2023
March
20
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 20, 2023
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In today’s issue, Washington Bureau Chief Linda Feldmann is giving us an (almost) front-row seat at the latest Monitor Breakfast – a conversation between Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia and members of the Washington press corps. Senator Warner, a Democrat, is chairman of the Select Committee on Intelligence and also sits on the Senate Banking Committee – making the conversation particularly timely as Chinese leader Xi Jinping visits Moscow and banks continue to roil international markets.

It’s also particularly noteworthy in terms of approach. Politicians and journalists often see each other – but at a hearing, a press conference, or amid a scrum of rapid-fire questions. At the Monitor Breakfast, over plates of eggs and the like, things unfold a bit differently. Linda – who’s typically worked for weeks to get her top-level guests – starts by taking him or her around the large table and introducing each journalist by name and affiliation. She moderates – but aims to keep the tone conversational. She lets people pursue a specific point when appropriate: “You often get your most interesting information in the follow-ups,” she says.

And, she adds, “I don’t let one person dominate the conversation or be disrespectful; I promise our guests civility and respect.”

It’s all part of creating a distinctive forum where everyone has a chance to dig a bit deeper. “The nature of what we do is unique. It’s not a webinar. It’s not a single reporter interviewing someone. Content is embargoed until the event ends; no filing is possible until things have wrapped up,” Linda points out. “You get the character of a person, and learn something about their strengths and background.” As she notes, they may even make some news.

For all those reasons, I hope you’ll check out today’s Breakfast report.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The looming indictment of a former U.S. president would set off an unprecedented national political drama. The legal complexity of the Manhattan hush money case further complicates the unpredictable path ahead.

AP/File
People wade through floodwaters after heavy rainfall in Hadeja, Nigeria, in September 2022. The latest climate report from the United Nations, released Monday, makes a sobering case for immediate climate action.

A new report sums up the known science on climate change – and walks a fine line between desperation and hope in an effort to spur a more forceful global response. 

SOURCE:

NOAA

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Monitor Breakfast

Bryan Dozier/Special to The Christian Science Monitor
Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia, speaks at the St. Regis hotel on March 20, 2023, in Washington.

From his vantage point on both banking and intelligence committees, Sen. Mark Warner spoke at a Monitor Breakfast on Monday about the recent bank turmoil, TikTok, and the handling of classified documents.

Juan Karita/AP
An anti-government protester speaks at a rally after a march in Juliaca, Peru, March 10, 2023. Peru has made a name for itself not only because of the vast number of high-profile politicians charged with graft, but also because these cases have been prosecuted. Renewed attention is on Peru's corruption battle following the December arrest of former President Pedro Castillo, who tried to carry out a “self-coup” and dissolve Congress. Can it get the "big win" it needs against corruption to retain citizen faith in the rule of law?

Peru has stood out in the region for its ability – and will – to prosecute high-level leaders for corruption. Can it persist?  

Books

JENNA SCHOENEFELD/SPECIAL TO THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
In a line that snaked out of the door and down the street, Milan Zoe (left) and Barry Queen wait to buy books the first day of business at Octavia’s Bookshelf in Pasadena, California, last month.

The pandemic reading boom brings an uptick of new BIPOC bookstores. They offer stories by people of color – “important stories that we should all be reading,” says one owner who opened her dream store last month.


The Monitor's View

AP
Children taken from an orphanage in a Russian-occupied part of Ukraine eat a meal in Zolotaya Kosa, Russia, where they will be raised as Russian.

On Friday, the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants for Russian President Vladimir Putin and a key aide for their role in the taking of thousands of Ukrainian children to Russia since the start of the war a year ago. Mr. Putin does not deny that the children were taken, that they are being taught Russian, and that they will be adopted by Russians. Rather, the Kremlin claims the children were taken for safety from the fighting.

But, says ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan, Mr. Putin must be tried for the abduction of  children across borders – a war crime. “The evidence will tell a different story,” he told a conference in London on Monday. He asked Moscow to repatriate the children and let them learn their own language in their own schools and not be adopted “by strangers.”

“The quite important elements of the offense are accepted by the individuals concerned,” he said.

The arrest warrants are a direct challenge to Mr. Putin’s notion that Ukraine has long been united with Russia by “blood ties,” or, as one people forming a special civilization with its own values rising from factors like language, ethnicity, and race.

The ICC, as well as Ukraine’s government, insists that Mr. Putin abide by values in international law. “The world needs a real embodiment of the rule of law, which is guaranteed to protect humanity from the ‘right of force’ – from the source or all aggressions,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said earlier this month.

The Geneva Conventions prohibit the forced transfer of people from occupied territories like those in eastern Ukraine under Russian control. Children, Mr. Khan said, “can’t be treated as spoils of war.” 

The ICC is not the only body challenging Russia’s rejection of universal justice. In an emergency session of the U.N. General Assembly last month, 141 nations backed a resolution demanding that Mr. Putin withdraw his forces from Ukraine and international laws be observed.

“If we can’t show that international justice can play a role [in Ukraine] when the world seems on a precipice – and I don’t think that’s hyperbole – then there will be no confidence in international institutions,” Mr. Khan told The Times of London.

The warrants mark just the third time that the ICC has sought the arrest of a head of state. Mr. Putin is unlikely to face a trial at The Hague unless his own people hand him over or he travels to any of the 123 countries that are signatories to the statute establishing the ICC.

Yet the court’s action sends a signal to Russians that the world embraces a universal type of civilization, one with values defined not by ethnicity but by principles of law applicable to all, especially innocent children.


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 more consistently experience a harmony like music in our daily lives as we learn about our true, spiritual nature as God’s offspring.


Viewfinder

Joe Burbank/Orlando Sentinel/AP
Two water-skiing squirrels, both known as Twiggy, perform at the Orlando Boat Show on March 17, 2023, in Florida. There have been 12 Twiggys since the show began performances in 1979.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Tomorrow, keep an eye out for Jackie Valley's explainer on how far governors and legislators can go in directing school content. Please join us!

More issues

2023
March
20
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