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Today — 30 April 2025News

关税对峙之际 美国参议院投票通过戴维·珀杜出任美国驻华大使

By: 陈美华
30 April 2025 at 17:36

美联社报道,当地时间4月29日,美国参议院确认前参议员戴维·珀杜(David Perdue)为驻华大使,而此时美国和中国正陷入关税对峙,这可能会重新定义世界两大经济体之间的外交关系。

路透社报道,参院最终以67票对29票通过了确认特朗普总统提名的候选人议案,珀杜于2015年至2021年担任佐治亚州共和党美国参议员,此前在香港居住了40年,担任国际企业高管。去年,珀杜在一篇文章中谴责中国国家主席习近平是“现代皇帝”,并称北京想要“摧毁资本主义和民主”以及美国主导的世界秩序。

美联社报道,在本月的确认听证会上,这位前企业高层称美中关系是“21世纪最重要的外交挑战”。珀杜说:“我们对华态度应该是细致入微、不带党派色彩和有战略性的。”他还表示,华盛顿和北京应该“寻求我们利益一致的领域,以发展更好、更安全的工作关系。”

中国外交部发言人郭嘉昆30日下午在例行记者会上应询回应说,在中美关系和经贸问题上,中方的立场是一贯的、明确的。

© AP FILE

美国参议院投票通过确认前参议员戴维·珀杜(David Perdue)为驻华大使。

被特朗普怒斥“敌对政治行为” 亚马逊紧急否认列出关税成本

30 April 2025 at 17:17
德才
2025-04-30T09:03:37.498Z
白宫发言人莱维特在记者会上表示,考虑到路透社在2021年的一则报道称,亚马逊曾与一家中国宣传机构合作,(打算在产品页面上列出新关税成本的)消息并不令人意外。

(德国之声中文网)据路透社报道,亚马逊在周二(4月29日)表示,旗下专注于超低价商品的“Amazon Haul”部门曾考虑过这一做法,但其主要网站从未有过类似的计划,也从未在亚马逊的任何平台上实际实施过。稍后,亚马逊在第二份声明中补充称,该想法未获批准,也“从未发生过”。

此前,美国新闻网站Punchbowl News早些时候援引知情人士消息称,亚马逊计划在每件商品旁注明由特朗普政府引入的关税在价格中所占的比例。

白宫发言人莱维特在引用Punchbowl News的相关报道时表示,总统将这一计划视为“一种敌对的政治行为”。美国政府消息人士透露,特朗普曾亲自致电亚马逊首席执行官贝索斯,对此事表示不满。特朗普在面对媒体时表示,贝索斯“非常友好”,并“非常迅速地解决了这个问题”,还称“他做了正确的事”。

目前贝索斯本人尚未对此做出回应。这位亿万富翁曾作为嘉宾出席特朗普的总统就职典礼。

白宫发言人莱维特在记者会上表示,考虑到路透社在2021年的一则报道称,亚马逊曾与一家中国宣传机构合作,(打算在产品页面上列出新关税成本的)消息并不令人意外。

白宫随后在社交媒体的贴文中附上了路透社报道的链接。莱维特借用“购买美国货”(buy American)这一口号表示:“这就是为什么美国人应该购买美国制造的商品的另一个原因。”

在莱维特发表上述言论后,亚马逊股价在美国盘前交易中下跌了2.2%。但在亚马逊发布声明后,股价几乎完全回升。特朗普总统此前已对进口商品征收了异常高额的关税,其中包括对中国商品加征145%的附加税。

虽然许多专家认为这些关税成本最终会直接或间接转嫁给美国消费者,但特朗普对此予以否认。

(路透社)

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© 2025年德国之声版权声明:本文所有内容受到著作权法保护,如无德国之声特别授权,不得擅自使用。任何不当行为都将导致追偿,并受到刑事追究。

六神磊磊读金庸|群众被两个董小姐搞得团团转

30 April 2025 at 16:51

file

和格十三老师撞题了,她真的,我哭死。昨天半夜没写完,大家凑合看吧。

两位董小姐,一个董明珠,一个董袭莹。

一个是最近离奇“间谍论”的高管,一个是最近医院八卦新闻的主角之一。完全不搭噶的两个人,但假如连起来看,就会觉得分外耐人寻味。其交汇点是一个词:海归。

董明珠反海归,董袭莹就是海归。

董明珠竭力向底层拱火,说海归是外人,是别有用心的人;而董袭莹在医学界的一路开挂则说明,有一些海归恰恰是“自己人”、“天龙人”。

只有吃瓜群众被耍得团团乱转,找不着北:

你们到底是回来窃取机密的,还是来继承家产的?

到底你们是外人,还是我们是外人?

CDT 档案卡
标题:群众被两个董小姐搞得团团转
作者:帅呆的sixgod
发表日期:2025.4.30
来源:微信公众号“六神磊磊读金庸”
主题归类:董明珠
CDS收藏:公民馆
版权说明:该作品版权归原作者所有。中国数字时代仅对原作进行存档,以对抗中国的网络审查。详细版权说明

这里面有一种很强的矛盾感和撕裂感。

董明珠说绝不招留学生,因为海归里有“间谍”。这番言论,在下沉的舆论场里一度引发大片叫好,点燃了许多人心中抵制留子、防火防盗的热情。

仿佛完全忘了她提携的王自如是海外高层次人才“孔雀计划”获奖者。

如果只看下沉用户的叫好,你会以为社会已保守到墙角,海外学生已无容身之地。

然而,在普通人看不到的地方,还有董袭莹。

家族背景深厚的她,从海外经济学本科迅速成为知名医院“风云人物”,一众大佬刷脸护航,履历中种种弯道超车,三年规陪都减到只需一年。唯一失手是怀了肖飞这大坑货的娃。

而她的通关券之一,恰恰就是哥伦比亚大学巴纳德学院的留学身份。

两个董小姐的事放一起,会形成一种撕裂。它会让人觉得非常怪异和不适,有一种逻辑脱榫、不能自洽的怪异。

好比说,桃花岛号召抵制外来学生,你非常认同,天天走访普查,结果回头一看,人家女婿耶律齐当了丐帮帮主了。

郭大小姐告诉你,抵制外来学生,主要是指杨过。耶律齐大爷那么优秀,必须重用嘛。

你是不是就会有点混乱?

也是琢磨了好一阵,才明白了这里面的逻辑。

董明珠的事和董袭莹的事,一个发生在言论的前台,一个发生在利益分配的后台;一个是故意给人看给人听的,一个是普通人看不见听不见的。

前台是刻意迎合,后台是默默输送;前台是意识上的日趋保守,后台是利益上的不断固化。

说白了,“海归”这玩意不过就好比一张牌,花色不变,但它的含义是可以变换的。

它可以是董明珠们手中的一块红布,也可以是董袭莹们手中的一张内部通行证。

它可以暗戳戳地指外人,也可以不动声色地标识自己人。当需要你亢奋喝彩、要引起你对外的反感和戒惧时,它是一张牌;当它要成为阶层繁殖、利益输送的默契和借口时,它就是另一张牌。

类似扑克里的2,可以很小,也可以很大,全看玩斗地主还是炸金花。

当你在前面恨完了,董小姐在后面吃完了,最后留下来供大众针对、宣泄的,是更多小杨过这样没有资源、压根无法复制董袭莹路线的无辜留子。 

有人说,董明珠一类高管抛出“间谍论”,只是因为他们个人观念保守,就当个笑话看就完了。

这话也对也不对。

诚然,很多一些类似的管理人士,因为教育背景、工作性质、长期惯性等原因,他们确实是非常保守的,甚至是迂腐的,对世界的理解非常刻板。

但那并不是完全的真相。真相是,在管理对象面前,他们可以是极度保守的;但在利益面前,他们就可以是极度开放开通的。

压根没有那么多条条框框,没有那么多食古不化的老脑筋。土和洋都不是问题,茅台和爱马仕都不是问题,学外语不是问题,孩子上哈佛上耶鲁都不嫌弃。

岳不群那么保守,口口声声“以气驭剑”,严禁学旁门左道,结果你看在《辟邪剑谱》面前他保守不保守?零件说嘎就嘎,激进得很。

这些人“反海归”的实质,就是把你的流量和上升空间一起拿走。董大姐拿走流量,董小姐拿走上升空间。

你则得到满满的自豪。

然后躺上手术台,麻醉完,肖飞大夫出去了,哄董小姐去了,你的人生闭环。

Spain Searches for Answers on What Caused Power Blackout

The country’s top officials are trying to figure out the cause of a power outage that stranded tens of millions of people across the Iberian Peninsula.

© Susana Vera/Reuters

People sitting in the dark during a nationwide power outage in Madrid on Monday.

中国4月制造业PMI回落,贸易战影响显现

30 April 2025 at 04:57

简繁中文
纽约时报 出版语言
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中国4月制造业PMI回落,贸易战影响显现

DAISUKE WAKABAYASHI
广州的一家服装厂,摄于本月。
广州的一家服装厂,摄于本月。 Qilai Shen for The New York Times
特朗普总统加征的关税已开始伤及中国的制造业。
在这场将中国商品的进口关税推高至145%的贸易战打响三周后,中国国家统计局周三发布的制造业调查报告显示,4月中国制造业活动出现了逾一年来最剧烈的月度萎缩。
国家统计局周三发布的这份针对工业企业的报告首次从官方角度揭示了美国关税政策对中国经济的影响。作为反制,中国对美国商品加征了125%的关税。
贸易的边缘政策威胁着中美两国的经济增长,甚至可能影响全球经济。两国出现的经济困境初步迹象加大了特朗普总统和中国最高领导人习近平达成协议以打破僵局的压力。
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北京和华盛顿似乎都不准备作出让步。中国外交部周二发布了一段视频,称中国拒绝向“霸权的欺凌”屈服。特朗普总统在周二接受ABC新闻采访时继续反驳,称中国“一直在占我们便宜,从来没有哪个国家像它这样”。他表示,他相信中国“很可能会承担那些关税”,尽管消费者和企业对其加征关税的影响忧心忡忡。
周二,物流巨头UPS宣布今年将裁员2万人,并关闭73处设施。通用汽车表示,由于特朗普对进口汽车和进口零部件加征关税,公司无法再维持此前对今年稳健利润增长的预期。美国消费者信心降至五年来的最低水平。
中国制造业采购经理指数从3月的50.5降至4月的49.0。该指数低于50表明制造业活动出现恶化。受关税生效前订单增加的推动,前两个月该指数均高于50。4月的数据低于经济学家的预期。
该调查显示,出口商品新订单的读数创下了自新冠疫情以来的最低水平,拖累了整体指数。此外,衡量制造业就业人数的指标也出现萎缩,处于自2024年2月以来的最低水平。
凯投宏观的中国经济学家黄子春(音)在给客户的一份报告中表示,这些数据“表明随着外部需求降温,中国经济正面临压力”。她说,政府为刺激经济而采取的措施“不太可能完全抵消这种阻碍”。凯投宏观预测,中国经济今年将增长3.5%,远低于政府设定的5%的增长目标。
野村证券在周二的一份研究报告中称,如果中国对美国的出口下降50%,中国将有570万人立即失业。一旦长期影响波及整个经济,失业人数将增至1580万。
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中国政府已承诺在与美国的贸易战中支持本国经济,并提出了一长串旨在鼓励民众增加消费的举措。其中包括推动地方政府增加对贫困人口的补贴,提高退休人员的养老金福利。
中国官员希望刺激国内消费,因为面对拖累中国经济的房地产危机,国内消费一直持续疲软。为了抵消消费停滞的影响,中国经济对出口的依赖程度甚至变得更高了。
周三,中国通过了一项旨在保护民营企业权益的法律。近年来,中国对安全和政府管控的关注是以牺牲曾助力中国成为世界第二大经济体的经济活力为代价的。
民营企业家抱怨说,他们的经济利益和权利往往被政府的优先事项和政策所忽视。从表面上看,该法律旨在缓解其中部分担忧。

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一名美国商人在中国被判处五年监禁

By: 王月眉
30 April 2025 at 04:40

简繁中文
纽约时报 出版语言
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一名美国商人在中国被判处五年监禁

王月眉
出生于中国的美国商人李增卯在中国被判处五年监禁,罪名与近25年前的一起刑事案件有关。
出生于中国的美国商人李增卯在中国被判处五年监禁,罪名与近25年前的一起刑事案件有关。 Louise Lin
上周,一名生于中国的美籍商人在中国被判处五年监禁,其罪名与近25年前的一起刑事案件有关,尽管他在案件发生后仍经常出入中国。
这位商人的家人以及一位长期从事人权工作的活动人士说,此案是中国执法专断性质的一个例子。他们敦促中国政府以人道主义保外就医的方式释放这位商人李增卯,并指出他已经住院10天,他们认为他患了中风。
李增卯于4月23日被判刑,美国和中国之间的紧张局势正处于多年来的最高点,特朗普总统的关税政策激化了这种紧张局势。没有迹象表明此案与两国紧张关系有关,但它可能会成为又一个制造摩擦的事由。
李增卯被判故意伤害罪和“寻衅滋事罪”,这是一个模糊的指控,中国经常用其来对付它认为对社会稳定构成威胁的人。法官在书面判决书中说,现年61岁的李增卯在2000年和2001年参与了三起口角,其中一起导致一名男子死亡。
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但李增卯的家人表示,他在这些事件中的角色微不足道。李增卯当时持有美国绿卡,并于2002年成为美国公民。他的妻子露易丝·林(Louise Lin,音)说,他被短暂拘留,然后未被指控,获得释放,他以为案件已经结案了。在接下来的20年里,他几乎每个月都要去中国,为家得宝进行灯具批发。
露易丝·林说,李增卯有时在中国一待就是几个月,没有任何问题。“如果你知道自己有麻烦了,你当然不会回去,”住在加州的露易丝·林说。
他经常回到他长大的河北省。她说,去年4月,他就是在那里的酒店电梯间里突然被捕的,当时他正准备和露易丝·林共进早餐。她说,她不知道为什么李增卯会成为目标。
她说,自从丈夫被拘留以来,除了一次在法庭上短暂露面外,她一直没能见到他。但她从获准探视他的美国大使馆代表那里听说,他的健康状况不佳,似乎瘦了大约20多公斤。
康原(John Kamm)是总部设在加利福尼亚州、致力于释放中国政治犯的 “对话基金会”的创始人。他说,出于人道主义考虑,李增卯应该被释放,以往遇到有死亡风险的情况,中国曾有过类似的处置。
他认为量刑过重,反映了“美中关系令人震惊的状况”。他指出,李增卯被捕时,白宫和中国政府正在就释放其他美国囚犯进行谈判。
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记者通过电话联系到此案的法官林森,他拒绝置评。中国外交部没有回应置评请求。美国驻北京大使馆拒绝置评。
这起案件的主要事件发生在2001年3月,地点是李增卯的家乡河北保定。起诉书称,李增卯在得知一桩涉及一名熟人的商业纠纷后,开车将三人带到争执地点,在那里,他们用从李增卯汽车后备箱里取出的刀与另一群人打斗。对方的一名男子被刺身亡。然后李增卯驾车带同伴离去。
同车三人均已获刑。根据判决书,李增卯说他没有下车参与斗殴。其他目击者也做出相同陈述。
在美国,驾驶汽车逃跑的人可被指控犯有谋杀罪,并可被判处几年到终身监禁。
中国的法官说,他对李增卯的判决较轻,因为他是暴力事件的从犯,而不是直接参与者。露易丝·林承认,既然是她丈夫开的车,她可以接受短期监禁。但她认为五年时间太长了。
判决书说,警方在斗殴事件后拘留了李增卯,但检察官没有批准正式逮捕他。他被“取保候审”,这是一种保释形式。(根据中国法律,如果调查人员没有收集到足够的证据提出指控,犯罪嫌疑人必须在35天后释放。但调查可以继续进行。)
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大约一个月后,李增卯飞往美国。
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Trump congratulates Canada's Carney as they agree to meet in 'near future'

30 April 2025 at 06:05
AFP via Getty Images Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks to the media upon arriving at his office on Parliament Hill April 29. 
He is smiling and waving, and wearing a dark blue suit and white shirt. AFP via Getty Images

US President Donald Trump has called Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney to congratulate him on his victory in the country's general election and the two have agreed meet in the near future.

The two countries were expected to enter talks about a new economic and security relationship after Monday's vote.

Trump's trade tariffs and repeated comments undermining Canada's sovereignty overshadowed the race, which ended with Carney's Liberals projected to win a minority government, according to public broadcaster CBC.

That result will make Carney's pressing tasks of negotiating with his US counterpart and tackling a range of domestic issues more of a challenge, as he'll need to wrangle support from other political parties.

In their first call since the election, Trump congratulated Carney on his victory, according to the prime minister's office on Tuesday.

The office also said the two leaders had "agreed on the importance of Canada and the United States working together – as independent, sovereign nations – for their mutual betterment".

The Liberals will need to rely on their support to pass legislation through the House of Commons.

They also face possible defeat in any vote of confidence in the chamber.

Results map

The Liberals are most likely to find willing partners with the diminished left-wing New Democrats, who have in the past supported the Liberals, and the Bloc Québécois.

The Liberals are projected to have won 169 seats, three short of the 172 needed for a majority in Canada's House of Commons.

It still marks a historic turnaround for a party that had seemed on course for collapse just months ago.

Carney, a former central banker for Canada and the UK, will continue as prime minister, having stepped into the role last month following his unpopular predecessor Justin Trudeau's resignation.

One issue where it may be easy for the Liberals to find support in the House is in passing legislation to help workers and industries affected by US tariffs - something all parties swung behind on the campaign trail.

On Tuesday morning, Bloc Québécois leader Yves-Francois Blanchet suggested Carney could benefit from at least a period of stability in the House.

Blanchet urged a "truce" among parties while Canada negotiated trade with the US, saying it was clear Canadians wanted political stability in unstable times.

He said it wasn't time for other parties to "threaten to overthrow the government anytime soon" and didn't see any scenario "other than collaboration for a period of slightly over a year".

The leader of the sovereigntist party, which only runs candidates in Quebec, did urge Carney to avoid pressing the province on certain issues, noting that collaboration goes both ways.

On Tuesday, the White House commented on Carney's win, with deputy press secretary Anna Kelly saying: "The election does not affect President Trump's plan to make Canada America's cherished 51st state."

In an interview with the BBC, Carney said that Canada deserves "respect" from the US and he will only allow a Canada-US trade and security partnership "on our terms".

Carney has told the BBC that a 51st state scenario was "never, ever going to happen".

Meanwhile, new US ambassador to Canada, Pete Hoekstra, said in a video statement that he is "committed to making progress in this great relationship".

Carney has also promised action on a range of domestic issues, including tackling the country's housing crisis and tax cuts for lower- and middle-income Canadians.

The prime minister also needs to prepare for the G7 summit in June, which Canada is hosting in the province of Alberta.

In Monday's election, both the Liberals and the Conservatives saw a significant rise in their share of the national vote compared with four years ago.

The Conservative Party came in second, on track to win 144 seats, and will form Official Opposition.

Increased support for Canada's two largest parties has come at the expense of smaller parties, particularly the NDP, whose share of the popular vote is down by around 12 percentage points.

Voter turnout for the election was 67%.

Both Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre and NDP leader Jagmeet Singh lost their seats, with Singh announcing he will step down as leader of the left-wing party.

Xi's real test is not Trump's trade war

30 April 2025 at 13:40
BBC A treated split image, showing a digital display with the figures of the stock market above China's President Xi Jinping 
BBC

If you say the name Donald Trump in the halls of wholesale markets and trade fairs in China, you'll hear a faint chuckle.

The US president and his 145% tariffs have not instilled fear in many Chinese traders.

Instead, they have inspired an army of online Chinese nationalists to create mocking memes in a series of viral videos and reels – some of which include an AI-generated President Trump, Vice-President JD Vance and tech mogul Elon Musk toiling on footwear and iPhone assembly lines.

China is not behaving like a nation facing the prospect of economic pain and President Xi Jinping has made it clear that Beijing will not back down.

"For more than 70 years, China has always relied on self-reliance and hard work for development… it has never relied on anyone's gifts and is unafraid of any unreasonable suppression," he said this month.

His confidence may come in part because China is far less dependent than it was 10 years ago on exports to the US. But the truth is Trump's brinkmanship and tariff hikes are pushing on pressure points that already exist within China's own struggling economy. With a housing crisis, increasing job insecurity and an ageing population, Chinese people are simply not spending as much as their government would like.

Xi came to power in 2012 with a dream of a rejuvenated China. That is now being severely tested – and not just by US tariffs. Now, the question is whether or not Trump's tariffs will dampen Xi's economic dreams, or can he turn the obstacles that exist into opportunities?

Xi's domestic challenges

With a population of 1.4 billion, China has, in theory, a huge domestic market. But there's a problem. They don't appear willing to spend money while the country's economic outlook is uncertain.

This has not been prompted by the trade war – but by the collapse of the housing market. Many Chinese families invested their life savings in their homes, only to watch prices plummet in the last five years.

Housing developers continued to build even as the property market crumbled. It's thought that China's entire population would not fill all the empty apartments across the country.

The former deputy head of China's statistics bureau, He Keng, admitted two years ago that the most "extreme estimate" is that there are now enough vacant homes for 3 billion people.

Getty Images A view of a complex of unfinished apartment buildings in Xinzheng City in Zhengzhou
Getty Images
China now has far more housing than it needs

Travel round Chinese provinces and you see they are littered with empty projects – lines of towering concrete shells that have been labelled "ghost cities". Others have been fitted out, the gardens have been landscaped, curtains frame the windows, and they appear filled with the promise of a new home. But only at night, when you see no lights, can you tell that the apartments are empty. There just aren't enough buyers to match this level of construction.

The government acted five years ago to restrict the amount of money developers could borrow. But the damage to house prices and, in turn, consumer confidence in China, has been done and analysts have projected a 2.5% decline in home prices this year, according to a Reuters poll in February.

And it's not just house prices that worry middle-class Chinese families.

They are concerned about whether the government can offer them a pension – over the next decade, about 300 million people, who are currently aged 50 to 60, are set to leave the Chinese workforce. According to a 2019 estimate by the state-run Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, the government pension fund could run out of money by 2035.

There are also fears about whether their sons, daughters and grandchildren can get a job as millions of college graduates are struggling to find work. More than one in five people between the ages of 16 and 24 in urban areas are jobless in China, according to official data published in August 2023. The government has not released youth unemployment figures since then.

EPA - EFE/REX/Shutterstock A screen on a pedestrian bridge shows financial data in Shanghai, ChinaEPA - EFE/REX/Shutterstock
China's domestic market does not appear to be in a position to make up for the potential economic impact of new tariffs

The problem is that China cannot simply flip a switch and move from selling goods to the US to selling them to local buyers.

"Given the downward pressure on the economy, it is unlikely domestic spending can be significantly expanded in the short term," says Prof Nie Huihua at Renmin University.

"Replacing exports with internal demand will take time."

According to Prof Zhao Minghao, deputy director of the Center for American Studies at Fudan University, "China does not have high expectations for talks with the Trump administration… The real battleground is in the adjustment of China's domestic policies, such as boosting domestic demand."

To revive a slowing economy, the government has announced billions in childcare subsidies, increased wages and better paid leave. It has also introduced a $41bn programme offering discounts on items such as consumer electronics and electric vehicles (EVs) to encourage more people to spend. But Prof Zhang Jun, the Dean of Economics at Fudan University, believes this is not "sustainable".

"We need a long-term mechanism," he says. "We need to start increasing residents' disposable income."

This is urgent for Xi. The dream of prosperity he sold when he took power 13 years ago has not become reality.

A political test for Xi

Xi is also aware that China has a disheartened younger generation worried about their future. That could spell bigger trouble for the Communist Party: protests or unrest.

A report by Freedom House's China Dissent Monitor claims that protests driven by financial grievances saw a steep increase in the last few months.

All protests are quickly subdued and censored on social media, so it is unlikely to pose a real threat to Xi for now.

"Only when the country does well and the nation does well can every person do well," Xi said in 2012.

This promise was made when China's economic rise looked unstoppable. It now looks uncertain.

Getty Images Chinese President Xi JinpingGetty Images
Political unrest caused by financial grievances is on the rise in China, according to a new report

Where the country has made huge strides over the past decade is in areas such as consumer electronics, batteries, EVs and artificial intelligence as part of a pivot to advanced manufacturing.

It has rivalled US tech dominance with the chatbot DeepSeek and BYD, which beat Tesla last year to become the world's largest EV maker.

Yet Trump's tariffs threaten to throw a spanner in the works.

The restrictions on the sale of key chips to China, including the most recent move tightening exports from US chip giant Nvidia, for instance, are aimed at curbing Xi's ambitions for tech supremacy.

Despite that, Xi knows that Chinese manufacturers are at a decades-long advantage, so that US manufacturers are struggling to find the same scale of infrastructure and skilled labour elsewhere.

Turning a challenge into an opportunity

President Xi is also trying to use this crisis as a catalyst for further change and to find more new markets for China.

"In the short term, some Chinese exporters will be greatly impacted," says Prof Zhang. "But Chinese companies will take the initiative to adjust the destination of exports to overcome difficulties. Exporters are waiting and looking for new customers."

Donald Trump's first term in office was China's cue to look elsewhere for buyers. It has expanded its ties across South East Asia, Latin America and Africa – and a Belt and Road trade and infrastructure initiative shored up ties with the so-called Global South.

China is reaping the rewards from that diversification. More than 145 countries do more trade with China than they do with the US, according to the Lowy Institute.

In 2001, only 30 countries chose Beijing as their lead trade partner over Washington.

Geopolitical gains

As Trump targets both friend and foe, some believe Xi can further upend the current US-led world order and portray his country as a stable, alternative global trade partner and leader.

The Chinese leader chose South East Asia for his first trip abroad after the tariff announcement, sensing his neighbours would be getting jittery about Trump's tariffs.

Around a quarter of Chinese exports are now manufactured or shipped through a second country including Vietnam and Cambodia.

Recent US actions may also present a chance for Xi to positively shape China's role in the world.

"Trump's coercive tariff policy is an opportunity for Chinese diplomacy," says Prof Zhang.

Getty Images China's President Xi Jinping waving upon his departure at Phnom Penh International Airport
Getty Images
Xi visited Vietnam, Malaysia and Cambodia on a tour of South East Asia in April

China will have to tread carefully. Some countries will be nervous that products being manufactured for the US could end up flooding into their markets.

Trump's tariffs in 2016 sent a glut of cheap Chinese imports, originally intended for the US, into South East Asia, hurting many local manufacturers.

According to Prof Huihua, "about 20% of China's exports go to the US - if these exports were to flood any regional market or country, it could lead to dumping and vicious competition, thereby triggering new trade frictions".

Getty Images President Donald Trump holds up a chart about tariffs while speaking into a microphone Getty Images
Trump has placed tariffs of up to 145% on Chinese goods

There are barriers to Xi presenting himself as the arbiter of free trade in the world.

China has subjected other nations to trade restrictions in recent years.

In 2020, after the Australian government called for a global inquiry into the origins and early handling of the Covid pandemic, which Beijing argued was a political manoeuvre against them, China placed tariffs on Australian wine and barley and imposed biosecurity measures on some beef and timber and bans on coal, cotton and lobster. Some Australian exports of certain goods to China fell to nearly zero.

Australia's Defence Minister Richard Marles said earlier this month that his nation will not be "holding China's hand" as Washington escalated its trade war with Beijing.

China's past actions may impede Xi's current global outreach and many countries may be unwilling to choose between Beijing and Washington.

Getty Images Aerial view of shipping containers sitting stacked at Shanghai Port 
Getty Images
The real battleground of the current trade war might be China's domestic economy

Even with all the various difficulties, Xi is betting that Beijing will be able to withstand any economic pain longer than Washington in this great power competition.

And it does appear that Trump has blinked first, last week hinting at a potential U-turn on tariffs, saying that the taxes he has so far imposed on Chinese imports would "come down substantially, but it won't be zero".

Meanwhile, Chinese social media is back in action.

"Trump has chickened out," was one of the top trending search topics on the Chinese social media platform Weibo after the US president softened his approach to tariffs.

Even if or when talks do happen, China is playing a longer game.

The last trade war forced it to diversify its export market away from the US towards other markets – especially in the Global South.

This trade war has China looking in the mirror to see its own flaws – and whether it can fix them will be up to policies made in Beijing, not Washington.

Top picture credit: Getty Images

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How Spain powered back to life from unprecedented national blackout

29 April 2025 at 22:06
Watch: Disruption continues in Madrid as power resumes

As life in Spain and Portugal stutters back to normal, the big questions are not just what went wrong but how to prevent such a full-scale power failure from happening again.

It was not until 11:15 (09:15 GMT) on Tuesday, almost 23 hours after the system collapsed that Spain's electricity grid declared it was back to normal.

The trains have started running again although some lines are suspended and most homes have got their power back.

So how did it get back up and running and why did it take so long?

For most of Monday, Spain was in chaos.

The issue appears to relate to two separate connection problems in the south west within moments of each other and then a disconnection from the French network for almost an hour.

Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez highlighted the sudden loss of 15 gigawatts of electricity at 12:33 on Monday, when about 60% of Spain's power generation suddenly vanished.

Graphic showing sudden loss of power in Spain

Eduardo Prieto, the director of operations for the grid Red Eléctrica, said the systems had been stable, until a loss of power generation in southwestern Spain.

Only the Canary Islands, the Balearics and Ceuta and Melilla on the North African coast were unaffected.

An increasing number of public figures are blaming a saturation of solar power and an over-reliance on renewable energy.

Minutes before the outage, Spain was running on 60.64% solar photovoltaic generation, with 12% wind and 11.6% nuclear.

Reuters People queue for a train on a platform in MadridReuters
By Tuesday, the Madrid metro was back up and running

However diversified and advanced Spain's energy mix is, the national power collapse at 12:35 on Monday required an enormous effort to get Spain back up and running.

The initial focus was to get the northern and southern power generating regions working again, which grid operator Red Eléctrica said was key to "gradually re-energising the transmission grid as the generating units are connected".

The risk lay in overloading the system by turning everything on at the same time and triggering another massive outage.

So everything had to be carefully phased for what experts call a "black start" working out as a success.

The initial focus was on hydro-electric plants, in particular pumped-storage plants with reservoirs full at this time of year and able to produce electricity fast from a standing start.

Combined-cycle gas plants also played a significant part in repowering the grid, but four nuclear power reactors at Almaraz, Ascó and and Vandellós were automatically shut down by the outage, and three others were already offline anyway.

EPA People use candles at a pub in Ourense, Galicia, northwestern Spain, amid a power outage, 28 AprilEPA
Power gradually returned overnight to all regions of Spain

Spain's neighbours France and Morocco also came to its aid.

Morocco said 900MW of power had been transferred through two high-voltage lines that cross the Strait of Gibraltrar from Fardioua to Tarifa in southern Spain.

French operator RTE said it had been "gradually transferring more electricity to the Spanish border" via its power lines supplying Catalonia in north-east Spain and the Basque country in the north-west.

RTE said the Iberian network had been disconnected from 12:38 to 13:30 on Monday, when the 400kV line to Catalonia was restored. Within minutes, France had supplied 700MW and RTE said it was later able to increase that by up to 2,000 MW.

Power was then eventually restored to Spain's electricity substations in the north, south and west of the peninsula.

By 19:20 on Monday, the grid operator said more than a fifth of demand had been restored by way of Spain's own electricity generation and from France.

Electricity provider Endesa said it had restored almost 3.5 million customers by 19:15 and had prioritised hospitals and other strategic infrastructure.

Just over an hour later the head of Red Eléctrica boss Eduardo Prieto said about 9,200 MW of demand - about 35.1% - had been restored.

That figure rose steadily to 61.35% by midnight on Monday and more than 99% by 07:00 on Tuesday.

Spain is only now beginning to count the cost. The CEOE bosses' organisation has estimated a €1.6bn hit on the economy.

And the political blame game has already begun.

The conservative head of the Madrid community, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, said the government's response had been slow and ineffective, while the leader of her People's Party Alberto Núñez Feijóo complained of a "lamentable" image of Spain being sent around the world.

Despite all the problems, Spaniards were praised by the government for rising to the occasion and showing solidarity.

Hospitals had back-up diesel-operated generators so they were able to keep critical care going.

Spain's Guardia Civil police force said it had rescued 13,000 passengers trapped on trains.

Residents in the southern town of Villanueva de Córdoba came to the aid of passengers stranded on a Ouigo train.

Local police in Barcelona returned to the old ways, regulating traffic in the Plaça España because the lights were out.

Passengers on the Barcelona metro had to walk to safety using the torches on their mobile phones when their trains became stuck in tunnels.

A conference centre in Girona was converted into a 180-bed shelter for people stranded by rail disruptions.

Although flights across the country were affected, airports operator Aena kept going throughout the disruption with the aid of generators.

Phone batteries ran down, TVs were on the blink and for many Spaniards their only lifeline to the outside world was from a car or battery-operated radio, as radio stations soldiered on through the blackout.

In Madrid there has been an urgent call for blood donations ahead of the big public holiday weekend.

Pedro Sánchez is determined that lessons will be learned and such a crisis will not happen again.

But energy expert Carlos Cagigal told Spanish TV there was a risk that it might, because Spain's infrastructure was simply not in a position to cope with all the renewable energy being produced.

The power grid operator warned earlier this year of the risks of excessive renewable energy while closing nuclear plants.

But a clip of its president Beatriz Corredor has gone viral from 2021, in which she insisted that Spain had "one of the safest and most advanced" electrical systems in the world and there was no reason to worry.

US president celebrates 100 days in office by touting record and blasting foes

30 April 2025 at 09:50
Watch: Trump’s first 100 days… in just 2 minutes

US President Donald Trump has celebrated the 100th day of his second term in office with a campaign-style speech, touting his achievements and targeting political foes.

Hailing what he called a "revolution of common sense", he told a crowd of supporters in Michigan that he was using his presidency to deliver "profound change".

The Republican mocked his Democratic predecessor, Joe Biden, and aimed fresh criticism at the US Federal Reserve's chairman, while dismissing opinion polls that show his own popularity slipping.

Trump has delivered a dramatic fall in the number of migrants crossing illegally into the US, but the economy is a political vulnerability as he wages an international trade war.

"We've just gotten started, you haven't seen anything yet," Trump told the crowd on Tuesday in a suburb of Detroit.

Speaking at the hub of America's automative industry, Trump said car firms were "lining up" to open new manufacturing plants in the Midwestern state.

But earlier in the day he softened a key element of his economic plan - tariffs on the import of foreign cars and car parts - after US car-makers warned of the danger of rising prices.

At his rally, Trump also said opinion polls indicating his popularity had slipped were "fake".

According to Gallup, Trump is the only post-World War Two president to have less than half the public's support after 100 days in office, with an approval rating of 44%.

But the majority of Republican voters still firmly back the president. And the rival Democratic Party is also struggling in polling.

The Democratic National Committee (DNC) said Trump's first 100 days were a "colossal failure".

"Trump is to blame for the fact that life is more expensive, it's harder to retire, and a 'Trump recession' is at our doorstep," the DNC said.

Trump conducted his own informal poll in Tuesday's remarks, asking the crowd for their favourite Biden nicknames. He also mocked his Democratic predecessor's mental agility and even how he appears in a swim suit, while continuing to insist he was the real victor of the 2020 election, which he lost.

Other targets of his ire included Jerome Powell, head of the US central bank, whom the president said was not doing a good job.

Trump touted progress on immigration – encounters at the southern border have plummeted to just over 7,000, down from 140,000 in March of last year.

On Tuesday the White House also said almost 65,700 immigrants had been deported in his term so far, although that is a slower pace than in the last fiscal year when US authorities deported more than 270,000.

A chart showing a large spike in arrests at the US border starting in 2021, reaching a peak of over 200,000, which reduced to just 7,181 in March 2025

Part of the way through his speech Trump screened a video of deportees being expelled from the US and sent to a mega-prison in El Salvador.

His immigration crackdown has faced a flurry of legal challenges, as has his effort to end the automatic granting of citizenship to anyone born on US soil.

During Tuesday's speech he insisted egg prices had declined 87%, a claim contradicted by the latest government price figures.

Inflation, energy prices and mortgage rates have fallen since Trump took office, although unemployment has risen slightly, consumer sentiment has sagged and the stock market was plunged into turmoil by the tariffs.

A chart showing stocks down around 9 percent since Trump's first day in office

Before the speech, Joe DeMonaco, who owns a carpentry business in Michigan, said Trump's patchwork of on-again, off-again import taxes were starting to increase prices, which he will have to pass on to his customers.

"I was hoping... he would approach things a little bit differently seeing that he's a little seasoned coming into a second term," Mr DeMonaco told the BBC. "But we're just treading water and seeing if things get better from here."

But it's clear that Trump's most steadfast supporters stand by him.

"I'm just thrilled," said Teresa Breckinridge, owner of the Silver Skillet Diner in Atlanta, Georgia.

"He's handling things wherever he can, multiple times a day, and he's reporting back to the people… I think the tariffs will end up definitely being in our favour."

Warning electricity meters in 300,000 homes could stop working

30 April 2025 at 07:06
Getty Images A woman is photographed from behind pointing at her RTS meter on the wall with her right index finger while the back of her head is visible in soft focus in the left side of the imageGetty Images

Hundreds of thousands of people are at risk of losing hot water or heating when their old type of electricity meter goes out of action.

Energy companies have said it will be "very, very difficult" to replace all Radio Teleswitching System (RTS) meters with smart meters before the old technology is switched off on 30 June.

Campaigners estimate more than 300,000 homes could lose heating - or have it stuck on constantly - in what energy regulator Ofgem has called "an urgent consumer welfare issue".

The government said the industry had to "work urgently to continue to increase the pace of replacements".

Since the 1980s, RTS meters have used a longwave radio frequency to switch between peak and off peak rates.

The technology is becoming obsolete and energy companies have a deadline to change their customers' meters by 30 June.

At the end of March, there were still 430,000 households using RTS meters for their heating and hot water, according to Energy UK, which represents energy companies.

It said more than 1,000 RTS meters were now being replaced each day.

But based on the 430,000 figure, this daily rate would need to be more like 5,000 to stand a chance of reaching everyone.

Ned Hammond, Energy UK's deputy director for customers, told BBC Radio 4's You and Yours the rate of replacement was rising, but added: "Obviously we'd need to increase from there significantly still to replace all the meters by the end of June."

Asked whether it was impossible to get every RTS meter switched over by 30 June, he said: "I wouldn't want to say impossible - but clearly very, very difficult to get to that point."

Simon Francis, from campaign group the End Fuel Poverty Coalition, said the Energy UK figures suggested more than 300,000 households could be left with a meter that doesn't work from 1 July.

He added: "With pressures on the replacement programme growing and with limited engineer availability, especially in rural areas, there's a real risk of prolonged disruption, particularly for vulnerable households."

RTS meters typically control heating and hot water on a separate circuit to the rest of the household's electricity, so things like plug sockets and lights are unlikely to be affected by the switch-off, Ofgem said.

The RTS network was originally planned to be switched off in March 2024, but this was extended to give energy companies more time to get through everyone.

Energy companies are still targeting 30 June "as things stand", Mr Hammond added, and are developing plans for a "managed and very careful phase down of the system", aiming to protect vulnerable customers.

'I don't want a smart meter'

One challenge of changing everyone on to the new system is a distrust of smart meters. The BBC has previously found that smart meters can sometimes give inaccurate readings and can work worse or better depending on where you live.

Jane from Norfolk told the BBC she is on an RTS meter and does not want a smart meter but feels as if she is being forced into getting one. She is currently on an Economy 7 tariff and does not want to switch.

"It's not yet lawful to say I've got to have one. And I really, really don't want one. I'm perfectly happy with the way things are," she said.

Diane Gray, who lives near Cockermouth in Cumbria, uses RTS to control the heating and hot water in her home on an Economy 7 tariff. She wants a smart meter but has been told one won't work in her house.

In December, her supplier wrote to her to say: "At the moment we're not able to install a new meter in your home that works with your current meter's heating set up. Please bear with us. We are working hard on a solution for your meter type."

She's since received another notification that a smart meter will be fitted in early June.

"I've got no idea where it's going to leave us," she told the BBC.

"It is very concerning. Because they're doing it in the summer, come the winter I keep thinking there must be some solution they're going to give us before we need to start using the heating."

If your energy supplier cannot fit a smart meter in your home, Ofgem says your supplier must install a "suitable meter" with no disruption to your service.

Getty Images A close up of a woman's hand as she calculates her energy bill and other outgoings using a calculator and a lined pad of A4 paper - her right hand is holding a pen and pressing numbers on the calculator and bills are spread over the tableGetty Images

What to do if you think you have an RTS meter

According to Ofgem, you may have an RTS meter if

  • Your home has a separate switch box near your meter with a Radio Teleswitch label on it
  • Your home is heated using electricity or storage heaters
  • There is no gas supply to your area
  • You get cheaper energy at different times of day, for example, on an Economy 7 tariff
  • If you haven't been contacted, Ofgem recommends reaching out to your supplier to arrange the replacement
  • However, beware if someone contacts you claiming you need to pay to change your meter as it's likely a scam.

Pakistan claims 'credible intelligence' India is planning an imminent military strike

30 April 2025 at 11:42
Getty Images An Indian paramilitary serviceman keeps watch in Pahalgam, Indian-administered Kashmir, where militants killed 26 tourists last weekGetty Images
An Indian paramilitary serviceman keeps watch in Pahalgam, Indian-administered Kashmir, where militants killed 26 tourists last week

Pakistan's information minister says that the country has "credible intelligence" that India intends to launch a military strike within the next 24 to 36 hours.

Attaullah Tarar's comments come after India accused Pakistan of supporting militants behind an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir that killed 26 tourists last week. Islamabad rejects the allegations.

Tarar said that India intends to use the attack as a "false pretext" for a strike and that "any such military adventurism by India would be responded to assuredly and decisively".

The BBC has contacted the Indian foreign ministry for comment.

The attack near the tourist town of Pahalgam was the deadliest attack on civilians in two decades in the disputed territory. Both India and Pakistan claim the region and have fought two wars over it.

Troops from both sides have traded intermittent small-arms fire across the border in recent days.

There has been speculation over whether India will respond with military strikes against Pakistan, as it did after deadly militant attacks in 2019 and 2016.

Authorities said last week they had conducted extensive searches in Indian-administered Kashmir, detaining more than 1,500 people for questioning. More people have been detained since then, although the numbers are unclear.

Authorities have demolished the houses of at least 10 alleged militants. At least one was reportedly linked to a suspect named in the shootings.

Kashmir, which India and Pakistan claim in full but administer only in part, has been a flashpoint between the two nuclear-armed countries since they were partitioned in 1947.

Indian-administered Kashmir has seen an armed insurgency against Indian rule since 1989, with militants targeting security forces and civilians alike.

India has not named any group it suspects carried out the attack in Pahalgam and it remains unclear who did it. A little-known group called the Resistance Front, which was initially reported to have claimed it carried out the shootings, issued a statement denying involvement. The front is reportedly affiliated with Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistan-based militant group.

Indian police have named three of four suspected attackers. They said two were Pakistani nationals and one a local man from Indian-administered Kashmir. There is no information on the fourth man.

Many survivors said the gunmen specifically targeted Hindu men.

The attack has sparked widespread anger in India, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi publicly saying the country will hunt the suspects "till the ends of the earth" and that those who planned and carried it out "will be punished beyond their imagination".

Warning shops could be forced to accept cash in future

30 April 2025 at 07:06
BBC Signs showing prices on a fruit and veg stall, including £1.50 each for celeriac, with a couple shopping in the background.BBC

Shops and services may have to be forced to accept cash in the future to help protect vulnerable people who rely on it, MPs have said.

A Treasury Committee report into cash acceptance stopped short of recommending a change in the law, but said the government had to improve its monitoring of the issue.

"There may come a time in the future where it becomes necessary for HM Treasury to mandate cash acceptance if appropriate safeguards have not been implemented for those who need physical cash," the report said.

Some countries, such as Australia or parts of the EU, are planning requirements to accept cash for essential services in some circumstances.

Poverty premium

In evidence to the inquiry, a government minister said there were no plans to make cash acceptance mandatory.

Shops and services can currently accept whichever form of payment they want.

With an increasing number going card-only, the committee said prices would rise for essential goods and services in the remaining outlets that accepted cash.

That would create a poverty premium for those who wanted to use cash to budget, as well as for vulnerable groups such as people with learning difficulties and the elderly.

"A sizeable minority depend on being able to use cash," said Dame Meg Hillier, who chairs the influential Treasury Committee.

She said the report should be a "wake-up call" about the risks of ignoring those affected by the falling use of banknotes and coins.

Dame Meg Hillier holding a purse and chatting with a greengrocer at Darlington's Victorian Covered Market who is wearing a green work tunic and gloves.
Dame Meg Hillier was one of the MPs on the committee who visited Darlington's Victorian Covered Market as part of the inquiry

The committee called on the government to "vastly improve" monitoring and reporting of cash acceptance levels.

Otherwise it warned it risked people being excluded from leisure centres, theatres or public transport. It also heard evidence about frustrated motorists unable to pay by cash in car parks.

"The government is in the dark on how widely cash is being accepted and that is completely unsustainable," said Dame Meg.

There was particular concern for victims of domestic and economic abuse who need cash to avoid being traced through card transactions or to gain financial independence from abusive partners.

'Cash or card, madam?'

Tom Cresswell stands at The Fruit Machine fruit and veg stall with punnets of strawberries in front of him, and a sign saying they are priced at £4 a box.

The committee's report is one of the most significant developments in the debate over the future of notes and coins since the Access to Cash Review, published in 2019 which called for urgent action on the viability of cash.

Among this latest report's findings is a conclusion that for some businesses, such as market stallholders, cash remains fundamental to the preservation of their trade.

There has been a market in Epsom, Surrey, for centuries - but it is only in recent years that traders have seen the majority of shoppers switch to electronic payments.

Chris Ilsley stands at his plant stall at Epsom market with cut flowers ready to sell behind him.

Chris Ilsley has been running his plant stall - CI Plants - on the market for 13 years.

When he started it was 100% cash, now it is 70% to 80% card payments.

Speaking surrounded by geraniums, he said he was happy to take any form of payment, although card was slightly easier albeit slower to process.

"We'll take anything," the 47-year-old said. "I prefer the older generation to use card and put their purse away [for safety]."

Over at The Fruit Machine greengrocer stall, Tom Cresswell also has a long line of customers, and he said most paid by card.

"The youngsters don't ever pay by cash; they pay with their phones and their watches," the 52-year-old said.

"The older gentlemen tend to use cash. Whatever is easier for the customer."

The report comes as the Post Office announced a renewed deal with banks to ensure customers can access basic banking services at post office counters.

The deal, which runs until the end of 2030 allows customers of 30 banks and building societies to use their local post office to withdraw and deposit cash, make balance queries and deposit cheques.

Some campaigners have called for cash acceptance to be enforced by the law now.

Ron Delnevo, from the Payments Choice Alliance, said he was disappointed about the "procrastinating approach" of the committee.

The Treasury said the government was committed to seeing 350 banking hubs in place.

"We welcome businesses who do want to continue accepting cash and new rules introduced by the Financial Conduct Authority support this by helping them to make deposits," a spokesman said.

Tony Blair says UK's current net zero policies are 'doomed to fail'

30 April 2025 at 06:00
PA Media Close up Tony Blair PA Media
Brian Wheeler
Political reporter

Sir Tony Blair has called for a major rethink of net-zero policies, arguing that limiting energy consumption and fossil fuel production is "doomed to fail".

In a new report, the former Labour prime minister says voters "feel they're being asked to make financial sacrifices and changes in lifestyle when they know the impact on global emissions is minimal".

He does not call for Labour to halt its push to decarbonise the UK economy - but says all governments need to rethink their approach, as it is not working.

The Tories - who have joined Reform UK in opposing net-zero emissions by 2050 - urged Labour to end the "mad dash" to this goal - but Downing Street said it would not be changing course.

In its report The Climate Paradox: Why We Need to Reset Action on Climate Change, The Tony Blair Institute argues that global institutions such as COP and the UN have failed to make sufficient progress in halting climate change.

At the same time, it argues, the public have lost faith in climate policies because the promised green jobs and economic growth have failed to materialise, thanks in part to global instability and the Covid pandemic.

Writing in the foreword, Sir Tony says: "Though most people will accept that climate change is a reality caused by human activity, they're turning away from the politics of the issue because they believe the proposed solutions are not founded on good policy."

He says "any strategy based on either 'phasing out' fossil fuels in the short term or limiting consumption is a strategy doomed to fail".

He also warns against the "alarmist" tone of the debate on climate change, which he says is "riven with irrationality".

The report calls for the rapid deployment of carbon capture and storage technology, greater use of AI to make energy grids efficient and investment in small scale nuclear reactors.

It also argues for a greater focus on climate change mitigation measures such as flood defences and a new international push to persuade China and India to cut emissions.

Downing Street said it would not be changing course on net zero - and rejected Sir Tony's suggestions that the public was no longer prepared to make sacrifices to meet green goals.

"We will reach net zero in a way that treads lightly on people's lives, not telling them how to live or behave," said the prime minister's official spokesman.

"Net zero is the economic opportunity of the 21st century, one that has the potential to reignite our industrial heartlands, create good jobs for the future and lower bills in the long term."

The government claims its net-zero strategy is already delivering results, with £43bn of private investment since last July and that its climate policies "now support around 600,000 jobs across the UK".

Labour sources are also pushing back against the idea that Sir Keir Starmer is going cold on the net-zero agenda, pointing to a speech he made last week in which he said the clean energy mission was "in the DNA of my government".

Reacting in the Commons to Sir Tony's comments in the report, Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said he agreed "with a lot of what it says" particularly on carbon capture and storage and AI "which the government are doing".

But Labour's opponents were quick to seize on the former prime minister's words.

Writing on social media, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage said: "Even Tony Blair now says the push for Net Zero has become 'irrational' and 'hysterical'. We are winning the argument!"

Conservative acting shadow energy secretary, Andrew Bowie said the government needed to "urgently change course".

"It seems even Tony Blair has come to the realisation that Keir Starmer and the Labour Party's mad dash to net zero by 2050 is simply not feasible, or sustainable," he added.

Green Party co-leader Adrian Ramsay said: "Blair is wrong, both morally and pragmatically. The British public understands the need for decisive climate action and expects politicians to lead in delivering this action."

Sir Tony's intervention has also been met with dismay by Labour-supporting environmental groups.

One campaigner told the BBC: "This is an oddly public and oddly-timed intervention that would usually be made by someone struggling for access.

"The Labour government are getting on with many of the policies outlined in the report because they know this is popular with people, especially the voting coalition they need to maintain for the next election.

"But adopting the anti-net-zero framing of [Tory leader Kemi] Badenoch and Reform is out of step with where the public are on this issue and will not help Labour."

The Liberal Democrats have been contacted for a response.

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Harvard head apologises as scathing reports on campus prejudice released

30 April 2025 at 10:46
Getty Images Student sit on steps at Harvard outside a large academic brick buildingGetty Images

Harvard University President Alan Garber has apologised following the release of internal reports into antisemitic and anti-Muslim prejudice at America's oldest university.

The reports included testimony from students who described feeling alienated and pressured to conceal their identity from their peers and educators.

In response to the findings, Harvard pledged to review its academic offerings and admissions policies - a key demand of the White House, which accuses the Ivy League institution of failure to stamp out campus antisemitism.

A pair of taskforces were established to look into bias at Harvard in the aftermath of last year's pro-Palestinian protests over the Israel-Gaza war.

"I'm sorry for the moments when we failed to meet the high expectations we rightfully set for our community," Dr Garber said in a letter on Tuesday accompanying the reports.

He said the Hamas attack on Israel of 7 October 2023, and the ensuing Israeli bombardment of Gaza unleashed "long-simmering tensions" on Harvard's campus.

"Members of our community reported incidents that led them to feel targeted and shunned on the basis of their identities," Dr Garber said.

"Harvard cannot - and will not - abide bigotry," his statement added.

The twin internal reports list some "actions and commitments", including that Harvard will review admissions processes.

The college said it would aim to ensure applicants are evaluated based on their ability to "engage constructively with different perspectives, show empathy and participate in civil discourse".

But the proposed remedial action appears to fall short of the White House's demands for Harvard to end all preferences "based on race, color, national origin, or proxies thereof" and implement "merit-based" policies by August.

The Trump administration has threatened to ban the university from enrolling foreign students and strip its tax exempt status if it does not comply.

In response, Harvard has sued the federal government to block the measures, including the freezing of more than $2bn in academic grants.

Lawyers for Harvard argue the government violated the university's constitutional rights and federal funding was being used as "leverage to gain control of academic decision making" on campus.

Dr Garber, who is Jewish, last month wrote in a letter to students that he had personally "experienced antisemitism directly, even while serving as president".

He did not offer details, but said it led him to understand "how damaging it can be to a student".

制造阵营对立,透视美菲规模最大军演“肩并肩-2025”丨智库视点2025

随着美国所谓“印太战略”的推进,军演性质已悄然转变。美菲极力拉拢其他盟友和伙伴参与“肩并肩”联合军演,企图在西太平洋地区制造阵营对立,加剧西太平洋地区紧张态势,谋求地缘政治和商业利益。

美国借“肩并肩”联演向菲律宾部署陆基反舰系统、高性能无人水面艇、濒海作战团等新型作战力量,展示其所谓“保护”盟友的决心,这明显就是在激化地区矛盾、鼓动对抗对立,搅动亚太地区安全局势。

南方防务智库特约研究员 金默

责任编辑:姚忆江

2025年4月21日,美菲年度“肩并肩-2025”联合军演启动,西太平洋的海风中弥漫着一股火药味。此次演习将持续至5月9日。这是美菲两国之间诸军兵种联合演习中的“重头戏”。相比以往,今年的军演呈现出参演国家多、持续时间长、指向性和针对性强等特点。

菲律宾武装部队声明称,6000名菲律宾军人和12000名美方人员将参与演习,澳大利亚和日本等一些国家派出了规模较小的特遣队,另有部分国家以观察员身份参与。约2万兵力集结南海咽喉之地,演习区域涉及菲律宾北部、西部,覆盖吕宋岛北部、巴丹群岛至巴士海峡,剑指南海争议海域。

美菲“肩并肩-2025”联合演习,号称“全面作战测试”的“印太版超级碗”军事行动,演习课目包括防空反导作战、海空作战、岛屿作战,并击沉菲律宾海军退役的二战老旧舰“马尔瓦号”,借此展现多种场景下联合战力与决心。

美国作为菲律宾最主要的盟友“靠山”,双方自1951年互助防御条约签署以来长期举行联合军演。菲律宾过度依赖美国的安全承诺,而特朗普政府的“交易政治”更让菲政府不得不寻求与日本、法国等国的多边防卫合作。美菲双边演习,现在日本自卫队也堂而皇之地进入,企图打造一个多角度、多层次的安全合作框架。

当地时间2025年4月26日,菲律宾吕宋岛,2025年度“肩并肩”联合军事演习期间,美国海军远征舰艇拦截系统NMESIS导弹系统从美国军用飞机上卸载。 (视觉中国/图)

多重政治军事企图

美菲“肩并肩”联演始于1982年,演习主题和课目随着美菲安全形势的发展变化不断调整,2015年后逐步由应对菲境内恐怖威胁和自然灾害为主,向应对外部威胁和高端战争转变。在美菲每年举行的多场联合军演中,“肩并肩”联演规模最大、要素最全、综合性最强,是观察美菲军事关系的风向标。

随着美国所谓“

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校对:星歌

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警惕呼吸道疾病反季流行,疾控专家详解防控策略

“麻疹曾是全球极力推动消除的疾病,新冠疫情后,全球消除麻疹进程放缓,已经消除麻疹的部分国家出现麻疹局部聚集或暴发流行。”

曾玫注意到,现在许多非儿科医院几乎不做百日咳检测,监测报告中成人和青少年病例被严重漏报,“需要加强对成人和青少年的百日咳监测,探索全生命周期的百日咳免疫策略”。

既非疫苗,也非药品,作为预防性生物制品的RSV单抗落地应用面临难题——由什么部门管理、是否需要处方、在哪里开放接种?

南方周末记者 黄思琪

发自: 武汉

责任编辑:曹海东

2025年1月7日,重庆市儿童医院,呼吸道传染病患儿增多。视觉中国|图

冬春季流行的部分呼吸道传染病,有“全年无休”的发展趋势?

4月19日-20日,在武汉举办的2025年全国疫苗与健康大会上,多位疾控专家呼吁关注麻疹、百日咳、RSV(呼吸道合胞病毒)等呼吸道疾病的反季流行与防控挑战。

南方周末记者了解到,2025年以来,全国报告985例麻疹病例(截至4月13日),较去年同期上升6.5倍。2024年11月开启的RSV流行期尚未结束,而往年到5月份基本结束流行的麻疹、百日咳等多种呼吸道传染病,在夏季仍有发病可能。

接种疫苗是预防传染病最有效、便利的手段,能有效降低感染、重症和死亡概率。每年4月24日-30日是世界免疫周,2025年世界卫生组织(WHO)公布的主题是“人人享有免疫服务,我们可以做到”。

自1978年全面实施计划免疫以来,我国可预防传染病发病率降至历史最低,2007年,我国实施扩大国家免疫规划,疫苗种类增加到14种,可预防15种传染病。

近两年来,麻疹、百日咳在全球重现,提示着这类免疫规划内的疾病防治并非一劳永逸。而对于流感、RSV等免疫规划外的疾病,“自费疫苗”接种率低的难题依然待解,南方周末记者在2025年全国疫苗与健康大会上获悉,2024-2025流行季,我国全人群流感疫苗估算接种率仅约3%。

国家卫生健康委副主任、国家疾控局局长沈洪兵在前述大会上表示,未来将动态调整优化国家免疫规划策略,逐步缩小国内免疫规划与国际差距,同时将探索建立通过纳入医保个人账户支付、财政补助等多渠道筹资机制,支持为老年人等重点人群接种流感疫苗、肺炎球

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校对:吴依兰

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从安防到场景数字化,海康威视如何破局?| 探访新质生产力先锋系列

南方周末特约撰稿 刘诗君

责任编辑:黄金萍

很多人对海康威视(002415.SZ)的印象还停留在“安防茅”,全球第一大安防企业,殊不知拉着它往前奔跑的马车,早已不只是传统安防。

2018年,海康威视重组业务,以公安、交通、司法等事业部为基础组建公共服务事业群(PBG),以金融、能源、楼宇、文教卫为基础组建企事业事业群(EBG),以渠道经销管理团队为基础组建中小企业事业群(SMBG)。

从安防,再到针对数字化转型的应用需求,基于物联感知、人工智能和大数据,帮助千行百业提质、降本、增效。一家行业龙头,就此摆脱路径依赖,在数智化浪潮中转型,立在了智能物联的潮头。海康威视的故事,也是中国当下千行百业数智化转型的缩影。

身处企业投资决策极为谨慎和务实的时代,海康威视副总裁、EBG解决方案总裁李亚亚对南方周末表示,要让用户真正愿意投资、购买,必须得帮助他们解决核心问题。这个问题往往朴素且直击要害,“你到底能不能解决问题、能不能产生价值?”

3万种产品的进化论

算算时间,李亚亚加入海康威视已经满15年了,2009年入门时还是一个不懂摄像机的程序员,现任海康威视副总裁、EBG解决方案总裁。

2001年,海康威视以安防起家,彼时,中国的数字视频监控还处于萌芽阶段。2002年,海康威视便发布板卡、DVR(硬盘刻录机)等产品,将H.264算法引入视频监控领域,后又不断迭代技术,推出摄像机产品,不仅搭上了行业技术换代的列车,还通过提高产品性能赢得市场。

2010年A股上市后,海康威视持续稳步前进,2011年跃居全球视频监控市占率第一位(据市场研究公司IHS排名)。自2016年至今,它一直稳居a&s(《安全&自动化》)全球安防50强榜单”榜首。当外界对其的印象还停留在安防茅”时,它早已开始布局数字化转型的新赛道。

海康威视位于杭州的总部大楼

海康威视位于杭州的总部大楼

李亚亚见证了这一过程,并投身其中。他入职后,最早在海康威视的金融行业事业部写联网软件代码,接着做金库、自助银行等业务场景的产品研发,然后转向解决方案。2018年金融、能源、楼宇、文教卫等事业部一起组建成为EBG之后,他们的业务也转向了千行百业的数字化产品和解决方案。

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校对:赵立宇

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“小额豁免”终止后,一件10美元T恤或将涨至24.50美元

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“小额豁免”终止后,一件10美元T恤或将涨至24.50美元

PETER EAVIS, JULIE CRESWELL
位于佐治亚州帕尔梅托的一处邮政设施。从周五开始,通过邮政进口的中国商品将面临相当于其价值120%的关税,或每包100美元的费用。
位于佐治亚州帕尔梅托的一处邮政设施。从周五开始,通过邮政进口的中国商品将面临相当于其价值120%的关税,或每包100美元的费用。 Kendrick Brinson for The New York Times
一个漏洞让美国消费者可以从中国大陆和香港购买大量廉价商品而无需支付关税和填写报关表格,它将于周五关闭。
价格已经在涨。
由于更高的价格和新的不便让消费者望而却步,来自希音和Temu等零售商的许多进口商品的订单可能会减少。但是,就像特朗普总统贸易战的大部分举措一样,政府对该漏洞的政策也经历了变化。总统曾下令在2月份关闭这一漏洞,但几天后又恢复了它。物流专家表示,短暂的关闭导致了边境的包裹堆积。
到底取消了什么?
广告
自2016年以来,价值800美元或以下的物品可以零关税进口到美国,甚至无需提交通常与购买外国商品相关的文件。这个漏洞被称为“小额豁免”。特朗普只取消了对来自中国大陆(小额豁免货物的最大来源地)和香港的商品的小额豁免。
今年提交给国会的一份报告称,海关和边境保护局每年处理超过10亿个小额豁免包裹。2023年,这些包裹的平均价值为54美元。
价值低于800美元的货物向来豁免关税,因为国会认为处理这些货物的费用和不便与它们带来的关税收入不符。特朗普终止豁免的部分原因是为了阻止芬太尼和芬太尼的前体物质通过小额豁免包裹进入美国。
特朗普在第一任期内对中国征收关税后,小额豁免包裹发货量激增,这表明人们和企业正在转向这一途径以避免关税。
这对购物者有什么影响?
由于对中国商品征收的关税高得离谱,小额豁免包裹商品的价格已经开始大幅上涨。
中国电子商务网站Temu的购物者明显感受到了这一点。该公司最近开始详细说明关税将增加的购物成本。
举个例子,在购物车里放入来自Temu的10件商品,包括50个装的重型衣架,70.50美元;一件绿色亚麻男衬衫,19.38美元;一张粉红色毛绒狗床,24.05美元;合计275.03美元,包括国际运费和10.20美元的销售税。但在结账时,该网站增加了343.26美元的进口费用,使总额达到628.49美元。(Temu给购物者的选择是购买标明来自本地仓库的商品,这样就不会产生进口费用。)
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在Temu的竞争对手希音,一购物车10件类似商品的价格为244.03美元。虽然没有详细说明商品的额外进口费用,但希音网站告诉购物者:“关税已包含在您支付的价格中。您永远不必在送货时支付额外费用。”
不过,购物者表示,他们看到希音网站上一些商品的价格在周末有所上涨。尽管关税豁免预计要到周五才会结束,但这些收费已经出现,因为现在下的订单要到周五之后才会跨境。
亚特兰大的林赛·奥利弗经常在希音购物,她上周在购物车里放了几件夏日衣裙,其中一件蓝色裙子售价10.88美元,一件碎花裙子售价11.29美元。她分享的截屏显示,当她周末去结账时,蓝色裙子的价格涨到了13.88美元,花裙的价格涨到了15.43美元。
“我知道东西要开始涨价了,我想在涨价之前买些夏装,”39岁的奥利弗说。她预计价格还会进一步攀升。
亚马逊周二表示,它曾考虑在其与Temu竞争的Amazon Haul网站上详细列出进口费用,但最终决定不这么做。
“团队总是在不断讨论各种点子,”发言人泰·罗杰斯在声明中说。他说,亚马逊的主网站从未考虑过这一方案,并且“这从未获得批准,也不会发生”。
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进口费用可能因货物的运输方式而异。如果通过DHL或联邦快递这样的快递公司运输,这些货物将被征收高达145%的关税,相当于一件10美元的T恤要缴纳14.50美元的关税。
从周五开始,通过邮政服务进入的货物将面临相当于货物价值120%的关税,或者每个包裹100美元的费用。6月份费用将增加到200美元。
手续上有什么不同?
小额豁免包裹的一个便利之处在于,收货人不需要像领取其他进口商品那样提供社会保障号码来领取货物。
收取小额豁免货物只需要姓名和地址。
从周五开始,来自中国的小额豁免货物将被归类为“非正式入境”进口。美国海关和边境保护局在声明中表示,价值最高可达2500美元的非正式入境物品不需要收件人的社会保障号码。尽管如此,该机构在1月份表示,承运商通常需要社会保障号码,因为有了这个号码可以加快通关速度。
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联邦快递表示,根据海关和边境保护局的要求,对于周五失去小额豁免的来自中国的货物,它不会要求提供社会保障号码。DHL表示,它不会对非正式入境货物要求社会保障号码。UPS拒绝透露是否需要,但该公司补充说,它有专业知识帮助客户“驾驭全球贸易,遵守所有适用的法律法规”。
邮政服务的一名代表表示,它将“不参与对小额豁免邮政货物的关税征收”。关税必须由将货物运往美国的承运人负责收取。
会有延误吗?
征收关税和检查更多的包裹可能为承运人和海关及边境保护局带来挑战。但目前尚不清楚这些举措是否会让包裹延误一两天或者更长时间。
海关总署在一份声明中表示,尽管“手头任务艰巨”,但它“具备实施和执行总统的关税政策的独特优势”。

Ana Swanson和Madeleine Ngo对本文有报道贡献。

Peter Eavis报道全球货物运输业务。

Julie Creswell是一名商业记者,为时报报道食品行业,他撰写有关食物的各个方面,包括农业、食品通胀、供应链中断和气候变化。

翻译:晋其角

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The white Afrikaners lining up to accept Trump’s offer of asylum

30 April 2025 at 12:49
Two people in 'Maga' red capsRachel Savage

Kyle believed God was looking out for him when he survived a violent farm robbery in South Africa eight years ago with only a black eye and broken ribs. The robbers failed to get the kettle and iron working, so were unable to burn anyone. Then the gun trigger jammed when they tried to shoot Kyle in the spine.

“They specifically said they were coming back for this farm … [that] it was their land,” said the 43-year-old, who did not want to use his full name. “Only afterwards, we found out that the guy that stays on the plot was actually killed … the farmhand … I don’t know what his name was.”

Kyle, a divorced father of three, is one of thousands of white South Africans hoping to take up Donald Trump’s offer of refugee status, to escape crime and what they allege is discrimination against white people.

The Trump administration’s support for these claims, while stopping other new refugee arrivals, has inflamed uncomfortable conversations about how far racial reconciliation still has to go, three decades after the end of white minority rule.

The US president’s offer was a “godsend”, said Kyle, now a salesman working remotely for an overseas company: “I’ve got white children, they’re at the bottom of the hiring list here. So, there is no future for them. And the sad thing is they don’t even know what apartheid is.”

White Afrikaner governments racially segregated every aspect of life from relationships to where people were allowed to live during apartheid, repressing South Africa’s Black majority while keeping the white minority safe and much better off.

South Africa remains deeply unequal, more than 30 years since the system ended. The black South African unemployment rate is 46.1%, for example, compared with 9.2% for white people.

Affirmative action has created a Black elite, but also nurtured feelings of disfranchisement among some white South Africans. Less than two-thirds of white South Africans agreed that apartheid deprived black people of their livelihoods, v three-quarters of Black South Africans, according to the 2023 Reconciliation Barometer, a survey by the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation, a thinktank.

Kate Lefko-Everett, the report’s author, said: “The level of contact and interaction between South Africans of different race groups has not really changed substantially.”

South Africa’s high violent crime rate – in the last quarter of 2024 there were almost 7,000 murders, according to police figures – affects everyone. But it has also added to a siege mentality among some white people. Almost two-thirds of white people were considering emigrating, compared with 27% of all South Africans, according to 2022 Afrobarometer data.

More than 8,200 people have registered their interest in US refugee status, the New York Times reported in March. The US embassy in Pretoria refused to comment.

Chilly Chomse, a 43-year-old carpenter, said he wanted to claim asylum for the sake of his four daughters.

He moved to Orania, a white, Afrikaner-only town, for work during the Covid-19 pandemic, but said he was not committed like some residents: “Once you leave this Orania premises, you are still in South Africa … you’re not safe and you can’t remain here 24/7 for the rest of your life.”

While some white English-speaking South Africans like Kyle hope the refugee programme will include them too, Trump’s February executive order referred to “ethnic minority Afrikaners”. It claimed a recently signed South African law that allows land expropriation in limited circumstances would enable the government to seize Afrikaners’ property, while state policy was “fuelling disproportionate violence against racially disfavoured landowners” (a longstanding far-right claim).

When Esté Richter, a friend of Chomse’s in Orania, heard about Trump’s refugee policy, she initially did not believe it. “Then I felt that someone has heard us, finally, that someone has heard the cries of Afrikaners,” said Richter, 35, who homeschools her two children and helps her husband with plumbing jobs.

“The main reason why we are looking at the refugee programme is in September 2022 my husband’s father was murdered on his farm,” she said. Richter’s mother-in-law was burned with a hot iron, beaten up and abandoned in the bush, but survived.

The Afrikaner rights group AfriForum met Trump allies in the US during his first term, claiming the South African government was “complicit” in white farmer murders. The group, which has 300,000 members, continues to claim that “Afrikaners are the target”.

Rudolph Zinn, a University of Limpopo professor, noted South African police data on farm attacks – which listed 12 “farming community” murders in the final quarter of 2024 – included black smallholder farms and non-commercial plots.

He said: “It’s definitely not linked to any political motive or a specific race. It’s all about the money.”

Zinn said imprisoned farm robbers he interviewed said they would tailor their language to instil as much fear as possible to get victims to hand over cash and valuables. “If it’s a white victim, then they would say: ‘I hate you because you’ve taken our land.’ But the very same offender would, when it’s a Black victim, say: ‘You’re a coconut, black on the outside, but inside you’re white.’”

Both AfriForum, which promotes staying in South Africa, and the prospective refugees raised the controversial Kill the Boer song as a reason for their fears. A South African court ruled in 2022 that the song, sung by the populist, far-left Economic Freedom Fighters party at political rallies, was not meant literally.

Others said South Africa risked a “white genocide”, a conspiratorial claim repeated by Trump’s billionaire, South African-born adviser Elon Musk.

Sam Busa, a 60-year-old business consultant of British descent, wants to claim asylum for herself and her three adult sons. She set up an “Amerikaners” website and social media pages to disseminate information, and gathered 30,000 signatures to thank Trump for offering refugee status.

She said: “We’re in, in my personal opinion, an advanced stage of a genocide potentially unfolding. What that does is it effectively throws out any argument about economic status.”

Chilly Chomse.Family of four smilingThe Orania town sign outside a shopping centre.

Pakistan claims 'credible intelligence' India is planning an imminent military strike

30 April 2025 at 11:42
Getty Images An Indian paramilitary serviceman keeps watch in Pahalgam, Indian-administered Kashmir, where militants killed 26 tourists last weekGetty Images
An Indian paramilitary serviceman keeps watch in Pahalgam, Indian-administered Kashmir, where militants killed 26 tourists last week

Pakistan's information minister says that the country has "credible intelligence" that India intends to launch a military strike within the next 24 to 36 hours.

Attaullah Tarar's comments come after India accused Pakistan of supporting militants behind an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir that killed 26 tourists last week. Islamabad rejects the allegations.

Tarar said that India intends to use the attack as a "false pretext" for a strike and that "any such military adventurism by India would be responded to assuredly and decisively".

The BBC has contacted the Indian foreign ministry for comment.

The attack near the tourist town of Pahalgam was the deadliest attack on civilians in two decades in the disputed territory. Both India and Pakistan claim the region and have fought two wars over it.

Troops from both sides have traded intermittent small-arms fire across the border in recent days.

There has been speculation over whether India will respond with military strikes against Pakistan, as it did after deadly militant attacks in 2019 and 2016.

Authorities said last week they had conducted extensive searches in Indian-administered Kashmir, detaining more than 1,500 people for questioning. More people have been detained since then, although the numbers are unclear.

Authorities have demolished the houses of at least 10 alleged militants. At least one was reportedly linked to a suspect named in the shootings.

Kashmir, which India and Pakistan claim in full but administer only in part, has been a flashpoint between the two nuclear-armed countries since they were partitioned in 1947.

Indian-administered Kashmir has seen an armed insurgency against Indian rule since 1989, with militants targeting security forces and civilians alike.

India has not named any group it suspects carried out the attack in Pahalgam and it remains unclear who did it. A little-known group called the Resistance Front, which was initially reported to have claimed it carried out the shootings, issued a statement denying involvement. The front is reportedly affiliated with Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistan-based militant group.

Indian police have named three of four suspected attackers. They said two were Pakistani nationals and one a local man from Indian-administered Kashmir. There is no information on the fourth man.

Many survivors said the gunmen specifically targeted Hindu men.

The attack has sparked widespread anger in India, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi publicly saying the country will hunt the suspects "till the ends of the earth" and that those who planned and carried it out "will be punished beyond their imagination".

Chinese Factories Slow in Early Sign of Trade War’s Toll

30 April 2025 at 13:57
A slowdown in commerce between the United States and China caused by escalating tariffs was evident in a report Wednesday on manufacturing activity in April.
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