Your Friday Briefing

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/05/briefing/italy-covid-tigray-anc.html

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The Italian port city of Trieste last month became the epicenter of protests against the government’s new health pass. It is now home to a Covid outbreak linked directly to those protests that threatens to burden intensive care units, with an unvaccinated minority endangering public health.

Italy’s measures, which went into effect Oct. 15, require proof of vaccination, a negative test or recent Covid recovery to go to work. Though protests have died down elsewhere in the country, Trieste has developed a reputation as a center of vaccine skepticism, prompting a ban on demonstrations. The region’s president put it bluntly: “It is the moment to say with clarity: Enough idiocy.”

Last week, new cases in the city of 200,000 doubled from the week before, to more than 800. Covid patients have taken up about 18 percent of the region’s intensive care beds. Trieste’s top law enforcement official said that the current outbreak was “strictly correlated” to the protests.

Divides: In Germany, an increase in cases and hospitalizations has led the health minister, Jens Spahn, to warn of “a pandemic mainly among the unvaccinated, and it is massive.”

Pandemic resurgence: Europe is experiencing near-record levels of coronavirus infections, with 1.8 million new cases and about 24,000 deaths in the past week. “Europe is back at the epicenter of the pandemic — where we were one year ago,” said Dr. Hans Kluge, the W.H.O.’s director for Europe.

Here are the latest updates and maps of the pandemic.

In other developments:

Britain authorized Merck’s antiviral drug for Covid, molnupiravir.

The Biden administration is requiring large companies to ensure that their workers are fully vaccinated against Covid-19 or start weekly testing by Jan. 4.

Hundreds of thousands of people traveled around India this week for Diwali. Health experts worry it could seed a major outbreak.

The authorities in Ethiopia have accelerated their campaign against ethnic Tigrayans, who are accused of sympathizing with the rebels now pressing toward Addis Ababa, the capital. Security officers went from house to house, conducting searches and arbitrary arrests and leaving families cowering in their homes, dreading a knock on the door.

The sweeping measures targeting Tigrayans raised concerns that the stage has been set for bursts of ethnically motivated violence. Tigrayans said they were being targeted on the basis of their identity cards or their language. Fighters from the same ethnic group have been locked in civil war with Ethiopian government forces for the past year.

Ethiopia’s embattled prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, announced a state of emergency on Wednesday that granted him draconian powers. An Ethiopian government post on Facebook made stark reference to Tigrayan leaders and their supporters, stating, “A rat that strays far from its hole is nearer to its death.”

International efforts: The U.S. envoy to the Horn of Africa, Jeffrey Feltman, flew into Addis Ababa as the leader of an international scramble to stop the violence and bring Ethiopia’s warring parties to the table. There were few signs it might succeed.

In nationwide municipal elections, South Africans rebuked the African National Congress, handing it less than half the overall vote for the first time. Voters went to the polls to choose councilors and mayors, but they used the opportunity to vent about national issues, including record unemployment and the government’s handling of Covid.

Cyril Ramaphosa, the South African president, is admired among South Africans, but they see a disconnect between his message of renewal and the corruption that has sullied his party among local leaders. Not since Nelson Mandela was the face of the party has the A.N.C. so heavily relied on the personality of its leader in a local election, one organizer said.

Quotable: They listen to him, they like him,” said Mcebisi Ndletyana, a political scientist at the University of Johannesburg, of the president. “But when they lower their eyes to the local leaders that are there, they see mediocrity.”

A recent dispute over fishing rights between Britain and France gets at something deeper: France is determined to show that Brexit has not worked, and Britain that it has.

Boris Johnson, Britain’s prime minister, intervened in the case of a Conservative Party lawmaker who faced suspension. A ferocious blowback caused him to retreat, a now familiar path for Johnson.

One of the most comprehensive studies to date of weaponry in the war in Ukraine shows that Russia has been systematically fanning the conflict with arms shipments.

More than 40 countries pledged to phase out coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel, in a deal announced at the climate summit COP26. Australia, above, was one of the countries that did not agree to the pledge.

OPEC and Russia shook off pressure from the U.S. and decided to stick with their plan to raise oil production by a modest 400,000 barrels a day.

House Democrats struggled to line up the votes needed to push through a $1.85 trillion social safety net, climate and tax bill, as moderate Democrats raised concerns about the cost and details of the rapidly evolving plan.

Some of the world’s biggest financial firms are warning that the rush to transition toward clean energy could have unintended consequences for the global economy.

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station grew chiles. The result? “Best space tacos yet.”

George Seitz’s disappearance in 1976 drew little notice — until investigators found his skeleton in a backyard in New York more than 40 years later. This is how the police cracked a grisly cold case.

The actor is earning some of the best reviews of his career for his turn as a vicious bully named Phil in the forthcoming movie “The Power of the Dog.” To become that seething cowboy required a focus on the character’s physicality, Roslyn Sulcas reports for The Times.

“He behaves abhorrently, but there is a deep well of pain there,” Cumberbatch said of the character. “If we don’t understand the monsters in our world, what motivates this behavior, if we can’t look at someone beyond being a baddie or a goody, then we’re in trouble.”

On set in New Zealand’s South Island, the actor remained in character even between takes. At what he describes as a “dude camp,” he learned to ride, whittle and work with animals, among other new skills: “Braiding rope, working with the cattle, castrating — braiding rope while smoking a cigarette, incredibly difficult!”

“I told him, the problem is that you’re about as English as anyone can get,” recalled Jane Campion, the film’s director. “But we’re going to make you an American rancher in 1925.”

Read more about Cumberbatch’s process.

After three hours in the pot, the lamb in this Moroccan-inspired tagine is fragrant and tender.

“Spencer” is a love story, a horror movie, a psychological thriller and a movie about Princess Diana, all in one, our reviewer writes.

Making rangoli, an ornate floor art, can be a celebratory act for festivals like Diwali and a meditative practice. Take a look at the designs.

Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: First sign of the zodiac (five letters).

And here is the Spelling Bee.

You can find all our puzzles here.

That’s it for today’s briefing. Have a great weekend. — Natasha

P.S. Raja Abdulrahim is joining our Jerusalem bureau to write about Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, with a special focus on Palestinian affairs.

The latest episode of “The Daily” is about a rough election night for Democrats.

You can reach Natasha and the team at briefing@nytimes.com.