Your Tuesday Briefing – The New York Occasions

(Would you like to receive this briefing by email? Here is the registration.)

Good Morning.

We cover something A Biden presidency means for Europe, As Leaders around the world failed their citizens and why thieves continue to prefer a 17th century Dutch painting.

After four years of a sometimes turbulent transatlantic relationship, the European Union is striving to achieve “political climate change” and cooperation under President-elect Joe Biden. But if the new president, as European leaders suspect, is consumed by domestic problems, the continent will not put its own agenda on hold.

Governments and public health organizations around the world have been slow and ineffective in responding to the coronavirus outbreak. This emerges from an interim report by a panel of the World Health Organization, which is to be published today.

Faulty assumptions, ineffective planning, and sluggish responses all contributed to a pandemic that killed more than two million people and infected more than 95 million. Time and again, the report says, those responsible for protecting and guiding have often failed to do both.

Investigators said they did not understand why the WHO waited until January 30 to declare an international health emergency and why these clear warning signs were often ignored.

Quote: “We have failed in our collective ability to come together in solidarity to create a safety net for human security,” wrote the Independent Panel on Pandemic Preparedness and Response.

Here are the latest updates and maps of the pandemic.

In other developments:

A video showing the chaos in a Covid ward at a hospital in El Husseineya, Egypt went viral on social media this month and has sparked outrage across the country. Footage of Ahmed Nafei, a relative of one of the four patients who died in a single night, appeared to show the hospital had run out of oxygen. The government rushed to deny the episode.

Through talking to witnesses and analyzing the footage, our investigators discovered that the lack of oxygen was the result of an avalanche of problems in the hospital. By the time the patients suffocated in the intensive care unit, an ordered release of oxygen was hours too late and a replacement oxygen system had failed.

Quote: “The whole world can admit that there is a problem, but not us,” said a doctor at the hospital.

In August, the painting “Two Laughing Boys with a Mug of Beer”, a 17th-century painting by Frans Hals, disappeared for the third time since 1988. The conservative work, endowed with over 10 million US dollars, is usually in a tiny Dutch piece Museum has become a magnet for burglars.

Does the brushwork contain a hint of a hidden treasure or a secret code? Could it be coveted by a cult that adores the throat, or maybe beer? Experts say the answer is probably more for pedestrians: “They know they can make money from someone,” said the founder of Art Recovery International.

Aleksei Navalny: A judge ordered the Russian opposition leader to be detained for 30 days pending trial. Mr Navalny was arrested from Germany late Sunday after arriving in Moscow, where he was recovering from a nerve agent attack.

China: With most nations around the world grappling with new lockdowns and layoffs during the pandemic, China’s economy has recovered after the country got most of the coronavirus under control.

Snapshot: At the top, former climbing master Lai Chi-wai climbed a skyscraper in Hong Kong on Saturday. Within 10 hours, Mr. Lai climbed 800 feet up the glass facade of the 1,050 foot Nina Tower and raised $ 735,000 to fund research on a robotic exoskeleton for patients with spinal cord injuries.

NASCAR goes virtual: When the pandemic brought motorsport to a standstill, the industry turned to simulated racing. Ten months later, the gambling seems to be paying off.

Judicial drama: Black artists and activists in Birmingham, England say the city’s largest playhouse, the Birmingham Repertory Theater, is sold out by renting out its auditoriums to the criminal justice system.

What we read: That long reading from the Financial Times about how lockdown caused a creativity crisis. It’s a powerful reminder of the value of serendipity and spontaneity.

Cook: Loosely inspired by spanakopita, the classic Greek spinach and feta cake, this comfortably baked pasta is possibly the most delicious way to eat your greens.

Listen: Take a jaunt back in time with rapper MF Doom’s 1999 debut album “Operation: Doomsday”. Our reviewer calls it “one of the most idiosyncratic hip-hop albums of the 90s”.

Interference suppression: Embrace the instant, intoxicating relief of the annoying bag. Give up trash that gets on your nerves, then throw it in the trash.

Do not lose heart. At Home offers a comprehensive collection of ideas on what to read, cook, see, and do while staying safe at home.

How do you mark the key events when the news is already so relentlessly remarkable? With the New York Times, one way is to get the headlines very big.

A banner headline usually spans the front page or website of a newspaper. It uses jumbo letters and bold face type to convey the size of a message and get other articles out of the way.

The Times front pages made headlines this winter – far more than usual, according to Tom Jolly, the newspaper’s print editor.

“It’s remarkable,” he said. “It is definitely a reflection of our world and all of the major news events that made 2020 so memorable – and will make 2021 unforgettable too.”

An “event headline” is even bolder than a banner. The only word that appeared in the print paper on Jan. 14 – “Impeached” – was discussed by several of the Times’ top editors in late-night conversations, Tom said.

While such headlines are usually reserved for presidential election results, this is an extraordinary time. This ultra-dramatic layout has been used three times in the past three months. And rising.

Here are some of the big headlines:

When former Vice President Joe Biden took over the leadership of Pennsylvania, the fog of a too-close election began to lift.

After President Trump falsely claimed that widespread electoral fraud stole his victory, the Times called election officials in every state.

And two days after Mr. Trump’s siege at the Capitol, the Democrats laid the groundwork to indict the president for the second time.

That’s it for today. See you tomorrow with the latest update from The Times.

– Natasha

Many Thanks
Theodore Kim and Jahaan Singh took the break from the news. You can reach Natasha and the team at [email protected].

PS
• There is no new episode of The Daily as we celebrate Martin Luther King’s birthday. Instead, we recommend The Sunday Read on how a group of climate activists decided to fight global warming by doing whatever it takes.
• Here is our mini crossword puzzle and a hint: “Later!” (Five letters). You can find all of our puzzles here.
• The word “legend” – here referring to figure skating champion Dick Button – appeared for the first time in The Times yesterday, according to the Twitter bot @NYT_first_said.

Comments are closed.