Your Monday Briefing: The World Cup Semifinals Loom
Plus, China’s sluggish economy and the arrest of the Lockerbie bombing suspect.Argentina’s players celebrated after beating the Netherlands in a penalty shootout.Matthias Hangst/Getty ImagesGet ready for the semifinalsFour countries will compete in the World Cup semifinals this week, after a weekend of surprises sent two favorites and two underdogs to the next round. Argentina will play Croatia tomorrow, and France will play Morocco on Wednesday.Argentina is driven by the belief that winning this World Cup is Lionel Messi’s undeniable destiny. But Croatia has its own undeniable sense of purpose after beating Brazil, a top contender.France knocked England out to advance. Morocco upset Portugal to become the first country in Africa and the Arab world to reach the semifinals. Its stout defense will be challenged by the tournament’s leading scorer, Kylian Mbappé, the most gifted player on the planet.Qatar: The country is poised to become a critical energy source for Europe as the continent pivots from Russia. Play our game: Where’s the ball?Other updates:Belgian authorities detained five people, including current and former members of the European Parliament, in an inquiry into possible bribes by Qatar.The soccer journalist Grant Wahl died after collapsing at the Argentina match.China is making a high-risk bet that its vaccination rates will prevent a severe outbreak.Ng Han Guan/Associated PressChina braces for a Covid surgeChina is rolling back its Covid-19 restrictions. Now, Beijing is bracing for a surge in cases.In near-freezing weather last week, residents of China’s capital lined up at hospitals and pharmacies. They sought help for fevers or waited to buy up dwindling stocks of at-home tests. The reported number of cases is unreliable and probably a significant undercount now that the government has moved away from mass testing.The pivot has left many confused and anxious. The government is suddenly playing down the threat of the coronavirus, after three years of relentless propaganda. But to conserve resources, it is also urging residents not to seek help unless necessary.Part of the challenge for the Communist Party: Less than 1 percent of China’s population have been infected through November, so many are vulnerable. After pushing shots last year, China has not yet moved on to administering fourth doses. And China’s vaccines are less effective than mRNA shots.Unrest: Many young people are still unemployed and have few job prospects. And the protesters who forced the pivot say their fight is bigger than Covid controls.Understand What Is Happening in ChinaA Victory for Protesters: Beijing’s costly policy of lockdowns pummeled China’s economy and set off mass public protests that were a rare challenge to its leader, Xi Jinping.A Messy Pivot: The Communist Party cast aside many Covid rules after the protests, while playing down the threat of the virus. The move could prove dangerous.A ‘Tipping Point’: For the protesters, public dissent was unimaginable until recently. We asked young Chinese about what led them to take the risk.Tracking Protesters: The authorities in China used the country’s all-seeing surveillance apparatus to track, intimidate and detain those who marched in the protests.From Opinion: The Chinese government’s response to protests against Covid measures doesn’t address the larger yearning for an end to autocracy, Nicholas Kristof writes.In other news: China plans to cooperate with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries in the fields of nuclear energy, nuclear security and space exploration, President Xi Jinping said on Friday.Martin Cleaver/Associated PressLockerbie suspect arrestedA Libyan intelligence operative charged in the 1988 bombing of an American jetliner over Lockerbie, Scotland, was arrested by the F.B.I. He is being extradited to the U.S. to face prosecution for one of the deadliest terrorist attacks in U.S. history.The arrest of the operative, Abu Agila Mohammad Mas’ud, was the culmination of a decades-long effort by the Justice Department to prosecute him. It is unclear how the U.S. government negotiated the extradition of Mas’ud.He was being held at a Libyan prison for unrelated crimes when the Justice Department unsealed the charges against him two years ago. He is accused of building the explosive device used in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, which killed 270 passengers, including 190 Americans.Background: Mas’ud confessed to the bombing in 2012 to a Libyan law enforcement official. His suspected role in the bombing received new scrutiny in a three-part documentary on “Frontline” on PBS in 2015.What’s next: Extradition would allow Mas’ud to stand trial. But legal experts have expressed doubts about whether his confession, obtained in prison in war-torn Libya, would be admissible as evidence.THE LATEST NEWSAsia PacificHuman rights activists denounced Jimmy Lai’s punishment as the latest blow to freedom of expression in Hong Kong.Kin Cheung/Associated PressJimmy Lai, the pro-democracy media tycoon in Hong Kong, was sentenced to more than five years in prison.Bangladeshi authorities arrested two senior opposition leaders last week, capping off a week of political tensions.Vanuatu wants the world’s highest judicial body to weigh in on whether nations are legally bound to protect against climate risks.The War in UkraineAs of yesterday afternoon, some 300,000 of the Odesa region’s residents were still without electricity, an official said.ReutersRussian strikes knocked out power to more than 1.5 million people in Odesa on Saturday. Moscow used Iranian-made drones in the attack on infrastructure.Russian strikes have damaged all of Ukraine’s thermal and hydroelectric power plants, Ukraine’s prime minister said yesterday.Ukraine struck the Russian-occupied city of Melitopol on Saturday as part of its campaign to recapture the south.Nobel Peace Prize winners from Belarus, Russia and Ukraine decried Russian aggression at the award ceremony.Around the WorldDeepening poverty and hopelessness in Cuba have set off the largest exodus since Fidel Castro rose to power.Confidential records show that Saudi Arabia’s golf tour, LIV, is far off-track from success.Highbrow movies aimed at winning Oscars are falling flat at the box office.SpaceSpaceX launched a lunar lander made by a Japanese company. Its cargo, which includes a rover from the United Arab Emirates and a robot for the Japanese space agency, could be the first successfully carried to the moon’s surface by a private company.NASA’s uncrewed test flight of its Artemis I moon mission was successful. The capsule splashed down in the Pacific yesterday.A Morning ReadThe Walshes bought their house for $180,000 in 2005.Tony Cenicola/The New York TimesOctagonal houses became a 19th-century fad after an amateur architect claimed they had better ventilation and more windows. They’re certainly quirky, but devotees gush about their panoramic views and all-day sunshine.Lives lived: Hamish Kilgour, a founding member of the New Zealand band the Clean, died at 65.ARTS AND IDEASWhy North Korea wants dollarsNorth Korea is scrambling for American dollars and other hard currency, not just to feed its people, but also to finance the military and economic ambitions of Kim Jong-un, its leader.The country is also trying to squeeze every bit of cash from the public. State-run stores sell smartphones and other imported goods to the moneyed class, especially to North Koreans who have accumulated savings in foreign currency by smuggling goods from China.The Times obtained a video of such a store in the capital, Pyongyang, where customers can use U.S. dollars to pay for international brands of instant noodles, deodorant, diapers and shampoo. Change is returned in North Korean won.Kim has positioned Pyongyang as a model of urban development, while other cities remain far behind. Pyongyang has become brighter. New apartment towers dot the skyline. And to attract spenders with foreign savings, department stores are filled with Rolex and Tissot wristwatches and Dior and Lancôme cosmetics — all luxury items banned under U.N. sanctions.But Kim’s economic reforms have done little to improve economic prospects. North Korea crawled out of the catastrophic impact of the famine of the 1990s, growing an average 1.2 percent annually between 2012 and 2016. But the economy began contracting again in 2017. And Kim seems to have reached the conclusion that delivering on his promise of military strength is his best hope for economic gains.PLAY, WATCH, EATWhat to CookLinda Xiao for The New York Times. Food stylist: Brett Regot. Prop stylist: Megan Hedgpeth.Make fancy popcorn at home.What to ReadBooks to take you through Kingston, Jamaica.What to Listen toEvery Friday, our pop critics weigh in on that week’s most notable new songs and videos. Here’s the playlist.The News QuizHow well did you keep up with last week’s headlines?Now Time to PlayPlay the Mini Crossword, and a clue: A shirt or a sport (four letters).Here are the Wordle and the Spelling Bee.You can find all our puzzles here.That’s it for today’s briefing. Have a great week! — Amelia and WhetP.S. Reading aloud is essential for these Times reporters.Start your week with this narrated long read about Ukraine’s rail system. And here’s Friday’s edition of “The Daily,” on gerrymandering in the U.S.I’m back from vacation. Questions? Concerns? Email us at briefing@nytimes.com. More