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Today — 7 November 2025News

Justice Dept. Is Said to Be Investigating D.C. Mayor Over Foreign Trip

The investigation into Muriel E. Bowser, which is being handled by the U.S. attorney’s office in Washington, could face significant hurdles because of the known facts of the case and recent turmoil inside the Justice Department.

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

It remains unclear how far the investigation into Muriel E. Bowser, a Democrat who has served as Washington’s mayor since 2015, has advanced.

Who Will Replace Nancy Pelosi in Congress?

Two Democrats have already announced their campaigns to replace Representative Nancy Pelosi in her San Francisco district, and others may join the race soon.

© Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

Representative Nancy Pelosi has held her House seat for nearly four decades.

Tesla Investors Back Musk’s Trillion Dollar Payday

Shareholders approved a plan to grant Mr. Musk shares worth nearly $1 trillion if he meets ambitious goals, including vastly expanding the company’s stock market valuation.

© Maansi Srivastava for The New York Times

Elon Musk, Tesla’s chief executive, had threatened to leave the company if shareholders rejected the pay plan.

OpenAI Races to Quell Concerns Over Its Finances

7 November 2025 at 05:52
The A.I. company faced pushback after a top executive raised the idea of government aid, amid concerns that the A.I. industry is headed toward a dangerous bubble.

© Mike Segar/Reuters

Sarah Friar, OpenAI’s chief financial officer.

特朗普:拟降低治疗肥胖症药物

7 November 2025 at 05:45
06/11/2025 - 22:16

新型“减肥神药”Wegovy(主要成分为司美格鲁肽)不仅能减肥,而且对患有糖尿病和心力衰竭病人的健康也有益处。 Zepbound 是一种新型的双重GIP鳄GLP-1 受体激动剂,被批淮用于治疗肥胖症和相关疾病。由于其显著的减肥效果。三分之一的美国人患有糖尿病和糖尿病前期。

这些疗法属于新一代药物,最初是为治疗糖尿病而开发的,它们模拟一种在调节食欲方面发挥作用的胃肠激素(GLP-1)。由于这些药物能显著减轻体重,因此越来越受欢迎,尤其是在美国,那里约有40%的成年人患有肥胖症。

然而,由于价格非常昂贵,在美国每月费用可能超过1000美元,并非所有人都能负担得起。周四宣布的协议规定,部分成功的注射疗法将很快以更低的价格提供给美国民众,并且公共医疗保险的覆盖范围也将扩大。

据政府称,这些药物很快将在一个政府运营的网站上以每月约350美元(约300欧元)的价格出售,目前正在审查中的口服药价可能会降至150美元左右。一位白宫官员表示,作为交换,制药公司将获得关税豁免和美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)的快速审批程序。

这是特朗普政府为降低美国药品价格而发布的最新公告。美国的药品价格位居世界最高之列。

特朗普在其第一任期内未能成功降低药品价格后,重返政坛后加大了对制药行业的监管力度,并对其发出更多威胁,试图迫使制药公司自愿降低药品价格。这位共和党总统已与辉瑞和阿斯利康签署了类似的协议,以获得部分药品的折扣。

为了避免高昂的药费,一些退了休的美国老人选择在法国购药。

联邦医疗保险(Medicare,即红蓝卡)是美国最大的医疗保险方案。它由政府机构联邦医疗保险(Medicare,即红蓝卡)和医疗补助(Medicaid,即白卡)服务中心 (CMS) 运营。但医疗体制改革大大削减了老人医疗保险报销。

法国费加罗报报道,美国老人罗西娜Rosine告诉法国记者,她和她丈夫每年都会来法国一次,购买她和丈夫治疗2型糖尿病所需的药物——诺和诺德公司的奥美拉唑(Ozempic)和勃林格殷格翰与礼来公司的恩格列净(Jardiance)。

她还解释说,在美国,扣除他们作为退休人员通过联邦医疗保险(Medicare,65岁以上人群的社会保障体系)获得的福利后,注射Ozempic每月每人需要花费1100到1300美元。Ozempic是一款每周一次的胰高血糖素样肽1(GLP-1)类似物,该药是一种皮下注射制剂,目前已批准的剂量为0.5mg和1.0mg,适用于:(1)作为饮食调整和运动的辅助手段,以改善2型糖尿病成人患者的血糖控制。

 

美撤销737 MAX坠机事故中对波音公司的刑事指控

7 November 2025 at 05:45
06/11/2025 - 22:10

这一决定源于司法部与波音公司于5月23日达成的一项协议,该协议旨在结束事故发生后启动的法律程序。此前原定于6月23日在德克萨斯州沃斯堡由里德·奥康纳法官主持的庭审即将开始。

如果波音公司被定罪,可能会影响其与美国联邦政府(波音航空航天和国防业务的主要客户)签订合同的能力。

波音公司周四回应称:“我们致力于履行与​​司法部达成的协议义务,并将继续大力加强我们的安全、质量和合规计划。”司法部发言人评论道: “这项协议避免了旷日持久的法律程序,为受害者提供了最终的慰藉,并要求波音公司立即采取行动”。

他补充说:“我们相信这项解决方案是最公平的”,并指出该协议规定波音公司需支付11亿美元,且必须“继续提升其合规和道德规范项目的有效性”。这家飞机制造商还必须任命一名独立的顾问。

法官在裁决中并未掩饰他对协议条款的保留意见,但同时承认美国政府“出于善意”行事,并履行了对受害者家属的义务。

法官表示,“法院承认,它无权以不同意政府关于撤销此案指控符合公共利益为由拒绝该协议”。法官还驳回了受害者家属提出的任命特别检察官的请求。代表受害者家属参与刑事案件的律师保罗·卡塞尔强调了法官态度的暧昧,并断言“当不公正发生时,法院绝不能保持沉默”。

代表受害者家属参与民事诉讼的克利福德律师事务所也发表声明,对这一判决表示谴责。律师们打算提起“紧急”上诉。

作为和解协议的一部分,波音公司承认曾试图“阻挠和妨碍”美国联邦航空管理局(FAA)的工作。

该公司必须向受害者家属赔偿基金捐款4.445亿美元——该基金已根据2021年达成的暂缓起诉协议(DPA)获得资金——并支付2.44亿美元的罚款。 

本案涉及两起波音737 MAX 8飞机坠毁事故:2018年10月狮航坠机事故和2019年3月埃塞俄比亚航空坠机事故。

美国政府指控波音公司未能向美国联邦航空管理局(FAA)披露MCAS防失速软件的技术细节。

早在2019年,波音公司就承认对这些坠机事故负有责任,并表示“MCAS(软件)的设计是造成这些事故的原因之一”。2021年达成的和解协议要求波音公司改进其合规计划。

然而,2024年1月,一架阿拉斯加航空公司的波音737 MAX 9飞机在飞行中机身面板脱落,造成轻微伤亡。该飞机于10月交付。

此次事故凸显了波音公司严重的生产质量问题,使其陷入了深刻的生存危机,至今仍未摆脱困境,并促使美国司法部取消了2021年的和解协议。

2024年7月,双方达成第二份暂缓起诉协议,但奥康纳法官于12月驳回了该协议,并未就其实质内容作出裁决。由于审判临近以及白宫新政府上任的压力,波音公司和司法部于5月决定请求撤销相关诉讼。

此外,美国还提起了数十起民事诉讼。据这家飞机制造商称,超过90%的诉讼已达成庭外和解。

该公司表示,除刑事诉讼中判决的赔偿金外,其已支付了“数十亿美元”。首例民事诉讼于周一在芝加哥联邦法院开庭,该案涉及埃塞俄比亚航空公司空难的一名受害者。

瑞典机场又暂时关闭了 !

7 November 2025 at 05:45
06/11/2025 - 22:07

自今年9月底起在丹麦多座机场与挪威奥斯陆机场发现多起无人机干扰事件,瑞典专家表示,在瑞典机场建立无人机侦测系统不贵也不难,但在机场上空击落无人机可能会带来较大风险。

瑞典25日夜间在东南部城市喀斯克罗纳(Karlskrona)的海军基地附近发现无人机,警方表示跟出现在丹麦的大型无人机类似,相信跟之前干扰丹麦的事件有关连,但目前尚未查出嫌疑人士。

一连串的无人机干扰从22日晚间起,北欧地区最繁忙的丹麦哥本哈根机场因为无人机干扰而停摆4个小时,挪威奥斯陆机场也因出现无人机而关闭空域,造成北欧航空交通延误中断。

接下来几天,丹麦阿尔堡机场(Aalborg airport)见无人机干扰,丹麦国内埃斯比约(Esbjerg)、松得堡(Son诶erborg)和斯克吕斯特鲁普(Skry诶strup)空军基地的机场也接连发现无人机。

22日晚间丹麦哥本哈根机场受到无人机干扰时,瑞典南部城市马尔默(Malmo)当晚也接获多架无人机出现的通报。

瑞典总理克里斯特森(Ulf Kristersson)23日针对丹麦所受到的无人机干扰表示,这些动作在测试北约(NATO)国家的集体反应,北约应该要有清楚的回应。他也表示,瑞典全国多处机场都已经备有反无人机系统。

他说,瑞典也严正以待,无论这些无人机干扰背后的主使者是谁,瑞典的决定都是非常清楚的,「瑞典有权防卫自己的领空,若必要的话会採取武力手段」,清楚表明瑞典保卫空域主权的决心。

瑞典国防大学(Swedish Defence University)的学者里汪(Hans Liwång)表示,瑞典机场的无人机防御系统包括很多面向,可以是机场派人用肉眼观察,并且通报可疑事件或可疑飞行物体。也可以是短波长的雷达侦测,这类型的侦测系统需要在机场附近找到能够监测整个机场的合适地点。若在离机场几公里的范围之内,这种系统也可以找出无人机的起飞与充电地点,提供警方更大的机会找出背后主使者。

他说这种系统花费跟机场其他的设备相比,所费不高,也不难建造。

 

爱泼斯坦案:美国会议员要听取安德鲁证词

7 November 2025 at 05:45
06/11/2025 - 22:01

信中写道:“据公开报道,您与爱泼斯坦先生的友谊始于1999年,并且在他2008年因性交易未成年人罪被定罪期间及之后,您一直与他保持密切联系。”信中还提及了弗吉尼亚·朱弗雷对查理三世国王的弟弟爱泼斯坦提出的性侵指控。

委员会认为安德鲁很可能“掌握有关爱泼斯坦先生及其同伙所犯罪行的重要信息”,并要求他“接受一次将被记录的访谈”。这些民选官员要求安德鲁在“2025年11月20日之前”作出回应。

但此举似乎不太可能成功,因为民主党是少数党,而且外国人不能被强制遵守美国国会的此类要求。法新社联系了安德鲁的发言人,但未立即得到回应。

英国女王伊丽莎白二世的次子安德鲁王子已被剥夺所有头衔,并被勒令搬离他在温莎的豪华皇家别墅。

上周宣布的剥夺其“殿下”和“王子”头衔的决定,是由查尔斯三世国王于周三正式宣布的。

由于爱泼斯坦的主要指控者弗吉尼亚·朱弗雷的遗作回忆录出版,引发了新的丑闻,国王被迫介入此事。弗吉尼亚·朱弗雷于2025年4月自杀身亡。在她的回忆录中,她讲述了自己曾三次被迫与安德鲁王子发生性关系,其中一次她仅17岁,当时她正处于杰弗里·爱泼斯坦的控制之下。

爱泼斯坦于2019年在狱中去世,当时他正等待审判。安德鲁王子一直否认弗吉尼亚·朱弗雷的指控。2022年,他与朱弗雷达成和解,结束了在美国的法律诉讼。



黄仁勋警示:“中国将在人工智能竞赛中获胜”

7 November 2025 at 05:45
06/11/2025 - 22:18

这究竟是警钟长鸣,还是失败者的哀嚎?尽管由于中美贸易战,英伟达在中国市场几乎被彻底抹杀,但其首席执行官黄仁勋仍直言不讳。他在《金融时报》上直言道:“中国将赢得人工智能竞赛。”为了佐证自己的观点,黄仁勋指出中国拥有两大优势:更低的能源成本和更宽松的监管环境。

在他看来,美国和英国之所以在人工智能竞赛中落后,是因为它们的犬儒主义。

为了缓和自己的口吻,他又表示,美国必须通过不断前进并吸引全球开发者来赢得这场竞争。” 言下之意:我被狠狠训了一顿,现在我不再说我们会输,而是说我们会领先中国,而且我们应该保持领先地位(当然,英伟达也应该如此)。

在《金融时报》的文章中,黄仁勋指出美国各州通过了新的人工智能法规,这些法规可能会导致“50项新规”。他认为,中国采取了截然相反的做法,通过大量的能源补贴帮助中国企业以更低的成本使用英伟达芯片的替代品。他用一句颇为激进的话概括了这一发展趋势:“电是免费的。”

最近,多家公司抱怨称,如果无法获得英伟达芯片,它们将失去竞争力。英伟达芯片的能效远高于华为和寒武纪(Cambricon)科技等中国竞争对手。在等待更高效芯片的同时,解决方案是什么?降低能源成本。

英伟达首席执行官最近发表的措辞更为强硬的言论,正值特朗普似乎不愿放松贸易限制之际。关于这家绿色标志巨头最先进的Blackwell架构,他告诉CBS:“我们不会允许它们落入美国以外的任何国家手中。我们会允许他们用英伟达的芯片与(中国)进行交易,但不会用最先进的芯片。”

在人工智能竞赛中,随着DeepSeek模型在今年1月的发布,竞争愈发激烈。DeepSeek模型以远低于美国巨头的价格,提供了非常令人满意的性能。

快时尚零售商希音在法国再遭抵制

7 November 2025 at 05:45
06/11/2025 - 22:22

格勒诺布尔绿党市长埃里克·皮奥尔(Eric Piolle)11月5日致公开信,要求百货公司业主SGM集团总裁弗雷德里克·梅林(Frédéric Merlin)暂停Shein在格勒诺布尔的开业计划,直至其产品合法性得到保证。

皮奥尔在公开信中写道:“我今天要求您暂停Shein在格勒诺布尔的开业计划,直到其管理层向我们的民选代表提供所有必要的保证,以确保贵公司销售的产品合法性得到控制和核实。”这家超人气时尚巨头计划于11月18日在格勒诺布尔巴诗威百货商场BHV(由SGM集团运营,前身为老佛爷百货)内开设实体店。

皮奥尔在社交媒体上补充道:“在格勒诺布尔,我们拒绝欢迎践踏尊严、道德和可持续发展价值观的品牌。”这位市长拒绝与Shein首席执行官唐伟(Donald Tang)会面。他谴责该品牌“体现了超快时尚最恶劣的弊端”,并提及该品牌线上销售平台曝光的“新丑闻:出售儿童色情制品,以及违禁武器”。

法新社联系百货公司业主SGM集团后,该集团回应称:“弗雷德里克·梅林已就巴诗威百货商场BHV与希因Shein之间的合作,充分阐述了产品质量和产地问题,这些产品质量和产地与第三方卖家在平台上销售的产品完全无关。”

该集团强调“目前的合作涉及质量可控的服装”,并补充说,他们已获得格勒诺布尔零售商的支持。据百货公司业主SGM提供的数据,希因Shein在巴黎巴诗威百货商场BHV开设的首家永久实体店于周三开业,当天吸引了近8000人次抢第一手货。

中国呼吁取消绿色产品关税

7 November 2025 at 05:45
06/11/2025 - 22:25

这项开创性的基金致力于保护热带雨林。马克龙总统在贝伦预备会议上表示,“我们必须重申十年前达成的《巴黎协定》的精神。我们应该选择“多边主义而非孤立主义”。

卢拉总统在亚马逊城市贝伦举行的启动仪式上宣布,该基金“将成为COP30的具体成果之一”。

巴西已承诺出资10亿美元,目标是从发起国政府筹集250亿美元。巴西还希望吸引私人投资者,主要是养老基金和主权财富基金,再投入1000亿美元。

丁薛祥副总理将作为习近平主席特别代表于11月6日出席贝伦气候峰会。 中国呼吁取消绿色产品关税。“各方携手,不懈推进绿色低碳发展”。丁学祥表示,国际社会必须“加强绿色科技产业领域的国际合作,消除贸易壁垒,确保优质绿色产品自由流通,更好地满足全球可持续发展的需求”。中方强调说,绿色低碳转型是时代潮流。

另外,在巴西举行的《联合国气候变化框架公约》第三十次缔约方大会(COP30),将是30年来首次没有美国高级代表参与的联合国气候变化峰会。作为全球第一大经济体和重要的地缘政治参与者,美国的缺席一度引发国际社会担忧,认为这将损害全球应对气候变化的进程。

 



联合国解除对叙过渡总统制裁 中国弃权

7 November 2025 at 05:45
06/11/2025 - 21:55

此前,针对与“伊斯兰国”和“基地”组织有关联的个人和团体的制裁包括旅行禁令、资产冻结和武器禁运。

决议特别赞赏了叙利亚新当局致力于“打击恐怖主义,包括外国恐怖主义战斗人员”、基地组织、“伊斯兰国”及其附属组织的承诺。美国驻联合国大使迈克·沃尔兹表示:“安理会通过这项决议,发出了一个强烈的政治信号,承认叙利亚正处于一个新时代。”

中国投了弃权票,其大使傅聪对叙利亚境内存在能够“利用”脆弱安全局势的“外国恐怖主义战斗人员”表示关切,并遗憾安理会未能充分评估局势。

艾哈迈德·沙拉领导的武装力量,包括他后来解散的“沙姆解放组织”(HTS),于2024年12月推翻了叙利亚前领导人巴沙尔·阿萨德。这位前圣战分子自2013年起就因担任HTS领导人而被列入联合国制裁名单。

HTS的前身是征服沙姆阵线(原名“努斯拉阵线”)是基地组织在叙利亚的前分支,但它在2016年与该圣战组织断绝了关系,并试图淡化自身形象。尽管被列入联合国制裁名单,这位临时总统自上任以来仍多次外访,每次都获得了联合国制裁委员会的豁免。

他于去年九月首次访问美国,并在联合国大会上发表讲话。美国总统特朗普的发言人卡罗琳·莱维特几天前宣布,他将于周一到访白宫,成为首位到访白宫的叙利亚国家元首。

发言人指出,特朗普在五月访问海湾地区期间宣布解除美国对叙利亚的制裁,而解除制裁将是周一会晤的重要议题。



Clerical error may have been behind release of missing sex offender

7 November 2025 at 04:11
PA Media Handout body worn camera video grab issued by the Metropolitan Police dated 09/09/25 of the arrest of 24-year-old Algerian national Brahim Kaddour Cherif - he has a goatee and is wearing a baseball cap, being led into the back of a police van PA Media

More details have emerged about the circumstances surrounding the release in error of convicted sex offender Brahim Kaddour-Cherif as a hunt continues for the missing prisoner.

He is one of two men separately released by mistake from Wandsworth Prison in the past week. William (Billy) Smith has since handed himself in.

The BBC has established Kaddour-Cherif was released on 29 October, the day after being found not guilty of a breach of the sex offenders' register's requirements, but he was still facing other charges and should have remained in custody.

The prison officers' representatives said a clerical error meant there was no warrant from the court to hold him - and he was released.

This release comes after a series of prosecutions and court appearances by him dating back two years.

These cases came about three years after the Algerian national was flagged in February 2020 as a probable visa overstayer, having entered the UK legally on a visitor's visa in 2019.

It is not clear what, if any, steps were taken five years ago to remove him from the country.

We know from government statements that the 24-year-old was in the early stages of deportation at the time of his release.

Outstanding criminal cases would be a reason for any proposed removal from the UK to have been delayed by the Home Office.

The releases of Kaddour-Cherif and William Smith come just weeks after migrant sex offender Hadush Kebatu, who arrived in the UK on a small boat, was mistakenly released from HMP Chelmsford in Essex.

Court appearances and offences

Court records reveal that the 24-year-old has been accused of 11 offences since September 2023 - his conviction and sentence for an indecent exposure, committed in March 2024, being one of them.

Another offence he admitted was assault of a police officer. He pleaded guilty to that offence and possession of cocaine, both also committed in March 2024, at a hearing in February this year.

He separately admitted a relatively minor charge of assaulting a man in public, receiving a conditional discharge plus an order to pay the victim £100 in compensation.

In July 2024, Kaddour-Cherif admitted the indecent exposure allegation.

His sentencing for that was put off a number of times - and in October 2024 Westminster Magistrates' Court remanded him in custody in relation to that matter.

He was held in Wormwood Scrubs prison in west London and then received an 18-month community order and was placed on the sex offender register for five years. That register requires an offender to report there whereabouts to the police.

Recent events

By June 2025, records show Kaddour Cherif was inside Colnbrook Immigration Removal Centre, near Heathrow Airport.

That suggests there was a plan to remove him from the UK.

But by late July he had left that institution. We know this because he was arrested in September by the Met Police on suspicion of breaching the sex offenders' register - the allegation being that he had failed to notify officers that he had left custody.

After that arrest, he was taken to Wandsworth Prison, from where he was later accidentally released.

The Metropolitan Police said it was not made aware of his release until 4 November.

That came after after he had been found not guilty of the alleged breach of the sex offender register's requirements. Kaddour-Cherif had denied the charge and City of London Magistrates' Court dismissed the case against him.

But Mark Fairhurst, from the Prison Officers' Association, told BBC News he believes there was a clerical error by the court.

He said governors were not aware, after that acquittal, that Kaddour-Cherif had further court dates on other matters.

"It's my understanding that there was a mix up with the warrants," he said.

"So when that person returned from court, we didn't actually have the authority to hold him in custody, because we didn't have a further warrant which outlined those further charges.

"So somewhere along the way, there's been a clerical error."

Hundreds of protesters at Aston Villa v Maccabi Tel Aviv match

7 November 2025 at 04:31
Reuters Pro-Palestinian protesters gather outside the stadium before the match. A man with a hi-vis jacket has a loudspeaker. The group are carrying flags.Reuters
Pro-Palestinian protesters have gathered outside the stadium, ahead of the match

The policing operation under way around the controversial Aston Villa match against Maccabi Tel Aviv is "unprecedented", Birmingham's police commander has said.

More than 700 officers are out in the city for the Uefa Europa League match, which kicks off at 20:00 GMT, alongside police horses, dogs, drones and roads units.

Ch Supt Tom Joyce said at least half a dozen groups were expected to protest including pro-Palestinian and pro-Israeli groups as well as the far right.

"We police football matches a lot. We police protests a lot. We deal with all sorts of public order scenarios, but certainly the level of interest, the level of concern around this match is pretty unprecedented," he said.

PA Media The Aston Villa team bus arrives before the UEFA Europa League match at Villa Park, Birmingham. It is dark outside and the bus has its lights on in front of the lit-up stadium. The sign says Aston Villa Team Coach.PA Media
The team bus arrived a couple of hours before kick-off

Outside the stadium, hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters gathered before the game, waving flags and banners calling for an end to violence in Gaza.

Five flatbed vehicles were driven past the ground prior to kick-off of the Europa League match, carrying electronic billboards showing messages opposing antisemitism.

One of the messages, beside a Star of David, read "Ban hatred not fans" while another carried a quote from Thierry Henry saying football is not about goals but bringing people together.

Extremist fans

Aston Villa announced last month that no Maccabi Tel Aviv fans would be welcome at the match, a decision made by Birmingham's Safety Advisory Group following intelligence from West Midlands Police.

The Guardian reported the force's intelligence concluded the biggest risk of violence came from extremist fans of the Israeli club, with scores of fans connected to a past history of violence and shouting "racist taunts" likely to travel to Birmingham.

The decision was the focus of parliamentary-level debate and led to MPs questioning West Midlands Police about the move, but Chief Constable Craig Guildford stood by it.

Maccabi Tel Aviv later said supporters would not travel to Birmingham for safety reasons.

PA Media Pro-Palestinian campaigners stage a demo outside Villa Park. Many are carrying flags and waving them. There is a banner that says "stop arming Israel". The stadium building is behind them with the lights on inside.PA Media
At least half a dozen groups were expected to protest

On Thursday, numbers of officers from the West Midlands force were boosted by police from 10 forces across the country.

Ch Supt Joyce said police had prepared for the possibility of people turning up looking for a fight.

"We've absolutely planned for that contingency," he said.

"We recognise that those groups who won't engage with this are probably turning up with different motives to those who want to protest lawfully.

"The policing operation you can see is partly a reflection of the need to deal with that."

PA Media A women named Emily carrying an Israel flag is moved away by police officers from pro Palestine campaigners, who are protesting on Trinty Road outside Villa Park.PA Media
Police are working to keep about half a dozen groups apart

Officers were deployed to the city centre by 13:30, amid reports of some protesters arriving early.

Police are using Section 60 powers in an area stretching from Aston and Perry Barr to Birmingham New Street and the city centre, which started at midday and run until 03:00 on Friday.

Ahead of the game, those living and working in the city near Villa Park saw shops and schools close early.

Meanwhile, Jewish Villa fan Elliot Ludvig said he was apprehensive about attending the match.

Mr Ludvig, who will attend with his son, told the BBC: "I'm apprehensive about what's going to happen. I'm apprehensive about the potential for violence for one thing.

"I'm apprehensive about various unpleasantries that we might encounter along the way, both outside the stadium and inside the stadium."

EPA Police officers have gathered from forces across the country, and are here assembling outside the Aston Villa ground.EPA
More than 700 police are out on in the city for the match, which has caused controversy for weeks

'Football unites us'

He said his other major emotion was "disappointment".

"Is it worth going to a football game to potentially put myself at some sort of risk and or expose my son to to all sorts of unpleasantries which you might not want to?," he asked.

Those who called for calm included one fan group, the Punjabi Villans, which urged people to respect each other and for everyone to get home safely, posting on social media: "We're in this together. Football unites us."

Elliot Ludvig sits at home with a bookcase and pictures behind him. He is wearing a light blue shirt and his Villa fan shirt is next to him on a chair. He is looking at the camera with a concerned expression.
Elliot Ludvig said he was apprehensive and disappointed

On Wednesday night, the chief executive of Maccabi Tel Aviv said it was "incredibly sad" his side's fans could not be there, adding: "Politics should never be drawn into football."

Planned protests include two by supporters of Palestine, who have been calling for the match to be called off.

The BBC has also been told a Maccabi Solidarity Rally has also been organised to coincide with the match.

On Monday, Naeem Malik, chair of West Midlands Palestine Solidarity Campaign, said there had been national outrage over the hosting of the Israeli team.

"The calls to cancel this match have been ignored despite the risks that it carries, therefore we must urge activists to unite in protest against this match," he said.

Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Stop the War Coalition, Muslim Association of Britain, Friends of Al-Aqsa, Kashmir solidarity campaign and Palestinian Forum in Britain had called for the match to be cancelled and jointly organised one of the protests.

Reuters Protesters hold signs outside the stadium before the match. They have Palestinian flags. Two signs say "boycotts not bullets" and "take the foot off their necks and get off our pitch".Reuters
Protesters have turned up with placards and flags

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Southport killer's parents failed girls, families say

7 November 2025 at 03:23
Family photos Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Alice da Silva Aguiar were killed in the 29 July 2024 attackFamily photos
Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Alice da Silva Aguiar were killed in the 29 July 2024 attack

The families of the three girls murdered in the Southport attacks have condemned the killer's parents for failing to take responsibility and "staying silent" when they knew how dangerous their son was.

Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, Bebe King, six, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, were killed by Axel Rudakubana, then 17, in a knife attack in 2024.

The girls' families said "deeply distressing" evidence from the killer's parents, heard at the Southport Inquiry, showed "this tragedy was not inevitable. It was the result of neglect".

The killer's parents apologised to the families at the hearing, saying they were "profoundly sorry" for their "failure".

Elsie's parents, Jenni and David Stancombe, said they believed the killer's parents, Alphonse Rudakubana and Laetitia Muzayire, "should be held to account for what they allowed to happen".

"They knew how dangerous he was, yet they stayed silent," they said.

"They failed not only as parents but as members of our society."

The killer's parents "knew his behaviour was escalating" in the months, weeks, and days before the attack, they said, "and still, they did nothing".

They accused them of showing "no real remorse or acceptance of the devastation their son caused".

PA Media Bunches of flowers and teddies lined up against a wall next to a road sign reading Tithebarn Road.PA Media
The girls' families said the evidence at the inquiry into the killings was "deeply distressing"

Alex and Sergio Aguiar said the system had failed their beloved Alice, Bebe and Elsie.

"This tragedy was not inevitable," they said.

"It was the result of neglect - neglect by those who should have known better, and by a system that repeatedly ignored warning signs.

"The institutions and authorities whose role it is to safeguard children failed in their most essential function and because of those failures, we have lost everything."

Bebe's parents, Lauren and Ben King, added: "What we're struggling to comprehend is not just [the killer's parents'] failure then, but their failure now - to acknowledge, to take responsibility, to face up to what they allowed to happen.

"But this isn't just about the actions of one family.

"This is about the repeated failings of agencies and professionals who should have known better - who did know better - and still did nothing."

'Desperately sorry'

The statements followed Mr Rudakubana and Ms Muzayire giving evidence at the public inquiry into the killings.

The couple who gave their evidence via videolink, which could be heard but not seen by the public and press, both apologised to the victims' families.

Ms Muzayire, who moved to the UK from Rwanda with her husband in 2002, said her family had come to the inquiry with "broken hearts".

"There are no words that can ever be enough to express our grief and remorse for the children whose lives were taken or forever changed by our son's actions," she said.

She said there were "many things" she and her husband wished they had done differently.

"[For] our failure, we are profoundly sorry," she added.

During his second day of evidence, Mr Rudakubana said he was "desperately sorry" for the families of the victims, and was "so ashamed" he "lost the courage to save their little angels".

Nicholas Bowen KC, representing the bereaved families, told him: "They have complete disdain for your excuses and the manner in which you have answered questions."

Mr Bowen was then stopped by inquiry chairman Sir Adrian Fulford, who told him: "That's not appropriate at all."

The girls' parents issued their statements as the inquiry concluded its first phase. A second phase of the inquiry is expected to focus on the risk posed by young people with a fixation or obsession with acts of extreme violence.

Rudakubana, 18, is serving a minimum 52-year sentence for the murders.

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World leaders take aim at Trump for climate inaction ahead of COP30

7 November 2025 at 03:33
Pablo Porciuncula/AFP Brazilian President Lula stands behind a white podium with the words "Belém COP30". On the podium is a glass of water. Lula is in a blue suit his hands pointing forward and his mouth open mid-speech.Pablo Porciuncula/AFP
Brazilian President Lula warned of "extremist forces" when he addressed world leaders at the global climate summit

President Trump was under attack on Thursday as world leaders lined up to criticise his stance on climate change ahead of the global COP30 summit.

The US leader, who is absent from the gathering in the Amazonian city of Belém, was called a liar for his rejection of climate science and being "against humankind" for his rollback of key climate policies.

UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer acknowledged the waning political consensus on the issue. He said climate change was once a unity issue but "today however, sadly that consensus is gone".

Over the next two weeks countries will try and negotiate a new deal on climate change, with a particular focus on channelling more money to forest protection.

Many leaders from the world's largest nations – India, Russia, US and China - are notably absent from this year's summit.

And whilst President Trump isn't attending this meeting in Belém, his views on climate change are certainly on the minds of many of the other leaders present.

Speaking at the UN in September, the US president said that climate change was "the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world".

Without naming the US leader, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil warned of "extremist forces that fabricate fake news and are condemning future generations to life on a planet altered forever by global warming".

The leaders of Chile and Colombia went further, calling the US president a liar, and asking other countries to ignore US efforts to move away from climate action.

But while Trump-bashing went down well with the audience, getting agreement on new steps to tackle warming is proving much harder.

Only a few dozen leaders have turned up here in Belém, and a majority of countries have failed to submit new plans to cut carbon emissions, the root cause of rising temperatures.

Anderson Coelho/Getty Images A spit of land jets out into the sea. The land is populated with trees, low lying house and roads winding through the forest.Anderson Coelho/Getty Images
Belém, a Brazilian city nestled in the Amazon rainforest, is the host for this year's COP30 climate summit

Despite UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer acknowledging that global political support for the climate movement is waning, he told the gathering of those that were present: "My message is that the UK is all in."

However, on Wednesday night, in a blow to the Brazilian hosts, the UK chose to opt out of its flagship $125bn (£95bn) fund to support the world's rainforests.

President Lula hoped that $25bn could be raised for the Tropical Forests Forever Facility from public sources – mainly from developed countries like the UK – to support governments and communities protecting the world's rainforests like the Amazon and the Congo Basin.

The protection of these ecosystems is crucial for tackling climate change - they cover just 6% of the world's land, yet store billions of tonnes of planet-warming gases and host half of the planet's species.

The move by the UK has come as a surprise as it had been heavily involved in the fund's design, and launched a global commitment for countries to halt deforestation by 2030 when it hosted the COP summit in Glasgow in 2021.

Lord Zach Goldsmith, who worked on the issue when he was former environment minister, told the BBC's PM programme: "The assumption was that the UK would be a leading participant and at the last minute the UK has walked away. It has caused real frustration to put it mildly here in Brazil.. the Brazilian government behind the scenes is furious."

The decision also seems at odds with the stance of the Prince of Wales. Also addressing leaders on Thursday he declared the fund "a visionary step toward valuing nature's role in climate stability" and shortlisted it for his £1m Earthshot Prize.

Ricardo Makyn/AFP/Getty Images The aftermath of Hurricane Melissa is seen. Power lines, trees and houses have fallen down across a street. Rubble is strewn everywhere. The houses that remain are a mixed of brown, yellow and bright blue. A man in a pink top attempts to cycle through the debris.Ricardo Makyn/AFP/Getty Images
Countries will negotiate on how to raise finance to support those impacted by climate change

Prince William tried to encourage leaders to overcome their differences and move forward with action.

"I have long believed in the power of urgent optimism: the conviction that, even in the face of daunting challenges, we have the ingenuity and determination to make a difference, and to do so now," he said.

And he urged them to take action for the sake of their children and grandchildren.

"Let us rise to this moment with the clarity that history demands of us. Let us be the generation that turned the tide - not for applause, but for the quiet gratitude of those yet to be born," he said.

From Monday, countries will spend two weeks negotiating further action on climate change - with crucial questions on how to raise finance previously pledged for those already impacted by the worst impacts of climate change.

The last few weeks have seen devastating extreme weather globally.

Hurricane Melissa, which hit the Caribbean last week, is one of the strongest the island nations have ever experienced - resulting in the deaths of more than 75 people.

Recent analysis from Imperial College has suggested that climate change increased the extreme rainfall associated with the Category 5 hurricane by 16%.

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Judge Orders Trump Administration to Fully Fund SNAP Benefits This Month

By: Tony Romm
7 November 2025 at 05:19
A federal judge rebuked the administration for the way it tried to fund only partial benefits to food stamp recipients.

© Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as SNAP or food stamps, provides aid to about one in eight Americans.

Sexual Assault of the President Exposes Mexico’s Endemic Machismo

President Claudia Sheinbaum was groped on the street this week, in an episode that set off a national conversation about what has and has not changed since Mexico elected its first female leader.

© Henry Romero/Reuters

President Claudia Sheinbaum during a news conference in Mexico City on Monday.

Mamdani Allies Create a Nonprofit to Push His Affordability Agenda

7 November 2025 at 05:49
A new group will solicit donations to replicate Zohran Mamdani’s grass-roots army of volunteers and to help build momentum for his proposals.

© Vincent Alban/The New York Times

Zohran Mamdani faces a big challenge in trying to implement his agenda, especially higher taxes on the wealthy.

When Will Zohran Mamdani Be Sworn In as NYC Mayor?

7 November 2025 at 04:45
Zohran Mamdani will take charge just after midnight on Jan. 1, 2026, as required by city law. A swearing-in ceremony will follow soon after.

© Amir Hamja for The New York Times

Zohran Mamdani has not yet publicly discussed plans for his swearing-in ceremony.

Britain Faces Up to Tough Economic Choices. Finally, Economists Say.

7 November 2025 at 04:19
The central bank held interest rates steady on Thursday, a decision that came at a time when British policymakers and lawmakers are confronting economic challenges.

© Sam Bush for The New York Times

The Bank of England kept rates at 4 percent amid persistent inflation concerns.

What Travelers Need to Know About the Shutdown, Flight Reductions and Delays

As the government shutdown continues, more challenges await passengers as they deal with the newest announcement from the Trump administration: a 10 percent cut in flights at 40 U.S. airports.

© Mario Tama/Getty Images

A 10 percent cutback in flights at 40 airports across the U.S. is likely to affect major hubs like Los Angeles International Airport as well as ripple out to some smaller destinations.

COP30 Begins With U.S. Allies and Rivals Alike Calling for Action

The calls for action on opening day stood in sharp contrast to the position of the President Trump, who has called global warming a “con job.”

© Pablo Porciuncula/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Leaders meeting on Thursday in Belém, Brazil. The conference is scheduled to run through Nov. 21.

Republicans Retire Pelosi as a Villain, and Turn to Mamdani

7 November 2025 at 04:16
Searching for another liberal boogeyman, Republicans have zeroed in on Zohran Mamdani. Whether their strategy will work in the midterms is less clear.

© New York Times photographs by Andri Tambunan and Vincent Alban

Republicans hope to turn Zohran Mamdani, the newly elected mayor of New York City, into the next national-level villain after Nancy Pelosi. They think the 34-year-old democratic socialist vividly illustrates their argument that the Democratic Party has swung hard to the left.

Trump Team Now Claims Its Trillions in Tariff Revenue Are ‘Incidental’

In arguments before the Supreme Court, the White House backed away from its claims that President Trump’s tariffs were about raising revenue.

© Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times

When the White House’s solicitor general defended the president’s use of tariffs before the Supreme Court on Wednesday, he said it was “only incidental” that the tariffs collected revenue.

Key Questions From Conservative Justices in the Tariffs Case

7 November 2025 at 04:32
A lively argument spanning almost three hours featured illuminating exchanges that tested the usual commitments of some of the justices on the right side of the court.

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

The administration said that a 1977 law, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, authorized President Trump to impose his vast tariffs program.
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