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Monday Briefing: Fears of anarchy grow in Gaza
Monday Briefing: Fears of anarchy grow in Gaza
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Monday Briefing: Fears of anarchy grow in Gaza

 
Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

March 4, 2024

 
 
Author Headshot

By Amelia Nierenberg

Writer, Briefings

Good morning. We’re covering the causes behind last week’s tragedy in Gaza.

Plus, Pakistan’s new leader and China’s Rust Belt renaissance.

 
 
 
Wounded people on beds at a hospital.
Palestinians who were wounded by Israeli gunfire while waiting for aid last week, according to health officials. Kosay Al Nemer/Reuters

Gaza’s deadly leadership vacuum

Last week, more than 100 people were killed in northern Gaza, health officials there said, after thousands of Gazans rushed at aid trucks. The crush on Thursday led to a stampede and prompted Israeli soldiers to fire at the crowd.

The immediate causes were extreme hunger and desperation: The U.N. has warned that famine is looming in northern Gaza, where roughly 300,000 civilians are still stranded and aid deliveries are rare — and can be fraught.

But there is a deeper problem: Even though fighting has ebbed in the north, Israel has been reluctant to fill the current leadership vacuum there. In trying to prevent Hamas from rebuilding, Israel stopped police officers from the Hamas-led government from escorting the trucks — and has delayed the creation of any alternative Palestinian law enforcement.

That means that there is no centralized body to coordinate the provision of services, enforce law and order, and protect the aid trucks. Video has emerged of armed groups attacking convoys, and diplomats say criminal gangs are beginning to fill the void left by Hamas.

Victims: More than 30,000 Gazans have been killed during Israel’s bombardment and invasion during the war. Here are some of their stories.

Red Sea: A British-owned cargo ship sank about two weeks after it was hit by the Houthis. It was carrying fertilizer, which could pose environmental risks to the waterway.

 
 
Shehbaz Sharif gestures while speaking into microphones.
Shehbaz Sharif has been deferential toward the military. K.M. Chaudary/Associated Press

Sharif is installed for a second term

Pakistan’s Parliament approved Shehbaz Sharif as prime minister yesterday. He began his second term after weeks of upheaval and is set to face years of questions about his legitimacy.

Analysts say that public confidence in Sharif’s government is low. His party did not win the most seats in elections a month ago — that honor went to allies of Imran Khan, the imprisoned former prime minister. Accusations are growing that the military tampered with dozens of races to tilt the vote in favor of Sharif’s party.

What’s next: A top analyst said that the longevity of Sharif’s coalition will likely depend on military support. Khan’s allies are preparing to put up a strong fight in Parliament.

Blasphemy: Mobs are going after people who are accused of disrespect toward Islam.

 
 
Two stacked bar charts showing if respondents feel either Trump or Biden is just too old to be an effective president. Forty-two percent of respondents either strongly or somewhat agreed that the statement applies to Trump; 73 percent felt that it applies to Biden.
A graph based on a New York Times/Siena College poll of 980 registered voters conducted late last month. The New York Times

Even Biden supporters say he is ‘just too old’

A majority of voters who supported President Biden in 2020 now say that he is “just too old” to lead the country effectively, according to a new poll by The Times and Siena College. Seventy-three percent of all registered voters said he was too old to be effective, and 45 percent expressed a belief that he could not do the job.

Their fears pose a deepening threat to his re-election bid and does not seem to extend to Donald Trump — who, at 77, is just four years younger. Their likely rematch this fall would make them the oldest presidential nominees in history.

Supreme Court: The justices may rule today on Trump’s eligibility to hold office, one day before the primaries on Super Tuesday.

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