Ukraine, Climate Agreement, Norway's Reindeer
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[The New York Times](
[The New York Times](
Monday, December 17, 2018
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Europe Edition
[Your Monday Briefing](
By ALISHA HARIDASANI GUPTA
Good morning.
Franceâs far right sees opportunity in the âYellow Vestâ movement, climate negotiators defy all odds and Ukraine moves toward religious autonomy. Hereâs the latest:
[Protesters gathered on Saturday in front of the Paris Opera house.]Protesters gathered on Saturday in front of the Paris Opera house.
Christian Hartmann/Reuters
Franceâs far right embraces the âYellow Vestsâ
Anti-government protests â this time on [a smaller scale]( â bubbled up again for a fifth consecutive weekend, increasing pressure on President Emmanuel Macron.
But for the far-right National Rally party â formerly known as the National Front â the grass-roots movement [presents an opportunity](. Its leaders â including Marine Le Pen, who lost to Mr. Macron in last yearâs presidential election â have swooped in to provide demonstrators with venues and encouragement, hoping to capitalize on a huge pool of potential recruits. The party has also sent its own activists into the protests to push an anti-immigrant agenda, which was [never a focus]( of the movement.
Go deeper: The âYellow Vests,â who remain untethered to a political party and still have no clear leader or agreed-upon set of demands, have [used Facebook to organize](. But conspiracy theories threaten to undermine their only trusted form of communication.
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[Diplomats celebrated a deal preserving the Paris climate accord.]Diplomats celebrated a deal preserving the Paris climate accord.
Karolina Jonderko for The New York Times
Climate negotiators save the Paris agreement
Diplomats from nearly 200 countries defied expectations and [reached a deal]( this weekend that would keep the Paris climate accord alive.
Even the U.S. agreed to the pact despite President Trumpâs vow to abandon the accord, which cannot formally happen until late 2020.
The details: The deal created a uniform set of standards for measuring emissions and tracking policies, called for stepped-up plans to cut emissions ahead of the next talks in 2020 and built a process to help countries struggling to meet their emissions goals.
The complications: The U.S. and other big oil producers derailed an effort to formally endorse a U.N. report that called for a drastic cut in fossil fuel use. And the deal doesnât contain more robust promises of climate aid for developing countries.
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[Chinese state television showing Muslims attending classes on how to be law-abiding citizens.]Chinese state television showing Muslims attending classes on how to be law-abiding citizens.
Evidence of forced labor in Chinaâs detention camps
Mounting evidence suggests that a [system of forced labor is emerging]( from a sprawling network of camps in the Xinjiang region in China. Hundreds of thousands of Uighur Muslim inmates are detained there.
Chinaâs ruling Communist Party has said in a surge of upbeat propaganda that detainees receive job training and an escape from poverty. The message is a brazen defiance of international outrage against the sweeping internment program, which forces Muslims to renounce religious piety and pledge loyalty to the party.
Why it matters: The emerging labor program indicates Beijingâs determination to continue operating the camps, despite calls to close them from the U.N. and U.S. and European diplomats.
Go deeper: Just four miles from one of these camps, McKinsey, a U.S. consulting firm, [held its lavish annual corporate retreat]( this year, underscoring its deep relationship with Beijing. The company has worked with contentious institutions around the world â including Saudi Arabiaâs absolute monarchy; Russiaâs state-owned bank, which has connections to its intelligence agency; and Ukraineâs disgraced president, Viktor Yanukovych â raising the question of whether it has been complicit in advancing the tactics of Americaâs biggest rivals.
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[The Ukrainian church is poised to split from Russian oversight.]The Ukrainian church is poised to split from Russian oversight.
Genya Savilov/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
Ukraine moves toward an independent church
Some 190 bishops, priests and other church figures [elected Metropolitan Epiphanius]( as the head of a newly unified Ukrainian church, bringing the country one step closer toward a split from the Russian Orthodox Church.
In January, Epiphanius will travel to Istanbul, the historic seat of the Eastern Orthodox Church, to receive an official order granting autonomy.
Why it matters: For centuries, the Kiev church answered to Moscow. But Russiaâs seizure of Crimea in 2014, in part, fueled the move for an independent church, creating a widening schism between the countries at a time of heightened tensions.
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Hereâs what else is happening
Newborn Ebola survivor: An infant in Congo is the[youngest person]( to have recovered from the virus in what is now the worldâs second-deadliest outbreak of the disease, medical officials said.
Turkeyâs extradition request: The countryâs foreign minister said the U.S. is âworking onâ sending back [Fethullah Gulen]( a Muslim cleric who lives in Pennsylvania and is wanted in Turkey on charges that he instigated a failed coup there in 2016.
Singaporeâs gay movement: Inspired by Indiaâs removal of a colonial-era law criminalizing gay sex, activists are [pushing to strike down]( Singaporeâs version of the ban.
Trump tax scheme: One of the familyâs ploys to avoid paying taxes in the 1990s ended up allowing for [inflated rents for thousands of residents]( of their fatherâs real estate empire.
Israelâs capital: Australia recognized [West Jerusalem]( as the countryâs capital city but said it would move its embassy there from Tel Aviv only after a peace settlement was reached.
[A reindeer herd grazing on the tundra in northern Norway.]A reindeer herd grazing on the tundra in northern Norway.
Nadia Shira Cohen for The New York Times
Norwayâs reindeer: The Sami, an indigenous people in the northern regions of the country, are fighting to keep their [herding traditions]( alive.
A third gender: People in Germany who donât identify as male or female can now [choose the option âdiverseâ]( on birth certificates and legal documents.
Murder in China: The case of [a 12-year-old boy]( who was able to return to school five days after stabbing his mother to death has raised widespread questions about the countryâs juvenile justice system.
Russian rap: President Vladimir Putin suggested the country should [âlead and guideâ]( the wildly popular music genre âin the right direction.â
Netflix and popcorn: After disrupting the cable TV industry, the streaming giant is now taking aim at [Hollywood movie studios]( with a lineup of original films from heavyweights like Martin Scorsese and Michael Bay.
Egyptian tomb: Archaeologists south of Cairo unearthed [a 4,400-year-old tomb]( for a royal priest and his family that was in near-perfect condition.
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Smarter Living
Tips for a more fulfilling life.
Con Poulos
Recipe of the day: Try this [vegetarian riff on pasta carbonara](.
What we know about [diet and weight loss](.
How to officiate a wedding and [why youâd want to](.
Back Story
The exiled Chinese writer Ma Jian says [his latest novel, âChina Dream,â]( was heavily influenced by George Orwellâs dystopian classic â1984.â
Orwellâs 1949 novel described a totalitarian regime that suppressed critical thought. Mr. Ma says âChina Dreamâ shows how the vision has become reality in China under President Xi Jinping.
[Ma Jian said he wants to bring his new book, âChina Dream,â to George Orwellâs grave.]Ma Jian said he wants to bring his new book, âChina Dream,â to George Orwellâs grave.
Lam Yik Fei for The New York Times
âIâm going to carve this book in stone and bring it to Orwellâs grave,â he said on a recent trip to Hong Kong.
Mr. Ma isnât the only one thinking of Orwell these days.
Last year, a White House adviser defended a colleagueâs provably false claim about the size of Mr. Trumpâs inauguration crowd as â[alternative facts]( Some readers said the comment sounded Orwellian, and [sales of â1984â surged](.
And in May, the White House described Chinaâs decision to order 36 airline companies to purge their websites of references to Macau, Taiwan and Hong Kong as separate countries as â[Orwellian nonsense](
(Chinaâs foreign ministry fired back by saying it was an âobjective factâ that all three places were âinseparable parts of Chinese territory.â)
Mike Ives, a reporter in our Hong Kong office, wrote todayâs Back Story.
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