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Asia and Australia Edition

Zimbabwe, Toshiba, Manus Island: Your Monday Briefing

Good morning.

Here’s what you need to know:

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Credit...Ben Curtis/Associated Press

•Zimbabwe’s embattled president, Robert Mugabe, stunned the nation on Sunday night with a speech in which he refused to say whether he would resign.

His political party had given him until noon today to resign or face impeachment, a rebuke delivered as Mr. Mugabe, 93, was locked in negotiations with the country’s army generals.

We asked readers in or from the country about life during Mr. Mugabe’s tenure. “We are ready for change,” one said.

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Credit...Adam Ferguson for The New York Times

• Two Times journalists made it into the contested, and now closed, Australian detention camp on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea, where hundreds of asylum seekers have refused to leave.

They fear hostile island residents, and mourn their years of hopeless detention as the cost of Australia’s rejection of refugees who come by boat.

Our Sydney bureau chief writes that they have “turned their prison into a protest, braving a lack of water, electricity and food to try to jog loose a little compassion from the world.”

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• “I should have left them in jail.”

That was President Trump blasting back at LaVar Ball, the outspoken father of one of three U.C.L.A. basketball players who were accused of shoplifting while in China but allowed to return home after Mr. Trump, who was on an extended tour of Asia, brought up the matter with President Xi Jinping.

Separately, the leader of the ruling party in South Korea said she believed Mr. Trump’s visit to her country had “actually led to an improvement in our bilateral relations.”

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Credit...Argentina Navy, via Associated Press

• Satellite signals that appeared to be from a missing Argentine submarine added urgency to rescue efforts, but the country’s Navy wasn’t able to confirm the source.

Australia, Britain, the U.S. and other countries are helping searchers. The craft, with 44 aboard, has been missing since Wednesday. Above, the submarine ARA San Juan in an undated photo.

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• A turning point at Fukushima? Japanese officials are hoping to persuade a skeptical world that the vast nuclear site has moved out of crisis mode and into cleanup.

The agent: the Mini-Manbo, or “little sunfish,” an armored underwater robot that was able to maneuver around debris and withstand radioactive hot spots, finally locating one reactor’s melted uranium core. Similar discoveries were made at the complex’s two other ruined reactors this year.

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• And single men in China are turning to a distinctly 21st-century coach for a leg up in the dating scene. In a country where men outnumber women by tens of millions, the “Fall in Love Emotional Education” school offers instruction in grooming, dressing and, critically, making an approach.

The school’s founder says 90 percent of its graduates end up with girlfriends.

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• Toshiba, fearing the $18 billion sale of its chip unit would be delayed by regulatory reviews, will sell shares to raise $5.4 billion and avoid being removed from the Tokyo Stock Exchange in March.

Trumpchi vehicles have a devoted following in China, and their maker hopes Trumpchi will be the first Chinese car brand to take off in the U.S. Top executives are agonizing, however, over whether to change the name — which they insist is a coincidence.

Radhika Jones, the editorial director of The Times’s books coverage, will be the next editor in chief of Vanity Fair, and the first Indian-American to lead a major U.S. glossy.

• Take a step inside an old missile silo that has been converted into a $1.5 million bunker condo for wealthy survivalists.

Here’s a snapshot of global markets.

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Credit...Ryan Mcmorrow/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

• An apartment-building fire in Beijing’s scrappy outskirts killed at least 19 people, many of them migrant workers trapped in thick smoke that witnesses said smelled of chemicals. [The New York Times]

• China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, visited Myanmar and outlined a “three-stage plan” to help resolve the Rohingya crisis. [South China Morning Post]

• A Japanese driver was killed in a collision with a U.S. military truck driven by a Marine stationed in Okinawa. The Marine was three times over the legal blood-alcohol limit, local news media said. [The New York Times]

• Two former South Korean spy chiefs were arrested and a third was questioned a second time about illegally channeling money to Park Geun-hye before her presidency ended in disgraced. [Korea Times]

• Global health agencies warn that bird viruses that can infect humans — and not only those of the H7N9 strain — have been spreading in Asia and Australia. [The New York Times]

• A North Korean soldier who was shot while defecting across the demilitarized zone was found by South Korean surgeons to have dozens of parasitic worms, a reminder of dire conditions in the North. [The New York Times]

• In Japan, a dairy farmer spent a decade planting an expanse of the sweet-scented shibazakura, the moss phlox, as a gift to his wife after she went blind. [Japan Inside]

Tips, both new and old, for a more fulfilling life.

Liberal arts are not doomed. We challenged other myths, too, about choosing a college major.

• How to give your fridge a good, deep cleaning.

• Recipe of the day: Start the week with simple, takeout-style sesame noodles.

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Credit...Miguel Medina/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

• Who really owns A.C. Milan? Li Yonghong, above, who bought Italy’s world-famous soccer club for $860 million in April, doesn’t seem to control the Chinese mining empire he claimed. Our reporters re-examine the deal in light of China’s pronounced tastes for brand names and concealed foreign holdings.

• In memoriam: Azzedine Alaïa, 82, hailed as one of the greatest and most uncompromising designers our time; Malcolm Young, 64, who helped found the Australian rock band AC/DC; and Girish Bhargava, 78, a master of editing dance films, notably for the movie “Dirty Dancing.”

• In the U.S., the Thanksgiving holiday coming on Thursday means something different to everyone. Nine prominent writers, including Viet Thanh Nguyen, Parul Seghal and A. O. Scott, shared their Thanksgiving stories.

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Credit...PA Images via Getty Images

“London is not going to sleep tonight. At least that is the impression given by the many, many thousands who thronged around Buckingham Palace.”

That was a dispatch in The Times in 1947 on the day before the wedding of Princess Elizabeth of Britain and Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten, the Duke of Edinburgh. Today, as Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, they celebrate their 70th anniversary.

This year’s celebration will be muted, the British news media reported. Elizabeth, 91, and her consort, 96, have scaled back public events in recent months.

In August, Prince Philip made his final solo public appearance before retiring from his official duties. This month, the queen delegated a Remembrance Sunday ceremony to Prince Charles in what was seen as a step in the monarchy’s transition to its next generation.

But 70 years ago, the wedding celebrations were anything but muted. Our report at the time recounted that the day “must have set a record in decibels.”

Drew Middleton, who covered Europe for The Times during and after World War II, was in the crowd outside Buckingham Palace. “Through field glasses you saw a healthy, happy girl and a grinning young naval officer,” he wrote.

Patrick Boehler contributed reporting.

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Your Morning Briefing is published weekday mornings and updated online. Browse past briefings here.

We have briefings timed for the Australian, Asian, European and American mornings. And our Australia bureau chief offers a weekly letter adding analysis and conversations with readers. You can sign up for these and other Times newsletters here.

What would you like to see here? Contact us at asiabriefing@nytimes.com.

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