2024
September
04
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 04, 2024
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

I always chuckle at the flood of pre-Olympics stories about how everything is going wrong and locals are angry. Then the Games start, and something else takes over. Joy and awe.

Today’s story by Colette Davidson adds a poignant twist. In Paris, that shift has also led to something deeper – a realization that the Paralympics are not about disability, but about extraordinary ability. We know that the Olympics can lift spirits. As Colette shows, they can also change minds.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor
A pedestrian uses the light of a mobile phone to walk on the sidewalk during a power outage, as Ukrainians grapple with severe power shortages caused by Russia's targeting of electrical infrastructure across the country, in Kharkiv, Ukraine, July 16, 2024.

Ukraine’s power grid is a prime target of Russian missiles and drones. And Ukrainians, from individual families to the officials in charge of keeping the lights on, are finding new ways to cope.

Today’s news briefs

• Ukraine resignations: President Volodymyr Zelenskyy orders a major government reshuffle at a crucial juncture in the war against Russia. 
• Grenfell Tower report: A damning report on a deadly London high-rise fire in 2017 says decades of failures by government, regulators, and industry turned Grenfell Tower into a “death trap” where 72 people lost their lives.
• Charges against Hamas leaders: The United States announces criminal charges against Hamas’ top leaders over their roles in planning, supporting, and perpetrating the deadly Oct. 7 attack in southern Israel.
• Biden’s student debt plan: Seven Republican-led states file a lawsuit to challenge President Joe Biden’s administration’s latest student debt forgiveness plan.
• High temperatures: The west coast of the United States is bracing for extreme heat with temperatures in desert towns expected to soar as high as 120 degrees Fahrenheit and Phoenix likely to extend its streak of 100 days over 100 F, forecasters say.

Read these news briefs.

When dealing with gangs, local officials are tasked with maintaining public safety without fearmongering. In Colorado, that ethos is being tested by the reputed presence of a Venezuelan gang. 

Aurelien Morissard/AP
Japan's Hashimoto Katsuya celebrates after winning the wheelchair rugby gold medal match between Japan and the United States at the 2024 Paris Paralympics, Sept. 2, 2024.

It took a while, but the French have warmed up enthusiastically to the Paralympics, buying nearly 2 million tickets. And parents are finding they offer a rare teachable moment when it comes to disability.

What should students in the United States learn about Asian and Asian American culture and history? With hate crimes on the rise, more states are turning to classroom lessons to help foster tolerance and understanding.

Difference-maker

Logan Newell/The Coloradoan /USA TODAY NETWORK/Reuters
A shopper browses the front section at Vindeket Foods in Fort Collins, Colorado.

The United States is the biggest food waster. The founder of Vindeket Foods finds a second life for items that stores, farms, and restaurants sometimes discard.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Henri Khoury, Lebanon's caretaker minister of justice

For months, Lebanon has been in the news mostly for the artillery fire across the border between the country’s militant group Hezbollah and Israel. On Tuesday, a different kind of headline caught global attention, bringing light to Lebanon’s dark circumstances.

Prosecutors arrested the Mediterranean country’s former chief central banker, Riad Salameh, for alleged embezzlement. The move led the Beirut-based newspaper L’Orient Today to ask whether it signaled “the end of impunity in Lebanon.”

Even asking the question is a milestone. Lebanon has been caught in a prolonged political and economic crisis orchestrated, the World Bank has noted, “by the country’s elite that has long captured the state and lived off its [economy].”

Yet when governments falter to such a degree, a single act of accountability can mark a turning point. “We have opened a new chapter, a very positive development,” Ali Noureddine, a Lebanese economist, told The Wall Street Journal.

The apprehension of Mr. Salameh is an example of a failed state trying to right itself. Since an economic collapse in 2019, the people of Lebanon have endured persistent shortages of water, electricity, internet access, and health care. Elections have been repeatedly postponed. More than 130 towns now have no local government. The country ranks near the bottom of global corruption indexes. Levels of public trust, a survey by Arab Barometer published in July found, are among the lowest in the Middle East.

A push for legal reform has offered a cautious counterpoint. Last spring, for example, officials in the justice ministry and Parliament joined forces with the United Nations, the European Union, and civil society organizations to strengthen Lebanon’s judicial institutions. A judiciary that is free, independent, and impartial, one member of Parliament noted at the time, is essential for rebuilding people’s trust in the State.

A former Merrill Lynch banker who ran the central bank until last year, Mr. Salameh faces indictments in the United States and at least seven European countries for allegedly running a ring of bankers accused of laundering and embezzling hundreds of millions of dollars. His arrest follows a tug-of-war among public officials, prosecutors, and judges over whether and how to hold him accountable. Skeptics worry his apprehension marks an attempt to avert greater international scrutiny of corruption in Lebanon.

But even the cautious reactions from civil society and fellow bankers show an expectation of integrity. “Any measure taken to expose the rampant corruption established by Riad Salameh in the country is welcome,” Tanal Sabah, president of Lebanese Swiss Bank, told L’Orient Today. “When the judiciary fulfills its duty and role with independence and courage, justice is served,” Ibrahim Kanaan, head of the parliamentary Budget and Finance Committee, wrote on X. The country’s caretaker justice minister, Henri Khoury, said, “The judiciary has spoken, and we respect this decision.”

Civil society organizations have called on citizens to a “solidarity sit-in with the judiciary” in front of the Beirut Justice Palace on Sept. 5. Drawn by a rare act of accountability, they may help embolden officials to further acts of honesty over impunity.


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.

The more we learn of divine Truth, God, as supreme, the more consistently we find the answers and healing we need.


Viewfinder

Carlos Avila Gonzalez/San Francisco Chronicle/AP
Construction crews take down the top of the cofferdam that remained from the Iron Gate Dam in the Klamath River, near Hornbrook, California, Aug. 28, 2024. The removal of the last of four hydroelectric dams along the Klamath concluded the largest such project in the United States, and allows the river – and the salmon that populate it – to flow freely for the first time in roughly a century. Tribal nations along the Oregon-California border had fought for decades for that outcome.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for coming along with us today. We hope you’ll come back tomorrow when Ned Temko looks at a question governments worldwide are wrestling with. What do you do with social media and the titans behind it? Brazil might offer some clues.

More issues

2024
September
04
Wednesday

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