World News Quick Take

Agencies

CHINA

Japan’s Takeshi visits

Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Takeshi Iwaya yesterday met with his counterpart Wang Yi (王毅) and other top officials in Beijing, with the two sides agreeing to try to increase cooperation despite acknowledging challenges, reports said. Iwaya met with Wang at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse, footage from state broadcaster China Central Television showed. He told Wang that Tokyo would try to “reduce challenges and matters of concern while increasing cooperation and collaboration,” Japan’s Kyodo news agency reported.

Photo: Reuters

MEXICO

Christmas organizer killed

The promoter of one of the largest Christmas fairs in Guerrero state was shot dead during a street festival on Tuesday along with another man, local authorities said. Martin Ramirez Ruiz, board president of the Christmas fair in the state capital, Chilpancingo, was attacked by armed men while he was participating in a dance, the state prosecutors’ office and government officials said. Witnesses said the attackers opened fire on the dancers, killing the promoter and another man whose identity has not been released by authorities. Guerrero Governor Evelyn Salgado said on X that Ramirez Ruiz’s murder “is an inadmissible act that will not go unpunished.”

Photo: Reuters

HAITI

Reopened hospital attacked

Two reporters were killed and several were wounded on Tuesday in a gang attack on the reopening of Port-au-Prince’s biggest public hospital, the country’s online media association said. A police officer was also killed in the attack. Gangs forced the closure of the General Hospital early this year and authorities had pledged to reopen the facility in the capital on Christmas Eve, but as journalists gathered to cover the event, suspected gang members opened fire.

Photo: AFP

INDIA

Filmmaker Benegal dies

Shyam Benegal, an Indian filmmaker known for pioneering a cinema movement that tackled social issues in the 1970s, has died after chronic kidney disease. He was 90. His contribution to cinema was recognized as a director, editor and screenwriter. He came into the limelight with films — Ankur (1974), Nishant (1975), Manthan (1976) and Bhumika (1977) — that challenged mainstream Bollywood by dealing with the social realities of a poor nation. He died on Monday at Mumbai’s Wockhardt Hospital, and his cremation was on Tuesday, the Press Trust of India news agency reported, citing his daughter Piya. Filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt wrote on X that Benegal told stories without pretense. “They were raw and real, about the struggles of ordinary people. His films had craft and conviction,” Bhatt wrote. Benegal is survived by his wife, Nira Benegal.

Photo: AP

UNITED STATES

Richard Perry passes away

Richard Perry, a hitmaking record producer with a flair for standards and contemporary sounds whose many successes included Carly Simon’s You’re So Vain, Rod Stewart’s The Great American Songbook series and a Ringo Starr album featuring all four Beatles, died on Tuesday. He was 82. Perry, a recipient of a Grammys Trustee Award in 2015, died at a Los Angeles hospital after a cardiac arrest, friend Daphna Kastner said. “He maximized his time here,” Kastner said. “He was generous, fun, sweet and made the world a better place. The world is a little less sweeter without him here, but it’s a little bit sweeter in heaven.”


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