特朗普宣布延长对华关税休战期三个月
特朗普宣布延长对华关税休战期三个月



中国常驻联合国代表傅聪在联合国安理会的公开辩论会上,驳斥美国在巴拿马运河问题上对中国的指责抹黑。
据新华社报道,傅聪星期一(8月11日)在联合国安理会海上安全问题高级别公开辩论会上说,近一段时间,美国代表团多次在安理会借各种议题对中国进行无理指责和抹黑,中方对此坚决反对。
他指出,中方一贯尊重巴拿马对运河的主权,承认巴拿马运河作为永久中立国际水道的地位。美方炮制谎言、无端攻击中国,无非是为它控制巴拿马运河制造借口。中方坚决反对经济胁迫和霸凌行径,敦促美方停止造谣生事。
傅聪称,美国是破坏南中国海和平稳定的最大搅局者。美方在南中国海地区部署包括陆基中程导弹在内的进攻性武器,频繁派遣大规模舰机到南中国海搞军事侦察和演习,在别国的家门口耀武扬威、横冲直撞,无非是想把南中国海搅乱,服务美国的地缘战略私利。
他表示,美国的霸权和冷战思维、单边主义行径正急剧推升全球海上安全风险。美国至今未加入《联合国海洋法公约》,不愿履行相关义务;无视国际法和国际海底管理局警告,单方面决定开发国际海底资源,抢夺全人类共同财产;公然恐吓巴拿马运河、苏伊士运河的正常运营,肆意挑战他国主权;将涉海事务泛安全化,阻碍海上基础设施建设,破坏产业链、供应链稳定。中方敦促美方深刻反思,切实承担起大国应尽的责任。
据香港《南华早报》报道,美国驻巴拿马大使卡布雷拉上星期三(6日)呼吁,将剔除中资企业掌控巴拿马运河的关键港口,以遏制北京在当地的影响力。
卡布雷拉批评负责运营巴拿马港口的巴拿马港务公司,后者是香港长和集团旗下的子公司。卡布雷拉称,华盛顿支持撤换这家公司。
中国经济学家、北京大学新结构经济学研究院教授林毅夫星期二(8月12日)在中国官媒《人民日报》撰文说,习近平经济思想内涵上继承和发展了马克思主义政治经济学,在外延上借鉴和超越了西方经济学,是立足国情、放眼世界、引领未来的科学理论,为中国准确把握经济社会发展规律、推进社会主义经济建设提供了科学指引。
林毅夫说,经济工作是党和国家的中心工作,做好经济工作是中国共产党治国理政的重大任务。中共总书记习近平经济思想是习近平新时代中国特色社会主义思想的重要组成部分,是以习近平为核心的中共中央不断推进理论创新、实践创新、制度创新在经济领域的集中体现。
他说,习近平经济思想在内涵上继承和发展了马克思主义政治经济学,在外延上借鉴和超越了西方经济学,为中国准确把握经济社会发展规律、推进社会主义经济建设提供了科学指引。
他说,习近平经济思想在新的时代条件下,坚持马克思主义政治经济学的基本原理和方法,基于改革开放后特别是新时代以来的伟大实践,原创性地发展了马克思主义政治经济学,深刻回答了马克思主义经典作家没有讲过、前人从未遇到过的许多重大理论和现实问题。
这其中,一个重要方面就是发展马克思主义生产力理论。《习近平经济文选》多篇文章结合新时代的创新实践,对发展马克思主义政治经济学作出概括,尤其是对构建新的生产力理论作出深刻论述。比如,《依法规范和引导我国资本健康发展,发挥资本作为重要生产要素的积极作用》指出:“深化社会主义市场经济条件下资本理论研究,用科学理论指导实践,促进各类资本良性发展、共同发展,发挥其发展生产力、创造社会财富、增进人民福祉的作用”等等。
习近平关于新质生产力的重要论述,对传统政治经济学只讨论在给定生产力边界条件下调整生产关系来释放生产力,而不讨论如何推动生产力边界拓展的理论局限进行了突破与创新,在学理上形成了能够对包括产业和技术结构、基础设施结构、制度结构等如何决定一个经济体生产力发展进行解释的理论体系,丰富发展了马克思主义生产力理论,是马克思主义政治经济学中国化时代化的重大理论创新成果。
林毅夫在文中说,习近平经济思想强调扎实推进新型工业化、信息化、城镇化、农业现代化,并把高质量发展的要求贯穿新型工业化全过程、注重在推进新型工业化的同时加快经济发展全面绿色转型等,打破了西方“先污染后治理”“先工业化后信息化”的线性教条,走出了跨越式发展道路。
又如,西方经济学的许多理论是建立在中小规模国家发展经验基础上的,往往忽视国家规模对经济发展的深刻影响。中国作为一个拥有14亿多人口的超大规模国家,人口总量超过现有发达国家人口总和。比如,随着粮食需求刚性增长,端牢中国饭碗的压力仍然较大;随着人口结构变化,创造新增就业岗位必须付出更大努力等。这种超大规模难题,在西方经济学理论库中找不到答案。
习近平经济思想立足发挥中国规模优势,提出一系列原创性思想:立足超大规模国内市场构建新发展格局,通过建立起扩大内需的有效制度,释放内需潜力,加快培育完整内需体系,加强需求侧管理,扩大居民消费,提升消费层次,使建设超大规模的国内市场成为一个可持续的历史过程等。这些实践突破了西方“小政府、大市场”的治理教条,展现出大国治理智慧。西方经济学无法理解这种“大国发展逻辑”,更无法提供应对超大规模难题的方案。
习近平经济思想强调必须把顶层设计和摸着石头过河结合起来、必须在法治轨道上推进改革、必须正确处理改革发展稳定的关系等,指引中国成功续写了经济快速发展和社会长期稳定“两大奇迹”新篇章,避免了完善体制机制过程中可能出现的社会风险。
中国改革开放特别是新时代以来创造的发展奇迹,源于社会主义经济制度的自我完善与发展。这一奇迹的密码,在于对经济制度的中国特色的深刻把握、坚持与发展。习近平经济思想在守正创新的基础上,坚持和完善社会主义基本经济制度,彰显了经济制度的中国特色。
在实践中,中国推动形成国有经济与民营经济相辅相成、共同发展的格局,国有企业在关系国家安全、国民经济命脉的重要行业和关键领域发挥“压舱石”作用,在重大战略实施、公共服务提供中承担主体责任;民营企业在创新创造、吸纳就业、活跃市场等方面展现出强大活力,成为推动经济增长的重要力量。
习近平经济思想强调使市场在资源配置中起决定性作用,更好发挥政府作用,形成了有效市场和有为政府相结合的独特的资源配置机制,既避免了市场失灵的弊端,又克服了政府干预的低效。
中国经济从高速增长阶段到高质量发展阶段的历史性跨越,充分证明了经济制度的中国特色决定了理论指导的独特性。构建中国经济学自主知识体系,不是否定西方经济学的合理成分,而是要打破教条束缚,从中国经济制度的实际出发总结规律、创新理论。
习近平经济思想既扎根于中国制度土壤,又回应了人类对更好发展制度的探索,为世界经济发展贡献了中国智慧与中国方案。习近平经济思想作为马克思主义政治经济学中国化时代化的最新成果,是新时代中国经济发展实践经验的科学总结和理论升华。
当前,中国经济运行依然面临不少风险挑战,要深入学习贯彻习近平经济思想,利用好发展机遇、潜力和优势,巩固拓展经济回升向好势头,不断推动高质量发展取得新成效,扎实推进和拓展中国式现代化,为实现中华民族伟大复兴的中国梦而不懈奋斗。
中共中央对外联络部副部长马辉上星期五(8月8日)在北京会见新任拉美和加勒比国家驻华使团团长、多米尼克驻华大使马丁·查尔斯。
中联部官网星期一(8月11日)发布这项消息,并称双方就中拉、中多关系及党际交往等双方共同关心的问题交换了意见。
中国商务部公布中美联合声明称,两国自星期二(8月12日)起再次暂停实施24%的关税90天,同时保留对这些商品加征的剩余10%的关税。
中国商务部在官网发布消息称,中美政府星期二发布斯德哥尔摩经贸会谈联合声明,称忆及5月12日达成的中美日内瓦经贸会谈联合声明,以及考虑到双方6月9至10日伦敦会谈和7月28至29日斯德哥尔摩会谈;双方忆及日内瓦联合声明下所作承诺,并同意于星期二前采取有关举措:
美国将继续修改2025年4月2日第14257号行政令中规定的对中国商品(包括香港特别行政区和澳门特别行政区商品)加征从价关税的实施,自星期二起再次暂停实施24%的关税90天,同时保留按该行政令规定对这些商品加征的剩余10%的关税。
中国将继续修改税委会公告2025年第4号规定的对美国商品加征的从价关税的实施,自星期二起再次暂停实施24%的关税90天,同时保留对这些商品加征的剩余10%的关税;并根据日内瓦联合声明的商定,采取或者维持必要措施,暂停或取消针对美国的非关税反制措施。
据路透社、彭博社早前报道,中美关税休战协议原定于星期二凌晨零时01分(新加坡时间下午12时01分)到期,一名白宫官员星期一(11日)说,美国总统特朗普已签署行政令,延长对华关税宽限期。
根据协议,中美同意暂停相互征收报复性关税,并放宽对稀土磁铁和某些技术的出口限制。
依照中美代表团5月12日在瑞士日内瓦达成的90天协议,美国同意把中国关税从145%降至30%,其中包括10%的基准关税和针对芬太尼走私问题征收的20%关税;中国则把对美国产品关税从125%降至10%。
© Francis Chung/POLITICO
© Doug Mills/The New York Times
© Doug Mills/The New York Times
It was two months into their relationship when Dr Caroline Muirhead's new boyfriend confessed he had killed a man and left him in a shallow grave.
Alexander McKellar offered to take her to the spot where the body was buried – and her quick thinking was crucial in cracking a case which had baffled police for three years.
Caroline secretly dropped a can of Red Bull at the spot, in a remote estate in Argyll, then called police to tell them about the location.
The shallow grave contained the body of Tony Parsons, who had gone missing on a charity cycle ride three years earlier.
Tony's son Mike said that without Caroline's intervention, it was unlikely that his body would ever have been found – and expressed the family's gratitude for what she had done.
The case is the subject of a new two-part documentary which reveals the twists and turns of the police investigation and the Parsons family's long wait for justice.
Mike Parsons told BBC Scotland News that his dad was the kind of man who was always determined to complete any challenge he set himself.
Tony had previously been treated for prostate cancer and wanted to give something back.
So he planned a 104-mile charity cycle from Fort William to his home in Tillicoultry, setting off on Friday 29 September 2017 and cycling through the night.
Mike said his family started to become concerned when Tony had not contacted them by Saturday night.
"I actually texted him myself, with what is my dad and myself's sense of humour, a simple text: 'Are you still alive?'
"Looking back now, it's not nice to know that was the very last thing I texted to him, knowing at this point he would have been passed away."
Tony was subsequently reported missing, sparking a major search operation.
Police knew he passed through Glencoe Village at about 18:00 on Friday before going on to the Bridge of Orchy Hotel in Argyll.
The last known sighting of him was at the hotel at 23:30 that night, before he headed south on the A82 in the direction of Tyndrum.
As the days progressed, former police officer Mike and his family grew increasingly concerned about Tony.
"I knew the timescales that would be involved," he said.
"The longer the days went on, I knew in my head that the chances of him being found alive would be pretty slim.
"But I basically had to convince my mum there was still a chance, and lying to somebody like that is not easy."
Despite numerous public appeals including an appearance by Mike on Crimewatch, it seemed that Tony Parsons had vanished into thin air.
Then, in late 2020, police received a phone call that would change everything.
The female caller was distressed.
She said she had information about a crime that had been committed three years earlier at Bridge of Orchy.
It concerned a hit and run, the concealment of a body, and lying to police.
She said the victim's name was Tony Parsons.
The caller was Dr Caroline Muirhead, the girlfriend of Alexander McKellar. Known as Sandy, he worked on a nearby estate with his twin brother Robert.
Police had spoken to the brothers after an anonymous letter in August 2018 said they were in the Bridge of Orchy Hotel the night Tony Parsons had vanished, but no further action was taken.
In June 2020, they were again questioned about Tony and confirmed being in the hotel with a hunting party that night. However, they said they had not seen the cyclist.
In November 2020, Caroline Muirhead and Alexander McKellar had been together for two months.
She asked her boyfriend if there was anything in his past which may affect their future together.
He told her he had hit Tony as he drove home from the hotel with his brother, but did not seek medical assistance.
It was later revealed that Tony's injuries were so bad that he would only have survived for 20 or 30 minutes without help - but it was unlikely that he had died instantly.
The twins left the area and came back to the site in another car before taking Tony's body to the Auch Estate, where they buried him.
Mike Parsons said: "What they did was inhumane and you wouldn't do that to animals.
"They killed him by not seeking any medical treatment."
After confessing to his girlfriend, Alexander McKellar led her to the shallow grave where Tony's body had been buried.
Caroline secretly dropped a Red Bull can as a marker for the spot, before later calling police.
Mike Parsons said she had shown "remarkable foresight."
"Being brutally honest, I'm not so sure if I was in the same situation I would have done and thought the same way.
"From my perspective, I have nothing but massive amounts of gratitude for that, because had she not done that and put herself into these positions, then we would never have found my dad's body."
Tony's body was recovered from the grave in January 2021 after a two-day operation by specialist officers.
He was found to have suffered "catastrophic" rib, pelvic and spine fractures following the collision.
Tony's funeral was held at Stirling Crematorium in April 2021.
The brothers were arrested and questioned twice by police, but were initially uncooperative, giving "no comment" interviews.
With the evidence against the twins mounting, police eventually charged the pair with murder.
In July 2023, shortly before their trial was due to begin at the High Court in Glasgow, Sandy McKellar admitted the reduced charge of culpable homicide.
His brother had his not guilty plea to murder accepted, but the pair both admitted attempting to defeat the ends of justice by covering up the crime.
Sandy McKellar was sentenced to 12 years in jail, while his brother was jailed for five years and three months.
Mike Parsons said that no sentence would ever be enough.
"They have left my mum without a husband and us without a father."
Mike said he would like his dad was remembered for the good he did in his life, rather than the circumstances of his death.
"For me, he was a grumpy old dad who you had your run-ins with every now and then," he says, smiling.
"But, I'd like people to remember him as just the guy who wanted to help everybody."
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President Donald Trump has said he will deploy hundreds of National Guard troops to Washington DC and is taking control of its police department to fight crime.
At a press conference, he declared "Liberation Day" for the city and pledged to "rescue our nation's capital from crime, bloodshed, bedlam and squalor and worse".
However, Mayor Muriel Bowser has said the city has "seen a huge decrease in crime" and that it was "at a 30-year violent crime low".
BBC Verify looks at what the figures show about violent crime in the capital and how it compares to other cities in the US.
Trump's executive order declaring "a crime emergency in the District of Columbia" mentions "rising violence in the capital". In his press conference he made repeated references to crime being "out of control".
But according to crime figures published by Washington DC's Metropolitan Police (MPDC), violent offences fell after peaking in 2023 and in 2024 hit their lowest level in 30 years.
They are continuing to fall, according to preliminary data for 2025.
Violent crime overall is down 26% this year compared to the same point in 2024, and robbery is down 28%, according to the MPDC.
Trump and the DC Police Union have questioned the veracity of the city police department's crime figures.
Violent crime is reported differently by the MPDC and the FBI - another major source of US crime statistics.
MPDC public data showed a 35% fall for 2024, while the FBI data showed a 9% drop.
So the figures agree that crime is falling in DC, but differ on the level of that decline.
The downward trend is "unmistakable and large", according to Adam Gelb, the CEO of the Council on Criminal Justice (CCJ), a legal think tank.
"The numbers shift depending on what time period and what types of crime you examine," said Mr Gelb.
"But overall there's an unmistakable and large drop in violence since the summer of 2023, when there were peaks in homicide, gun assaults, robbery, and carjacking."
Trump also claimed that "murders in 2023 reached the highest rate probably ever" in Washington DC - adding that numbers "just go back 25 years".
When we asked the White House the source for the figures, they said it was "numbers provided by the FBI".
The homicide rate did spike in 2023 to around 40 per 100,000 residents - the highest rate in 20 years, according to FBI data.
However, that was not the highest ever recorded - it was significantly higher in the 1990s and in the early 2000s.
The homicide rate dropped in 2024 and this year it is down 12% on the same point last year, according to the MPDC.
Studies have suggested that the capital's homicide rate is higher than average, when compared to other major US cities.
As of 11 August, there have been 99 homicides so far this year in Washington DC - including a 21-year-old congressional intern shot dead in crossfire, a case Trump referred to in his press conference.
The president also mentioned the case of a 19-year-old former employee of the Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) who was injured in an alleged attempted carjacking in the capital at the start of August.
Trump claimed "the number of carjackings has more than tripled" over the last five years.
So far this year, the MPDC has recorded 189 carjacking offences, down from 300 in the same period last year.
According to the CCJ, carjacking rose markedly from 2020 onward and spiked to a monthly peak of 140 reported incidents in June 2023.
Since July 2025, a citywide curfew has been in force for people under the age of 17 from 23:00 to 06:00.
It was introduced to combat juvenile crime - including carjacking - which often spikes in the summer months.
"The level of violence in the District remains mostly higher than the average of three dozen cities in our sample," Mr Gelb from the CCJ told us.
"Although it is consistent with what we're seeing in other large cities across the country," he added.
The CCJ looks at crime rates across 30 large US cities.
Its analysis suggests that the homicide rate in DC fell 19% in the first half of this year (January-June 2025), compared with the same period last year.
This is a slightly larger fall than the 17% average decline across the cities in the CCJ's study sample.
However, if you take the first six months of 2025 and compare it to the same period in 2019 - before the Covid-19 pandemic - it shows only a 3% fall in homicides.
Across the 30 cities in the study, that decrease was 14% over the same timeframe.
The US and China have extended their trade truce for 90 days just hours before a jump in tariffs had been set to kick in.
An executive order signed by US President Donald Trump on Monday keeps in place an agreement from May, when the two sides temporarily suspended some of the tariffs on each others' goods.
The US had warned higher tariffs could kick in on Tuesday unless that truce was extended.
Talks last month ended with both sides calling the discussions "constructive". China's top negotiator said at the time that both sides would push to preserve the truce, while US officials said they were waiting for final sign-off from Trump.
A return of higher duties would have risked further trade turmoil and uncertainty amid worries about the effect of tariffs on prices and the economy.
Trade tensions between the US and China reached fever pitch in April, after Trump unveiled sweeping new tariffs on goods from countries around the world, with China facing some of the highest levies.
Beijing retaliated with tariffs of its own, sparking a tit-for-tat fight that saw tariffs soar into the triple digits and nearly shut down trade between the two countries.
The two sides had agreed to set aside some of those measures in May.
That agreement left Chinese goods entering the US facing an additional 30% tariff compared with the start of the year, with US goods facing a new 10% tariff in China.
The two sides remain in discussions about issues including access to China's rare earths, its purchases of Russian oil, and US curbs on sales of advanced technology, including chips to China.
Trump recently relaxed some of those export restrictions, allowing firms such as AMD and Nvidia to resume sales of certain chips to firms in China in exchange for sharing 15% of their revenues with the government.
The US is also pushing for the spin-off of TikTok from its Chinese owner ByteDance, a move that has been opposed by Beijing.
Earlier on Monday in remarks to reporters, Trump did not commit to extending the truce but said dealings had been going "nicely". A day earlier he called on Beijing to increase its purchases of US soybeans.
Even with the truce, trade flows between the countries have been hit this year, with US government figures showing US imports of Chinese goods in June cut nearly in half compared with June 2024.
In the first six months of the year, the US imported $165bn (£130bn) worth of goods from China, down roughly 15% from the same time last year. American exports to China n roughly 20% year-on-year for the same period.
An explosion was reported at the US Steel Clairton plant outside Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on Monday, causing multiple injuries and trapping several people, officials say.
Allegheny County Emergency Services spokesperson Kasey Reigner confirmed there were "dozens" of injuries but could not confirm fatalities or a cause, CBS News reported.
Another spokesperson confirmed a rescue operation was underway for people trapped.
Governor Josh Shapiro posted on social media that the state's emergency management services and police had been deployed to the plant.
US Senator John Fetterman wrote on X that he was also at the scene and witnessed "an active search and rescue underway."
KDKA News, a local broadcaster, reported at least one person was unaccounted for.
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The bones of a British man who died in a terrible accident in Antarctica in 1959 have been discovered in a melting glacier.
The remains were found in January by a Polish Antarctic expedition, alongside a wristwatch, a radio, and a pipe.
He has now been formally identified as Dennis "Tink" Bell, who fell into a crevasse aged 25 when working for the organisation that became the British Antarctic Survey.
"I had long given up on finding my brother. It is just remarkable, astonishing. I can't get over it," David Bell, 86, tells BBC News.
"Dennis was one of the many brave personnel who contributed to the early science and exploration of Antarctica under extraordinarily harsh conditions," says Professor Dame Jane Francis, director of the British Antarctic Survey .
"Even though he was lost in 1959, his memory lived on among colleagues and in the legacy of polar research," she adds.
It was David who answered the door in his family home in Harrow, London, in July 1959.
"The telegram boy said, 'I'm sorry to tell you, but this is bad news'," he says. He went upstairs to tell his parents.
"It was a horrendous moment," he adds.
Talking to me from his home in Australia and sitting next to his wife Yvonne, David smiles as stories from his childhood in 1940s England spill out.
They are the memories of a younger sibling admiring a charming, adventurous big brother.
"Dennis was fantastic company. He was very amusing. The life and soul of wherever he happened to be," David says.
"One of the funniest things was, and I still can't get over this, one evening when me, my mother and father came home from the cinema," David continues.
"And I have to say this in fairness to Dennis, he had put a newspaper down on the kitchen table, but on top of it, he'd taken a motorbike engine apart and it was all over the table," he says.
"I can remember his style of dress, he always used to wear duffel coats. He was just an average sort of fellow who enjoyed life," he adds.
Dennis Bell, nicked-named "Tink", was born in 1934. He worked with the RAF and trained as a meteorologist, before joining the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey to work in Antarctica.
"He was obsessed with Scott's diaries," David says, referring to Captain Robert Scott who discovered the South Pole and died on an expedition in 1912.
Dennis went to Antarctica in 1958. He was stationed for a two-year assignment at Admiralty Bay, a small UK base with about 12 men on King George Island, which is roughly 120 kilometres (75 miles) off the northern coast of the Antarctic Peninsula.
The British Antarctica Survey keeps meticulous records and its archivist Ieuan Hopkins has dug out detailed base camp reports about Dennis's work and antics on the harsh and "ridiculously isolated" island.
Reading aloud, Mr Hopkins says: "He's cheerful and industrious, with a mischievous sense of humour and fondness for practical jokes."
Dennis's job was to send up meteorological weather balloons and radio the reports to the UK every three hours, which involved firing up a generator in sub-zero conditions.
Described as the best cook in the hut, he was in charge of the food store over the winter when no supplies could reach them.
Antarctica felt even more cut off than it is today, with extremely limited contact with home. David recalls recording a Christmas message at BBC studios with his parents and sister Valerie to be sent to his brother.
He was best known for his love of the husky dogs used to pull sledges around the island, and he raised two litters of dogs.
He was also involved in surveying King George Island to produce some of the first mapping of the largely unexplored place.
It was on a surveying trip that the accident happened, a few weeks after his 25th birthday.
On 26 July 1958, in the deep Antarctic winter, Dennis and a man called Jeff Stokes left the base to climb and survey a glacier.
Accounts in the British Antarctic Survey records explain what happened next and the desperate attempts to rescue him.
The snow was deep and the dogs had started to show signs of tiredness. Dennis went on ahead alone to encourage them, but he wasn't wearing his skis. Suddenly he disappeared into a crevasse, leaving a hole behind him.
According to the accounts, Jeff Stokes called into the depths and Dennis was able to shout back. He grabbed onto a rope that was lowered down. The dogs pulled on the rope and Dennis was hitched up to the lip of the hole.
But he had tied the rope onto his belt, perhaps because of the angle he lay in. As he reached the lip, the belt broke and he fell again. His friend called again, but this time Dennis didn't reply.
"That's a story I shall never get over," says David.
The base camp reports about the accident are business-like.
"We heard from Jeff […] that yesterday Tink fell down a crevasse and was killed. We hope to return tomorrow, sea ice permitting," it continues.
Mr Hopkins explains that another man, called Alan Sharman, had died weeks earlier, and the morale was very low.
"The sledge has got back. We heard the sad details. Jeff has badly bitten frostbitten hands. We are not taking any more risks to recover," the report reads the day after the accident.
Reading the reports again, Mr Hopkins discovered that earlier in the season, it had been Dennis who'd made the coffin for Alan Sharman.
"My mother never really got over it. She couldn't handle photographs of him and couldn't talk about him," David says.
He recalls that two men on Dennis's base visited the family, bringing a sheepskin as a gesture.
"But there was no conclusion. There was no service, there was no anything. Just Dennis gone," David says.
About 15 years ago, David was contacted by Rod Rhys Jones, chair of the British Antarctic Monument Trust.
Since 1944, 29 people have died working on British Antarctic Territory on scientific missions, according to the trust.
Rod was organising a voyage for relatives of some of the 29 to see the spectacular and remote place where their loved ones had lived and died.
David joined the expedition, called South 2015.
"The captain stopped at the locations and give four or five hoots of the siren," he says.
The sea ice was too thick for David to reach his brother's hut on King George Island.
"But it was very, very moving. It lifted the pressure, a weight off my head, as it were," he says.
It gave him a sense of closure.
"And I thought that would be it," he says.
But on 29 January this year, a team of Polish researchers working from the Henryk Arctowski Polish Antarctic Station stumbled across something practically on their doorstep.
Dennis had been found.
Some bones were in the loose ice and rocks deposited at the foot of Ecology Glacier on King George Island. Others were found on the glacier surface.
The scientists explain that fresh snowfall was imminent, and they put down a GPS marker so their "fellow polar colleague" would not be lost again.
A team of scientists made up of Piotr Kittel, Paulina Borówka and Artur Ginter at University of Lodz, Dariusz Puczko at the Polish Academy of Sciences and fellow researcher Artur Adamek carefully rescued the remains in four trips.
It's a dangerous and unstable place, "criss-crossed with crevasses", and with slopes of up to 45 degrees, according to the Polish team.
Climate change is causing dramatic changes to many Antarctic glaciers, including Ecology Glacier, which is undergoing intense melting.
"The place where Dennis was found is not the same as the place where he went missing," the team explains.
"Glaciers, under the influence of gravity, move their mass of ice, and with it, Dennis made his journey," they say.
Fragments of bamboo ski poles, remains of an oil lamp, glass containers for cosmetics, and fragments from military tents were also collected.
"Every effort was made to ensure that Dennis could return home," the team say.
"It's an opportunity to reassess the contribution these men made, and an opportunity to promote science and what we've done in the Antarctic over many decades," says Rod Rhys Jones.
David still seems overwhelmed by the news, and repeats how grateful he is to the Polish scientists.
"I'm just sad my parents never got to see this day," he says.
David will soon visit England where he and his sister, Valerie, plan to finally put Dennis to rest.
"It's wonderful, I'm going to meet my brother. You might say we shouldn't be thrilled, but we are. He's been found - he's come home now."
The death of a one-month-old baby girl who was the victim of female genital mutilation (FGM) in The Gambia has sparked widespread outrage.
The baby was rushed to a hospital in the capital, Banjul, after she developed severe bleeding, but was pronounced dead on arrival, police said.
Although an autopsy is still being conducted to establish the cause of her death, many people have linked it to FGM, or female circumcision, a cultural practice outlawed in the West African state.
"Culture is no excuse, tradition is no shield, this is violence, pure and simple," a leading non-governmental organisation, Women In Leadership and Liberation (WILL), said in a statement.
Two women had been arrested for their alleged involvement in the baby's death, police said.
The MP for the Kombo North District where the incident happened emphasised the need to protect children from harmful practices that rob them of their health, dignity, and life.
"The loss of this innocent child must not be forgotten. Let it mark a turning-point and a moment for our nation to renew its unwavering commitment to protecting every child's right to life, safety, and dignity," Abdoulie Ceesay said.
FGM is the deliberate cutting or removal of a female's external genitalia.
The most frequently cited reasons for carrying it out are social acceptance, religious beliefs, misconceptions about hygiene, a means of preserving a girl or woman's virginity, making her "marriageable", and enhancing male sexual pleasure.
The Gambia is among the 10 countries with the highest rates of FGM, with 73% of women and girls aged 15 to 49 having undergone the procedure, with many doing so before the age of six years.
WILL founder Fatou Baldeh told the BBC that there was an increase in FGM procedures being performed on babies in The Gambia.
"Parents feel that if they cut their girls when they're babies, they heal quicker, but also, because of the law, they feel that if they perform it at such a young age, it's much easier to disguise, so that people don't know," she said.
FGM has been outlawed in The Gambia since 2015, with fines and jail terms of up to three years for perpetrators, and life sentences if a girl dies as a result.
However, there have only been two prosecutions and one conviction, in 2023.
A strong lobby group has emerged to demand the decriminalisation of FGM, but legislation aimed at repealing the ban was voted down in parliament last year.
FGM is banned in more than 70 countries globally but continues to be practised particularly in Africa's Muslim-majority countries, such as The Gambia.
Go to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.
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香港豪宅市场低迷之际,中国电动汽车制造商小鹏汽车的副董事长兼联席总裁在港添置豪宅。
据彭博社报道,备案文件显示,顾宏地和妻子马婉仪上周斥资1.71亿港元(约2800万新元),在香港渣甸山地区买下一栋房屋。
包括地产大亨刘銮雄在内,许多社会名流和亿万富翁都住在这一地段。
顾宏地还曾于2016年在香港南区购置一处6000万港元的房产,南区也是富人青睐的地区。
中原地产的数据显示,香港住宅市场整体价格目前处于2016年9月前后的水平。
今年上半年,香港过亿港元住宅的成交量为56宗,较去年同期减少29%,总成交金额暴跌43%。
中国发布传染病疫情预警管理办法,将风险等级分为极低风险、低风险、中风险、高风险四级。
中国国家疾病预防控制局网站星期一(8月11日)公布了《传染病疫情预警管理办法(试行)》。
《管理办法》规定,各级疾病预防控制机构收集多渠道传染病监测信息,开展传染病疫情风险评估,识别可能存在的公共卫生风险,评价疫情风险等级。风险等级分为极低风险、低风险、中风险、高风险四级。风险等级为低风险及以上的,形成健康风险提示,提出警示信息通报、预警决策建议等建议。风险等级为极低风险的,继续做好常态化监测工作。
《管理办法》指出,风险评估等级为低风险,需要公众采取一定防护措施的,各级疾病预防控制机构向公众公布健康风险提示;风险评估等级为中风险,需要医疗卫生机构、风险关联部门和地区采取一定专业防范措施的,各级疾病预防控制机构应当向同级疾病预防控制部门提出警示信息通报的建议,同步做好健康风险提示;风险评估等级为高风险,各级疾病预防控制机构应当在2小时内向同级疾病预防控制部门提出发布传染病预警、依法采取预警措施的建议。
《管理办法》要求,各级疾病预防控制部门、疾病预防控制机构依据疫情风险发展态势,动态调整预警类型和内容。对于政府已向社会发布预警、根据疫情变化应当予以调整的,疾病预防控制部门提出预警调整建议,报请卫生健康部门报本级人民政府依法决定。
《管理办法》要求,各级疾病预防控制部门应当对本级疾病预防控制机构的健康风险提示,以及下级疾病预防控制部门的警示信息通报和预警决策建议加强指导,对发现的问题应当予以督促调整。如果传染病疫情未出现跨域扩散风险或风险等级未出现明显变化的,原则上,上级疾病预防控制机构不应对下级疾病预防控制机构发布的健康风险提示进行重复预警。
© Dado Galdieri for The New York Times
© Doug Mills/The New York Times
© Doug Mills/The New York Times
© Shelby Tauber for The New York Times
© Doug Mills/The New York Times
© Levine-Roberts/Sipa USA, via Reuters Connect
© Mary Altaffer/Associated Press
It's the bilateral summit every European leader wants to be at.
And for good reason. On Friday, Donald Trump is scheduled to meet Vladimir Putin in Alaska to discuss ending the war in Ukraine.
Territorial concessions will likely be discussed, and Europe (not least Ukraine) doesn't want its borders to be redrawn through force.
But, as things stand, there are no invites for the country being invaded, nor the continent it sits in.
"Brace ourselves for some pretty outrageous Russian demands," warns Lord Simon McDonald, a former head of the UK Foreign Office.
"It will be theatrical," he adds. "Putin is going to ask for things that nobody else would concede - with the possible exception of Donald Trump."
President Zelensky has said he won't agree to the giving up of any land, or even freezing the conflict along the current front lines.
His argument is that it won't slow a Russian war machine that has waged a full-scale war for more than three and a half years. Concessions, he claims, would only speed it up.
"It's clear Putin wants a photo with the most influential people on Earth, which is President Trump, and he wants sanctions to be postponed, which he'll probably get," the EU's foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, tells me.
"The question is, what is success for the US in the meeting?" she asks. "If President Zelensky is there, it would be a clear success."
But if Ukraine's leader isn't at the Alaskan table, how might the Kremlin's proposals be challenged?
"He could go," said the US president on that possibility. But Kyiv and Europe want it to go from a "maybe" to a "yes".
Adding to their anxiety is the one-on-one format being a Kremlin idea the White House agreed to.
Brussels' European Quarter isn't its usual flurry of political activity during August, but these US-Russia talks have changed that.
On Monday, Kallas hosted a virtual meeting of foreign ministers where they called for an unconditional ceasefire before any deal. New sanctions for Moscow were announced as well.
I asked Kallas what she thought Donald Trump meant by suggesting some land could be swapped.
"We have to ask President Trump," she says. "But it is clear an aggressor can't be awarded for aggression. Otherwise, we will just see more aggression around the world because it pays off."
Europe is trying to do two things: rally around Ukraine, as well as muscle in on this American-led peace process.
Whether or not Zelensky does make the trip, the door for Europe has firmly remained shut since Trump retook office at the start of the year.
At the time his envoy to Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, said the bloc wouldn't be involved in any peace talks. It's a position the Europeans have been unable to change through diplomacy.
Their relationship with the US has still improved, not least with significant increases in their defence spending. But Radoslaw Sikorski, Poland's foreign minister, believes they need a more central role.
"This is a matter of existential European security interest," he explains.
"We appreciate Trump's efforts but we'll be taking our own decision in Europe too.
"A simple ceasefire would not resolve the problem."
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has secured a remote sit down between European leaders, as well as Volodymyr Zelensky and Donald Trump, this Wednesday.
They hope to be consulted on America's plan to end Russia's invasion, but ex-UK Foreign Office head Lord McDonald would be surprised to see a last-minute European invite for Friday.
"The end will be as protracted as the war has been long," he warned.
"The meeting is a milestone, but it doesn't actually mean it will lead anywhere."
President Donald Trump has deployed the National Guard to Washington DC and taken control of the city's police force as he pledges to crack down on crime and homelessness in the nation's capital.
Trump declared a "public safety emergency" on Monday, deploying 800 National Guard troops who will bolster hundreds of federal law enforcement officers who were deployed over the weekend.
"It's becoming a situation of complete and total lawlessness," he told reporters at the White House.
The city's Mayor Muriel Bowser has rejected the president's claims about crime and while there was a spike in 2023, statistics show it has fallen since then. Violent crime in the city is also at a 30-year low.
"I'm announcing a historic action to rescue our nation's capital from crime, bloodshed, bedlam and squalor and worse," Trump said during a news conference in which he was flanked by US Attorney General Pam Bondi, who will lead the city's police force while it is under federal control.
"This is liberation day in DC, and we're going to take our capital back," he said.
Trump said Washington DC had been "taken over by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals" as well as "drugged out maniacs and homeless people".
According to data from the city's Metropolitan Police Department, homicides dropped by 32 percent between 2023 and 2024 and reached their lowest level since 2019.
There has been another substantial drop this year of 12 percent, the data shows.
Mayor Bowser, a Democrat, acknowledged there had been a "terrible" spike in crime in 2023, which mirrored a national trend, but she pushed back against any claims of a crimewave in the city.
"We are not experiencing a crime spike," she told MSNBC on Sunday. "The president is very aware of our efforts."
When asked about White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller's comment that Washington is more violent than Baghdad, Bowser said "any comparison to a war-torn country is hyperbolic and false".
Of the 800 National Guard troops who will be activated, between 100-200 will be deployed and supporting law enforcement at any given time, the army said in a statement.
As well as that deployment, Trump said he would place the city's police department under direct federal control using the District of Columbia Home Rule Act.
That act was instituted by former President Richard Nixon to allow residents of Washington DC - which is the only US city that is not in any of the 50 states - to elect a city council and a mayor.
But it also has a caveat that allows the president to take control of the city's police force if "special conditions of an emergency nature exist".
If the president intends to take control for longer than 48 hours, they need to provide a written notice to Congress. And even if that notice is provided, they cannot keep control of the police for longer than 30 days.
On Sunday, when asked about the possibility of the president taking control of the city's police department, Mayor Bowser said: "There are very specific things in our law that would allow [that]. None of those conditions exist in our city right now."
She said she was "concerned" about the National Guard enforcing local laws.
The mayor's office has not yet responded to a request for comment from the BBC on Trump's Monday announcement.
As well as crime, Trump also spoke at length about homelessness in Washington DC.
"We're getting rid of the slums," he said, without giving further details. He said homeless people would be sent elsewhere but did not say where.
Trump added that "everything should be perfect" when dignitaries and foreign leaders visit the city.
"It's a very strong reflection of our country," he said. "If our capital is dirty, our whole country is dirty and they don't respect us."
Local groups working with homeless people in the capital told the BBC they had actually seen progress in recent years.
Homelessness is down almost 20% for individuals in Washington DC in 2025 compared to five years ago, said Ralph Boyd, the president and chief executive of So Others Might Eat (SOME) - a group that provides people in the city with housing, clothing and other social services.
He also said Trump's proposal to move people out of the city was not a long-term solution.
"All it will do is transfer the problem somewhere else into communities that are perhaps less equipped to deal with it than we are," Boyd said.
Meanwhile, outside the White House, protesters concerned about Trump's actions gathered and chanted "hands off DC" and "protect home rule".
"Trump does not care about DC's safety, he cares about control," a speaker at the event said.
The president's actions follow a series of social media posts in recent days in which he has criticised the running of Washington DC. Trump has long complained about the city's Democratic leadership for their handling of crime and homelessness.
He has also responded angrily to a former employee of the Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) who was attacked recently in in the city.
During Monday's press conference, Trump said the employee was "savagely beaten by a band of roaming thugs" and was "left dripping in blood".
He also mentioned other federal government employees and elected officials who have been attacked, including a Democratic lawmaker and an intern.
"This is a threat to America," Trump said.
The first time Trump deployed the National Guard was in June, when he ordered 2,000 National Guardsmen to Los Angeles to deal with unrest over raids on undocumented migrants.
The last time the National Guard was deployed to Washington DC was in response to the Capitol riot in 2021.