Trump and Mamdani Strike Optimistic Tone, Sidestepping Past Critiques

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

© Eric Lee for The New York Times
中美海军在海上军事安全磋商机制工作小组会议和年度会晤中,探讨了两军海空相遇典型案例,讨论改进海上军事安全问题措施。
据“人民海军”微信公众号消息,中美两军星期二至四(11月18日至20日)在美国夏威夷举行2025年度中美海上军事安全磋商机制第二次工作小组会议和年度会晤。
“人民海军”微信公众号也说,双方以两国元首重要共识为引领,在平等和尊重的基础上,进行了坦诚、建设性交流,主要就当前中美海空安全形势交换了意见,探讨了两军海空相遇典型案例,评估了《中美海空相遇安全行为准则》年度执行情况,讨论了改进中美海上军事安全问题的措施,并就2026年工作小组会议议题交换了意见。
双方认为,中美海上军事安全磋商机制会议有助于中美两军海空一线部队更专业、安全地开展互动,有利于双方避免误解误判、管控风险危机。
与此同时,中国坚决反对任何以航行和飞越自由为名危害中国主权和安全的行为,坚决反对任何针对中方的侵权挑衅和抵近侦察滋扰,将继续依法依规坚定捍卫国家领土主权和海洋权益,维护地区和平稳定与繁荣。
时隔三年,中美去年恢复海上军事安全磋商。中美军方于4月3日至4日,在美国夏威夷举行年度中美海上军事安全磋商机制工作小组会议。上一次会议是在2021年12月通过线上方式举行。
2022年8月起,中国一度因美国时任众议院议长佩洛西访台而冻结与美国的高级别军事接触。美国总统拜登和中国国家主席习近平2023年11月在旧金山会晤中同意重启两国高层军事沟通。
中美国防官员去年1月重启在五角大楼的面对面会谈,同年4月的海上军事安全磋商机制工作小组会议,标志着双方进一步恢复原有的军事高层会谈机制。
中国央企中国旅游集团牵头组建另一家央企邮轮运营平台公司。
据中国央视新闻报道,国务院国资委星期五(11月21日)组织召开中央企业专业化整合推进会并举行重点项目签约仪式,八组项目集中签约,共同推动专业化整合。
项目包括央企、民企、地方政府在内的17家单位,涵盖新材料、人工智能、邮轮产业、检验检测等多个重点领域。
签约项目中,中国旅游集团牵头组建央企邮轮运营平台公司,此次专业化整合后,船队规模据报位居亚洲第一。
中国旅游集团华夏邮轮公司总经理黎明:“邮轮产业的带动效应极为显著,产业带动比例系数高达1∶10至1∶14。即邮轮产业每产生1元(人民币,下同,0.18新元)收入,就能带动上下游相关产业产生10—14元的经济效益。”
国务院国资委相关负责人说,开展专业化整合必须符合行业和技术未来发展趋势,坚持长期主义、坚决杜绝片面追求短期规模而搞无关多元、无序扩张。整合要锚定“高端”发力,推进同类业务整合是重点任务,消除低水平重复建设,提升整体效率效能。
据中国旅游集团官网的集团简介,中国旅游集团是中央直接管理的国有重要骨干企业,总部在香港。

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

© Koen Van Weel/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

BBCGeorgia congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene has announced she will resign from office in January, an unexpected turn for the high-profile Republican days after a public feud with President Donald Trump.
Greene, who became one of Trump's Maga superstars in US politics, posted a video statement on social media announcing she would leave Congress on 5 January 2026.
"I look forward to a new path ahead," she said in a social media post.
The announcement came just a few days after she and President Donald Trump had vehement disagreements over the release of Justice Department files related to late paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.
In a video statement, Greene ticked off a list of achievements and criticised the president, who threatened to back a Republican candidate to unseat her in next year's election.
"I have too much self respect and dignity, love my family way too much, and do not want my sweet district to have to endure a hurtful and hateful primary against me by the President we all fought for, only to fight and win my election while Republicans will likely lose the midterms."
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.
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US President Donald Trump met New York City's newly elected mayor Zohran Mamdani at the White House in what was billed as the political showdown of the year - but instead became a praise fest.
In his election victory speech, the self-described Democratic socialist mayor called Trump a "despot."
And before Friday's meeting, the president's spokeswoman had billed Mamdani's visit as a "communist coming to the White House".
But standing side-by-side in the Oval Office, the two men struck a surprisingly conciliatory tone.
Over and over, both men emphasised their shared interest in addressing New York City's affordability crisis. They smiled often, and Trump even appeared amused as reporters asked him about the political attacks Mamdani had fired his way.
The tone of the meeting appeared to strike political observers off guard, but offered a signal that both men understand that tackling the affordability crisis is critical to their political success.
Whether the truce will last once Mamdani takes office on 1 January remains to be seen.
Until then, "I'll be cheering for him," Trump said.
The conciliatory tone was evident from the moment they started speaking to the press.
Facing the media after a private meeting, Mamdani stood to Trump's right with his hand clasped, as the president sat behind the Resolute Desk. Their body language was relaxed – particularly Trump.
Not only did Trump refrain from attacking Mamdani, he actually praised him numerous times.
Trump expressed hope that Mamdani would be a "really great mayor".
Later, the president added he was "confident that he can do a very good job".

Getty ImagesMamdani and Trump traded political barbs throughout the mayoral election. A reporter in the room reminded the two men that Trump had called Mamdani a "communist" and Mamdani referred to the president as a "despot".
But today, both deflected multiple questions about their previous statements and pivoted back to praise.
Trump even let Mamdani answer a question about whether the mayor-elect thought the president was a "fascist".
"That's ok, you can just say yes," Trump interjected, giving Mamdani a light tap on the arm and smiling. "It's easier than explaining."
The closest Trump got to criticising Mamdani's politics was telling reporters, "He's got views that are little out there".
Perhaps most strikingly, Trump swatted away an attack that one of his top political allies running for governor of New York had lodged against Mamdani.
"Do you think you're standing next to a 'jihadist' right now in the oval office?" a reporter asked, quoting Republican Congresswoman Elise Stefanik.
"No I don't," Trump quickly said.
"You say things sometimes in a campaign," Trump said of Stefanik. "She's a very capable person."
Mamdani and Trump have something in common: they're both New Yorkers, and both have called the borough of Queens home.
Trump's childhood home is in the neighbourhood of Jamaica Estates, while Mamdani currently resides in Astoria.
The two had a "shared love" of the city, Mamdani said.
Though Trump rarely spends time in his namesake Manhattan skyscraper these days, he spoke fondly of his hometown throughout the news conference.
"This city could be unbelievable, if he could be a spectacular success, I'll be very happy," Trump said.
At one point, Trump even suggested that in a different political lifetime, he would have liked to be mayor of New York himself.
Perhaps part of the reason the two men appeared in lock step on Friday was their shared focus on cost-of-living issues.
Trump won his re-election last year by relentlessly hammering the issue of high inflation that had frustrated voters in 2024. As consumers grow restless about the cost of groceries, housing, and other essentials, Trump has tried to convey a message of economic stability.
But in elections earlier this month, Republicans struggled and Democrats won key races. All eyes are peering forward to the midterm elections next year, where control of the US Congress will be up for grabs.
During his election campaign, Mamdani maintained a laser-focus on the lack of affordable housing and proposed freezing rent increases on certain rent-stabilised apartments, among other housing proposals.
Mamdani said he and the president had discussed how to "deliver affordability to New Yorkers".
Whenever he was asked a question about their differing views, the mayor-elect brought the conversation back to this topic.
Facing one question about their different views on achieving peace in the Middle East, Mamdani responded that Trump voters had expressed to him a wish for "an end to forever wars" and for leaders to address "the cost of living crisis".
There are still major political issues that could quickly put the two men back in opposition.
A reporter asked about the potential for federal immigration enforcement in the city, which has outraged Democrats and some immigrant communities in New York.
Mamdani said he discussed federal immigration enforcement operations in New York, and the concerns from residents about how they are being conducted.
Trump said they discussed crime more than immigration.
"He doesn't want to see crime and I don't want to see crime," the president said. He had "very little doubt" the two would get along on that issue.
Trump even stunningly said he would feel safe living in a Mamdani-led New York.
But as the Trump administration continues to set aggressive deportation goals, it's possible that the two men could wind up in opposition to each other once again.
Also, another potential problem lingers beyond the pair and their specific policies.
Republicans have hinted that they want to use Mamdani as a political foil in the upcoming 2026 midterm elections, where control of the US Congress will be on the ballot.
But in the Oval Office while praising Mamdani, the president said he believed the new mayor would "surprise some conservative people".
This could complicate Trump's own political party's strategy.
美国科技企业英特尔首席执行官陈立武,对有关台积电前副总经理罗唯仁携带2纳米先进制程资料加盟的报道予以驳斥,并称公司尊重其他企业的知识产权。
台媒本周报道,75岁的台积电前技术研发暨企业策略发展资深副总经理罗唯仁,今年7月退休时疑似利用职权携走2纳米等先进制程影印资料,并在10月赴任美国半导体巨头英特尔。台湾高检署智财分署已立案调查,厘清是否涉及国安法或营业秘密法相关违法行为。
陈立武星期四(11月20日)在圣何塞出席美国半导体行业协会颁奖礼,于场边接受彭博社采访时说,“这(罗唯仁携商业机密加盟)完全是传闻、推测。我们尊重知识产权。”
综合台媒报道,曾是台积电董事的龚明鑫星期三(19日)受访时说,对罗唯仁投靠敌营感到意外。
对于罗唯仁疑似窃密一事,龚明鑫说,此事涉及国家安全、个别厂商损失、整体产业利益三个层次。经济部将配合高检署,就核心关键技术管制涉及国安部分作认定,台积电若有诉讼需要也会协助。
罗唯仁今年9月当选台湾工业技术研究院第14届院士,由副总统萧美琴亲自授证,台积电董事长魏哲家亲自出席典礼祝贺。
在立院质询被问及政府将如何处理颁发罗唯仁工研院院士殊荣时,龚明鑫说,现在案件仍处于初步调查阶段,在案件调查结果明朗后,就会跟工研院商讨是否撤销罗唯仁的头衔。

日本首相高市早苗涉台言论使中日关系紧张,中国官媒《人民日报》发文指高市的言行已毒化中日关系,并告诫日本若拒不悔改,中国将不得不采取更加严厉坚决的反制措施。
《人民日报》星期六(11月22日)在署名“钟声”、题目为《一意孤行抑或回归理性,日本再次面临抉择》的文章中称,为了一己政治私欲而置国家前途和世界和平稳定于不顾,“高市早苗的错误言行正将日本引入好战必亡的危险境地”。
文章称,高市早苗“在中国人民抗日战争暨世界反法西斯战争胜利80周年这一重要年份,公然对中国发出武力威胁,这不仅毫无对历史的敬畏,更是对和平的公然挑战”。
文章指高市早苗拿台湾问题做文章,背后有她的政治算计,并说她全面继承甚至激进发挥日本右翼政客的政治遗产,把严肃的国家政策异化为个人政治表演的工具,把事关中日关系根基的台湾问题当作谋求私利的筹码。“这种将本国前途命运捆绑于个人政治野心的做法,只会把日本带入歧途,把自己碰得头破血流。”
《人民日报》续称,高市早苗的顽固立场,暴露了日本右翼势力的持续抬头和军国主义思想的不散阴魂。
文章称,高市早苗的“错误言行已毒化中日关系”,正迫使日本民众为她的政治野心付出代价。中国是日本最大贸易伙伴、第二大出口对象国和最大进口来源国。“如果日方拒不悔改甚至一错再错,中方将不得不采取更加严厉坚决的反制措施。”
中共中央军委机关报《解放军报》也在同日发文强调,台湾光复已经80年了,台湾是否有事,根本不是日本的事,并指日本方面仍有人不思反省、狂言挑衅。文章称:“正告以高市为代表的右翼势力,与其鼓吹‘台湾有事,日本有事’,不如谨记,借台湾生事,就是给日本找事。”
文章称:“高市的涉台谬论,却以日本国家前途和地区和平为筹码,将日本民众绑上分裂中国的战车,传递出重蹈军国主义覆辙的危险信号。”
文章强调,有“搞事”的“勇气”,就要有“了事”的本领,并指高市“妄图借台湾问题生事,就必须承担相应的后果”。中国敦促高市早苗及她的政府深刻反省历史,收回涉台言论。
文章也针对高市提及的“对台立场不变“说法做出回应说,口头上称“立场未变”,行动上却步步越线,中国人民不会答应。
高市星期五(21日)发表讲话时说,她上个月刚于韩国举行的亚太经合组织(APEC)峰会上,与中国国家主席习近平会面,她希望继续努力改善两国关系。
高市周五启程前往南非参加二十国集团(G20)峰会前告诉记者:“习主席和我确认了全面推进中日战略互利关系、构建建设性稳定关系的大方向。这一立场没有任何改变。”
她强调,在台湾问题上,日本的立场没有改变。
韩国媒体报道,中国驻韩国大使戴兵在与韩国最大在野党国民力量党党魁张东赫会面时说,仍有部分人难以接受中国的崛起。这段话未出现在中方新闻稿。
据韩联社报道,韩国最大在野党国民力量党魁张东赫星期五(11月21日)在国会党魁办公室会见中国驻韩国大使戴兵。
张东赫说,若韩国经济发展受阻,将对韩中两国都不利。韩中关系应朝着为两国创造发展机遇的方向发展。双方应相互尊重、携手合作,推动双边关系在互利共赢的道路上行稳致远。
报道引述戴兵说,中国愿携手国民力量党等韩国各界人士,推动中韩合作伙伴关系迈向新台阶。在全球保护主义、单边主义抬头的背景下,中韩两国有着更广泛的共同利益。部分人士仍对中国的崛起不太适应甚至难以接受,中国愿与国民力量党等韩国各界人士一道努力,使两国关系发展成果造福两国人民。
据中国驻韩国大使馆微信公众号消息,戴兵表示,中韩互为重要近邻和合作伙伴,加强友好合作最符合双方根本利益。中国国家主席习近平访韩取得成功,引领中韩关系开辟新局面。
戴兵说,中国愿同包括国民力量党在内的韩国各界一道,落实好中韩元首重要共识,弘扬两国友好正能量,妥善管控双方分歧,推动中韩战略合作伙伴关系健康稳定、积极向上发展,更好造福两国人民。
中方新闻稿引述张东赫说,韩中是密不可分的近邻,两国关系发展对双方都有利。当前韩中两国都面临充满不确定性的国际环境,理应相互尊重、携手合作、互利共赢。国民力量党愿同中国一道,推动韩中关系实现更好发展。
第三十届气候峰会进入最后阶段,周五推出的第二份文本引发强烈反响。以哥伦比亚为首的要求走出化石能源的国家强烈抗议该文本中并未提到走出化石能源路线图的内容,气候受害国对文本中的气候援助资金不够明确以及数额存在不确定性提出质疑,总而言之,会场到处可以听到的是,文本是令人难以接受的。
目前各方正在紧锣密鼓的进行谈判,预计最迟周六下午应该就峰会最终文本进行表决,不过,文本内容将会是什么?目前是一个巨大的未知数。亚洲协会的中国气候政策研究专家李硕认为有两种可能,或者是就现有的版本表决,或者是修改后可能完全不同的版本,不过法国可持续发展与国际关系学院(IDDRI)的负责人特里耶 ( Sébastien Trayer)则认为 峰会最终很可能就现有的版本进行表决。
会场对中国拒绝接受走出化石能源路线图的立场颇为关注,有消息说,中国认为该路线图未被列入议程,并未经过会场正式讨论,因而不符合规则,中方无法就未经讨论的文本投票。
就此,特里耶先生向法广阐述了他的理解,他说:我认为中国完全有权认为,如果某项内容不在议程上,就不能进行表决。巴西的外交技巧多少有些游离于程序之外。所以我们理解,像中国这样的国家可能会在某个时候说:“你们做得太过分了。”但有意思的是,在贸易等诸多问题上,中国却接受了同样的做法。对此,我唯一的解释是,或许中国也有自身不接受逐步淘汰化石燃料文本的理由,因为中国希望能够按照自己的节奏逐步淘汰煤炭,而不是让气候大会(COP)就此做出决定。为什么中国坚持在这个程序性问题上,而不是其他问题上,要采取这种做法呢?中国今年秋季发布的国家自主贡献目标中(NDC,本质上是中国的气候行动计划)几乎没有提及逐步淘汰煤炭,而是主要关注可再生能源的部署。然而,如果中国想要在2060年实现碳中和,那么在未来十年内,煤炭的淘汰速度必须相当快。因此,或许中国不希望国际协议规定其煤炭淘汰计划,因为这或许会对中国的产煤省份产生影响,所以中国希望能够掌控自己的节奏。我们将深密切关注中国的“十五”规划,看看它在多大程度上不仅纳入了可再生能源的部署,而且也纳入了煤炭的淘汰计划。
奥尔登·迈耶(Alden Meyer)是E3G的高级合伙人,主要研究美国和国际气候政策与政治。他同时也是Performance Partners的负责人,该公司为政府、企业和非营利组织客户提供一系列咨询服务。他在接受法广采访时就中国在化石能源路线图问题上的立场评论说:我认为虽然他们已经公开表示需要进行多边合作,但我们正式了解到,中国是强烈反对化石燃料转型路线图的国家之一。尽管两年前在迪拜会议上,他们接受了关于摆脱化石燃料和能源领域需要转型的措辞,所以我们对他们在幕后采取的行动感到困惑。但如果我们明天期待到达终点线的话。中国确实需要挺身而出,与欧盟、巴西等大多数国家以及其他主要参与者一起发挥领导作用。

Getty ImagesDetails of a new UK clinical trial to assess the risks and benefits of puberty-blocking drugs in children and young people questioning their gender have been announced.
It follows the banning of the drugs for gender treatment last year after a major review raised concerns about the lack of clinical evidence over their safety for under-18s.
Researchers from King's College London say the trial will involve around 220 children under the age of 16 who are going through puberty, and will examine the impact of the drugs on their physical, social and emotional wellbeing.
Some clinicians and campaigners question whether the trial is ethical.
Prof Emily Simonoff, study leader and professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at King's College London (KCL), said: "We know there are ongoing societal discussions about gender transition, but this research is focused solely on informing and improving healthcare by better understanding how to support the physical and mental health of young people with gender incongruence."
Puberty blockers, also known as puberty suppressing hormones (PSH), are drugs used to delay or prevent puberty happening.
They were used to treat some young people with gender incongruence - when someone's gender doesn't match the sex they were registered at birth - or with gender dysphoria, when it causes significant distress.
As a result of the uncertainty over the safety of the drugs, highlighted by the Cass review into gender care, led by paediatrician Dr Hilary Cass, doctors can now only offer the treatment to under-18s as part of a research study.
Last year, the government brought in a UK-wide indefinite ban on the drugs being prescribed privately or by the NHS to children and young people questioning their gender identity.
The new clinical trial, called Pathway, will involve children who are currently accessing gender services and have a diagnosis of gender incongruence.
They will all have reached puberty, but will be younger than 16 - and will have to meet strict criteria, undergo intensive medical and psychological screening before they are allowed to start taking puberty blockers.
A team of specialist NHS doctors must have a full picture of the young person's wellbeing before deciding if they think they are suitable for the treatment.
The young person will also have to show they have a good enough understanding of the potential impact of taking puberty blockers to give their consent, and their parent or legal guardian will need to agree. They will be provided with ongoing psychological support.
To explore the impact of the drugs, the researchers plan to start one group on the treatment straight away and another group 12 months later. The children in these groups will be chosen randomly.
The KCL researchers said there would be no minimum age for taking the drugs, but puberty normally starts around the age of 11 for girls and 12 for boys.
The trial will look at issues such as bone density, brain development and mental health and wellbeing over time.
The research team said the trial had been given ethical approval and was expected to start in January, with five to six children recruited every month. The first results should be available in around four years.
Alongside this, a larger observational study involving 3,000 children will research different types of support and how effective they are.
The puberty blockers trial has already proved controversial, with campaigners threatening legal action.
Keira Bell, who took the Tavistock gender clinic to court in 2020 after she was given puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones as a teenager, said the trial should be halted immediately. If it is not, she says she and another campaigner will start judicial review proceedings at the High Court.
She said it was "disgusting" that children were being put on the drugs when they had already been banned because they were "unsafe".
In her case, the High Court ruled that under-16s were "unlikely to be able to give informed consent" to puberty blockers, but this was later overturned by the Court of Appeal which ruled that doctors can judge whether young people can give consent to the treatment.
Some clinicians from the Clinical Advisory Network on Sex and Gender, which campaigns for rigorous science and improved treatment options for gender-questioning people, have also questioned whether the trial can be carried out ethically.
A spokesperson for charity Stonewall, which campaigns for the rights of LGBTQ+ people, said all young people should have access to the very best medical care, guided by evidence.
"We urge the government and policymakers to invest in delivering excellent healthcare for trans young people and to make sure the voices of trans young people and their families are at its core."

BBCGeorgia congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene has announced she will resign from office in January, an unexpected turn for the high-profile Republican days after a public feud with President Donald Trump.
Greene, who became one of Trump's Maga superstars in US politics, posted a video statement on social media announcing she would leave Congress on 5 January 2026.
"I look forward to a new path ahead," she said in a social media post.
The announcement came just a few days after she and President Donald Trump had vehement disagreements over the release of Justice Department files related to late paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.
In a video statement, Greene ticked off a list of achievements and criticised the president, who threatened to back a Republican candidate to unseat her in next year's election.
"I have too much self respect and dignity, love my family way too much, and do not want my sweet district to have to endure a hurtful and hateful primary against me by the President we all fought for, only to fight and win my election while Republicans will likely lose the midterms."
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.
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BBCGeorge Clarke and several of his fellow Strictly Come Dancing stars were scrolling through their social feeds last month when something stopped them in their tracks.
Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman had just announced in an Instagram video that they were stepping down as presenters of the hit BBC One show after 21 and 11 years respectively.
Not that the contestants of the current series knew - this was news to them.
"I think we found out as everybody else did, just on their socials, which I'm constantly refreshing anyway, as I'm a big fan," said Clarke, a YouTuber and podcaster.
"I don't think anybody expected it."
"We'd just finished on Lorraine, and we just looked at our phones and we saw it on social media," added Emmerdale actor Lewis Cope.
"We were so shocked. And then we were told later, it had to be that way, and they couldn't really give anyone a heads up."
"No one saw it coming," drag queen and Strictly star La Voix said.
Daly and Winkleman's revelation sparked a huge reaction online, with the pair saying in a joint statement at the time that they "were always going to leave together and now feels like the right time".
It's the right time for them, but a rocky time for the show - following several controversies in recent years.
And on Thursday night, it emerged that an unnamed Strictly star was arrested last month on suspicion of rape. Hertfordshire Police said the man was released on bail under investigation.
The development is not understood to be related to the current series of Strictly.
Nearly one month on from Daly and Winkleman's announcement, BBC News spoke to the Strictly contestants ahead of the show heading to the Blackpool Tower Ballroom this weekend.
Much attention has turned to who may replace the presenting pair, with Alan Carr and Holly Willoughby among the names being speculated upon.
EastEnders star Balvinder Sopal said "you feel like it's the end of an era, and you don't know what the show is going to look like in the future".
Speaking to the Rest is Entertainment podcast this week, Kate Phillips, the BBC's chief content officer, admitted her inbox had been "inundated" with people expressing interest in the job.
"We have had so many people who are keen to be considered, which is great."

AFP via Getty ImagesFor many celebrities and professionals, it's a major goal to reach the annual episode filmed at Blackpool Tower ballroom, which usually marks the halfway point in the competition and is a change of scenery from the usual location of Elstree Studios.
La Voix won't be joining the stars in the 19th century ballroom after being forced to withdraw because of injury, so will get a pass through to next week under Strictly rules, but the six other remaining couples will compete alongside live performances from Lewis Capaldi and Steps.
Former Strictly finalists Ashley Roberts, Danny Mac, Jay McGuiness and Layton Williams will also return for the special.


For Cope, it feels like an "achievement" to have reached Blackpool week.
"Although you have the themed weeks leading up to it, it feels like the first big milestone," he said. "And the fish and chips are really nice."
Former England footballer Karen Carney feels similar.
"I spoke to my sister this morning, and she was like, they're really proud we've reached this milestone. They didn't think I'd be able to do it," she said.
All the stars have been putting in long hours as they get ready for the experience.
But former Love Island winner Amber Davies is trying to approach Blackpool as she would any other week.
"I don't want to look back with regrets. I'm literally pushing my mind and my body to the furthest it can go," she said.


Amid the glitz of the dancefloor, Strictly, which has been airing since 2004, has faced multiple controversies in recent years relating to the behaviour of some of its professionals and celebrity guests, with some alleging a toxic culture on the show.
We asked the current stars whether they've felt this to be the case.
Doctor Who actress Alex Kingston, for her part, says she "doesn't read stuff like that" in the press.
"The thing that I have found really so extraordinary and unexpected is that everybody is so lovely," she said.
"No one can make Strictly not exhausting and not painful. Your feet kill and your back hurts and you're trying desperately to hold your physical self together week by week, but the emotional support is incredible," La Voix added.
Since we did those interviews, the Sun reported this week that a male Strictly star is alleged to have raped a woman after a BBC event.
According to the paper, the woman was not a contestant or pro on the show.
Another BBC TV behemoth - Traitors - has risen to new heights this year with Celebrity Traitors, with up to 13 million viewers tuning in - more than double the number who watched this year's Strictly launch show.
So, we asked the contestants, has Traitors stolen Strictly's sparkle this year?
Cope, for his part, isn't too worried. "I think it's brilliant, isn't it? Just more great shows on television," he said. "I think it's only a positive."
"There's enough success in the world for everything," Davies agreed.
"And also," she added, "we've got one diamond amongst both of them - Claudia."
Strictly Come Dancing's Blackpool special is on BBC One and BBC iPlayer at 6.35pm on Saturday.

Alex Lake / @twoshortdays"Whenever you're ready," says Thom Yorke, adopting the tone of a schoolteacher waiting for an unruly class to settle down, as Radiohead get ready to play their encore at London's O2 Arena.
It's a rare flash of humour from the frontman, whose onstage utterings are mostly limited to mumbled "thank yous". But it's also an acknowledgment of how long fans have been waiting for this show.
It is now 10 years since Radiohead last released new material, and 99 months since their last UK gig.
Anticipation for their return has been building ever since they announced a limited run of concerts in September. Setlists from early shows in Spain and Italy have generated news stories ("Radiohead play Nice Dream for the first time since 2009"), as fans pore over the song choices.
According to one source, they've rehearsed 65 different numbers.
At the O2, the band sift through their entire discography - from the arena rock anthems of 1994's The Bends to the celestial ballads of A Moon Shaped Pool, via the layered electronics of Kid A, currently celebrating its 25th anniversary.
There are some signs that Radiohead are a bit rusty. A few timing and tuning issues crop up, which could easily be the result of a first night in a new venue, but which feel odd for a band of such technical proficiency.
But when it comes together, it's a rapturous, spell-binding sight.


They begin with the spacey, hypnotic Planet Telex, and follow it up with a crunchy version of 2+2=5, written in 2003 as a reaction to George W Bush's "War on Terror", and taking on new urgency in a world where political norms have seemingly been turned upside down.
By the third song, Sit Down, Stand Up, they're flexing their musical muscles, with an extended outro of percussive lunacy, aided by US session musician Chris Vatalaro.
His addition to the line-up is a giveaway. Radiohead's secret sauce has always been their rhythm section - who manage to locate sinewy, danceable grooves even when presented with their bandmate's most challenging material.
The prowling bassline of National Anthem and the slamming drum loops of Idioteque, in particular, give the audience ample opportunity to jump up and down.
That said, it's amusing to watch bassist Colin Greenwood try (and fail) to get the crowd clapping in time to the glitchy and unconventional rhythms of 15 Step.
Instead, most of them simply bob their heads up and down in unified appreciation of the music. At times, it looks like a convention of nodding dogs.
Cushioned between the more experimental songs, however, were the real crowd-pleasers: An elegiac version of Lucky, a beautifully twisted No Surprises and a genuinely sublime version of Weird Fishes/Arpeggi.
I have a theory, however, that the band's notorious dislike of "the old stuff" is an elaborate ruse. They've never really stopped playing songs from The Bends and OK Computer - but the suggestion they won't makes it all the more exciting when they break into something anthemic like Fake Plastic Trees.
That song opened Friday night's encore, which dwelt largely on their 90s material, including Let Down - a deep cut that's had a new lease of life on TikTok - and the epic Paranoid Android.

Alex Lake / @twoshortdaysIntroducing a muscular version of Just, Yorke explains that it was written "on a freezing cold farm in 1994", in a period where they thought they'd only be remembered for one song: Their 1992 breakout Creep.
We all know the story ended differently, but the reunion does find Radiohead in a strange position.
This tour comes with no new material, and the last seven years have been so fertile with side projects, most notably Thom Yorke and guitarist Jonny Greenwood's three albums as The Smile, that it seemed Radiohead's members might have permanently moved on.
Several factors got in the way - grief, parenthood, mental health and rumours of intra-band tension over Israel.
As recently as August, Yorke said a reunion was "not on the cards from where I'm sitting".
All of which makes the decision to play in the round, packed like sardines in a crushed tin can, all the more significant.
The group are symbolically returning to the rehearsal room, playing off each other as much as they are playing to the audience.
Yorke glides across the stage, doing that dance he does, moving from acoustic guitar to electric piano and back again.
During Idioteque, guitarist Ed O'Brien catches him mid-transit, and they holler the lyrics directly to one another. At the start of Jigsaw Falling Into Place, Yorke and Greenwood face each other and play duelling guitars.
It suggests the tour has been an act of healing, even if the band have been assigned separate dressing rooms for the first time in their career.
Whether that leads to anything more is still up for debate. "We haven't thought past the tour," Yorke recently told the Times. "I'm just stunned we got this far."
The delighted fans who queued for the Tube home singing Karma Police will be hoping everything is in its right place for a fully-fledged comeback.
Planet Telex
2 + 2 = 5
Sit Down, Stand Up
Lucky
Bloom
15 Step
The Gloaming
Kid A
No Surprises
Videotape
Weird Fishes/Arpeggi
Idioteque
Everything in Its Right Place
The National Anthem
Daydreaming
Jigsaw Falling Into Place
Bodysnatchers
There There
Encore:
Fake Plastic Trees
Let Down
Paranoid Android
You and Whose Army?
A Wolf at the Door
Just
Karma Police

US President Donald Trump met New York City's newly elected mayor Zohran Mamdani at the White House in what was billed as the political showdown of the year - but instead became a praise fest.
In his election victory speech, the self-described Democratic socialist mayor called Trump a "despot."
And before Friday's meeting, the president's spokeswoman had billed Mamdani's visit as a "communist coming to the White House".
But standing side-by-side in the Oval Office, the two men struck a surprisingly conciliatory tone.
Over and over, both men emphasised their shared interest in addressing New York City's affordability crisis. They smiled often, and Trump even appeared amused as reporters asked him about the political attacks Mamdani had fired his way.
The tone of the meeting appeared to strike political observers off guard, but offered a signal that both men understand that tackling the affordability crisis is critical to their political success.
Whether the truce will last once Mamdani takes office on 1 January remains to be seen.
Until then, "I'll be cheering for him," Trump said.
The conciliatory tone was evident from the moment they started speaking to the press.
Facing the media after a private meeting, Mamdani stood to Trump's right with his hand clasped, as the president sat behind the Resolute Desk. Their body language was relaxed – particularly Trump.
Not only did Trump refrain from attacking Mamdani, he actually praised him numerous times.
Trump expressed hope that Mamdani would be a "really great mayor".
Later, the president added he was "confident that he can do a very good job".

Getty ImagesMamdani and Trump traded political barbs throughout the mayoral election. A reporter in the room reminded the two men that Trump had called Mamdani a "communist" and Mamdani referred to the president as a "despot".
But today, both deflected multiple questions about their previous statements and pivoted back to praise.
Trump even let Mamdani answer a question about whether the mayor-elect thought the president was a "fascist".
"That's ok, you can just say yes," Trump interjected, giving Mamdani a light tap on the arm and smiling. "It's easier than explaining."
The closest Trump got to criticising Mamdani's politics was telling reporters, "He's got views that are little out there".
Perhaps most strikingly, Trump swatted away an attack that one of his top political allies running for governor of New York had lodged against Mamdani.
"Do you think you're standing next to a 'jihadist' right now in the oval office?" a reporter asked, quoting Republican Congresswoman Elise Stefanik.
"No I don't," Trump quickly said.
"You say things sometimes in a campaign," Trump said of Stefanik. "She's a very capable person."
Mamdani and Trump have something in common: they're both New Yorkers, and both have called the borough of Queens home.
Trump's childhood home is in the neighbourhood of Jamaica Estates, while Mamdani currently resides in Astoria.
The two had a "shared love" of the city, Mamdani said.
Though Trump rarely spends time in his namesake Manhattan skyscraper these days, he spoke fondly of his hometown throughout the news conference.
"This city could be unbelievable, if he could be a spectacular success, I'll be very happy," Trump said.
At one point, Trump even suggested that in a different political lifetime, he would have liked to be mayor of New York himself.
Perhaps part of the reason the two men appeared in lock step on Friday was their shared focus on cost-of-living issues.
Trump won his re-election last year by relentlessly hammering the issue of high inflation that had frustrated voters in 2024. As consumers grow restless about the cost of groceries, housing, and other essentials, Trump has tried to convey a message of economic stability.
But in elections earlier this month, Republicans struggled and Democrats won key races. All eyes are peering forward to the midterm elections next year, where control of the US Congress will be up for grabs.
During his election campaign, Mamdani maintained a laser-focus on the lack of affordable housing and proposed freezing rent increases on certain rent-stabilised apartments, among other housing proposals.
Mamdani said he and the president had discussed how to "deliver affordability to New Yorkers".
Whenever he was asked a question about their differing views, the mayor-elect brought the conversation back to this topic.
Facing one question about their different views on achieving peace in the Middle East, Mamdani responded that Trump voters had expressed to him a wish for "an end to forever wars" and for leaders to address "the cost of living crisis".
There are still major political issues that could quickly put the two men back in opposition.
A reporter asked about the potential for federal immigration enforcement in the city, which has outraged Democrats and some immigrant communities in New York.
Mamdani said he discussed federal immigration enforcement operations in New York, and the concerns from residents about how they are being conducted.
Trump said they discussed crime more than immigration.
"He doesn't want to see crime and I don't want to see crime," the president said. He had "very little doubt" the two would get along on that issue.
Trump even stunningly said he would feel safe living in a Mamdani-led New York.
But as the Trump administration continues to set aggressive deportation goals, it's possible that the two men could wind up in opposition to each other once again.
Also, another potential problem lingers beyond the pair and their specific policies.
Republicans have hinted that they want to use Mamdani as a political foil in the upcoming 2026 midterm elections, where control of the US Congress will be on the ballot.
But in the Oval Office while praising Mamdani, the president said he believed the new mayor would "surprise some conservative people".
This could complicate Trump's own political party's strategy.


BBCIn my many years as a journalist, I never thought I would be asking someone how it feels to have trout sperm injected into their face.
And yet, here I am.
Abby Warnes is lying on a large, black padded chair at a small aesthetics clinic in south Manchester.
She winces as a small cannula is delicately inserted into her cheek.
"Ouch. Ouch," she exclaims.
I should make it clear that 29-year-old Abby is not actually receiving a pure dose of trout sperm.
The lower part of her face is being injected with tiny fragments of DNA, known as polynucleotides, which have been extracted from either trout or salmon sperm.
Why? Well, interestingly, our DNA is pretty similar to that of a fish.
So the hope is Abby's body will not only welcome these tiny strands of fish DNA, her skin cells will be spurred into action, producing more collagen and elastin, two proteins which are vital for maintaining the structural integrity of our skin.
For Abby, the aim is to freshen her skin, keep it healthy, and hopefully, treat the acne she's lived with for many years by reducing scarring and redness.
"I just want to target those problem areas," she explains.


Polynucleotides are being touted as the next big skincare "miracle" and are rapidly gaining popularity after a number of celebrities have spoken candidly about their "salmon sperm facials".
Earlier this year, Charli XCX told her nine million Instagram followers that she felt "fillers are kind of over now", and explained she had moved onto polynucleotides, which are "kinda like deep vitamins".
Kim and Khloe Kardashian are also reportedly avid fans. And when asked about her skincare routine on a recent episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live, Jennifer Aniston responded: "Don't I have beautiful salmon skin?"

EPA-EFE/REX/ShutterstockSo, despite their fishy beginnings, are polynucleotides transforming skincare?
"We are having a Benjamin Button moment," Suzanne Mansfield, who works for aesthetics company Dermafocus, tells me.
That's a reference to the 2008 film The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, where Brad Pitt plays a man who ages backwards. By the time he's in his later years, he has the skin of a baby's bottom.
While such an effect is highly unlikely and would probably be a tad disconcerting, Ms Mansfield says polynucleotides are forging the way when it comes to regenerative skincare.
A small but growing body of research and clinical trials suggest that injecting polynucleotides can rejuvenate skin, not only making it healthier but potentially reducing fine lines, wrinkles and scars.


"All we are doing, by using it in the aesthetics industry," she says, "is enhancing something the body already does. That's why these are so special."
But they also come with a pretty hefty price tag.
A single session of polynucleotide injections can cost anywhere from £200 to £500 - and it's recommended you have three of these over several weeks.
After that clinics tend to advise you need to top up every six to nine months to maintain the look.
Back at the clinic, Abby's treatment is almost finished.
"Just one area left," Helena Dunk, the aesthetic nurse practitioner who owns the clinic, Skin HD, reassures her.
She says polynucleotides have massively increased in popularity over the past 18 months.
"Half my clients really notice a huge difference - their skin feels more hydrated, healthier, younger - while the other half don't see such a big change. But their skin does tend to feel tighter and fresher."
Abby has already had the area under her eyes injected as part of a three-course treatment at the clinic - and she's really pleased with the results.
She received lots of tiny injections of polynucleotides, which was a "pretty painful procedure", but says it's helped reduce the dark circles under her eyes.

Charlotte BickleyWhile a growing number of studies consider it a safe and effective treatment, it is still relatively new and some experts warn the hype may be outpacing the science.
Consultant dermatologist Dr John Pagliaro, based in Brisbane, Australia, says that while we know that nucleotides play an important role in our bodies - they are the building blocks of our DNA for a start - he questions whether "injecting salmon DNA, cut into little pieces" into our faces is going to work as well as our own nucleotides.
"We do not have good, strong data," he says. "As a medical specialist, I would want to see at least a few more years of big, credible studies showing safety and efficacy before I started using them in my practice. We're just not there yet."
Charlotte Bickley describes her foray into the world of polynucleotides as "salmon-gate".
The 31-year-old from New York had the treatment last year as part of her "wedding glow up", shortly before she was due to get married.
But Charlotte ended up with a skin infection, inflammation and darker rings under her eyes than before she had the treatment.
"I got the complete opposite of what I wanted," she says. "I trusted that doctor, but he's left me scarred."
Charlotte believes she was injected too deeply under her eyes, causing a negative reaction. There can be side effects - such as redness, swelling and bruising but these tend to be temporary.
In some cases, people can have an allergic reaction, or, if polynucleotides are not injected properly, there are longer term risks, such as skin pigmentation and infections.
Polynucleotides are widely used across the UK. They are registered as medical devices with the Medicines Health and Regulatory Authority (MHRA) but they are not regulated like medicines.
They have not been approved by the UK’s equivalent in the US, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
"I just keep thinking, 'Why did I go through with it?'" Charlotte says. "When something goes wrong on my face I hyperfixate on it."
She's paid thousands in medical bills to try to rectify the situation, but 10 months on, there's still some scarring below her eyes.
"I would never have salmon DNA injected into my face again," Charlotte says, "ever."
Ashton Collins, director of Save Face, an organisation which campaigns for better regulation of the cosmetic industry and who runs a government-approved register of clinics in the UK, says polynucleotides are generally considered a safe treatment when administered by a medically-trained professional and the brand of polynucleotides used is from a reputable company.
"But, we are now seeing products coming onto the market that haven't been tested properly, that's the worry," she says.
Dr Sophie Shotter, president of the British College of Aesthetic Medicine, agrees.
"Due to the lack of regulation, anyone can use products that have not been robustly tested. It is a real issue."
In her opinion, are polynucleotides effective though?
"I have them on my shelf, in my toolbox. I definitely offer them to clients, who want a natural look and want to potentially invest long-term," Dr Shotter says.
"Polynucleotides as a treatment is not the panacea. There are plenty of other treatments out there that can do similar, and have more data behind them."
There is no one treatment that will work for everyone, she adds.
"We all respond differently to different things, and that is not always predictable."
























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Getty ImagesThere's a new song doing the rounds, and in the immortal words of Kylie Minogue, you just can't get it out of your head.
But what if it was created by a robot, or the artist themself is a product of artificial intelligence (AI)? Do streaming sites have an obligation to label music as AI-generated? And does it even matter, if you like what you hear?
A survey published last week suggested 97% of respondents could not spot an AI-generated song. But there are some telltale signs - if you know where to look.
Here's a quick guide.
AI music became one of last summer's hottest topics after accusations the band The Velvet Sundown was AI-generated sent them viral.
The band, who had no record label and a minimal social media footprint, quickly racked up hundreds of thousands of monthly listeners on Spotify after releasing two albums just weeks apart - and the music world grew suspicious.
The band initially denied the claims, later describing themselves as a synthetic project "guided by human creative direction, and composed, voiced and visualised with the support of artificial intelligence".
They claimed the project was an "artistic provocation", not a trick, but many fans felt betrayed.
Internet sleuths were suspicious of the band's airbrushed photos, which featured non-descript backgrounds and a warm orange filter.
There was also no record of them having performed live – no glowing reviews from fans posted online, nor any concert photos or videos. The band members had not given interviews and did not appear to have individual social media accounts.
Looking into the real-life and social media presence of an artist can be one helpful indicator of whether or not they are real. But experts tell the BBC that fast-developing, sophisticated technology means it is increasingly hard to know when a song has been made using AI.
Still, while it may be tricky, they say there are signs listeners can be alert to.
When LJ Rich started creating AI music around five years ago, she recalls how it could only generate three seconds at a time, taking about 10 hours to create a minute of audio.
Now, an entire song can be summoned rapidly with a single prompt, sparking what industry experts have described as an "explosion" of AI music, sometimes referred to as "slop" - on streaming platforms.
A song with a formulaic feel - sweet but without much substance or emotional weight - can be a sign of AI, says the musician and technology speaker, as well as vocals that feel breathless.
AI songs tend to stick to generic verse-chorus structures, and usually don't have a satisfying ending. AI is also more likely to create lyrics that follow a correct grammatical structure, says Rich, whereas some of the most beautiful or memorable words penned by humans don't always make sense.
Just ask Alicia Keys and her "concrete jungle where dreams are made of", or The Rolling Stones and their flirtation with double negatives in (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction.
"If it doesn't feel emotional, it's a really big part," the former BBC Click presenter continues. "Does it create that tension and resolution that is a fundamental part of the music that we love? Does it have a story inside it?"
Another tell-tale sign is unrealistic levels of productivity. Professor Gina Neff, from the Minderoo Centre for Technology and Democracy at the University of Cambridge, describes how one artist was recently believed to be AI after dropping multiple soundalike albums simultaneously.
Their songs resembled a mashup of 80s rock bands – like "really classic rock hits that had been put in a blender".
"This will be fine for background music for most people," she continues, "but it won't work for creating the superstars of the future who, of course, draw on the past but then make something completely new out of it."
Sometimes, what might stand out is a song that sounds almost too perfect, lacking minor flaws and variances.
This could mean no strain in the vocals, and overly polished production, according to Tony Rigg, music industry advisor and lecturer in music industry management at the University of Lancashire.
He adds that odd phrasing, unnatural emotional delivery, and lyrics that feel generic or repetitive can also be clues.
"AI hasn't felt heartbreak yet... It knows patterns," he explains. "What makes music human is not just sound but the stories behind it."
It's also worth paying close attention to the vocals. AI "singers" often sound a little slurred. Consonants and plosives (hard sounds like "p" and "t") aren't quite right. You might hear "ghost" harmonies, where backing vocals appear and disappear at random.
However, Rigg calls these signs "hints not proof", acknowledging it is not very easy for the casual listener to detect AI-generated songs.

Getty ImagesAs well as being used to generate full songs, AI is also becoming a tool some established artists are using to support their creativity.
There currently isn't any obligation – or consistent way – for artists to let fans know if and how they are using AI.
Some are very open: the Beatles, for example, used machine learning to extract the voice of John Lennon from a 1970s cassette recording to release what they called their "last song", Now and Then, in 2023.
And artists including Imogen Heap and Timbaland have created AI personas and released singles under their names.
Last month, Heap released the song Aftercare with her AI model ai.Mogen, trained on her voice.
She created the voice model as a chatbot - a "desperate attempt" to keep up with a deluge of messages and requests including from fans - but more recently, it has featured on several songs and allowed Heap to take part in more collaborations than she otherwise would have due to time constraints.
While "it does sound different if you really know my voice", she says she has put a lot of work into making the AI version of her voice sound human and doesn't think listeners would be able to tell.
Heap isn't trying to mislead listeners – ai.Mogen is listed as a co-contributor on the track.
But she hopes if people feel a human connection to the song, without already knowing part of the vocals are sung by her AI model, they might reconsider any preconceived negative ideas or fears they have about AI.
"I hope that people listen, don't realise, find peace in that," she tells the BBC.
She says she isn't against using AI to actually create music, but it's just not something she's got around to doing yet.
Heap believes there should be more transparency around what goes into a song, and how AI has been used.
Citing the example of someone reading the label of a microwave ready meal so they know the ingredients, she says: "We need that for music, and we need that for AI."
There is currently no legal obligation for streaming platforms to label AI-generated songs, despite increasing calls for them to signpost such tracks.
In January, the streaming platform Deezer launched an AI detection tool, followed this summer by a system which tags AI-generated music.
Deezer says its detection system can flag tracks made with the most prolific AI music creation tools, and is working on expanding its ability to detect music made by others. It says the risk of false positives - eg incorrectly flagging a track created by a human - is very low.
This week, the company said a third (34%) of content uploaded to its platform was fully AI-generated – about 50,000 tracks a day.
Manuel Moussallam, Deezer's director of research, says his team was so surprised by how many tracks were flagged up by the detector when it first launched they were "pretty convinced we had an issue".
The tool quickly flagged up the music by The Velvet Sundown – the band who went viral over the summer – as being "100% AI-generated".
Other platforms have recently announced steps toward more transparency.
In September, Spotify said it would roll out a new spam filter later this year to identify "bad actors", and prevent "slop" being recommended to listeners. In the past year, it has removed more than 75 million spam tracks.
It is also supporting a way to enable artists to say where and how AI was used in a track, through a system by a consortium of industry members called DDEX. This information will be included in the metadata of a track and displayed on its app.
Spotify says it is about recognising listeners' desire for more information, as well as "strengthening trust".
"It's not about punishing artists who use AI responsibly or down-ranking tracks for disclosing information about how they were made."
If you've fallen hard for a new artist, does it matter if they or their songs are made by AI?
Some believe the presence of AI is irrelevant – engagement is driven by enjoyment, and music people love is already serving its primary purpose.
Others say music fans should be able to make informed choices about what they listen to.
Artists have shared deep concerns around the impact of AI, and hundreds of musicians including Dua Lipa and Sir Elton John have protested about the use of their songs in the training of AI tools.
For LJ Rich, the use of AI in music raises many "weird and beautiful ethical questions" which remain as yet unanswered.
"Like if the music makes the hairs on the back of your neck go up, does it matter if an AI wrote it or not?"

© Timothy Hurst/College Station Eagle, via Associated Press

© Gabriela Bhaskar/The New York Times
日本首相高市早苗“台湾有事”言论,令中日关系紧张。香港教育局证实,以安全为由取消原定下月派青年赴日交流行程。
香港《明报》报道,经香港教育局甄选的师生代表团,原定12月7日至13日赴日参加21世纪东亚青少年大交流计划。
教育局星期五(11月21日)回复查询时,确认香港将退出今年的交流计划,称鉴于中国公民在日本发生遇袭事件趋势渐增,为确保师生安全,经审慎考虑后退出。
据香港教育局官网消息,日本政府2007年1月在第二届东亚首脑会议上,宣布推出上述计划,邀请邻近国家或地区的青少年访日,透过交流建立亚洲团结基础,行程包括在当地家庭住宿、参与学校课堂、实地考察设施等。计划所需费用由日本政府负责,香港从2008年起参加上述交流。
据报道,香港教育局今年9月向全港中学校长发通告,称日本政府邀请香港今年继续参加计划,香港代表团将包括16名学生及两名教师,每所中学可提名一名学生及一名教师参加,局方将安排合适师生面试。获选者原定本月下旬收到通知。
据日本《读卖新闻》报道,日本鸟取县一所高中的10名学生原定于12月17日至21日访港,与香港一所中学的交流行程告吹。上述香港中学星期二(18日)联系日本鸟取县,表示希望取消相关交流活动,但未交代原因。
香港教育局回复港媒am730查询时说,不评论个别个案,并强调学校进行对外交流活动时,可因应不同情况,自行对活动安排作出适当调整。
英国媒体报道,台美关税协议将于近期公布,台湾承诺支持在美国建立科技园区,并承诺对美投资约4000亿美元(5227亿新元)。台湾行政院经贸谈判办公室回应时称,将持续与美国确认协商内容。
英国《金融时报》星期五(11月21日)引述熟悉台美关税谈判的美国官员,报道上述消息。
台湾“护国神山”台积电已承诺在亚利桑那州投资1650亿美元建造晶片制造和加工厂,以及研发中心等设施。这将纳入美国要求台湾在美投资的总金额。
综合ETtoday新闻云和中广新闻网报道,台湾经济部长龚明鑫星期五受询时称,协议目前尚未确定,如果有确定结果,行政院副院长郑丽君与经贸谈判办公室一定会对外说明。至于谈判结果是否最近出炉,龚明鑫仅回应,“我们努力”。
台湾行政院经贸谈判办公室指出,台谈判团队目前持续透过视讯会议、书面文件交换等方式进行协商。
经贸办称,在供应链合作部分,台方提出的“台湾模式”是由企业基于国际布局,自主规划到美国投资,贴近客户并结合市场,延伸产业实力。政府则提供金融的信保支持,也透过台美政府之间的合作形成产业聚落。“台湾模式”与美日、美韩之间的投资模式并不相同,无法直接类比。
经贸办说,台政府向美国争取有利的投资环境和条件,也协助相关产业在美国的布局。由于232条款不只涉及半导体,还有其他项目,台方将持续争取优惠待遇,同时也为赴美企业争取更有利的投资环境与条件。
经贸办强调,台谈判团队将持续以书面文件交换确认协商内容,与美国凝聚共识,盼尽早达成协议,展开台美下一阶段的经贸合作。

随着中日因台湾议题僵持不下,本周约有十几场有日本音乐人参与、在中国主要城市举办的音乐会据报突然取消。
据路透社报道,日本爵士音乐人铃木良雄和他的乐队星期四(11月20日)下午在北京为期待已久的演出进行音响测试时,遇到便衣警察前来演出场地。
在中国生活了13年的德国音乐会承办人和纪录片导演彼得森-克劳森(Christian Petersen-Clausen)说:“不到一分钟后,场地老板就来找我说,警察告诉他有日本人参加的所有音乐会都取消了——而且没有任何商量的余地。”
80岁的铃木良雄和他的五重奏乐队,早前经过长达数月的审核过程,才获得中国演出签证。
彼得森-克劳森说,他们对于能来中国演出感到非常兴奋,但听到演出取消的消息后都感到非常沮丧。
彼得森-克劳森称,中国各地的音乐场所在星期四和五(20日和21日)接到有关部门的通知,2025年剩余日子内所有日本音乐人的演出都可能被取消。
路透社报道,这些场所也被告知,明年不得提交涉及日本表演者的新演出申请,演唱会主办方现在也被禁止向粉丝发送有关即将举行的日本艺人演出的宣传短信。
中国外交部尚未对此置评。
铃木良雄巡演北京站主办方MEMOS TO THE FUTURE星期四在微信公众号宣布,星期六(22日)第二场(晚上9时30分场次)取消。
MEMOS TO THE FUTURE也说,原定于北京、上海的中本麻里中国巡演将延期举行。大隅寿男北京演出场次也将进行缩减调整,第二场(晚上9时30分场次)取消。
路透社也引述在社交媒体流传的歌迷投诉报道,日本歌手KOKIA原定星期三(19日)晚间在北京举行的演唱会,也是突然被取消的演出之一。
日本饶舌歌手KID FRESINO中国巡演主办方博山娱乐星期五(21日)在微博宣布,基于不可抗力,“不得不宣布‘KID FRESINO 2025中国巡演’将延期举办。这一结果非常遗憾,但还望广大乐迷朋友能够予以理解和谅解”。

© Paul Morigi/Getty Images for Haddad Media

Gallo Images via Getty ImagesWhen it assumed the presidency of the G20 last year, South Africa hoped that as the first African country to host the gathering of world leaders, it could champion issues that mattered the most to developing nations.
For instance, it wanted the 20 heads of state from the world's biggest economies to consider arguments that borrowing should be cheaper for developing countries, which pay two to four times more in interest on debts than more advanced economies.
Other themes of this weekend's summit include securing climate change financing, increasing the participation of African countries in multilateral forums and ensuring that they get the best value out of their critical minerals.
But so far, discourse surrounding the meeting has been dominated by Donald Trump's very public decision not to attend.
The US president said he would not go due to the widely discredited claim that South Africa's white minority is the victim of large-scale killings and land grabs.
The relationship between the two countries has become increasingly fraught over the past year - the US expelled the South African ambassador to Washington, cut some of its aid funding and slapped South Africa with tariffs of 30% (the highest rate in sub-Saharan Africa).
And finally, after initially saying he would send Vice-President JD Vance to the G20 summit, Trump abruptly announced two weeks ago that no US representatives would attend.
The government in South Africa's capital, Pretoria, has tried to maintain a defiant but diplomatic tone. It has firmly denied claims of a white genocide and insisted that the summit would proceed with or without the US.
In a sudden about face, and with less than 48 hours to go before the G20 conference, the US announced that it would be sending a small team of its in-country diplomats to the handover ceremony, but that it wouldn't take part in any discussions.
As tension between the two nations shows no sign of letting up, there are concerns that South African diplomats may be frozen out of meetings when the US takes over the G20 presidency next year.
South Africa's Finance Minister, Enoch Godongwana, told reporters earlier this week that there's only one way they would not attend next year's meetings.
"We are members of the G20, we're not an invited country. So we don't need an invitation from anybody," he said.
"If the United States do not want us to participate, the only way they can do it is to decline us visas."

Bloomberg via Getty ImagesSo will South Africa manage to reach its aims without the presence of the world's wealthiest nation? Professor Richard Calland, from the Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership, thinks it can.
"I think that people who are serious-minded in their analysis will not attach much weight to [the US' absence]," he says.
"Ironically, the absence of President Trump may create more space for real consensus, because people won't be constantly looking over their shoulder at him and trying to anticipate or navigate his conduct and his positioning."
Prof Calland adds that the absence of the US may enable middle powers to step up and push for the reforms they want by issuing a joint declaration.
Answering reporters' questions at the summit's venue in Johannesburg on Monday, South African Foreign Minister Ronald Lamola echoed this sentiment.
"[The United States] are absent, so in their absence, the countries that are present must make a decision.
"We are forging ahead to persuade the countries that are present that we must adopt a leaders' declaration because the institution cannot be bogged down by someone who's absent," he said.
The leaders' declaration is a culmination of work done throughout the year to build consensus on issues affecting the global economy, including trade barriers, technological advancements and climate change. It outlines what decisions the members have agreed to act on moving forward.
President Trump isn't the only head of state who will not be attending. China's Xi Jinping is sending his Premier Li Qiang, who has represented the president in a number of meetings this year.
Russian leader Vladimir Putin will also be absent due to the International Criminal Court's warrant against him.
Mexico's Claudia Sheinbaum is another leader who will not be attending.
And Argentinian President and Trump ally, Javier Milei, is skipping the summit in solidarity with Washington.
However, unlike the US, all of these countries are sending senior delegations to represent their countries' interests.
Mr Lamola was keen to downplay the significance of these absences, saying sometimes heads of state are not able to attend major events, and it is "nothing abnormal" for them to send a replacement.
Other global powers have expressed their support of South Africa's presidency of the G20, including France, the UK and the European Union, which signed a deal with South Africa on Thursday agreeing to boost the extraction and, more importantly, the domestic processing, of critical minerals.
African countries have long argued that processing minerals in their countries before exporting them would boost their economies by providing much-needed development, jobs and income.
These are the types of initiatives that Pretoria has spent the year lobbying for across various working groups and ministerial meetings.
South Africa is the last G20 country to take over the presidency in this current cycle. It's also the last country in the global south to host the gathering. Indonesia, India and Brazil have led the summit over the past three years.
As such, the South African government says it wants to use its presidency to bridge the developmental divide between the global north and south. It wants to push for equity, sustainability and shared prosperity.
Although building consensus through multilateral institutions like the G20 is becoming increasingly fraught in a divided world, Prof Calland argues that it is needed more than ever.
"Human life on Earth is facing an existential set of challenges, whether it's climate change, demographic shifts, technological revolution and so on.
"All of these are hugely difficult pressure points for human society. And you can't deal with them unless there is international collaboration and cooperation," he says.
President Trump and his supporters argue that multilateral organisations do little to change real people's lives, preferring instead bilateral deals done directly between two countries.
But South Africa and other developing countries argue that issues like reducing the cost of borrowing for poorer countries require the input of international institutions like the IMF and cannot be done through one-on-one deals.
In many ways, South Africa's presidency of the G20 is part of a wider debate around multilateralism and its effectiveness.
If South Africa is able to convince other G20 members to issue a joint declaration on Sunday, it might have succeeded in proving that consensus can be reached without the participation of the world's most powerful country.

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