Mamdani Lands Endorsement From Kamala Harris, His Biggest Yet
© Mike Kai Chen for The New York Times
© Mike Kai Chen for The New York Times
广州中医药大学第一附属医院星期一(9月22日)被曝发生伤医事件。
综合《中国新闻周刊》和红星新闻报道,多名知情人士透露,伤医事件发生在星期一上午,伤者是该院骨科一名王姓主任医师及跟诊的一名学生。王医生经抢救,已脱离生命危险。受伤学生伤势相对较轻。
一名参与王医生部分抢救工作的医生说,王医生身上有多处伤口,“受伤很重”,行凶者已被抓捕。
星期一晚11时许,该院骨科科室的一名医生告诉媒体,目前王医生已经做完手术,已送到ICU病房。
消息称,受伤的医生是广州中医药大学第一附属医院骨伤中心主任王海彬教授。
报道说,不少王海彬教授的患者谈及其遭遇都表示惋惜。在住院部走廊公示墙上,还贴有许多患者感谢王海彬教授的感谢信。
广州中医药大学第一附属医院官网信息显示,王海彬1971年4月生于山东,博士生导师,教授,从医30余年,是广东省首位中医骨科博士后,现为广州中医药大学全国重点学科骨科实验室主任。
路透社引述两名消息人士称,中国证券监管机构已建议一些本地券商暂停在香港开展实体资产(RWA)代币化业务,这表明北京方面对迅速升温的离岸数字资产市场感到担忧。
RWA代币化流程通常将股票、债券、基金甚至房地产等传统资产,转换为可在区块链上交易的数字代币。过去几个月,包括券商在内的众多中国公司已在香港推出了相关RWA产品。
消息人士称,最近几周,至少有两家主要券商收到了中国证监会的非正式指导,要求不要在海外开展RWA代币化业务。
其中一名消息人士说,最新的监管指导旨在加强新业务的风险管理,并确保公司提出的主张,有坚实、合法的业务作为支撑。
过去一年来,香港加大力度将亚洲金融中心定位为数字资产中心,包括中国券商在内的许多公司都在准备推出虚拟资产交易、投资咨询和虚拟资产管理服务。
户外动品牌“始祖鸟”联手艺术家蔡国强在西藏日喀则境内的喜马拉雅山脉举办烟花秀,引发破坏生态环境的争议并持续延烧。近日曝光的现场视频显示,蔡国强在烟花秀完成后发言说,“感谢聪明的动物们帮助...支持我们在这里大闹天宫”,再度引发舆论批评。
综合极目新闻、杭州日报和热度新闻星期二(9月23日)报道,曝光的视频显示,蔡国强当天身穿橙色始祖鸟上衣,在发言中感慨“这是一条盘旋的龙啊!震撼!”
蔡国强在发言中还感谢了牧民配合、感谢聪明的动物们帮助、感谢始祖鸟,“让我的点火线路畅通无阻。很感恩在场的大家和我一起实现我年轻时的梦想,全力支持我们在这大闹天宫,或者我们一起大闹天宫。最后要感谢这片土地,这里的人民和永恒的大自然,期待未来有机会和大家再次相聚世界屋脊。”
发言内容曝光后,网民纷纷表示质疑,有网民留言说“他知道那里有动物啊?”“气得人想笑,就算是道歉还得问问人家小动物接不接受啊”。
中国小动物保护协会星期一(22日)通过公众号发文说,协会高度重视蔡国强与始祖鸟联合举办的烟花活动,对此次事件可能给当地动物带来的影响深感忧虑。
协会倡议,艺术创作与商业实践的价值,绝不应建立在惊扰生灵、破坏生态的代价之上。呼吁全社会秉持敬畏自然的理念,以科学与人文并重的态度,守护高原动物的栖息净土,“别让艺术惊扰生灵,这份‘热闹’请适可而止”。
中国财经媒体报道,跨境互联网券商富途证券和老虎证券,进一步关闭了中国大陆居民的开户通道。
第一财经星期一(9月22日)报道,根据最新监管要求,富途证券开户条件有所变更,目前大陆客户开户须持有海外永居身份证明。老虎证券客服也称,应监管最新要求,公司调整了关于大陆居民的开户政策,自上周开始不再接受大陆居民通过提供境外工作或生活相关证明文件开户,仅接受持有非中国大陆身份证件的客户申请开户。
此前,第一财经曾报道,应中国政府相关要求,全球最大互联网券商盈透证券自8月起也逐步收紧了对大陆居民的开户通道,公司应用程序已在境内各应用商店下架。
第一财经称,这些调整的背景在于,随着中国税务部门加大对个人境外所得的征税实施力度,今年二季度以来,不少投资港美股的大陆居民密集收到当地税务部门的补税通知。
中国证监会2022年12月称,富途证券和老虎证券多年来未经批准面向境内投资者开展跨境证券业务,已构成非法经营,要求它们停止吸纳新的大陆居民用户和开新账户,已开户的可继续交易,但新资金转入此类账户,需合乎中国外汇管制规定。
中国海军星期一(9月22日)宣布,歼-15T、歼-35和空警-600三型舰载机,已于此前成功完成在福建舰上的首次弹射起飞和着舰训练。这是中国首次在弹射型航母上,实现多型号先进舰载机的电磁弹射和阻拦着舰。专家认为,此次训练将为遂行远海作战任务、加速中国海军从“近海防御”向“远海防卫”的战略转型提供关键支撑。
根据新华社报道,中国航空学会舰载机分会总干事、海军航空大学教授韩维说,这次试验试训的成功,是舰载机与航母核心技术的“双向赋能”,将有力推动航母编队体系作战能力实现“代际跨越”,为遂行远海作战任务、加速中国海军从“近海防御”向“远海防卫”的战略转型提供了关键支撑。
韩维介绍说,空警-600是中国第一型舰载固定翼预警机,能够遂行预警探测、指挥引导、目标指示和作战协同等任务,被誉为‘海空司令部。作为航母编队电子信息系统的空中核心节点,它在航空母舰上起降成功,不仅重塑远海预警指挥链路,预警探测、空域监视范围大幅拓展,还意味着航母编队对相关海域的控制从“阶段性存在”转向“持续性掌控”,空防圈和打击圈向外大大延伸,攻防能力得到提升。
韩维认为,除了预警探测、空域监视范围大幅拓展外,歼-35、歼-15T两型舰载战斗机在航空母舰上起降成功,意味着航母编队具备了“隐身突防+重载打击”的双重能力。
他说,歼-35是五代隐身舰载战斗机,是海军实现由“近海防御”向“远海防卫”转变的重要装备之一,重点承担航母编队夺取制空权任务,像一把隐身的尖刀。而歼-15T相较于歼-15舰载战斗机,改进了飞行平台、航电和武器系统,实现了弹滑兼容,大幅提升了综合作战能力,拥有较强的对海对陆打击能力,“好比一记有力的重拳”。
韩维还认为,三型先进舰载机在福建舰上起降成功,还实现了电磁弹射技术对舰载机的“赋能”。一方面,电磁弹射和阻拦这种起降方式,大大提高了预警机出动回收效率,能够保证预警体系持续在线。
另一方面,使用电磁弹射,歼-35能以“满油+隐身构型”快速起飞,凭借低可探测性突破敌防空网;歼-15T则可以“满油满弹”升空,依托其大载弹量和大航程实施饱和式对敌攻击。
韩维说,随着越来越多型号的舰载机上舰运用,中国航母编队远海作战能力将实现“代际升级”,空警-600发现目标后,可以直接引导歼-35拦截,指令歼-15T攻击,再加上在纪念抗战胜利80周年阅兵中亮相的歼-15D提供掩护支援,真正实现体系效能整体提升。“这一天已经不再遥远,中国海军维护海洋权益、遂行远海任务的底气也将更强。”
中国总理李强星期一赴纽约出席第80届联合国大会一般性辩论。
据新华社报道,李强星期一(9月22日)下午乘包机离开北京,并在美东当地时间星期一下午抵达纽约肯尼迪国际机场。
报道称,李强将出席第80届联合国大会一般性辩论及相关高级别活动。同时,他将出席中国主办的全球发展倡议高级别会议等活动,并同联合国秘书长古特雷斯及有关国家领导人举行会晤。
另一方面,由美国众议院军事委员会资深议员史密斯(Adam Smith)率领的代表团星期天(9月21日)抵达北京。当天下午,李强在北京人民大会堂会见代表团一行。
据中国外交部网站,李强会见代表团时说:“中美都是世界上有重要影响力的大国,中美关系保持稳定、健康、可持续发展,符合两国共同利益和国际社会期待。”
李强也表示,中国愿同美国相互尊重、和平共处、合作共赢。“希望美方与中方相向而行,共同推动双边关系沿着正确轨道向前发展,既造福两国,也惠及世界。”
据彭博社报道,李强也告诉代表团,“你们这次的访问是一次破冰之旅,将进一步促进两国关系的发展。”
朝鲜领导人金正恩表示,顺应时代要求进一步加强和发展朝中传统友好合作关系,是朝鲜劳动党和朝鲜政府的坚定立场。
据朝中社报道,金正恩星期天(9月21日)向中共总书记习近平发去回电时说,在朝鲜成立77周年之际,习近平来电表示热烈的祝贺和由衷的祝愿。
金正恩说,他前不久访问华出席中国抗日战争暨世界反法西斯战争胜利80周年活动,并同习近平举行很有意义的会晤,“充分感受到中国党、政府和人民对我们党、政府和人民的坚定支持和特别的友好情谊”。
金正恩进一步称,顺应时代要求进一步加强和发展朝中传统友好合作关系,是朝鲜劳动党和朝鲜政府的坚定立场。
他表示,相信和中国一起在完成社会主义事业的共同斗争中,将进一步有力推动朝中友好关系发展,更好造福两国人民。
中国9月3日在北京天安门广场举行阅兵式,纪念抗日战争胜利暨世界反法西斯战争胜利80周年,金正恩、俄罗斯总统普京等人受邀出席。
另一方面,金正恩星期天在平壤举行的最高人民会议第14届第13次会议上发表讲话时说,如果美国承认朝鲜现实,双方领导人会晤并非不可能,但同时重申“绝不会放弃核武器”,更不会以弃核换取解除制裁。
中国庞大的新能源汽车保险市场陷入困境。保险公司的风险模型跟不上汽车经济和驾驶员行为的变化,承保亏损在不断增加。
据彭博社报道,目前中国道路上已有数千万辆电动汽车,销量仍在快速增长。但中国的保险公司发现,平均年龄通常更年轻的新能源汽车车主提出理赔的可能性约是油车车主的两倍。维修成本也明显更高。
电动汽车的保费虽然比传统车险高出20%甚至是后者的两倍,但至少在过去三年里,中国新能源车险处于承保亏损状态。
根据中国精算师协会整理的数据,2024年,中国保险行业新能源车险承保亏损57亿元人民币(10.3亿新元),今年预计还会再次亏损。
电动汽车提速比燃油车更快,如果驾驶员在颠簸路面上行驶速度过快,通常安装在底盘商的电池很容易损坏。电动汽车的电池系统复杂,也可能占到汽车价值的三分之一,而且有的零部件价格高或属于小众产品。
另外,一些网约车司机为降低保费按私家车投保,给保险公司带来挑战。新车型的不断推出,使得车辆类型和驾驶习惯的历史数据也很快过时。
© Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times
US comedian Jimmy Kimmel will return to his late-night talk show on Tuesday after he was suspended for making jokes relating to the death of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk.
Disney, which owns the US broadcast network that airs Jimmy Kimmel Live, said on Monday that it suspended the show because it "felt some of the comments were ill-timed and thus insensitive".
"We have spent the last days having thoughtful conversations with Jimmy, and after those conversations, we reached the decision to return the show on Tuesday," Disney said.
The comic's abrupt suspension came after threats by the federal tv regulator to revoke ABC's broadcast licence, sparking nationwide debates over free speech.
US President Donald Trump had welcomed Kimmel's suspension and suggested that some TV networks should have their licences "taken away" for negative coverage of the president.
Trump did not address Kimmel's reinstatement when a reporter asked about it during a White House event on Monday.
Critics and First Amendment advocates have railed against the decision as censorship and a violation of free speech.
Kimmel has not yet publicly addressed the suspension or the fallout.
The row started after Kimmel said in his monologue on 15 September that the "Maga gang" were "desperately trying to characterise this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them" and trying to "score political points from it".
He also made fun of Trump's reaction to the influencer's murder, showing a clip of the president responding to a quesiton about how he was mourning the death by changing the subject to construction of a new White House ballroom.
Kimmel compared the response to "how a four-year-old mourns a goldfish".
Brendan Carr, the Trump-appointed chair of broadcast regulator the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), threatened to act against ABC and its parent company Disney over Kimmel's remarks.
The spat comes as Vice President JD Vance and other White House allies have been pushing a national campaign to punish anyone who has criticised Kirk in the wake of his death.
Hours after Mr Carr made his initial remarks about Kimmel's monologue, Nexstar Media, one of the biggest owners of TV stations in the US, said it would not air Kimmel's show "for the foreseeable future".
Sinclair, the largest ABC affiliate group in the US, followed suit and ABC announced that it would "indefinitely" suspend the programme.
Mr Carr thanked Nexstar "for doing the right thing" and said he hoped other broadcasters would follow its lead. Nexstar is currently seeking FCC approval for its planned $6.2bn (£4.5bn) merger with Tegna.
Nexstar and Sinclair did not immediately respond on Monday to the BBC's requests for comment.
ABC's decision was met with protests in California and lambasted by the writers and actors guilds, lawmakers and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) alike, who argued that the suspension violates free speech rights and spurs a chilling effect.
Kimmel's late-night colleagues, including Jon Stewart, John Oliver and outgoing CBS host Stephen Colbert, rallied behind him and hundreds of celebrities and Hollywood creatives signed on to a letter backing Kimmel.
Ben Stiller, Jennifer Aniston, Meryl Streep and Robert DeNiro are among those who called Kimmel's suspension a "dark moment for freedom of speech in our nation".
"At what point did we become North Korea?" That was the question Nigel Farage posed when asked by a US congressional committee about limitations on freedom of speech in the UK.
He was condemning the "awful authoritarian situation we have sunk into", which he claimed had led to various arrests including that of Father Ted co-creator Graham Linehan over his views on challenging "a trans-identified male" in "a female-only space".
When I heard the question, I confess I thought that the leader of Reform UK had gone over the top.
Farage was comparing his country - my country - with a brutal dictatorship that murders, imprisons and tortures opponents.
And he was doing it in front of an influential audience of American lawmakers.
When I interviewed his deputy, Richard Tice on Radio 4's Today, I asked him whether he really believed that UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer was the same as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
Three times I asked the question. Three times Tice swerved it, suggesting Farage was simply using "an analogy".
But Farage is not alone in questioning how far restrictions to freedom of speech have gone in the UK.
Tensions around the limits of free speech are nothing new and since the advent of social media in the mid-2000s, the arguments have been simmering.
Now, though, they're reaching a boiling point.
During his recent visit, US Vice-President JD Vance said he did not want the UK to go down a "very dark path" of losing free speech.
The US business magazine Forbes carried an editorial this month that took this argument further still.
In it, editor-in-chief Steve Forbes condemned the UK's "plunge into the kind of speech censorship usually associated with tin pot Third World dictatorships".
He argues that, in stark contrast to the United States - where free speech is protected by the first amendment to the constitution, "the UK has, with increasing vigour, been curbing what one is allowed to say, all in the name of fighting racism, sexism, Islamophobia, transgenderism, climate-change denial and whatever else the woke extremists conjure up".
So, how exactly did we get to the point where the UK is being compared to a dictatorship and, given how inflamed the conversation has become, what - if anything - would it take to turn down the heat?
The case of Lucy Connolly has become a cause celebre to some in the UK and beyond.
The former childminder from Northampton, who is married to a Conservative councillor, had posted an abhorrent message on X, calling for people to "set fire" to hotels housing asylum seekers following the murder of three young girls at a dance class in Southport in July 2024.
It was viewed hundreds of thousands of times at a time when the threat of violence was very real.
Connolly had pleaded guilty to inciting racial hatred by publishing and distributing "threatening or abusive" written material on X. And yet she was given the red carpet treatment at the Reform party conference, as "Britain's favourite political prisoner".
The length of her prison sentence - 31 months although she only served 40% before she was released - was questioned by many, including people who were appalled by what she had written.
It is just one case that highlights how much social media has changed the shape of the debate around free speech and made heroes and villains of ordinary people.
And I use the word "ordinary" deliberately because views similar to Connolly's will have been expressed up and down the land by others who might well have said, as she now does, "I was an idiot".
But while it's unlikely that any action would have been taken had she said what she did in a coffee shop or a bar, the fact she posted it on social media changed things.
What's more, big tech firms have changed their approach in recent years.
After Musk bought Twitter, which he re-named X, he changed content moderation, which he regards as "a propaganda word for censorship" - and he talks a lot about people spreading "the woke mind virus".
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has also changed the rules governing Meta and Instagram.
In the case of Connolly, her post was "accelerated by the algorithm" and spread far more widely, according to Lilian Edwards, an emeritus professor at Newcastle University.
The arrest of Graham Linehan at Heathrow, too, raised further questions around policing freedom of speech - and put the way issues are handled under renewed scrutiny.
Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police Sir Mark Rowley has voiced his own concerns. "It's a nonsense to pretend that with all of the (online) content out there that enforcement is the answer to that," he has said.
What these cases both illustrate is the lack of consensus about what can and should be policed online in the UK, and by who.
And a lack of consensus too about how we can set apart the unpleasant, offensive, ugly and hateful things said online from those that are genuinely threatening or dangerous.
In the UK, the Human Rights Act does give protection to free speech but as a "qualified right".
This means that "governments can restrict that right… provided that the response is proportionate - [or] 'necessary in a democratic society' is what people tend to say", according to Lorna Woods, professor of internet law at the University of Essex.
But some of the comments made at the protest in London earlier this month, billed by far-right, anti-Islam activist Tommy Robinson as a "free speech rally," demonstrate that, despite other controversies, that right isn't that qualified.
"Violence is coming" and "you either fight back or die", the billionaire X owner Elon Musk told flag-waving protesters via video link.
Along with his call for the overthrow of the government, some might argue that his words at the rally were an incitement to violence.
But the UK's independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, the barrister Jonathan Hall KC, has said that Musk's words would not have broken the law.
"Politicians use martial language all the time, don't they?" he told BBC Radio 4's Today. "Metaphors such as fights and struggles are pretty normal. And he was talking about it contingently, wasn't he? He wasn't saying: 'Go out immediately.'"
Yet the fact both men were able to address a huge crowd in London is perhaps evidence that there is rather more leeway for free speech in this country than those likening the UK to a "tin pot dictatorship" suggest.
According to Essex University's Prof Lorna Woods, the lowest level of views that can be prosecuted in British criminal law are those deemed "grossly offensive or of an indecent, obscene or menacing character".
These are concepts that few people without a law degree could easily define, let alone agree upon.
It is the job of the police initially, but ultimately the courts, to try to nail that particular piece of jelly to the wall.
The UK is "out of whack" with other countries, according to Sir Nick Clegg, the former deputy prime minister who later became right-hand man to Zuckerberg. He believes the UK needs to "think long and hard" about "whether we've overdone it" on policing speech.
"Surely part of the definition of being in a free society is people say ghastly things, offensive things, awful things, ugly things, and we don't sweep them under the carpet," he has said.
What the British public want is another story.
Earlier this month, in a survey by YouGov, 5,035 British adults were asked what was most important when it came to online behaviour: 28% said it was that people were able to express themselves freely but 61% prioritised keeping them safe from threats and abuse.
"People tend to prefer safety to free speech [online]," argues Anthony Wells, a director at YouGov.
What's more, there seems to be a generational divide.
In my conversations with young people in their 20s and 30s - the age of my own children - I often hear the view that far from being an ideal to be strived for, free speech is the cause of much of the anger, division and fear they live with every day.
In recent years a "cancel culture" has emerged in which those with "unacceptable" views can be hounded out of their jobs, no platformed as speakers or intimidated as students.
Even back in 2021, a YouGov poll of Britons found that a majority of those surveyed - some 57% - had sometimes stopped themselves from expressing political or social views because of the fear of being judged or negative responses.
For those who believe that free speech is under threat in the country, these figures can be used as evidence that decades of political correctness has had a chilling effect on people's ability to express their opinions.
"Our definitions of what constitutes hate speech, and I think a very broadened definition of what constitutes harm, is meaning that people feel like they are walking on eggshells and they're frightened - not just that they'll have the police around, but that they'll be cancelled if they say the wrong thing," the former Brexit Party MEP Baroness Claire Fox told the BBC's The World Tonight.
But dig deeper and this debate, like so much else, is also about politics and the deepening and, increasingly, angry and violent divisions in our society.
Even with its constitutional protection for free speech, plenty in the UK question what basis Americans have to lecture Britain on free speech, given the arguments they are having back at home.
The anger and division sparked by the assassination of the conservative firebrand Charlie Kirk in Utah this month ramped up the debate further on that side of the Atlantic over where the boundaries should lie between what is offensive, hateful and dangerous.
Trump's Attorney General Pam Bondi appalled many conservatives when she declared that, "There's free speech and then there's hate speech".
It seemed to take her into precisely the territory, which has caused so many problems here in the UK.
President Trump himself has threatened to sue the New York Times for $15bn (£11bn) over what he calls defamation and libel, adding to the long list of media outlets he has taken to the courts over stories - the newspaper has called it "intimidation tactics" - and he celebrated the sacking of the late-night TV host Jimmy Kimmel as "great news for America".
The US historian Tim Snyder, who is an outspoken public critic of the direction America is heading under Trump believes that free speech should be distinguished from what he calls "me speech".
"Me speech is a common practice among rich and influential Americans," writes Mr Snyder. "Practitioners of me speech use the phrase free speech quite a bit.
"But what they mean is free speech for themselves. They want a monopoly on it.
"They believe that they are right about everything, and so they should always have giant platforms, in real life or on social media.
"The people with whom they disagree, however, should be called out and intimidated in an organised way on social media, or subjected to algorithmic discrimination so that their voices are not heard."
This issue is one I've felt strongly about for as long as I can remember. My grandparents knew first hand what it was to be persecuted for who you were and what you thought or said. They were German Jews who fled the Nazis for what then was the relative security of China and later had to flee the Communists there.
As a child, I recall watching in reverential silence as each day, after lunch, my grandfather held a huge radio on his lap and turned the dial, skipping stations until he found the BBC World Service. There, he had learned, he would find news he could trust and speech which was free of political control.
So important was this to him that he had risked hiding with his wife and daughter (my mother) in a cupboard in their home in Shanghai to listen to it on a banned shortwave radio.
That is why I find any comparison between the UK and a dictatorship a little hard to swallow.
What I learned as the grandchild of those who had fled not one but two murderous ideologies was that free speech was about listening as much as talking.
What mattered above all else is being able to hear both sides of an argument and learn the facts behind them - without having that information controlled by governments, rich and powerful media owners, or anyone else.
Nick Robinson is presenter of BBC Radio 4's Today programme and Political Thinking.
Top image credit: Carlos Jasso / Getty Images
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The UK government should offer discount visas to US cancer scientists who have had their research cancelled by the Trump administration, Sir Ed Davey will say.
"The UK should step up and say: If Trump won't back this research, we will," the Liberal Democrat leader will say in a speech to his party's conference in Bournemouth on Tuesday.
He will propose the setting up of a fellowship scheme for US scientists seeking to escape the US government's "anti-science agenda".
The Lib Dem leader has stepped up his attacks on the US president this week and accused Reform UK leader Nigel Farage of wanting to turn the UK into "Trump's America".
His staunch criticism of Farage, President Trump and his allies is expected to be a big theme of Sir Ed's keynote speech on the final day of his party's conference.
In February, the US government cut billions of dollars from overheads in grants for biomedical research as a part of broader cost-saving measures.
The US government said it was "vital to ensure that as many funds as possible go towards direct scientific research costs rather than administrative overheads".
At the time, the boss of the American Society of Clinical Oncology said the move "would be devastating to the pace and progress of cancer research in America".
"Slashing federal research funding at a time when science is revolutionising cancer care risks leaving millions of patients without the promise and potential of life-saving breakthroughs," said Clifford Hudis.
According to a poll conducted by the Nature journal, 75% of its readers were considering leaving the US and heading to Europe or Canada as a result of the actions of Trump.
The Liberal Democrats have not set out what level of discounts the UK government should offer to researchers wanting to come to the UK. Costs to purchase a visa can exceed £1,000.
In his conference speech, Sir Ed will argue that the UK should be "stepping into the vacuum left by Trump's anti-science agenda - leading the world in the fight against cancer".
The Liberal Democrat leader is also expected to criticise Reform UK party members for applauding a US decision to cut research for mRNA vaccines.
Twenty-two projects had been examining how the vaccine technology could counter viruses such as bird flu.
Sir Ed will say: "It is hard to express the cruelty and stupidity of cutting off research into medicine that has the power to save so many lives."
In addition to criticising Trump, Sir Ed has also been increasingly vocal in his attacks on the billionaire and former Trump ally Elon Musk.
On Sunday, he called on the UK's communications regulator Ofcom to "go after" Musk over "crimes" he claims are being committed on the tech mogul's social media platform X.
Sir Ed has also accused Musk of "inciting violence" when he addressed a rally in London via video link. In response, the X owner called the Liberal Democrat leader a "craven coward".
Asked by Sky News if he was worried about legal threats from Musk, Sir Ed said: "If he ... sues me, let's see how he fares, because I don't think he'll win."
The Lib Dems have become well known for their political stunts alongside a policy offer focused on social care and other priorities under Sir Ed's leadership.
It brought them success at last year's general election, with the party winning 72 seats in the House of Commons - its highest ever share.
But the Lib Dems have struck a more serious tone at this year's conference, as the party considers it's next move ahead of local elections next year.
On the opening night of the conference, former Lib Dem leader Tim Farron draped himself in a flag and called on members to "reclaim patriotism" from the far right.
Farron told a hall full of activists to "stop being so flaming squeamish and English" and reclaim the UK's flags from groups who seek to "divide and destroy".
Unusually for the Lib Dems, they have gone out of their way to claim that they are the true patriots, in contrast to Farage, who they have dubbed a "plastic patriot".
In an interview with the BBC, Sir Ed said his party has a moral duty to keep Farage and his Reform UK party out of power.
Trump officials are expected to link the use of pain reliever Tylenol in pregnant women to autism, according to US media reports.
At an Oval Office event on Monday, the US president will reportedly advise pregnant women in the US to only take Tylenol, known as paracetamol elsewhere, to relieve high fevers.
At the Charlie Kirk memorial service on Sunday, Trump said he had an "amazing" announcement coming on autism, saying it was "out of control" but they might now have a reason why.
Some studies have shown a link between pregnant women taking Tylenol and autism, but these findings are inconsistent and do not prove the drug causes autism.
Tylenol is a popular brand of pain relief medication sold in the United States, Canada and some other countries. Its active ingredient is acetaminophen, which is called paracetamol outside North America.
Tylenol maker Kenvue has defended the use of the drug in pregnant women.
In a statement to the BBC, it said: "We believe independent, sound science clearly shows that taking acetaminophen does not cause autism. We strongly disagree with any suggestion otherwise and are deeply concerned with the health risk this poses for expecting mothers."
Acetaminophen is the safest pain reliever option for pregnant women, it added, and without it, women face a dangerous choice between suffering through conditions like fever or use riskier alternatives.
The BBC has contacted the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) for comment.
In April, the leader of HHS, Robert F Kennedy Jr, pledged "a massive testing and research effort" to determine the cause of autism in five months.
But experts have cautioned that finding the causes of autism - a complex syndrome that has been researched for decades - would not be simple.
The widely held view of researchers is that there is no single cause of autism, which is thought to be the result of a complex mix of genetic and environmental factors.
The American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology said doctors across the country have consistently identified Tylenol as one of the only safe pain relievers for pregnant women.
"[S]tudies that have been conducted in the past, show no clear evidence that proves a direct relationship between the prudent use of acetaminophen during any trimester and fetal developmental issues," the group has said.
The drug is recommended by other major medical groups as well as other governments around the world.
In August, a review of research led by the dean of Harvard University's Chan School of Public Health found that children may be more likely to develop autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders when exposed to Tylenol during pregnancy.
The researchers argued some steps should be taken to limit use of the drug, but said the pain reliever was still important for treating maternal fever and pain, which can also have negative effects for children.
But another study, published in 2024, found no relationship between exposure to Tylenol and autism.
"There is no robust evidence or convincing studies to suggest there is any causal relationship," said Monique Botha, a professor in social and developmental psychology at Durham University.
Dr Botha added that pain relief for pregnant women was "woefully lacking", with Tylenol being one of the only safe options for the population.
Autism diagnoses have increased sharply since 2000, and by 2020 the rate among 8-year-olds reached 2.77%, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Scientists attribute at least part of the rise to increased awareness of autism and an expanding definition of the disorder. Researchers have also been investigating environmental factors.
In the past, Kennedy has offered debunked theories about the rising rates of autism, blaming vaccines despite a lack of evidence.
All flights to and from Denmark's largest airport have been suspended after drone sightings, police have said.
Between two to three large drones were seen flying in the area around Copenhagen Airport, according to authorities.
Take-offs and landings at the airport have been suspended since around 20:30 local time (19:30 BST).
"[The airport] is currently closed for take-off and landing, as 2-3 large drones have been seen flying in the area. The time horizon is currently unknown," police said in a statement on X.
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.
You can receive Breaking News on a smartphone or tablet via the BBC News App. You can also follow @BBCBreaking on X to get the latest alerts.
© Elizabeth Frantz for The New York Times
© Evan Vucci/Associated Press
© Shuran Huang for The New York Times
Trump officials are expected to link the use of pain reliever Tylenol in pregnant women to autism, according to US media reports.
At an Oval Office event on Monday, the US president will reportedly advise pregnant women in the US to only take Tylenol, known as paracetamol elsewhere, to relieve high fevers.
At the Charlie Kirk memorial service on Sunday, Trump said he had an "amazing" announcement coming on autism, saying it was "out of control" but they might now have a reason why.
Some studies have shown a link between pregnant women taking Tylenol and autism, but these findings are inconsistent and do not prove the drug causes autism.
Tylenol is a popular brand of pain relief medication sold in the United States, Canada and some other countries. Its active ingredient is acetaminophen, which is called paracetamol outside North America.
Tylenol maker Kenvue has defended the use of the drug in pregnant women.
In a statement to the BBC, it said: "We believe independent, sound science clearly shows that taking acetaminophen does not cause autism. We strongly disagree with any suggestion otherwise and are deeply concerned with the health risk this poses for expecting mothers."
Acetaminophen is the safest pain reliever option for pregnant women, it added, and without it, women face a dangerous choice between suffering through conditions like fever or use riskier alternatives.
The BBC has contacted the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) for comment.
In April, the leader of HHS, Robert F Kennedy Jr, pledged "a massive testing and research effort" to determine the cause of autism in five months.
But experts have cautioned that finding the causes of autism - a complex syndrome that has been researched for decades - would not be simple.
The widely held view of researchers is that there is no single cause of autism, which is thought to be the result of a complex mix of genetic and environmental factors.
The American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology said doctors across the country have consistently identified Tylenol as one of the only safe pain relievers for pregnant women.
"[S]tudies that have been conducted in the past, show no clear evidence that proves a direct relationship between the prudent use of acetaminophen during any trimester and fetal developmental issues," the group has said.
The drug is recommended by other major medical groups as well as other governments around the world.
In August, a review of research led by the dean of Harvard University's Chan School of Public Health found that children may be more likely to develop autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders when exposed to Tylenol during pregnancy.
The researchers argued some steps should be taken to limit use of the drug, but said the pain reliever was still important for treating maternal fever and pain, which can also have negative effects for children.
But another study, published in 2024, found no relationship between exposure to Tylenol and autism.
"There is no robust evidence or convincing studies to suggest there is any causal relationship," said Monique Botha, a professor in social and developmental psychology at Durham University.
Dr Botha added that pain relief for pregnant women was "woefully lacking", with Tylenol being one of the only safe options for the population.
Autism diagnoses have increased sharply since 2000, and by 2020 the rate among 8-year-olds reached 2.77%, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Scientists attribute at least part of the rise to increased awareness of autism and an expanding definition of the disorder. Researchers have also been investigating environmental factors.
In the past, Kennedy has offered debunked theories about the rising rates of autism, blaming vaccines despite a lack of evidence.
All flights to and from Denmark's largest airport have been suspended after drone sightings, police have said.
Between two to three large drones were seen flying in the area around Copenhagen Airport, according to authorities.
Take-offs and landings at the airport have been suspended since around 20:30 local time (19:30 BST).
"[The airport] is currently closed for take-off and landing, as 2-3 large drones have been seen flying in the area. The time horizon is currently unknown," police said in a statement on X.
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.
You can receive Breaking News on a smartphone or tablet via the BBC News App. You can also follow @BBCBreaking on X to get the latest alerts.
缅北白家犯罪集团主案一审在深圳开庭,检方指控犯罪集团涉赌、诈资金200余亿元人民币(超过36亿新元)。
据中新社报道,9月19日至22日,广东省深圳市中级人民法院一审公开开庭审理了白所成、白应苍等21名被告人诈骗、故意杀人、故意伤害、绑架、敲诈勒索、开设赌场、组织、强迫卖淫、非法拘禁、组织他人偷越国(边)境、偷越国(边)境、走私、贩卖、运输、制造毒品、帮助毁灭、伪造证据一案。
广东省深圳市人民检察院起诉指控:2009年8月以来,以白所成、白应能(另案处理)、白应苍等家族核心成员为首要分子,以白应香、白应兰、白应萍、白应改(均另案处理)、李福寿等家族成员,杨再华、罗文筠(均另案处理)等亲信下属及杨再军、刘华龙(均另案处理)、李龙华等武装头目为重要成员的犯罪集团,利用白家家族在缅甸果敢地区的影响力,依托家族武装力量,通过自行建设、合作开发等方式设立百胜宾馆、腾龙一号楼、苍胜科技园等41个园区。
他们招揽、吸引杨立强、陈双福、鄢杰峰等多名“金主”入驻并提供武装庇护,伙同“金主”实施电信网络诈骗、故意杀人、故意伤害、绑架、敲诈勒索、开设赌场、组织他人偷越国(边)境、组织、强迫卖淫等犯罪活动,造成六名中国公民死亡、多名中国公民受伤,涉赌、诈资金200余亿元人民币。
此外,白应苍还结伙贩卖、制造毒品甲基苯丙胺约11吨。
检察机关提请以诈骗罪、故意杀人罪、故意伤害罪等12项罪名追究白家犯罪集团及其关联犯罪团伙成员的刑事责任。
庭审中,检察机关出示了相关证据,各被告人及其辩护人进行了质证,控辩双方在法庭的主持下充分发表了意见,各被告人进行了最后陈述。
庭审结束后,法庭宣布休庭,将择期宣判。
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© Jacquelyn Martin/Associated Press
© Photographs by Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times, Evan Vucci/Associated Press and Kenny Holston/The New York Times
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