Pakistan, Laos Dam, Michael Cohen |
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[The New York Times](
[The New York Times](
Thursday, July 26, 2018
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Asia Edition
[Your Thursday Briefing](
By CHARLES MCDERMID
Good morning. A secret Trump recording, violence at Pakistanâs polls and a flag fracas for Australia. Hereâs what you need to know:
Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
⢠A betrayal or âa new pathâ?
President Trumpâs former lawyer, Michael Cohen, [released a secret recording]( in which Mr. Trump appears to have direct knowledge about hush money paid to a former Playboy model who said she had an affair with Mr. Trump. Hereâs how the audio clip has [unraveled a web of false statements]( by Mr. Trump and his aides.
Mr. Trump reacted at once: âWhat kind of a lawyer would tape a client? So sad!â But Mr. Cohenâs lawyer said that his client is âon a new path â itâs a reset button to tell the truth and to let the chips fall where they may.â
Separately, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo [defended Mr. Trump before Congress]( saying he had âproofâ that the president is willing to confront Moscow for its interference in American elections and misbehavior around the world.
The White House, meanwhile, said a planned follow-up meeting with President Vladimir Putin of Russia will be postponed until [after the investigation of the special counsel]( is concluded.
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Arif Ali/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
â¢Â Polls have closed in Pakistan.
Imran Khan, the charismatic cricket star with close ties to Pakistanâs influential military, had appeared poised to emerge victorious in a crucial national election, but vote counting continued overnight without any announcement of final results.
At least 31 people were killed in a [suicide bombing outside a polling station]( in Quetta, in the southwestern province of Baluchistan, where an attack earlier this month killed more than 150 people.
The attack on Wednesday raises the death toll in what has already been one of the bloodiest elections in the countryâs history.
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Ben C. Solomon/The New York Times
⢠âEvery single house, gone.â
In Laos, [the death toll is climbing from the devastating flood]( released when an auxiliary dam, part of a billion-dollar hydroelectric project, collapsed under heavy rains.
At least 26 people have been reported killed, and Prime Minister Thongloun Sisoulith, said 131 people were still missing. More than 3,000 are homeless. Many had been rescued from rooftops and trees after their villages and farms were flooded.
âEveryone here lost everything â animals, our houses,â a farmer told a Times reporter on the scene. âAll we have left is our lives.â
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Costas Baltas/Reuters
⢠Greece declared three days of mourning [after]( that killed at least 80 people]( in vacation areas outside Athens. In addition to those killed by smoke or fire, or who drowned in the sea while trying to flee, 187 people were hospitalized, more than 20 of them children.
The death toll, our correspondent reports, seems likely to grow as the authorities begin the grim task of inspecting the torched cars and wrecked homes in which some evacuees sought escape or refuge, only to find themselves trapped.
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Ian Waldie/Getty Images
⢠Cross over the âStars and Crosses.â
Since New Zealandâs prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, stepped down for maternity leave, tensions between her country and Australia have been on the rise.
Thatâs been primarily because of Australiaâs policy of [deporting New Zealanders]( convicted of crimes. But this week, Winston Peters, Ms. Ardernâs stand-in, accused Australia of copying New Zealandâs 116-year-old flag. He even demanded that Australians come up with a new design.
âAnd they should actually change their flag and honor the fact that we got there first,â Mr. Peters said.
Could this flag spat become a major international incident? Almost certainly not. But [hereâs what itâs all about](.
We collected nine examples of such âdoppelgängerâ flags. [Can you match the flag with the country?](
Business
⢠A major trade shift: [The European Union agreed to lower tariffs]( and other trade barriers, and to buy billions of dollars of American exports.
The surprise announcement, made by President Trump and the president of the European Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, temporarily defused a trade battle that began with Mr. Trumpâs tariffs on European steel and aluminum exports and threatened to escalate to its automobiles.
⢠A bow to Beijing: American Airlines, Delta and United started to [remove âTaiwanâ from their websites](. The U.S. carriers were among the last holdouts against Chinaâs effort to force all airlines to drop any references to Taiwan as a separate country.
⢠Unfriended: It seemed as if Facebook finally had a foothold in China. Then the [government changed its mind](.
⢠Exchange 106 tower in [Kuala Lumpur is the shining centerpiece]( of a $10 billion project to promote Malaysia as a global finance hub. But itâs been mired by charges of corruption, embezzlement and fraud.
⢠U.S. stocks [were up](. Hereâs a snapshot of [global markets](.
In the News
Ko Sasaki for The New York Times
⢠Japan knows hot, sweaty summers â but this year has been an aberration. Last week, close to 23,000 people were hospitalized for heat-related illnesses, almost twice the previous weekly record. And no immediate respite is in sight. [[The New York Times](
⢠Yosemite National Park is ordering evacuations in large areas during peak tourist season amid worsening danger from the 38,000-acre Ferguson Fire. There have been seven injuries and one death connected to the fire. [[The New York Times](
⢠A Swedish student activist stopped the deportation of an Afghan man by refusing to take her seat on a packed flight. Her video of the tense standoff has gone viral. [[The New York Times](
⢠Nine days of charity and prayer: The Thai boys and their soccer coach who were trapped in a cave for more than two weeks were ordained as Buddhist monks. The widow of the diver who died during the operation to save them attended the ceremony. [[The New York Times](
⢠No ninja shortage: The perplexed mayor of Iga, Japan, denied a report on a U.S. radio show that his city was recruiting ninja for as much as $85,000 per year. The city was inundated with calls from hopeful ninja from around the world. [[The Asahi Shimbun](
Smarter Living
Tips for a more fulfilling life.
Daniele Fummo
⢠Summer hair [inspiration for men](.
⢠Make your partnerâs parents [more woke](.
⢠Recipe of the day: Delivery can be tempting, but [pan-roasted salmon]( takes about 15 minutes.
Noteworthy
Poras Chaudhary for The New York Times
⢠Is one path more peaceful than another? [A trip to Nepal and Bhutan]( promised a pre-60s couple âsomething big, something different.â There was only one possible stumbling block: the organized tour they signed up for.
⢠In memoriam. [Aiko Herzig Yoshinaga]( 93, a critic of the World War II internment of Japanese-Americans who discovered evidence that isolating the ethnic group was motivated by ârace prejudice,â not by military necessity.
⢠Australian expats are bringing their food and mellow lifestyles to New York, and [the Australian breakfast is taking hold](. Our food reporter: âThis cooking style features bright mash-ups of foods that are healthy, natural and luxurious all at once.â
Back Story
Kyodo, via Reuters
The man who [has been verified by Guinness World Records]( as the worldâs oldest celebrated his 113th birthday on Wednesday.
Masazo Nonaka was born on the Japanese island of Hokkaido in 1905, the same year that Albert Einstein published his theory of relativity and the Wright brothers conducted some of their early powered flights.
The problem faced by most supercentenarians â people who are more than 110 years old â is that their age canât be validated unless they have birth records and possess multiple documents from throughout their life.
So while gerontologists say the number of documented supercentenarians, including Mr. Nonaka, is around 150, the [unverified total might be closer to 1,000](.
A man who died earlier this year in Chile [claimed to be 121 years old]( and a man who died in Indonesia last year [said he was 146](. But neither manâs age was independently verified.
Although Mr. Nonaka is the oldest validated living man, heâs only the 17th oldest person, according to the Gerontology Research Group, whose [listing of supercentenarians is dominated by women](.
The worldâs oldest person ever authenticated is a title currently held by [Jeanne Louise Calment of France]( who lived to 122.
Anna Schaverien wrote todayâs Back Story.
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