Elise Stefanik Tried Everything to Please Trump. He Still Jilted Her.

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

© Matt Kelley/Associated Press
“天津一医院女护士被偷拍”的视频在网络传播,天津警方通报,已抓获涉案人员,是医院一名男护士。
据大风新闻报道,有博主星期三(12月17日)曝料称,天津某医院护士站更衣室被装摄像头,偷拍护士更衣,提醒医护人员要注意保护好自己的隐私。
这名博主称,12月9日,一不雅网站流出多段偷拍视频,摄像头疑似安装在桌子上,镜头高度与更衣室桌子齐平,画面中多名女性先后脱下便装,然后换上护士服,下班后又换回来,护士服上面写有某某医院四个字。
博主说,从护士服上面的医院名字分析,全国同名的医院共有四家,从视频里护士说话的口音判断,他最终确定该医院位于天津市西青区。
12月11日,博主向天津警方打电话报警,并称事后有民警联系他,告知他经调查,此事确实发生在那家医院。
天津公安西青分局星期五(19日)发布案件通报称,公安机关于星期四(18日)晚抓获23岁的刘姓涉案男子,为该医院护士。
警方称,刘姓男子对多次在护士办公室内实施偷拍行为并上传网络的事实供认不讳。目前,案件正在依法办理。
台北两处捷运站发生袭击事件致多人死伤。网络社群随后出现自称嫌犯“张文是我兄弟”的可疑账号,扬言下个目标是“高雄车站”,高雄警方加强巡逻监控,并追查发文者身份。
台北车站和捷运中山站星期五(12月19日)傍晚接连发生袭击事件,已造成四人死亡、六人轻重伤。27岁的嫌犯张文在行凶后跳楼,送医抢救无效身亡。
据台湾联合报、中时新闻网报道,案发后,社群网络Threads有署名“nvlw6wyef8rc5”的网友随即贴文,称“北捷事件主角张文是我兄弟,我们是一个组织”,扬言“他未完成的任务,我会继续接下去”,并宣告“下一个地点高雄车站”“社会病态交给我们来重整”。
贴文发出后陆续被网友截图转发,但账号和贴文在几分钟后一起被删文下架。高雄警方和铁路警察已介入调查,高雄市刑大科侦队漏夜追查发文者身份。
由于贴文者发文提到高雄火车站将成下一个目标,高雄警方派出保大霹雳小组、捷运警察和铁路警察加强巡视车站内有无可疑目标,警方荷枪实弹在车站巡逻。
警方称,星期六搭车人潮多,铁路警察将增派警力,捷警和保大也将增派警力在人潮密集处加强监控及巡视。
作品声明:个人观点、仅供参考
12月15日上午9:30,司法部在其官网通报了规范涉企行政执法专项行动的8个典型案例,分别涉及甘肃、湖南、黑龙江、江西、浙江、山西、山东、江苏8省。
值得注意的是,所有的通报只说了具体哪个省,具体到违法违纪的具体城市时,全部用了某字代替。
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比如,湖南某县市场监管局16名行政执法人员因在执法中“吃拿卡要”、收受商户红包礼金的案例被公开通报,湖南被点名,具体的县用了“某县”。
根据司法部官方的通报:2025年4月说起,当地市场监管局开展专项行动自查时,主动向县政府行政执法监督局上报线索:2024年期间,局内部分执法人员在日常执法中,存在向管理服务对象索要、收受红包礼金的违规行为,涉及范围覆盖餐饮业、服务业、房地产业等多个领域,受害商户多为小微企业和个体工商户,不少商户因担心被刻意刁难,只能被迫配合送礼。接到上报后,县政府行政执法监督局迅速介入,先后向20余家相关商户核实情况,最终确认16名执法人员存在“吃拿卡要”问题属实。16名涉事人员被撤职或调离执法岗位,并且所有人限期退还违规收受的红包礼金。
对这样含混不清的通报,我个人表示强烈的反对。
首先,这都已经2025年了,从上到下都在高压反腐,抓的违法犯罪官员不计其数,被处分的违纪官员更是数不胜数,湖南的这个县的执法人员居然还敢向商户“吃拿卡要”,何其大胆、何其恶劣啊。这些人如此胆大包天,这样的地方、这些人理应点名道姓全部向社会公开曝光,让他们不仅承受法纪的处罚,还应接受社会舆论的谴责,让他们付出更为沉重的代价,才能实现有效的惩戒。
公布了具体县名,公众就会去关注这个县的市场监督管理局局长是谁、县长是谁、县委书记是谁,公众就会追问他们为什么当地到了2025年了还会出现执法人员吃拿卡要的事情,公众就会格外注意监督这些地方官员,这样才能给地方官有效的舆论压力,才能迫使他们加强对手下官员的约束,才能让他们时刻注意自己行使权力时是否越界了。
可是,司法部的通报居然没有点这个县的名。
其次,从传播的角度说,司法部既然是公开通报曝光这八个省存在的具体问题,公开省名是应该的,公布具体的问题发生在哪个县哪个市,也是应该的。现在只公布省名而不公布县名区名市名,在传播中信息很容易走形变样,很容易让受众误以为该省各县各区各市都如此,将全省抹黑、将全省污名化。
我如今居住在湖南,很在乎湖南的名声,所以还是以湖南为例。现在公开了湖南的某县存在执法人员吃拿卡要,我在向其他省的朋友介绍这个事情的时候,只能说湖南,而无法具体到县,虽然我也会强调是某个县,但因为县名不详,接受这个信息的外地人肯定只能记住湖南,等到他二次传播的时候,湖南会被再次强化,某县会再次被弱化,这是不是会让湖南全省给这个乱来的县背锅呢?
信息传播的过程中,信息会逐渐丢失和变形,省名你都点了,理应点具体的县名、区名、市名,才能在传播中尽量让信息少丢失少变形。
再比如,司法部的通报的第一例,甘肃某区城市管理局执法人员王某滥用其执法人员身份,要求某商户安装王某亲属代理的某品牌共享充电宝,涉嫌以权谋私,干预市场经营活动。点了甘肃的名,具体到区里,却含糊不清,这显然不是为了保护甘肃,而是为了保护这个区。
我想问问,为什么要保护这样的区?
这八个省出现这些问题,省里当然应该承担责任,但让省里全部扛下而保护这些违法违纪行为的具体地方,非常不妥。
正常的情况下,这类通报点名越具体详细越有惩戒效果,既要点省里的名,也要点具体的县市区的名,如今只点省名而不点具体县市区的名,这种做法不利于有效约束具体的权力,也不利于有效惩戒失范的具体权力。
在此,公开呼吁司法部重新发布该通报,不仅要具体点名那些违法执法的事情发生在哪个省,也要把违法执法的具体县市区的名点出来。
2025年12年16日

© Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times

© U.S. Marine Corps

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.

AFP via Getty ImagesTimothée Chalamet has finally quashed rumours that he is cult anonymous rapper EsDeeKid - by performing alongside him in a new video.
Speculation has run riot that the Oscar-nominated US actor has been leading a double life as the masked rapper, who only ever reveals his eyes.
Some followers spotted an apparent resemblance with Chalamet's eyes, and when the BBC questioned the star about the connection earlier this week, he responded: "No comment... You'll see, all in due time."
Now, the actor - who adopted the hip-hop moniker Lil Timmy Tim in high school - has scotched the conspiracies by posting a video of himself rapping alongside EsDeeKid on a remix of the musician's top 40 hit 4Raws.
In the music video, Chalamet appeared to refer to the rumours by starting with only his eyes on show, like the drill artist, before pulling down the bandana from his face and dropping the bars: "It's Timothée Chalamet chillin', tryin' to stack $100 million."
He then referenced his partner Kylie Jenner with the line: "Girl got $1 billion."
The clip was filmed at Andover Minimarket Off Licence in north London, and was reposted by EsDeeKid.
The speculation has been seized upon by fans in recent weeks, and both sides stayed silent as EsDeeKid reached the UK top 10 and Chalamet promoted his new film.
He even gave the title, Marty Supreme, several shout-outs in the new collaboration, building on an already savvy marketing campaign for the film.
But it was always far-fetched that the two people could be one and the same, and that Chalamet could have pulled off rapping with EsDeeKid's Liverpudlian accent.
Their collaboration quickly went viral, with British rapper Central Cee replying "Naaa" with crying and laughing emojis, Tinie Tempah posting "Hahha this is sickkk" and US star Shaboozey declaring "This going #1".
Additional reporting by Lola Schroer.

BBCThis article contains descriptions of sexual abuse and violence which some readers may find distressing.
Two Palestinian men have told the BBC they personally experienced the kind of beatings and sexual abuse highlighted in recent reports into the treatment of prisoners in Israeli detention.
The United Nations Committee against Torture said last month that it was deeply concerned about reports indicating "a de facto state policy of organised and widespread torture and ill treatment" of Palestinian detainees in Israeli jails. It said the allegations had "gravely intensified" after the Hamas-led attacks on Israel on 7 October 2023.
Other reports by Israeli and Palestinian rights groups have detailed what they say is "systematic" abuse.
Israel has denied all the allegations, but rights groups say the fury in the country over the 7 October attacks and the treatment of Israeli hostages in Gaza has created a culture of impunity within the prison services, especially towards detainees who have expressed support for Hamas and its attacks.
Last year, leaked CCTV footage from inside an Israeli military prison showed a Palestinian man from Gaza allegedly being sexually abused by prison guards. That led to a resignation and recriminations at the top of Israel's military and political establishment.
Sami al-Saei, 46, now works in a furniture shop, but he used to be a freelance journalist in the town of Tulkarm, in the north of the occupied West Bank.
He was arrested by Israeli soldiers in January 2024 after working with reporters to arrange interviews with members of Hamas and other armed groups.
He was detained without being charged for 16 months, under a controversial Israeli system known as administrative detention, before being released this summer.
While he was being held in Megiddo prison in northern Israel, he said, the guards partially stripped him and raped him with a baton on or around 13 March 2024.
He said he had decided to speak to the BBC about his allegations of sexual abuse, despite the risk of being ostracised in the often conservative Palestinian society in the West Bank.
"There were five or six of them," he said.
"They were laughing and enjoying it. The guard asked me: 'Are you enjoying this? We want to play with you, and bring your wife, your sister, your mother, and friends here too,'" Mr al-Saei continued.
"I was hoping to die and be done from that, as the pain was not only caused by the rape, but also from the severe and painful beating."
He said the assault lasted around 15 to 20 minutes, during which time the guards also squeezed his genitals, causing extreme pain.
He said the beatings happened on an almost daily basis, but he was only sexually abused once.
The BBC asked the Israel Prison Service (IPS) for a response to Mr al-Saei's allegations. It sent a statement, which said: "We operate in full accordance with the law, while ensuring the safety, welfare, and rights of all inmates under its custody.
"We are not aware of the claims described, and to the best of our knowledge, no such incidents have occurred under IPS responsibility."
We also asked the IPS whether an investigation had been launched into the alleged sexual assault and whether any medical records existed. It did not comment.

IDF handoutAllegations of abuse of Palestinians in Israeli prisons have been made for decades, but one recent case has shaken the country's establishment and deepened a growing divide in Israeli society over the treatment of prisoners and detainees accused of supporting Hamas.
In August 2024, leaked CCTV from inside Sde Teiman military prison in southern Israel showed a Palestinian detainee from Gaza allegedly being abused with a sharp object by soldiers, leaving the man with a pierced rectum. The assault allegedly happened in July 2024.
Five Israeli reservist soldiers were charged with aggravated abuse and causing serious bodily harm to the detainee.
Last month, they convened a press conference on Israeli television, four of them appearing in black balaclavas to hide their identities.
In an interview with Channel 14 News, a fifth soldier pulled off his mask to reveal his face, saying he had nothing to hide.
All five have denied the charges.
The reservists held the press conference after it emerged that the CCTV footage was leaked by the Israeli military's top lawyer, Military Advocate General Major General Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi.
She resigned in October, saying that she took full responsibility for the leak. She explained that she had wanted to "counter false propaganda against the army's law enforcement authorities" – a reference to claims from some right-wing politicians that the allegations were fabricated.
Supporters of the far right have held protests in support of the five accused reservists outside Sde Teiman prison.
In July, before her resignation, at a fiery committee hearing at Israel's parliament, Hanoch Milwidsky, a politician from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's right-wing Likud party, was challenged over whether raping a detainee was acceptable.
"Shut up, shut up," he shouted. "Yes, everything is legitimate if they are Nukhba [elite Hamas fighters who took part in the 7 October attacks]. Everything."
A recent opinion poll by the widely respected Israel Democracy Institute indicated that the majority of the Israeli public oppose investigating soldiers when they are suspected of having abused Palestinians from Gaza.


Ahmed, not his real name, lives in the West Bank with his wife and 11 children.
He was arrested by soldiers in January 2024 and was found guilty of incitement to terrorism, after making social media posts praising the 7 October Hamas-led attacks, in which around 1,200 people, mostly Israelis, were killed and a further 251 were taken hostage.
He was sentenced to one year in prison and fined 3,000 shekels ($935, £700).
He alleges serious sexual abuse while in Israeli detention.
"The prison guards, three of them, took me into a bathroom and stripped me completely naked before forcing me to the ground," Ahmed said in an interview at his home.
"They put my head in the toilet bowl and a massive man, maybe 150kg (330lb), stood on my head, so I was bent over. Then, I heard the voice of someone talking to the prison dog. The dog was named Messi, like the footballer."
He then detailed how he said the dog was used to sexually humiliate him. He said his trousers and underwear were removed and the dog mounted his back.
"I could feel its breath... then it jumped on me... I started to scream. The more I screamed, the more they beat me until I almost lost consciousness."
During his time in detention, Ahmed also said the guards would beat him on a regular basis, including on his genitals.
He said he was released 12 days after the alleged sexual abuse, after serving his full sentence.
We asked Ahmed if there were any medical documents regarding his claims, but he said he did not have any.
We contacted the IPS to ask for a response to Ahmed's allegations, and if an investigation had been launched into his alleged abuse, but we did not receive a reply.
There are over 9,000 Palestinian security detainees held in Israeli jails, nearly double the number before the 7 October attacks. Many have never been charged.
The recent report by the UN Committee against Torture unequivocally condemned the 7 October attacks, and also expressed deep concern over Israel's response and the huge loss of human life in Gaza.
Some of the hostages abducted on 7 October and survivors of the attacks have also made allegations of sexual abuse, rape and torture by Hamas and its allies.
Hamas has also publicly executed Palestinians in Gaza accused of collaborating with Israel.
There are also claims of abuse within prisons run by the Palestinian Authority (PA), which is in charge in parts of the West Bank not under Israeli control and is a political and military rival of Hamas.
The BBC has spoken to a former detainee who said PA security officers beat him and used electric shocks on him.
The BBC has contacted the PA for comment but received no reply. It has previously denied allegations of systematic abuse.

Getty ImagesIn a report submitted in October to the UN Committee against Torture, five Israeli human rights groups said there had been "a dramatic escalation in torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment across all detention facilities, carried out with near total impunity and implemented as state policy targeting Palestinians".
Adalah, the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel, Parents Against Child Detention, HaMoked, and Physicians for Human Rights–Israel presented evidence that they said showed Israel had "dismantled existing safeguards and now employs torture throughout the entire detention process - from arrest to imprisonment - targeting Palestinians under occupation and Palestinian citizens, with senior officials sanctioning these abuses while judicial and administrative mechanisms fail to intervene".
The report said such practices had resulted in a surge of Palestinian deaths in custody, with at least 94 deaths in Israeli custody documented between the start of the Gaza war and the end of August 2025.
Israel's ambassador to the UN in Geneva rejected the allegations made before the UN Committee against Torture as "disinformation".
Daniel Meron told the expert panel last month that Israel was "committed to upholding its obligations in line with our moral values and principles, even in the face of the challenges posed by a terrorist organisation".
He said the relevant Israeli agencies complied fully with the prohibition against torture and that Israel rejected allegations of systematic use of sexual and gender-based violence.

BBCThis article contains descriptions of sexual abuse and violence which some readers may find distressing.
Two Palestinian men have told the BBC they personally experienced the kind of beatings and sexual abuse highlighted in recent reports into the treatment of prisoners in Israeli detention.
The United Nations Committee against Torture said last month that it was deeply concerned about reports indicating "a de facto state policy of organised and widespread torture and ill treatment" of Palestinian detainees in Israeli jails. It said the allegations had "gravely intensified" after the Hamas-led attacks on Israel on 7 October 2023.
Other reports by Israeli and Palestinian rights groups have detailed what they say is "systematic" abuse.
Israel has denied all the allegations, but rights groups say the fury in the country over the 7 October attacks and the treatment of Israeli hostages in Gaza has created a culture of impunity within the prison services, especially towards detainees who have expressed support for Hamas and its attacks.
Last year, leaked CCTV footage from inside an Israeli military prison showed a Palestinian man from Gaza allegedly being sexually abused by prison guards. That led to a resignation and recriminations at the top of Israel's military and political establishment.
Sami al-Saei, 46, now works in a furniture shop, but he used to be a freelance journalist in the town of Tulkarm, in the north of the occupied West Bank.
He was arrested by Israeli soldiers in January 2024 after working with reporters to arrange interviews with members of Hamas and other armed groups.
He was detained without being charged for 16 months, under a controversial Israeli system known as administrative detention, before being released this summer.
While he was being held in Megiddo prison in northern Israel, he said, the guards partially stripped him and raped him with a baton on or around 13 March 2024.
He said he had decided to speak to the BBC about his allegations of sexual abuse, despite the risk of being ostracised in the often conservative Palestinian society in the West Bank.
"There were five or six of them," he said.
"They were laughing and enjoying it. The guard asked me: 'Are you enjoying this? We want to play with you, and bring your wife, your sister, your mother, and friends here too,'" Mr al-Saei continued.
"I was hoping to die and be done from that, as the pain was not only caused by the rape, but also from the severe and painful beating."
He said the assault lasted around 15 to 20 minutes, during which time the guards also squeezed his genitals, causing extreme pain.
He said the beatings happened on an almost daily basis, but he was only sexually abused once.
The BBC asked the Israel Prison Service (IPS) for a response to Mr al-Saei's allegations. It sent a statement, which said: "We operate in full accordance with the law, while ensuring the safety, welfare, and rights of all inmates under its custody.
"We are not aware of the claims described, and to the best of our knowledge, no such incidents have occurred under IPS responsibility."
We also asked the IPS whether an investigation had been launched into the alleged sexual assault and whether any medical records existed. It did not comment.

IDF handoutAllegations of abuse of Palestinians in Israeli prisons have been made for decades, but one recent case has shaken the country's establishment and deepened a growing divide in Israeli society over the treatment of prisoners and detainees accused of supporting Hamas.
In August 2024, leaked CCTV from inside Sde Teiman military prison in southern Israel showed a Palestinian detainee from Gaza allegedly being abused with a sharp object by soldiers, leaving the man with a pierced rectum. The assault allegedly happened in July 2024.
Five Israeli reservist soldiers were charged with aggravated abuse and causing serious bodily harm to the detainee.
Last month, they convened a press conference on Israeli television, four of them appearing in black balaclavas to hide their identities.
In an interview with Channel 14 News, a fifth soldier pulled off his mask to reveal his face, saying he had nothing to hide.
All five have denied the charges.
The reservists held the press conference after it emerged that the CCTV footage was leaked by the Israeli military's top lawyer, Military Advocate General Major General Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi.
She resigned in October, saying that she took full responsibility for the leak. She explained that she had wanted to "counter false propaganda against the army's law enforcement authorities" – a reference to claims from some right-wing politicians that the allegations were fabricated.
Supporters of the far right have held protests in support of the five accused reservists outside Sde Teiman prison.
In July, before her resignation, at a fiery committee hearing at Israel's parliament, Hanoch Milwidsky, a politician from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's right-wing Likud party, was challenged over whether raping a detainee was acceptable.
"Shut up, shut up," he shouted. "Yes, everything is legitimate if they are Nukhba [elite Hamas fighters who took part in the 7 October attacks]. Everything."
A recent opinion poll by the widely respected Israel Democracy Institute indicated that the majority of the Israeli public oppose investigating soldiers when they are suspected of having abused Palestinians from Gaza.


Ahmed, not his real name, lives in the West Bank with his wife and 11 children.
He was arrested by soldiers in January 2024 and was found guilty of incitement to terrorism, after making social media posts praising the 7 October Hamas-led attacks, in which around 1,200 people, mostly Israelis, were killed and a further 251 were taken hostage.
He was sentenced to one year in prison and fined 3,000 shekels ($935, £700).
He alleges serious sexual abuse while in Israeli detention.
"The prison guards, three of them, took me into a bathroom and stripped me completely naked before forcing me to the ground," Ahmed said in an interview at his home.
"They put my head in the toilet bowl and a massive man, maybe 150kg (330lb), stood on my head, so I was bent over. Then, I heard the voice of someone talking to the prison dog. The dog was named Messi, like the footballer."
He then detailed how he said the dog was used to sexually humiliate him. He said his trousers and underwear were removed and the dog mounted his back.
"I could feel its breath... then it jumped on me... I started to scream. The more I screamed, the more they beat me until I almost lost consciousness."
During his time in detention, Ahmed also said the guards would beat him on a regular basis, including on his genitals.
He said he was released 12 days after the alleged sexual abuse, after serving his full sentence.
We asked Ahmed if there were any medical documents regarding his claims, but he said he did not have any.
We contacted the IPS to ask for a response to Ahmed's allegations, and if an investigation had been launched into his alleged abuse, but we did not receive a reply.
There are over 9,000 Palestinian security detainees held in Israeli jails, nearly double the number before the 7 October attacks. Many have never been charged.
The recent report by the UN Committee against Torture unequivocally condemned the 7 October attacks, and also expressed deep concern over Israel's response and the huge loss of human life in Gaza.
Some of the hostages abducted on 7 October and survivors of the attacks have also made allegations of sexual abuse, rape and torture by Hamas and its allies.
Hamas has also publicly executed Palestinians in Gaza accused of collaborating with Israel.
There are also claims of abuse within prisons run by the Palestinian Authority (PA), which is in charge in parts of the West Bank not under Israeli control and is a political and military rival of Hamas.
The BBC has spoken to a former detainee who said PA security officers beat him and used electric shocks on him.
The BBC has contacted the PA for comment but received no reply. It has previously denied allegations of systematic abuse.

Getty ImagesIn a report submitted in October to the UN Committee against Torture, five Israeli human rights groups said there had been "a dramatic escalation in torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment across all detention facilities, carried out with near total impunity and implemented as state policy targeting Palestinians".
Adalah, the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel, Parents Against Child Detention, HaMoked, and Physicians for Human Rights–Israel presented evidence that they said showed Israel had "dismantled existing safeguards and now employs torture throughout the entire detention process - from arrest to imprisonment - targeting Palestinians under occupation and Palestinian citizens, with senior officials sanctioning these abuses while judicial and administrative mechanisms fail to intervene".
The report said such practices had resulted in a surge of Palestinian deaths in custody, with at least 94 deaths in Israeli custody documented between the start of the Gaza war and the end of August 2025.
Israel's ambassador to the UN in Geneva rejected the allegations made before the UN Committee against Torture as "disinformation".
Daniel Meron told the expert panel last month that Israel was "committed to upholding its obligations in line with our moral values and principles, even in the face of the challenges posed by a terrorist organisation".
He said the relevant Israeli agencies complied fully with the prohibition against torture and that Israel rejected allegations of systematic use of sexual and gender-based violence.

Getty ImagesThe ousted chair of Ben & Jerry's has accused the company which owns the brand of threatening to launch a public smear campaign against her.
Anuradha Mittal, who chaired Ben & Jerry's independent board for seven years, told the BBC that Magnum had threatened to publish "defamatory statements" about her if she did not step down from her role.
It relates to an increasingly bitter dispute between the Vermont-based activist ice cream maker and its owner over the independence of the board and its freedom to pursue its social missions.
Magnum said in its view Mittal "no longer met the criteria to serve" on the board, following an investigation it had commissioned by external advisors.
In a statement on Monday, Magnum outlined changes to the way the board operates including a nine-year limit for people serving on it.
As well as Mittal, who said she had received a letter telling her she had been removed from the board, two other board members will be required to leave as a result.
It also said that an audit of the Ben & Jerry's Foundation, a charitable organisation, had "identified a series of material deficiencies in financial controls, governance and other compliance policies, including conflicts of interest".
Speaking to the BBC's World Business Report, Mittal said there had been an escalation of the friction between Ben & Jerry's board and its owner, over the brand's independence, social mission and integrity.
"For several years now, we have been resisting their overreach, including their efforts to muzzle us from speaking out for human rights, for peace," she said.
The brand, which is also known for the playful puns in its flavour names, was owned by Unilever until earlier this month, when the household goods giant spun off its ice cream unit to create, Magnum Ice Cream Company.
Ben & Jerry's was sold to Unilever in 2000 in a deal which allowed it to retain an independent board and the right to make decisions about its social mission.
This was a frequent source of friction while owned by Unilever.
In 2021, Ben & Jerry's refused to sell its products in areas occupied by Israel, resulting in its Israeli operation being sold by Unilever to a local licensee, and in October, Ben Cohen said it was prevented from launching an ice cream which expressed "solidarity with Palestine".
This row has now been inherited by Magnum, culminating in this week's stand-off, and Mittal's removal.
"This October, Unilever-Magnum executives threatened me with defamatory statements in their forthcoming prospectus if I did not resign," Mittal said.
"At the same time, they offered me a prominent role in a multimillion dollar Unilever-funded non-profit if I gave in," she added.
She said she had turned down that "inappropriate" offer.
Magnum is now the world's largest ice cream maker, with its brands include Cornetto, Wall's and Carte D'Or.
Mittal, founder of the Oakland Institute, a human rights and development focused think tank in California, described Magnum's approach as a "public smear campaign" and said the allegations were unfounded.
One of the firm's original founders Jerry Greenfield left the firm in September saying he felt its social mission was being stifled. The other, Ben Cohen, has also hit out at Magnum saying it was "not fit" to own the firm.
In a statement a spokesperson for Magnum said the steps it had taken were aimed at strengthening corporate governance and to "reaffirm the responsibilities of the Board of Ben & Jerry's".
"These actions aim to preserve and enhance the brand's historical social mission and safeguard its essential integrity," a spokesperson said.
When Ben & Jerry's was created in 1978 it made its mark selling flavours such as Cherry Garcia named after the guitarist from rock band Grateful Dead, Bohemian Raspberry, a play on the Queen track, and the now discontinued Vermonty Python.
Magnum said in its statement: "We remain unequivocally committed to Ben & Jerry's three-part mission – product, economic and social – and its progressive, non-partisan values.
"Ben & Jerry's continues to advocate for a range of causes and be a bold voice for social justice, as a glance at its social media channels demonstrates."

US Immigration and Customs EnforcementThe US justice department has launched a civil legal case against a man accused of being a Bosnian war criminal to revoke his citizenship.
Kemal Mrndzic did not disclose during his US immigration process that he served as a guard at Bosnia's notorious Celebici prison camp, where atrocities were committed, the department said.
A UN war crimes tribunal found that people held in the camp during the Bosnian war were killed, tortured, sexually assaulted, beaten and subjected to cruel and inhuman treatment.
US President Donald Trump's administration would not allow people who "persecute others" to "reap the benefits of refuge in the US", justice department official Brett Shumate said.
The assistant attorney general added that the legal case showed the value that the US government placed on "the integrity of its naturalisation process".
Mrndzic was found guilty by a jury in October 2024 on several counts of criminal fraud and misrepresentation in relation to his successful application for a US passport and naturalisation certificate.
He failed to disclose to immigration authorities the nature and timing of his military service, or that "he persecuted Bosnian-Serb inmates as a prison guard", the justice department said.
Mrndzic was sentenced in January 2025 to more than five years in prison.

US Immigration and Customs EnforcementThe Bosnian war followed the break-up of Soviet Yugoslavia in the early 1990s and led to the Srebrenica massacre in July 1995.
Srebrenica, recognised by the UN as a genocide, became known as Europe's worst mass atrocity since World War Two, after Bosnian-Serb forces systematically murdered more than 8,000 Bosniak Muslim men and boys.
The Celebici prison camp was operated by Bosniak and Bosnian-Croat forces, who were also responsible for widespread killings in areas they controlled.
Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic was tried for war crimes and genocide, and the massacre led to the US-brokered Dayton Peace Agreement on 14 December 1995.


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美国总统特朗普周四正式签署美国『2026财年国防授权法案』,该法包括抵制中国威胁,强化台湾防卫等内容,并要求国家情报总监公布中共高层财富报告。中国外交部发言人周五指责该法“渲染”“中国威胁”,干涉中国内政。
该法“关于中共领导层财富的报告”规定,从法案颁布之日起一年内,国家情报总监应与国务卿和战争部长协商,在国家情报总监办公室公开网站上公布一份关于中国共产党领导层财富的报告,涉及范围包括中共总书记、中共政治局常委、中共中央政治局全体委员。
该法要求相关情报机构披露上述领导人直接或间接拥有或控制的实物和金融资产证据,确定他们的财富来源,包括在中国以外司法管辖区持有的商业资产、投资及金融账户,识别用于掩饰这类财富和资产所有权的金融代理人、商业伙伴或其他控制的实体;分析这些财富如何影响中共外交政策和扩大全球影响力等。
美国新版国防法还包括为抵制中国威胁,为台湾安全合作计划提供全额10亿美元拨款,授权为美军继续对台训练提供资金,以抵抗中国侵扰及恶意影响力行动;要求五角大楼寻求与台湾建立联合计划,部署无人机和反无人机系统。
该法还要求制定增加美台海巡整合训练机会的计划,计划内容应涵盖2026至2030财政年度的预估成本,包括派遣美国海岸防卫队行动训练团队赴台,以提升台湾海事安全、执法及嚇阻能力的相关费用。『国防授权法』还包含『不歧视台湾法案』,支持台湾加入国际货币基金组织。
中国外交部发言人郭嘉昆19日在回答记者提问时表示,美国新版『国防授权法案』渲染中国威胁,干涉中国内政,损害中国主权、安全、发展利益,中方对此强烈不满、坚决反对,已多次向美方提出严正交涉。中方要求美方“不得实施上述法案涉华消极条款,并消除负面影响。”中方威胁称,如美方“一意孤行”,中方将采取坚决有力措施。
中国国台办发言人陈斌华也于19日回答记者时抨击美国2026国防授权法案“塞入涉台错误内容”,“企图进一步武装台湾”,中方“坚决反对”。

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