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Epstein Files Include 1996 Child Porn Complaint That F.B.I. Ignored

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I've worked just as hard as the other Strictly finalists, says Amber Davies

Wireimage/Getty ImagesAfter weeks of intense competition, the Strictly Come Dancing finalists are primed to take to the dance floor one last time.
Just three couples remain of the 15 at the start of the series, with celebrities Amber Davies, George Clarke and Karen Carney vying to get their hands on the glitterball trophy.
It's also the last time Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman will present a Strictly final. The pair announced they would be stepping down at the end of the current series.
The grand final will be broadcast on Saturday from 19:00 GMT on BBC One and iPlayer.
Amber Davies says she's earned her place in final


One of the main talking points leading into the final has been whether Amber Davies' performing background has given her an unfair advantage.
The Love Island star has faced a backlash online with people pointing out she's had roles in West End musicals Pretty Woman, 9 to 5: The Musical, and The Great Gatsby, as well as competing in the 16th series of Dancing on Ice.
This week, she told BBC News and other reporters at a Strictly press conference that she could "appreciate" where the comments are coming from.
"I have experience compared to these two," she said, gesturing at the other finalists. "I'm not shying away from that. However, I would say that the love actually does outshine the hate."
When asked whether she deserves to win, the actress, who is paired with Nikita Kuzmin, said: "I feel like I have worked just as hard as these guys going into the final, because I had to fight to get into the final."
The backlash is perhaps a symptom of a wider theme on Strictly, where over the years some viewers have appeared to form their own judgements on contestants, regardless of what the judges think or what the overall audience vote says.
Earlier this series Lewis Cope received criticism for having been a child actor in Billy Elliot, for example, and last year JB Gill came under fire for having danced before in the boyband JLS.
'I can't believe a footballer is in the final'


And it seems many viewers value an element of surprise or beating the odds, as with Strictly's first blind contestant Chris McCausland winning last year.
For Karen Carney, becoming the first footballer to reach the Strictly Come Dancing final feels "weird" but she's also "really, really proud".
"I can't believe a footballer is in the final," she said in the press conference.
The former Lioness, who is partnered with Carlos Gu, said she had struggled with her confidence in recent years, but added: "I always knew in my heart Strictly would be the thing that would fix me... It's by far the happiest I've ever been."
Crown for the social stars?


For social media star George Clarke, reaching this point in the contest is "mental".
"It's a completely different world to what I'm used to," he said.
Another online star, AngryGinge, was recently crowned king of the jungle in this year's I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! It opens up the possibility of two social media stars winning two of the biggest shows on television.
"I feel like it's a whole demographic that hasn't really been touched massively in mainstream TV," said Clarke, who is partnered with Alexis Warr.
Who is dancing to what this week?
The finalists will perform three routines: they will revisit a previous routine, perform a show dance and then take to the floor with their favourite dance from the series.
This is what they'll be dancing to:
Amber and Nikita
- Showdance to Rain On Me by Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande
- Judges' Pick - Paso Doble to Dream On by Aerosmith
- Favourite Dance - Jive to Proud Mary
George and Alexis
- Showdance to Human by The Killers
- Judges' Choice - Viennese Waltz to Somebody to Love by Queen
- Favourite Dance - Paso Doble to Game of Survival by Ruelle
Karen and Carlos
- Showdance to Inner Smile by Texas
- Judges' Pick - Argentine Tango to Red Right Hand by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
- Favourite Dance - Jive to One Way Or Another by Blondie
Other highlights from the show will include a group routine from the professional dancers and this year's finalists.
The cast of 2025 will return to the dance floor one last time for a group number, although BBC News understands that Apprentice contestant Thomas Skinner will not join.
What time does the Strictly final start?
Strictly Come Dancing 2025's grand final is at 19:00 GMT this Saturday on BBC One and iPlayer.
It will also be available to watch on the live page on the BBC News website.
The live page will also have plenty of build up ahead of the show - plus extra insight on the dances, the outfits, the judges' comments, and much more.
How can I vote for my favourites?
This year, Strictly has moved to online-only voting.
When the vote is open, shimmy over to this website to make your decision!
As with every final, all of us at home have the full power to decide the winner.
The judges will give their scores, but these will just be for guidance and don't get combined with the viewers' votes.
What happened last weekend?
Warning: The section below includes spoilers from last week's Strictly


Standards were incredibly high last week, as you would expect for a semi-final.
Amber Davies and Nikita Kuzmin kept up with their perfect score for a third consecutive week, while Karen Carney's Waltz had judge Anton Du Beke "a bit emotional" and George Clarke captivated the judges with his hip movement.
In the end, Balvinder Sopal and Caillon left the competition, following a dance off on Sunday night against Davies and Kuzmin.
Tess and Claudia's last Strictly final


In October, we had the shock announcement by Daly and Winkleman that they would be stepping down at the end of this year's series.
The celebrity contestants later told me that the news took them by surprise too. "No one saw it coming," one said.
Daly has presented since the first series 21 years ago. Winkleman joined in 2014, having hosted Strictly's sister show It Takes Two since 2004.
This Saturday will be their last time presenting a Strictly final. Speaking on Strictly's sister show It Takes Two last week, the pair admitted they might feel "emotional" after the show.
Their last ever appearance on the show will be the Christmas special, which airs on 25 December.


There have been plenty of twists and turns in the show's 21st year.
But the show has also been embroiled in controversy.
In November, it emerged that an unnamed star from Strictly has been arrested on suspicion of rape. It comes after another man involved with the hit BBC dance show was also arrested on suspicion of rape in August.
It is understood that neither developments were related to the current series of Strictly.
It came after a difficult few years for the show, with a number of former celebrity contestants speaking up about their negative experiences on Strictly.
Last year, the corporation introduced new duty of care measures, including putting chaperones in rehearsals.
Are these AI prompts damaging your thinking skills?

yacobchuk/GettyWhat was the last thing you asked an AI chatbot to do for you?
Maybe you asked it for an essay structure to help answer a tricky question, provide an insightful analysis of a chunky data set, or to check if your cover letter matches the job description.
Some experts worry that outsourcing these kinds of tasks means your brain is working less - and could even be harming your critical thinking and problem-solving skills.
Earlier this year, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) published a study showing that people who used ChatGPT to write essays showed less activity in brain networks associated with cognitive processing while undertaking the exercise.
These people also couldn't quote from their essays as easily as those in the study who didn't use an AI chatbot.
The researchers said their study demonstrated "the pressing matter of exploring a possible decrease in learning skills".
All 54 participants were recruited from MIT and nearby universities. Their brain activity was recorded using electroencephalography (EEG), which involves electrodes being placed on the scalp.
Some of the prompts used by the participants included asking AI to summarise essay questions, track down sources as well as refine grammar and style.
It was also used to generate and articulate ideas - but some users felt AI wasn't very good at this.
'AI makes it too easy to find answers'
Separately, Carnegie Mellon University and Microsoft, which operates Copilot, found people's problem-solving skills could diminish if they became too reliant on AI.
They surveyed 319 white-collar workers who used AI tools for their jobs at least once per week about how they apply critical thinking when using them.
They looked at 900 examples of tasks given to AI, ranging from analysing data for new insights to checking whether a piece of work satisfies particular rules.
The study found that higher confidence in the tool's ability to perform a task was related to "less critical thinking effort".
"While GenAI can improve worker efficiency, it can inhibit critical engagement with work and can potentially lead to long-term overreliance on the tool and diminished skill for independent problem-solving."
Schoolchildren in the UK were similarly surveyed for a study published in October by Oxford University Press (OUP).
It found six in 10 felt AI had negatively impacted their skills in relation to schoolwork.
So, with the massive explosion of AI use, are our cognitive skills at risk of decline?

Klaus Vedfelt/GettyNot necessarily, says Dr Alexandra Tomescu, a generative AI specialist at OUP who worked on the school survey.
"Our research tells us that nine in 10 students say AI has helped them develop at least one skill related to schoolwork - be it problem-solving, creativity or revision.
"But at the same time, about a quarter state that AI use made it too easy to do work for them… So [it's] quite a nuanced picture."
She adds that many pupils want more guidance on how to use AI.
ChatGPT, which has more than 800 million weekly active users according to boss Sam Altman, has published a set of 100 prompts for students designed to help them get the most out of the technology.
But Prof Wayne Holmes, who researches critical studies of artificial intelligence and education at University College London (UCL), says this isn't enough.
He wants much more academic research to be done about the effects of AI tools on learning before pupils and students are encouraged to use them.
He tells us: "Today there is no independent evidence at scale for the effectiveness of these tools in education, or for their safety, or even for the idea they have a positive impact."
Better results but worse learning?
Prof Holmes points to research about cognitive atrophy, where someone's abilities and skills become worse after using AI.
He says this has been a problem for radiologists who use AI tools to help them interpret X-rays before they diagnose patients.
A study by Harvard Medical School published last year found AI assistance did improve the performance of some clinicians but damaged others for reasons researchers don't fully understand.
The authors called for more work to be done on how humans interact with AI so we can figure out ways of using AI tools that "boost human performance rather than hurt it".
Prof Holmes fears that students, whether in school or university, could become too reliant on AI to do their work for them and not develop the fundamental skills an education provides.
A student's essay might receive better marks thanks to help from AI but the issue is whether they end up understanding less.
As Prof Holmes puts it: "Their outputs are better but actually their learning is worse."
Jayna Devani, who leads international education at OpenAI - the company that owns ChatGPT - and helped secure a deal with the University of Oxford, says the firm are "very aware of this debate right now".


She tells the BBC: "We definitely don't think students should be using ChatGPT to outsource work".
In her view, it's best used as a tutor rather than just a provider of answers.
The example she gives is of a student having a back and forth with ChatGPT using the study mode setting.
You enter the question you're having difficulty answering and the chatbot can break down its components and help you understand it.
The example she gives is of a student doing an assignment late at night about a topic they don't quite understand.
"[If] you have an upcoming presentation to give and… it's midnight, you're not going to email your [university] tutor and ask for help," she says.
"I think the potential is truly there for ChatGPT to accelerate learning when it's used in a targeted way."
But Prof Holmes insists that any student who uses AI tools should be aware of how its reasoning works and how the companies providing them handle data. He stresses that results should always be checked.
"It is not just the latest iteration of the calculator," he says, describing AI's far-reaching capabilities and implications.
"I never say to my students, you shouldn't use AI… But what I do try to say is look, we need to understand all these different things about it so that you can make informed decisions."
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Blank canvas or tone-deaf? Pantone's white Colour of the Year sparks backlash

PantoneFor anyone who has spent years renting, staring at the same landlord-approved magnolia walls and dreaming of one day adding some actual personality to their home, Pantone's 2026 Colour of the Year might feel like a personal attack.
This year, Pantone has chosen white as its colour of the year.
More specifically, Cloud Dancer - a white described as "lofty" and "billowy" which "serves as a symbol of calming influence in a society rediscovering the value of quiet reflection".
It is the first time white has been chosen as the colour of the year, and it has raised more than a few eyebrows.
According to Pantone, Cloud Dancer "is not just a colour, it's a mindset" and reflects a collective desire to slow down, reset and find calm after years of visual overload.

PantoneBut some critics have labelled the decision as "Pantonedeaf", arguing that elevating minimalist and pristine white spaces can feel far removed from the smaller, messier homes most people inhabit.
Others argue that positioning white as aspirational risks racial undertones, landing uncomfortably amid ongoing political and cultural conversations about race and representation.
Clinical or calm?
Designer Chris Beaumont says the backlash goes beyond aesthetics, arguing that white carries cultural undertones and is rarely a neutral choice.
"White is a signal," he says, shaped by a decade of minimalist celebrity interiors – most notably Kim Kardashian's stripped-back home – that came to represent "wealth, order and distance from chaos".
He explains that white is "not about inspiration but being careful not to offend", with Cloud Dancer embodying "austerity, moral minimalism and the idea that neutrality signifies virtue".

Chris BeaumontBeaumont points to the pandemic as a turning point in how people relate to their homes.
"Overnight they became our offices, sanctuaries and emotional anchors," he says, adding that against this backdrop, pushing the Colour of the Year towards "further visual emptiness feels rather tone-deaf".
Rather than offering calm, he believes white now risks amplifying "a sense of bleakness", particularly when paired with cool, clinical lighting.
'Hospital vibes'
Lara Clark, a Surrey based interior designer, agrees and says Cloud Dancer "doesn't really read as a colour" and is "firmly in the bin for me".
While it may suit highly minimal or architectural spaces, she says bright whites rarely create calm in real homes.
"What looks serene in a styled shoot can easily feel clinical at home," she explains.
"White can feel stark and unforgiving and you don't want your home to give hospital vibes."

Lara ClarkShe adds that "homes should spark joy and feel warm and lived-in, and this shade feels quite removed from that."
Beaumont hopes that homeowners will reject the Pantone Colour of the Year in favour of "full-scale dopamine décor", using colour to express personality.
Laurie Pressman, VP of the Pantone Colour Institute, told the BBC that people "bring different feelings" to the meaning of the colour, but it was chosen as it "works seamlessly with everything around it, offering a refined neutrality that feels intentional and adaptable".
Since its launch in 2000, Pantone's Colour of the Year has become a powerful industry signal.
Past choices have included the optimism of Living Coral, the calm confidence of Classic Blue, the vibrancy of Viva Magenta, and most recently softer, emotionally driven tones like Peach Fuzz.
These colours don't just live on trend forecasts - they show up in fashion collections, beauty launches, interiors, packaging and even technology, shaping how products are marketed and how consumers imagine the year ahead.

Carlos Avila Gonzalez/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty ImagesVictoria Robinson, a style and trend expert, says Cloud Dancer is a "beautiful choice" and while it may seem simple, "this particular shade feels soft and elegant rather than stark".
In contrast to those who say the colour is boring, Robinson sees it as "adaptable" and says it's best used in "bedrooms and living areas where you want a serene, restful atmosphere".
"Even if you don't want to repaint, you can introduce the colour into a room with cushions, throws and curtains."

PantoneInterior designer James Mellan-Matulewicz says although he was surprised that Pantone's pick this year was "essentially the absence of colour", it is a bit like vanilla ice cream, in that "everyone likes it but it's nobody's favourite".
He can see its merits, explaining that white can work particularly well as a backdrop for architectural details like panelling and arched doorways which is a "growing trend in modern homes".
In fashion, white has long been a staple rather than a statement and as a Colour of the Year it presents a different challenge to designers more accustomed to bold shades.
Luxury stylist Oriona Robb says elevating white feels "less about novelty and more about intention", reflecting a shift towards refinement after years of trend overloads.

Oriona Robb"White forces designers and wearers alike to focus on form, proportion and quality, there's really nowhere to hide," she explains.
But she adds that it also carries assumptions around body confidence, lifestyle and privilege, saying: "When white is treated as something only a narrow group of people can pull off, it becomes exclusionary."
She says industry is already aware of the uncomfortable undertones tied to celebrating white as an ideal, particularly amid ongoing conversations about representation and accessibility, and the real test will be whether "brands engage with that nuance honestly, or simply aestheticise the colour".
A cultural mood, not a trend
Stylist Katie Malik admits the choice initially surprised her, given Pantone's history of bold colours, but says it reflects a genuine shift and fits within a wider mood of "quiet luxury", burnout and a rejection of excess.
She says feedback from her clients has been largely positive, with many craving calmer, more restorative spaces.
"Many people are actively seeking tranquillity and serenity in their homes and aren't always ready to commit to more daring colours," she explains.
Whether white feels calming or sterile, Malik argues, depends on how it is used and far from being "Pantonedeaf", she sees it as one of Pantone's most usable picks.
Cloud Dancer is described as a blank canvas that allows "all colours to shine", a view Malik shares.
"A blank canvas isn't an empty space, it's a space filled with potential," she says.
Adding that its success "won't be in its universal adoption, but in how it anchors a larger conversation about what we want from our homes".
For those tempted to embrace Cloud Dancer in all its pristine glory, one thing may be essential: a very good stain remover, kept firmly within reach.
巴黎法院驳回政府要求希音暂停在法平台运营
法国巴黎一家法院星期五驳回政府对中国跨境快时尚巨头希音(Shein)提出暂停在法平台运营三个月的诉求。
综合法新社和彭博社报道,法国政府以希音在平台售卖性玩偶和违禁药物等,提出上述诉求,并要求希音制定严格措施确保不会再犯,才能重启平台(marketplace)运营。
巴黎法院星期五(12月19日)作出裁决时确认,相关行为确实“严重危害公共秩序”,但发现被指不得售卖的物品数量“零星”,希音在接获指令后也迅速下架相关物品。对希音实施禁令是“过分”的要求,也是对自由企业的无理侵犯。
法院称,希音不能仅靠简单声明,而是要列明年龄验证措施,才能重新出售性玩偶。
法国政府原本打算通过无需法院批准的行政程序对希音实施禁令,但由于希音下架原本销售的性玩偶和违禁药物等,并同时暂停平台运营,该行政程序未启动。
在法国官员发出警告后,希音11月全面禁止在平台上销售性玩偶,并承诺将“全力配合”法国司法机关的调查。
中国禁平台经营者为独占市场以低于成本价卖商品
中国出台《互联网平台价格行为规则》,规定平台经营者不得以排挤竞争对手或者独占市场为目的,以低于成本的价格销售商品或者提供服务。
《互联网平台价格行为规则》自2026年4月10日起施行,有效期为五年。
根据中国网信网星期六(12月20日)发布的规则内容,平台经营者、平台内经营者不得违反《中华人民共和国价格法》第十四条第二项规定,以排挤竞争对手或者独占市场为目的,以低于成本的价格销售商品或者提供服务,扰乱正常的生产经营秩序,损害国家利益或者其他经营者合法权益。
不过,降价处理鲜活商品、季节性商品、积压商品、临期商品等商品,或者有正当理由降价提供服务的除外。
平台经营者也不得强制或者变相强制平台内经营者按照其定价规则,以低于成本的价格销售商品或者提供服务,扰乱市场竞争秩序。
平台经营者的商业模式系对用户长期免费的,且有利于推动创新进步、有利于提升经营者和消费者长远福利的,可以不认定为违反《中华人民共和国价格法》第十四条第二项规定。
此外,平台经营者也应当公平公正开展补贴促销,不得虚假、夸大宣传补贴金额和力度。平台经营者开展补贴促销,应当在网站或者应用程序(APP)相应活动页面显著位置标示补贴及相关促销活动规则,明确补贴对象、补贴方式、参与条件、起止时间等信息。
Toss a Coin in the Trevi Fountain? That’ll Be 2 Euros, Wish Not Included

© Andrew Medichini/Associated Press
Epstein Victims Upset About Lack of Transparency in Newly Released Files

© Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times
北京同仁堂为磷虾油产品零磷脂事件致歉
中国北京同仁堂一款南极磷虾油产品被发现没有磷脂含量后,集团誓言一查到底,并说责令涉事经销主体下架涉事产品。
上海市消费者权益保护委员会本月11日在微信公众号公布,一款标称“北京同仁堂99%高纯南极磷虾油”的产品,在网页上写着“高含量”、“智利进口原料”、“高度提纯”、“1粒≈100只磷虾”,磷脂标识值为43%,看似是品质出众的优质产品,但检测结果显示该款产品磷脂含量为0。
消保委通报,针对相关企业涉嫌造假行为,为了保护消费者合法权益,上海市消保委“将于近日约谈该产品的生产企业安徽哈博药业有限公司和经销商北京同仁堂(四川)健康药业有限公司,要求其对产品的真实情况做出解释”。
北京同仁堂四天后(12月15日)通过“同仁堂健康会员”微信公众号指这款产品未经授权擅自突出使用“北京同仁堂”字样,涉嫌违法,并已启动司法程序,对涉事企业进行起诉。
澎湃新闻之后报道,被上海市消保委点名的产品具体名称为“南极磷虾油凝胶糖果”,经销商为“北京同仁堂(四川)健康药业有限公司”,生产企业为“安徽哈博药业有限公司”。生产商和经销商12月15日被约谈。
约谈中,生产商安徽哈博药业有限公司陈述,涉事产品由经销商北京同仁堂(四川)健康药业有限公司定制采购,采购价格远低于正常水平,产品包装按照北京同仁堂(四川)健康药业有限公司要求制作,所有涉事产品均供给北京同仁堂(四川)健康药业有限公司,由其对外销售。
安徽哈博药业有限公司承认,在生产过程中未添加其对外宣称的 “南极磷虾油”。澎湃新闻报道,经销商北京同仁堂(四川)健康药业有限公司则在约谈中回避问题,推脱责任,声称对产品的涉嫌造假行为毫不知情,与己无关。
报道称,涉事企业用鱼油提取物冒充南极磷虾油进行生产销售。
北京同仁堂星期六(20日)在“中国北京同仁堂官微”微信公众号发声明称,针对有关南极磷虾油的舆论关注,“北京同仁堂集团高度重视、深感痛心,对因此给消费者造成的权益损害,向广大消费者和社会各界致以最诚恳的歉意”。
集团公布,已派专项工作组到四川,对涉事产品开展全面深入核查,坚决一查到底,并责令并监督涉事经销主体四川健康立即下架涉事产品,严格按照监管部门要求依法依规对消费者进行赔偿。
集团也宣布,依法追究四川健康、哈博药业及相关电商平台的商标侵权等责任;对其违法使用“北京同仁堂”字样,误导消费者判断,损害消费者合法权益的行为追究法律责任;对四川健康及其控股股东健康药业等单位在经营、管理、监督环节存在的问题开展问责,严肃追究相关人员责任。
北京同仁堂也宣布,全面排查品牌使用中的违法违规行为,对集团各级企业的品牌使用情况进行拉网式核查;全面开展品牌清理行动,坚决清理“擦边”使用“同仁堂”字号、商标使用不规范等行为,严格规范品牌管理体系。
南京导航出现异象 官方称卫星信号受干扰
针对南京网民反映称,所使用的导航软件出现异常情况,南京卫星协会回应称,包括北斗和GPS在内的卫星信号受到干扰。
综合每日经济新闻和快科技报道,有南京网民星期三(12月17日)反映,所使用的导航软件系统出现突发异常状况。导航界面持续显示“行驶在无数据道路上”,同时外卖、共享单车等日常服务也受到影响,有外卖骑手反映外卖软件等内置导航出现问题,显示“看不见导航”或导致外卖配送延时。
南京卫星应用行业协会星期五(12月19日)通过“南京卫星协会”微信公众号发布《关于12月17日南京区域导航信号异常情况的技术性探讨分析》指出,这次导航失灵的核心原因是全球导航卫星系统(GNSS)卫星信号(含北斗、GPS)受到临时干扰压制,而非网络信号中断,因此下载离线地图并无实际意义。
协会称, 离线地图的核心功能是存储地理数据,仅解决“地图显示”问题,无法替代定位信号来源;手机导航需依赖GNSS卫星信号(至少四颗卫星)解算位置坐标,再将位置信息匹配至地图,定位信号与地图数据是相互独立的两大系统。
协会说,这次干扰精准针对北斗、GPS民用频段,导致定位信号无法被接收机识别,即便搭载离线地图,也因缺乏位置数据源出现定位漂移、无数据反馈等问题,无法实现有效导航。这次信号异常仅涉及民用GNSS频段,北斗军用频率完全不受干扰。
港官员:政府部门成员欺瞒火灾委员会 将有严肃法律后果
香港特区官员星期五(12月19日)主持会议,讲解政府部门如何配合针对宏福苑火灾而成立的独立委员会调查工作,并强调任何欺骗、隐瞒或误导行为将面临严肃的法律后果。
香港律政司司长林定国在脸书发文写道,他向向十多个政策局及部门首长讲解政府部门应如何配合独立委员会的调查工作,包括准备事项及应遵循的原则。
林定国说,律政司已就此成立专责小组,由他亲自监督领导。小组负责协助政府部门向独立委员会提供证据和资料,并解答相关法律问题。
林定国续称:“我向所有同事强调,政府必须坚守两大原则配合独立委员会的调查工作。一是,主动性。所有政府部门均有责任主动协助调查,向独立委员会提交职权范围相关的材料,而非被动等待查询;二是,全面及坦诚的资料提供(full and frank disclosure)。只要与调查范围相关,即使资料可能对部门或个人构成负面影响,也必须如实提供。任何欺骗、隐瞒或误导行为将面临严肃的法律后果。”
他指出,独立委员会须在九个月内提交报告,并说:“时间上相当紧迫,我们在会上也详细讨论了具体工作方式及时间表,以确保高效运作。”
林定国也说:“我们会立即全面检视现行制度,针对存在的问题进行修正与改革,透过相应改善措施,确保同类不幸事件不会重演。此外,我们更要推动大厦大型维修工程在充分保障业主整体合法权益的前提下,以公平、安全且高效的方式进行。”
这场火灾是香港近80年来最严重火灾,造成160人死亡。特首李家超上星期成立独立委员会,审视大埔宏福苑火灾的事故原因及相关问题,提出建议,防止同类事故再次发生。
河南小学火灾案 三人获刑
中国河南省一所学校发生致命火灾,官方经过两年调查后对25人进行处罚。此案星期五一审宣判,包括创始人在内的三人获判监禁。
综合中国央视新闻和澎湃新闻报道,河南省方城县法院星期五(12月19日)上午9时开庭审理河南方城县独树镇砚山铺村英才学校火灾案,经过10小时的庭审后,与当晚宣判,以犯教育设施重大安全事故罪,对学校创办人、实际控制人李宇、校长徐向阳和学校起火宿舍宿管员贾霞,分别判处七年、六年半和六年有期徒刑。
法院同时禁止李宇、徐向阳、贾霞自刑罚执行完毕之日起,五年内从事与教育教学相关的职业,并驳回附带民事诉讼原告人范永归等人的诉讼请求。
英才学校宿舍去年1月19日深夜发生火灾,造成13名学生遇难、四名学生受伤。
事发后,英才学校与13名死亡小学生的近亲属签订赔偿协议,赔偿每名遇难学生近亲属各项费用130万元人民币(24万新元)。上述赔偿款已于2024年1月支付完毕。
河南省政府事发生后牵头成立事故调查组,对起火原因进行了深入调查,认定事故性质和责任,并在星期三(12月17日)发布调查报告,对包括南阳市副市长在内的25人,因监督管理不到位等原因作出处理处分。
公安机关对英才学校五名相关人员采取刑事强制措施,其中李宇、徐向阳和贾霞等三人被检察机关以犯教育设施重大安全事故罪提起公诉,其他两人因未参与学校实际管理,不构成犯罪,不予追究刑事责任。
法院认为,李宇、徐向阳、贾霞明知学校校舍及教育教学设施有危险,既不采取措施整改,也不及时报告,致使发生重大伤亡事故,其行为均已构成教育设施重大安全事故罪。这次火灾事故后果特别严重,社会影响极其恶劣,对三名被告应依法从严惩处。
法院称,李宇、徐向阳、贾霞违背职业要求,怠于履行学校安全管理职责,在判处刑罚的同时,也禁止其在刑罚执行完毕之日起,五年内从事教育教学相关的职业。附带民事诉讼原告人范永归等人案发后已依法获得赔偿,对其诉讼请求依法不予支持。
Vivek Ramaswamy Challenges Conservatives on Surging Anti-Indian Hate

© Eric Lee/The New York Times
每日一语 2025.12.19
特区其实也意味着对其他地区的不公
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BBC | Top Stories
- Rosenberg: Was Putin's response to my question about war in Europe an olive branch?
Rosenberg: Was Putin's response to my question about war in Europe an olive branch?
Reporters ask world leaders questions all the time.
No big deal. Right?
But what's it like putting a question to Vladimir Putin - the president who ordered the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the leader whose country was accused this week by the head of MI6 of "the export of chaos"?
And imagine asking that question live on TV while millions of Russians are watching.
It's a big responsibility. You don't want to mess up.
"My question is about Russia's future. What kind of future are you planning for your country and your people?" I ask President Putin.
"Will the future be like the present, with any public objection to the official line punishable by law? Will the hunt for enemies at home and abroad be accelerated? Will mobile internet outages become even more common? Will there be new 'special military operations'?"
While I'm speaking, Vladimir Putin is making notes. And then replies.
He defends Russia's repressive foreign agent law. Hundreds of Russians who are critical of the authorities have been designated "foreign agents".
"We didn't invent it," Putin tells me.
"This [foreign agent] law was adopted in a string of Western countries, including in America in the 1930s. And all these laws, including the US one, are much tougher…"
In reality, the Russian law is draconian. It excludes "foreign agents" from many aspects of public life, including teaching, the civil service, elections and public events. It imposes financial and property restrictions. Criminal prosecution can follow a single administrative fine.
However, I'm unable to point this out to President Putin. The microphone was taken away from me after I'd finished my question.
Suddenly the moderator intervenes to change the subject.
"There's another question here: 'What's going to happen to the BBC? It's facing a multi-billion lawsuit from the US president?'," says anchor Pavel Zarubin.
"I think President Trump is right," President Putin confirms.
The Kremlin and the White House seeing eye to eye… on the BBC.
Putin returns to my question.
"Will there be new special military operations? There won't be, if you treat us with respect, and respect our interests, just as we've always tried to do with you. Unless you cheat us, like you did with Nato's eastward expansion."
Visible for all to see is what is driving Vladimir Putin - a deep-seated resentment of the West.
He argues that, for years, Western leaders have disrespected, deceived and lied to Russia - and that they're lying still by claiming that Moscow intends to attack Europe. "What kind of rubbish is that?" declares the Kremlin leader.
But many European leaders simply don't trust Moscow.
In the run-up to the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, Russian officials denied they had plans for a mass attack.
More recently Russia has been accused of violating European air space with fighter jets and drones, as well as of carrying out cyber-attacks and acts of sabotage.
But as he finished answering my question, was this an olive branch to Europe from Russia's president?
"We're ready to cease hostilities immediately provided that Russia's medium- and long-term security is ensured, and we are ready to co-operate with you."
However, if Moscow continues to connect its long-term security to its maximalist demands over Ukraine, European leaders will remain sceptical.
What's really going on with flu this winter?

Getty ImagesFlu should always be taken seriously. It is a virus that kills thousands of people every winter and puts intense strain on hospitals.
However, I can't remember a flu season that has played out quite like this. There have been claims it is both a "superflu" and "unprecedented" across the media and even from NHS England - while experts say this year's flu is not out of the ordinary with accusations of "crying wolf".
So what's really going on and is anything truly different this year?
As I reported in early November, there were concerns the flu season had the potential to be the worst for a decade.
Scientists who track the multitude of flu viruses around the world noticed seven fresh mutations appear in a strain of influenza – a type called H3N2 – in June.
This newly mutated virus rapidly became the dominant form of H3N2 and was named subclade-K.
The flu season took off a month early in the UK hinting the virus may have the potential to spread more widely than normal and it was too late to adjust this year's flu vaccine to match the new mutations.
That was the concern, but the reality has been more in line with a normal flu than a super flu.

Getty ImagesThe K-flu virus has not gained a dramatic ability to rip through the population.
"It was basically spreading at a very similar speed to previous years, it was towards the upper end, but it wasn't an outlier," says Prof Christophe Fraser, who is analysing the spread of the virus at the Pandemic Sciences Institute at the University of Oxford.
His team's latest analyses, still to be published, suggest the mutations did give the virus a slight edge at slipping past our immunity – in the region of 5-10% more than usual. It is not clear if that applies to everyone or is concentrated just in children and young adults who have caught less flu in the past and who have been most affected so far.
H3N2 viruses always tend to be more severe for the elderly and there is no clear evidence the virus is worse than expected this year. A rapid analysis of the seasonal flu vaccine also suggested it was performing in line with previous years despite fears of a mismatch.
Dr Jamie Lopez Bernal, a consultant epidemiologist at the UKHSA, said: "The things that we saw that were unusual this season are the early start to the season, we also saw this change to the virus, with more evolution than we typically see.
"But overall, in terms of the impact on the NHS and the impact on people's health, we're seeing a broadly typical flu season."


There are suggestions that flu may already be peaking, although this comes with significant uncertainty. There are questions about what happens over Christmas when everyone meets up and it's easier for the virus to infect older people who are more at risk. There are also signs a different strain of flu - H1N1 - is picking up in Europe and may lead to an increase in cases here too.
But a "broadly typical flu season" is probably not the sense you'd get from watching or reading the news.
Statistical artistry was used to compare an early flu season to one that started much later allowing claims of flu cases being "an incredible 10 times higher" than in 2023.
It was technically true, but is like saying your train to Glasgow got you there in record time… but the journey time was identical, you just booked an earlier train.
NHS England was not the first organisation to start calling it superflu, but Prof Meghana Pandit, national medical director at NHS England, did label it an "unprecedented wave of super flu".
It has been suggested by the British Medical Association that flu has been used to scaremonger while resident doctors were deciding whether to continue their strike action.
Superflu isn't a scientific description and the BBC Health Team has not found any expert who thinks it is an accurate one.
"I don't think it's a helpful term, there isn't a particularly unusual set of symptoms, there's no indication of it being associated with exceptional severity, exceptionally rapid spread or exceptional health impact," says Prof Fraser.
One of the UK's top flu scientists, Prof Nicola Lewis, the director of the World Influenza Centre at the Francis Crick Institute, said the virus was "not particularly unusual" and that she saw "no evidence" the virus was "particularly different" and superflu "wouldn't be my description".
The former deputy chief medical officer for England through the pandemic, Prof Jonathan Van-Tam, posted: "I'm very unclear what is meant by the rather silly term of 'superflu'."
Crying wolf?
Persuading people to get the flu vaccine saves lives and last winter the jabs were estimated to have kept around 100,000 people out of hospital.
However, experts have started to question whether the escalation in language used since the Covid pandemic could harm trust in official health advice. Previous winters came with warnings of a tripledemic of flu, Covid and RSV; then it was upgraded to a quademic adding in norovirus; this year it's superflu.
Dr Simon Williams, who researches psychology and public health at Swansea University, says there are issues with the "current language around every winter being 'the worst' in some way or another" and risks a "cry wolf" effect that damages trust and means people become "numb" to the advice.
He said there was a danger of "over-using the narrative that viruses will overwhelm the NHS" when "ultimately the NHS hasn't got overwhelmed to the point of not being able to carry out emergency and basic functions".
Instead he argues a "fine balance" is needed between raising awareness and "not falling into the trap of fear-messaging or being overly alarmist, which can backfire".
Prof Jonathan Ball, a virologist at Nottingham University, agrees saying: "I think it is a concern to use words like super flu, when we may one day experience a real super flu.
"We have to be very, very careful about how we communicate these things to the public, because there is a risk that we can cry wolf."
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BBC | Top Stories

- Australia was seen as a world leader in gun control - Bondi has exposed a more complicated reality
Australia was seen as a world leader in gun control - Bondi has exposed a more complicated reality

ReutersIt was a Sunday afternoon in April 1996 when a lone gunman armed with semi-automatic rifles killed 35 people in the Australian tourist town of Port Arthur.
The massacre almost 30 years ago, which ushered in some of the strictest gun laws in the world, feels like a bygone age for many Australians.
But the Bondi Beach attack on Sunday, which left 15 dead, rekindled memories of the Tasmanian tragedy - none more so than for leading gun control advocate Roland Browne.
As the country's deadliest modern-day mass shooting was unfolding an hour's drive away, Mr Browne was meeting fellow gun control advocates at his home, ahead of a government meeting, to lobby for a ban on the exact type of firearm the Port Arthur gunman was using.
Mr Browne, 66, was again at home in Hobart on Sunday when he received news of the shooting at Bondi, targeting a Jewish event celebrating the first night of Hanukkah.
"There's just a lot of similarities," Mr Browne, who spent childhood summers in Bondi and still has family there, told the BBC.
"They're both very public places frequented by tourists from around the nation and around the world."
"It's sickening and I'm bitterly disappointed in our political system whereby the voices for tighter gun laws and public health aren't listened to until there's a major event like this," he added.
For decades, Australia has stood as a beacon on the world stage for its strict gun laws, he says, taking a similar path to the UK which experienced its own mass shooting in Dunblane, just one month before Port Arthur.
Even now, Mr Browne remains friends with relatives of some of the 17 victims - mostly children aged five and six - killed at a primary school in Scotland.
But despite being praised for its stringent gun laws, the reality in Australia is not clear-cut.

Roland BrowneGun ownership at record high
A report by the Australia Institute earlier this year revealed that there are more than four million privately-owned firearms across the country - almost double the amount from about 20 years ago.
That equates to one gun for every seven Australians, the report says.
Queensland has the most registered guns, followed by New South Wales (NSW) and Victoria while Tasmania and the Northern Territory have the most guns per person.
The report also dispels a common view that guns are mainly owned by rural residents.
Guns are widespread in metropolitan and suburban areas, with one in three firearms in NSW located in major cities, the report said.
The total figure has risen at a lower rate than population increases, but there are now more guns in fewer hands, with every licence holder owning an average of more than four firearms.
And that's one of the key issues that Mr Browne wants the government to address.


Currently, only one jurisdiction - Western Australia - has a cap on the number of legal firearms that a licence holder can have. Under new laws introduced in March this year, gun owners can have between five and ten firearms, depending on the type of licence and model of firearm.
Authorities have confirmed that one of the alleged gunmen, Sajid Akram who was killed at the scene of the Bondi attack, owned six registered guns.
Mr Browne wants a cap of one to three guns, depending on the licence category, to be introduced across Australia.
But Tom Kenyon, chief executive of the Sporting Shooters Association of Australia, argues that a cap would be meaningless.
"Limiting the number of guns wouldn't have made a difference on Sunday," he says.
"And it wouldn't have changed the fact that an attack occurred because those two individuals had been radicalised."
Mr Kenyon argues that people intent on harm, without access to guns, will use other weapons, referencing the 2016 Bastille Day massacre in the French city of Nice where 86 people were killed after a man drove a truck into crowds during fireworks celebrations. The attack was claimed by Islamic State (IS).
The other alleged Bondi gunman, 24-year-old Naveed Akram, was previously investigated over links to IS, according to comments made by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.
Mr Kenyon also says that more guns are found in cities because most people in Australia live in metropolitan areas and travel to other areas to hunt.


What are Australia's current gun laws?
Gun control laws in Australia are not uniform across the country, with inconsistent implementation of the rules across states and territories.
But generally, to apply for a gun licence, you must be over 18, a "fit and proper person", pass a training and safety course and give a "genuine reason" for having a firearm.
The eight accepted reasons include recreational hunting or pest control, target or sport shooting, for work (such as security guards and prison officers), for use in farming or animal welfare and firearms collectors.
But there are loopholes.
For example, anyone under 18 was meant to be barred from owning a firearm under the 1996 gun control reforms, but minors in various jurisdictions can have access to a firearm while under supervision, ranging from age 10 in the Northern Territory to 12 in other states.
Another situation is where a particular type of gun is banned in one state but legal elsewhere.
In the days after the Port Arthur massacre, then-Australian prime ministerJohn Howard galvanised every state and territory to overhaul the country's gun laws.
More than 650,000 firearms were voluntarily handed in to authorities and destroyed, as part of a buyback programme. And background checks and a mandatory cooling-off period for gun sales were introduced. Automatic and semi-automatic rifles and shotguns were banned.
Similar gun reforms - a ban on semi-automatic weapons and a buyback scheme - were introduced in New Zealand after a white supremacist killed 51 Muslims at two Christchurch mosques in 2019.
Part of Howard's reforms included scrapping self-defence as a reason for owning a firearm - a contrast to gun laws in the United States where personal protection is often the main reason for citizens to own guns.
Gun ownership in the US is much higher compared to Australia as is gun violence. The country saw 488 mass shootings - defined as where four or more people are killed or injured - last year.
Recent polling by the Australia Institute showed that seven out of ten Australians think gun laws should make it harder to access a gun and 64% agreed that current gun laws need to be strengthened.

Getty ImagesFresh reform for gun laws
In the hours after the Bondi shooting, the NSW Premier Chris Minns was unequivocal about the need to tighten the state's gun laws.
"If you're not a farmer, you're not involved in agriculture, why do you need these massive weapons?" he asked.
And less than 24 hours after the shooting, Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese hosted an emergency meeting where leaders from across the country pledged to tighten gun laws. On Friday he announced a national gun buyback scheme "to help get guns off our streets", the first scheme of its size since 1996.
Other proposals include:
- limiting the number of guns someone can legally own
- limiting "open-ended" licensing
- making Australian citizenship a condition of owning a firearm
- improving intelligence sharing when licence applications are being assessed
Albanese said there should also be regular reviews of licence holders.
"People's circumstances can change," he said. "People can be radicalised over a period of time."

GettyThe swift action prompted Howard – the architect of the 1996 gun laws – to weigh in.
While he supported stricter gun laws, Howard said the move was an "attempted diversion" from the real cause of the tragedy, which he said was a rise in antisemitism in recent years.
Mr Kenyon believes the moves to tighten gun laws are a waste of resources.
"All that time and effort and political capital could be spent combating radicalisation of individuals," he says.
The only thing that might have prevented Sunday's attack was better intelligence-sharing that would have flagged the gunmen's links to extremist ideology to the NSW firearms' registry, he says.
Elsewhere, one of the headline reforms proposed in 1996 - a national firearms register - is yet to be created, with authorities saying the database is "expected to be operational by mid-2028".
Little had been done to implement the measure until the 2022 fatal shooting of two police officers and a civilian in Wieambilla became a catalyst to speed the process up.
The Bondi shooting has now propelled the government to list the creation of the register as a priority.
Recreational hunting under spotlight
Mr Browne believes the application process for a gun licence is too easy and that licences for recreational hunting should be abolished as its definition is ambiguous.
Sajid Akram owned a recreational hunting licence.
But recreational hunting contributes a "valuable social good" to Australia, argues Mr Kenyon, saying that hunters remove millions of feral animals such as rabbits, foxes and cats.
He was just 10 when he picked up his first gun. Now 53, he goes on regular hunting trips - often shooting deer in Victoria's high country - and competes in pistol shooting events six times a year.
Hunting isn't just a pastime for him, it's about family and community connections. He taught his three children - all adults now - how to shoot when they were teens.
"All my life I've had the opportunity to do it and I've enjoyed it," Mr Kenyon, a former Labour politician in South Australia, says, "so I want my kids to have the same opportunity".

SuppliedIn the wake of the Port Arthur massacre, self-loading firearms were banned, resulting in a drop in gun-related deaths, but the risk to public safety has now shifted to high-powered fast-loading rifles with magazines that can shoot up to five rounds, of the kind believed to have been used by the gunmen.
"If you watch the video, you'll see him firing rapidly with his rifle," Mr Browne says, referring to footage of one of the gunmen shooting from a footbridge leading to Bondi Beach.
"If he didn't have a magazine in that rifle, he would have had to manually reload each time," which would dramatically reduce - but not eliminate - the threat of a mass shooting.
Mass shootings remain rare in Australia.
In 2018, a Western Australian grandfather killed his wife, his daughter and four grandchildren before turning the gun on himself in what was, at the time, the worst such incident since Port Arthur.
For Mr Browne, Australia is a safe country but incidents involving firearms are not uncommon, ranging from neighbourhood disputes to gang shootings.
"This is a reflection on guns being in the wrong hands, a legacy of poor storage allowing guns to be stolen and sold - and thus move into black markets."
But the issue of gun control isn't just about the physical firearm.
"It's like a plane crash, it's never just one thing. It's a culmination of a lot of factors," he says. Australia needs better assessment of whether a licence holder is a suitable candidate and more stringent rules on the types of guns that can be legally owned, he says.
Tragedy is a wake-up call
In the aftermath of the Port Arthur massacre, Mr Browne met with many of the survivors and families of the victims including Walter Mikac, whose wife Nanette and two young daughters were among the 35 people killed.
Mr Mikac, who founded the Alannah and Madeline Foundation charity to honour his children, said the Bondi shooting was a "horrific reminder" of ensuring Australia's gun laws protect everyone.
"After Port Arthur, Australia made a collective commitment to put community safety first, and that commitment remains as important today as ever," he said in a statement.
Mr Browne echoed those sentiments.
Gun laws need to be reformed to "keep up-to-date with changing community attitudes, technological advances and to rectify identified deficiencies," Mr Browne says.
"It's sad that it takes such a tragedy to get people to wake up and listen."
From beating the traffic to opening hours: How to navigate the Christmas break

Getty ImagesThere can be a lot to think about at Christmas, from whether public transport is running to when shops and services are open.
With UK bank holidays on Christmas Day, Boxing Day and New Year's Day, and a fourth holiday in Scotland on 2 January, here are some tips to help you win the festive period.
When are roads likely to be busiest?
Motoring organisations the RAC and AA predict that 2025 could see the busiest festive getaway on record.
The RAC expects 37.5 million trips to take place in the week running up to Christmas Day. It thinks roads are likely to be especially busy after lunchtime on Saturday 20 December, and during the afternoon and evening on Christmas Eve.
It suggests the following periods may be quieter:
- Saturday 20 December, before 12:00 GMT
- Sunday 21 December, before 10:00
- Monday 22 December, after 17:00
- Tuesday 23 December, before 11:00
- Wednesday 24 December, before 11:00
You can check for planned roadworks and closures in England on the National Highways website.
For instance, the M27 motorway will be closed in both directions between junctions nine (Whiteley) and 11 (Fareham), from 20:00 on 24 December until 04:00 on Sunday 4 January.
Details of planned roadworks are also available from Traffic Scotland, Traffic Wales and TrafficwatchNI.
You can also check local weather warnings before setting off.
Make sure you have plenty of fuel, that your tyres are properly inflated and your lights are working. Prepare for bad weather by carrying a charged phone, food, drinks and warm clothes. Top up your screen wash and de-icer supplies.
Many BP and Shell petrol stations will be open as usual, but some garages may have shorter hours. All Tesco petrol stations will be closed on Christmas Day. On other days, opening hours could be different to those of the linked store.
Are trains, buses and ferries running?

PA MediaTrains
Some National Rail services will finish early on Christmas Eve, and no trains will run on Christmas Day.
Most train operators won't run any services on Boxing Day either. However, a small number of firms (Chiltern Railways, London Overground, Merseyrail, ScotRail, Southern and Stansted Express) will have a very limited service.
The UK's busiest station, London's Liverpool Street, will be closed for eight days between Christmas Day and New Year's Day, for works on its roof.
No trains will call at London Waterloo on 27 and 28 December, with trains terminating at Clapham Junction and a reduced timetable between 29 December and 4 January.
Improvement works will also affect services into Cardiff Central station between Christmas Eve and New Year's Eve.
You can check for other engineering works and timetable alterations on the National Rail website.
There are no Eurostar services on Christmas Day, but trains are running every other day.
Buses and coaches
Most local bus services will not run on Christmas Day, but check individual websites for detailed schedule information.
National Express is running extra coaches on a number of UK routes between 20 December and 4 January.
On Christmas Day itself, 355 services will operate from 96 locations. This includes routes between Edinburgh, Glasgow and London, as well as some to and from Heathrow, Gatwick and Luton airports.

Getty ImagesTransport for London (Tfl)
Bus, tram, DLR, underground, overground and Elizabeth Line services will finish earlier than usual on Christmas Eve. No services will run on Christmas Day.
There is no Elizabeth line service on Boxing Day, and a number of overground lines are also shut. Some Tube lines have restricted service. No night Tube or night overground services will operate.
Tfl services will run through the night on New Year's Eve.
Some black taxis and private cab firms may operate throughout the period, including Christmas Day. Hire bikes and electric scooters will be available.
The congestion charge will not apply between Christmas Day and New Year's Day. The Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) is suspended on Christmas Day only, but the Low Emission Zone (LEZ) remains active throughout the period.
Blackwall and Silvertown tunnels charges do not apply on Christmas Day.
Ferries
The Port of Dover will close at 15:30 GMT on Christmas Eve and reopen at 07:30 on Boxing Day.
The final departures on 24 December are:
- DFDS (Dunkerque route): 12:00
- DFDS (Calais route): 13:15
- Irish Ferries:14:25
- P&O: 16:05
There are no sailings to or from Holyhead or Portsmouth ports on Christmas Day either, but services will run on Christmas Eve and Boxing Day.
What if I'm flying over Christmas?
Most UK airports are open on Christmas Day, although they may have a reduced schedule. All Heathrow and Gatwick terminals will be open as normal.
The UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) expects Friday 19 December to be the busiest travel day, with around 460,000 passengers. Around 160,000 people are due to fly on Christmas Day itself, a 13% increase on 2024.
Planned strike action at London Luton Airport could cause disruption, between 19 and 29 December. Some easyJet check-in and baggage handling staff employed by DHL Group are set to walk out over pay.
All air passengers are advised to check the status of their flights before setting off. Experts also recommend confirming any return journey.
As usual, passengers should arrive at the airport three hours before long-haul flights and two hours before short-haul flights.
You may need to make alternative travel arrangements to get to the airport if public transport is not running. If you plan to drive, consider booking parking in advance.
The CAA recommends that passengers:
- leave presents in hand luggage unwrapped, to allow security checks
- remember that party poppers are not allowed on UK aircraft
- remember that some airlines do not allow other festive items like crackers
What if I need a doctor or dentist?

Getty ImagesGP surgeries are generally closed on Christmas Day, Boxing Day and New Year's Day.
Some practices offer out-of-hours services which you can access via the NHS 111 helpline, which operates 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Calls are free from landlines and mobile phones.
If you run out of medication when your GP is closed, you can use the NHS 111 emergency prescription service.
A&E departments will be open as usual throughout the festive period. Urgent treatment centres are also operating, but may have reduced hours.
You should only call 999 for life-threatening emergencies such as heart attacks, strokes, severe bleeding or difficulty breathing.
Most NHS dentists are closed on Christmas Day, Boxing Day and New Year's Day. Emergency services are available via NHS 111 for urgent issues.
When will pharmacies be open?

Getty ImagesMost pharmacies will be closed on Christmas Day and New Year's Day.
However, one or more should be open near you under out-of-hours arrangements. Your local pharmacy should display details of the rota, or you can find details online.
You can find open pharmacies near you via the relevant NHS website:
Boots will open more than 60 pharmacies on Christmas Day and more than 460 on New Year's Day.
All Superdrug pharmacies will be closed on Christmas Day and New Year's Day. Most branches in Scotland will remain shut on 2 January.
What about supermarkets and food delivery services?

Getty ImagesYou should check your local store's opening hours, but in general you should assume:
- early closing on Christmas Eve
- almost all stores will be shut on Christmas Day
- Aldi, Lidl, M&S and most Waitrose shops will also close on Boxing Day. Other chains have reduced hours
- early closing on New Year's Eve
- Aldi, Lidl, M&S and most Waitrose shops are closed on New Year's Day
Smaller local shops are more likely to be open earlier and later than the large superstores. Many petrol station forecourt shops will be open too.
The Deliveroo, Just Eat and Uber Eats apps and websites will be running throughout the festive period, but restaurants will set their own operating hours.
When will universal credit and other benefits be paid over Christmas?
Some payments will be made earlier if they're due between 24 December 2025 and 2 January 2026:
- universal credit payments due on 24, 25, or 26 December will be made on 24 December
- other payments due on 24, 25, 26 December will be paid on 23 December
- all payments due on 1 January including Universal Credit will be paid on 31 December
- in Scotland, payments due on 2 January will be made on 31 December
Child benefit payments due on bank holidays will also be paid on a different date:
- in Northern Ireland, payments due on 29 or 30 December will be paid on 30 and 31 December
- in Scotland, payments due on 5 January will be made on 6 January
The Department for Work and Pensions says that you should tell the office that pays your benefit if you do not get your payment.
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BBC | World
- Steve Rosenberg: Was Putin's response to my question about war in Europe an olive branch?
Steve Rosenberg: Was Putin's response to my question about war in Europe an olive branch?
Reporters ask world leaders questions all the time.
No big deal. Right?
But what's it like putting a question to Vladimir Putin - the president who ordered the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the leader whose country was accused this week by the head of MI6 of "the export of chaos"?
And imagine asking that question live on TV while millions of Russians are watching.
It's a big responsibility. You don't want to mess up.
"My question is about Russia's future. What kind of future are you planning for your country and your people?" I ask President Putin.
"Will the future be like the present, with any public objection to the official line punishable by law? Will the hunt for enemies at home and abroad be accelerated? Will mobile internet outages become even more common? Will there be new 'special military operations'?"
While I'm speaking, Vladimir Putin is making notes. And then replies.
He defends Russia's repressive foreign agent law. Hundreds of Russians who are critical of the authorities have been designated "foreign agents".
"We didn't invent it," Putin tells me.
"This [foreign agent] law was adopted in a string of Western countries, including in America in the 1930s. And all these laws, including the US one, are much tougher…"
In reality, the Russian law is draconian. It excludes "foreign agents" from many aspects of public life, including teaching, the civil service, elections and public events. It imposes financial and property restrictions. Criminal prosecution can follow a single administrative fine.
However, I'm unable to point this out to President Putin. The microphone was taken away from me after I'd finished my question.
Suddenly the moderator intervenes to change the subject.
"There's another question here: 'What's going to happen to the BBC? It's facing a multi-billion lawsuit from the US president?'," says anchor Pavel Zarubin.
"I think President Trump is right," President Putin confirms.
The Kremlin and the White House seeing eye to eye… on the BBC.
Putin returns to my question.
"Will there be new special military operations? There won't be, if you treat us with respect, and respect our interests, just as we've always tried to do with you. Unless you cheat us, like you did with Nato's eastward expansion."
Visible for all to see is what is driving Vladimir Putin - a deep-seated resentment of the West.
He argues that, for years, Western leaders have disrespected, deceived and lied to Russia - and that they're lying still by claiming that Moscow intends to attack Europe. "What kind of rubbish is that?" declares the Kremlin leader.
But many European leaders simply don't trust Moscow.
In the run-up to the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, Russian officials denied they had plans for a mass attack.
More recently Russia has been accused of violating European air space with fighter jets and drones, as well as of carrying out cyber-attacks and acts of sabotage.
But as he finished answering my question, was this an olive branch to Europe from Russia's president?
"We're ready to cease hostilities immediately provided that Russia's medium- and long-term security is ensured, and we are ready to co-operate with you."
However, if Moscow continues to connect its long-term security to its maximalist demands over Ukraine, European leaders will remain sceptical.
US carries out 'massive' strike against IS in Syria

EPA/ShutterstockThe US says its military has carried out a "massive strike" against the Islamic State group (IS) in Syria, in response to a deadly attack on American forces in the country.
Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said Operation Hawkeye Strike was aimed at eliminating IS "fighters, infrastructure, and weapons sites".
Fighter jets, attack helicopters and artillery hit multiple targets in central Syria, US officials told CBS, the BBC's media partner in the US. Aircraft from Jordan were also involved.
President Donald Trump later said "we are striking very strongly" against IS strongholds, after the 13 December IS ambush in the city of Palmyra in which two US soldiers and a US civilian interpreter were killed.
In a post on X late on Friday, Hegseth wrote: "This is not the beginning of a war - it is a declaration of vengeance. The United States of America, under President Trump's leadership, will never hesitate and never relent to defend our people.
"If you target Americans - anywhere in the world - you will spend the rest of your brief, anxious life knowing the United States will hunt you, find you, and ruthlessly kill you.
"Today, we hunted and we killed our enemies. Lots of them. And we will continue," the US defence secretary added.
Meanwhile, the US Central Command (Centcom) said that "US forces have commenced a large-scale strike" against IS, adding that more information would be provided soon.
Posting on Truth Social later on, President Trump said the US "is inflicting very serious retaliation, just as I promised, on the murderous terrorists responsible".
He said the Syrian government was "fully in support".
Meanwhile, the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (OBHR) said IS positions near the cities of Raqqa and Deir ez Zor were targeted.
It said that a prominent IS leader and a number of fighters were killed.
IS has not publicly commented. The BBC was unable to verify the targets immediately.
Centcom, which directs American military operations in Europe, Africa and the Indo-Pacific, earlier said that the deadly attack in Palmyra was carried out by an IS gunman, who was "engaged and killed".
Another three US soldiers were injured in the ambush, with a Pentagon official saying that it happened "in an area where the Syrian president does not have control."
At the same time, the SOHR said the attacker was a member of the Syrian security forces.
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, and the identity of the gunman has not been released.
In 2019, a US-backed alliance of Syrian fighters announced IS had lost the last pocket of territory in Syria it controlled, but since then the jihadist group has carried out some attacks.
The United Nations says the group still has between 5,000 and 7,000 fighters in Syria and Iraq.
US troops have maintained a presence in Syria since 2015 to help train other forces as part of a campaign against IS.
Rubio Meets (and Meets, and Meets … ) the Press

© Kevin Mohatt/Reuters
行政院长:军工产业链或成为台湾新蓝海
台湾行政院长卓荣泰星期五(12月19日)接受台湾媒体访问时说,政府审慎乐观看待明年经济,且总统赖清德积极推动“台湾之盾”,军工产业链可望成为新蓝海,若顺利,将成为明年经济的新动能,期待经济成长率可以更高。
卓荣泰告诉台湾《经济日报》,军工产业有望成为台湾过去未曾纳入经济发展想像的新蓝海,因国防韧性特别预算除军备采购外,更重要的是建构本土军工产业链。
赖清德上个月宣布,未来八年编列400亿美元(520亿4300万新元)国防特別预算,打造“台湾之盾”等,以因应中国大陆武统台湾。
台湾主计总处预估,台湾今年经济成长率将达7.37%,明年可达3.54%。卓荣泰指出,今年整体经济表现明显优于年初预期,第一季、第两季都维持高成长,第三季、第四季也没有转弱。
日媒:日经贸代表团拟下月访华 北京尚未答复
日本媒体报道,日本经贸代表团拟下月访华,但北京至今尚未给予明确答复。
日本共同社星期五(12月19日)引述消息人士称,日中经济协会会长进藤孝生星期四(18日)在东京与中国驻日大使吴江浩会面。进藤提出希望中方安排接待由该协会、日本经济团体联合会及日本商工会议等所组成的经济代表团明年1月访问北京。
他强调,在日本首相高市早苗涉台国会答辩导致中日关系恶化的当下,两国依旧保持经济交流的重要性。
上述访问由日中经协组织,包括经团联会长筒井义信和日商主席小林健在内的日企高层计划1月20日至23日访问北京,并希望实现与中方高层的会面。
然而,距离访问仅剩一个月,北京仍未给出明确答复,不排除访问延期或取消的可能性。小林星期四在记者会上谈及访华前景时说:“听说中方的反应并不十分积极。”
筒井也曾在11月28日与吴江浩会面时,提出希望中方对代表团访华予以安排。
共同社11月引述消息人士称,日本企业代表团原定11月24日至27日访华,期间与中国商务部长王文涛会面,但因中方要求延期。
在本月初的中国外交部例行记者会上,针对北京会否为有意访华的日本经贸代表团安排出访行程,发言人林剑回应时说,中国敦促日本反思纠错,撤回首相高市早苗的错误言论,停止伤害两国的国民感情,以实际行动体现对华的政治承诺,为中日的正常交流创造必要条件。希望日本的相关团体在日本国内多发挥积极作用。
Hochul Reaches Deal on A.I. Regulation in New York

© Kent J. Edwards for The New York Times
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Politico | Politics

- Epstein files put Bill Clinton under scrutiny – and the White House wants him there
Epstein files put Bill Clinton under scrutiny – and the White House wants him there
The Trump administration, initially wary over the Justice Department’s release of Jeffrey Epstein documents, pounced on go-to villain Bill Clinton’s appearance in Friday’s trove of pictures, emails and interviews.
“I wonder why the Biden DOJ refused to release the files…,” DOJ spokesperson Chad Gilmartin posted from his personal X account, alongside one partially-redacted photo of Clinton in a pool with an unidentified woman. Another swimming pool photo Gilmartin posted shows Clinton with Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s longtime co-conspirator who was convicted of sex trafficking charges in 2021.
Trump and the DOJ also resisted releasing the files until Congress passed a bill to do so. Trump signed the bill last month.
Clinton has long been linked with Epstein, contributing to his status as MAGA’s favored boogeyman. Some high-profile members of the movement cited him in pushing for the release of the files, and continued that message after the DOJ made public a trove of documents from the government’s investigation into Epstein.
“Slick Willy! @BillClinton just chillin, without a care in the world. Little did he know…” White House Communications Director Steven Cheung posted to X.
“Here is Bill Clinton in a hot tub next to someone whose identity has been redacted. Per the Epstein Files Transparency Act, DOJ was specifically instructed only to redact the faces of victims and/or minors. Time for the media to start asking real questions,” White House deputy press secretary Abigail Jackson posted to her personal X account.
The act also allowed the DOJ to redact material related to active investigations.
It’s unclear when the previously unreleased photo was taken and where the pool is located.
Clinton appears in photos posing with Epstein in coordinating shirts, interacting with a dancer, sitting with a redacted woman on his lap on what looks like an airplane and with someone who appears to be the late pop icon Michael Jackson. The music legend faced his own child sex abuse allegations as early as 1993, though he was never convicted of any crimes.
The former president is also seen at a dinner sitting next to rock star Mick Jagger, alongside Maxwell and Epstein.
Epstein faced state and federal charges over two decades related to the sexual abuse and trafficking of dozens of underage girls as young as 14. He pleaded guilty in Florida to state charges in 2008, one of which was for soliciting prostitution from someone under 18. He was awaiting trial on federal child trafficking charges when he died by suicide in a New York jail in 2019. His connections to the wealthy and powerful, and efforts to keep information related to him from becoming public, has become part of the national political narrative – intensifying bipartisan sniping and deepening fractures in Trump’s base.
The files were heavily redacted. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said earlier Friday that the first dissemination would be partial, with as many as hundreds of thousands of more documents to follow in the coming weeks.
A spokesperson for Clinton said the Friday afternoon timing of the document release is “about shielding themselves from what comes next, or from what they’ll try and hide forever.”
“So they can release as many grainy 20-plus-year-old photos as they want, but this isn’t about Bill Clinton,” Angel Ureña, deputy chief of staff for Clinton, posted in a statement on X. “There are two types of people here. The first group knew nothing and cut Epstein off before his crimes came to light. The second group continued relationships with him after. We’re in the first. No amount of stalling by people in the second group will change that.”
Clinton and Epstein have been linked since the early 1990s, having run in the same social circles. They have been photographed together several times. Clinton flew on Epstein’s plane in the early 2000s, taking trips to Europe, Asia and Africa. Ureña said those trips included stops for work connected to the Clinton Foundation.
The former president has never been accused of any wrongdoing in connection to Epstein, and said he was not aware of Epstein’s crimes, something a Clinton spokesperson reiterated in a social media post six years ago.
Democrats on the House Oversight Committee this month released additional photos from Epstein’s estate that feature Clinton.
Trump has long suggested that Clinton repeatedly visited Epstein’s private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands, the location of alleged sex trafficking and abuse where the financier hosted high-profile friends. But White House chief of staff Susie Wiles said in a Vanity Fair interview published this week that Trump was “wrong” to tie Clinton to Epstein’s criminal activity.
Trump and Epstein were longtime friends before Trump said they had a falling out several years ago. The president has denied wrongdoing in relation to the Epstein allegations, and no evidence has suggested that he took part in Epstein’s trafficking operation.
Brakkton Booker contributed to this report.


© Department of Justice
呦呦鹿鸣|《江南春》不在场:8800万元,不是最可怕的数字
“国家收藏”因此避免了一次与“无法核查”划等号的命运
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Photo of tobiasbjorkli by Pexels
文|呦呦鹿鸣
如果不是这个数字:起拍价8800万,普通人很少会注意到《江南春》手卷。现在,人们好奇:为什么,庞莱臣后人向南京博物院捐赠的《江南春》手卷会出现在2025拍卖市场?
昨天晚上9点多,南京博物院发布了《情况说明》:
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作者:呦呦鹿鸣的鹿鸣君
发表日期:2025.12.19
来源:微信公众号“呦呦鹿鸣”
主题归类:仇英名画离奇现身拍卖
CDS收藏:公民馆
版权说明:该作品版权归原作者所有。中国数字时代仅对原作进行存档,以对抗中国的网络审查。详细版权说明。
“高度重视”“迅速开展调查核实”“将依法依规严肃处理”“尚待进一步查证”,这些词语组合在一起,给我们传递了一种熟悉的安全感:“放心吧,系统正在稳健运转”。
但问题在于,珍贵文物确确实实在系统里“不知去向”了。
昨天文章《退捐还画,两难自解》我们已经提到了,这不知去向的5幅画分别是:明代仇英《江南春》,北宋赵光辅《双马图轴》、明代王绂《松风萧寺图轴》、清初王时敏《仿北苑山水轴》、清代汤贻汾《设色山水轴》。
其中,明代仇英《江南春》出现在2025年北京某拍卖会春拍市场,起拍价8800万元。曾向南京博物院捐赠《江南春》的庞增和的女儿发现后,向文物管理部门紧急反映,才被撤拍。
《情况说明》虽然说要“深入核查该5幅画作的去向”“进一步查证”“进一步加强对捐赠物品和馆藏文物的规范管理”,言辞说得挺好,可是,恰恰在这一点上,南京博物院的信誉已经透支了。
为什么呢?
早在2016年9月,上海《东方早报》报道: “自去年5月至今,庞增和的遗孀王念瑛和女儿庞叔令屡次向南博申请公开捐赠古画账目等信息无果。现在,她只希望南博能依法依规出示完整的账目,让一切透明化,依法让捐赠人监督、让社会公众监督。”
也就是说,捐赠人申请查明所捐古画账目,已经是十年前(2015年)的事了,当年报道此事的《东方早报》甚至都已经注销,不存在了。
直到2025年6月,庞家通过诉讼,在法院司法文书的支持下,得以进库房查看,这才得知,5件古画不知去向。
因此,长期以来,南京博物院对于查看古画账目一直是拒绝的、不情不愿的、遮遮掩掩的,最后也只是被法院敲开了库房大门。
现在,人们要如何才能相信南博真的会自己“深入核查画作去向”呢?
要多少个十年,才够他们“深入核查”?
其实,如果真的要核查,并没有多大难度。《情况说明》中提到了“依照《博物馆藏品管理办法》对该5幅画作进行了处置”。我细看了下这个《管理办法》,其中明确的管理程序有:《库房日记》、提用凭证、出库手续、借出手续、登帐、编目、入库手续等,而且,藏品总数及增减数字,每年年终都要报省一级备案并做说明。
如果真的是依照这个《管理办法》的话,那么,账目就太清楚不过了。至少会知道,在哪个环节失踪了。
我个人相信,经过十年官司,对这5幅画作的去向,南京博物院是心里有底的。但是,他们始终没说。所以,这则《情况说明》,水分比较大,至少没有“知无不言、言无不尽”,单独来看,没啥漏洞,拉长时间看,就显得很空洞。它丝毫无助于减轻这件事的荒诞感:
一个为国家管理文物的公共机构,竟然需要捐赠人申请十年以上,需要法院强制,才让看一眼账目。
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那么,如果外面的人要查,有没有线索呢?
有两个线索。
第一个线索,是这两天文藏界挖掘出来的“姚迁之死”。
确实,谈到南京博物院,就很难绕开姚迁。
姚迁生于1926年江苏如东一个农民家庭,1943年高中毕业,1944年加入中国共产党后,从事文教工作(儿童团辅导员、文教科督学、小学教导主任、校长、师范教员),1949年之后,担任县文教科科长、苏北行署教育处小教科副科长、江苏省文化局文化科科长、处长,1958年调江苏省历史研究所任副所长,1962年任南京博物院副院长。
就这个轨迹来看,是那种组织看着一路成长的行政干部。
1964年,南京博物院院长曾昭燏自杀身亡,时年55岁。姚迁接任院长,然而,20年后,1984年,姚迁在院长任上自缢身亡,时年58岁。
“姚迁之死”不仅是当年的国内大事件,也引起国外关注。原因之一是南京博物院地位独特:虽然它现在只是副厅级单位,但前身是1933年成立的“国立中央博物院”,是我国第一座由国家投资兴建的大型综合类博物馆,由于历史原因,承袭了大量文物珍藏,1950年才更名为南京博物院。
那么,当时到底发生了什么?
明面上的原因是《光明日报》的报道。1984年8月26日、27日,《光明日报》连续发表两篇报道《南博院长姚迁以权谋私侵占科研人员学术成果》、《姚迁在执行知识分子政策方面存在严重问题》,并配发评论员文章《知识分子的智力成果不容侵占》。报道让姚迁不堪重压。
在江苏作家庞瑞垠先生的报告文学《姚迁之死》中,则进行了更加深入的评述:伴随这三篇文章的,是南京博物院文革期间原“造反派”的诬陷,以及省里一些人“一连串非同寻常”的打压,“这里经历了第二次WG”。终于,1984年11月7日,风暴眼中的姚迁在卫生间自缢。
姚迁自杀后,中纪委的调查组南下江苏,给姚迁平反,做出“错案,姚迁含冤去世”的结论,负有直接责任的一位省委常委、宣传部长被撤职。《光明日报》也承认错误,发表《光明日报编辑部关于姚迁事件报道严重失实的检查》。
在报告文学《姚迁之死》中,将原因归结于不正常的派系斗争、“南博的第二次文革”,没有提到和文物去向有关。但是,在红学家冯其庸先生的口述自传《风雨平生》(商务印书馆版)中,专门写了一篇《姚迁事件》。原文如下:
“为什么1984年会出现“姚迁事件”呢?因为江苏省委有一些老同志喜欢文物,尤其是字画,经常到南京博物院去借有名的字画去看。
按说这种做法都已经不合适了,因为博物馆的藏品,一般不能外借给私人的,只能展览的时候你来看。
有些专家来了专门要看哪一件,调出来看,这也是可以的,借回去看是绝无可能的。但是因为他们是省委领导,姚迁也无奈,就让他们借回去了。但是姚迁非常认真,他都记录了,谁借什么,借的时间多久,到时间他就去催,催不回来他也去催,经常是隔一段时间就去催。后来这些老同志心里有点不高兴了。
有一次,有一位老同志就跟我打招呼,他说,你以后有事不必去找姚迁,你们红学方面的事找我们就行了,姚迁有问题,估计要退下来了。我也不知道什么原因,也没有去问。
后来是姚迁跟我讲的。好几位老同志借了博物院的字画不还,姚迁非常头痛,当然,他职责所在,不能不去催。”
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冯其庸先生说,得知姚迁自杀后,他找到了中央很多领导,最后中央派了调查组到江苏去,为姚迁平反。冯其庸先生在文中认定:
“经过这一番调查,一清二楚,姚迁是为了保护国家的文物,最后遭到种种打击、诬蔑,弄得他觉得已经走投无路了,国内外都传开来了,所以他上吊自杀了。”
虽然,在这份材料中,冯其庸先生的话可信度比较高,大家也很受震动,可是,由于我们并没有看到中央的调查报告内容,而姚迁自杀的直接原因(发表文章的署名问题)又与文物保护没有直接关系,庞瑞垠《姚迁之死》更是对文物保护只字不提——我们现在暂时只得到来自冯其庸先生的一个孤证,就很难一口断定:姚迁是因为保护文物而死。
还有一个原因是,我看到一些反面证据。
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姚迁担任20年院长,和庞家有直接交集,而庞家和南京博物院的冲突,恰恰姚迁也是极为重要的当事人。
在庞家于1959年向南京博物院捐赠137件文物之后,南博继续动员庞家将剩余文物征集给南博。根据2009年出版的曾昭燏日记记载,从1962年12月至1963年11月之间,南博向庞增和家征集了11件“虚斋旧藏”古画。其中除了宋徽宗赵佶的一幅《鸲鹆图》出价1万元外,其他几件都以象征性的价格给了南博。
1963年,南京博物院征集员徐沄湫找到庞增和,请求借两件画用来办画展(元四家之一吴镇的 《松泉图》轴、清初吴历的《仿古山水册页》),说好展期三个月后就归还,不料,这两幅画就此杳无音讯。
偏偏1964年南京博物院院长曾昭燏自杀身亡,庞增和就不好意思去讨要这幅画,偏偏紧接着就是WG,庞家全家被下放到苏北大丰农村,庞家也被抄家。家中古画全部被抄走,包括借据。直到1979年,庞增和一家才得以回到苏州,这时,他们开始联系南博。
根据2016年《东方早报》报道,庞增和之妻王念瑛说:自1979年到1988年间的十年内,夫妻俩几次到南京博物院讨要两幅被借走的画作,却被干晾在办公室无人接见。“特别是当年到苏州参与征集的姚迁院长,曾经的殷勤变为冷漠,使庞增和夫妻心酸不已。庞增和遂在1988年向南京市玄武区人民法院提起诉讼,希望确认两件“虚斋旧藏”古画的所有权。”
法院的判决是:两幅画是南京博物院从庞家“征购”的,判令南博支付2.6万元画款、2.8万元利息。
法庭上的证据也令庞家唏嘘,因为1978年的藏品简目显示,被借走的《松泉图》和《仿古山水册页》,却被登记为捐赠,且捐赠人不是庞家,被登记为陶白。时任南京博物院院长徐湖平向法庭解释说:“是当时的院长姚迁关照,将这件藏品登记在陶白名下。”
从这些信息来看,院长姚迁在庞家古画文物上的态度令庞家心寒,而且有意改捐赠人名字的操作也相当可疑。
我非常希望姚迁是一位为保护文物而殚精竭虑、四处奔走、不惧权贵的人,这会让我更安心,只可惜,如今,却得知姚迁在院长任上未能善待庞家。对庞家如此,其他文物藏品是怎么管的呢?我不知道。
因此,对于姚迁之死,我还停留在“同情”上。
1964年,姚迁38岁,担任了南京博物院的院长,而这个位置不同于一般的行政岗位,它的要求极高,也受国际瞩目。或者,他就是那种中规中矩的、努力的但最终又受了委屈的行政干部吧。
或许他曾试图守住某些边界,也或许在另一些地方选择了妥协。历史的残酷之处在于,它往往同时容纳这两种可能。
历史常常是灰色的。在制度混乱的环境中,一个人既可能是受害者,也可能是问题链条的一环。
似乎,也不能责怪谁。毕竟,在本土,管理混乱缺乏章法是一个无法回避的话题,即便早就建章立制的领域也是如此。我记得2004年时,我曾经进入一个古战场开掘现场采访,当时来到一个单位,地上成堆新出土的青铜器,但凡我当时起了一点歪心思,拿走了也就拿走了,了无痕迹。这种场合太考验一个人的道德水准了。
斯人已去,关注姚迁,不如关注文物管理制度本身:为什么庞家作为捐赠者想要知道捐赠文物去向竟如此之难?
有没有可能,我们不需要去不断考验那些文物管理者的道德水平,就能管理好文物呢?有没有可能,当一个博物馆拒绝查阅、公开账册,负责人就立即会被制裁呢?
或许,少一些道德模范,少一些英雄,少一些“圣人”,自然而然地按公开规则运转,才是一个更加让人安心,更加稳健的社会。
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另一个线索是《江南春》的公开拍卖。
这个线索更加明确,《江南春》手卷出现在2025年拍卖会上,且起拍价8800万元,可见,这件大概率是真品。
那么,它是从哪来的呢?
在《南京艺术学院学报》2006年3月刊上,我找到了南京师范大学美术学院博士生丁蔚文的《仇英 卷考辩》一文。
这篇文章第一段说:“艺兰斋收藏的《江南春》卷, 得于庞氏后人”。
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这位作者丁蔚文,恰就是艺兰斋陆挺的妻子。
从文章看,这件《江南春》手卷是流传有序的,上面一共有60方印鉴,按年代顺序排列,其中,庞莱臣一共盖了12枚收藏印:
“庞莱臣珍藏印、虚斋珍藏、虚斋至精之品、莱臣欣赏、虚斋审定、虚斋秘藏、莱臣欣赏、虚斋、虚斋秘笈之印、虚斋秘玩、庞莱臣……”
可见,庞莱臣对《江南春》手卷的喜爱。爱到极致的那种。
《江南春》手卷价值点在哪?简单说就是“传统中国文人的诗情画意”。它记录的是一场诗文集会,先有了倪云林一首《江南春》词,沈周和了两首,仇英补上了绘画,,然后文征明、王宠、文彭、王榖祥、文嘉等等,继续和《江南春》词,累计三十多名文人名士在此留墨,陈鎏为此题了引首“江南佳丽”。
这幅长卷有7米,从题跋到绘画,花费了几十年。所以,这是一幅集体作品,是文学史、美术史上的一个精彩片段,它描绘的是一个文人理想中的世界:诗酒唱和,山水悠然,时间被拉长,世事被暂时搁置。它可以带着我们,完成一次对逼仄现实的短暂疏离。
对于某些人来说,什么文人名士,什么诗情画意,一文不值。但对于传统文化来说,这属于精神世界,意义非凡。
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《江南春》手卷局部
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2006年《南方周末》对艺兰斋的报道中,使用了这张图片:陆挺(左)与鉴定大师杨仁恺先生共同鉴赏仇英的《江南春卷》
在《瞭望新闻周刊》的报道中,陆挺说,《江南春卷》是艺兰斋的镇馆之宝。
那么,艺兰斋是从哪位“庞氏后人”手上得到它的呢?
前面说是得自“庞氏后人”。在2016年的《东方早报》、2025年澎湃新闻的报道中,庞家诉南京博物院名誉权案的法庭上,南京博物院研究馆员庞鸥提供的证据说,《江南春》原属庞莱臣在苏州的女儿,90年代被艺兰斋所收藏。
“后人”明确为“女儿”。但这件事最大的漏洞在于:庞莱臣并没有女儿。
根据当前已有信息,庞莱臣只有一个儿子,但31岁时病故了,给庞莱臣留下两个幼孙庞增和、庞增祥。由于独子早逝,庞莱臣将侄子庞维谨过继来作为嗣子,因此,庞莱臣在1949年去世之前,将藏品分为三份,分别留给两个孙子和这位嗣子,另有一小部分藏品由继室庞贺氏保管。
清晰的时间线是:庞莱臣1949年将《江南春》手卷留给了庞增和,庞增和1959年将它捐赠给南京博物院。
那么,艺兰斋这件到底哪来的?它“流传有序”是怎样的序?
艺兰斋的上一家是谁?是一个很接近真相的线索。可以确定的是,无论最终答案为何,总有一个人在说谎。
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如今,南京博物院《情况说明》说,1959年庞家捐赠的《江南春》在1961年就被鉴定是伪作,是假的。
这种说法对捐赠者的名誉当然是一种损害,这意味着当年庞家竟拿伪作欺骗新兴的人民政府。
捐赠人庞增和的女儿庞叔令说,家中保存有父亲1959年向南京博物院捐赠时,亲笔写的全部137件(116种、268幅)藏品清册,字迹端正如同印刷一般,分为册页、立轴、成扇,时任苏州文化局局长的段东战和苏州博物馆馆长钱镛都在各页分别写下“以上逐件点过”,江苏博物馆和南博也出具公函确认收到“虚斋旧藏”古画。
我有几个简单的疑问:既然《江南春》手卷如艺兰斋丁蔚文所说,是时任国家文物局局长点名“非要不可”的,所有当事人都知道它的重要性,那么,如果1961年就认定是“伪作”,为什么不立即提出并向庞家询问真品去向呢?为什么直到2025年直到庞家通过法院查到《江南春》手卷去向不明了,才告知他们这是伪作呢?而且,这件“伪作”为什么不见了?还有,为什么上世纪90年代艺兰斋宣布收藏《江南春》手卷之后,南京博物院不去找他们核查呢?
其他问题还挺多的。
迄今为止,这件事唯一让我感动的,就是庞家。自1979年从大丰农村回到苏州后,他们就一直没有放弃对这批文物的追问,虽然屡屡碰壁,不断吃闭门羹,坐冷板凳,被泼脏水,但,从庞增和、王念瑛到庞叔令,他们两代人接力,不断申请、申诉,王念瑛甚至因此气得心脏病发作而故去,最后,他们通过法院让南京博物院打开了库房大门,也才终于将藏品不知去向的事实大白于天下,将当前文物管理体系的弊病展现在所有人面前,“国家收藏”因此避免了一次与“无法核查”划等号的命运,恰巧也中止了一次起拍价8800万元的可疑拍卖。
由此受益的,是中国的文脉,而一直以来受委屈的,是他们一家。
1979-2025,他们跨越46年的耐心本身,就很了不起。时局波诡云谲,而时间将证明一切——这种对待文物的态度本身,对得起他们的家族先辈庞莱臣先生,也对得起文物本身在时间上的厚重。
文物不应在黑箱里消失。昨天的文章里,我提出了“退捐还画”的建议。今天,写完这篇文章后,仍觉得这个建议最为合理。
江南依旧,春色何辜?愿你我仍能唱和,愿江南秀美暖人心。
呦呦鹿鸣20251218
【404文库】网易|中纪委请注意:退休副省长被“管家”盗卖243万元名酒
假酒与真权交织,此案不仅是法治的试金石,更是反腐的放大镜。中纪委不能再拖,是时候出手了
2025年12月13日,年满八十的副省级退休老干部陈某明,以“诽谤”为由报案,称个别媒体侵犯其隐私。济南市舜玉路派出所出具了《行政案件立案告知书》。
报案一事由来,盖因2025年9月,青岛市黄岛区法院的一纸判决,将这位退休17年的高官推至公众视野——陈某明的“管家”李鹏,在长达两年半的时间里,利用工作便利,从陈某明及其女儿家中盗取茅台、五粮液等名酒并销赃,累计非法获利高达243.5226万元。
在此案进入二审环节,案情经媒体披露,老干部陈某明认为舆论侵犯其隐私,涉嫌“诽谤”。
如此巨额的名酒从何而来?为何假酒比例如此之高?针对已经公之于众的案情,中纪委应当立即出手了,要么还陈某明一个清白,要么让腐败分子接受惩罚。
“家贼”的案发与抓捕
案件始于2021年初。当时,李鹏应聘到陈某明女儿陈某家中工作,身兼司机、厨师、保姆数职,负责照顾陈某明的起居。
工作期间,李鹏逐渐获得了陈家的信任,被安排负责拿取、运送和保管家中酒水。
自2021年4月起,李鹏开始利用持有的钥匙和门禁卡,采取“蚂蚁搬家”的方式,多次从陈某位于青岛的住所及陈某明位于济南的住所盗窃名酒。
李鹏的盗窃行为持续了长达两年半时间,直到2023年10月,陈某在调取监控后发现端倪。
2023年10月16日晚,当李鹏驾车再次前往陈某明位于济南的家中作案时,被公安机关当场抓获。
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警方从其汽车后备箱查获了尚未出手的茅台、五粮液等酒品,经物价鉴定,仅被查获的部分酒水价值就达14670元。
此案引人注目的另一细节,是涉案名酒存在极高的假冒比例。
根据检察机关在案件审理过程中提交的鉴定材料,贵州茅台酒股份有限公司对一批涉案茅台酒进行鉴定后证明,送检的44瓶茅台酒中,有42瓶并非该公司生产,属于假酒。
仅有两瓶十五年/五星茅台酒,确为茅台股份的产品。
五粮液集团有限公司的鉴定结果同样触目惊心:在送鉴的八瓶五粮液中,有四瓶属假冒产品,四瓶第七代五粮液酒和一瓶尊酒为该公司真品。
陈某明的女婿何某在案件审理过程中称,家中总计丢失了至少60箱茅台酒、两箱五粮液、20瓶红酒、5盒茶叶及一块卡地亚手表等贵重物品。
盗窃罪还是侵占罪?
尽管一审法院已作出判决,但案件在法律定性上仍存在争议。
李鹏及其家人认为,陈家人授权李鹏拿取、运送、保管家中酒水,李鹏趁机变卖牟利,应认定为侵占罪而非盗窃罪。
侵占罪与盗窃罪在法律上的区别显著:前者是将代为保管的他人财物非法占为己有,后者则是以非法占有为目的,秘密窃取他人财物。
侵占罪属轻罪,而盗窃罪则要严重得多。
李鹏的辩护人指出,李鹏明明可以在单独开车运酒时无人监管的情况下盗窃,没有必要冒险入室偷酒。既然被害人声称有监控,为何不提供监控记录。
然而,一审法院并未采纳这一辩护意见。
法院根据李鹏的供述、车辆出入记录、小区监控视频、陈家人的陈述等证据,认定陈家人没有授权李鹏代为保管酒水等物品,李鹏采用秘密窃取的方式盗窃,其行为构成盗窃罪。
青岛市黄岛区法院经审理认为,李鹏以非法占有为目的,多次采取秘密窃取的手段盗窃他人财物,数额特别巨大,其行为已构成盗窃罪。
2025年9月27日,法院作出一审判决:李鹏犯盗窃罪,判处有期徒刑十年六个月,并处罚金人民币二十万元。
案发后,李鹏家人曾主动退赔20万元。因对一审判决不服,已于2025年12月15日提起上诉。二审暂未开庭。
副省长以“诽谤”为由报案
当事人陈某明,1945年生,1987年起任县级市市长、市委书记、地委委员、行署副专员、地委副书记、行署专员、地委书记,1997年起相继任省长助理、副省长、省人大常委会副主任。2008年,63岁的陈某明从省人大常委会副主任的位置上卸任。
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此案看似普通盗窃,却因陈某明的特殊身份及涉案物品的异常情况,至少存在三大疑问有待中纪委调查通报:
第一、名酒来源是否涉及违纪?
陈某明曾任副省长、省人大常委会副主任,属于中管干部。其家中囤积大量名酒,若系他人赠送,可能涉及受贿或违反中央八项规定精神。若这些酒系陈某明与女儿自购,则需提供购买记录以证清白。
第二、假酒泛滥暴露监管漏洞,酒厂是否该担责?
假酒比例之高令人咋舌。若系购买,陈某明作为高级干部,买到大量假酒却未维权,不合常理;若系收礼,则送礼者“以假乱真”的行为可能涉及欺诈。茅台酒厂曾宣称假酒率不足1%,此案却显示高端市场假酒猖獗,监管部门需追溯假酒链条。
第三、司法程序为何“避重就轻”?
黄岛区法院判决仅追究管家盗窃责任,未对名酒来源开展调查。根据《刑法》,盗窃案需查明涉案物品性质,但判决书对赃物权属、真伪背景的回避,削弱了司法公信力。
随着案件细节在社交媒体上传播,陈某明于2025年12月13日以“诽谤”为由向公安机关报案,称舆论侵犯其隐私。公安机关已向其出具了《行政案件立案告知书》。
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然而,根据《中国共产党纪律处分条例》,领导干部需接受舆论监督,尤其涉及公共利益时。陈某明未澄清名酒来源,反而起诉网民,被批“转移焦点”。
北京律师赵琮对此分析指出,自媒体从业人员如果只是对一审判决书内容进行摘取、分析和评价,没有捏造事实,其内容来自司法文书,则不构成法律上的诽谤。
此案已超出盗窃案范畴,涉及干部廉洁性、市场监管、司法公正三大问题。鉴于陈某明为中管干部,地方纪委监委无权调查,必须由中纪委直接介入。
一桩盗窃案,撕开了退休高官家中隐秘的角落。假酒与真权交织,此案不仅是法治的试金石,更是反腐的放大镜。中纪委不能再拖了,必须尽快启动调查,要么还陈某明一个清白,要么让腐败分子接受惩罚。㳒








