Pakistan’s Khan Arrested: Monday Briefing

Pakistan’s Khan Arrested: Monday Briefing


Imran Khan, the former prime minister of Pakistan, was taken into custody and sentenced to three years in prison on Saturday after a court ⁢found him guilty of illegally selling state gifts and concealing the assets. ⁤The verdict will most likely end his chances of running ‌in general ⁢elections, set for this fall.

The verdict is the‌ culmination of a⁤ nationwide political saga that has‌ escalated‍ since Khan‌ was‍ ousted in‍ April 2022 after⁢ a vote ‍of no confidence. It ‌comes on the heels of a⁣ monthslong intimidation campaign by Pakistan’s powerful military, which was aimed at hollowing out Khan’s political party and stifling his comeback.

Reaction: In a sign of the effectiveness of the intimidation, there were no ‍mass protests after Khan was ‍sentenced.

Also in Pakistan: At least 30 people were killed yesterday after a train⁣ derailed, officials said. It was traveling from Karachi to Havelian, in the north.

Chinese officials deliberately diverted floodwaters to villages around Beijing to⁢ spare ‍the capital from the worst of last week’s record deluge. Residents were ‌furious after​ nearly a million‌ people were forced to evacuate ‍in and ⁣around ⁤Hebei Province, which borders Beijing.

The leader of Hebei‌ said that he ⁤had tried to “resolutely build a ‘moat’​ for the capital.” The phrasing set off an outcry, as people denounced what they perceived as an effort to appease national leaders in Beijing, and the comment became a hashtag that amassed more than 60 million views⁣ before it was‌ censored.

His decision⁢ inundated the city of Zhuozhou with water as deep⁢ as 23 feet (about seven meters). “No one ‌ever informed us of⁣ the flood discharge or told us to prepare to evacuate,” a ‍villager told The Times, adding, “Everything is soaked in water.​ I can barely calculate my loss.”

My colleague Roger Cohen spent a month in Russia, searching for​ clues ​that‍ might explain the country’s nationalist lurch into an unprovoked war and its mood 17 months into ⁣the conflict.

“I found ‍a country uncertain of its‍ direction ‍or meaning,” Roger wrote. It’s torn between President ⁤Vladimir Putin’s glorious myths and the everyday struggle — especially in Russia’s poorest regions — of continuing a fight that U.S. ⁣diplomats think has now taken about 100,000 lives on each side.

From an Indian village ⁢where ⁤“no one wanted girls,” one father of two daughters is taking on the patriarchy by fighting prenatal sex testing. In just four years, his campaign has improved the village’s sex ⁣ratio from 37 girls and 63 boys‍ per hundred newborns ⁤to 51 girls and 49 boys.

Lives lived: Seiichi Morimura wrote a searing exposé of the Japanese Army’s ​secret biological warfare ⁣program in occupied China, describing⁤ how it forcibly infected thousands of‍ prisoners with deadly pathogens. He died at 90.

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2023-08-06 15:29:37
Original from www.nytimes.com
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