Your Wednesday Briefing: Indonesia’s Death Toll Climbs

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Workers in Indonesia are struggling to find survivors of Monday’s earthquake as power outages and blocked roads hinder rescue efforts.

The death toll has risen to at least 268, and is likely to continue to climb. Many of the dead were women and children in homes or schools. More than 150 people are still missing. Yesterday, rescue dogs sniffed for what officials estimated could be dozens of people still buried under mounds of rust-colored soil.

Tens of thousands of people were displaced from their homes. More than a thousand people are injured, and hospitals are overrun. Some people are being treated outside, in makeshift tents, and there aren’t enough ambulances. Here are photos of the aftermath.

Details: A full picture of the damage from the magnitude 5.6 earthquake is still emerging. One entire village was engulfed by a landslide.

Context: Indonesia sits on the “Ring of Fire,” an arc of volcanoes and fault lines along the Pacific Basin. Quakes can set off landslides, which can be catastrophic in a country where deforestation for farmland and illegal small-scale gold mining have contributed to unstable soil conditions.

In one of the biggest upsets in World Cup history, Saudi Arabia defeated Argentina, 2-1.

If you don’t follow sports, it’s hard to overstate how big of a deal this is. Argentina has Lionel Messi, perhaps the greatest player ever, and it carefully built its team to support him. The Saudis were widely viewed as a sacrificial lamb. Even Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman advised them to focus more on “enjoying themselves” than winning.

The loss is not just a defeat for Argentina, my colleague Rory Smith wrote. “It was an embarrassment, an ignominy, a stigma scarred into Argentine skin in front of 88,000 people, streamed live on television and beamed around the world.”

Argentines are disgusted. “What a disgrace,” a woman in Buenos Aires said.

Details: Even at halftime, Saudi’s win seemed wildly improbable. Argentina had put the ball in the net four times, but three had been ruled out for offside. (Here’s an explainer of the term.)

Messi: This is most likely his last World Cup. His team arrived in Qatar with the sole ambition of cementing his golden legacy; despite his acclaim, Messi, 35, has never won the tournament.

Cristiano Ronaldo: The star forward, who is playing for Portugal in the World Cup, will immediately part ways with Manchester United “by mutual agreement,” the club said.

For more, sign up for our World Cup updates.

Other updates:

Australia lost to France, 4-1.

Denmark tied with Tunisia, 0-0. And Mexico tied Poland, 0-0.

The U.S. tied with Wales, 1-1.

Despite China’s hints that it will tweak its approach to Covid restrictions, multiple outbreaks are prompting lockdowns across the country.

Shijiazhuang, a northern city, is mostly under a five-day lockdown, barely a week after no longer requiring residents to show a negative Covid test to use mass transit. Several neighborhoods in Shanghai reinstituted frequent tests, just days after telling residents they were seldom needed.

And schools and businesses were forced to close across Beijing, where leaders had been looking to adjust the restrictions that had dragged its economy down. Last weekend, the city recorded its first coronavirus-related deaths in months. Here are photos from the new effort.

It’s part of a nationwide pattern: Earlier this month, China said that it would fine-tune Covid restrictions to limit the disruption caused by lockdowns, quarantines and daily mass testing. But the outbreaks have tested officials’ resolve and raised questions about when — if ever — the world’s second-largest economy might reopen.

Cases: New infections have climbed almost every day since late October. Yesterday, the number of cases announced — 27,307 — came close to China’s single-day record of 28,973 cases, set in April during the early days of the Shanghai lockdown.

Context: China is the only major country still attempting to eradicate Covid infections. Its population has scant immunity; most have never been exposed to the virus; and vaccination efforts dropped off over the summer and autumn.

A fire at a factory in central China killed 38 people, one of the country’s deadliest fires in recent years.

In the Philippines, Kamala Harris, the U.S. vice president, denounced China for “intimidation and coercion” in the disputed parts of the South China Sea.

Malaysia’s king said he would appoint the prime minister, as the country’s political crisis deepens, Reuters reports.

Ukraine is on the offensive, but Russia still occupies about one-fifth of its land.

Ukraine raided a famous monastery in Kyiv that many Ukrainians view as a front for pro-Russian activity.

Voluntary evacuations began in Kherson. The city’s museums are now missing priceless treasures. As many as three million Ukrainians are expected to be displaced this winter.

Ukrainian units showed my colleague Carlotta Gall how they plant mines by enemy camps along the Dnipro River.

An Army veteran described how he stopped the Colorado gunman: “I just knew I had to take him down.”

The U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for a House committee to obtain Donald Trump’s tax returns, refusing his request to block their release.

An opinion poll showed that support for Brexit has fallen to its lowest level yet in Britain.

Women outnumber men in the New York Philharmonic for the first time in its 180 years.

China’s grandparents are rapping and gaming on social media, finding viral success by sharing their daily lives online.

They’re challenging the traditional belief that seniors should stay home and raise the next generation, and they have company: With more than 260 million residents over 60, China has the largest and fastest-growing population of old people in the world.

Lives Lived: Bao Tong was the highest-ranking Chinese official imprisoned over the pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Square. He died at 90.

“If you pay close attention, you know that no two bodies move the same way,” Katja Heitmann, a German choreographer, said. She has been collecting the mannerisms of others — how they walk, stand, kiss or fidget — for her dance project, “Motus Mori.”

Her archive now includes movements “donated” by more than 1,000 people, though she does not record or photograph them; instead, dancers learn the moves in private sessions, commit them to memory and incorporate them into performances.

“In our current society, we are trying to capture humanity in data,” Heitmann said. “But we are losing something this way.”

Make mulligatawny soup in a slow cooker.

“Aesthetica” imagines an ex-influencer who reverses years of plastic surgery.

Daniel Craig reprises his role as the world’s greatest detective in “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery,” a Times critic’s pick.

The Andaman Islands, an archipelago in the Indian Ocean, offer wild, pristine nature.

Play the Mini Crossword, and a clue: Big blue body (three letters).

Here are the Wordle and the Spelling Bee.

You can find all our puzzles here.

That’s it for today’s briefing. See you next time. — Amelia

P.S. Karan Deep Singh won a health award from the South Asian Journalists Association for his reporting on India’s Covid-19 surge.

“The Daily” is on a looming “tripledemic” in the U.S.

Tom Wright-Piersanti, an editor with The Morning, wrote today’s Arts & Ideas. Email us at briefing@nytimes.com with any questions or concerns.