Antony Blinken, America’s secretary of state, met Xi Jinping, China’s president, in Beijing. After the meeting Mr Xi reported that the two sides had “made progress and reached agreement on some specific issues”. Yesterday Mr Blinken met Wang Yi, China’s most senior diplomat. After that meeting, Mr Wang said both countries must choose between “cooperation or conflict.” On the issue of Taiwan Mr Wang said China had “no room to compromise”, according to Chinese state media. Mr Blinken’s visit to China follows a meeting between President Joe Biden and Mr Xi at the G20 summit in Bali last November.

Ukraine made “small advances” in its counter-offensive amid heavy fighting along the frontline in the country’s south, according to British intelligence. Russia’s defensive operations were “relatively effective”, it said. But a Russian-appointed official acknowledged that Ukraine had recaptured the village of Piatykhatky, in the Zaporizhia region. Military analysts have cautioned that Ukraine’s attempt to retake occupied areas along the 1,000km (620-mile) frontline will be heavy going.

Israeli forces raided a refugee camp in the West Bank, killing three people and wounding at least 29, according to Palestinian officials. Israel’s army said its troops were attacked first, after they had entered the camp to arrest two terrorism suspects. Bezalel Smotrich, Israel’s finance minister, called for a “large-scale operation” in the West Bank.

The EU signed a trade deal with Kenya. The country will have tariff-free access to the bloc’s market, and will also gradually open its market to EU imports. The deal also included an agreement to collaborate on sustainability commitments, including on climate change. The EU is already Kenya’s largest export market; total trade between the two was worth €3.3bn ($3.6bn) in 2022.

Australia’s senate voted to hold a constitutional referendum on recognising the rights of indigenous peoples. If approved, the constitution will be changed to allow for the creation of an indigenous advocacy group to parliament. Aboriginal people, who make up 3% of the population, played no part in drafting Australia’s constitution and were not accorded any special rights in it.

A Russian warship rescued 68 people from a boat on the Mediterranean, according to the country’s defence ministry. Passengers were safely transferred from the ship to Greek coastguard boats. Earlier, authorities in Pakistan arrested 12 alleged human traffickers in connection with the shipwreck of a migrant boat off Greece’s coast last week that killed at least 78 people. The vessel was carrying hundreds of people.

“Elemental”, Pixar’s latest release, suffered the worst opening weekend in the studio’s 28-year history. Despite favourable reviews, the animated film brought in only $30m in ticket sales in North America. Pixar’s last release, “Lightyear”, was also a flop. The results heap more pressure on Disney, Pixar’s beleaguered parent company.

Figure of the day: $640, the cost of a human head. Read the full story.


PHOTO: AP

Russia stacks up Navalny’s charges

On Monday another trial of Alexei Navalny, Russia’s most prominent dissident, begins. It is taking place at a penal colony some 250km (150 miles) east of Moscow, where the politician has been imprisoned for the past year.

Since his arrest in January 2021, Mr Navalny has been convicted of parole violation, fraud and contempt of court. Now the Kremlin is adding spurious charges of extremism and terrorism. If Mr Navalny is found guilty, as is almost certain, he could face 35 years in jail.

The charges show the role the courts are playing in carrying out the Kremlin’s increasingly repressive policies. As Vladimir Putin’s bloody and expensive invasion of Ukraine grinds on, he is suppressing dissent back home. Last week, Lilia Chanysheva, a co-ordinator for Mr Navalny’s political office in Bashkortostan, a region in central Russia, was jailed for seven and a half years on extremism charges. In Mr Putin’s Russia, it is becoming increasingly costly to speak out.

PHOTO: AP

Imran Khan is losing his battle

Imran Khan is in a precarious position. On Monday the bail granted to him in a corruption case will probably be extended again, staving off a looming arrest. Pakistan’s former prime minister has suffered a spectacular reversal of fortunes in recent weeks. Until early May the country’s most popular politician looked on course to force Shehbaz Sharif, the prime minister, into early elections—or at least to be odds-on to win a vote later in the year. But after Mr Khan’s supporters attacked military installations on May 9th, Pakistan’s powerful army set about dismantling his base.

Thousands of Mr Khan’s followers have been arrested; many face trial in military courts. His party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, disintegrated as senior leaders defected; the government has mooted banning it. Media have been told not to broadcast Mr Khan’s speeches or even mention his name. Threatened with jail, deprived of political support and the oxygen of publicity, the flamboyant rabble-rouser looks increasingly lonely and powerless.

PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

Paris Air Show takes off again

The aerospace and defence executives, industry analysts, journalists and hangers-on pounding the baking tarmac at Le Bourget airport will do so with springs in their steps this year. The first Paris Air Show since 2019, which starts on Monday, will probably bring a glut of orders for passenger jets. Order books at Boeing, the American planemaker, and Airbus, its European rival, are already stuffed as air travel bounces back with a vengeance. And the war in Ukraine is boosting military spending by governments around the world. Defence companies will be keen to show off their newest kit.

There will be plenty of talk about decarbonising air travel, with companies that plan to launch battery-powered flying taxis in the coming years converging on the show too. None has yet carried passengers, but by the end of a long day in the heat, the promise of a quick flight from the suburbs of Paris to the city centre will seem worth waiting for.

PHOTO: AP

Trump’s post-indictment glow

When Bret Baier, Fox News’s senior political correspondent, last interviewed Donald Trump, it was aboard Air Force One in 2018. The then-president was in negotiations with North Korea’s dictator, Kim Jong Un. His concessions in a tentative agreement on Korea’s denuclearisation alarmed many Republican lawmakers.

On Monday Mr Baier will sit down again with Mr Trump, who is now tussling with America’s Justice Department. But more Republicans have his back this time. Last week Mr Trump was charged with 37 felonies related to an alleged mishandling of classified documents. At least 100 Republicans in Congress have questioned the validity of his stunning indictment; about 76 fully reject it.

Expect Mr Baier to let Mr Trump air his grievances. But even Fox’s support has its limits. A recent town hall with Mr Trump was pre-recorded, so that any references he made to a “stolen” election in 2020—a claim similar to one that cost Fox $787.5m in a recent legal settlement—could be edited out.

PHOTO: BASSO CANNARSA / OPALE.PHOTO

Lorrie Moore’s haunting story of lost love

“Everyone at some point in their lives should have a long great love affair with a magnificent lunatic,” declares Finn, a melancholic schoolteacher, in the beautifully idiosyncratic “I Am Homeless if This is Not My Home” by Lorrie Moore, an American novelist. The deceptively slender volume, published on Tuesday, ponders heavy themes, such as love, death, suicide and the meaning of life. But its true power lies in the almost antic ingenuity of each sentence.

Does Finn actually spot his beloved ex-girlfriend wandering around the cemetery where she has just been buried, smelling vaguely of rot? Do they really embark on a road trip, discussing their love and trials? Perhaps Finn is simply undone by his grief. Yet Ms Moore seems to be probing how we are all haunted by past loves, unhealed wounds and slipping memories. As Finn observes: “no longer caring about a thing was key to both living and dying. So was caring about a thing.”

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Russia launched 12 missiles and two drones at Kyiv as African leaders arrived in the Ukrainian capital to broker peace talks. The rockets were shot down by the city’s air defences, according to the Ukrainian air force. The African delegation, which includes the presidents of South Africa and Zambia, will meet with Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s president, before travelling to St Petersburg on Saturday to meet Vladimir Putin, Russia’s president. Ukraine’s foreign minister said the attack was evidence that “Russia wants more war, not peace.”

The UN suggested that the use of torture by Russian forces in Ukraine may be “state-endorsed”. Alice Jill Edwards, the UN special rapporteur on torture, said she was alarmed by “reports and testimonies” that appeared to indicate that Russia was “intentionally inflicting severe… pain and suffering” on civilian and military prisoners. She and other UN experts have written to the Kremlin about their concerns.

The International Monetary Fund urged the European Central Bank to further restrict monetary policy, a day after the ECB raised interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point to 3.5%, their highest level in 22 years. The IMF said a “sustained period” of tightened policy would be needed to ward off “persistently high” inflation.

Intel, an American chipmaker, will build a $4.6bn semiconductor assembly plant in Poland as it ramps up investments in Europe. Last year the company announced plans for a €17bn factory in Germany, but has since demanded an additional €3bn in government subsidies, citing inflation. Some analysts think the Polish plant—which is the largest greenfield investment in the country’s history—will encourage Germany to acquiesce.

Emmanuel Macron, France’s president, hosts Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, in Paris on Friday. The meeting marks a diplomatic rehabilitation for MBS, nearly five years after the grizzly murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a veteran journalist, in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul. Human-rights activists have accused Mr Macron of hypocrisy.

BlackRock sought approval from America’s securities watchdog to offer a bitcoin exchange-traded fund on the Nasdaq stockmarket. The launch of the first-of-its-kind ETF by the world’s largest asset manager would be welcome news for the cryptocurrency industry, which has been squeezed by regulators in recent months. The Securities and Exchange Commission, however, has previously rejected similar applications.

Japan overhauled its sex-crime legislation, broadening the legal definition of rape, criminalising photo voyeurism and raising the age of consent from 13 to 16. The landmark move follows a string of rape acquittals in 2019, which spurred national outcry and prompted a widespread social movement against sexual violence. Japan had not changed its age of consent since 1907.

Figure of the day: $2.1trn, the American government’s revenue shortfall in the year to May—equivalent to 8.1% of GDP. Read the full story.


PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

The Bank of Japan sticks to ultra-loose policy

Since Ueda Kazuo took over as the Bank of Japan’s governor in April, he has bolstered his reputation as a man of restraint. Speculation has been rife that the bank might exit from its ultra-loose monetary policy. But Mr Ueda insists it will “patiently” maintain its approach, which was designed to haul the country out of decades of deflation. After the bank concluded a two-day meeting on Friday, Mr Ueda decided to continue existing policies including yield-curve control, which caps ten-year government-bond yields.

Now inflation is back. Prices excluding fresh food and fuel rose by 4.1% in April from a year earlier—the biggest increase in four decades. Some analysts suggest this heralds the beginning of a virtuous cycle, which will lift wages and consumer spending. But the evidence so far is thin. Wages have risen by just 1% over the past year, meaning workers are enduring pay cuts in real terms.

PHOTO: EPA

Britain’s sky-high food prices

Tesco, Britain’s biggest supermarket, published a quarterly trading statement on Friday. Total sales in Britain stood at £10.8bn, a 9.3% increase from last year. The update for investors comes amid pressure from politicians to tackle Britain’s cost-of-living crisis. According to the Office for National Statistics, hard-pressed consumers now fret more about rising food prices than they do about the cost of energy. The ONS estimates that food is dearer by around a fifth than it was a year ago, the second-highest jump in more than 45 years.

The Conservative government has suggested an agreement with leading supermarkets to cap prices of some basic items such as milk and bread. The British Retail Consortium, a trade body, says the plan will not work. It blames the higher costs that retailers are incurring for energy and labour. For its part, Tesco says it expects its operating profit to remain broadly flat this year.

PHOTO: AP

SCOTUS season heats up

America’s Supreme Court justices have just two weeks to release 20 decisions in cases heard between October and April. The most important of the three rulings handed down on Thursday was in Haaland v Brackeen, a 7-2 decision rebuffing an attempt to hobble the Indian Child Welfare Act. This law, enacted in 1978, protects Native American children from being removed from their families and tribes. Only Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas agreed with plaintiffs’ claims that the law amounted to congressional overreach.

More decisions are expected to arrive on Friday. Does the First Amendment give a Christian web designer the right to refuse to make websites for gay weddings, a state anti-discrimination law notwithstanding? Can President Joe Biden proceed with his plan to relieve millions of borrowers of a portion of their student debt? How generously must employers accommodate workers’ religious beliefs? Is race-based affirmative action in university admissions compatible with the constitution? Stay tuned.

PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

Can “Bazball” win England the Ashes?

The Ashes, a biennial cricket series between Australia and England, is steeped in tradition. But this year’s edition, which started on Friday at the Edgbaston ground in Birmingham, will feature something radical. Over the past year, England has revolutionised Test cricket by injecting pace into a very slow game. English batsmen have been scoring at five runs an over, when the norm is closer to three. This hyper-aggressive style, nicknamed “Bazball” after Brendon McCullum, the team’s coach, has borne fruit: England have won 11 of their past 13 Tests, a form of cricket match that lasts five days, many in record-breaking manner.

The matches against Australia will be Bazball’s toughest test yet: the Aussies won Test cricket’s world championship last week. Still, England could yet lay claim to being the world’s best team. According to our own Test-cricket rankings, if they were to win three tests in the five-match series then they would leapfrog Australia and India into top spot.

PHOTO: ROGER DO MINH/POP. 87 PRODUCTION

Wes Anderson’s “Asteroid City”

The robin’s-egg blue skies and sandy stretches of desert in “Asteroid City” evoke a Kodachrome postcard. This charming film is the latest marvel of design from Wes Anderson, an American director who delights fans with his pastel palettes and deadpan characters. In this movie Mr Anderson lovingly and comically sketches a mourning family’s adventures during a science convention for child prodigies, set in a flyspeck town in the mid-century American West.

Mr Anderson’s meticulously crafted world has a crucial quality that a lot of studio output lacks: personality. That extends to the cast. Scarlett Johansson plays a droll film starlet whose daughter is among the prodigies; Jeffrey Wright is a military general who emcees the convention. “Asteroid City” feels nostalgic for a bygone Hollywood era of top-notch production values and casts. Mr Anderson’s distinctive aesthetic has inspired parodies, but the gently bittersweet heart of this film suggests that there is more than meets the eye in his elaborate concoctions.

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Donald Trump pled not guilty to 37 charges stemming from his alleged mishandling of classified documents. America’s former president was arraigned at a federal courthouse in Miami, and joined in court by Waltine Nauta, his personal aide and co-defendant. Mr Trump was neither handcuffed nor required to give a mugshot. Local police earlier said they were preparing for crowds of up to 50,000 around the courthouse, but only several hundred protesters turned up.

Russian missiles killed six people in Odessa, a city in southern Ukraine, and Donetsk, an eastern region, according to local officials. The strikes came as Vladimir Putin, Russia’s president, claimed without evidence that Ukraine had suffered “catastrophic losses” in its counter-offensive. Mr Putin also ruled out the need for any further mobilisation in Russia.

Nvidia, a chipmaker, ended trading on Tuesday with a valuation over $1trn, becoming the seventh American company to do so. Shares in the firm have risen 181% this year, driven by booming demand for its semiconductors, which power generative artificial-intelligence systems. Nividia’s stock closed at $410.22, having risen 3.9% over the day. Its market capitalisation stood at around $1.01trn.

America’s Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, spoke to China’s foreign minister, Qin Gang, ahead of an expected visit to Beijing. Mr Qin urged America to “stop interfering” in China’s affairs, while Mr Blinken advocated for communication “to avoid miscalculation and conflict”. Mr Blinken’s planned visit to China in February was postponed after a suspected Chinese spy balloon was shot down over American territory.

Britain’s economy returned to growth in April as GDP increased by 0.2% compared with the previous month. The expansion, which partially reversed a 0.3% contraction in March, was driven by the services sector. The positive GDP figures, coupled with strong labour-market data released on Tuesday, increase the chances that the central bank will raise interest rates again next week.

Mass evacuations took place in India and Pakistan as the countries prepare for Cyclone Biparjoy, which is expected to make landfall on Thursday. In Gujarat, a western Indian state, almost 38,000 people had been moved, according to the regional government. Heavy rains and high winds have already killed seven people in India’s coastal areas.

Cormac McCarthy, one of America’s most lauded novelists, died aged 89 at his home in Santa Fe, New Mexico. He won the Pulitzer prize for “The Road” in 2007, and the National Book Award for “All the Pretty Horses” in 1992. Those two books became films, as did “No Country for Old Men”, which won four Oscars.

Figure of the day: 18m, the number of Indian migrants spread around the globe, according to the latest UN estimates from 2020. Read the full story.


PHOTO: REUTERS

Russia’s answer to Davos falls flat

On Wednesday the St Petersburg International Economic Forum, the biggest event of Russia’s economic calendar, kicks off. The talking-shop has previously attracted everyone from the secretary-general of the United Nations to the president of France. The cost of attendance ($25,000) is supposed to reflect the opportunities for schmoozing.

But this year will be different. True, Russia’s finance minister and central-bank governor are expected to attend. President Vladimir Putin will probably stop by. Yet few other dignitaries will participate in the discussions, which will cover weighty subjects such as “technological sovereignty in agribusiness”. Western journalists are not allowed to take part; Western businesspeople do not want to. Indeed it is not clear that any world leaders are planning to make the trip. The event is billed as Russia’s answer to the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum at Davos, a Swiss mountain resort. Instead, it merely highlights the country’s isolation on the global stage.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Lebanon tries to pick a new president, again

After 11 failed attempts, Lebanon’s parliament will try again on Wednesday to elect a president to replace Michel Aoun, whose term ended in October. Previous votes were a farce: many MPs cast blank ballots or failed to show up. Do not expect progress this time. The apparent front-runner is Jihad Azour, a former finance minister, who announced his candidacy on Monday after denying for months that he wanted the job. Christian parties and independent MPs have endorsed Mr Azour, whose economic expertise would be useful. The country has been mired in a financial crisis since 2019.

Still, he faces fierce opposition from Hizbullah, the Shia militia-cum-political-party. It wants Suleiman Frangieh, a veteran politician close to the regime of Bashar al-Assad, Syria’s president, to fill the job. Many Lebanese think the parties supporting Mr Azour are in fact doing so to try and convince Hizbullah to dump Mr Frangieh and back a lesser-known consensus candidate. With little prospect of that, the deadlock looks set to continue.

PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

Germany’s first National Security Strategy

Before taking office in late 2021, Germany’s three-party coalition sought to reassure voters it would govern wisely. Its pledges included drafting a National Security Strategy, a first for the country. Delayed by Russia’s war on Ukraine and internal wrangling, the document will finally be released on Wednesday.

The strategy will probably commit to strengthening Germany’s trans-Atlantic and European alliances. That means reaffirming a commitment to raise defence spending to 2% of GDP—a longstanding promise to NATO that Germany has failed to meet. But talk is cheap: analysts will pore over the wording for firm details. The text may also skirt tough topics, such as how to steer between German economic interests in China and the growing rivalry between the Asian military power and America. Still, it is the ambition underpinning the statement that counts: in a more dangerous world, Germany is recognising the need to step up.

PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

Monitoring the Zaporizhia nuclear plant

A new team of monitors from the International Atomic Energy Agency, a UN nuclear watchdog, could arrive at the Zaporizhia nuclear-power facility in occupied southern Ukraine as early as Wednesday. Fears of a possible nuclear accident are heightened. The plant drew water to cool its reactors from the Kakhovka reservoir, which was destroyed with the bursting of a huge dam in the neighbouring Kherson region.

After the dam explosion, IAEA staff said that there was “no immediate risk” to the facility as it stores enough water for a few months nearby. The new monitoring team will assess these water reserves and the plant’s cooling systems. Yet the dam’s destruction, probably by the Russians, has also introduced an ominous possibility that will hang over the team’s work. It’s now highly unlikely that the plant’s reactors, which have been in “shutdown” modes for months, could be fired up to generate electricity in the foreseeable future. If deemed useless by the Russian occupiers, it is possible that they might sabotage the plant, perhaps before a retreat.

PHOTO: CAPITAL PICTURES

“The Full Monty” back on screens

A quarter of a century after their one-night-only striptease, the six former steelworkers who were the heroes of “The Full Monty” are back. An eight-part drama series of the same name is out on Wednesday on Hulu in America and Disney+ elsewhere. Released in 1997, the original film was a surprise international hit. Its many fans fondly recall the scene in which the men dance to “Hot Stuff” in a dole queue in Sheffield, a city in Yorkshire.

In the television reprise, things are the same but different. The group’s ringleader is once again Gaz (played by Robert Carlyle), a chancer with a heart of gold; his best friend Dave (Mark Addy) is still married to Jean (Lesley Sharp). But do not expect the greybeards to get their kit off again. There are plenty of fully clothed high jinks, but the plot focuses on the friends’ enduring struggles as they navigate the impact of government austerity and the caprices of the welfare state.

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