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Today — 14 November 2025News

The Shutdown Is Over. For Many SNAP Recipients, the Scars Remain.

Some recipients have seen their benefits return but are worried they could still be taken away. Others wonder whether the funding could be stopped again at some point.

© Hannah Yoon for The New York Times

A food pantry at the Lutheran Settlement House in Philadelphia.

‘No Closure, No Transparency’: Harassment Victims Seek Resolution

Fewer women in South Korea are reporting workplace harassment, but those who do say their claims are often not taken seriously or handled sensitively.

© Jun Michael Park for The New York Times

Baek SongYi, who works at Salesforce in South Korea, said she had been subject to sexual harassment for years. The company, she said, failed to address her claims against her former boss appropriately.

An Escape From India’s Air Pollution for Those Who Can Afford It

14 November 2025 at 13:00
Companies are offering much-needed, but expensive, air purification systems to shelter from the smog in one of the world’s most polluted cities.

© Atul Loke for The New York Times

Workers assembling YOGA Clean Air units in a factory in Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh in India.

A.I. Cheating Rattles Top Universities in South Korea

14 November 2025 at 13:07
As many elite colleges struggle to adapt to the technology, the nation’s most prestigious universities said dozens of students used artificial intelligence tools to cheat.

© Tina Hsu for The New York Times

The entrance of Korea University in Seoul, South Korea, in August.

荷部长称政府代表团下周赴华讨论安世

14 November 2025 at 11:15

荷兰经济部长卡雷曼斯星期四(11月13日)公布,荷兰政府代表团将于下周初前往中国,针对涉及安世半导体的争端寻求解决方案。

据路透社报道,卡雷曼斯(Vincent Karremans)在声明中说:“我部将派出一个高级官员代表团前往北京,继续努力寻找双方都能接受的解决方案。”

卡雷曼斯也对中国放宽安世半导体晶片出口规定表示欢迎,但称仍在监测情况,以确定来自安世半导体在华工厂的买卖活动,是否已全面恢复,以及何时全面恢复。

荷兰政府今年9月底以国家安全为由,强制接管隶属于中国闻泰科技的安世半导体。北京随后对安世在华工厂实施出口禁令,引发全球汽车制造供应链中断的担忧。

不过,美国总统特朗普和中国国家主席习近平10月底于韩国会晤、就经贸问题达成一定共识后,安世风波出现转机。中国已恢复出口部分安世半导体晶片,条件是购买方承诺晶片仅用于民用用途。

另一方面,接近安世半导体的消息人士告诉路透社,针对在欧部门与在华工厂之间的争端,安世客户正与公司合作寻找绕过此争端的变通办法。

这个办法并非永久解决方案,对于小型客户而言也是不可行的,但此举能减轻汽车市场所面对的部分压力。安世半导体晶片短缺在汽车市场已经影响到部分汽车和零部件的生产。

安世半导体在欧洲生产晶圆后,会运往至中国东莞的工厂进行切割和封装。上述争端导致欧洲方面停止向中国运输货物。

消息人士称,一些客户现在与安世半导体欧洲(Nexperia Europe)合作,直接从位于德国汉堡的工厂购买硅片,然后另外将硅片运往中国,再与东莞工厂签订合同进行最终封装。

路透社无法确定哪些客户正就变通方案进行谈判,也无法确定是否已有客户采用这个方案。包括大众(福士伟根)、海拉(Hella)、博世、欧摩威(Aumovio)、本田在内的汽车制造商和供应商使用安世晶片。

安世发言人称,公司正在尽一切可能,努力为客户提供支持,但未就具体计划置评。闻泰科技一名发言人则拒绝置评。

其他潜在替代方案包括用性能相近、由安森美(Onsemi)和意法半导体(STMicroelectronics)等竞争对手生产的的晶片,取代安世晶片。

报道称,从长远来看,安世欧洲分部希望扩大在马来西亚和菲律宾的封装业务。中国分部则希望使用中国制造的晶圆,取代欧洲制造的晶圆。

中国10月工业产出与零售销售增速创一年多新低

14 November 2025 at 11:09
官方数据显示,中国10月工业产出与零售销售增速均降至一年多来最低水平。图为工人在江苏省连云港一家工厂生产风力涡轮机零部件。 (法新社)

官方数据显示,中国10月工业产出与零售销售增速均降至一年多来最低水平。

中国国家统计局星期五(11月14日)公布的数据显示,今年10月,全国规模以上工业增加值同比增长4.9%,为2024年8月以来最弱增速,低于9月的6.5%,也未达到路透社调查预测的5.5%。

数据还显示,作为衡量消费的指标,社会消费品零售总额同比增长2.9%,同样创下去年8月以来新低,低于9月的3%,略高于预测的2.8%。

路透社报道称,中国官员长期以来依靠两种策略应对经济波动:一是刺激庞大的工业体系以推动出口,应对国内消费者支出收紧的情况;二是通过公共资金投资基础设施项目以提振国内生产总值(GDP)。

不过,美国总统特朗普的关税政策凸显了中国制造业对美国这个全球最大消费市场的依赖。即便是中国这样如此庞大的经济体,也难以仅通过建设更多工业园区、变电站和水坝来获得可持续增长。

此次中国官方公布的经济指标几乎未带来短期反弹迹象,而数据连续下滑更凸显了结构性改革的紧迫性。

称日本80年来首次武力威胁中国 人民日报批高市台湾有事论

14 November 2025 at 10:57
日本首相高市早苗11月7日在国会备询时,暗示东京可能武力介入台海,引发中日关系过去一周日益紧张。 (路透社档案照)

日本首相高市早苗11月7日在国会备询时,暗示东京可能武力介入台海,引发中日关系过去一周日益紧张。中国官媒《人民日报》星期五(11月14日)发表署名文章,批评高市的“台湾有事”论是日本领导人80年来首次在台湾问题上表达试图武装介入的野心,首次对中国发出武力威胁,用心极其险恶、性质极其恶劣、后果极其严重。

《人民日报》在署名钟声、题为“绝不容忍高市早苗在台湾问题上的越线挑衅”的文章中并警告日本,如果胆敢武力介入台海局势,将构成侵略,中国必将迎头痛击。文章并敦促东京必须立即纠正挑衅越线的错误言行,收回恶劣言论,停止在军事安全领域的危险冒进举动,否则一切后果必须由日本承担。

高市早苗11月7日在众议院质询时表示,如果“台湾有事”,且伴随武力攻击,有可能被认定为“存亡危机事态”,日本自卫队可行使集体自卫权。这番涉台言论随即引来两名前日本首相的议论,并引发中国外交部提出严正交涉和强烈抗议,批评日本领导人涉台言论性质和影响极其恶劣。

中国驻大阪总领事薛剑11月8日深夜在社媒X发文称,高市把脖子伸到不该伸的地方,“那种肮脏的头就应该毫不犹豫斩掉”,“斩首论”引起日本社会哗然。

据中国外交部官网消息,中国副外长孙卫东星期四(11月13日)奉示召见日本驻华大使金杉宪治,就高市早苗涉华言行提出严正交涉。

孙卫东表示,高市早苗日前在国会答辩时公然发表涉台露骨挑衅言论,暗示可能武力介入台海问题,性质影响极其恶劣。在中国多次严正交涉后,日本仍不思悔改,拒不撤回错误言论。北京对此强烈不满、坚决反对,向东京提出严正交涉和强烈抗议。

孙卫东指出,高市的涉台言论极其错误、极为危险,粗暴干涉中国内政,严重违背国际法和国际关系基本准则,严重破坏战后国际秩序,严重违背“一个中国”原则和中日四个政治文件精神,严重破坏中日关系政治基础,严重伤害中国人民感情,14亿中国人民对此绝不答应。

孙卫东强调,台湾问题是北京核心利益中的核心,是不可触碰的红线和底线。台湾是中国的神圣领土,台湾事务纯属中国内政。如何解决台湾问题是中国人自己的事,不容任何外来干涉。

今年是中国人民抗日战争暨世界反法西斯战争胜利80周年,也是台湾光复80周年。孙卫东表示,80年前,中国人民历经14年浴血奋战,打败了日本侵略者。80年后的今天,任何人胆敢以任何形式干涉中国统一大业,中国必将予以迎头痛击。

中国并再次敦促日本深刻反省历史罪责,立即反思纠错,收回恶劣言论,不要在错误的道路上越走越远,否则一切后果必须由东京承担。

《人民日报》星期五在署名文章中则指出,高市的言论是1945年日本战败以来,日本领导人首次在正式场合鼓吹“台湾有事就是日本有事”并与行使集体自卫权相关联,首次在台湾问题上表达试图武装介入的野心,首次对中国发出武力威胁,用心极其险恶、性质极其恶劣、后果极其严重。中国官民对此强烈愤慨、坚决反对。

文章指出,近代以来,日本军国主义疯狂对外侵略扩张,对中国犯下的罪行罄竹难书。1895年,日本通过《马关条约》强行割占台湾,实施长达50年的殖民统治,血腥镇压台湾民众反抗,大肆掠夺资源,对台湾经济、文化、民生等造成严重破坏。

1945年,中国人民历经14年的浴血奋战赢得抗日战争胜利,日本签署投降书,正式接受《开罗宣言》《波茨坦公告》等规定台湾归还中国的国际法律文件,中国收复台湾,恢复对台湾行使主权,这是中华民族捍卫国家统一的篇章,也是二战后国际秩序的重要组成部分。

文章认为,日本作为战败国,理应深刻反省历史罪责,恪守对中国和国际社会作出的承诺,以实际行动彻底反思历史罪责,充分尊重中国的主权和领土完整。但高市却试图将台湾和日本的安全利益进行绑定,从而企图为日本武力干预台湾问题提供口实,暴露出日本军事介入台海的图谋和野心。

文章续指,高市的言论不仅向“台独”分裂势力释放严重错误信号,而且严重违背《中日联合声明》中坚持“一个中国”原则的核心内容,以及2008年中日第四个政治文件中关于两国“互为合作伙伴,互不构成威胁”的共识,严重破坏了中日关系的政治基础。

《人民日报》指出,高市的涉台谬论绝非孤立的政治妄言,背后是日本右翼势力突破和平宪法束缚、谋求军事大国地位的偏执和狂妄。近年来,日本在强军扩武道路上疾行狂飙,不断架空和平宪法,彻底背弃“专守防卫”原则,图谋放弃“无核三原则”。

在此背景下,高市将“台湾有事”与集体自卫权挂钩,是为日本军事扩张寻找借口,蕴藏着军国主义死灰复燃的危险苗头。高市从频繁参拜靖国神社到否认南京大屠杀,再到极力渲染“中国威胁论”,她每一步都踩在历史罪恶的旧脚印中,企图为侵略历史翻案,为军国主义招魂。

文章指出,日本军国主义历史上多次以存亡危机为借口,发动对外侵略,包括以“行使自卫权”为由悍然制造“九一八”事变,挑起侵华战争。如今重提类似论调,难道日本想重蹈历史覆辙?

《人民日报》强调,中华民族伟大复兴、两岸统一是不可阻挡的历史大势。中国官民维护国家主权和领土完整的决心坚定不移。台湾问题是中国核心利益中的核心,谁敢触碰这条红线,14亿多中国人民、整个中华民族绝不会答应。

文章最后表示,今天中华民族有坚定意志、充分信心和足够能力挫败任何形式“台独”分裂图谋和外部干涉。玩火者必自焚,任何企图阻挠中国统一大业的势力都是螳臂当车,必将遭到坚决反制和彻底失败。

Councils warn of 'total collapse' in special needs system

14 November 2025 at 08:58
Getty Images Schoolchildren in classroom holding pencils and writing in exercise books Getty Images

The special educational needs and disabilities system for children in England faces "total collapse" and the government must not "keep ducking" reforms, council leaders have warned.

The County Councils Network, which represents some of England's largest local authorities, said councils had deficits which will reach £4.4bn a year by the end of this parliament in 2029, as they struggled to cope with increased demand.

The government has put off planned reforms to the SEND system until next year, and a white paper setting out those reforms was delayed recently.

But ministers face pressure from Labour MPs who warn there would be political danger in watering down support for children.

SUPPLIED Ezra Quick sitting in bus seat SUPPLIED
Amanda Quick's 12-year-old Ezra who has autism and ADHD attends a specialist school

The number of Education Health and Care Plans (EHCP) - the legal document entitling children to support from local authorities - have increased, according to the Department for Education.

There were 638,745 EHCPs in place in January 2025, up 10.8% on the same point last year. The number of new plans which started during 2024 also grew by 15.8% on the previous year, to 97,747.

The County Councils Network (CCN) says one in every 20 children in England could end up needing this kind of support by the end of the decade.

Councils have a statutory duty to provide support to children with an EHCP, depending on what the document outlines.

The CCN also says demand for EHCPs alone is not the only factor driving spiralling expenditure, with "over-reliance on higher costs placements and special provision" also a factor, including "expensive private school places".

There are now record numbers of pupils in special schools. In England, there are around 194,000 pupils, compared with 109,000 in 2014/15 according to the CNN.

The CCN has projected that councils could be spending £8bn on these placements by the end of the decade.

SUPPLIED Claire Naylor sat in between sons Jaxon and MJ on a benchSUPPLIED
Claire Naylor with sons six-year-old MJ and Jaxon, who is eight

While the government wrestles with provision for children, many families continue to struggle.

Amanda Quick, who has a 12-year-old son with ADHD and autism, really appreciates the support at her local Taunton café, set up specifically for parents to bring their children with special educational needs.

Amanda's son Ezra attends a specialist school, but Amanda says she had a long fight with their local authority in Somerset to get him the support he needs.

"My mental health took a hit. I couldn't cope with all the paperwork so I ended up getting a solicitor, which is about £200 an hour," she said.

Claire Naylor, who owns the café, said she felt "dismissed" in trying to get support for her six-year-old son MJ, who has non-verbal autism.

"The EHCP process became a real fight and a real battle to get those provisions put in place. We ended up having to go to court which took us over a year," she says.

"We had to spend thousands of pounds on private reports just to prove what we already knew.

"We needed him to fail to be able to prove [he needed support] which is a really really sad way of basically being heard and it affected a whole family. We lost friendships, we've lost a lot of money and a lot of time."

Budget deficits

The CCN has called for the council deficits incurred by SEND provision to be written off and for changes to the law to focus EHCPs on those "most in need".

Councillor Bill Revans, Lib Dem leader of Somerset County Council and SEND spokesman for the CCN, said spiralling demand is fuelling the crisis and better inclusion in mainstream schools should be a priority.

"The whole system needs looking at, including EHCPs," he said.

"That pressure is unsustainable and it will make the system collapse within this parliament.

"All councils that have responsibility for special educational needs and disabilities carry a deficit on their budget which isn't included on their accounts.

"We will have no way of paying that off unless there is a solution from government."

PA Media The education secretary Bridget PhillipsonPA Media
MPs have praised the approach of Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson whose team are on a "listening exercise"

But changing EHCPs is a political battleground and campaigners have warned against watering down legal protections for families.

Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson has refused to say whether the government would change or abolish EHCPs.

Labour chair of the Education Select Committee, Helen Hayes, has joined campaigners saying this entitlement must stay in place.

Rachel Filmer, a parent of children with special educational needs, set up Save our Children's Rights campaign in direct response to the government refusing to commit to these plans.

"Without [EHCPs] children have no legal right to any support so things could be catastrophic," she said.

Keeping EHCPs in place but diluting them into a more generalised format that offers less tailored support is also a concern amongst campaigners, and some MPs have suggested the delay to the government's reforms are due to tension over whether to change or scrap these plans.

One said the pushback to changes to EHCPs would be "serious and significant" and would endanger already low levels of trust families have.

The Conservatives have said the delay in publishing the white paper had been "seriously damaging".

Tory MP Saqib Bhatti said: "SEND provision is vital to so many children and that's why we all need the government to get its reforms right."

He added: "Speculation that the government may scrap EHCPs has caused further anxiety to families that already face a struggle to get their children the support they need."

Reform UK are expected to set out its own plans for the SEND system soon.

The party's deputy leader, Richard Tice, recently suggested some parents were "abusing" the system – limiting support for those in "genuine need".

Phillipson favours an approach of earlier intervention, something that is welcomed by campaigners and MPs.

Schools Minister Georgia Gould, who recently inherited the SEND brief, has been visiting constituencies on a "listening" tour exercise.

A Department for Education spokesperson said the government inherited a SEND system "on its knees".

"We're determined to put that right by improving mainstream inclusion so every child can thrive at their local school," they said.

"We've held over 100 listening sessions with families and will continue engaging parents as we deliver reform through the Schools White Paper."

Phillipson has had praise from MPs for being accessible and ready to hear their thoughts, and they point to this as evidence that Downing Street has learned lessons from the summer, when numerous Labour MPs rebelled against the government's proposed cuts to welfare.

Ministers favour setting up more specialist provision in mainstream schools, but MPs have warned that there cannot be a half-hearted approach to giving schools and councils what they need.

"If SEND reform is about saving dough rather than improving the system then it's not headed in the right direction," said Labour MP Neil Duncan-Jordan.

Labour MP Rachael Maskell said that if the upcoming budget does not show that the government is adequately equipping schools and councils - such as increased workforce funding for roles such as speech therapists, health visitors and physiotherapists - then she will not be supporting reforms.

And Jen Craft, a Labour MP who has a disabled daughter, says the approach of groups like the CCN may not be the right one.

"I don't think you should be coming at it from a position of these children, these families cost too much money," she said.

Writing off billions in council deficits would be challenging for a government already facing what's widely expected to be a difficult budget, with warnings about the existing pressure on public finances.

Ministers have signalled that reform of the SEND system will focus on increasing and improving inclusive mainstream provision and early intervention, but that would require extra resource for schools.

Either way it is a challenge ministers are trying to carefully navigate, conscious of the consequences if they don't get this right.

'I could hardly walk' - the issue that affects one in five mums

14 November 2025 at 09:21
Rebecca Middleton A woman with blonde hair and glasses smiling with a young boy with blonde hair wearing a blue top. Rebecca Middleton

When Rebecca Middleton became pregnant, she had no idea that she would end up in a wheelchair for the final three months before she gave birth.

Rebecca had had a difficult first trimester dealing with nausea and sickness, and began to develop pelvic pain four months into her pregnancy.

"I could hardly walk, I'd always had some problems with lower back pain in my life. But nothing that significant and it escalated quite quickly," she says.

After complaining about the pain, she was referred to an NHS physio, and eventually diagnosed with an extreme case of pelvic girdle pain (PGP), also known as symphysis pubic dysfunction.

Problems with your pelvic joints are a common symptom of pregnancy, affecting one in five expectant mothers to some degree.

"I was terrified, would I ever walk again? How would I have my baby, how would I care for it?"

Rebecca Middleton A woman with blonde hair and glasses smiling wearing a red coat. Rebecca Middleton
Rebecca now helps raise awareness of the issue

After giving birth, Rebecca was in less pain, but she still struggled with basic things like walking, lifting her son or pushing a pram.

"I was disabled for seven months and had to have someone helping me all the time," she says.

"I just couldn't do the things that you should be able to do in looking after a baby, it was a really challenging time."

Prior to becoming pregnant, it was an issue Rebecca was unaware of and since her experience she volunteers for The Pelvic Partnership, a charity which helps raise awareness and support women with this condition.

It says the condition is treatable with the right action.

As soon as your symptoms start, the charity advises you get hands-on individualised treatment, including manual therapy, and ask for a referral for NHS physiotherapy from your GP or midwife.

If you aren't offered this support initially, the charity suggests going back to your GP or midwife and asking for a second opinion.

They can also refer you to maternal mental health support to help you manage the emotional impacts of living with PGP.

Dr Nighat Arif, a women's health specialist, says higher awareness and early assessment could prevent patients like Rebecca needing wheelchairs or crutches.

"Without that early identification based on a really good understanding of the female body, we leave some of these women with negative effects for life," she says.

Gynaecologist Dr Christine Ekechi says the lack of research around the condition means it is less likely to be identified and suitably treated, particularly post birth.

"We don't necessarily see them unless they then come back into a gynaecology clinic presenting with pain.

"So we don't have a great understanding as to the proportion of women that have persisting pain that has started off during pregnancy."

Victoria Roberton A woman with long blonde hair holding a baby smiling. Victoria Roberton
Victoria says her second pregnancy was much easier to manage

Victoria Roberton, co-ordinator at the Pelvic Partnership, is an example of how awareness can help.

Like Rebecca, she didn't know what PGP was when she began experiencing the condition during her first pregnancy.

She tried to stay as active as possible as advised and was referred to NHS physio sessions online and by phone, but found the pain worsening as her pregnancy progressed.

"They gave us exercises, stretches to do. By this point I couldn't do any of them. It was too painful," she says.

It got to the point where even sitting became uncomfortable for Victoria, and she was largely homebound until her baby was born.

The pain lessened after the birth of her daughter, but she began experiencing the same problem when she became pregnant with her second child.

It's not an option for many mothers, but Victoria said given her medical history she decided to pay for a private physio as the NHS wait for referral was long.

The physio gave her a full assessment and hands-on treatment including joint mobilisation, and taught her different ways to move her body to not aggravate her hip joints, which helped ease the pain.

Victoria still struggles with a degree of PGP today, four years on, but her second pregnancy was much easier to manage because she understood her condition and how to handle it.

Rebecca's second pregnancy has been similarly a much more positive experience.

This time round she knew she was at risk of PGP and was able to have it treated throughout her pregnancy before it became debilitating.

She has made a full recovery from PGP, just two months post birth compared to two years for her first child.

"I'm probably in better shape now than I was before either of my children because I now know what caused that pelvic girdle pain, and have had it fully treated and resolved with manual therapy," she says.

"It was five years of hell because of the pain I was in because of a lack of knowledge and understanding about the subject."

Ex-Bangladesh leader tells BBC she's not guilty of crimes against humanity

14 November 2025 at 10:26
Getty Images Headshot of Sheikh Hasina smiling at an event in Italy in summer 2025. She has grey hair that is largely covered by a colourful headscarf, and is wearing glasses, jewelled earrings and a silver beaded necklace. Getty Images
Sheikh Hasina is facing the death penalty over a deadly crackdown on student-led protests last year that ousted her from power

Bangladesh's former prime minister Sheikh Hasina has denied committing crimes against humanity during a deadly crackdown on last year's uprising that ousted her, days before the special tribunal trying her is due to deliver a verdict.

Hasina is accused of being the main architect behind hundreds of killings during the mass protests against her autocratic rule - an allegation she denies.

In her first interview with the BBC since she fled the country on 5 August 2024, she said her trial in absentia was a "farce" orchestrated by a "kangaroo court" controlled by political opponents.

Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty for Hasina if she is found guilty on Monday.

Hasina claimed the trial was destined to deliver a "pre-ordained guilty verdict".

Security has been tightened in and around the tribunal in the capital Dhaka ahead of Monday's verdict.

It will mark a significant moment for the country as well as for the relatives of those killed during the student-led anti-government protests that ousted Hasina.

UN human rights investigators have said up to 1,400 people were killed when Hasina and her government used systematic, deadly violence against protesters in the failed bid to hold onto power.

The former prime minister has refused to return from India to attend the trial.

She has been accused of personally ordering security forces to fire at protesters in the weeks before she fled.

In an email interview, Hasina told the BBC she "categorically" denied such allegations.

"I'm not denying that the situation got out of control, nor that many lives were lost needlessly. But I never issued any order to fire on unarmed civilians," she said.

Leaked audio of one of her phone calls verified by BBC Eye earlier this year suggested that she had authorised the use of "lethal weapons" in July 2024. The audio was played in court during the trial.

Hasina was formally indicted along with two others in July this year. They are former home minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal and former inspector general of police Chowdhury Abdullah Al-Mamun.

Prosecutors have sought the death penalty for the former, who is in hiding. The latter pleaded guilty in July but has not been handed a sentence.

Speaking about the trial, Hasina said she hadn't been able to defend herself or appoint her own lawyers.

She added her political opponents had gone after her in an attempt to "liquidate" her Awami League party as a political force.

Lawyers representing her issued a statement on Monday saying they had filed an urgent appeal to the UN raising serious fair trial and due process issues at the International Crimes Tribunal in Bangladesh.

The Awami League is already banned from standing in general elections due in February.

The BBC interview also covered other serious allegations of abuses committed during Hasina's 15-year rule, which will be heard in another case at the special tribunal. Hasina denies charges of crimes against humanity in that case too.

After Hasina was ousted from power, a number of secret jails were discovered holding prisoners who had been detained for years without any legal process. Many other critics and opponents of Hasina who had been abducted or held in these prisons are alleged to have been killed unlawfully.

Asked who was responsible for this, Hasina said she "did not have knowledge" of them.

She also denied her involvement in alleged extra-judicial killings and disappearances, which rights group say she was responsible for as the head of government during her leadership.

"This is denied in terms of my own involvement, but if there is evidence of abuse by officials, let us have it examined properly in an impartial, depoliticised process," she said.

Hasina and other senior members of her former government are also facing trial for corruption in a separate court, charges they deny.

The Papers: 'BBC's apology to Trump' and '84 in, 113 out' on migrants deal

14 November 2025 at 09:55

The headline on the front page of the Guardian reads: "BBC apologises to Trump over Panorama, but rejects $1bn claim".
Issued one day before the deadline set by the US president, the BBC's official apology to Donald Trump leads the way on the front page of the Guardian. Under the headline "BBC apologises to Trump over Panorama, but rejects $1bn claim" the paper quotes the BBC's public statement that "sincerely regrets" how it edited a clip of his speech in a Panorama documentary clip, but strongly disagrees there is a basis for Trump's defamation claim.
The headline on the front page of the x reads:
The Daily Telegraph, which originally broke the story about Panorama, has a new angle involving another big BBC show. It says that Newsnight also misleadingly edited a Trump clip from the same speech, for a programme in 2022, two years prior to Panorama. The paper says the "spliced footage" appeared to suggest that Trump was encouraging his supporters to riot. In response, a BBC spokesperson said: "The BBC holds itself to the highest editorial standards. This matter has been brought to our attention and we are now looking into it."
The headline on the front page of Metro reads: "84 in... 113 out".
Meanwhile, Metro turns its attention to the long-standing debate on how politicians can deal with asylum seekers arriving in the UK on small boats. Its headlne "84 in... 113 out" collates the latest total in the government's recently-introduced one-in-one-out strategy. That would be encouraging news for Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood but the paper argues that figure is "dwarfed" by the total of more than 8,000 people who have arrived on small boats since the deal began.
The headline on the front page of the i Paper reads: "UK to unveil stricter 'Denmark-style' laws for migrants".
In a further effort to crack down on illegal migration methods, the i Paper reports that Mahmood will reveal tougher "Denmark-style" laws which include deporting 95% of failed asylum seekers and creating barriers to family reunions. The move aims to deter new arrivals and restrict refugees to a temporary stay in the country, the paper says.
The headline on the front page of the Times reads: "Denmark-style reforms to drive away 'asylum shoppers'".
Those new measures, expected to be announced next week, would be "the most radical asylum reforms since the second world war" says the Times. The home secretary hopes the stricter rules will help tackle the "pull factors" that have made the country Europe's destination for "asylum shoppers", the paper says.
The headline on the front page of the Mirror reads: "Andrew 'knew Epstein abused girls'".
The fallout from newly released Jeffrey Epstein emails continues to dominate the news agenda for the Daily Mirror. The paper focuses on allegations from accuser Virginia Giuffre that Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was aware of the late sex offender's conduct. "Andrew 'knew Epstein abused girls'" is the headline, featured alongside the infamous photo of Andrew and Epstein walking in New York's Central Park from 2010. Andrew has consistently denied Ms Giuffre's allegations.
The headline on the front page of the Daily Star reads: "Ferg off... and don't come back".
Andrew's ex-wife Sarah Ferguson is also caught up in the Epstein fallout as the Daily Star reports she is planning to move to her daughter Princess Eugenie's villa in Portugal to escape the media storm. "Ferg off... and don't come back" is the paper blunt send-off.
The headline on the front page of the Daily Mail reads: "Fear of being seen as racist contributed to failures that doomed tragic Sara".
The Daily Mail shifts its focus to revelations from an independent review of the Sara Sharif case which identified multiple failings from agencies before her murder in Surrey in 2023, after years of abuse by her parents. The paper highlights a finding that revealed neighbours of the Sharif family heard things that worried them but were hesitant to raise concerns for "fear of being seen as racist".
The headline on the front page of the Daily Express reads: "Sara failed by officials 'afraid to cause offence'".
"Sara failed by officials 'afraid to cause offence'" echoes the Daily Express, as it says the "damning review" found that social workers did not fully question why Sara wore a hijab - which hid her injuries - because they were "too scared of being branded racist".
The headline on the front page of the Independent reads: "Afghan heroes still at risk from MoD data breach".
The Independent leads with another damning report, one conducted by cross-party MPs who warn that Afghans who served with UK forces remain vulnerable after the Ministry of Defence failed to implement safeguards following multiple data breaches. Also gracing the front page is a photo of Sir David Beckham giving a thumps up, as the paper says the former footballer is backing its campaign to launch a lifeline for missing children.
The headline on the front page of the Financial Times reads: "Call to arms: Berlin steps up recruitment".
Meanwhile in Europe, a "call to arms" in Germany provides the lead for the Financial Times. Berlin has ruled that all 18-year-old German men must have medical inspections to see if they are fit enough to serve in the military as part of a recruitment drive, the paper reports.
The headline on the front page of the Sun reads: "Peaty brother arrested over threats".
Finally, the Sun splashes with another "Ramsay wedding feud exclusive". The paper reports that Adam Peaty's brother has been arrested over allegations he sent threats to the Olympian during his stag-do, ahead of the swimmer's wedding to social media influencer Holly Ramsay . James Peaty was questioned by police and later released on conditional bail.
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中国10月新房售价创下一年来环比最大跌幅

14 November 2025 at 10:35
中国10月新房售价跌势加剧,创下一年以来最大降幅。图为上海城市景观。 (法新社)

中国10月新房售价跌势加剧,创下一年以来最大降幅,显示房地产市场需求持续疲软。

中国国家统计局星期五(11月14日)在官网公布的数据显示,今年10月,剔除保障性住房的70个城市新建住宅价格环比下降0.45%,为一年以来最大跌幅;二手房价格下跌0.66%,为13个月来最大的降幅。

目前,中国持续四年的房地产下行正在拖累经济。长期的房价下跌让购房者对房地产作为财富储存手段的可靠性产生担忧,从而抑制了购房需求。

中国最近一次楼市刺激政策在8月底出台,当时北京、上海和深圳三大城市放宽购房限制,尤其是郊区区域。不过,花旗集团大中华区首席经济学家余向荣指出,由于家庭收入停滞和城市化增速放缓,这些措施的效果不及去年9月出台的一揽子政策。

余向荣星期四(11月13日)在上海举行的媒体圆桌会上说:“房地产政策效应正在减弱,住房市场尚未触底。我们预计一年内房地产行业不会实现稳定和复苏。”

076两栖攻击舰四川舰下水11个月后首次航行试验

14 November 2025 at 10:15
中国四川舰星期五(11月14日)早上9时许从上海沪东中华造船厂码头解缆启航,赴相关海域开展首次航行试验任务。 (新华社)

中国076两栖攻击舰首舰四川舰下水大约11个月后,在星期五(11月14日)开展首次航行试验。

据中国央视新闻报道,属于中国海军新一代两栖攻击舰的四川舰,上午9时许从上海沪东中华造船厂码头解缆赴相关海域开展首次航行试验。这次海试将主要检测验证四川舰动力、电力等系统的可靠性和稳定性。

在五艘拖船的牵引下,四川舰离开上海沪东中华造船厂码头驶向相关海域。四川舰舷号为51,满载排水量4万余吨,设置双舰岛式上层建筑和全纵通飞行甲板,创新应用电磁弹射和阻拦技术,可搭载固定翼飞机、直升机、两栖装备等。

报道称,自2024年12月下水以来,四川舰建造工作按计划稳步推进,顺利完成系泊试验和装设备调试,具备出海试验的技术条件。

中国四川舰星期五(11月14日)早上9时许从上海沪东中华造船厂码头解缆启航,赴相关海域开展首次航行试验任务。(新华社)
中国四川舰星期五(11月14日)早上9时许从上海沪东中华造船厂码头解缆启航,赴相关海域开展首次航行试验任务。(新华社)
中国四川舰星期五(11月14日)早上9时许从上海沪东中华造船厂码头解缆启航,赴相关海域开展首次航行试验任务。(新华社)
中国四川舰星期五(11月14日)早上9时许从上海沪东中华造船厂码头解缆启航,赴相关海域开展首次航行试验任务。(新华社)

美议员抨击特朗普暂停对华技术限制 称削弱国安

14 November 2025 at 09:57

美国参议院少数党领袖舒默等多名民主党参议员抨击特朗普政府,指华盛顿在新一轮对华贸易谈判中暂停了一项旨在阻止数千家中国企业获取美国技术的限制措施,并称此举将削弱美国国家安全。

据路透社报道,这项限制措施在9月29日公布,旨在阻止受制裁的中国企业通过旗下子公司规避禁令,获取关键美国设备。规定要求,凡是由先前受制裁企业持股至少50%的公司,均不得获得美国技术出口。根据WireScreen最新报告,这一措施本可使约2万家中企被纳入美国出口限制范畴。

但在中美元首上月会晤后,美国同意将这一规定推迟一年,以换取北京暂停对稀土矿出口的限制。

在一封日期为星期三(11月12日)的信中,参议员怀登(Ron Wyden)等人呼吁美国总统特朗普恢复这一规定,警告推迟执行将“让美国研发的先进计算技术面临风险,被用于推进中国的议程,而非我们自身利益”。

他们在信中写道:“暂停这些管控削弱了美国国家安全,并使阻止美国产半导体及其他先进技术流向中国国有相关实体更加困难。我们敦促您恢复这些管控措施,停止对关键国家安全工具的让步。”

议员指出,这项为期一年的暂停重新打开了“漏洞”,让被列入黑名单企业的关联公司有“一整年的时间通过重组规避规定”。

他们还批评,这项推迟是特朗普的一贯做法,旨在寻求“快速握手的协议”,以缓解贸易战造成的压力,而牺牲国家安全。他们呼吁特朗普“重新考虑这一错误策略,确保我国出口管制不再被当作谈判筹码”。

对此,白宫发言人德赛(Kush Desai)回应称:“特朗普政府已经实施严格的出口管制制度,以保障美国的经济与国家安全。”

“战狼”回归,中国外交官威胁砍掉高市早苗“肮脏的头颅”

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“战狼”回归,中国外交官威胁砍掉高市早苗“肮脏的头颅”

ANDREW HIGGINS, 赫海威
日本首相高市早苗上月在韩国与中国领导人习近平会晤。此后,她的涉台言论引发中国方面连番抨击。
日本首相高市早苗上月在韩国与中国领导人习近平会晤。此后,她的涉台言论引发中国方面连番抨击。 Japan Pool/Jiji Press, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
被日本新任首相高市早苗的涉台言论激怒的中国发出了一连串的尖刻批评,其中包括一名中国外交官威胁要砍掉这位领导人“肮脏的头颅”。
这番辱骂突如其来地结束了上任不到一个月的高市与中国之间的蜜月期。上月她刚在韩国与中国最高领导人习近平会晤,双方曾热情握手并微笑
这也终结了中国对所谓“战狼外交”的回避——这种咄咄逼人的好斗外交方式始于2012年习近平执掌北京政权后,近年来已基本淡出。
几十年来,中国和日本的关系一直处于激烈的争执之中,这在很大程度上是由中国人对第二次世界大战的痛苦记忆所推动的。二战期间,日军犯下了包括1937年南京大屠杀在内的多起暴行,北京认为,东京从未为这些罪行充分道歉。
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这两个亚洲大国之间冲突的最新爆发始于上周五,当时高市在国会回答了一个事关潜在“存亡危机事态”的问题。根据日本法律,这种情况允许该国部署军事力量。
高市早苗说,若中国试图封锁或占领台湾可能会造成这样的局面。台湾距离日本领土不到110公里,横跨对日本经济生存至关重要的航道。中国认为自治民主的台湾是其领土的一部分。
她告诉国会:“如果涉及出动军舰和使用武力,我认为这可能构成存亡危机事态,无论如何看待它。”
周一,她稍作修正,说她的言论并不构成政府政策的改变。
中国外交部对此并不满意,要求她收回自己的言论,并在周四指责说她“执迷不悟”。一名发言人列举了日本在1945年前殖民统治台湾期间犯下的“罄竹难书的罪行”,并称日本一再利用“所谓‘存亡危机’为借口发动对外侵略”。
中国著名民族主义者胡锡进在社交媒体上谴责高市早苗是“恶毒的巫婆”,她“成功地点燃了中日两国舆论之间新一轮的仇恨风暴”。
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中国中央电视台本周发表评论警告说,干涉台湾事务的日本领导人“注定自掘坟墓”。
“引火者必自焚,”评论还说,将高市早苗提到的“存亡危机事态”与1931年日本入侵中国东北的满洲相提并论。
高市最初的评论并未实质性改变日本长期支持台湾的立场,但打破了之前避免在“存亡危机事态”的背景下明确提及台湾的政策惯例。此前日本与其紧密盟友美国一样,始终奉行战略模糊政策,对未来中国可能对台湾发动军事攻击的情况含糊其辞。
就连日本前首相安倍晋三也没有详细说明日本将如何应对台湾危机。安倍晋三曾是高市的政治导师,对中国持鹰派观点。近年来,日本领导人反复使用模糊的团结表述:“台湾有事就是日本有事。”
中国对日本有关台湾的表态尤为敏感。从1895年到1945年,日本作为殖民大国统治着台湾岛,遗留下的知识精英阶层常自认与日本比与中国更亲近。台湾首位民选总统李登辉精通日语,并在1990年代主导岛内全面民主转型,屡被北京指责为日本代理人。
现居香港的政治学家、《面对中国:战争与和平的前景》(Facing China: The Prospect for War and Peace)一书的作者高敬文(Jean-Pierre Cabestan)将本周的中日冲突描述为“战狼外交的明显回归”。他还说,日本首相对议会所说的“是事实:如果中国攻击台湾,日本不可能置身冲突之外。看看地图就知道了”。
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针对高市早苗的言论,中国驻日本大阪总领事薛剑在社交媒体平台X上用日文发帖称:“那颗自己冲上来的肮脏的头颅,必须毫不犹豫地砍掉。你准备好了吗?”
日本执政党和反对党高层都将其解读为死亡威胁,要求将薛剑驱逐出境。
针对薛剑的信息,美国驻东京大使乔治·格拉斯也表达了自己的态度。“面具再次掉下去了,”大使写道。“北京是时候践行它反复宣称却屡屡背弃的‘友好邻邦’承诺了。”
驻大阪的中国外交官删除了薛剑的帖子。
作为日本首位女首相的高市一直毫不掩饰捍卫台湾的立场。她在韩国举行的地区峰会上会见了一名台湾代表,招致中国官员的批评。

Hisako Ueno自东京对本文有报道贡献。

Andrew Higgins是《纽约时报》东欧和中欧分社社长,常驻华沙。他近期在上海进行报道。

赫海威(Javier C. Hernández)是《纽约时报》东京分社社长,领导时报对日本及周边地区的报道。在过去十年的大部分时间里,他一直在亚洲进行报道,此前曾任驻华记者。

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腾讯第三季度营收超出预期 谨慎推进AI策略获验证

14 November 2025 at 09:49
中国科技巨头腾讯控股第三季度营收增长15%,增速超出预估,延续稳步增长势头。 (路透社档案照)

中国科技巨头腾讯控股第三季度营收增长15%,增速超出预估,延续稳步增长势头,并在未大举投资人工智能(AI)基础设施的情况下持续吸引投资者。

据彭博社报道,腾讯控股星期四(11月13日)发布最新业绩,截至9月底的三个月营收达到1929亿元人民币(353亿新元),其中国际市场游戏收入增长43%并高于预估。第三季度净利润增长约19%。

最新业绩表明,与许多行业激进竞争对手相比,腾讯可以采取更为审慎的AI开发策略。阿里巴巴和字节跳动已投入大量资金用于AI基础设施和产品发布,但腾讯控股更侧重于将AI技术整合到核心盈利服务中,包括融入到社交平台微信和游戏发行当中。腾讯在公告中重申了这些理念。

腾讯的这种策略也不同于Meta和微软等美国硅谷巨头,其高利润率的在线内容提供了有力支撑。腾讯旗下开发团队去年凭借射击游戏《三角洲行动》大获成功,该游戏拥有3000万日活跃用户,成为全球扩张的支点。

多年来腾讯对西方大型工作室的投资也开始发力,今年夏天推出的丧尸题材动作游戏《消逝的光芒:困兽》大受欢迎。

腾讯在财报中表示:“我们持续升级混元基础模型的团队及技术架构,混元的图像和3D生成模型已处于行业领先水准。随着混元能力的不断提升,我们对推动元宝应用普及的投入,以及在微信中发展AI智能体能力所作的努力,将带来更积极的进展。”

50年来首次访华 泰王抵京王毅接机

14 November 2025 at 09:17
泰国国王哇集拉隆功(右二)和王后素提达(右一)星期四(11月13日)抵达北京,开始对中国进行五天国事访问,中国外长王毅(右三)前往机场迎接。 (香港无线新闻视频截图)

泰国国王哇集拉隆功和王后素提达星期四(11月13日)抵达北京,开始对中国进行五天国事访问,首相阿努廷也随行。这是中泰建交50年以来泰王首次访华,也是哇集拉隆功首次对外国进行正式访问,中国外长王毅前往机场迎接。

泰国《民意报》(Matichon)引述首相阿努廷表示,此次泰王访华必将载入史册,因为这是中泰建交50年来泰国国王首次访华,值得铭记。他指出,今年恰逢泰中建交50周年,两国虽为外交关系,但交往实已延续数百年。阿努廷与外长西哈萨此次都以荣誉部长身份随行,行程中不会与北京进行任何随行外的会谈。

泰国实行君主立宪制,王室访问是其重要外交政策工具,此次访问正值哇集拉隆功登基第九年。中国驻泰国大使张建卫星期二(11月11日)在泰国主流媒体发表署名文章,表示此访不仅是一场外交盛事,更是中泰关系发展史上又一座重要里程碑。北京期待通过此访,推动中泰命运共同体建设取得更多丰硕成果,为赓续两国友好再谱历史新篇,推动两国关系迈向更加辉煌的下一个50年。

据报道,哇集拉隆功和王后素提达此行将与中国领导人会面,并还将在北京参观灵光寺、人形机器人创新中心、教育部教育技术与资源发展中心、中国空间技术研究院等;此外,还将前往故宫博物院参观一场庆祝泰中建交50周年的特别展览。

分析认为,双方极有可能讨论贸易、旅游、高铁等议题。路透社称,中国是泰国最大的进口市场,泰国去年从中国进口了价值超过800亿美元(1041亿新元)的商品;同时,中国也是泰国旅游业的重要客源地,还是其汽车等行业的主要投资者。

泰国官方数据显示,今年前9个月,赴泰国旅游的国际游客数量为2345万人次,与去年同期相比下降7.44%。中国旅行团和自由行人数出现了缩减的情况。泰媒称,泰铢升值、安全问题以及来自越南的竞争加剧,导致赴泰游客流失。

除了旅游方面的期待,今年以来,中泰之间的铁路合作也受到关注。泰国今年2月已在例行内阁会议上批准了中泰铁路合作项目二期工程,即呵叻至廊开段铁路。

北京外国语大学亚洲学院教授宋清润在《环球时报》撰文指出,泰王访华让“中泰一家亲”亲上加亲,两国将从传统的经贸互联互通,迈向共同探索未来科技前沿、培育发展新动能的新阶段。这也凸显北京“周边外交”理念的吸引力。

英军情六处前处长:英国应找到办法批准中国在伦敦建新使馆

14 November 2025 at 09:15

英国军情六处(MI6)前处长摩尔说,英国政府应该能够找到办法,批准中国在伦敦兴建新使馆的申请。

据彭博社报道,摩尔(Richard Moore)在《Mishal Husain Show》播客节目星期五(11月14日)播出的采访中说:“我相信一定能找到一条可行的路径,让他们得到一座合适的使馆,同时我们也能保留并继续发展自己在北京的那座优秀的大使馆。”

他认为:“我们在北京需要一座使馆,这一点非常重要。因此,中国获得他们的使馆是顺理成章、理所当然的。”

摩尔还说:“至于是这个地点还是别的地点,那就不是我能评判的了。”

中国方面申请在伦敦塔附近的原皇家铸币厂旧址上建设一座有望成为欧洲最大外交机构的新使馆,但计划近年来陷入争议与延宕。自当地规划机构在2022年否决申请后,英国政府接手了最终裁决权。

不过,随着英国检方9月撤销一起中国间谍案,导致中英关系再度紧张,英国政府将使馆申请的最终裁决推迟至12月。

报道称,摩尔上述表态具有重要意义,因为这可能意味着,如果英国政府支持中国建馆,立场不会与英国情报界发生冲突。

反对中国建馆计划的人士则提出多项国安顾虑,包括中国可能在英从事敌对行动、监控流亡异议人士,以及拟建地点临近伦敦金融城和敏感地下通信电缆等问题。

上月,中国外交部曾警告英国,如果不批准建馆,将面临未具体说明的后果,并暗示英国在北京建设新使馆的进度,与伦敦建馆申请的裁决存在关联。对此,斯塔默回应说,英国不会向北京施压屈服。

恐袭十周年:马克龙承诺采取一切措施防恐袭

14 November 2025 at 10:45
14/11/2025 - 03:29

在法国遭受系列恐怖袭击十周年之际,马克龙承诺,国家“保证将采取一切措施防止任何进一步的袭击”。

法国总统马克龙周四晚间在法国遭受系列恐怖袭击十周年之际重申,法国“保证”将“竭尽全力防止任何新的袭击”。十年前法国遭受的系列恐怖袭击是法国历史上最致命的恐怖袭击,共造成132人死亡。

周四傍晚,在巴黎市中心新落成的“2015年11月13日纪念花园”举行的庄严仪式上,马克龙总统表示,对于2015年发动袭击的“恐怖分子”所展现的“圣战主义”,“我们已竭尽全力给予遏制”。

在首都巴黎和巴黎近郊圣丹尼十年前所有的受到袭击的地点,周四,都举行了悼念和纪念活动。在这一系列悼念活动结束后,马克龙总统发出警告说,“但“恐怖分子”所展现的“圣战主义”以另一种形式重生了,这种形式潜藏于内部,更加隐蔽,更加难以察觉,也更加难以预测,”

总统强调说,“不幸的是,没有人能够保证袭击会彻底停止,但我们可以保证,对于那些拿起武器对抗法国的人,我们将毫不妥协地予以回击。”

总统在讲话中还详尽地谈到了遇难者家属所遭受的“不公且难以承受”的痛苦。他说,“这种痛苦根深蒂固、令人揪心,每当又一次袭击降临我们的土地,这种痛苦就会再次涌上心头,从尼斯到斯特拉斯堡,儿童、成人、执法人员、教师,一次又一次地成为恐怖主义的受害者。今晚,我们心中充满悲痛。”

马克龙还说,(法兰西)“共和国顶住了”。马克龙还列举了过去十年采取的反恐措施说,“在过去的十年里,国家变得更加坚固了。”

專訪香港導演周冠威:抗爭很痛苦 服從也很痛苦

14 November 2025 at 10:47
潘柏林
2025-11-14T02:34:18.528Z

(德國之聲中文網)「我電影的路是窄門。」46歲香港電影導演周冠威平靜地說。10年前他有份執導政治寓言電影《十年》,描繪2025年香港政治全面收緊,中國官媒批評該電影是「思想病毒」,周冠威亦付出代價——近4年時間沒有人敢與他合作。

2019年他創作的愛情電影《幻愛》大獲好評,事業出現轉機,同年香港爆發反修例運動,周冠威開始拍攝社運紀錄片《時代革命》。消息曝光後,投資者、演員退避三舍,連借場地拍攝新片也處處碰壁。最新電影作品《自殺通告》被迫改在台灣拍攝,香港當局至今仍未批出上映許可。

周冠威說,外界看他是一位很抗爭的導演,但實際他與很多香港人一樣也要服從。

周冠威《十年:自焚者》電影劇照。

自焚與新生

周冠威的「窄門」路,從10年前的電影《十年》開始。該片邀請5位新晉導演各自創作一條短片,想像10年後的香港社會變化。

周冠威負責執導〈自焚者〉,短片以偽紀錄片方式製作,假設2025年的香港,有社運領袖因違反涉及國家安全的《基本法》23條,在獄中絕食死亡,激發支持者在英國駐港總領事館前自焚。他說,劇本想拷問一點:香港人願意為自由、民主、公義價值犧牲到什麼程度?

「當時我很憤慨,因為政府或者中國共產黨都有一些說話,令我覺得2012雙普選會再次幻滅。 我覺得整個社會、整個香港,都活在一個這樣的謊言底下,那種委屈求全的謊言的感覺令我很痛苦。我從來沒有寫過政治的題材,我又不遊行,我亦都不是社運人士,但是我怎樣作為一個導演,或者作為一個公民的責任——電影應該都有社會責任——我就寫了一個這樣的短片。」

《十年》2015年上映時引起香港社會熱議,獲香港電影金像獎「最佳電影」,但中國官媒《環球時報》發表社評,批評電影是「思想病毒」,又指電影所描繪的場景,10年後不可能在香港出現。

周冠威說,〈自焚者〉劇本創作歷時漫長,期間香港經歷雨傘運動,基調也有所修改。圖為2014年,香港雨傘運動資料照片。

周冠威自嘲,〈自焚者〉猶如他電影事業的「自焚行為」,後來有電影公司原本答應投資新電影,要求找知名度高的演員。他找了8個月,接觸10多名演員都失敗,有著名香港女演員看了劇本後感動落淚,一度表示願意出演,後來透過經理人改口辭演,「都是接受不了,這個都是冒險。」

最終投資者撤回投資計劃,周冠威經歷多年「空窗期」,直到2017年中,他創作的愛情電影劇本《幻愛》成功申請香港電影發展局的「電影製作資助計劃」,獲批120萬港元的資助。

周冠威說,雖然資助額不多,但有了「官方機構」的認證,總算遊說到其他投資者。最終電影名利雙收,成為該年香港最高票房的十大電影之一,亦在香港電影金像獎獲6項提名,在台灣金馬獎獲最佳改編劇本獎。

他慨嘆:「命運就是這樣,你關了一個門,另一個門會開。」

《幻愛》的成功,沒有讓周冠威從此避開政治題材。2019年香港爆發反修例運動,逾百萬港人上街示威,周冠威為此拍攝紀錄片《時代革命》。

《時代革命》紀錄香港反修例運動,但卻無法在香港上映。

他說,拍攝《時代革命》時的掙扎不多,因為拍攝〈自焚者〉時,已經直面最敏感題材,「自焚者是一個尺度的極限,一方面好像是(電影事業)自焚,另一方面我生出很多自由的心靈空間,可以容讓更多的冒險、更多的禁忌,我可以去思考、去拍攝、去表達。」

「我最記得有一個2019年我拍攝《時代革命》的時候,有個手足和我說:你知道我的政治覺醒是什麼嗎?是你的電影《十年:自焚者》。這些就是力量,這些就是會喚起公民意識,喚起我們對自由、對公義、對誠實的執著。」

周冠威形容,有死就有生,所有的付出也生長出另一些種子。

抗爭與服從

2021年《時代革命》在坎城首映,同年獲得金馬獎最佳紀錄片。當時香港已經實施《國安法》超過一年,周冠威是該套紀錄片唯一具名的製作人員。他坦言是有風險,「我拍《十年》會影響我事業,我拍《時代革命》會影響我會否坐牢。」

後來開拍喜劇電影《一人婚禮》時,周冠威甚至找了一位後備導演以防不測。被捕的風險讓他痛苦,「其實我有時候也會發惡夢,會不會有警察過來,在(拍攝)現場捉走我?」

後來他思考,為了未到的苦難提早恐懼不值得,做了最壞打算要坐牢,豁出去反而換來心安。「我身邊的人會替我很恐懼,但我會說不要啦。你們不要怕,要來的才怕,要來的才承受。」 

周冠威說,外界一般認為他是一個很敢「抗爭」的人,其實自己亦有服從的時候,「我怎會不服從呢?我現在仍然在香港生活,你一定要面對這個制度。我做的事不是畫一幅畫,我做的是電影,我需要和很多人合作,而很多人不是和你一樣抗爭的。」

他找合作伙伴時要小心翼翼,對方婉拒後就不再遊說,怕會連累他人,就算接受訪問也不太願意提起合作過的演員。周冠威說,這也是一種服從,「我永遠不會單單是一個抗爭者,我同樣也是服從者,我服從得仍然很痛苦。」

2020年5月,香港旺角街頭示威,抗議《國安法》。

這種服從如影隨形。訪問在台北一間書店進行,周冠威隨手拿起作家香港陳慧的小說《弟弟》,說很喜歡陳慧和韓麗珠的作品,轉念又想,這樣做會不會影響到作者?「你說多慘,我拿著她的書,我怕影響了她。」

周冠威說,服從恐懼氣氛,人的心靈就不自由。試過有香港的朋友表示,不敢在社交媒體分享他電影作品的帖文,那位朋友移民後,仍然不敢分享,「移民原來同樣恐懼,解決不到這種恐懼,你說那種恐懼多麼討人厭、多麼需要痛恨,為何會鉗制我們心靈到這個地步?」

今年10月,他來台出席《十年》10週年重映的映後座談會,慨嘆現時《十年》短片《冬蟬》最觸動自己。該片講述一對情侶把舊日的物品、甚至把自己做成標本保存的故事。

周冠威語帶哽咽說,就像2025年的香港,很多東西已經不能講,很多關係都要封存起來,「這些人性、這些演員,不再能夠跟我合作......即使他們支持我、但都不能跟我合作,所有事已經不同了。」

走窄門的人

今年11月周冠威最新作品《自殺通告》在台灣上映,這部作品「香港」成份大減。全劇的香港演員只有黃秋生一位,劇組在香港找不到一間學校願意借出場地拍攝,唯有移師台灣拍攝。周冠威笑言,自己一直習慣用廣東話執導,現時要改用國語溝通很難,「其實我用國語的時候,我自己都不知道自己說什麼。」

電影今年8月4日送交香港電影報刊辦進行電影檢查,至今仍然沒有回音,暫時在香港上映無期。

「現在好悲哀。香港電影以前不會有政治審查的,《國安法》之後(國家安全)入了電檢這個條例,我的新電影就是被政府壓著了。」周冠威說,電影探討學童自殺問題,無關政治題材,亦是架空世界的故事,若香港無法上映就很難回本,對他會是很大打擊,日後要遊說投資者開拍新電影更困難。

11月5日,周冠威在台北為新片《自殺通告》宣傳。黃秋生是該片唯一的香港演員。

根據香港電影金像獎的規定,電影必須要在香港首輪公開售票放映,方可報名。一旦《自殺通告》不能在香港上映,意味日後無緣競逐獎項。

這方面周冠威看得開,他明白很多人想保存和爭取香港價值,但他認為探究是否仍在拍「香港電影」,本身是很悲哀的事。「你恐懼沒有了這個身份,你恐懼不知道怎樣去定義(香港電影)。你的身份不夠肯定,你的心不夠踏實——因為你受了傷。」

他說,香港社會今日太少眼淚能夠宣洩,但電影能夠明白政治傷痕、甚至療癒。「被政局、被恐懼牽制的時候,你找些方法。每個人有不同的方法,我是電影。我拍《十年》我哭,我拍《時代革命》我哭,我拍我的新片《自殺通告》我都在哭。」

本身是基督徒的周冠威用窄門比喻自己電影的路:「我的信仰就是走窄門,我電影的路是窄門的,那就窄吧。其實不要緊要的,它仍然是一個門,仍然是我可以進入。」

儘管被貼上「禁片」導演的標籤,但他笑言凡事不要看得太窄:「我10年裡面有5套電影,比很多香港電影的導演其實都很幸福,非常幸福,我怎會很悲情呢?」他說,未來的電影作品不會局限在特定地方拍攝,香港、海外都有機會。

被問10年後的香港又是怎樣?周冠威說理性上要悲觀,但他選擇樂觀,「如果不是,我怎樣積極去面對我的人生?」他想像,2035年那是一個自由的香港,戲院可以重映《十年》、《時代革命》。

「我希望我的下一代,可以在香港的戲院自由地去觀看,或者讓他感受到,我們香港歷史這麼多的血與淚,所有的意義是什麼。」

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Peers suggest over 900 changes to assisted dying bill

14 November 2025 at 03:05
PA Media Campaigners supporting and opposing the assisted dying Bill demonstrate at Parliament Square in Westminster, ahead of a debate on the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill in the House of Commons.PA Media

Members of the House of Lords have put forward more than 900 proposed changes to the law to deliver assisted dying, ahead of a debate on Friday.

Experts believe the number of amendments, which is understood to be 942, is unprecedented, but opponents say significant alterations are needed to ensure any scheme can operate safely.

The volume of amendments has sparked a letter from 65 supportive peers to their colleagues in the Lords, raising concern about possible delaying tactics.

Those opposing the bill have been urged not to "frustrate" the passage of the legislation, which has already gained the approval of MPs.

The House of Commons passed the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill in June, and it passed its first stage in the Lords in September.

The required line-by-line examination of the bill that follows was delayed, following an amendment by Labour's Baroness Berger to allow a committee of peers to scrutinise the legislation further.

Parliament heard officials worked into the early hours of Thursday morning to compile the suggested changes to the bill that flooded in ahead of the next scrutiny stage, known as committee stage, which begins on Friday.

There appear to be seven opponents to the bill who have submitted 579 amendments between them.

According to the parliamentary authorities, while some bills have had more amendments tabled in total at committee stage, it sets a possible record for the number submitted in the first full list of suggested changes.

They say it is almost certainly unprecedented for the committee stage of this type of bill, known as a private member's bill, which has been put forward by backbench Labour MP Kim Leadbeater rather than the government.

Experts including Matthew England, a researcher at the Hansard Society, said the number of amendments "does appear to be a record, at least in the recent past".

Others drew comparisons to the bill to take the UK out of the European Union, which had 820 amendments in total.

'Genuine improvements'

A peer in favour of the legislation told the BBC that the number of amendments "looks like a delaying tactic to me... It's obviously not a coincidence."

Defending the volume of amendments, Baroness Luciana Berger, who opposes assisted dying, told the BBC that evidence to the select committee "strongly refuted any suggestion this bill is either safe or workable".

"This bill is full of holes which vulnerable people will fall through and be harmed if peers don't act to change and amend it," she added.

However, signatories to the letter highlighted how the bill had "already undergone unprecedented scrutiny" and "offers dying people the choice of a safe, dignified end while strengthening protections for the vulnerable".

Former Royal College of Nursing president Baroness Rafferty was among the 65 peers to have signed, and she was joined by scientist and broadcaster Lord Winston, former Labour leader Lord Kinnock and former Whitehall chief Lord O'Donnell.

They urged opponents to focus on refining the bill to find where "genuine improvements can be made, while respecting both the will of the Commons and the overwhelming support of the public".

In response to the letter, a source close to peers who are concerned about the bill said: "This letter is making claims directly contradicted by the evidence provided in the last few weeks at the Lords select committee by the royal colleges, professionals and independent statutory bodies.

"Evidence and facts are vital when crafting good legislation."

The bill is being treated by parties as a matter of conscience, meaning they will not instruct their MPs or peers how to vote.

The bill will become law in England and Wales only if both the House of Commons and House of Lords agree on the final drafting of the legislation - with approval needed before spring next year, when the current session of Parliament ends.

If it does pass into law, the government has four years in which to get an assisted dying service into place, meaning it could be 2029/30 before the first assisted death happens.

The legislation proposes allowing terminally ill adults with fewer than six months to live to apply for an assisted death.

This would be subject to approval by two doctors and a panel featuring a social worker, a senior legal figure and a psychiatrist.

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Met investigating 'tens of grooming gang cases' in London

14 November 2025 at 05:51
London Assembly Sir Mark Rowley is seen sitting at a table speaking into a microphone, with a London Assembly backdrop behind him.London Assembly
Sir Mark told the assembly said recorded abuse falls into various categories beyond just "grooming gangs"

The Metropolitan Police is investigating "tens" of group-based child sexual abuse cases involving what could be described as grooming gangs, the force's commissioner has said.

An initial data search identified around 9,000 historic cases that might fall under the broad national criteria, but after reviewing 2,200 of them only about 1,200 remained in scope, Sir Mark Rowley told the London Assembly.

The commissioner warned against using "grooming gangs" as a catch-all term because offending includes abuse within families, in institutions, between peers and online.

He said the ethnicities of suspects varied and are "reflective of the diversity we see in the city".

During Thursday's meeting, the police commissioner set out details of a national review of child exploitation cases, which has prompted recent political debate.

Sir Mark said a data search had initially identified about 9,000 historic cases in London that might fall under a national definition of group-based sexual offending, which includes any case with two or more suspects and at least one victim.

He also said that figure had been widely misinterpreted as 9,000 grooming gang cases and had led to "unbalanced reporting".

He said the definition used by the national audit was far broader than the public understanding of grooming gangs and covered intra-familial offending, institutional abuse, peer-on-peer cases and online exploitation.

'Simplistic analysis'

He told the assembly that after reviewing 2,200 of the 9,000 cases, around 1,200 remained in scope and that the number would continue to fall as the work progressed.

The commissioner said that once the initial assessment was complete, the Met expected "maybe 2,000 or 3,000 cases" to be considered for possible reinvestigation, but stressed this would still cover a wide mix of offending types, not solely grooming gangs.

"We do not see the typology reported elsewhere where there have been cases of offending committed by groups of Pakistani men on white British children being the sole or majority case," added Sir Mark.

He also said the Met recorded around 2,000 sexual offences a month, about half of which involved child sexual abuse, and warned that managing current cases alongside historic ones would require extra funding and specialist officers.

"It is important for us to use precise language and consider its impact on victims and public understanding. There is too much ready reach to simplistic analysis which risks misleading communities," he said.

Getty Images A close up of the Sir Sadiq Khan in the foreground, with Susan Hall out of focus behind him.Getty Images
Sir Sadiq Khan defended his record on supporting victims and survivors of abuse

Sir Mark's comments came during a meeting in which London Mayor Sir Sadiq Khan was accused of "taking the mickey" out of victims after previously saying there was "no indication of grooming gangs" operating in the capital.

Susan Hall, Conservative group leader, said: "In January, I asked if we had grooming gangs in London. You dismissed my question by pretending you didn't know what I meant."

London Assembly Susan Hall is seen sitting at a desk speaking into a microphone, wearing glasses and a purple jacket.London Assembly
Susan Hall accused the mayor of previously dismissing victims of grooming gangs

Sir Sadiq responded by clarifying "what is meant by grooming gangs", according to the national inquiry announced by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in June, and outlined the support provided to victims.

The mayor told the assembly that London had "issues in relation to child sexual exploitation" and "child sexual abuse", but that these cases were different to those seen elsewhere in England.

"I've led efforts to strengthen the protection of children and those exploited by abuse and exploitation," he said.

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The TikTok mum helping others from her son's hospital bedside

14 November 2025 at 06:43
Chris Watt Photography Kirsty is holing her son, Kobi, in her arms. She hass long brown hair. Daniel is standing beside them and smiling. He has a shaved head and stubble on his chin. He is wearing a grey top.Chris Watt Photography
Kirsty Grandison and Daniel Crolla make sure one of them is always in hospital with their son Kobi

Kobi Crolla is not yet 18 months old but he has spent almost all his life in hospital as medics treat him for severe brain damage.

In that time he has suffered countless seizures and endured 17 operations, while his parents have had to give up their jobs to care for him full-time.

Now his mother Kirsty Grandison, 35, is charting their experience on TikTok in a bid to help other parents of sick children in hospital.

"We used to feel like we were the only parent's going through this," she said

"There was no-one online making videos where we could go for advice, so I started making videos to show life in hospital in a bid to help other people."

Her TikTok page has 34,000 followers and receives up to 40 private messages a day.

Chris Watt Photography Kobi has a bandage wrapped around his head. He is lying on his tummy and is holding his head up. He is wearing a green and white t-shit. He has blue expressive eyes. there is a feeding tube in his nose.Chris Watt Photography
Kobi has had 17 operations and has spent most of his life in hospital

Kobi was born 10 weeks prematurely at the Royal Hospital for Children and Young People in Edinburgh on 17 July 2024.

Despite weighing just 3lb 3oz, his parents initially thought he was doing well.

However, that night doctors "came pouring" into his hospital room in Edinburgh as his tiny lung had collapsed and he had stopped breathing.

Then Kirsty, 35, and her partner Daniel Crolla, 38, received the news "that changed everything" - Kobi had had a grade four brain bleed, the most severe kind.

They were told he would not have any quality of life and they should prepare for the worst and call their family to say their goodbyes.

Against all odds, Kobi pulled through and eight "agonising" days later, they finally got their first cuddle with their son, which felt like a "miracle".

But his parents said his "battles kept coming" with Kobi developing meningitis and each day bringing a new fear with blood transfusions, lumbar punctures and scans.

Chris Watt Photography Kobi is lying on his tummy. He has short blond hair and has a feeding tube in his nose. He is looking at fairy lights which are all over his bed.Chris Watt Photography
Kobi has been diagnosed with hydrocephalus that causes a dangerous build-up of fluid on the brain

"He was having up to 10 seizures a day. We were always panicked, always so scared for him. We still are," said Kirsty.

Kobi was diagnosed with hydrocephalus that causes a dangerous build-up of fluid on the brain.

The only option was brain surgery, to install a shunt to allow fluid to be drained from the brain - since then, Kobi has endured 16 surgeries.

"That's 16 times we've handed him over, not knowing if he'd come back," Kirsty said.

Both Daniel, a bus driver, and Kirsty, a carer, have given up their jobs to care full-time for their son.

And Kirsty is using her TikTok page - Kobi The Brave - to give followers a glimpse into the reality of life in a sick kids' unit.

She shows where she buys specially-adapted vests to fit around his feeding tube, how to clean his feeding peg, showing them medicines and setting up Kobi's feeding pump and changing his bed.

"I get messages from other parents in neonatal saying my videos are getting them through and how it's making them not give up hope because they have seen how far Kobi has come from my videos and how well he does despite what he's been through," Kirsty said.

"I want to take all these followers on this journey as I know how many it can help."

Chris Watt Photography Kobi in an incubator when he was younger. He is wearing a nappy and a white hat. He has tubes all around him including one taped to his mouth.Chris Watt Photography
Kobi was born on 17 July 2024 - 10 weeks before his due date of 28 September

Kirsty said caring for Kobi was the "greatest privilege in the world" but it was exhausting, relentless and a lonely journey.

She plans to continue documenting Kobi's story in a bid to help other parents know there are other people going through a similar experience.

"We don't remember the last time we felt at ease, content," Kirsty said.

"We used to have little bits of ourselves outside all this - football, the gym. Now, we go days without having a shower. Sometimes, you wish someone would ask, 'But how are you?'"

Kirsty and her two children from a previous relationship live in Prestonpans, East Lothian, with Daniel, who has three children.

They take it in turns to stay in the hospital with Kobi day and night.

"We've grieved the life we thought we'd have with Kobi," Kirsty said.

"It's hard not to feel jealous sometimes. You see people worrying about hand prints on the walls or toys all over the floor. We'd give anything for that kind of normal."

'Flight or fight mode'

Now the family are hoping they can have their "cheeky and determined" Kobi at home with them for Christmas, away from the beeping machines and clinical smells of hospital.

"We will be on edge worrying and thinking what might go wrong," said Daniel

"His head can double in size instantaneously and we have to rush him back to hospital, you see all the veins in his head and it's like a balloon.

"It's very traumatic and we are constantly in a fight or flight mode.

"But when the fear feels overwhelming, his smile pulls us back.

"As a family, we can count on one hand the number of days we've had out together.

"That's all we want - more time, more chances to make memories."

The family are being helped with the hidden costs of hospital life by the Edinburgh Children's Hospital Charity.

Chris Watt Photography Kobi is lying on a pillow in a green blanket. He has a feeding tube in his nose. His sister is wearing a blue hooded top. She is smiling at the camera and has her face near her baby brother. She has long brown hair.Chris Watt Photography
Hope, Kobi's big sister, is hoping he can be at home with them for Christmas

Pippa Johnston, deputy chief executive officer at Edinburgh Children's Hospital Charity, said Daniel and Kirsty had shown "so much courage and resilience in the face of such unimaginable hardship and uncertainty".

"While many people will be heading home to be with their loved ones, the sad reality is that many children like Kobi, and their families, will spend the festive season in hospital," she said.

"No-one should feel like they're facing hospital alone, especially at Christmas.

"Alongside our friends in the NHS, we'll be there to bring reassurance, comfort and unexpected moments of joy when they're need most."

Weekly quiz: Who did Alan Carr give his Celebrity Traitors prize to?

14 November 2025 at 02:30

Will AI mean better adverts or 'creepy slop'?

14 November 2025 at 08:07
Getty Images A young woman in an orange top looks at her laptop while chewing her fingerGetty Images
Advertisers are using AI to personalise online advertising

Imagine one night, you're scrolling through social media on your phone, and the ads start to look remarkably familiar. They're decked out in your favourite colours, are featuring your favourite music and the wording sounds like phrases you regularly use.

Welcome to the future of advertising, which is already here thanks to AI.

Advertising company Cheil UK, for example, has been working with startup Spotlight on using large language AI models to understand people's online activity, and adapt that content based on what the AI interprets an individual's personality to be.

The technology can then mirror how someone talks in terms of tone, phrase and pace to change the text of an ad accordingly, and insert music and colours to match, say, whether the AI deems someone to be introverted or extroverted, or have specific preferences for loud or calm music, or light or dark colours.

The aim is to show countless different ads to millions of people, all unique to them.

Brands in retail, consumer electronics, packaged goods, automotive, insurance and banking are already using the technology to create AI-enhanced, personality-driven ads to target online shoppers.

The AI is able to read what people post on public platforms - Facebook, Instagram, Reddit and other public forums - as well as someone's search history, and, most importantly, what people enter into ChatGPT.

Then, with what it deduces about an individual's personality, the AI overlays that on top of what advertisers already know about people. For example, what part of the country you live in, what age bracket you're in, whether you have children or not, what your hobbies might be, where you go on holiday and what clothes you like to wear - information brands can already see through platforms like Facebook or Google.

That's why the jeans you've been searching online for magically appear in your inbox as a sponsored ad, or the holiday you've been searching for seems to follow you around the internet.

Cheil Chris Camacho in a black, long-sleeved, collarless shirt, stands with his arm folded in front of an old brick wall. Cheil
AI ads will attempt to discover and use your emotional state says Chris Camacho

The difference is now AI can change the content of those ads, based on what it thinks your personality is, thanks to what it's been reading about you. It targets individual people, rather than the demographic segments or personas advertisers would traditionally use.

"The shift is that we are moving away from what was collected data based on gender and age, and readily available information, to now, going more into a deeper emotional, psychological level," says Cheil UK CEO Chris Camacho.

"You've now got AI systems that can go in and explore your entire digital footprint - your entire online persona, from your social media interests to what you've been engaging in.

"That level is far deeper than it was previously, and that's when you start to build a picture understanding that individual, so whether they're happy, whether they're sad, or what personal situation they're going through."

An added bonus for advertisers is that they might not even need a bespoke AI system to personalise their output.

Researchers in the US studied the reactions of consumers who were advertised an iPhone, with tailored text written by ChatGPT based on how high that person scored on a list of four different personality attributes.

The study found the personalised text was more persuasive than ads without personalised text - and people didn't mind that it had been written by AI.

"Right now, AI is really excelling on that targeting piece. Where it's still in nascent stages, is on that personalisation piece, where a brand is actually creating creative copy that matches some element of your psychological profile," explains Jacob Teeny, an assistant professor of marketing at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, who led the AI research.

"It still has some development to go, but all roads point to the fact that this will become the way [digital advertising is done]," he adds.

Personalised AI ads could also provide a solution to the problem of digital advertising 'wastage' - the fact that 15% of what brands spend on digital advertising goes unseen or unnoticed, so it generates no value to their business.

Alex Calder Bearded Alex Calder looks into the camera wearing a navy v-neck jumper.Alex Calder
Alex Calder warns that adverts could turn into "creepy slop"

Not everyone is convinced that personalisation is the right way to go.

"Congratulations - your AI just spent a fortune creating an ad only one person will ever see, and they've already forgotten it," says Brighton-based Alex Calder, chief consultant at AI innovation consultancy Jagged Edge, which is part of digital marketing company Anything is Possible.

"The real opportunity lies in using AI to deepen the relevance of powerful, mass-reach ideas, rather than fragmenting into one-to-one micro-ads that no one remembers. Creepy slop that brags about knowing your intimate details is still slop."

Ivan Mato at brand consultancy Elmwood agrees. He is also questioning whether people will accept it, whether regulators will allow it, and whether brands should even want to operate this way.

"There's also the surveillance question. All of it depends on a data economy that many consumers are increasingly uncomfortable with," says London-based Mr Mato.

"AI opens new creative possibilities, but the real strategic question isn't whether brands can personalise everything - it's whether they should, and what they risk losing if they do."

Elmwood Ivan Mato wearing a tie and button-down collar looks into the camera.Elmwood
"Should brands personalise everything?" asks Ivan Mato

AI-personalised ads could also take a dark turn, Mr Camacho at Cheil UK acknowledges.

"There's going to be the camp that uses AI well and in an ethical manner, and then there's going to be those that use it to persuade, influence, and guide people down paths," he says.

"And that's the bit that I personally find quite scary. When you think about elections and political canvassing, and how the use of AI can influence voting decisions and who is going to be elected next.

But Mr Camacho is committed to staying on the right side of ethics.

"We don't have to use AI to make ads creepy or to influence individuals to do things that are unethical. We're trying to stay on the nicer side of it. We're trying to enhance the connection between brands and individuals, and that's all we've ever tried to do."

Why are resident doctors striking and how much are they paid?

13 November 2025 at 21:58
Getty Images Resident doctors, previously known as junior doctors, hold placards in support of fair pay during a demonstration in Whitehall outside Downing Street as they begin a strike over pay, July 2025. Getty Images

Resident doctors in England are going on strike between 14 and 19 November, in their 13th walkout since March 2023.

The doctors' union, the British Medical Association, is in a long-running dispute with the government over pay for the medics, who were formerly known as junior doctors.

The government says resident doctors have received pay rises totaling nearly 30% in the past three years, but the union says the increases don't go far enough.

Who are resident doctors?

Resident doctors make up around half of all doctors in England. As a patient you could come into contact with a resident doctor in any NHS department, including at A&E and in your GP surgery.

Resident doctors are qualified doctors who have completed a medical degree.

Many then enter speciality training in a particular area of medicine and surgery, or train to become a GP.

They used to be known as junior doctors, but in September 2024 the government agreed to change the name of their role to better reflect their expertise.

Full training can take a long time, so although some resident doctors may have only recently finished medical school, others could have more than a decade of practical experience and be responsible for most aspects of care.

How much do resident doctors earn?

During their first foundation year after finishing their medical degree, resident doctors in England earn a basic salary of £38,831. In their second year, this rises to £44,439.

Medics are often expected to work night shifts, weekends and longer hours, for which they receive extra payments.

After eight years or more as a resident doctor, salaries can progress to around £73,000.

During 2023-24, they received a 22% pay increase over two years. From August 2025, they have been given an additional 5.4%.

A chart showing how much basic pay resident doctors receive at each stage during their eight-year training period.

What are the resident doctors' pay demands?

The BMA has called a series of strikes in England over pay and working conditions since 2023.

It argues that resident doctors' pay is 20% lower in real terms than it was in 2008, even after the August 2025 increase.

The government uses the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) measure of inflation to calculate public sector pay increases.

However, the BMA says many resident doctors have large student loans and that interest on these is calculated using a different inflation measure called RPI, which is higher.

Using the CPI measure, the government says resident doctors' current pay is fair.

But analysis from the Nuffield Trust think tank suggests pay has fallen 5% since 2008 if CPI is used, compared with nearly 20% with RPI.

What have the government and the BMA said about the dispute?

Health Secretary Wes Streeting says resident doctors have received the largest pay rises of any public sector employees over the last three years, and insists the government won't offer any further increases.

In October the union rejected a fresh offer to cover mandatory exam fees and increase the number of specialist training posts by an extra 2,000 places.

These are roles which many doctors apply for two years after qualification.

In 2025, there were more than 30,000 applicants for 10,000 jobs, although some were foreign doctors.

The BMA argues that said that even after the expansion of places, many resident doctors would be left without a job at a crucial point of their training, and said the pay issue still needed to be addressed.

The union said it had told the government there would be no strikes for the foreseeable future if doctors were offered a multi-year deal "that restores pay over time", and expressed disappointment at the lack of progress.

What happens if I'm ill over the strike?

The strike in England will last from 0700 on Friday 14 July to 0700 on Wednesday 19 July.

The NHS has urged patients to "come forward for care as usual" during the period.

Anyone with a life-threatening emergency should call 999 and attend the emergency department if needed.

For urgent, non life-threatening issues the advice is to use the NHS 111 website or to call the helpline. GP surgeries will be open as normal.

Most planned hospital appointments and procedures should go ahead as scheduled. The NHS says anyone whose appointment is postponed will be contacted in advance.

As happened during previous industrial action, hospitals have been told they should only cancel routine appointments in exceptional circumstances.

The target set this time is for a minimum of 95% of "planned activity" to take place on strike days.

But NHS chiefs accept that the ongoing industrial action has disrupted the care for thousands of patients.

Government analysis shows that 507,000 appointments and operations were cancelled or rescheduled during the previous wave of strikes between July 2023 and February 2024 - which involved some consultants.

The latest strike action takes place as the NHS starts to face additional winter pressures, such as a rising number of flu cases.

Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are not affected by the latest walk-out.

What pay rises have other public sector staff had?

In May 2025, the government announced pay rises for a number of public sector workers, including:

  • 4.5% for members of the UK armed forces, with 3.75% for senior military staff
  • 4% for other doctors, dentists, and teachers in England, as well as prison officers in England and Wales
  • 3.6% for some NHS staff in England, including nurses and midwives
  • 3.25% for civil servants

However, because a medical degree can take five or six years to complete - longer than most other degree courses - the BMA argues resident doctors' pay should reflect the fact that they may have more student debt than other graduates.

Resident doctors also have little control on where and when they are asked to work, and that the need to do placements in different parts of the country can be expensive.

中美俄元首齐缺席 习近平将不出席G20南非峰会

14 November 2025 at 08:36

中国国家主席习近平将不出席本月晚些时候举行的二十国集团(G20)峰会,为面临美国总统特朗普抵制的东道国南非带来了又一则坏消息。

中国外交部星期四(11月13日)宣布,中国国务院总理李强将代表中国出席11月22日在约翰内斯堡开幕的领导人峰会。外交部声明并未解释去年出席G20的习近平为何今年缺席。

G20的创立旨在应对全球经济问题,通常由国家元首出席。彭博社指出,上述决定意味着中美这两个全球最大经济体,以及俄罗斯的最高领导人都将缺席本届G20。

特朗普早前指责南非虐待阿非利卡裔白人(南非和纳米比亚的白人移民后裔),称美国官员将集体缺席。俄罗斯总统普京则因国际刑事法院的逮捕令出席仍受限制。

自冠病疫情以来,习近平大幅减少了国际出访,仅出席在会议间隙举行密集边会的重大峰会,例如上月在亚太经合组织峰会前于韩国与特朗普的会晤。

与此同时,习近平转而推行“主场外交”,今年早些时候接待了普京、印度总理莫迪和朝鲜领导人金正恩,在中美竞争加剧之际寻求与地区国家加强联系。习近平2023年曾赴南非出席金砖国家峰会,去年也在北京接待了非洲国家领导人。

美国国际战略研究中心高级顾问甘思德(Scott Kennedy)指出,习近平缺席G20峰会并不意味着该会议在北京眼中的重要性有所下降,“这些全球治理机构仍是中国传达自身理念的重要场合。”

中国外交部发言人林剑周四在例行记者会上表示,G20领导人峰会首次在非洲大陆举办,具有重要历史意义,表示北京支持南非主席国工作。

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