The tennis star’s accusation of sexual assault against a Before Peng Shuai’s accusation, Zhang Gaoli was best known as a low-key technocrat. As he quietly ascended to top leadership, he skirted scandals and controversy. One of the few profiles of him in the Chinese media described Zhang, 75, as “stern, low-key, taciturn.” |
Now, Peng’s allegation has made Zhang a symbol of a political system that prizes secrecy and control. Her accusation raises questions about how far the party’s elite carry their declared ideals of clean-living integrity into their heavily guarded homes. |
Background: Early in Xi Jinping’s term as the Chinese leader, lurid reports about officials’ sexual misdeeds at times surfaced in state media, disclosures intended to signal that he was serious about purifying the party. Now, Xi’s priority appears to be fending off scandal. References to Peng’s account were nearly wiped off the internet inside China. |
| Darul Uloom Haqqania has educated more Taliban leaders than any school in the world.Saiyna Bashir for The New York Times |
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Many alumni of Darul Uloom Haqqania madrasa, one of Pakistan’s largest and oldest seminaries, are now ruling Afghanistan. |
Administrators of the madrasa — located close to the Afghan border — argue that the school has changed and that the Taliban should be given the chance to show they have moved beyond their bloody ways. |
But its critics call it a university of jihad and blame it for helping to sow violence across the region for decades. They also worry that extremist madrasas, potentially emboldened by the Taliban’s victory in Afghanistan, may fuel radicalism in Pakistan. |
A wide reach: The Haqqani Network — the Taliban’s military wing, responsible for hostage takings, suicide attacks and targeted assassinations — is named after the madrasa and retains connections there. |
Notable alumni: The foreign minister, the higher education minister, the justice minister, and the acting interior minister, who led much of the Taliban’s military efforts and carries a $5 million bounty from the U.S. government on his head. |
| Discontent has long simmered in the Solomon Islands over resource distributions and an alliance switch to Beijing from Taipei.Georgina Kekea, via Reuters |
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- Protesters clashed with the police in the capital of the Solomon Islands, demanding that the prime minister resign
- Australian police announced that a suspect had been charged with the murder of a couple that disappeared on a camping trip.
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| About 1,300 people have drowned in the Mediterranean this year.Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters |
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- The boat that capsized in the English Channel, leaving at least 27 migrants dead, was like “a pool you blow up in your garden,” France’s interior minister said.
- As Russia moves troops along its border with Ukraine, raising fears of an invasion, the Biden administration has been vague about when, and how, it might come to Ukraine’s defense.
- Poland’s far-right ruling party has benefited from its hard-line stance on migrants at the Belarusian border.
- Sweden chose Magdalena Andersson, the leader of the Social Democratic Party, to be its first female prime minister. Her term lasted less than a day.
- An explosion outside a school in Mogadishu killed at least eight people, the latest in a series of attacks during Somalia’s tense election period.
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As you get this newsletter, people across the U.S. will be preparing to celebrate. Here’s some holiday news. |
- An off-duty police officer in Newark, N.J., has been charged with reckless vehicular homicide after prosecutors say he fatally struck a pedestrian and then took the body home in the trunk of his car.
- Because of climate change, the Smithsonian’s buildings are extremely vulnerable to flooding. Nearly two million irreplaceable artifacts are housed in the basement of the National Museum of American History.
- Texas has rejected efforts to protect Native American remains buried under the Alamo, a controversial tourist destination.
- In a last-minute change to the nomination process, Kanye West and Taylor Swift became Grammy contenders for album of the year.
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| “Everything I do is to improve the sound,” said Francisco Luis Ramírez, 76. “I’m a technician, always refining.”Alicia Vera for The New York Times |
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If your accordion breaks in |
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