped the attack uninjured, Reuters reported.


Coronavirus cases are on the rise in China, though officials have stepped up restrictions that many have deemed excessive. The daily Covid count has more than doubled over the past week, to around 1,400 cases on Friday – a small number by global standards but still high for China.

Authorities in China are sticking to their “zero Covid” policy before the crucial Communist Party congress begins on October 16, at which China’s president, Xi Jinping, is expected will extend his power and declare power for another term.

The increased number of cases leads to new lockdowns and more mandatory testing and isolation. The closures have been a punishment for residents of underdeveloped areas, where shortages of food and medicine are common.

Details: On Tuesday, Xinjiang effectively banned residents and visitors from leaving, stopping all departing trains and buses and canceling most flights. In the tropical island province of Hainan, authorities ordered mass inspections after just two.

Can quote: China’s pandemic strategy is “almost a political campaign to show allegiance to Xi Jinping himself,” said Willy Lam, an assistant professor of politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Lil Nihilist, Shy Boogie and MoistPB were among those The Times’ privacy and technology correspondent Kashmir Hill spoke with during the interview. Horizon World Discovery Month, Meta’s virtual reality-based social network. She finds gamers, parents, children, amnesiacs, pranksters, and comedians roaming the digital space Meta has staked its future on.

Grace Glueck, a reporter who made the art world different at The New York Times, and the man who later helped bring a pivotal sexism lawsuit against the newspaper, died Saturday. She is 96 years old.

When Sylvia Wu opened Madame Wu’s Garden in Los Angeles in 1959, luxury homes still dominated American Chinese food.

Wu, who died last month at the age of 106, came from a wealthy family and studied at Columbia University. Horrified by the Chinese food she found in America, she had the idea to build something closer to the lavish places she visited in Hong Kong. Madame Wu has catered to stars like Frank Sinatra and Elizabeth Taylor, and Wu has become a celebrity in her own right, appearing on television, writing books and driving a Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud with makeup board with the words “MMEWU” written on it.

Her generation of chefs expanded the American idea of ​​what Chinese food could be. “Her enthusiasm for the new is as strong as her reverence for the old, and she is always looking for other avenues to delight her audience, grow her business, and perform. showing the ingenuity and beauty of Chinese cuisine,” write my colleague Tejal Rao.

“Chinese friends will criticize the dish, saying it is inaccurate,” she said Los Angeles Times in 1998. “But I told them, ‘Look around. Did you see any Chinese food here? ‘”

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