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Your Thursday Briefing – The New York Times

Your Thursday Briefing – The New York Times
Your Thursday Briefing – The New York Times


Travelers from China, including Hong Kong and Macau, must present negative Covid-19 tests before entering the U.S. starting Jan. 5, a move that the Biden administration says is intended to slow the spread of the coronavirus. The requirement comes amid growing concern over a surge of cases in China and the country’s lack of transparency about the outbreak there.

Health officials said the requirement for testing will apply to air passengers regardless of their nationality and vaccination status, as well as to those coming from China who enter the U.S. through a third country, and to those who connect through the U.S. to other destinations. Italy and Japan have already imposed similar restrictions.

Some experts questioned whether the testing requirement would do any good — especially given a surge in cases in northeastern states. In the U.S., an especially fast-spreading Omicron subvariant, XBB, appears to be spreading more quickly than ones related to the dominant variant in Beijing, BF.7, which is related to BA.5.

Background: After three years of a “zero Covid” policy, China made an abrupt turnabout in early December, after mass protests over lockdowns threatened the ruling Communist Party. Since then, there has been an explosion of cases.

Ukrainian and Russian officials have insisted that they are willing to discuss making peace. But statements made in recent days show that each side’s demands are flatly unacceptable to the other, and that there appears to be little hope for serious negotiations in the near future.

Ukraine this week proposed a “peace” summit by the end of February but said Russia could participate only if it first faces a war-crimes tribunal. Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, said that Kyiv must accept all of Russia’s demands, including that Ukraine give up four regions that Moscow claims to have annexed.

The hard-line positions suggest that both sides believe they have more to gain on the battlefield, analysts say. Ukraine holds the momentum, having retaken much of the land that Russia captured early in the war. But Moscow’s forces still occupy large chunks of the east and south, and Russia is readying more troops and continuing its attacks on infrastructure.

Analysis: “They are both in it for the long haul,” Karin von Hippel​, director general of the Royal United Services Institute, said. “Putin still feels he can win this. He still has more men and more money, although you wonder what his tipping point will be.”

In other news from the war:


Pope Francis yesterday asked the faithful to pray for the retired Pope Benedict XVI and said he was “very ill.” In their prayers, Francis said, people should ask God to console Benedict and “support him in this witness of love to the church, until the end.”

A Vatican spokesman said that Francis later visited Benedict, 95, at the monastery on Vatican City grounds where the former pope has lived since announcing his resignation in February 2013. Benedict was the first pope in six centuries to step down. Increasingly frail, he has rarely made public appearances in recent years.

When he resigned nearly 10 years ago, Benedict cited his declining health, both “of mind and body.” He said that “due to an advanced age” he felt that his strengths were “no longer suited to an adequate exercise” of leading the church and that he had decided to resign freely “for the good of the church.” Since then, he has mostly stepped back from public life.

Quotable: “I’d like to ask all of you for a special prayer for emeritus Pope Benedict, who, in silence, is sustaining the church,” Francis said at the end of an hourlong audience.

Benedict’s life: Joseph Alois Ratzinger was born in 1927 and was ordained a priest in 1951. He became pope after the death of Pope John Paul II in 2005 and took the name of a fifth-century monk, Benedict of Norcia, who had founded monasteries that spread Christianity in Europe.

Mexico City is a hot remote-work destination for Americans and Europeans because of its vibrant mix of gastronomy, history and bustling street life. But the influx of remote workers is pushing housing costs higher, as landlords take advantage of record demand for long-term stays on platforms like Airbnb.

Critics say that local residents are being forced out of their apartments, upending the fabric of neighborhoods. Average monthly rents in Mexico City jumped to $1,080 in November from $880 in January 2020, according to a real estate website. (The average monthly salary in Mexico City is $220.)

Cities around the world, including London, New York and Barcelona, Spain, have targeted Airbnb by imposing stricter rules for rentals, but in Mexico City the company is working with government officials “to be part of the solution,” an Airbnb spokesman said. The city’s leftist mayor, Claudia Sheinbaum, has partnered with the company on a campaign that encourages foreigners to spend money in poorer neighborhoods.

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