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Friday: Doubts about the China-U.S. trade deal

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Kashmir, Women's Day, Afghanistan View in [Browser]( | Add nytdirect@nytimes.com to your address book. [The New York Times]( [The New York Times]( Friday, March 8, 2019 [NYTimes.com »]( Asia Edition [Your Friday Briefing]( By ALISHA HARIDASANI GUPTA AND MELINA DELKIC Good morning. Attacks rattle the tense Kashmir region, China tries to iron out trade deal details and one lone Blockbuster store withstands wider changes. Here’s the latest: [A civilian injured in a grenade blast in Jammu.]A civilian injured in a grenade blast in Jammu. Jaipal Singh/EPA, via Shutterstock Violence and anxiety flare up again in Kashmir A grenade lobbed at a crowded bus stand Thursday in the Indian-controlled part of Kashmir [killed one person and wounded several others](. The authorities identified the suspect as a 17-year-old Kashmiri from a militant group fighting Indian rule. Around the same time, a video went viral of two men wearing saffron shirts — the color associated with Hindu nationalists — beating Kashmiri street vendors in the northern Indian city of Lucknow. The two events encapsulated the heightened tensions in the region and the wariness between India and Pakistan, which New Delhi accuses of training terrorists. On the ground: Some in the Kashmir region worry that these scattered attacks are connected to India’s coming national elections and are part of an effort to stoke animosity between Hindus and Muslims for electoral gain. Perspective: Our Opinion columnist Farhad Manjoo tracked how the recent India-Pakistan conflict, sparked by a suicide truck bombing targeting Indian troops last month, played out online and in the media. “What I found was alarming,” [he writes](. “Whether you got your news from outlets based in India or Pakistan during the conflict, you would have struggled to find your way through a miasma of lies. The lies flitted across all media: there was lying on Facebook, Twitter and WhatsApp; there was lying on TV; there were lies from politicians; there were lies from citizens.” ______ [President Xi Jinping at the National People’s Congress in Beijing.]President Xi Jinping at the National People’s Congress in Beijing. Roman Pilipey/EPA, via Shutterstock China becomes wary of a quick trade deal President Trump is optimistic that the U.S. and China are close to signing a landmark trade deal. [Chinese officials, however, aren’t as confident](. While the two sides seem to have agreed on the broad outline of an agreement, with both countries rolling back tariffs and China buying more American goods, the more granular details have yet to be hammered out. That has left Beijing officials nervous, given Mr. Trump’s propensity for last-minute changes, according to two people familiar with China’s position. Takeaway: The emerging gap between the two sides throws cold water on enthusiasm that the end of the trade war is near and casts doubts on Mr. Trump’s plans to meet with President Xi Jinping in late March or early April to sign the final deal. Huawei: The Chinese electronics giant [sued the U.S. government]( arguing that it had been unfairly and inaccurately banned as a security threat. Another angle: Mr. Xi is breaking the rules and longstanding traditions of Chinese politics — by [letting his hair go gray](. ______ [The Taliban in the Nangarhar province last summer.]The Taliban in the Nangarhar province last summer. Parwiz/Reuters Afghan talks hinge on one question: What is terrorism? More than a week after the U.S. and the Taliban began another round of peace negotiations with high hopes, both sides are beginning to realize that their efforts will likely be complicated and frustratingly slow. Even [the definitions of basic terms]( have sparked tense disagreements. The Taliban has agreed not to allow Afghan soil to be used as a launchpad for international attacks but is resisting efforts to specify that the country won’t be used by “terrorist” groups. The sticking point: The Taliban argues that there is no universal definition of terrorism, a term that strikes at the core of their ideological narrative of the 18-year war. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo complicated matters by making clear that he considered the Taliban themselves terrorists. ______ [Paul Manafort arriving for a hearing in June.]Paul Manafort arriving for a hearing last June. Brendan Smialowski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images Paul Manafort faces sentencing A judge will decide on Thursday whether to send President Trump’s former campaign chairman to prison [for the rest of his life]( — potentially the harshest punishment yet against any of the half-dozen former Trump associates who have been prosecuted by the special counsel, Robert Mueller. The sentencing brings to a close one of two cases against Mr. Manafort, whose work in Ukraine and ties to Russians made him a target of Mr. Mueller. Details: This case focused on a financial fraud scheme, in which Mr. Manafort illegally concealed his work on behalf of political parties in Ukraine that were aligned with Russia, and how he hid more than $55 million in payments from that work in more than 30 overseas bank accounts. Mr. Manafort faces another sentencing next week. Here’s [an explainer of the separate cases against him](. ______ Here’s what else is happening Joe Biden: The former vice president seems to be [95 percent committed to running for president]( in 2020, a decision that could thin out a crowded Democratic field. Thailand: A political party that nominated King Vajiralongkorn’s sister as its candidate for prime minister was [dissolved by the constitutional court]( which called it a “hostile action” against the country’s political system. Justin Trudeau: The Canadian prime minister blamed a dispute with his former justice minister, which snowballed into a political crisis that tarnished his reputation, on [an “erosion of trust.”]( He denied any wrongdoing. Ebola: The international president of Doctors Without Borders said efforts to end the epidemic in the Democratic Republic of Congo — the second largest ever — were failing because [workers had alienated the community]( and called on medical teams to treat patients “as humans and not as a biothreat.” Iran: A prominent female lawyer who defended women arrested for not covering their heads in public has been [convicted of security-related crimes in a secret trial]( and could face a “very lengthy sentence.” The details of the charges are unclear but activists say she “is being persecuted for her peaceful defense of human rights in Iran.” R. Kelly: Two women whose parents say they are being held captive by the R&B singer [defended him in an interview]( with “CBS This Morning.” The women, Azriel Clary, 21, and Joycelyn Savage, 23, told Gayle King they were “absolutely” in love with him and accused their families of blackmailing him for money. Photo illustration by Cristiana Couceiro. Source photograph: Larry Busacca/Getty Images. Music: Bruce Springsteen, Beyoncé, Lady Gaga. In The Times Magazine this week, our critics weigh in on [the top 25 songs and artists]( that define and shape this era that seems particularly grueling and frantic. Gabriel Garciá Márquez: Netflix announced that it had acquired the [first ever rights to adapt “One Hundred Years of Solitude,”]( more than 50 years after the Nobel-winning novelist’s seminal work was first published, catapulting him to the forefront of literature. Blockbuster: An outlet of the video rental store in Oregon is poised to become [the world’s last]( rather than fading into obscurity, it is thriving. “Holy cow it’s exciting,” the store manager said of becoming the last one standing. ______ Smarter Living Tips for a more fulfilling life. Linda Xiao for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Monica Pierini. Recipe of the day: Ease into the weekend with a comforting dinner of [loaded sweet potatoes with beans and Cheddar](. Going plastic-free is daunting — if close to impossible — but our Climate reporter is [giving it a shot this week](. Here’s what you can do to make working [from home with children]( less of a challenge. Back Story Today is International Women’s Day, a day of celebration and solidarity. Many scholars trace its [origins]( to 1909, when the Socialist Party of America declared a Woman’s Day. The idea spread internationally. In 1915, Clara Zetkin, a German Marxist who had promulgated the day, used it to protest World War I. In Russia in 1917, revolutionary women used the day to demand [bread and peace](. [The Women’s Suffrage Demonstration in Petrograd on March 8, 1917.]The Women’s Suffrage Demonstration in Petrograd on March 8, 1917. Heritage Images/Getty Images In many countries, the celebration these days is less political and more commercial, a holiday marked by candy and flowers. In your Back Story writer’s youth in a Bosnian household in St. Louis, it was a day when the women celebrated one another and all they had overcome. Gifts from husbands and children played a part, but the focus was on women’s bonds to one another. It raises the question: Who gets to shape a holiday? As Temma Kaplan, a history professor at Rutgers University, put it, “Commemorations and holidays are like clay — you can define what they will mean.” Melina Delkic wrote today’s Back Story. ______ This briefing was prepared for the Asian morning. You can also [sign up]( to get the briefing in the Australian, European or American morning. [Sign up here]( to receive an Evening Briefing on U.S. weeknights. Browse our full range of Times newsletters [here](. What would you like to see here? Contact us at [asiabriefing@nytimes.com](mailto:asiabriefing@nytimes.com?subject=Briefing%20Feedback%20(Asia)). LIKE THIS EMAIL? Forward it to your friends, and let them know they can sign up [here](. ADVERTISEMENT FOLLOW NYTimes [Facebook] [FACEBOOK]( [Twitter] [@nytimes]( ABOUT THIS EMAIL You received this message because you signed up for NYTimes.com's Morning Briefing: Asia Edition newsletter. [Unsubscribe]( | [Manage Subscriptions]( | [Change Your Email]( | [Privacy Policy]( | [Contact]( | [Advertise]( Copyright 2019 The New York Times Company 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

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