Good morning. We’re covering the deadliest missile attack in Ukraine in months and Blinken’s surprise visit to Kyiv. |
Plus, books to help you explore Seoul. |
| A street after a missile strike in Kostyantynivka, Ukraine, yesterday.Lynsey Addario for The New York Times |
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Blinken visits Kyiv as a Russian missile kills 17 |
The attack hit an outdoor market around 2 p.m., a time when it is usually bustling with activity, Ukrainian officials said. A child was among those killed, according to the prime minister, and the interior minister said 32 people had been injured. |
The visit from Blinken, who met with Zelensky, came as the Ukrainian counteroffensive in the southeast gained some traction after three months of grueling fighting. Ukrainian troops have broken through a main line of Russia’s defenses in one location, Ukraine’s Army has said, and are turning their attention to breaking through in another heavily defended patch of territory. |
- The vote in Slovakia this month will be a test of European unity on Ukraine, and of Russia’s efforts to undermine it. The front-runner wants to halt arms shipments to Kyiv.
- Russia’s extensive use of cluster munitions last year in Ukraine led to the highest number of casualties from the widely banned weapons in more than a decade, according to a new report.
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| President Xi Jinping’s strategy of ruling China through highly centralized control is under pressure.Pool photo by Gianluigi Guercia |
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China’s economic slump is testing Xi’s agenda |
The recent troubles have fed an unusually candid domestic debate about the direction of economic policy under Xi, especially his expansion of the state’s control over the economy. Proponents of the private sector argue that such statist policies are taking China down a dead end. |
Xi now faces a tangle of difficult choices. To spur growth, he may have to open up new sectors for private entrepreneurs and investors, or offer financial support to debt-saddled local governments. Or he may have to push through painful steps that some experts say are needed to fix the economy, such as introducing new taxes. |
| Delegates to the African Climate Summit outside the Kenyatta International Convention Center in Nairobi on Monday.Monicah Mwangi/Reuters |
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Africa’s first climate summit |
In a declaration, the leaders stressed that Africa is primed for leadership on clean energy and environmental stewardship. But to make that happen, the world’s industrialized countries, which are largely responsible for the pollution that is causing climate change, must first unlock access to their wealth through investments, the declaration said. |
| The Japanese space agency’s H2-A rocket before the launch was scrubbed last month.Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images |
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| Damage from the storm was reported in 67 municipalities across Rio Grande do Sul State.Diego Vara/Reuters |
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| Raphaelle Macaron |
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A modern megacity, Seoul has a long history, reaching back 6,000 years. For centuries, the city was the center of dynasties that ruled the region. |
| Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Mick Jagger in London yesterday.Toby Melville/Reuters |
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A new Rolling Stones album |
The anticipated 12-track “Hackney Diamonds” will be released on Oct. 20, and is the group’s first album of original material since the release of “A Bigger Bang” in 2005. It’s also the first since the drummer Charlie Watts died in 2021. |
Fans of the Stones, which formed in 1962 and are one of rock’s most enduring acts, have been awaiting a new album since “Blue & Lonesome” in 2016, which featured a dozen blues covers. Although the Stones have said “Hackney Diamonds” marks a “new era,” Philip Norman, who wrote a major biography of the group, said he was anticipating a classic Stones sound. |
“This is the Stones we know and some of us have loved for the past six decades,” he said. |
| Linda Xiao for The New York Times |
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That’s it for today’s briefing. See you tomorrow. — Jonathan |
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