👋 Grüss Gott!*
Welcome to Wednesday, where Israel says the UN resolution is damaging ceasefire talks, protests erupt in Hungary after a leaked conversation hints at high-level corruption, and Holy Week celebrations are up in the Malaga ’hood. Meanwhile, as Poland considers lowering the voting age to 16, Worldcrunch’s Katarzyna Skiba takes a look at the lessons learned from other such attempts around the world.
[*Swabian, Germany]
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🗞️ FRONT PAGE
Brasilia-based daily Correio Braziliense features a photo of the meeting between Brazilian President Luiz Inacio “Lula” da Silva, Indigenous leader Raoni Metuktire and French President Emmanuel Macron on its front page. During Macron’s three-day official visit to Brazil, he and his Brazilian counterpart announced a plan to invest 1 billion euros in the Amazon rainforest. The investment project will be a collaboration between Brazilian state banks and France’s national investment agency. The project aims to repair the relationship between the two countries post-Bolsonaro, and deepen cooperation to protect the vital rainforest. Read more about protecting the rainforest on Worldcrunch.
🌎 7 THINGS TO KNOW RIGHT NOW
• Israel accuses UN resolution of damaging ceasefire talks, Hezbollah launches strikes: Israel said that Hamas’s rejection of a current proposal for a Gaza truce deal is proof of the “damage” done by the UN Security Council resolution that demanded an immediate ceasefire. The U.S. has dismissed Israel’s claims, saying they were “inaccurate in almost every respect.” Meanwhile, Iran-aligned Hezbollah said it has launched dozens of rockets at Kiryat Shmona, an Israeli border town, killing a civilian, after Israel carried out a deadly strike in south Lebanon.
• Divers to resume search for bodies after Baltimore bridge collapse, data recovered from crashed ship: Divers are expected to resume the search for six missing construction workers, who are now presumed dead, after the U.S. coast guard said they had no hope of finding survivors of the Baltimore bridge collapse. The voyage data recorder from the ship that crashed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge has been recovered by dive crews, as the cause of the incident is still under investigation. The disaster has forced the indefinite closure of the Port of Baltimore, one of the busiest on the U.S. Eastern Seaboard, raising concerns of a “ripple effect” on global supply chains.
• China's Xi Jinping meets U.S. business leaders to restore confidence: Chinese President Xi Jinping has met with American business leaders and academics at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People on Wednesday, as China seeks to woo foreign investments and international firms. This comes after a challenging few years for the world's second-largest economy. Foreign direct investment shrank 8% in 2023 amid concerns over an anti-espionage law, exit bans as well as raids on consultancies. For more on China’s economy, here is an analysis translated from French to English: Billionaires, Jingoists And The Paradox Of China's Economic Slowdown.
• Protests erupt in Hungary after leaked tape hints at corruption: Thousands of protesters took to the streets last night near Budapest’s parliament, after a leaked tape hinted at high-level government corruption. The recording allegedly involves former Justice Minister Judit Varga detailing how Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s aides and chief of staff interfered in a graft case.
• Tunisia sentences four to death over politician Chokri Belaid’s murder: A court in the Tunisian capital Tunis sentenced four people to death and two to life imprisonment on Wednesday for their role in the assassination of secular opposition leader Chokri Belaid in 2013. The leftist politician was shot dead in his car outside his home, sparking turmoil in the young democracy after the 2011 overthrow of longtime dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.
• Thailand moves closer to legalize same-sex marriage: Thailand's parliament overwhelmingly approved a same-sex marriage bill on Wednesday, paving the way for the kingdom to become the first Southeast Asian nation to recognize LGBTQ marriage equality. The bill still needs approval from the Senate and royal endorsement to become law. That is widely expected to happen by the end of 2024. Read more on LGBTQ+ rights on Worldcrunch.
• Banksy’s London mural under protection: A mural of a tree painted by street artist Banksy in Finsbury Park, in north London, has now been covered with plastic and surrounded by wooden boards after it was defaced with white paint, just two days after it appeared on a residential building. The Islington Council said it wanted the piece “to stay” and that it was discussing solutions with the homeowner “to enable everyone to enjoy the artwork.” Read more about Banksy here.
#️⃣ BY THE NUMBERS
$718,750
The floating wooden door prop that played a key role in the end of the 1997 film Titanic, sold at auction for $718,750 in Dallas. The piece of balsa wood was sold at a Heritage Auctions’ Planet Hollywood event, where fans bid on other props and costumes from blockbuster movies. The panel has been the object of intense fan-led debate for decades over whether it was actually too small to fit Leonardo Dicaprio’s character, Jack, alongside Kate Winslet’s character, Rose, as the Titanic sank.
📰 STORY OF THE DAY
A vote at 16? Experiments with lowering the voting age around the world
As Poland considers lowering the voting age to 16, what can other countries' experiences with reducing the voting age teach us about political trends and ralling young constituents?
🗳️ Poland's new Marshal of the Sejm — the speaker of the lower house — and Polska 2050 party leader, Szymon Hołownia has said he intends to lower the country's voting age from 18 to 16. Calling this measure urgent, he says that it is unfair that older Poles take up a disproportionate percentage of the Polish vote, and that adding more young voters will balance the scale. With an aging population akin to much of Europe’s demography, the proportion of older Poles is only expected to rise in the upcoming years.
🇪🇺 Under EU law, member states are free to set their own minimum voting age, including for European elections. While the most popular minimum age is 18, three countries have lowered their voting ages: Greece reduced it to 17 in 2016, Austria to 16 in 2007, and Malta to 16 in 2018. "There is an old democratic principle which states that there should not be any taxation without representation," the National Youth Council told the Times Of Malta, adding that 16 year-olds “should also be able to vote, since they are allowed to work and liable to pay taxes."
✊ While the EU has only recently begun to test the impact of younger voting ages, Brazil lowered its voting age to 16 in 1988. The country has a long history of crucial youth involvement in politics, and student activist movements were critical to bringing down the 21-year military dictatorship in 1985. One-fifth of all 16 and 17 year olds in Brazil registered to vote in the 2022 presidential election, offering much of their support (54%) to elect President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. The country continues to hope that younger voters will remain mobilized.
➡️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com
📹 THIS HAPPENED VIDEO — TODAY IN HISTORY, IN ONE ICONIC PHOTO
➡️ Watch the video: THIS HAPPENED
📣 VERBATIM
“The British justice is killing him slowly using purely legal means.”
— Stefania Maurizi, an investigative journalist at Italian daily Il Fatto Quotidiano spoke to Al Jazeera about the UK’s ruling on Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, where Maurizi had previously worked. A London High Court ruled Tuesday that Assange should be allowed to appeal an order for his extradition to the U.S., unless American prosecutors can ensure that Assange would receive a fair trial and not face the death penalty. Maurizi is one of many free speech advocates who have criticized the British ruling allowing Assange’s extradition, and see the U.S. indictment as a misuse of the 1917 Espionage Act.
✍️ Newsletter by Anne-Sophie Goninet and Katrina Scalise
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