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Today — 7 May 2025News

What happens next between India and Pakistan? Four key questions

7 May 2025 at 19:55
NurPhoto via Getty Images People look at a part of an aircraft in Wuyan village in the Himalaya region of Kashmir on May 7, 2025. India fires missiles at Pakistani territory early on May 7, killing at least eight people, according to Pakistan, which says it has begun retaliating in a major escalation between the nuclear-armed rivals. (Photo by Sajad Hameed/NurPhoto via Getty Images)NurPhoto via Getty Images
Pakistan claims to have shot down five Indian fighter jets - India has not confirmed this

In a dramatic overnight operation, India said it launched missile and air strikes on nine sites across Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir, targeting what it called militant positions based on "credible intelligence".

The strikes, lasting just 25 minutes between 01:05 and 01:30 India time (19:35 and 20:00 GMT on Tuesday), sent shockwaves through the region, with residents jolted awake by thunderous explosions.

Pakistan said only six locations were hit and claimed to have shot down five Indian fighter jets and a drone - a claim India has not confirmed.

Islamabad said 26 people were killed and 46 injured in Indian air strikes and shelling across the Line of Control (LoC) - the de facto border between India and Pakistan. Meanwhile, India's army reported that 10 civilians were killed by Pakistani shelling on its side of the de facto border.

This sharp escalation comes after last month's deadly militant attack on tourists in Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir, pushing tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals to dangerous new heights. India says it has clear evidence linking Pakistan-based terrorists and external actors to the attack - a claim Pakistan flatly denies. Islamabad has also pointed out that India has not offered any evidence to support its claim.

Does this attack mark a new escalation?

In 2016, after 19 Indian soldiers were killed in Uri, India launched "surgical strikes" across the LoC.

In 2019, the Pulwama bombing, which left 40 Indian paramilitary personnel dead, prompted airstrikes deep into Balakot - the first such action inside Pakistan since 1971 - sparking retaliatory raids and an aerial dogfight.

Experts say the retaliation for the Pahalgam attack stands out for its broader scope, targeting the infrastructure of three major Pakistan-based militant groups simultaneously.

India says it struck nine militant targets across Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir, hitting deep into key hubs of Lashkar-e- Taiba (LeT), Jaish-e-Mohammed, and Hizbul Mujahideen.

Among the closest targets were two camps in Sialkot, just 6-18km from the border, according to an Indian spokesperson.

The deepest hit, says India, was a Jaish-e-Mohammed headquarters in Bahawalpur, 100km inside Pakistan. A LeT camp in Muzaffarabad, 30km from the LoC and capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir, was linked to recent attacks in Indian-administered Kashmir, the spokesperson said.

Pakistan says six locations have been hit, but denies allegations of there being terror camps.

Anadolu via Getty Images Citizens gather in the area of the Bilal Mosque destroyed in Indian attack in Muzaffarabad, Jammu and Kashmir, Pakistan on May 7, 2025. (Photo by Chudary Naseer/Anadolu via Getty ImagesAnadolu via Getty Images
Pakistan says six locations have been hit, including in Muzaffarabad, capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir

"What's striking this time is the expansion of India's targets beyond past patterns. Previously, strikes like Balakot focused on Pakistan-administered Kashmir across the Line of Control - a militarised boundary," Srinath Raghavan, a Delhi-based historian, told the BBC.

"This time, India has hit into Pakistan's Punjab, across the International Border, targeting terrorist infrastructure, headquarters, and known locations in Bahawalpur and Muridke linked to Lashkar-e-Taiba. They've also struck Jaish-e-Mohammed and Hizbul Mujahideen assets. This suggests a broader, more geographically expansive response, signalling that multiple groups are now in India's crosshairs - and sending a wider message," he says.

The India-Pakistan International Border is the officially recognised boundary separating the two countries, stretching from Gujarat to Jammu.

Ajay Bisaria, a former Indian high commissioner to Pakistan, told the BBC that what India did was a "Balakot plus response meant to establish deterrence, targeting known terrorist hubs, but accompanied by a strong de-escalatory message".

"These strikes were more precise, targeted and more visible than in the past. Therefore, [they are] less deniable by Pakistan," Mr Bisaria says.

Indian sources say the strikes were aimed at "re-establishing deterrence".

"The Indian government thinks that the deterrence established in 2019 has worn thin and needs to be re-established," says Prof Raghavan.

"This seems to mirror Israel's doctrine that deterrence requires periodic, repeated strikes. But if we assume that hitting back alone will deter terrorism, we risk giving Pakistan every incentive to retaliate - and that can quickly spiral out of control."

Could this spiral into a broader conflict?

AFP via Getty Images Smoke billows after an artillery shell landed in the main town of Poonch district in India's Jammu region on May 7, 2025. At least eight Indians were killed and 29 others wounded Wednesday in the town of Poonch in Kashmir, close to the de facto border with Pakistan, a local Indian government official said. (Photo by Punit PARANJPE / AFP) (Photo by PUNIT PARANJPE/AFP via Getty Images)AFP via Getty Images
Smoke rises after an artillery shell hits the main town in India's Jammu region on Wednesday

The majority of experts agree that a retaliation from Pakistan is inevitable - and diplomacy will come into play.

"Pakistan's response is sure to come. The challenge would be to manage the next level of escalation. This is where crisis diplomacy will matter," says Mr Bisaria.

"Pakistan will be getting advice to exercise restraint. But the key will be the diplomacy after the Pakistani response to ensure that both countries don't rapidly climb the ladder of escalation."

Pakistan-based experts like Ejaz Hussain, a Lahore-based political and military analyst, say Indian surgical strikes targeting locations such as Muridke and Bahawalpur were "largely anticipated given the prevailing tensions".

Dr Hussain believes retaliatory strikes are likely.

"Given the Pakistani military's media rhetoric and stated resolve to settle the scores, retaliatory action, possibly in the form of surgical strikes across the border, appears likely in the coming days," he told the BBC.

But Dr Hussain worries that surgical strikes on both sides could "escalate into a limited conventional war".

Christopher Clary of the University at Albany in the US believes given the scale of India's strikes, "visible damage at key sites", and reported casualties, Pakistan is highly likely to retaliate.

"Doing otherwise essentially would give India permission to strike Pakistan whenever Delhi feels aggrieved and would run contrary to the Pakistan military's commitment to retaliating with 'quid pro quo plus'," Mr Clary, who studies the politics of South Asia, told the BBC.

"Given India's stated targets of groups and facilities associated with terrorism and militancy in India, I think it is likely - but far from certain - that Pakistan will confine itself to attacks on Indian military targets," he said.

Despite the rising tensions, some experts still hold out hope for de-escalation.

"There is a decent chance we escape this crisis with just one round of reciprocal standoff strikes and a period of heightened firing along the Line of Control," says Mr Clary.

However, the risk of further escalation remains high, making this the "most dangerous" India-Pakistan crisis since 2002 - and even more perilous than the 2016 and 2019 standoffs, he adds.

Is Pakistani retaliation now inevitable?

AFP via Getty Images Indian paramilitary personnel stand guard along a road in Srinagar on May 7, 2025, following border tensions. India and Pakistan exchanged heavy artillery along their contested frontier on May 7, after New Delhi launched missile strikes on its arch-rival in a major escalation between the nuclear-armed neighbours. New Delhi announced it had carried out "precision strikes at terrorist camps" at nine sites in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, days after it blamed Islamabad for a deadly attack on the Indian-run side of the disputed region. (Photo by Sajjad HUSSAIN / AFP) (Photo by SAJJAD HUSSAIN/AFP via Getty Images)AFP via Getty Images
Indian paramilitary personnel stand guard along a road in Srinagar on Tuesday

Experts in Pakistan note that despite a lack of war hysteria leading up to India's strike, the situation could quickly shift.

"We have a deeply fractured political society, with the country's most popular leader behind bars. Imran Khan's imprisonment triggered a strong anti-military public backlash," says Umer Farooq, an Islamabad-based analyst and a former correspondent of Jane's Defence Weekly.

"Today, the Pakistani public is far less eager to support the military compared to 2016 or 2019 - the usual wave of war hysteria is noticeably absent. But if public opinion shifts in central Punjab where anti-India feelings are more prevalent, we could see increased civilian pressure on the military to take action. And the military will regain popularity because of this conflict."

Dr Hussain echoes a similar sentiment.

"I believe the current standoff with India presents an opportunity for the Pakistani military to regain public support, particularly from the urban middle classes who have recently criticised it for perceived political interference," he says.

"The military's active defence posture is already being amplified through mainstream and social media, with some outlets claiming that six or seven Indian jets were shot down.

"Although these claims warrant independent verification, they serve to bolster the military's image among segments of the public that conventionally rally around national defence narratives in times of external threat."

Can India and Pakistan step back from the brink?

NurPhoto via Getty Images Indian security forces are on the LoC sector in Uri, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on May 7, 2025. Many civilians are injured on the Indian side after their house is hit by Pakistani shelling in Baramulla district. The Indian military says early Wednesday it launches strikes against Pakistan in retaliation for last month's militant attack in Pahalgam, Jammu and Kashmir. (Photo by Nasir Kachroo/NurPhoto via Getty Images)NurPhoto via Getty Images
Indian security forces patrolling in Uri, Jammu and Kashmir

India is once again walking a fine line between escalation and restraint.

Shortly after the attack in Pahalgam, India swiftly retaliated by closing the main border crossing, suspending a water-sharing treaty, expelling diplomats and halting most visas for Pakistani nationals. Troops on both sides have exchanged small-arms fire, and India barred all Pakistani aircraft from its airspace, mirroring Pakistan's earlier move. In response, Pakistan suspended a 1972 peace treaty and took its own retaliatory measures.

This mirrors India's actions after the 2019 Pulwama attack, when it swiftly revoked Pakistan's most-favoured-nation status, imposed heavy tariffs and suspended key trade and transport links.

The crisis had escalated when India launched air strikes on Balakot, followed by retaliatory Pakistani air raids and the capture of Indian pilot Abhinandan Varthaman, further heightening tensions. However, diplomatic channels eventually led to a de-escalation, with Pakistan releasing the pilot in a goodwill gesture.

"India was willing to give old-fashioned diplomacy another chance.... This, with India having achieved a strategic and military objective and Pakistan having claimed a notion of victory for its domestic audience," Mr Bisaria told me last week.

Final five designs revealed for Queen Elizabeth memorial

7 May 2025 at 19:00
FOSTER + PARTNERS Proposed statue of Queen Elizabeth II on a horseFOSTER + PARTNERS
The winning monument will be built at St James's Park in London

A final shortlist of five proposed designs for the national memorial to Queen Elizabeth II has been revealed by the government.

The memorial, commemorating the life of Britain's longest-reigning monarch who died in September 2022, will be built in St James's Park in central London.

Illustrations of the design concepts are being put online by the Cabinet Office and the public will be invited to have their say about the ideas for the major new monument.

Three of the five proposed designs feature the late Queen riding a horse, reflecting her lifelong enthusiasm for equestrianism.

HEATHERWICK STUDIO A proposed statue of the late Queen on horseback surrounded by lily padsHEATHERWICK STUDIO
This idea features the late Queen on horseback surrounded by lily pads

There are other features proposed by the competing teams of artists and architects, such as incorporating recordings of the late Queen's voice into a memorial, and large sculptures of lilies around a figure of the late Queen.

One of the proposed designs uses an oak tree to represent Queen Elizabeth's strength and resilience. Another suggests building symbolic pathways and a pair of bridges over the lake in the park.

The winning entry will be chosen later this year, but there is no date yet set for when the finished memorial will be unveiled. The construction budget will be between £23m and £46m, depending on the selected design, says the Cabinet Office.

TSS JFA Oak tree as a proposed memorial to Queen Elizabeth IITSS JFA
An oak tree from Windsor Great Park was the inspiration for this proposal

The public will get a chance to say whether they want a more traditional representation of the late Queen, or something more experimental, in what will become an important London landmark.

The new memorial will be placed not too far from statues of the late Queen's parents, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother.

Also nearby is the memorial to Queen Victoria outside Buckingham Palace.

WILKINSON EYRE Bridges across the lake in St James's Park in a proposed monument to Queen Elizabeth IIWILKINSON EYRE
Interweaving bridges are used in one of the proposed designs

The location for the monument will be a section of St James's Park close to the Mall and across to a bridge over a lake in the park. The entries include plans to landscape and redesign this area and the construction process is expected to mean replacing the current bridge.

The memorial scheme will also provide community projects and facilities around the country.

This will follow in the tradition of legacy schemes such as the King George V Playing Fields, which saw almost 500 sports grounds opened in memory of the monarch who died in 1936.

Many of those playing fields are still in use, dotted around the country.

JLL Gibbons A proposed memorial for the late Queen Elizabeth showing a statue of her on horsebackJLL Gibbons
A figure of the late Queen on horseback is part of this design for the park

The public is being encouraged to contribute ideas about the memorial and to give feedback on the shortlisted designs.

"We want public engagement, we want the public to comment on these proposals, because we want them to feel part of it," said Baroness Amos, a member of the committee which will select the design to be built.

"So much of what the late Queen was about was meeting people and engaging with them," she said.

Baroness Amos, a former leader of the House of Lords, said the memorial should be a fitting tribute to the late Queen, who died at the age of 96 after seven decades on the throne.

"This is about an extraordinary woman and an extraordinary reign, about her commitment to public service, her duty, her commitment to the community, to the nation and the Commonwealth," she said.

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'Why would we play Putin's game?': Ukrainians see Russian lull as sideshow

7 May 2025 at 19:37
Getty Images Students dressed in old Soviet costumes stand in front of a large sign saying 2025 as they mark the 80th anniversary of the end World War TwoGetty Images
Russia is celebrating the 80th anniversary of the end of World War Two

Russia is expected to begin a self-declared three-day pause in fighting against Ukraine on Wednesday night, in a move derided by many Ukrainians and described by President Volodymyr Zelensky as little more than a "theatrical show".

Russia's Vladimir Putin proposed the three-day ceasefire to coincide with the anniversary of the end of World War Two in Europe – a public holiday in Russia on Friday known as Victory Day.

But in doing so Putin has rejected a much more substantial proposal from the Trump administration for a 30-day ceasefire and negotiations – a proposal that was accepted by Ukraine.

Zelensky has in turn rejected Russia's unilateral three-day ceasefire and said that Ukraine will not guarantee the safety of a celebratory military parade in Moscow's Red Square on 9 May.

The Russian proposal has been met with widespread cynicism in Ukraine, where polls consistently suggest that about 95% of the population distrusts Russia.

"I don't believe there will be any ceasefire," said Tetyana Kondratenko, 42, a shopkeeper in Khotin Village in Sumy, a heavily bombarded region about six miles (10km) from the Russian border.

"Lately the shelling has only intensified, for half the day today we have heard boom after boom," Ms Kondratenko said in a phone interview.

Getty Images A man stands amid debris in front of residential houses destroyed by Russian shelling on May 6, 2025 in Velyka Chernechchyna, Sumy OblastGetty Images
Ukraine's Sumy border region has been heavily bombarded by Russian forces

Zelensky was right to reject the proposal "because you know how they operate, like what happened at Easter", she added, referring to the Russians.

"They announced a ceasefire, then used it to bring in more equipment and started attacking again. What kind of ceasefire is that?"

Last month, around Easter, Russia proposed a similar 30-hour cessation in hostilities but was later accused by Ukraine of violating its own suggested truce nearly 3,000 times.

On that occasion, rather than rejecting the proposal outright, Ukraine said it would mirror Russia's actions.

A senior Ukrainian military officer told the BBC at the time that frontline units received an order to stop firing at Russian positions, but to record evidence of Russian violations and return fire if needed.

By Wednesday Ukrainian officials had not said categorically whether they would adjust their military action over the three-day period. Asked if Ukrainian forces planned to continue military operations, a source in the presidential office told the BBC: "We'll see."

From Novosofiivka village, in the very badly hit region of Zaporizhzhia, Antonina Sienina, 35, said that any ceasefire worth agreeing to should come with "solid guarantees" for Ukraine's safety and sovereignty – not something included in Putin's plan for the next three days.

But Ms Sienina had mixed feelings. Her parents were killed in a Russian strike, her brother has been wounded, and her village has been pounded, so "maybe it wasn't right to refuse" the three-day proposal, she added.

"Because honestly, we would be happy even for just one day without explosions. Just to take the kids somewhere, to a shopping mall, to a playground, to some attractions," she said.

"We dream of the war being over, or at least a temporary ceasefire, because my children are exhausted. The nerves, the medications, the sleepless nights. It's too much."

Reuters Firefighters work at the site of a Russian drone strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in ZaporizhzhiaReuters
Ukraine's south-eastern region of Zaporizhzhia has come under repeated bombardment

Residents of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv were kept awake in the early hours of Wednesday morning by Russian drone and missile strikes on the city. A ballistic missile was successfully shot down by air defence systems but a drone hit a block of flats, killing a mother and her son and injuring at least six more, including a child.

The mayor of Moscow said on Wednesday that Russian air defences had downed 14 Ukrainian drones overnight. The Kremlin said that the drone attacks had no bearing on its plans to pause fighting for three days.

The pause is not being taken seriously in Ukraine, for the most part. It has been greeted instead as more of a propaganda exercise. Pavlo Klimkin, the former foreign minister of Ukraine, told the BBC it was simply another Russian show of force.

"This is all about Russia framing the agenda on its own terms," Klimkin said. "It has nothing to do with a real ceasefire. It is all about messaging – messaging internally, messaging to the US, messaging to Europe to say that we, Russia, are in control."

Talks directed at a substantial ceasefire process began back in February, with US President Donald Trump sending officials to negotiate separately with the leaders of Russia and Ukraine. Ukraine has since agreed to a US proposal for a 30-day unconditional ceasefire, Russia has not.

Getty Images Two men in dark suits, Putin on the right, shake hands in the Kremlin in Moscow in AprilGetty Images
Trump envoy Steve Witkoff met Putin several times but was unable to secure a 30-day ceasefire

The months since have been a deadly period in the war. Russia has intensively targeted Ukrainian cities with drones and missiles, killing 19 people including nine children last month in a strike on a playground in Kryvyi Rih and 35 people a week later in an Easter strike on the city of Sumy.

According to the UN, at least 848 civilians were killed between 1 and 24 April - a 46% increase on the same period last year.

The level of civilian deaths meant that any ceasefire should be accepted, even on Russian terms, said Oleksii Kamchatnyi, 38, a scientist living in Kyiv.

"It is about saving lives," Mr Kamchatnyi said. "I'm originally from Donbas, from Pokrovsk. I managed to evacuate my mother but my father stayed there. I haven't had any contact with him since 9 March."

Still, Mr Kamchatnyi supported the temporary ceasefire, he said, "even if it means giving up territory."

Ukrainian polling suggests that a majority of the public would accept the idea of ceding some control of territory seized by the Russians during the full-scale invasion, though not surrendering formal sovereignty over the land, according to Anton Grushetsky, director of the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology.

"There is for certainly a lot of fatigue and there is a lot of desire to have a stable peace in Ukraine," Mr Grushetsky said.

But based on previous polling, the majority of Ukrainians would likely view the proposed three-day ceasefire as "either a trap or simply a ploy to avoid attacks on Moscow during the holiday", he added.

There is also suspicion among many in Ukraine that the ceasefire proposal is simply a ploy by Russia to move its forces to strategic places on the battlefield, make reinforcements where needed, and prepare for offensives.

Ukraine had already made clear that it was ready for a full, unconditional ceasefire, and had no obligation to take part in Russia's agenda, said Mykhailo Samus, a Ukrainian military analyst and director of the New Geopolitics Research Network.

"Why would we play Putin's game? We are ready for a real ceasefire," Mr Samus said. "If he wants to organise a parade to show that he is a great leader, that is his business."

Daria Mitiuk contributed to this report.

智识漂流|协和孙主任投诉我了:“男性子宫肌瘤患者”主编无责

7 May 2025 at 19:42

相关阅读:智识漂流|“55名男性子宫肌瘤患者”,如何瞒过协和院士?

file

真的是第一次听到这种抗辩理由。

前文回顾:河南中医院36名男性剖宫产!协和院士背书……

前天我写了一篇文章,大意是:齐鲁医院霍文静在论文中制造了55个“子宫肌瘤男性患者”,如果她是齐鲁医院重点科室主任,那这个丑闻就大了。但她仅仅是一个护士而已,所以这个事件的关注点更应在国家药品监督管理局主管、中国医药科技出版社主办、协和院士主编的国家权威期刊——《实用妇科内分泌》电子杂志。

然后我扒了一下这份期刊:

编辑团队如下:它由我国著名妇产科领域学科带头人北京协和医院郎景和院士担任主编,孙爱军教授担任执行主编,北京协和医院妇科内分泌中心联合主办。全国妇产科领域著名专家教授担任副主编、常务编委和编委。

CDT 档案卡
标题:协和孙主任投诉我了:“男性子宫肌瘤患者”主编无责
作者:卸妆君
发表日期:2025.5.7
来源:微信公众号“智识漂流”
主题归类:学术造假
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

我的疑问是,这种一眼假的论文,是怎么发出来的?这真是一个巨大的谜团。《实用妇科内分泌》电子杂志都不审稿的吗?

全文见:“55名男性子宫肌瘤患者”,如何瞒过协和院士?

极目新闻稍晚的报道给了一个答案:发表“男性患子宫肌瘤”论文的杂志一年发文高达三千余篇,中介称版面费最高达万元,可提供代写服务。

就是这样一个事情。我没觉得自己做错什么,也没觉得自己侵犯了谁的名誉权。

结果今天收到一位孙先生的夺命连环投诉,都是针对这篇文章的。

第一个投诉发起于12.03分,投诉理由是:“责任编辑可以决策文章的发表,除非发生重大问题,才提交编委会讨论审议,决议提交执行主编决策,必要时才提交主编做决定。至今为止没有发给主编执行主编任何文章做决策。上面的文章对主编进行了人身攻击,申请删除上面文章。”

image

44分钟后,又投诉了一次,理由为:“针对近2日山东大学齐鲁医院霍文静的学术论文的报道,在报道传播过程中,出现了与主编,执行主编,编委团队不实信息,主编郎景和院士、执行主编、编委团队内的所有成员都未参与该稿件任何评审环节,对论文数据真实性、作者学术行为无监管义务,对该杂志的运行与发布情况并不知情。所发信息涉及内容与事实不符,要求删除。”

image

我猜测这位孙先生可能就是《实用妇科内分泌》电子杂志执行主编孙爱军。

孙爱军是北京协和医院能妇科内分泌与生殖中心主任,先后担任“国家十五,十一五,十二五支撑计划重点攻关项目与国家自然科学基金面上项目、首都卫生发展科研专项项目的负责人。

我其实是被吓到了。主编、执行主编“对论文数据真实性、作者学术行为无监管义务”?

真的是第一次听到这种抗辩理由。

主编和执行主编“对该杂志的运行与发布情况并不知情”,不是失职吗?你不知情,期刊发布的内容还是一样要承担责任的。这不是常识吗?

协和的大咖,你在搞什么啊?

我有点崩溃了。我要向中国工程院院士和协和妇产主任普及这个知识点吗?

根据《报纸期刊管理规定》《著作权法》及多家期刊公布的岗位职责,主编和执行主编的核心义务包括:

终审权责:执行主编需对每期稿件进行终审并签发,主编需对期刊的政治、学术、出版标准全面负责;

流程监督:建立三审三校制度,确保责任编辑初审—专家外审—执行主编终审流程落实;

质量把控:对明显存在数据异常(如男性子宫肌瘤患者这类医学常识性错误)的稿件,负有不可推卸的失察责任。

此事件已构成重大出版事故。主编团队却以”不知情"为由推卸责任,在那一本正经地胡说八道。

把我都整不会了。我该怎么办?我算说明白了吗?对协和的大咖真的刮目相看了。

知鸦读书|大生刘蟾:中西医之争,谁更厉害?

7 May 2025 at 19:36

在当今社会,中西医之争一直是一个备受关注且争议不断的话题。然而,我们需要清晰地认识到,中西医之争本质上是一个具有诱导性的假问题,很难通过争论得出明确的结果。

医学的核心目的是治病救人,其唯一的判断标准就是能否有效地治疗疾病。但现实中,人们常常用地域来区分医学,将其分为 “中医” 和 “西医”。这种做法其实是民族主义情绪在作祟,它预设了一种敌我对立的氛围,是不合理的。

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实际上,全世界的古代医学在很多方面都有相似之处。

以中医为例,它强调不能暴饮暴食,提倡食用清淡、让人感觉舒服的食物,认为康复应顺应自然规律。而古希腊医学之父希伯克拉底也提出 “让食物成为你的药物,让药物成为你的食物”,古罗马医学家盖伦同样认为简陋可口的饮食对健康更有益。

此外,放血疗法在民间也有体现,比如老太太给发烧小孩扎中指放血退烧,这和古罗马的方法类似。这表明在古代,不同地域的医学都在探索如何维护人体健康,有着相似的思考方向。

到了 17 世纪,传统医学迎来了重大变革,迈入了现代医学阶段。

英国医生威廉・哈维通过解剖人体,深入认识了人体结构,这一举措带来了一场全新的医学革命。西医实际上包含了西方传统医学和西方现代医学,西方现代医学是在批判和继承西方传统医学的基础上不断发展而来的。

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CDT 档案卡
标题:大生刘蟾:中西医之争,谁更厉害?
作者:大生刘蟾
发表日期:2025.5.7
来源:微信公众号“知鸦读书”
主题归类:中医
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

那么,中国是否有现代医学呢?答案是肯定的。

清末名医伍连德在抗疫过程中,最早提出了戴口罩、分餐制等理念,这些都是典型的现代医学理念。

屠呦呦在治疗疟疾时,从古代医方中获取灵感,经过大量的研究和实验,最终提炼出了青蒿素。她运用的是现代医学的理念和方法,是当之无愧的了不起的现代医学家。

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“中医” 和 “西医” 这种分类方式天然地预设了对立情绪,并不科学。如果我们用传统医学和现代医学来划分,就会清晰许多。

不管是来自哪个地域的医生,使用何种方子,都应该用现代人的思维和认知进行重新检验。对于那些有效的方法和药物,我们应该保留并进一步研究和发展;而对于无效的部分,则应果断抛弃。同时,我们要借助高科技手段来提升治疗方法,充分发挥传统医学的最大价值。

倡导科学的医学态度

我们提倡现代医学,并不是要反对中医,而是要用现代思维来审视中医。中医有着悠久的历史和丰富的经验,其中必然有许多有用的东西值得我们去挖掘和传承。但不可否认的是,中医中也存在一些可能已经过时或无效的内容,我们需要进行自然的筛选。

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医学不应该存在中西医的对立,而应该有传统医学与现代医学、有效和无效、医生和骗子的区分。在医学领域,打嘴炮式的争论是没有意义的,真正重要的是能够治病救人,为人们的健康保驾护航。

中西医之争不应成为我们关注的焦点,我们应该把目光更多地投向医学的本质,以科学、客观的态度对待不同的医学体系,取其精华,去其糟粕,共同推动医学的进步和发展,让更多的人受益于医学的成果。

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【异闻观止】三里河|“五一”消费,爆了

7 May 2025 at 17:44

CDT编者按:微信公众号“三里河”发布一篇文章援引官方数据称“五一假期期间消费爆了”,并强调“中国有足够的韧性抵御外部环境冲击”,该报道引发了一些网友的质疑,因为人均消费“尚未恢复到疫情前的水平”。

@whyyoutouzhele:五一刚过,官媒交出了亮眼的数据:“五一消费爆了,中国游客消费同比增8%” 但人均消费尚未恢复到疫情前的水平。2019年五一,全国国内旅游接待总人数1.95亿人次;人均消费150.08元;2025年五一假期,全国国内旅游出游3.14亿人次,人均每日消费114.82元。今年五一假期人均每日消费较2019年下降了23.86%。


“五一”消费,爆了。

据文化和旅游部数据中心测算,假期5天全国国内出游3.14亿人次,同比增长6.4%;国内游客出游总花费1802.69亿元,同比增长8%。

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据商务部商务大数据监测,假期全国重点零售和餐饮企业销售额同比增长6.3%。

消费市场的亮眼表现,不仅是一组令人振奋的统计数据,更折射出中国消费市场在政策工具与市场力量共振下激发出巨大活力。

CDT 档案卡
标题:“五一”消费,爆了
作者:三里河
发表日期:2025.5.7
来源:微信公众号“三里河”
主题归类:中美贸易战
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

这背后,有哪些重要的趋势,又传递出怎样的信号?

文旅消费不断出“新”。

5天,总花费1802.69亿元,再次体现中国消费市场的韧性。

“五一”假期,各地创新和丰富消费场景,以多元供给激发消费潜力、市场活力,为游客带来深度体验。

从特种兵式夜游到博物馆奇妙夜,深度化、个性化等需求让文旅消费有了新变化、新趋势。

如,酣畅淋漓的音乐节和演唱会成为假日“新宠”。北京昌平区打造的“音乐+文旅”沉浸式体验,实现综合收入6593.05万元。

同样在北京,花式游园备受青睐,全市公园共接待游客931.83万人次,同比增加4.37%。

新变化还体现在“China Travel”+“China Shopping”上。

伴随入境免签利好,“五一”假期很多外国游客选择到中国旅游。

假期首日,天津国际邮轮母港,梦想号、芮吉塔号和海洋赞礼号三艘国际邮轮,三船同靠让2000多名外籍游客抵达中国。很多外国人还提着行李箱来“扫货”,支付宝平台显示,“五一”假期前三天,入境游客用支付宝消费金额同比去年增长180%。

新趋势上,县域游、夜经济在升温。

除了去大城市感受繁华商圈与地标景点,越来越多人出行的目的地也在变化,“反向旅游”逐渐兴起。

晋江、荣昌、平潭等小城凭借独特的非遗文化、未被过度开发的自然景观和充满烟火气的传统美食,成为都市人逃离喧嚣的新选择。

“县城游”持续走热的背后是消费者不再执着于追逐地标符号,而是更渴望在旅途中获得心灵的松弛,小地方大体验逐渐变得更具吸引力。

值得注意的是,“五一”期间多地推出“惠玩夜经济”活动,通过消费券、数字化导览等提升服务便捷性,拉动餐饮、住宿等二次消费。

如,陕西11个国家级夜间文旅消费集聚区客流量达481.7万人次,同比增长11.39%。

促消费政策撬动效应凸显。

观察消费者的变化,可以感知一个阶段的消费市场趋势演变。

“五一”假期,以旧换新政策展现出超预期的市场撬动效应。

假期前四天,汽车以旧换新补贴申请量超6万份,带动新车销售88亿元;消费者购买12大类家电产品356万台,带动销售119亿元;购买手机等数码产品242万件,带动销售64亿元。

如果拉长时间的维度,政策的精准性与需求撬动效应则更为凸显。

2025年初至5月5日0时,汽车以旧换新补贴申请量突破300万份;消费者购买12大类家电以旧换新产品5516万台,购买手机等数码产品4167万件。

系列数据印证了耐用消费品存量市场更新需求的巨大潜力,揭示了耐用消费品消费升级的深层逻辑,家庭耐用消费品进入集中更新周期,技术普惠正通过政策激励加速转化为现实消费力。

“五一”假期,中国更具韧性、更富层次的内需市场新图景正在展开。在政策工具与市场活力的双轮驱动下,中国有足够的韧性抵御外部环境冲击,在转型升级中积蓄新动能。

剑客写字的地方|这些事情放一起看,人心随着失望在凉却

7 May 2025 at 17:01

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当一件几乎一样的事情,开始出现两种完全不同的评价时,那么必然是哪里出了点问题。去年4月份,江西抚州的才子大桥上,出现护栏被成片吹倒的画面。当时也上了热搜,官方说夜里11级大风,而网友们骂骂咧咧:耗资2亿,就这?

人们怀疑质量上存在豆腐渣以及施工中存在官商之间的利益勾结,所以才被大风捡了便宜。但与此同时,也有一小部分声音认为:这很难评价。接近12级的风把护栏吹塌,并非完全不可能。

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可一年之后的今天,同样的事件出现后,无论是在视频里,还是在新闻报道下面,人们为地方官方“解释”的评价,可以说是万里挑不到一条。这种现象,对于我们这儿的人来说,反倒是有点凤毛麟角的意思了。

但这也相当合理,毕竟再如何自欺欺人的货色,也必须在大山落到自己头上之前,重新做回一个人。

5月6日,“百姓关注”发布消息,四川雅安一桥面护栏被风吹倒,石材碎裂,市民质疑是“豆腐渣工程”。

CDT 档案卡
标题:这些事情放一起看,人心随着失望在凉却
作者:送青人
发表日期:2025.5.7
来源:微信公众号“剑客写字的地方”
主题归类:塔西佗陷阱
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

当地的解释是咨询过气象部门了,就是风太大,后续维修会加一些相应的防护措施。

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别再说风大了,笑太多,脸都要笑麻了。

怎么之前建造的时候,不加一点防护措施呢?有位网友的点评非常到位:照你们这个逻辑,那沿海城市是不是天天都得修护栏?黑白手套左右互搏,投标的公司岂不得发财。

这并不是普通人越来越爱刁难谁,是你常常用天气作借口,年年拿剧本喂饭,次次都说是真人真事。吃多了,哪怕只是一口热水,也会先咂摸咂摸,看看是不是工业风味。

真正被吹倒的,是群众的耐心、信任,还有那点点残余的期待。就像吃坏肚子的饭,你总不能每次都说锅的问题。

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于是,见得多了,自然不好骗了、或是不愿意继续被骗了。隔三差五污吏落马,不是收了商人的钱,就是权色交易,或者是警察长期给黑恶势力提供庇护……甚至去年的央视纪录片里,还有某地公安局副局长的另一重身份曝光,直接是黑社会老大的。

连庇护都省了,自己去干。

真以为这种事情频繁的发生,只要打掉,便不会有任何影响吗?

殊不知,那些看不见的影响才是最致命的。很多人已经潜移默化的看到官,就想到贪,有的甚至看到穿着某些制服的人,都能联想到黑恶势力了。

失望多了,人心怎么可能没有一丝一毫的变化。

这种失望导致的变化,换种说法便是:你说你的,反正我不信。

有些东西,就像那被风吹倒的护栏一样,看起来结实,其实早已风中摇摇。

前几天,各大媒体纷纷转发90后男子搬砖赚200万的新闻,结果翻车翻了个彻底,收获了满满当当的嘲讽和揶揄。

这几天,又一个大叔卖600万个鸡蛋饼,直接挣了4套房出来。

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你好歹得尊重一下看客的智商吧,25年卖600万个鸡蛋饼,你当你是孙大圣,会72变吗?就算你每天工作10个小时,全年无休,连着干了25年,算下来也必须每54秒钟就卖出去一个。

而比起每54秒钟卖出一个鸡蛋饼而言,显然每54秒做出一个鸡蛋饼的手速,更让人感到“有趣”。

这种内容,能怪网友们不信,怪他们在评论里质疑嘲讽吗?你可以粉饰太平,但无法修复人心;可以控制流量,但挡不住失望积压成潮。

事实上,那些动不动便质疑的,还算是保留了一些信任。现在已经有越来越多的人,开始看到这些内容后,连质疑都不屑了。

失望的次数太多了,明摆着扯淡的内容,却被大量媒体奉为圭臬,动不动搬两个缺斤少两的信息出来,作为表明立场的素材。死不悔改,那还质疑个屁。

人设可以立,护栏可以倒,智商可以骗,但人心骗一次、两次、三次之后,就变成你现在看到的样子。

谁言大风无眼,专拣豆腐渣吹。

信任一旦破碎,重建就比修桥难得多。哪怕后来真的刮来了12级大风,也很难再有人信那护栏是被风吹倒的。

不是因为风不够大,而是因为“谎太多”,人心早就吹凉了。

Biden Criticizes Trump in BBC Interview

7 May 2025 at 20:35
In his first broadcast interview since leaving office, the former president criticized several of President Trump’s actions and defended his withdrawal from the 2024 campaign.

© Erin Schaff/The New York Times

President Biden said his departure from the 2024 presidential campaign was a “difficult decision.”

客座评论:教宗方济各的“慈悲外交”与中国遗产

7 May 2025 at 20:47
吕恒君
2025-05-07T12:40:12.197Z
2016年方济各教宗在彼得广场同中国天主教徒合影,两年后《中梵协会》出炉

(德国之声中文网)教宗方济各的葬礼在全球瞩目之中圆满落幕,而新任教宗的选举也已定于5月7日正式举行。葬礼现场,无论多国政要、神职人员,抑或普通信众,皆以经久不息的掌声表达追思与敬意——这被广泛解读为:方济各教宗的思想遗产正在获得广泛认同,而新任教宗亦当承担起延续改革的期盼。

方济各教宗的众多遗产之中,最具挑战性、亦最富争议者,莫过于《梵中主教任命临时协议》的签署。新任教宗如何处理这一敏感议题,势必成为全球关注的焦点;而与此同时,1200万中国天主教徒——无论身处“官方”还是“地下教会”——也处在某种微妙的迷惘之中。毕竟,唯有教廷持续关注中国事务,方可能为他们的处境带来实质性改变。

相关图集:谦卑为本:教宗方济各上任五年

“晚上好!”:当选新任教宗,方济各对圣彼得广场上等待的人们致以一句简单的问候:“晚安!”作为天主教廷的元首,他以此奠定了平实的行事基调。
九人改革委员会:上任伊始,教宗方济各便成立了9名成员的大主教会议,对天主教廷进行组织结构和内容上的改革。主要精神是:教会不是以自身为目的,而是以传福音为宗旨。这也包括,梵蒂冈与普通信众要更加靠近。
反对对弱势群体的冷漠:从非洲前往欧洲的途中葬身大海的移民,令方济各感到心痛。2013年夏天,教宗来到兰佩杜萨,当时已有数千人希望从那里进入欧洲大陆。
谦卑的象征:维罗纳的一名神父把自己开了30年的这辆雷诺小轿车送给了教宗。据说,教宗很想用这辆小轿车,但安全人员不允许他这样做。方济各时常传讲“清贫教会”的理念。
流行明星?:甚至连非信徒都对教宗的平易近人予以认可,认为方济各与其前任、学术风格的本笃十六世大相径庭。上任10个月,方济各就成为首位登上“滚石”杂志的教宗。
建立桥梁:在中非与哥伦比亚,方济各参与调停内战各方。在华盛顿与哈瓦那之间,教宗致力于推动关系冰期的结束。在美国与墨西哥之间,他呼吁特朗普不要建墙、要建桥。
与其它宗教领袖会面:方济各希望建立跨教派、跨宗教的桥梁。他在耶路撒冷哭墙祷告,与大穆夫提会面。在开罗与科普特领袖以及大伊玛目会面。在缅甸他与佛教僧侣谈话,在哈瓦那与俄罗斯东正教领袖会面。
临时证婚:2018年1月从智利去秘鲁的飞行途中,教宗方济各为一对机组人员临时证婚。他们之前表示打算结婚。
神职人员性侵丑闻:智利的天主教会处境艰难,特别是性侵丑闻曝光之后。巴罗斯主教(图右)据称长期知情,但却保持沉默。方济各称这是对巴罗斯的诬蔑。后来,方济各对自己的这一表态道歉。但巴罗斯仍继续留任主教。
梵蒂冈内部的批评声:也有人指责方济各对教廷内部事务过于严厉,有人认为他的路线过于世俗化,还有人批评他的一些“姿态”是为了媒体效果。

方济各教宗与《梵中协议》之历史动因

与历任教宗相比,方济各教宗对中国展现出别具一格的亲近情感,这内中有着诸多因素:其来自拉美“全球南方”,对威权统治和社会不公具有直观经验;其矢志效仿简朴亲民的圣方济各(San Francesco d'Assisi),尤其关注边缘群体的艰难处境;更重要的是,作为史上首位耶稣会出身的教宗,其深受耶稣会早期在中国传教传统的启发,尤其推崇利玛窦(Matteo Ricci)的文化适应策略。

众所周知,利玛窦自1583年抵华之后,采取与儒家礼俗兼容的“本地化”方式,深入与明朝士大夫阶层对话。他不仅感化徐光启、李之藻等高官皈依天主教,更赢得明神宗的关注,被誉为天主教在华传播的奠基者。方济各教宗对其极为推崇,曾追封其为“可敬者”(venerabilis Dei servus),并多次公开赞扬其文化适应理念。

利玛窦路线的继承者们,如汤若望(Johann Adam Schall von Bell)、 南怀仁(Ferdinand Verbiest)等,均将西方科学与数学、天文等知识引入紫禁城,并协助制定历法、参与外交事务,赢得康熙皇帝等的高度信任。但此种文化调适策略并未在教廷内部获得一致认同——道明会等保守派批评耶稣会“纵容异俗”,引发激烈的“礼仪之争”,最终导致教廷禁止“祭祖祭孔”,而清廷也于1723年正式禁教。此后天主教退入中国社会边缘,虽在清末民初略有复苏,但1949年后再次遭遇严厉打压,尤其在“文革”期间几近中断。

自1980年代中国改革开放以来,教廷多次试图恢复与北京的接触。其中,波兰籍的若望保禄二世(Ioannes Paulus II )借鉴冷战时期对东欧社会主义国家的“东方政策”(Ostpolitik),强调秘密谈判、避免对抗,以争取宗教空间。其继任者本笃十六世(Benedictus XVI )则在2007年写给中国信徒的公开信中,呼吁打破“合法/非法”的身份对立,在良知基础上维护教会合一,并为对话预留空间。

2013年方济各接任教宗之后,在前任们的“耐性外交”的基础之上,更加强调“慈悲”理念、历史感与主动性,因“慈悲的天主形象应奠定我们处理政治事务的方式”(Il volto di Dio misericordioso fonda un modo di affrontare l’impegno politico)。其积极推动中梵接触,最终促成2018年《梵中协议》的首次签署,之后亦于2020、2022、2024年三度续签,达成一个十年机制——这是自1951年中梵断交以来的首次制度性交集,亦是“慈悲外交”(La diplomazia della misericordia)的一项重要成果。

围绕《梵中协议》的争议与分歧

就实质而言,方济各的“慈悲外交”是希望借助”生机勃勃的外交“,团结不同想法、对立的政治立场以至相去甚远的宗教观点,而最终达成全球范围内的和平与和解——正如91岁的枢机团雷团长(Giovanni Battista Re)在方济各教宗的葬礼上所强调:“他指出‘慈悲’是福音的核心,并反复重申天主不厌其烦地宽恕”。

然而,具体而言,《梵中协议》关于“双方共同任命主教”的“慈悲”或“宽恕”,却一直面对着外界巨大质疑浪潮。其中最具代表性的批评来自香港荣休主教陈日君枢机。其直言该协议“牺牲了地下教会”,批评其透明度低、执行力差,甚至形容为“‘东方政策’在中国的失败延续”。

显然,陈枢机的担忧既出于历史背景,亦源于对地下教会的切身体认:在中国无神论意识形态主导之下,天主教长期承受巨大压力与政府的不信任。尤其在全面禁教年代,地下教会顶着巨大风险秘密维系与教廷的联系,得以维持梵蒂冈在中国的主教任命与圣统制度。正因代价巨大,地下信徒对任何“可能性妥协”均格外敏感。

然而,若将《梵中协议》简单视为对中国政府的“绥靖”,则未免忽略现实复杂性。笔者通过经年田野调查发现,中国官方教会亦坚持“与罗马共融”,在教义方面与地下教会并无本质分歧,其接受政府监管更多出于生存策略。同时,几乎所有官方神职人员都反对将中国天主教异化为一个“民族教会”,因这不仅削弱其普世性,也与国家对宗教的“统战”利益相抵触。

因此,目前梵中问题的关键应是在于:协议能否有效防止中共将其工具化,用以削弱地下教会或重塑教会结构?其是否真能保障“共同任命主教”的机制?江西教区2022年未经教廷批准单方任命辅理主教,以及2023年上海教区绕过教廷强行任命主教,均引发教廷不满,亦加深着外界疑虑。

但另一方面,笔者认为,国际舆论亦需对中国的历史语境与结构性困境保持一定理解:在一个历史上“儒释道三教合一”、且缺乏宗教制度传统的世俗国家,共产党对“超国家认同”的天然警惕,使其宗教政策长期以“可控性”为核心。而《梵中协议》的争议,实际上也映射出整个中国宗教生态的制度性困境。

相关图集:在中国,天主教徒被边缘化

国家监控的天主教会: 据估计中国有1200万名天主教徒。而中国是一个大部分国民不信教的世俗国家。 1957年,共产党政府成立了“天主教爱国会”(KPV) - 一个由国家控制的官方教会。任何想要在中国信奉天主教的人,都必须加入天主教爱国会(KPV)。
中国与梵蒂冈:持续了几十年的冲突: 但中国的天主教徒是分裂的。只有大约一半属于国家控制的天主教爱国会 。其追随者不承认教宗是天主教的最高领袖。而中国的另一部分天主教徒,也就是所谓的地下天主教徒则忠于罗马教宗及其在中国的最高代表贾治国主教(Julius Jia Zhigou )。他们在所谓的“地下教会”传播其信仰。
谁有权任命主教? : 中国国家承认的天主教爱国会与梵蒂冈之间争议的焦点是应该由谁来任命主教和神父,如鞠瑞彬主教。北京则自己任命主教。但是根据梵蒂冈的教规,主教要由教宗来任命。此外,梵蒂冈与中国之间没有建立外交关系,但却同北京不承认有独立主权的台湾建有外交关系,这给梵蒂冈与北京之间的关系蒙上阴影。
中国天主教的混乱状况 : 中国北方一个名叫友通村的村庄就充分体现了中国天主教的混乱状况。该村共有5000多村民,其中约有一半是天主教徒。村里有一个国家认可的教会,另外还有两个大型地下教会和许多非正式的小型家庭教会。正式教会的信徒也会在公共场合公开展示其信仰。
新宗教法威胁信仰自由: 像这样的地下教会一般情况下被容忍,但受到当局的严格监控。家庭教会只要不举行大规模的集会活动通常不被重视。然而,2018年2月一部新的宗教法生效,宗教活动将受到更严格的监控。因此,中国天主教徒担心今后会受到更多的压制。
新宗教法加强对教会的管制: 现在,国家教会的宗教事务也开始受到限制。教堂的十字架被拆除。教宗方济各一世显然正在考虑承认中国官方承认的教会主教。作为回报,北京应该在挑选主教方面让教宗拥有发言权。
协议导致不确定性:中国政府和梵蒂冈之间有可能达成的协议让很多天主教徒感到不安。他们担心这会加剧教区的分裂。还有一些人希望能够享有更多的自由。董冠华牧师(图片)认为,这笔交易可能会让更多的人进入像他这样的非官方教会。
真正的信仰何在? :对于来自友通村的裴资鸣来说,梵蒂冈和北京之间的不同利益是核心的问题。他说:“通过其建筑你就能看出什么才是这个国家真正重要的东西。许多欧洲国家规模最大的建筑是教堂。但是在中国最大的建筑物都是银行和政府机构,因为那才是他们真正的信仰所在。”

结语:在历史张力中理解慈悲外交

综上所述,方济各教宗面对世界东方的威权体制,仍坚持推行“慈悲外交”,实属充满智识与远见的勇气之举。其曾坦言《梵中协议》“并不理想”,但却是一种“可能性的艺术”——显然,其努力在不挑战政权安全感的前提之下,为天主教争取基本的尊严与对话空间。

正如利玛窦当年开启“中西会通”的历史性尝试,《梵中协议》亦难以仓促定论。但其制度设计、以及对双边对话可能性的开启,却在当下极端化加剧的国际局势之中至关重要。而要避免其沦为权宜之计,则需要教廷继续保持监督与善意坚持。

或令人欣慰的是,2024年,在教廷的持续推动之下,中共正式承认天津地下主教石鸿祯的合法身份。这或许意味着一种双向的调整,也为协议注入某种现实的积极性。

或许,正如方济各教宗在就任之初所言:“天主在时间之中显现自己,他也临在于历史的进程之中。”此种“时间优于空间”的慈悲理念,依然在提醒着我们:真正的希望,并非源自“强势性”的突破,而是在复杂现实之中保持信心、留住对话的可能。而新任教宗是否能继承这份历史的耐性,将不仅决定梵中关系的未来,亦关乎教廷如何面对全球威权、文化冲突与制度挑战。

吕恒君(Dr. Hangkun Strian,华裔德籍汉学家。在柏林洪堡大学亚非研究所获得哲学博士学位。主要研究及兴趣领域为文学史、电影、国际关系、基督宗教本土化等。

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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。

Gang who smuggled thousands of ants sentenced in Kenya

7 May 2025 at 19:42
Reuters Belgium nationals David Lornoy, wearing a yellow T-shirt and Seppe Lodewijckx, wearing a black T-shirt sitting next to Vietnamese national Duh Hung Nyugen who is wearing mask Reuters
The four suspects – two Belgians, a Vietnamese and a Kenyan - had pleaded guilty

A Kenyan court has sentenced four men to one year in prison or pay a fine of $7,700 (£5,800) for trying to smuggle thousands of live ants out of the country.

The four suspects – two Belgians, a Vietnamese and a Kenyan – were arrested last month with 5,000 ants at a guest house in the western town of Naivasha.

They had pleaded guilty to the charges and told the court that they were collecting the highly sought-after ants as a hobby and didn't think it was illegal.

But delivering the sentence on Wednesday, the court said the particular species of ants collected was valuable and they had thousands of them — not just a few.

It is believed that the ants were intended for exotic pet markets in Europe and Asia.

The contraband included giant African harvester ants, which are valued by some UK dealers at up to £170 ($220) each.

Belgian nationals Lornoy David and Seppe Lodewijckx, both 19, Vietnamese national Duh Hung Nguyen and Kenyan Dennis Ng'ang'a, were handed similar terms after the magistrate considered their mitigation arguments.

The Belgians were found with 5,000 ants, while Nguyen and Ng'ang'a had 300.

The Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS), which is more used to protecting larger creatures, such as lions and elephants, has described this as a "landmark case".

The case showed a "disturbing shift in trafficking patterns - from iconic mammals to lesser-known species that are vital to ecological balance", the KWS said last month when the four were arrested.

The Belgian teens had entered Kenya on a tourist visa and were staying in Naivasha, a town popular with tourists for its animal parks and lakes.

The KWS said the demand for rare insect species was growing.

In Kenya, the ants are protected by international bio-diversity treaties and their trade is highly regulated.

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多国阅兵式将登场 俄罗斯:29位各国领导人将出席

7 May 2025 at 19:47
德正
2025-05-07T11:19:06.522Z
俄罗斯阅兵仪式彩排:驶向红场的坦克队伍

(德国之声中文网)俄罗斯将于本周五(5月9日)举行胜利日阅兵式。克里姆林宫表示,届时将有29位外国国家领导人出席,有13个国家的军队也将参加阅兵。克里姆林宫顾问乌沙科夫周二(5月6日)向媒体透露:“预计将有29位外国领导人出席胜利日阅兵式……来自13个国家的军队方阵将参加阅兵,其中包括中国。” 周三习近平已动身前往莫斯科。

俄罗斯表示,中国国家主席习近平和巴西总统卢拉之外,亚美尼亚、阿塞拜疆、波黑、越南、埃及、伊拉克、缅甸以及古巴等多国政府首脑也将出席阅兵式。

斯洛伐克总理菲佐将是唯一出席此次活动的欧盟国家领导人,塞尔维亚总统武契奇也表示将前往莫斯科参加阅兵式。

俄罗斯总统普京将于周四会见习近平。克里姆林宫顾问乌沙科夫表示:“最重要的议题将在一次一对一会谈中讨论,包括乌克兰问题以及俄美关系。”中国外交部几日前已宣布,应俄总统普京邀请,中国国家主席习近平5月7日至10日对俄罗斯进行国事访问,并出席在莫斯科举行的纪念苏联伟大卫国战争胜利80周年庆典。

克里姆林宫称,除中国军队外,来自埃及、越南、缅甸以及多个前苏联加盟共和国的军队也将参加红场阅兵。乌克兰方面则呼吁外国军队不要出席阅兵,强调任何参与都将被视为“对侵略国的支持”。

阅兵活动前夕,乌克兰发动了一轮无人机袭击,导致莫斯科多个机场一度关闭。克里姆林宫表示,将坚持此前提出的为配合阅兵而实施的三天停火倡议——但乌克兰对此予以驳斥,称这不过是莫斯科为保障阅兵安全而采取的权宜之计。

克里姆林宫表示,将为配合阅兵而提出三天停火倡议,但乌克兰方面则呼吁为期一个月的全面停火。克里姆林宫发言人佩斯科夫(Dmitry Peskov)表示:“普京总统提出在庆典期间临时停火的倡议是有意义的。”但他也补充说,如果乌克兰不停止攻击,“俄方将立即作出回应”。

 

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Gazans Despair After Israel Announces More Displacement

7 May 2025 at 19:17
Israel’s plan to capture more land in Gaza and relocate thousands of civilians has heightened a sense of hopelessness among Palestinians.

© Dawoud Abu Alkas/Reuters

Palestinians displaced by the Israeli military offensive sheltering in Gaza City on Wednesday. Many have been displaced multiple times during the war.

Israel Downs Drone as Houthis Vow to Continue Tit-for-Tat Strikes

7 May 2025 at 19:10
The Israeli military said it had intercepted an unmanned vehicle a day after President Trump said the U.S. would step back from conflict with the Iran-backed group.

© Amir Levy/Getty Images

Police officers inspecting the site of a Houthi missile attack near Ben Gurion Airport outside Tel Aviv on Sunday. The strike prompted a series of tit-for-tat military responses between Israel and the group based in Yemen.

欧盟不急于和美签协议 中国趁机搞魅力攻势

7 May 2025 at 19:17

2025-05-07T11:08:21.082Z
欧盟贸易委员谢夫乔维齐(Maroš Šefčovič)

( 德国之声中文网)欧盟贸易委员谢夫乔维齐(Maroš Šefčovič)表示,欧洲人并不急于在关税问题上去和美国人达成“糟糕的协议”。他在5月6日说,欧洲感觉自己并不弱小,因此没有必要去接受对欧盟不公平的方案。谢夫乔维齐还说,欧盟应该和其他国家深化经贸关系,而且也感受到了美国以外地区的相关意愿。

最迟到7月初,欧盟计划就针对美国的贸易反制措施做好准备,其中包括对1000亿欧元美国商品征收报复性关税等。谢夫乔维齐在欧洲议会表示,特朗普的关税一旦正式生效,欧盟对美出口商品的70%都会遭到打击;如果华盛顿进一步扩大关税加征范围,这一比例可能上升到97%。他表示,欧洲希望通过谈判解决问题,但需要看到美国达成公平协议的意愿。

目前,特朗普对中国以外的众多国家实行为期90天的“宽限期”,“对等关税”暂时下调到10%,以便为谈判留出空间。而对中国加征的关税则调高到了145%。

欧中相互吹捧

与此同时,中国则利用这一时机对欧洲发动“魅力攻势”。就在5月6日,中国国家主席习近平就中欧建交50周年向欧洲理事会主席科斯塔(Antonio Costa)、欧盟委员会主席(Ursula von der Leyen)冯德莱恩发送贺电,称赞中欧关系是“世界上最具影响力的双边关系之一”,中欧双方是“推动多极化的两大力量、支持全球化的两大市场、倡导多样性的两大文明”,并认为“中欧双方要坚持多边主义,捍卫公平正义,反对单边霸凌,携手应对全球性挑战”。科斯塔和冯德莱恩也在致习近平的贺电中表示,“在当前全球不确定性和地缘政治变化的背景下,欧盟愿同中国深化伙伴关系,加强交往合作”。

同一天,中国外交部也披露,“中方欢迎欧洲理事会主席科斯塔、欧盟委员会主席冯德莱恩适时联袂来华举行新一次中欧领导人会晤,双方还将举行战略、经贸、绿色、数字等高层对话。”

不过,无论是习近平的贺电,还是中国外交部的声明,都对美国或者特朗普的关税只字未提,仅仅是笼统提到“单边霸凌”、“不确定性”等词汇。

相关图集:聚焦遭中方制裁的欧盟实体与个人

MERICS:继续使命 不忘初心:有四家机构上了中方制裁名单,分别是欧盟理事会政治与安全委员会、欧洲议会人权分委会、丹麦民主联盟基金会和德国墨卡托中国研究中心。其中墨卡托中国研究中心(MERICS)作为一家智库,尤其受关注。中国官媒《环球时报》总编胡锡进发文称,切断该机构与中国的联系,“意味着该研究中心的调研渠道难以为继,影响力将受沉重打击”。该德国智库发声明回应称,对中方决定感到非常遗憾,同时拒绝这些指控。“作为一家独立研究机构,我们致力于增进对于中国更好、更多元的了解。我们将继续通过提供基于事实的分析来追求这一使命,即使在困难时期也以创造交流和对话的机会为目标”。
彼蒂科菲尔:中国会搬起石头砸自己的脚:遭到中方制裁的欧方人员还包括8名政界人士和2名学者。首当其冲的是来自德国绿党的欧洲议会议员彼蒂科菲尔(Reinhard Bütikofer)。他也是欧洲议会对华关系小组的负责人,曾多次在新疆、香港等问题上对北京提出严厉指控。在得知自己受中方制裁后,彼蒂科菲尔称中方的制裁“荒谬”,指中国如今试图在海外压制言论自由、恐吓批评者,“但这只会适得其反,用中国的谚语说就是搬起石头砸自己的脚”。
盖勒:不会放弃倡导民主和人权:盖勒(Michael Gahler)是另一名受到中方制裁的德国籍欧洲议会议员,这位基民盟人士也是欧洲人民党议会党团安全政策发言人。在得知自己受到中方制裁后,盖勒发声明称,表示这会让欧盟与中国的对话变得更艰难,这令人非常遗憾。“无论如何,我不会放弃倡导人权与民主。此外,我也怀疑,我作为欧洲议会友台小组主席的身份,在北京的(制裁)决定中也起了一定作用“。
格鲁克斯曼:制裁是荣誉勋章:受到中方制裁的还有来自法国的社民党籍欧洲议会议员格鲁克斯曼(Raphaël Glucksmann),他也是欧洲议会外交事务委员会以及欧洲议会人权分委会的成员,而后者作为机构同样出现在这次的中方制裁名单上。在中方宣布制裁后,格鲁克斯曼在推特上说,这些制裁是他的“荣誉勋章”,他还会继续抗争!
欧洲议会:中方制裁“不可接受”:除了上述三人外,受到制裁的欧洲议会议员还包括来自匈牙利的库楚克(Ilhan Kyuchyuk)、斯洛伐克议员莱克斯曼(Miriam Lexmann)。另外,荷兰议会议员舍尔茨玛(Sjoerd Wiemer Sjoerdsma)、比利时议会议员科格拉蒂(Samuel Cogolati)以及立陶宛议会议员萨卡利埃内(Dovile Sakaliene)也在制裁名单上。欧盟外交政策负责人博雷尔(图)和欧洲议会主席萨索利 (David Sassoli)已经表态支持这些议员,称中方此举“令人不可接受”。
危及欧中投资协议?:比利时绿党籍议员科格拉蒂(Samuel Cogolati)在得知自己受制裁后,发推特表示会继续捍卫民主和人权。他还转发了比利时外交部长强烈谴责中方制裁的声明,以及另外一位来自比利时的欧洲议会议员维霍夫斯塔(Guy Verhofstadt)的推特,其中称中方的制裁“终结了欧中投资协议”。欧洲议会原定于3月23日审议欧中投资协议,该计划因最新发展而被临时取消。
郑国恩:望德国也像法国一样强硬表态:中方制裁名单上除了五位欧洲议会议员、三位欧盟国家议员外,还包含两名学者,分别是德国研究新疆问题的学者郑国恩(Adrian Zenz)和瑞典学者叶必扬(Björn Jerdén)。对于中方制裁,郑国恩(图)在推特上表示,希望柏林也能够为受到制裁的德国政治家、学者和智库发声,强调法国政府发出了措辞严厉的声明,谴责中方所作所为。目前,法国和荷兰已经召见了驻该国的中国大使。
欧洲权威学者集体声援 :瑞典学者叶必扬(Björn Jerdén)是瑞典国际问题研究所中国中心的负责人。瑞典国际问题研究所3月23日对中国制裁其学者叶必扬的做法表示谴责。3月25日,该研究所刊登了欧洲30多家国际事务研究所所长的联署声明,表达在目前“困难时期,将学术研究人员和民间机构拉入当前的紧张情势而深感遗憾”,“将站在我们同事的一边”,对这次被中方制裁的人员和机构进行声援。叶必扬本人在推特上转发了相关消息。他也表示现在研究中国问题的难度越来越大,这令人遗憾。

相互解除制裁?中欧说法有矛盾

值得注意的是,中国外交部发言人林剑同一天还确认说,“当前形势下,双方都认为,中欧加强对话合作十分重要。经双方商定,中方和欧洲议会决定同步全面取消对相互交往的限制。”而在一个星期前,欧洲议会的声明刚刚指出,此次与中方谈判主要涉及北京解除对欧洲议会4名现任议员以及人权委员会的制裁,并且强调将继续维持因新疆人权问题而对中国实施的制裁措施。欧洲议会各党团领袖也在声明中强调,北京的行动“并不意味着欧洲议会将忽视欧中关系中持续存在的挑战”,并誓言欧洲议会将“继续坚定捍卫人权”。

截至发稿时为止,欧洲议会暂未向德国之声澄清“同步全面取消对相互交往的限制”是否意味着欧方也松动对中国的制裁。

(综合报道)

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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

Five takeaways from Biden's first interview since leaving the White House

7 May 2025 at 18:05
Watch: Biden's first interview since leaving the White House

Former US President Joe Biden has given his first in-depth interview since he left the White House in January, speaking to the BBC about his legacy, foreign policy and his view of President Donald Trump's first 100 days.

He said that he had few regrets, but he offered grave warnings about global affairs as Europe marks 80 years since the end of World War Two on the continent.

Biden spent much of his time in public office – as a senator, vice-president and president – focusing on US foreign policy, and it remains a top concern.

The former president also reflected on his decision to drop out of the 2024 election race - but he had less to say about any mistakes he and the Democrats may have made along the way.

Here are five key takeaways from his interview with Nick Robinson for BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

He admits decision to quit 2024 race was 'difficult'

Biden: Withdrawing from 2024 race earlier 'wouldn't have mattered'

Biden's ill-fated decision to seek a second presidential term may haunt Democrats for a generation. Three months removed from power, however, the former president said he didn't think "it would have mattered" if he had abandoned his re-election ambitions earlier, before a disastrous debate forced his hand in July 2024.

Kamala Harris, who became the nominee after Biden dropped out just four months before the election, was a "good candidate" who was "fully funded", he said.

Democratic strategists have lamented that the last-minute handover left their campaign flat-footed, ultimately aiding Trump's path to the White House, even as Democrats held a financial advantage in the 2024 race.

Biden boasted of being "so successful on our agenda" – a reference to the major legislation enacted in his first two years in office on the environment, infrastructure and social spending, as well as the better-than-expected Democratic performance in the 2022 midterm elections.

"It was hard to say now I'm going to stop," he said. "Things moved so quickly that it made it difficult to walk away."

Ultimately, quitting was "the right decision", he said, but it was "just a difficult decision".

A stark accusation of 'modern-day appeasement'

Biden described the Trump administration's suggestion that Ukraine give up territory as part of a peace deal with Russia as "modern-day appeasement" - a reference to European allies that allowed Adolf Hitler to annex Czechoslovakia in the 1930s in an ill-fated attempt to prevent a continent-wide conflict.

"I just don't understand how people think that if we allow a dictator, a thug, to decide he's going to take significant portions of land that aren't his, that that's going to satisfy him. I don't quite understand," Biden said of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The term "appeasement" gets kicked around a lot in American politics, and the list of foreign leaders compared with modern-day "Hitlers" is a long one.

Though Biden's repeated assertion that Russian tanks would be rolling through central Europe if America and its allies didn't support Ukraine is impossible to prove, he views the threat posed by Putin as serious and worthy of the comparison.

Biden also said that if the US allowed a peace deal that favoured Russia, Putin's neighbours would be under economic, military and political pressure to accommodate Moscow's will in other ways. In his view, the promise of American support to European allies becomes less believable and less of a deterrent.

Watch: Biden says Trump’s approach to Ukraine war is "modern-day appeasement"

US-Europe alliance at risk

Under Biden, the US helped expand the Nato to include Finland and Sweden – one of the former president's signature foreign policy achievements. Now, he says Trump is turning his back on America's European allies and threatening the very foundations of Nato and its mutual defence agreement.

The former president described the thought of Nato breaking apart as a "grave concern". Already, he warned, US allies were doubting American leadership.

"I think it would change the modern history of the world if that occurs," he said. "We are not the essential nation, but we are the only nation in position to have the capacity to bring people together to lead the world."

There are some in Trump's circle – perhaps including the president himself – who believe that a more restrained America, less concerned with global security and more focused on regional self-sufficiency, is best way to ensure long-term prosperity in a world of competing global powers. They argue that America's post-Cold War dominance was a historical anomaly.

Biden, whose political career spans those decades of American supremacy, disagrees.

Greenland, Canada and the Panama Canal: 'What the hell's going on here?'

In his interview, Biden sounded like most modern American presidents before him. He used words like freedom, democracy and opportunity to describe American principles.

But in Biden's view, those principles also include a sense of decorum, especially towards long-standing allies.

He said Trump's February meeting-turned-argument with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office was "sort of beneath America". He argued Trump's territorial designs on Canada, Greenland and the Panama Canal were "not who we are".

"What president ever talks like that? That's not who we are. We're about freedom, democracy, opportunity, not about confiscation," he said.

A tepid response to Trump's first 100 days

When asked about Trump's first 100 days in office - which included dramatic attempts to expand presidential power - Biden said he would let history judge his successor, but "I don't see anything that's triumphant".

It was the kind of understatement that surely will irk some on the left. Since the start of Trump's second term, rank-and-file Democrats have been clamouring for their party to do more to resist the president's agenda.

Biden said he didn't think Trump would succeed in flouting courts or the law, or diminishing congressional power, in part because the president's fellow Republicans are "waking up to what Trump is about".

"I don't think he'll succeed in that effort," he said.

The idea that members of Trump's own party will turn on him is a recurring one for Biden. In 2019, he predicted there would be an "epiphany" among Republicans once Trump was out of the White House, ushering in a new era of bipartisanship.

It didn't exactly work out that way in 2024.

British workers will not be undercut in UK-India trade deal, government says

7 May 2025 at 18:38
UK Department for Business and Trade Piyush Goyal on the left and Jonathan Reynolds greet each other last week. UK Department for Business and Trade
UK Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds and India's Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal met in London last week to finalise the deal

The UK government has hit back against claims by opposition parties that the newly-agreed trade deal with India could disadvantage British workers.

Business and Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds told the BBC there was "no situation" in which he would "ever tolerate" British workers being undercut as a result of a trade agreement.

Under the terms of the deal, some Indian and British workers will be exempt from paying National Insurance for three years. The exemption applies to the staff of Indian companies temporarily transferred to the UK, and to UK firms' workers transferred to India.

Opposition parties have claimed this could mean Indian workers become cheaper to employ than British workers.

But Reynolds said the deal would not impact British workers, pointing out the UK has 16 agreements preventing double taxation of work, which cover more than 50 countries - including the US, EU and South Korea.

"What the Conservatives are confused about, and Reform as well, is a situation where a business in India seconds someone for a short period of time to the UK, or a UK business seconds a worker to India for a short period of time, where you don't pay in simultaneously now to both social security systems," he told the BBC's Today programme.

Reynolds said the deal was a "huge economic win for the UK and would deliver "faster growth, higher wages, more tax revenue brilliant wins for goods and for services".

He said previously that Indian workers would still be required to pay the NHS immigration surcharge and would not be eligible for benefits from the National Insurance system.

Minimum age to be a train driver lowered to 18

7 May 2025 at 17:52
Getty Images A young woman with shoulder length blonde hair wearing a red and black checked coat walking along a railway platform looking at her phoneGetty Images

Eighteen-year-olds will be allowed to drive trains after the minimum age was lowered from 20 in a bid to tackle driver shortages.

UK rail services are frequently disrupted due to a lack of drivers being available, and the problem is set to get worse with companies struggling to replace a growing number of people retiring with new recruits, the government said.

Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander announced the change as "bold action to improve train services and unlock thousands of jobs".

Union Aslef said it would open up opportunities for school or college leavers, while the Rail Safety and Standards Board said its research found "18-year-olds are capable of safely becoming train drivers".

In the UK several train companies rely on "rest day working" - when drivers voluntarily work extra shifts to run timetabled services.

But disruption can be caused to passenger journeys when there are not enough volunteers or drivers are off sick.

Some 87% of cancellations made the night before a service is scheduled to run are due to driver shortages, according to the Department for Transport (DfT).

The average age of a UK train driver is 48, with 30% set to reach retirement age by 2029, it said.

Fewer than 9% of train drivers are female, while under 12% are from an ethnic minority.

'Overwhelming support'

A consultation on lowering the minimum age for drivers carried out last year by the then Conservative government received "overwhelming support from across the industry", the DfT said.

Training to become a driver of mainline trains generally takes between one and two years. The DfT believes new job and apprenticeships for 18-year-olds could become available as early as December.

Alexander said the Labour government was "committed to getting the economy moving and a big part of that is getting young people into the workforce, putting them on track for a skilled and fulfilling career which will boost growth across the country".

Mick Whelan, general secretary of train drivers' union Aslef, said the industry currently missed out on young people wanting to become train drivers "as they don't wait around until they turn 20 to find a career".

He added the new policy would "increase diversity in the driver's cab" and also encourage more young people to take on the role.

The minimum age for train drivers has already been lowered in France, Germany, the Netherlands and Switzerland, the government said

Transport for London opened up its train driver apprenticeships on the underground to 18-year-olds in 2007.

Why India and Pakistan fight over Kashmir

7 May 2025 at 15:05

Kashmir: Why India and Pakistan fight over it

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Pakistani men in Lahore chant slogans at a rally expressing solidarity with the people of KashmirImage source, Reuters
Image caption,

Kashmir has been a source of conflict between India and Pakistan for decades

Nuclear-armed neighbours India and Pakistan have fought two wars and a limited conflict over Kashmir. But why do they dispute the territory - and how did it start?

How old is this conflict?

Kashmir is an ethnically diverse Himalayan region famed for the beauty of its lakes, meadows and snow-capped mountains.

Even before India and Pakistan won their independence from Britain in August 1947, the area was hotly contested.

Under the partition plan provided by the Indian Independence Act, Muslim-majority Kashmir was free to accede to either India or Pakistan.

The maharaja (local ruler), Hari Singh, initially wanted Kashmir to become independent - but in October 1947 chose to join India, in return for its help against an invasion of tribesmen from Pakistan.

A war erupted and India asked the United Nations to intervene. The UN recommended holding a plebiscite to settle the question of whether the state would join India or Pakistan. However, the two countries could not agree to a deal to demilitarise the region before the referendum could be held.

In July 1949, India and Pakistan signed an agreement to establish a ceasefire line as recommended by the UN and the region became divided.

Kashmiri men walk by a river near the Line of Control, the de facto border between Pakistan and IndiaImage source, AFP/Getty Images
Image caption,

Kashmir is known by some as India's Switzerland, due to its verdant fields and sweeping mountainscapes

A second war followed in 1965. Then in 1999, India fought a brief but bitter conflict with Pakistani-backed forces.

By that time, India and Pakistan were declared nuclear powers. Today, Delhi and Islamabad both claim Kashmir in full, but control only parts of it.

Why has there been so much unrest in the Indian-administered part?

Within Kashmir, opinions about the territory's rightful allegiance are diverse and strongly held. Many do not want it to be governed by India, preferring either independence or union with Pakistan instead.

Religion is one factor: Jammu and Kashmir is more than 60% Muslim, making it the only part of India where Muslims are in the majority.

An armed revolt has been waged against Indian rule in the region since 1989, claiming tens of thousands of lives.

India accuses Pakistan of backing militants in Kashmir - a charge its neighbour denies.

In 2019, Indian-administered Kashmir was stripped of its semi-autonomous status by the government in Delhi amid a huge security crackdown.

For several years after, the revocation of the region's special status, militancy waned and tourist visits soared.

What happened after previous Kashmir militant attacks?

In 2016, after 19 Indian soldiers were killed in Uri, India launched "surgical strikes" across the Line of Control - the de facto border between India and Pakistan - targeting alleged militant bases.

In 2019, the Pulwama bombing, which left more than 40 Indian paramilitary personnel dead, prompted Indian airstrikes deep into Balakot - the first such action inside Pakistan since 1971 - sparking retaliatory raids and an aerial dogfight.

Tensions rose again in April 2025 after years of relative calm when militants killed 26 people in an attack on tourists near the resort town of Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir. It was the deadliest attack on civilians in two decades.

India responded two weeks later with missile strikes on targets in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir, once again raising fears of further escalation and calls for restraint.

Kashmir remains one of the most militarised zones in the world.

What about hopes for peace?

India and Pakistan did agree a ceasefire in 2003.

In 2014, India's current Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power promising a tough line on Pakistan, but also showed interest in holding peace talks.

Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif shakes hands with Prime Minister Narendra Modi after the swearing-in ceremony of the NDA government in New Delhi on Tuesday, May 27, 1014Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Pakistan and India's prime ministers promised peace in 2014

Nawaz Sharif, then prime minister of Pakistan, attended Modi's swearing-in ceremony in Delhi.

But a year later, India blamed Pakistan-based groups for an attack on its airbase in Pathankot in the northern state of Punjab. Modi also cancelled a scheduled visit to the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, for a regional summit in 2017.

Since then, there hasn't been any progress in talks between the neighbours.

More on this story

Indian and Pakistani civilians describe aftermath of strikes and shelling

7 May 2025 at 15:54
EPA An Indian paramilitary soldier keeps watch from behind a fenceEPA
An Indian paramilitary soldier keeps watch from behind a fence in Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian-administered Kashmir

Mohammed Waheed was fast asleep at his home in Pakistan-administered Kashmir in the early hours of Wednesday morning when a huge blast shook his home.

"Before we could even process what was happening, more missiles struck, causing widespread panic and chaos," he told the BBC, adding that he had jumped out of bed and run outside along with his family and neighbours.

"Children were crying, women were running around, trying to find safety."

Mr Waheed lives in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir - it is one of at least three places that were hit by Indian missile strikes on Wednesday.

The Indian military said it carried out the strikes in response to a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir that killed 26 civilians. It has blamed Pakistan-based militant groups for the attacks, accusing Islamabad of tacitly supporting them - a charge Pakistan has consistently denied.

The BBC spoke to witnesses in both Indian and Pakistan administered Kashmir who described the strikes by India as well as the aftermath of shelling by Pakistan.

Pakistan said eight civilians were killed and 35 others injured as a result of the strikes this morning, according to Islamabad.

India's army has also said that at least seven civilians have been killed by Pakistani shelling on its side of the Line of Control (LoC) - the de facto border between both countries.

'Killed while making tea'

Ruby Kaur, who lived in India's Poonch district along the LoC has been identified as one of the Indians who has been killed.

Her uncle, Buava Singh, told the BBC that a mortar shell struck near Ms Kaur's house around 1:45 am, killing her on the spot and injuring her daughter.

"Her husband was not keeping well. She woke up to make tea for him when the mortar shell landed close to her house," he said.

He added that the heavy shelling on Wednesday morning was something "we have never seen so far". Singh says that there were no community bunkers in the area, which meant residents were forced to take shelter in their homes.

"The shrapnel hit her head. She was bleeding heavily. We rushed her to a nearby hospital, but she was declared dead," Mr Singh said.

Another resident from Poonch said they heard "loud explosions for hours on Wednesday night".

"It was a panicky situation across the city and other areas close to the Line of Control (LoC)," Dr Zamrood Mughal said over phone.

"People couldn't sleep the entire night. People abandoned their homes and ran for safer places. A shell hit the main town near the forest office and damaged the nearby structure."

Reuters A pictures shows the top of Bilal Mosque collapsed after the strikes.Reuters
A damaged portion of Bilal Mosque is seen after it was hit by an Indian strike in Muzaffarabad

'Terrified of what might come next'

Muhammad Younis Shah in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, described how four missiles fired by India landed on an educational complex in the Nangal Sahadan suburb, destroying a mosque in the process.

"There is a school and college for children, a hostel, and a medical complex here," he says. "The first three missiles came in succession, while the fourth missile came with an interval of five to seven minutes."

While rescue operations in the are underway, locals say they are anticipating further escalation of the violence, and terrified of what may come next.

"We're terrified, and we don't know what to do," says Mr Waheed. "People are fleeing their homes and the sense of uncertainty is overwhelming."”

His fellow Muzaffarabad resident Shahnawaz echoes this, saying he and his family were now "desperately searching for safe locations".

"We were anticipating something would happen, and now we're gripped with fear of further escalations."

Delhi emphasised its actions on Wednesday were "focused, measured and non-escalatory in nature", but locals in the targeted areas in Pakistan-administered Kashmir say that their mosques and residential complexes were among the sites hit.

Mr Waheed told the BBC he could not fathom why his local mosque was hit in the strike which he claims injured "dozens of men and women" in his neighbourhood in Muzaffarabad.

"It's hard to understand," he says. "It was a normal street mosque where we prayed five times a day. We never saw any suspicious activity around it."

Delhi emphasised its actions on Wednesday targeted terrorist infrastructure and said thee were chosen "based on credible intelligence inputs".

But locals in the targeted areas in Pakistan-administered Kashmir say that their mosques and residential complexes were among the sites hit.

Mr Waheed cannot fathom why his local mosque was hit, which injured "dozens of men and women" in his neighbourhood in Muzaffarabad.

"It's hard to understand," he says. "It was a normal street mosque where we prayed five times a day. We never saw any suspicious activity around it."

China Is Likely to Play Hardball in U.S. Tariff Talks

7 May 2025 at 18:56
Beijing says it will meet with American officials to discuss trade, but warned Washington against using the engagement to ratchet up pressure on China.

© Eric Lee/The New York Times; Florence Lo/Reuters

Indian and Pakistani civilians describe aftermath of strikes and shelling

7 May 2025 at 15:54
EPA An Indian paramilitary soldier keeps watch from behind a fenceEPA
An Indian paramilitary soldier keeps watch from behind a fence in Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian-administered Kashmir

Mohammed Waheed was fast asleep at his home in Pakistan-administered Kashmir in the early hours of Wednesday morning when a huge blast shook his home.

"Before we could even process what was happening, more missiles struck, causing widespread panic and chaos," he told the BBC, adding that he had jumped out of bed and run outside along with his family and neighbours.

"Children were crying, women were running around, trying to find safety."

Mr Waheed lives in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir - it is one of at least three places that were hit by Indian missile strikes on Wednesday.

The Indian military said it carried out the strikes in response to a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir that killed 26 civilians. It has blamed Pakistan-based militant groups for the attacks, accusing Islamabad of tacitly supporting them - a charge Pakistan has consistently denied.

The BBC spoke to witnesses in both Indian and Pakistan administered Kashmir who described the strikes by India as well as the aftermath of shelling by Pakistan.

Pakistan said eight civilians were killed and 35 others injured as a result of the strikes this morning, according to Islamabad.

India's army has also said that at least seven civilians have been killed by Pakistani shelling on its side of the Line of Control (LoC) - the de facto border between both countries.

'Killed while making tea'

Ruby Kaur, who lived in India's Poonch district along the LoC has been identified as one of the Indians who has been killed.

Her uncle, Buava Singh, told the BBC that a mortar shell struck near Ms Kaur's house around 1:45 am, killing her on the spot and injuring her daughter.

"Her husband was not keeping well. She woke up to make tea for him when the mortar shell landed close to her house," he said.

He added that the heavy shelling on Wednesday morning was something "we have never seen so far". Singh says that there were no community bunkers in the area, which meant residents were forced to take shelter in their homes.

"The shrapnel hit her head. She was bleeding heavily. We rushed her to a nearby hospital, but she was declared dead," Mr Singh said.

Another resident from Poonch said they heard "loud explosions for hours on Wednesday night".

"It was a panicky situation across the city and other areas close to the Line of Control (LoC)," Dr Zamrood Mughal said over phone.

"People couldn't sleep the entire night. People abandoned their homes and ran for safer places. A shell hit the main town near the forest office and damaged the nearby structure."

Reuters A pictures shows the top of Bilal Mosque collapsed after the strikes.Reuters
A damaged portion of Bilal Mosque is seen after it was hit by an Indian strike in Muzaffarabad

'Terrified of what might come next'

Muhammad Younis Shah in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, described how four missiles fired by India landed on an educational complex in the Nangal Sahadan suburb, destroying a mosque in the process.

"There is a school and college for children, a hostel, and a medical complex here," he says. "The first three missiles came in succession, while the fourth missile came with an interval of five to seven minutes."

While rescue operations in the are underway, locals say they are anticipating further escalation of the violence, and terrified of what may come next.

"We're terrified, and we don't know what to do," says Mr Waheed. "People are fleeing their homes and the sense of uncertainty is overwhelming."”

His fellow Muzaffarabad resident Shahnawaz echoes this, saying he and his family were now "desperately searching for safe locations".

"We were anticipating something would happen, and now we're gripped with fear of further escalations."

Delhi emphasised its actions on Wednesday were "focused, measured and non-escalatory in nature", but locals in the targeted areas in Pakistan-administered Kashmir say that their mosques and residential complexes were among the sites hit.

Mr Waheed told the BBC he could not fathom why his local mosque was hit in the strike which he claims injured "dozens of men and women" in his neighbourhood in Muzaffarabad.

"It's hard to understand," he says. "It was a normal street mosque where we prayed five times a day. We never saw any suspicious activity around it."

Delhi emphasised its actions on Wednesday targeted terrorist infrastructure and said thee were chosen "based on credible intelligence inputs".

But locals in the targeted areas in Pakistan-administered Kashmir say that their mosques and residential complexes were among the sites hit.

Mr Waheed cannot fathom why his local mosque was hit, which injured "dozens of men and women" in his neighbourhood in Muzaffarabad.

"It's hard to understand," he says. "It was a normal street mosque where we prayed five times a day. We never saw any suspicious activity around it."

Smokey Robinson accused of sexual assault by four women

7 May 2025 at 17:30
Getty Images Smokey Robinson performs on stage as the stars come out for Byron Allen in Beverly Hills as he was honored with the 2023 UCLA Neurosurgery Visionary Award at The Beverly Hilton on October 11, 2023 in Beverly Hills, CaliforniaGetty Images
Smokey Robinson, pictured in 2023, has yet to respond to the allegations

Four anonymous housekeepers are suing Motown legend Smokey Robinson for $50 million (£37 million), accusing him of sexual assault.

A complaint filed in Los Angeles superior court accuses the 85-year-old of sexual battery, false imprisonment, negligence and gender violence, in addition to a number of labour violations related to wages, breaks, meal times and overtime pay.

The lawsuit also names Robinson's wife, Frances Robinson, claiming she contributed to a hostile work environment, and used "ethnically pejorative words and language".

Representatives for the Robinsons did not immediately respond to requests for comment, and the accusations could not be independently verified.

Robinson was Motown's first hitmaker, writing number one hits like Mary Wells' My Guy and the Temptations' My Girl.

Born William Robinson Jr in Michigan, he was both a talent scout for the record label and one of its most prominent recording artists, known for songs like Tracks of My Tears, Shop Around and Tears of a Clown.

He has spots in both the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Halls of Fame, and claims to have credits on more than 4,000 songs.

Getty Images Smokey Robinson smiles and poses for the camera with his wife, Frances, on the red carpet of a film premiere.Getty Images
Robinson's second wife, Frances, is also named in the lawsuit

Robinson's reputation and stature was an intimidating factor for his accusers, who were made to feel "powerless", their lawyer said at a press conference in Los Angeles.

"They're Hispanic women who were employed by the Robinsons earning below minimum wage," said John Harris.

"As low-wage women in vulnerable positions, they lacked the resources and options necessary to protect themselves from sexual assaults."

The women are suing under the pseudonyms Jane Doe 1, 2, 3 and 4, due to the sexual misconduct allegations, including rape, being levelled against the musician.

Three are former housekeepers and one was the singer's personal assistant, cook and hairdresser, according to court documents.

In the lawsuit, all four women claim that Robinson would summon them to various areas of his properties in Chatsworth, Bell Canyon and Las Vegas, at times when his wife was away.

Sometimes emerging naked from a shower, he forced them to have various types of sex over a number of years, starting in 2006, the lawsuit alleges.

Jane Does 1, 3 and 4 all allege Robinson sexually assaulted them in the "blue bedroom" of his Chatsworth residence, claiming he would lay down a towel to protect the bed sheets prior to the assaults.

Jane Doe 2's allegations state that Robinson raped her in the laundry room and garage of his Chatsworth residence, where closed-circuit cameras were unable to see.

The women claim that during the alleged assaults, Robinson used physical barriers and threats of force to prevent them from fleeing.

The lawsuit also includes several allegations of workplace violations.

All four women say they worked 10 hours a day, for six days a week without being paid minimum wage or overtime. They also claim to have worked holidays without receiving a holiday rate.

According to their lawsuit, the employees all quit because of the alleged sexual misconduct and hostile work environment.

The BBC has contacted Robinson's representatives for a response to the lawsuit.

No police reports or criminal charges have been filed against the musician.

A spokesperson for Los Angeles County District Attorney said the women's claims were not under review because law enforcement had not presented a case.

Los Angeles police said they had no statement on the matter.

Sudan cuts ties with UAE over alleged paramilitary support

7 May 2025 at 16:15
Reuters A large plume of smoke rising from fuel depot in Port SudanReuters
Defence Minister Yassin Ibrahim made the announcement following three consecutive days of aerial attacks on Port Sudan

Sudan has cut diplomatic ties with the United Arab Emirates (UAE), after repeatedly accusing the Gulf nation of backing the rival Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in the country's civil war.

The announcement came as the RSF were blamed for attacks on the usually safe city of Port Sudan, which started on Sunday and have continued until Wednesday.

On Tuesday, Sudan's Defence Minister Yassin Ibrahim accused the UAE of violating his country's sovereignty through its "proxy", the RSF.

The UAE has repeatedly denied allegations that it is giving financial, military and political support to the paramilitary force.

Two years of conflict has killed thousands, forced millions from their homes and created the world's worst humanitarian crisis.

As a result of the defence minister's announcement, the Sudanese ambassador will be withdrawn from the UAE and Sudan will shut its diplomatic missions in the Gulf nation.

Since Sunday, drone strikes have hit an international airport, a major power station and a hotel in Port Sudan. The army has accused the RSF of being behind the assault, but the paramilitary group is yet to comment.

On Wednesday the Sudanese army said it had foiled a strike on the country's biggest naval base.

"They [the drones] were met with anti-aircraft missiles," an unnamed source told the AFP news agency.

Until now, Port Sudan had avoided bombardment and was regarded as one of the safest places in the war-ravaged nation.

Sudan's army has often accused the UAE of arming the RSF.

Both the UK and the US have singled out the UAE in separate appeals for outside countries to stop backing Sudan's warring parties.

However, on Monday, the UN's top court dismissed Sudan's case against the UAE, in which it accused the Gulf state of complicity in genocide.

The International Court of Justice in The Hague ruled that the case could not proceed because the UAE had opted out Article 9 of the Genocide Convention, which means that it cannot be sued by other states over genocide allegations.

Reem Ketait, the UAE's deputy assistant minister for political affairs, said the court's decision was "clear and decisive".

"The international community must focus urgently on ending this devastating war and supporting the Sudanese people, and it must demand humanitarian aid reaches all those in need," she said.

Both the army and RSF have been accused of war crimes.

Additional reporting by Cecilia Macaulay

More BBC stories on the war in Sudan:

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Go to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.

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中基透明指数发布13年,基金会透明度仍堪忧

7 May 2025 at 15:22
中基透明指数FTI2024数据显示,全国超七成基金会没在慈善中国做好政府要求的信息公开,各省市基金会公开程度也参差不齐,从业者“不了解相关法规”是基金会透明度不理想的原因之一。

文/黎宇琳

责任编辑:钟金秀

2025年4月,中基透明指数FTI2024发布,数据显示,有超过75%的基金会未能做到“应公开尽公开”。在中基透明指数发布的第13年,中国基金会行业的透明度仍然堪忧。

中基透明指数(Foundation Transparency Index,简称FTI)是2012年由基金会中心网和清华大学廉政与治理研究中心联合开发,反映中国基金会自律透明水平的一套综合指标系统,FTI从组织信息、财务信息、项目信息和募捐信息等方面对全国基金会透明度进行全方位观测,结果由基金会中心网每年发布一次。

不理想的基础信息公开

FTI2024分为“基础扫描”与“进阶观测”两个版块。基础扫描版块的要求比较基础,好比全国统考,考的都是官方要求必须考的内容。今年的FTI基础扫描看的

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