Wednesday, November 15, 2023

The New York Times Morning Briefing November 15, 2023 by NAtasha Frost covering an Israeli raid on a Gaza hospital, and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s centrist gamble.

 

Author Headshot

By Natasha Frost

Writer, Briefings

Good morning. We’re covering an Israeli raid on a Gaza hospital, and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s centrist gamble.

Plus: A cache of historic maps.

Displaced Palestinians living at Al-Shifa hospital last week, amid the ongoing conflict.Reuters

Israel says it is inside Gaza hospital

The Israeli military said early this morning that its troops were raiding Gaza’s Al-Shifa Hospital, a complex of buildings where thousands of people have sheltered and conditions for patients have grown increasingly grim as supplies have dwindled. Fighting has been raging nearby for days, and the hospital was struck at least four times over the weekend.

In a statement posted on social media, the Israel Defense Forces said it had launched “a precise and targeted operation against Hamas in a specified area in the Shifa Hospital.” It remained unclear how many troops were involved in the assault or what their immediate objective was.

Israeli commanders say that Hamas fighters have built an underground operational hub and tunnels under the hospital. They have accused Hamas, the armed group that controls Gaza, of using patients, doctors and hospital workers as human shields for command centers and safe houses. Hamas and hospital officials deny the accusations.

Mass graves: Workers at Al-Shifa buried dozens of bodies on the complex because the bodies had started to decompose and posed a health hazard, according to the medical authorities in Gaza.

In other news:

  • At least four strikes hit Al-Shifa on Friday morning, and at least three of the projectiles appear to have been Israeli munitions, a Times analysis found.
  • At least 102 workers from the largest U.N. agency in Gaza have been killed in five weeks of heavy Israeli bombing.
  • A mission to rescue child cancer patients from the violence in Gaza has involved several countries and last-minute connections in the chaos of war.
  • Digital disinformation and restrictions on photojournalists have complicated decision-making in newsrooms about how to chronicle the war visually.
Oleksandr Dubinsky after a news conference in Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, in 2021.Sergei Supinsky/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Ukraine indicts officials linked to Russian spying

Ukrainian police officials and prosecutors have accused two politicians and a former prosecutor of colluding with a Russian intelligence agency in aiding an effort by Rudolph Giuliani several years ago to tie the Biden family to corruption in Ukraine.

Kostyantyn Kulyk, a former Ukrainian deputy prosecutor general; Oleksandr Dubinsky, a current member of Ukraine’s Parliament; and Andriy Derkach, a former member, were indicted on charges of treason and belonging to a criminal organization. The charges refer to “information-subversive activities” and focus on actions in 2019. They do not say if or when the activity stopped.

A high-profile reprieve: Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, has pardoned one of the convicted organizers of the murder of the acclaimed human rights journalist Anna Politkovskaya. Putin’s move was in return for the man’s service in Ukraine, a lawyer for the man said.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain at a cabinet meeting inside 10 Downing Street on Tuesday.Pool photo by Wpa

Rishi Sunak’s gamble

A centrist pivot by Rishi Sunak, the British prime minister, has left some saying that his recent cabinet reshuffle could fracture the coalition that delivered a landslide victory for the Conservative Party in 2019 and that it risked alienating working-class voters who once flocked to the Tory slogan “Get Brexit done.”

“Ending up with three moderates in the top four positions is not going to be great for his party politics,” said Jonathan Powell, who served as chief of staff to Tony Blair. “A centrist cabinet in a right-wing party is a dangerous combination for a prime minister.”

Sunak’s third makeover: When he replaced Liz Truss as prime minister 13 months ago, Sunak initially cast himself as a pragmatic technocrat before adopting divisive policies on climate change, immigration and crime to try to put the opposition Labour Party on the defensive.

THE LATEST NEWS

Around the World
Pool photo by Charlie Neibergall
From the U.S.
Jake Offenhartz/Associated Press
What Else is Happening
A Morning Read
Oculi Mundi

A trove of dozens of historic maps, some dating as far back as the 15th century, has been digitized as Oculi Mundi (the Eyes of the World), an online archive.

The maps are artifacts of people’s efforts to pinpoint where they were and where they were going next, in the age before the emergence of GPS and phones that could tell us exactly where we are. And each has its own story.

SPORTS NEWS

Why soccer fears tramadol: The World Anti-Doping Agency’s decision to put the painkiller on its banned list could have serious consequences for players.

Women’s soccer: Emma Hayes has been confirmed as the new head coach of the U.S. team, in a deal that makes her the highest-paid coach in the sport.

The return of David Cameron: Social media announcements about the Conservative Party’s cabinet reshuffle appeared to refer to a sports media celebrity.

Success in Formula 1’s glitziest race: As the paddock travels to Nevada for the Las Vegas Grand Prix’s debut, many questions remain.

Enjoy our newsletters? We’ve reserved a selection only for subscribers like you. Explore the list.

ARTS AND IDEAS

Staging the unthinkable

Manuel Oliver’s son Joaquin was one of 17 people killed in a mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., on Valentine’s Day of 2018. Known to his friends as Guac, he was a 17-year-old who loved bacon, buttery popcorn, Guns N’ Roses and the Miami Heat.

Since Joaquin was killed, Oliver, a painter, has used art and activism to push for stronger gun regulation. Most recently, he has been performing “Guac: The One Man Show,” a 90-minute show about his son’s life, around the U.S. He hopes to stage it again in New York in 2024, and to bring the show to Europe. “It makes me feel very connected to my son,” he said.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

RECOMMENDATIONS

Christopher Testani for The New York Times

Cook: Bookmark these classic deviled eggs for the upcoming holiday season.

Pack: Take these gadgets with you on a trip.

Exercise: Walking is good for you. Running is better.

That’s it for today’s briefing. See you tomorrow. — Natasha

No comments:

Post a Comment