2023
April
17
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 17, 2023
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Noelle Swan
Weekly Editor

Few things say spring has sprung in Boston like Marathon Monday.

This year, the annual Boston Marathon on April 17 carries added significance as the city marks 10 years since two young men detonated makeshift bombs near the finish line on April 15, 2013. The explosions killed three people and seemingly ripped a hole in the social fabric of the city.

Monitor illustrator Karen Norris was running her first marathon that day and was abruptly stopped from completing the race. The turmoil that surrounded the bombings left Karen, like many Bostonians, “in a dark place.”

At the same time, she was buoyed by the support she found, particularly from fellow runners. And before long she committed to trying again the following year. 

“We can’t live in fear,” she says. “You fall off your bike, you get back on it.”

So in 2014 she plodded across the state once more and achieved the belated triumph of crossing the finish line. Along the way she was reminded of what had drawn her to the marathon in the first place: “I felt like I was a part of something much bigger than myself.”

A decade later, memories of the day still weigh heavily, and yet, “There’s been so much progress and healing and camaraderie,” she says. “I feel like we gained a new perspective – on ourselves personally and as a city.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The truth is the North Star of journalism, and the Supreme Court has carved out broad protections to allow reporters to do their work. A defamation trial brought against Fox News could have wide-ranging ramifications.

The Saudi-Iran regional rivalry has hung heavily over Yemen’s tragic civil war. But removing the proxy layer of the complex conflict is not enough to secure peace, analysts caution. That requires including other factions.

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Edmar Barros/AP
Brazil environmental agency helicopters fly near a dredging barge on the Uraricoera River during an operation to contain illegal mining in Yanomami Indigenous territory in Roraima state on Feb. 11, 2023.

Brazil’s president is doubling down on protecting the Amazon – crucial for combatting global warming. But policing illegal activities may not be enough.

Difference-maker

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Taylor Chaney founded Dig It! Coffee Co. to offer meaningful employment for people with disabilities in Las Vegas.

People with disabilities often have limited options for advancement. A Las Vegas employer aims to pair dignity with opportunities for growth.


The Monitor's View

AP
Sudan's Army chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan speaks Dec. 5 about an initial deal to establish a civilian-led transitional government.

Just a few days ago, civil society and military leaders in Sudan were poised to set the African nation on a carefully negotiated path back to democracy. Instead the country’s two top generals, who joined forces to seize power 18 months ago, have turned on each other.

The fighting that erupted Saturday comes at a time when the Horn of Africa is already dealing with multiple security challenges. Yet rather than marking the end of popular hopes for a return to civilian government in Sudan, the outbreak between the rival military factions shows how deeply rooted those democratic aspirations have become. As a doctor in Khartoum, the capital, told Le Monde today, “this is not our war.”

Across Africa, an uptick in coups in recent years has strengthened pro-democracy movements and efforts to instill democratic values in African armed forces. In the past five years, 26 African countries have joined in an association of parliamentary committees working to strengthen civilian military oversight. African civilian and military leaders, meanwhile, are working through regional security blocs and the African Union to professionalize armed forces under civilian command.

Those efforts, the Africa Center for Strategic Studies notes, reflect an attempt to earn public trust by instilling values such as “integrity, honor, expertise, sacrifice, and respect for citizens” in African militaries. They mirror public attitudes. The latest Afrobarometer survey of attitudes about democracy found that, across 34 countries, 68% of Africans prefer democracy to any other system of government, while large majorities reject military rule (74%) or one-person rule (77%).

Tellingly, in countries where militaries have seized power in recent years, the generals have felt compelled to promise transitions back to democracy. In Sudan, one of the warring generals admitted last year that the coup he backed in 2021 was wrong. The other said, “soldiers belong in the barracks, and parties go to elections.”

Negotiated transitions in countries that have fallen recently under military rule have met repeated delays and obstacles. A constitutional referendum in Mali, for instance, was indefinitely postponed in March. Yet for the democratic forces set in motion by African coups in recent years, such setbacks have strengthened resolve.

“The Malian population has enormous energy and appetite for a change,” Korotoumou Thera, executive director of a Malian civil society group for women, told the United States Institute of Peace last week. Organizations like hers, she said, “act as cement in the consolidation of peace and security.”

The outbreak of fighting in Sudan has raised united calls from the international community for a swift return to peaceful negotiations. But for Sudan’s civil society groups, the power struggle between two warring generals is almost secondary. Their work of building a society shaped by democratic values goes on.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

We can rely on the light of God, good, to lift us out of the darkness of hopelessness or unhappiness – as a young woman experienced after facing recurring periods of sadness.


Viewfinder

Mary Schwalm/AP
Spectators watch as runners stream by during the 127th Boston Marathon, April 17, 2023, in Hopkinton, Massachusetts. Today's run marks the 10th anniversary of the deadly Marathon bombings. Boston honored the moment with ceremonies at Marathon memorial sites, bell-ringing, and citywide volunteer efforts and acts of kindness. Defending champion Evans Chebet of Kenya won the Marathon with a time of 2:05:54. The women's winner was Hellen Obiri of Kenya, with a time of 2:21:38. In the wheelchair division, Susannah Scaroni of the United States topped the women's leaderboard with a time of 1:41:45, while Marcel Hug of Switzerland set a course record for the men with a time of 1:17:06.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Tomorrow, we’ll have news from Israel, where Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is under intense pressure over security, extremist threats, and his government’s stability. And we’ll have some poetry collections to recommend as well. 

More issues

2023
April
17
Monday

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