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Today — 18 December 2025Main stream

Zelensky gives stark warning as EU leaders start crunch talks on Russia's frozen cash

18 December 2025 at 19:25
Ukrinform/NurPhoto Two men - one in a three-piece suit in grey, the other in black stand in front of colourful flagsUkrinform/NurPhoto
Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever is yet to be convinced that the money held in Belgium should be loaned to Ukraine (file pic)

European Union leaders begin two days of talks in Brussels with a momentous decision to be taken on whether to loan tens of billions of euros in frozen Russian assets to Ukraine to fund its military and economic needs.

Most of Russia's €210bn (£185bn; $245bn) worth of assets in the EU are held by Belgium-based organisation Euroclear, and so far Belgium and some other members of the bloc have said they are opposed to using the cash.

Without a boost in funding, Ukraine's finances are set to run dry in a matter of months.

One European government official described being "cautiously optimistic, not overly optimistic" that a deal would be agreed. Russia has warned the EU against using its money.

It has filed a lawsuit against Euroclear in a Moscow court in a bid to get its money back.

The Brussels summit comes at a pivotal moment.

US President Donald Trump has said a deal to end the war - which began with Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 - is "closer now than we have been ever".

Although Russia has not responded to the latest peace proposals, the Kremlin has stressed that plans for a European-led multinational force for Ukraine supported by the US would not be acceptable.

President Vladimir Putin made his feelings towards Europe clear on Wednesday, when he said the continent was in a state of "total degradation" and "European piglets" - a derogatory description of Ukraine's European allies - were hoping to profit from Russia's collapse.

Alexander KAZAKOV/POOL/AFP A man with a glass stands on the right of two men in uniformAlexander KAZAKOV/POOL/AFP
Those in favour of loaning Ukraine the money believe it will help deter Putin from continuing the war

The European Commission - the EU's executive arm - has proposed loaning Kyiv about €90bn (£79bn) over the next two years - out of the €210bn of Russian assets sitting in Europe.

That is about two-thirds of the €137bn that Kyiv is thought to need to get through 2026 and 2027.

Until now the EU has handed Ukraine the interest generated by the cash but not the cash itself.

"This is a crunch time for Ukraine to keep fighting for the next year," a Finnish government official told the BBC. "There are of course peace negotiations but this gives Ukraine leverage to say 'we're not desperate and we have the funds to continue fighting'."

Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen says it will also ramp up the cost of war for Russia.

Russia's frozen assets are not the only option on the table for EU leaders. Another idea, backed by Belgium, is based on the EU borrowing the money on the international markets.

However, that would require a unanimous vote and Hungary's Viktor Orban has made it clear he will not allow any more EU money to help Ukraine.

For Ukraine, the hours ahead are significant and President Volodymyr Zelensky is expected to attend the EU summit.

Ahead of the Brussels meeting, EU leaders were keen to stress the momentous nature of the decision.

"We know the urgency. It is acute. We all feel it. We all see it," von der Leyen told the European Parliament.

EPA European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks during a debate on 'Preparation of the European Council meeting of 18-19 DecemberEPA
Ursula von der Leyen told the European Parliament that two choices were on the table for EU leaders

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has played a leading role in pushing for the Russian assets to be used, telling the Bundestag on the eve of the summit it was about sending a "clear signal" to Moscow that continuing the war was pointless.

EU officials are confident they have a sound legal basis to use the frozen Russian assets, but so far Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever remains unconvinced.

His Defence Minister Theo Francken warned ahead of the talks that it would be a big mistake to loan the Euroclear cash.

Hungary is seen as the biggest opponent of the move and, ahead of the summit, Prime Minister Orban and his entourage even suggested that the frozen assets plan had been removed from the summit agenda. A European Commission official stressed that was not the case and it would be a matter for the 27 member states at the summit.

Slovakia's Robert Fico has also opposed using the Russian assets, if it means the money being used to procure weapons rather than for reconstruction needs.

When the pivotal vote does finally take place, it will require a majority of about two-thirds of member states to go through. Whatever happens, European Council President António Costa has promised not to go over the heads of the Belgians.

"We're not going to vote against Belgium," he told Belgian public broadcaster RTBF. "We'll continue to work very intensively with the Belgian government because we don't want to approve something that might not be acceptable for Belgium."

Belgium will also be aware that ratings agency Fitch has placed Euroclear on a negative watch, partly because of "low" legal risks to its balance sheet from the European Commission's plans to use the Russian assets. Euroclear's chief executive has also warned against the plan.

"There are many hiccups and obstacles of course still on the way. We have to find a way to respond to Belgium's worries," the Finnish official added. "We are on the same side as Belgium. We will find a solution together to make sure all the risks are checked as much as they can be checked."

However, Belgium is not the only country to have doubts, and a majority is not guaranteed.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has told Italian MPs she will endorse the deal "if the legal basis is solid".

"If the legal basis for this initiative were not solid, we would be handing Russia its first real victory since the beginning of this conflict."

Malta, Bulgaria and the Czech Republic are also said to be unconvinced by the controversial proposals.

If the deal is passed and the Russian assets are given to Ukraine, the worst-case scenario for Belgium would be one in which a court would order it to hand the money back to Russia.

Some countries have said they would be prepared to provide billions of euros in financial guarantees, but Belgium will want to see the numbers add up.

At any rate, Commission officials are confident that the only way for Russia to get it back would be by paying reparations to Ukraine - at which point Ukraine would hand its "reparations loan" back to the EU.

Duke of Marlborough accused of strangling estranged wife

18 December 2025 at 20:40
PA Media The Duke of Marlborough faces the camera, not smiling, in an outdoor location. He wears a dark grey suit, light blue shirt and dark blue tie, and has fair, slightly untidy, hair.PA Media
The Duke of Marlborough was due to appear in court on Thursday morning

A court hearing for the Duke of Marlborough on charges of intentional strangulation has been adjourned.

Charles James Spencer-Churchill, 70, formerly known as Jamie Blandford, is accused of attacking the same person in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, three times over an 18-month period.

He was due to appear at Oxford Magistrates' Court on Thursday morning charged with three counts of non-fatal intentional strangulation.

Thames Valley Police said a new court date had yet to be confirmed.

The attacks are alleged to have taken place between November 2022 and May 2024, police said.

The twice-married aristocrat, formerly known as the Marquess of Blandford, was arrested on 13 May 2024.

He inherited his dukedom in 2014, following the death of his father, the 11th Duke of Marlborough.

He is a first cousin, three times removed, of Sir Winston Churchill and a distant relative of the late Princess Diana through the Spencer family.

His ancestral family home is Blenheim Palace in Woodstock – Sir Winston's birthplace - which is owned and managed by Blenheim Palace Heritage Foundation.

The foundation said it was "unable to comment on the charges, which relate to the duke's personal conduct and private life, and which are subject to live, criminal proceedings".

Blenheim Palace An aerial view of golden sunlight on part of Blenheim Palace, showing tall pillars beneath a carved pediment.Blenheim Palace
Former Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill was born at Blenheim Palace

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How is flu wave affecting hospitals in your area? Use our tool to check

18 December 2025 at 20:37
PA Media A general view of staff on a NHS hospital ward.PA Media

Hospitals across the UK are seeing high levels of flu cases this winter.

The NHS in England has said it is on "on high alert" after seeing the highest ever number of flu cases in hospital for this time of year, in the week ending 14 December.

You can use our tool below to find out how many flu patients there are in hospitals near you.

About the data

Figures relating to flu cases in hospitals are collected in different ways in each UK nation.

In England it is the weekly number of beds occupied by patients with a laboratory confirmed flu case.

This data is provided at NHS Trust level. Trusts are organisations which include hospitals, community services and providers of other forms of patient care. You can find which trust your local hospital belongs to on the NHS England website.

In Scotland the figures relate to the number of patients admitted to hospital with a laboratory confirmed flu case taken between 14 days before the admission date and 48 hours after the admission date.

In Wales it is the weekly number of patients in hospital with a laboratory confirmed flu case taken from 28 days before the admission date if tested outside of hospital, or within two days after admission.

Figures for Scotland and Wales are provided at NHS Health Board level. Health boards are responsible for all frontline healthcare services. You can find which Health Board your local services belong to on the NHS Scotland or NHS Wales websites.

In Northern Ireland the figures show the number of new flu cases admitted to hospital that were acquired outside of hospital.

This data is provided at Health and Social Care Trust level. Trusts are responsible for providing local and regional health services. You can find which trust your local hospital belongs to on the NI direct website.

How the court backlog became a huge problem - and why it's so hard to fix

18 December 2025 at 19:16
Getty Images BBC Verify-branded image showing five barristers, both male and female, facing away from the camera wearing wigs and black robes.Getty Images

More than 79,600 criminal cases are now caught in the courts backlog in England and Wales, new figures show.

The Crown Court backlog has been at a record high since early 2023 and is projected to hit 100,000 by 2028, according to the Ministry of Justice (MoJ). The delays mean that for some serious crimes charged today the victims and suspects could be left waiting years for justice as they are unlikely to see the case come to trial before 2030.

This crisis has prompted the government to announce radical reforms to the criminal courts, including removing juries - a fundamental part of our criminal justice system - from a number of trials in England and Wales in an attempt to speed up justice and slash the backlog.

The latest MoJ figures show there has been a huge growth in cases taking two years or more to conclude, something that was a rarity before 2010 budget cuts began to bite, and which was later exacerbated by the pandemic and other factors.

About a quarter of violence and drug offences, many of which do not require the defendant to be detained pre-trial, have been in the backlog for at least a year. More than 30% of sexual offences have been in the system for at least that long. For context, in 2019 there were around 200 sexual offences that had been open for more than a year. Now there are more than 4,000.

It means the situation has become significantly worse for victims, defendants, witnesses and everyone else who works in the system, and shows the scale of the problem the government is now grappling with.

Violent and sexual offences make up almost half the crown court backlog
Cases outstanding in England and Wales September 2025
Violence: 24,703
Sexual offences: 14,180
Drug offences: 10,683
Miscellaneous crimes: 8,123
Theft offences: 5,567
Possession of weapons: 3,380
Public order: 3,311
Robbery: 2,688
Fraud offences: 1,914
Other: 5,070
Source: Ministry of Justice

So how did we get here? At the heart of this story is funding - and the lack of it - which started in 2010.

Back then the coalition government pledged to slash spending to balance the books - and the MoJ took a huge cut to its £9bn budget. It means its total spending today is £13bn, which is £4.5bn lower in real terms than it would have been had it kept pace with the average government department, according to the Institute of Fiscal Studies.

Why did that cut happen?

When the coalition government began making austerity cuts, the MoJ took a bigger hit than some other departments such as health and defence. It delivered some of its cuts by shutting court rooms, and by 2022, eight crown court centres and more than 160 magistrates courts were gone, according to ministerial answers to parliamentary questions.

Ministers also introduced a cap on the number of days judges are paid to sit in court and hear cases, to help reduce spending.

In 2016-17 there were 107,863 of these "sitting days" recorded, but that had fallen to 81,899 by the eve of the pandemic. If there's no judge, there's no hearing, which meant individual courtrooms were left idle even if the rest of a court complex was still hearing cases.

Then the Covid pandemic happened, which left all Crown Courts closed for two months during the first lockdown other than for urgent and essential work. When they reopened, many individual courtrooms could not be used for trials because they were too small to comply with social distancing requirements. Everything slowed to a snail's pace and the backlog exploded.

This is when the unintended consequences of earlier closures began to bite harder. Take for example Blackfriars Crown Court in London. Its nine court rooms were once an important centre for serious organised crime cases, but ministers decided to close it in 2019 and hoped to sell the land.

Many of its cases were shifted to Snaresbrook in east London, but since the pandemic it has been overwhelmed. At the end of September 2019 it had 1,500 cases on its books, official figures show, but as of September this year it was juggling more than 4,200.

Before the pandemic, only 5% of outstanding cases for violence across England and Wales had been in the system for more than a year - now a quarter of cases have taken that long. There have been similar increases in the length of time taken for criminal damage, possession of weapons and drug offence cases.

Increase in cases in crown court backlog for at least a year
Outstanding cases, taking one year or more to conclude, England and Wales
Fraud offences: 2019: 16%, 2025: 39%
Sexual offences: 2019: 7%, 2025: 31%
Miscellaneous crimes: 2019: 9%, 2025: 29%
Possession of weapons: 2019: 5%, 2025: 27%
Drug offences: 2019: 7%, 2025: 25%
Criminal damage/arson: 2019:5 %, 2025: 25%
Violence: 2019: 5%, 2025: 25%
Public order: 2019: 5%, 2025: 24%
Theft offences: 2019: 4%, 2025: 20%
Robbery: 2019: 4%, 2025: 19%
Summary non-motoring: 2019: 7%, 2025: 17%
Summary motoring: 2019: 2%, 2025: 11%
Source: Ministry of Justice

During the Covid pandemic, temporary "Nightingale courts" were introduced to help alleviate pressure on the court system by keeping some cases moving, sitting for 10,000 days between July 2020 and 2024.

But they could not deal with serious crime involving custody because they were often in conference centres or hotels with no cells or appropriate security. Today there are still five Nightingale courts operating, all of which are due to close by March 2026.

Sometimes the MoJ re-opened a court it had closed. Chichester's Crown Court was shut down, despite local opposition, in 2018. It was temporarily re-opened to help deal with the overflow of cases from Guildford 40 miles away - and its future remains uncertain, despite the backlogs.

Getty Images David Lammy standing in front of a black van and smiling. He is holding a royal blue folder. Getty Images
David Lammy has announced radical reforms to the courts system

But there is another element that has made everything much harder to fix.

The national legal aid system pays for barristers and solicitors to act for a defendant who cannot afford to pay for their own lawyer. It both helps ensure a fair trial and keeps cases moving through the courts, but the funding for this system has been repeatedly cut or frozen over the past 25 years, which in turn has led to a fall in barristers taking criminal cases.

The National Audit Office found there has been a real term reduction in legal aid spending by the MoJ of £728m between 2012-13 and 2022-23.

And there has also been a 12% fall in the number of barristers doing criminal work between 2018-19 and 2024-25, according to the Criminal Bar Association.

In 2021, the government was advised to inject £135m extra funding into legal aid but it did not go far enough for many in the profession and triggered months-long strike action from defence barristers the following year. This created a second wave of chaos in the courts because, just like in the pandemic, cases could not progress through the system.

The shortages in judges and lawyers contrast sharply with what happened to policing. In 2019 former prime minister Boris Johnson promised to hire 20,000 extra police officers across England and Wales, reversing the fall that began during austerity cuts. That meant more suspects charged and sent to trial - but critics said there was no corresponding planning for how this would impact the courts.

Prosecutions can also take longer because of changes to how evidence is gathered by police, particularly involving our digital lives. Many cases today, especially those involving serious sexual offences, involve a huge amount of evidence taken from digital sources such as mobile phone chats, which can take months to comb through ahead of a trial and more time going through it with a jury.

More than 4,000 sexual offences in court system for at least a year
Cases outstanding at crown courts, England and Wales, 2016 to 2025 as of 30 September
A bar chart shows 5,783 outstanding under one year in 2016 with 569 at 1-2 years and 80 over two years.
This decreases until 2019 when there were 2,900 under one year, 163 1-2 years and 52 two years or more.
It then climbs year on year to 9,460 under one year in 2025, 3,151 1-2-years and 1,191 two years or more.

The backlog also has a knock-on effect on prisons. There are nearly 17,700 people on remand in England and Wales, almost double the number in 2019 . This includes people who have been convicted of a crime but have not yet been sentenced, and nearly 12,000 people who are waiting for a trial.

People held on remand accounts for around 20% of the prison population. The number of prisoners in England and Wales is already projected to top 100,000 by 2030 according to the MoJ.

Line chart showing prision population projected to rise to more than 100,000 by 2030. 
The chart has historical data from 2024 and 2025 sitting between 85-90,000 and a projection showing numbers rising steadily to 103,000

That crisis led Sir Keir Starmer's governent to introduce an early release scheme for some offenders last year and pledge wider justice reforms.

If people on remand don't have their cases completed then they can't be released or sent to serve a sentence, which means prisons will quickly fill up again. But while the courts try to prioritise remand cases at the expense of everyone else entering the system, the growing queue of cases has become ever longer.

Briton who fought in Ukraine jailed for 13 years by Russia

18 December 2025 at 20:50
Anadolu via Getty Images Ukrainian military forces in the Donetsk area in 2024 (file image) Anadolu via Getty Images
Ukraine forces pictured in combat in the Donbas region - Hayden Davies was reportedly captured in the area in 2024 or early 2025 (file image)

A Briton who fought in Ukraine has been sentenced to 13 years in a maximum-security prison, the Russian Prosecutor-General's office has said.

Hayden Davies, a former British soldier who Russia has called a mercenary, was reportedly captured in Ukraine's Donbas region in late 2024 or early 2025 while serving with the country's foreign legion.

He was tried in a Russian-controlled court in the city of Donetsk, which is currently occupied by Moscow.

The UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) has been contacted for comment. It had previously described charges against Mr Davies and another Briton captured in Ukraine as "false" and said the pair were prisoners of war.

The FCDO condemned the detention of both Mr Davies and James Anderson.

"They are not mercenaries," it said earlier this year. "They are prisoners of war.

"Ukraine has confirmed that both are members of Ukrainian Armed Forces. They must be provided all the rights and protections afforded to prisoners of war under the Geneva Conventions," it added.

In a statement, Russian prosecutors said Mr Davies joined the Ukrainian army in August 2024 and "took part in military operations against the Russian armed forces on the territory of [Donetsk Region]".

In court footage released by prosecutors, a man with a British accent speaks via a translator from inside a barred cage, which is standard practice for many Russian hearings.

The man said he was a member of the Ukrainian Army's foreign legion and travelled to Ukraine by bus via Poland.

He said he was paid $400 (£300) or $500 a month as a salary. When asked if he pleaded guilty to the charge, the man said "yeah" and nodded his head.

It is not clear whether he was speaking under duress.

Mr Anderson was jailed for 19 years in March after being charged with terrorism and mercenary activity.

The 22-year-old was the first British national to be convicted by Russia during the war.

The 'fed up' Scottish town that voted for Reform UK

18 December 2025 at 14:16
Watch: The 'fed up' Scottish town that voted for Reform UK

Reform UK threw a Christmas party last weekend, and they had more to celebrate than just the festive season.

A few days earlier the party pulled off a surprise victory in a council by-election in the ward of Whitburn and Blackburn in West Lothian. This was their first win in Scotland.

We're only a few months away from a Scottish election, and we would expect to see in this part of the country a tussle involving SNP and Labour.

The outcome of one local by-election does not represent a complete shift in Scottish politics - of the 33 West Lothian Council seats the SNP and Labour dominate, sharing 26 between them. However, this is a moment nonetheless.

The exterior of Andy's Coffee House - a typical High street frontage with large windows and a blue and white sign, Cars are parked on the road outside and lights on in the shop make it look inviting.
Andy's Coffee House was a popular stop for campaigning candidates

So what has led a former mining town between Glasgow and Edinburgh to turn to the party of Nigel Farage?

In the words of multiple people we spoke to, it's all quite simple - they're "fed up".

Farage's previous political projects - Ukip and the Brexit Party - never got much of a foothold in Scotland. But Reform UK seems to be bucking that trend.

Numerous Scottish opinion polls have suggested that they're in second place behind the SNP, hovering around the same levels of support as Labour. At this point, it seems likely they'll return a decent number of MSPs at the Holyrood election next May.

Small businesses

Our morning began in Andy's Coffee House on Whitburn's main street.

GB News – the favoured channel of Nigel Farage – was on the TV as the owner Andy Valentini made the coffees.

Andy told us that he allowed Labour, the SNP and Reform to leave leaflets out in his café during the by-election campaign.

He wasn't hugely surprised by the result. After all, he explains "the bulk of the customers were actually taking Reform leaflets".

And he's glad to see this new-ish party start to have some electoral success in Scotland, insisting that the country needs "a huge, big change".

Andy accuses Labour of "destroying the country" when it comes to their approach to small businesses.

Interior view of Andy's Coffee House shows two women sitting at one table and a young man at another. The walls are light yellow and there are tinsel decorations pinned around them. We see menus on the wooden tables and a counter at the back of the room.
Owner Andy said his customers picked up Reform UK leaflets more than other parties' literature

He says his electricity bills have gone from £300 a month to £900 in the past few years.

And increases in the minimum wage and employer national insurance have resulted in him "taking a big hit".

Longer term, current costs mean that he doesn't think his business is sustainable.

Migration is also an area that the café owner thinks needs addressed.

He insists he backs legal migration, pointing out his grandfather moved from Italy to Scotland, but says "I'd like to see [Reform] stopping illegal migration full stop".

"Nigel Farage is the man to do it", he adds.

'Everyone's skint'

A portrait shot of Darren Ainslie, a light blonde-haired man wearing a black zipper top.Outside, smiles for the camera while behind him a white pick-up truck sits outside an optician.
Darren Ainslie is concerned about small boats and thinks Reform UK are a party of change

Andy isn't alone. There are others we spoke to in Whitburn who like the approach that the Reform UK leader is taking.

Darren Ainslie, who popped in for a roll on his way to pick up waste in his van, complains that "everyone's skint".

He's also concerned about people arriving in the UK via small boats, saying "you don't know who you're getting".

Darren says he'll be voting Reform UK at the next Holyrood election.

"Our governments now are not listening. And if this is what it takes to make them listen then Reform's got to be the way to go."

But Reform are by no means universally popular in this town.

Susan Snow – a retired nursey operator – told us she wasn't pleased when the party won last week's by-election.

She said she doesn't like Nigel Farage and questioned how genuine he is.

Another woman we spoke to said that Reform wanted to "bring things back to the old days, the 1930s" and questioned how inclusive the party was.

Susan Snow, a retired lady with short blonde hair and glasses smiles at the camera in the local main street, wearing a blue winter jacket and a blue and white neck scarf. There is a pub behind her but the name sign is blurred.
Susan Snow is not impressed by Nigel Farage and questioned if he was genuine

Regardless of their view on Reform, no one we spoke to seemed particularly politically satisfied at the moment.

We spent around 90 minutes on the main street talking to passers-by. Some were happy to give their views on camera, others didn't want to be recorded.

But the phrase that came up time and time again was "fed up".

People were "fed up" with the main parties, "fed up" with what they regarded as poor-quality public services, and "fed up" with what they perceived as a lack of change.

And there were specifics. A number of people brought up migration and questioned why asylum seekers were being housed in hotels.

The UK government said it aimed to end this practice by the time of the next general election.

There were also complaints about the NHS, potholes, homelessness and the benefits bill.

We found no shortage of residents who were at least sympathetic to Reform UK's approach.

And they weren't all former Labour or Conservative voters.

A street with shops on either side and cars going in both directions
The people of Whitburn seem "fed up" with what politics is bringing them

One woman told us that she had been a "massive SNP supporter" until a few years ago, but was now "a wee bit homeless" and understood why local people were opting for Reform.

Though she questioned how much she personally trusted the new right-wing party.

In the aftermath of last week's by-election, the SNP said they had run a campaign focused on "the real challenges faced by our communities".

Scottish Labour acknowledged that voters were frustrated, with Deputy Leader Jackie Baillie saying that "politics must aspire to being more than Reform and the SNP talking up division for their own political gain."

The polls do seem to suggest that Reform UK are now serious players in Scotland, on the verge of delivering a significant number of MSPs next May.

And the mounting evidence that some Scots seem willing to give them a shot injects a massive dose of unpredictability into the looming election campaign.

Don't feel awkward - How to handle festive fallouts with neighbours

18 December 2025 at 08:11
Getty Images Semi detached house pictured at night with various christmas light decorations including a full santas sleigh and reindeer on the front grass surrounded by light up presents and a huge 'merry christmas' sign lit up above the door.Getty Images

It might be a neighbour's car blocking your driveway, music vibrating through the walls, or a flashing inflatable Santa lighting up your bedroom at 3am.

Whatever the issue, you're unlikely to be alone. Neighbourly tensions often rise during the festive season and, while raising concerns can feel awkward, there are practical and legal ways to deal with disputes.

Here's how to deal with festive fallouts and keep the peace this Christmas.

Use a light timer

There's no law that specifies when Christmas lights must be turned off. However, artificial light can be classed as a statutory nuisance if it "interferes with the use or enjoyment of a home" or is likely to "injure health".

"Speaking to neighbours in advance or using a timer to switch lights off at unsociable hours can help avoid problems," lawyer Denise Nurse told the BBC's Morning Live.

Some lights are more disruptive than others. Sleep specialist Dr Nerina Ramlakhan says bright, flashing or blue-toned lights are particularly problematic.

"These wavelengths trigger photoreceptors in the eyes that suppress melatonin and shift our sleep-wake cycles," she says.

If you're affected, she recommends starting with a polite conversation. "They may not realise their lights are causing disruption and would be happy to make adjustments once they know," she says.

If that fails, you can complain to your local council, who are obliged to investigate. If the council agrees the lights amount to a statutory nuisance, it can issue an abatement notice which if ignored could result in a fine.

Warn them there will be noise

Even if you're only planning a one-off celebration, Nurse advises letting neighbours know in advance that they can expect some extra noise.

Jon from east London, who enjoys hosting parties with his wife Sharon, says he always does this.

"It's polite to let them know and apologise in advance if it disturbs them. We'll normally turn the music down by 11 or midnight - or sometimes just invite them to join us."

If you're affected by noise, Nurse recommends asking them to turn it down in the first instance. If that doesn't work you can contact your local council under the Environmental Protection Act to report excessive noise.

Parking can also be a point of contention over the festive period.

Doug, who lives in Windsor says neighbours and their visitors often block his driveway or access path. "It really winds me up," he says, explaining how his family have to walk across the garden or struggle to get out.

"I don't approach my neighbours because I always hope they'll realise how inconsiderate it is," he adds. "But it keeps happening."

"Public roads are public roads, but parking on your driveway is trespassing," Nurse says, suggesting putting up signs to help deter the behaviour.

If the problem continues, she suggsts contacting your local council.

Dumping your Christmas tree is fly-tipping

Getty Images Used christmas tree lying on a concrete pavement after celebration having been dumped on the floor.Getty Images

Lobbing a Christmas tree into a park or over a fence might feel tempting once the festivities are over, but it counts as fly-tipping which is illegal and can result in fines, says Nurse.

Not all councils offer a scheme for recycling your Christmas tree but most in the UK do through drop off points or collections.

You can find your local scheme using websites like Recycle now, by entering your post code and finding your local drop-off or collection point or by checking your local council's website.

Alternatively, some charities offer collection for a donation or local garden centres may chip up your old trees for mulch.

It's not just trees that cause problems. Nurse says that households generate around a third more waste during the festive period which can often means bins spill over.

"Talk to your neighbours, and ask them to move anything that's causing an issue," she advises.

If you still can't resolve it

If you've tried talking and things still aren't improving or last beyond the festive period, Nurse recommends seeking help from Citizens Advice.

Each nation has a service that connects neighbours with trained, neutral mediators who help both sides reach a resolution.

Your local council may also be able to help you find a mediator, even if you're not a council tenant.

Citizens Advice advises keeping a detailed record of incidents, noting what happened, how long it lasted and how it affected you. When you report it let them know what steps you've taken to try and resolve it. Ask when you can expect a response and what to do if the problem gets worse.

'I've realised I can make a difference' - Sir Chris Hoy on terminal cancer diagnosis

18 December 2025 at 14:17
Sport Insight

I've realised I can make a difference - Hoy

  • Published
Sir Chris Hoy holding up two Olympic gold medals Image source, Getty Images

Sir Chris Hoy is in his kitchen, chatting about early-morning coffee and fry-ups.

And mindsets.

An Olympic champion's mindset to be exact.

An exacting, leave-no-stone-unturned, meticulous mindset that defined a career in which he won six gold medals and one silver across four Olympic Games.

This is the same mindset he is relying on more than ever to reframe his entire existence and purpose following a terminal cancer diagnosis.

"We normally have a fry-up for breakfast but, when you guys are here, we need to make an effort," he jokes.

The "you" in this instance are the BBC cameras that have been following Hoy and his family and friends for the past 12 months for the documentary Sir Chris Hoy: Cancer, Courage and Me.

The programme will be broadcast for the first time at 21:00 GMT on Thursday, 18 December on BBC One and available from 22:00 GMT on BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website and app.

It shows a hopeful, yet raw, portrayal of the realities of living with stage four cancer, while it also brings to life Hoy's realisation that he can use his platform as a force for raising awareness, and money, for other people living with the illness.

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Sir Chris Hoy: Cancer, Courage & Me

As he weighs his coffee – perhaps the number one area where Hoy's obsessive eye for detail manifests itself – the Scot is in an upbeat mood, laughing and joking with wife Sarra about their imagined usual morning scenario of a full English breakfast compared to the omelette and green homemade smoothie they are actually tucking into.

It has not been anywhere near this rosy for much of the past two years, however, as Hoy explains a few minutes later when the cameras are rolling properly.

"It's about five miles from the hospital back home," he says, describing his return journey from seeing doctors after learning of his cancer diagnosis in September 2023. "I just walked back in a daze. I don't remember the walk. I was just thinking, how am I going to tell Sarra? What am I going to say?

"As soon as I said the words, I broke down."

What Hoy had to articulate was a terminal cancer diagnosis. Incurable secondary bone cancer. Between two and four years to live.

"In my sporting career it used to be about process, not outcome," he says. "Focus on what you have control over. But if you win or lose, it's not life and death.

"[After the diagnosis] the stakes have changed dramatically. The principle is the same – but now it is life and death."

Hoy has shrewdly taken on support for this difficult time in his life.

Steve Peters is a man that Hoy knew could make a difference.

The list of sportspeople that Peters has worked with - the public list he is happy to talk about on the record - is a high-profile 'who's who' ranging from Steven Gerrard to Ronnie O'Sullivan.

The donkeys in the front paddock of the psychiatrist's countryside home bely that glitzy, glamourous list.

But their tranquil nature make complete sense when you spend a few hours in the company of Peters and Hoy.

Peters was Hoy's first port of call throughout his career when it came to training and calming his mind to be at its peak in and around Olympic competition.

He was also one of the first people Hoy called when he got his terminal diagnosis last year.

At first Peters was part of the firefighting phase of what Hoy's wife Sarra describes as a "deep grief" in the first few days post-diagnosis.

But in time, with Peters' help, Hoy set about finding a new purpose.

Firstly, it is to raise awareness of the limitations of the current provision for prostate cancer in the UK. Both Hoy's father and grandfather have had prostate cancer.

Understandably, given an earlier diagnosis could have shifted his diagnosis from terminal to manageable, the 49-year-old Scot argues eloquently that a national screening programme should be made a priority for men from their 45th birthday onwards.

But, crucially, his approach is also to show other people living with cancer that sport and exercise can still be a positive part of their lives, even through their treatment.

Peters explains: "What Chris did when he was presented with this illness is he said: 'Right, what's the plan?' After we worked through the initial stages of the shock and grief of it, then he came out the other side and he picked up on the purpose.

"And that was to reach other people. It became a mission for him."

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Sir Chris Hoy and his wife Lady Sarra recall the night they met

Peters knows all too well how unstoppable Hoy can be when a mission takes him over.

The pair have now worked together for more than 20 years, with perhaps their crowning moment coming at the Athens 2004 Games.

It was in the Greek capital that Peters' "pink elephant" technique helped Hoy win his first Olympic gold. In the run-up to Athens, Peters had encouraged Hoy to pre-empt a scenario in which his rivals broke the world record in the men's kilometre time trial before the Scot had his chance to ride. The scenario became reality on three occasions, but rather than falter, Hoy, the last to ride, responded with a world record of his own to take gold.

The mindset of that moment is one he is tapping into again with his approach to cancer. Control the controllables, but don't waste time worrying about the end result.

Just like in Athens.

"As I went to the start line, a personal best would have got me third," Hoy remembers.

"Recognising what you have control over is such an important part of life. Focus on what you have control over - but the outcome itself, you don't have control over.

"Steve helped me to access the best of myself, and get the best out of myself."

The BBC Breakfast and BBC Sport cameras witnessed Hoy, with the help of Lady Sarra - who herself is dealing with her own diagnosis of multiple sclerosis - making the best of his cancer diagnosis in the last 12 months.

They have followed Hoy and his family to doctor and physio appointments and out on mountain bike rides in Wales with a GB Olympic cycling A-list group of riders and friends.

That same cast list turned out in Glasgow in September as Hoy and a host of his supporters took his cycling fundraising event the Tour de Four from concept to delivery inside a few months.

'Overwhelming' response to Hoy mission

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Murray and Kennys on discovering 'superhero' Hoy’s cancer diagnosis

It is just after 9am in a back room of the Sir Chris Hoy Velodrome in Glasgow – a few minutes before Hoy's charity mass participation cycling event, the Tour de Four, is due to get under way.

The ride was set up, and given its title, in an effort to change perceptions around stage four cancer.

Every time the door opens, a member of British Olympic and Paralympic royalty walks through it.

Sir Mark Cavendish, Sir Jason Kenny, Becky James, Dani King, Sir Ben Ainslie, Sir Steve Redgrave, Dame Sarah Storey...

In and among the clip-clop of cycling cleats comes another sporting knight.

This one is wearing tennis shoes.

Hoy goes over to check in with Sir Andy Murray about his readiness and is met with a typical sardonic quip from his fellow Scot.

Hoy asks: "Are you feeling ready mate?"

"Well, I've got the kit," Murray responds.

As it turns out, the two-time Wimbledon champion was woefully ill-prepared – completing the ride in tennis shoes and boxer shorts. Not typical road cycling gear, but typical of the response of Hoy's friends to his diagnosis.

"The response of friends has been quite overwhelming at times," Hoy says.

The friend response has been mirrored by that of the public.

September's Tour de Four raised more than £3m for cancer charities across the UK.

However, the highs of that success were followed in November by the UK National Screening Committee's recommendation that a prostate screening cancer programme for all men in the UK was not justified.

For Hoy, the fight to raise money and raise awareness is his new Olympic-sized mission and his response therefore was dignified, yet resolutely determined.

"I was quite astonished," he said. "I can't believe that the answer to this situation is to sit on your hands and do nothing. There are 10,000 men a year in the UK who find out they have prostate cancer too late – it's incurable.

"We're failing these men if we don't do something proactive. Regardless, I'm going to keep pushing."

Again, we meet his Olympic-honed mindset, targeted on a bigger mission.

"The Olympics was something that was my life for so many years and drove me on," Hoy says.

"I'm still incredibly proud of it now and I look back with great fondness, but this is something on an entirely different level.

"It's more important than riding bikes in anti-clockwise circles, put it that way."

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Sir Chris Hoy on his BBC documentary and 'speaking to the world'

  • You can watch Sir Chris Hoy: Cancer, Courage & Me on Thursday, 18 December at 21:00 GMT on BBC One, and from 22:00 GMT on BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website and app.

Truth Social Parent to Merge With Nuclear Fusion Firm in $6 Billion Deal

The deal would be a total transformation for Trump Media & Technology Group, the social media and crypto company in which President Trump holds a large stake.

© Yuvraj Khanna for The New York Times

Trump Media & Technology Group is the parent company of Truth Social, a social media platform that has struggled to gain widespread traction.

实测豆包 Seedance 1.5 Pro:哪吒朱迪在线飙戏,复刻名场面,AI台词、音效水平大更新

By: 张子豪
18 December 2025 at 21:10

AI 视频最近的玩法特别多,颇有上半年 AI 生图火起来的那种感觉。

▲ 视频来源:https://x.com/pabloprompt/status/2000706593579573301/

之前火过一遍的 AI 探班视频,随着模型能力的提升,现在又开始变成了社交媒体上的热门玩法。

不过彻底摒弃了以往复杂的工作流,有更好用的模型,甚至是简单几句提示词就能复刻,视频里的同款真实感。

视频生成模型的优化,不断地在降低,对我们人类提示词工程的依赖,同时还带来了更稳定的一致性保持。

豆包最近更新了新一代的音视频生成模型,豆包 Seedance 1.5 Pro,在音视频的生成上也有了明显的改善。现在它生成的视频,支持中文、英文、日文、韩语、西班牙语等语种的不同声韵,同时针对中文场景,还能生成四川话、粤语等方言。

不仅能说,而且还能模仿不同语言的口音。有声视频是 Seedance 1.5 Pro 的一大突破,在视频生成本身,结合音频的音画同步,以及电影级的运镜两项优化,让 AI 视频看起来更真实、更细致。

目前该模型已上线豆包 APP,只需要打开豆包,点击「照片动起来」,选择 1.5 Pro 模型,就能体验到 AI 生视频的快乐。此外,在火山引擎体验中心、即梦 AI 也可以体验。

我们也提前测试了一波,Seedance 1.5 Pro 完全可以说,是现在手边能拿起来直接用,能同时融合声音,表现最好的视频生成模型。

听听「臣妾做不到啊」的原音重现

《疯狂动物城 2 》上映之前,网友们对配音演员的选择,有很大的争议。现在 Seedance 1.5 Pro 的语音生成有多牛,我们可以看看之前网上很火的甄嬛传和让子弹飞,两个视频的配音,让它来完成是什么样。

从网上找了一张影视剧的截图,然后丢给豆包,我们甚至什么提示词都没有输入,它就能做到自动识别视频画面,生成一段有感情的台词戏。

▲在豆包 App 内,使用「照片动起来」,上传首帧,生成视频

皇后和张麻子都演得太像了,这和几个月前的视频生成模型,完全不是一个 Level。 以前那些 AI 视频,口型对不上,或者声音有机械感的问题,现在都解决了。

但普通话对它来说都是基本操作,方言的表现才是 Seedance 1.5 Pro 打败那些国外模型的独门秘籍。就像 Sora 2 和 Google Veo 3.1 虽然在画面生成上被认为是行业领先,但如果把上面这两张首帧图片丢给它们。Sora 和 Veo 3 都理解不了甄嬛传的经典台词,和张麻子这流利的四川话口音。

全运会刚结束,如果你也在广州,一定忘不了「活力大湾区,魅力新广州」这句魔性的口号。我们生成了一张站在广州塔前面的照片,然后在豆包「照片动起来」里面输入提示词。

画面里的这个男生正在面向镜头,向大家介绍他身后的广州塔,他用粤语说「活力大湾区,魅力新广州,我身后面嗰个就系广州塔喇!」

这个粤语水平怎么样,比多邻国里面的早茶四件套,虾饺、肠粉、烧卖、豉汁排骨,听着是不是要舒服一点。

而且,Seedance 1.5 Pro 有一个好处是「视听一致性」,意思是它能根据画面的内容,理解视频想要表达的故事,来自动生成对应的配音。

举个例子,当我们上传了一张明显是外国人的图片时,我们不输入任何提示词,它会自动使用英文来配音,并且让画面里的角色,说合适的台词。

即便是在中餐厅面馆里吃面的威尔·史密斯,Seedance 1.5 Pro 还是让他自动用英文来说话,而且这个吃面姿势也完全对了。

同样地,我们用它复刻了 AI 片场探班的视频,直接上传一张图片给豆包,不输入任何提示词,它会自动用中文来生成视频,还配上了台词,「哇,跟阿凡达合影啦!」

当我们重新生成时,Seedance 1.5 Pro 还把照片里的男生识别成韩国人,然后生成了一段讲韩语的视频。不过,说实话,他确实是有点韩国欧巴的感觉。

豆包视频生成还有一点特别好,是我们可以直接把生成的视频,下载为动图保存在手机。配合现在模型更强大的多模态理解能力,以及能生成更真实的画面,手机里那些静态的图片,让它们「真实地」动起来,然后发到微信朋友圈,可能真的会有人看不出来。

AI 巨人照加上无人机运镜,太酷啦

叙事是 Seedance 1.5 Pro 更新的一个关键词,它的意思是这些 AI 视频不只是单纯的生成,而是有了一定的故事感,能够对要表达的内容进行理解,让 AI 生成的视频,更像是一个有血肉的作品。

一个好的视频作品,灯光色彩、音效要出色。技术性的工作也少不了,运镜就是在音画之外,不可忽视的镜头语言。

Seedance 1.5 Pro 在这次更新里,在长镜头跟随、希区柯克变焦这些电影级运镜都有了大幅度的提升。

像是之前我们做的子弹时间,现在上传一张图片到豆包,调整一下提示词,子弹时间特效也自由了。

▲提示词:子弹时间效果。时间完全冻结。舞者悬浮在半空中,对抗重力。[定格画面]:舞者、她的头发和她的蓝色裙子绝对静止,就像时间冻结中的 3D 雕像。摄像机围绕悬浮的舞者水平轨道运行。背景建筑物改变透视(视差),而舞者保持锁定在中心。头发保持僵硬并指向上方,没有飘动。裙子布料是固体的并冻结保持不动。 电影级照明,高质量。

我们把同样的照片交给 Veo 3.1 处理时,它生成的子弹时间也很难做到保持角色一动不动。因为对大多数视频生成模型来说,识别到头发,就一定要飘动;看到裙边也要摆动;所以精准的运镜控制和调度,也是区分不同模型的一项重要能力。

还有这个前段时间很火的 AI 巨人照,现在我们也可以用超酷炫的无人机俯冲和穿越运镜,来凸显视频里的巨人。

▲提示词:电影级 FPV 无人机镜头,极致动态运镜:从高空鸟瞰开始,无人机急速俯冲向一位坐在城市街道中央的巨人,红砖建筑环绕两侧。巨人保持完全静止的姿势,身体、头部、四肢均不移动,如同雕塑般定格。无人机以特技飞行动作环绕巨人静止的身体——盘旋绕腿、从手臂下穿越、沿躯干螺旋上升,然后拉远展现巨人与微小车辆(红色双层巴士、黑色出租车)和行人的尺寸对比。超写实合成。比例 16:9,时长 5s,模型 1.5 Pro。

从参考图转视频,能更好的控制视频的输出效果。但 Seedance 1.5 Pro 的文生视频能力也毫不逊色。

根据字节公开的 Seedance 1.5 pro,在内部基准测试 SeedVideoBench-1.5 的模型表现结果,显示无论是 T2V 文生视频,还是 I2V 首帧转视频,和可灵 2.6、Google Veo 3.1 等模型对比,Seedance 1.5 Pro 的表现都有一定优势。

尤其是在音频生成和音画同步上,Seedance 1.5 Pro 几乎是碾压性的存在。

我们尝试让疯狂动物城朱迪和哪吒一起,一个普通话,一个四川话,演了一出 10s 的小剧场。

▲提示词:[0s-4s] 朱迪指着哪吒说(普通话,语速快,严肃): “那个小孩!站住!双手抱头!根据《动物城交通法》,你刚才风火轮超速了!” • [5s-10s] 哪吒(四川话,翻白眼,语速慢,拖长音): “哎呀,莫挨老子!我是踩的风火轮,又没烧你的油。瓜娃子,管得宽!”

这个视频的风格和内容,和我们平时看的动画片风格真的很类似。当义正辞严的兔朱迪警官,抓到哪吒的时候,那严肃的表情和语气;还有哪吒用四川话说台词,也能对上嘴型。

APPSO 今年前前后后也测试了有十多款 AI 视频生成的模型,我们在使用的过程中,发现很多以前的测试案例,放到现在已经是 Out 了。

一开始是鲁迅来了,都得让他说两句英文;能生成一个 5s 流畅播放的视频,就谢天谢地。现在的模型,不仅支持中、英、日、韩等多语种,广东话、四川话这些特色方言都能同步生成。

恍然间,AI 视频的进化,已经从按年计算变成了按月计算。昨天的突破,今天就是及格线。

▲ Seedance 1.5 Pro 案例截图|来源:字节跳动 Seed 官网

Seedance 1.5 Pro 这次更新,可能又会变成新的及格线。但至少现在我们看到了,有了音画同步后更有感染力的视频;多语种和方言的支持,也让 AI 视频更有「生活味」;专业的电影级运镜和智能理解能力,让一些高难度的复杂场景,也有机会通过 AI 生成。

当技术能够理解画面背后的故事,自动匹配合适的语言和情绪,我们距离想象力和创作自由的时代,又近了一大步。

实现这一切需要什么? 一张图片或者一句提示词。

打开豆包 APP,上传/输入,生成,就这么简单。每张照片都是待激活的故事,每次上传都是创作的开始。

步骤越少,门槛越低,创作者越多,用 AI 视频实现创意就该是这样。

文章内视频可点击该链接前往观看:https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/em_E90Q7AdydHsNwVkAMTQ

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Rob Reiner Family Tragedy Strikes a Nerve for Families Fighting Addiction

18 December 2025 at 18:03
Nick Reiner, charged with murdering his parents, Rob and Michele Singer Reiner, spent much of his life battling drug addiction, an affliction that millions of Americans face.

© Constanza Hevia H. for The New York Times

Pattie Vargas’s daughter and son both struggled with addiction. “As a parent, I would have cut off both my arms to save my kids,” she said.

中国官媒呼吁对渲染矛盾煽动对立“毒广告”加大惩处力度

18 December 2025 at 20:19

中国官媒新华每日电讯星期四(12月18日)发文指出,一些企业为博眼球、赚流量,刻意选择最具煽动性的话题切口,通过简单粗暴的标签化叙事,制造矛盾冲突以获取传播热度。文章呼吁监管部门应加强广告的社会影响评估,对渲染矛盾、煽动对立、传播不良价值观的内容加大惩处力度。

文章说,有短视频宣扬男子将同居女友视作 “免费保姆”,有的渲染“父母无退休金等于子女负债”的养老焦虑,有的演绎子女漠视父母健康的尖锐冲突,而正当观众为视频中的情节怒火中烧时,视频的画风骤变,生硬切入广告,让人猝不及防。

文章指出,这类视频看似情节引人入胜,实则是靠渲染矛盾、煽动对立来博流量的 “毒广告”。刻意选取夫妻关系、婆媳矛盾、兄弟背刺等话题,将个别故事引申到某一群体的共同问题,用夸张的剧情放大焦虑,将商业利益凌驾于社会责任之上。

更值得警惕的是,有些视频将社会转型期的敏感议题,用肤浅、极端的方式呈现,将多元诉求简化为二元对立,把结构性矛盾包装为群体冲突。这不仅无助于问题解决,反而会固化偏见、激化矛盾,破坏社会共识。

文章说,广告本质上是一种沟通艺术,其社会影响力不容小觑。然而,一些企业为博眼球、赚流量,刻意选择最具煽动性的话题切口,通过简单粗暴的标签化叙事,制造矛盾冲突以获取传播热度。这种 “黑红也是红”的扭曲逻辑,反映了此类广告价值观的严重偏离——将社会撕裂视为营销代价,将公众情绪当作可操纵资源。

文章说,治理这类 “毒广告”,需要监管、平台、商家、网民的协同努力。监管部门应加强广告的社会影响评估,对渲染矛盾、煽动对立、传播不良价值观的内容加大惩处力度。行业组织需制定更具约束力的伦理准则。平台必须承担起内容审核责任,拒绝为煽动对立内容提供传播渠道。消费者也应提升媒介素养,学会识别广告的操纵手法,用理性批判代替情绪反应。

文章最后说,广告作为社会文化的一部分,应当成为促进理解的“桥梁”,而非制造分裂的“沟壑”。只有各方协同发力,才能让广告的天空少一些硝烟,多一些彩虹。

王毅:泰柬当务之急尽快停火 警惕抹黑中国同两国友好关系

18 December 2025 at 19:43

中国外交部长王毅星期四(12月18日)分别同柬埔寨副首相兼外交大臣布拉索昆、泰国外长西哈萨通电话说,中方最不希望看到两国兵戎相见,当务之急是做出决断、尽快停火。他希望两国采取有效措施保障中方项目和人员安全,并警惕不实之词抹黑中国同两国的友好关系。

根据新华社报道,王毅在通话时说,作为柬泰两国的朋友和近邻,中方最不希望看到两国兵戎相见,对冲突造成双方平民伤亡深感痛心。此轮冲突烈度远超以往,持续下去对双方都无益,也有损亚细安(中国称东盟)的团结。当务之急是做出决断、尽快停火、及时止损、重建互信。

王毅说,中方在柬泰边境争端问题上坚持劝和促谈、公平公允,支持亚细安的调停努力。中国外交部亚洲事务特使已启程赴柬、泰穿梭沟通,中方将继续牵线搭桥,为推动柬泰重建和平发挥建设性作用。希望两国采取有效措施保障中方项目和人员安全,警惕有人散布不实之词抹黑中国同两国的友好关系。

根据中国方面新闻稿,柬泰双方都向王毅通报柬泰边境冲突最新进展,表达了降温停火的意愿。布拉索昆、西哈萨欢迎中方特使穿梭调停,期待中方为推动局势降温及重建和平发挥更重要作用。

泰国军队在与柬埔寨的冲突中,在柬军阵地上缴获了中国制造的反坦克导弹等装备,引发柬埔寨有外援的猜测。

中国外交部星期三(17日)对此回应称,中国与泰国、柬埔寨以往都开展了正常的防务合作,不针对任何第三方,更与柬泰边境的冲突无关。

李家超:有信心推动香港成为亚洲飞机工程回收零件贸易中心

18 December 2025 at 19:17

香港国际航空学院宣布,将与一家法国的航空服务公司合作开办飞机部件处理的课程,并成立航空工程培训中心。香港特首李家超说,他有信心培训中心可推动香港成为亚洲飞机工程回收零件贸易中心。

综合星岛日报和香港电台报道,香港国际航空学院星期四(12月18日)与法国航空服务公司 Elior Group Derichebourg Aeronautics Services合作,启动航空工程培训中心。

李家超出席启动仪式时说,此次合作,标志着香港在成为亚洲首个飞机部件处理及交易中心的道路上迈出重要一步。航空工程培训中心首期课程将于明年首季推出,后续也会开设更多课程。

李家超说,相关公司在飞机工程、拆解等领域拥有国际专业知识;而香港国际航空学院是世界领先的民航培训机构,已培训接近40万名学员。他说,将香港打造成飞机部件处理及交易中心,有望创造更多高价值、高技能及更好待遇的就业机会,带动贸易保险、金融等相关产业发展。

Elior Group主席兼行政总裁Daniel Derichebourg 表示,公司选择香港作为进军亚洲的起点,主要基于三大原因,包括香港的战略地理位置、优越的营商环境,以及与中国大陆的紧密联系。

Derichebourg说,这些优势使香港成为航空业发展的理想基地。他强调,培训中心将能培育具备必要技能的专业人才,为航空业的持续发展奠定坚实基础,“香港不仅是亚洲的国际枢纽,更拥有世界级的法律制度和营商环境。透过培训中心,我们能够培养新一代航空工程专才,支撑整个航空产业链的长远发展。”

台总统府:肯定海基会董事长理念主张 两岸政策立场方向不变

18 December 2025 at 19:12

台湾海峡交流基金会董事长吴丰山星期四(12月18日)宣布请辞让贤。台湾总统府发言人郭雅慧说,总统赖清德肯定并支持吴丰山一贯主张追求两岸和平、巩固“中华民国”主权的理念。政府两岸政策立场与方向不变,将持续秉持对等尊严原则,维护台海和平稳定。

根据台湾总统府发布的声明,郭雅慧说,总统诚挚感谢吴董事长任内承担任务、推动会务及服务台湾人的付出,并肯定其完成阶段性任务与贡献。吴董事长长年投入公共事务,对两岸交流及台湾治理具有深厚经验与专业,也带领海基会同仁稳健推动既有业务、强化为民服务。总统未来仍将持续借重其所长,敦聘担任总统府资政,协助提供政策建言,厚植台湾整体策略视野。

郭雅慧强调,总统肯定并支持吴丰山一贯主张追求两岸和平、巩固“中华民国”主权的理念。政府两岸政策立场与方向不变,将持续秉持对等尊严原则,维护台海和平稳定,并支持海基会依法依规持续办理交流服务及协助民众相关事务。

吴丰山星期四在董监事会会议上宣布请辞让贤,将于本月底结束13个月任期。

Interest Rate Cut and Slower Inflation Offer Britons a Reprieve

18 December 2025 at 20:41
Britain’s central bank reduced interest rates to 3.75 percent, a move that was welcomed by the government, which has been looking to lower the high cost of living.

© Justin Tallis/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The Bank of England in central London. The central bank has lowered interest rates six times in the past year and a half.

Don't let Matilda's death fuel anger, say family of Bondi victim, 10, at funeral

18 December 2025 at 16:29
EPA A man holds a balloon reading 'Matilda' during the funeral for 10-year-old Matilda a Bondi Beach shooting victim, at Chevra Kadisha Memorial Hall in SydneyEPA
Lina Chernykh tells the BBC her niece Matilda was a joyous child who spread love everywhere she went

The family of the Bondi shooting's youngest victim Matilda urged the community to not let her death fuel anger, as they said a final goodbye to the 10-year-old on Thursday.

Matilda was among 15 people who were shot dead when two gunmen opened fire on an event marking the start of Hannukah at Sydney's Bondi Beach on Sunday.

Speaking to the BBC at Matilda's funeral, her aunt Lina Chernykh said the Jewish community is right to want more action to stamp out antisemitism – she does too.

But she said Matilda was a joyous child who spread love everywhere she went, and urged the community to do the same in her honour.

"Take your anger and… just spread happiness and love and memory for my lovely niece," Ms Chernykh said.

"I hope maybe she's an angel now. Maybe she [will] send some good vibes to the world."

Jewish community leaders have in recent days suggested the tragedy was an inevitable result of Australia struggling to address rising antisemitism.

The attack on Sunday, which targeted the Jewish community at an event celebrating the first night of Hanukkah, was the country's deadliest incident since 1996, when a gunman killed 35 people during the Port Arthur massacre.

Ahead of Matilda's funeral on Thursday, Ms Chernykh said the family was devastated.

"I look at their faces [and] I don't know if they will be ever happy again," she said of Matilda's parents.

Matilda's younger sister, from whom she was "inseparable", is shattered and confused, she said.

"She doesn't have enough tears to cry."

At a flower memorial on Tuesday, Matilda's mother Valentyna told mourners that the family came to Australia from Ukraine more than a decade ago, thinking it would be a safe place for them.

"I couldn't imagine I'd lose my daughter here... It's just a nightmare," she said.

Ms Chernykh told the BBC she too has struggled to make sense of what is happening.

She was gardening at her home on the Gold Coast when Matilda's mother called on Sunday.

"Truly, I was thinking something happened to my father because he's 84 years old... and she says Matilda was shot," she recalled.

"How [could] someone in Australia understand, if someone tells you your kid was shot… I couldn't understand it. I was thinking I have bad reception. I asked a few times what I'm [hearing]."

Police have designated the attack a terrorist incident, with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese saying it appears to have been "motivated by Islamic State" group ideology.

Police allege that the two gunmen were a father and son. Sajid Akram, 50, was shot dead at the scene, while his son Naveed, 24, has been charged with 59 offences, including 15 counts of murder and one of committing a terrorist act.

Australia on Thursday announced it would strengthen laws to crack down on hate - including by introducing powers to cancel or refuse visas on grounds of antisemitism.

Zelensky appeals to EU leaders facing crunch decision on Russia's frozen cash

18 December 2025 at 19:25
Ukrinform/NurPhoto Two men - one in a three-piece suit in grey, the other in black stand in front of colourful flagsUkrinform/NurPhoto
Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever is yet to be convinced that the money held in Belgium should be loaned to Ukraine (file pic)

European Union leaders begin two days of talks in Brussels with a momentous decision to be taken on whether to loan tens of billions of euros in frozen Russian assets to Ukraine to fund its military and economic needs.

Most of Russia's €210bn (£185bn; $245bn) worth of assets in the EU are held by Belgium-based organisation Euroclear, and so far Belgium and some other members of the bloc have said they are opposed to using the cash.

Without a boost in funding, Ukraine's finances are set to run dry in a matter of months.

One European government official described being "cautiously optimistic, not overly optimistic" that a deal would be agreed. Russia has warned the EU against using its money.

It has filed a lawsuit against Euroclear in a Moscow court in a bid to get its money back.

The Brussels summit comes at a pivotal moment.

US President Donald Trump has said a deal to end the war - which began with Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 - is "closer now than we have been ever".

Although Russia has not responded to the latest peace proposals, the Kremlin has stressed that plans for a European-led multinational force for Ukraine supported by the US would not be acceptable.

President Vladimir Putin made his feelings towards Europe clear on Wednesday, when he said the continent was in a state of "total degradation" and "European piglets" - a derogatory description of Ukraine's European allies - were hoping to profit from Russia's collapse.

Alexander KAZAKOV/POOL/AFP A man with a glass stands on the right of two men in uniformAlexander KAZAKOV/POOL/AFP
Those in favour of loaning Ukraine the money believe it will help deter Putin from continuing the war

The European Commission - the EU's executive arm - has proposed loaning Kyiv about €90bn (£79bn) over the next two years - out of the €210bn of Russian assets sitting in Europe.

That is about two-thirds of the €137bn that Kyiv is thought to need to get through 2026 and 2027.

Until now the EU has handed Ukraine the interest generated by the cash but not the cash itself.

"This is a crunch time for Ukraine to keep fighting for the next year," a Finnish government official told the BBC. "There are of course peace negotiations but this gives Ukraine leverage to say 'we're not desperate and we have the funds to continue fighting'."

Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen says it will also ramp up the cost of war for Russia.

Russia's frozen assets are not the only option on the table for EU leaders. Another idea, backed by Belgium, is based on the EU borrowing the money on the international markets.

However, that would require a unanimous vote and Hungary's Viktor Orban has made it clear he will not allow any more EU money to help Ukraine.

For Ukraine, the hours ahead are significant and President Volodymyr Zelensky is expected to attend the EU summit.

Ahead of the Brussels meeting, EU leaders were keen to stress the momentous nature of the decision.

"We know the urgency. It is acute. We all feel it. We all see it," von der Leyen told the European Parliament.

EPA European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks during a debate on 'Preparation of the European Council meeting of 18-19 DecemberEPA
Ursula von der Leyen told the European Parliament that two choices were on the table for EU leaders

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has played a leading role in pushing for the Russian assets to be used, telling the Bundestag on the eve of the summit it was about sending a "clear signal" to Moscow that continuing the war was pointless.

EU officials are confident they have a sound legal basis to use the frozen Russian assets, but so far Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever remains unconvinced.

His Defence Minister Theo Francken warned ahead of the talks that it would be a big mistake to loan the Euroclear cash.

Hungary is seen as the biggest opponent of the move and, ahead of the summit, Prime Minister Orban and his entourage even suggested that the frozen assets plan had been removed from the summit agenda. A European Commission official stressed that was not the case and it would be a matter for the 27 member states at the summit.

Slovakia's Robert Fico has also opposed using the Russian assets, if it means the money being used to procure weapons rather than for reconstruction needs.

When the pivotal vote does finally take place, it will require a majority of about two-thirds of member states to go through. Whatever happens, European Council President António Costa has promised not to go over the heads of the Belgians.

"We're not going to vote against Belgium," he told Belgian public broadcaster RTBF. "We'll continue to work very intensively with the Belgian government because we don't want to approve something that might not be acceptable for Belgium."

Belgium will also be aware that ratings agency Fitch has placed Euroclear on a negative watch, partly because of "low" legal risks to its balance sheet from the European Commission's plans to use the Russian assets. Euroclear's chief executive has also warned against the plan.

"There are many hiccups and obstacles of course still on the way. We have to find a way to respond to Belgium's worries," the Finnish official added. "We are on the same side as Belgium. We will find a solution together to make sure all the risks are checked as much as they can be checked."

However, Belgium is not the only country to have doubts, and a majority is not guaranteed.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has told Italian MPs she will endorse the deal "if the legal basis is solid".

"If the legal basis for this initiative were not solid, we would be handing Russia its first real victory since the beginning of this conflict."

Malta, Bulgaria and the Czech Republic are also said to be unconvinced by the controversial proposals.

If the deal is passed and the Russian assets are given to Ukraine, the worst-case scenario for Belgium would be one in which a court would order it to hand the money back to Russia.

Some countries have said they would be prepared to provide billions of euros in financial guarantees, but Belgium will want to see the numbers add up.

At any rate, Commission officials are confident that the only way for Russia to get it back would be by paying reparations to Ukraine - at which point Ukraine would hand its "reparations loan" back to the EU.

6 Takeaways From Trump’s Address to the Nation

18 December 2025 at 20:21
In an 18-minute address, President Trump said the economy was booming despite the public’s consistent concerns about prices. Here are six takeaways from the speech.

© Doug Mills/The New York Times

President Trump in an address from the White House on Wednesday argued that U.S. economy under his leadership is in better shape than many voters think.

Reading Visual Art: 239 Bread as food

By: hoakley
18 December 2025 at 20:30

In the first of these two articles looking at bread in visual art, I considered it as a symbol of life, predominantly following the Christian tradition set by the Last Supper. Here I consider bread in its role as food, the staple of most Europeans.

raffaellimantwoloaves
Jean-François Raffaëlli (1850-1924), Man with Two Loaves of Bread (1879), further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.

Man with Two Loaves of Bread (1879) is one of Jean-François Raffaëlli’s social realist paintings. This man’s bowed head and furtive look make you wonder just how he had acquired those loaves.

mersonwolfofaggubio
Luc-Olivier Merson (1846–1920), The Wolf of Agubbio (1877), oil on canvas, 88 x 133 cm, Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille, Lille, France. Wikimedia Commons.

Luc-Olivier Merson’s wonderful painting of the Franciscan legend of The Wolf of Agubbio from 1877 is set in the town’s central piazza on a bitter winter’s day. The large wolf of the legend has a prominent halo and stands at the door of the butcher’s shop, from where the butcher is handing it a piece of meat. A young girl smiles open-mouthed as she strokes the wolf’s back. Her mother holds her other hand, as she walks back clutching a loaf of bread and other provisions (detail below).

mersonwolfofaggubiod1
Luc-Olivier Merson (1846–1920), The Wolf of Agubbio (detail) (1877), oil on canvas, 88 x 133 cm, Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille, Lille, France. Image by Chatsam, via Wikimedia Commons.
vermeermilkmaid
Johannes Vermeer (1632–1675), The Milkmaid (c 1658-59), oil on canvas, 45.5 x 41 cm, The Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Wikimedia Commons.

Vermeer’s Milkmaid, probably from about 1658-59, is less about milk than the bread on the tabletop. A wicker basket of bread is nearest the viewer, broken and smaller pieces of different types of bread behind and towards the woman, in the centre. These are shown in the detail below, where Vermeer’s controlled use of blurring is visible.

vermeermilkmaidd2
Johannes Vermeer (1632–1675), The Milkmaid (detail) (c 1658-59), oil on canvas, 45.5 x 41 cm, The Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Wikimedia Commons.

Perhaps because it was so commonplace in many households and bakers, there are relatively few paintings showing the making and baking of bread.

Anders Zorn, Baking Bread (1889), oil on canvas, dimensions not known, Private collection. WikiArt.
Anders Zorn (1860–1920), Baking Bread (1889), oil on canvas, dimensions not known, Private collection. WikiArt.

In Baking Bread, painted in Mora, the artist’s home town in Sweden in 1889, Anders Zorn captures each step in the process in documentary fashion, from kneading the dough, through rolling and preparing it, to its baking. There’s even an infant in the foreground who looks ready to be its consumer.

allinghambakingbread
Helen Allingham (1848-1926), Baking Bread (date not known), watercolour, further details not known. The Athenaeum.

Helen Allingham’s undated Baking Bread shows a traditional farmhouse baking oven being used to bake the bread for an extended family, or possibly a small village shop. These ovens can still be found in many remaining period dwellings, but are now seldom used.

krohgwomancuttingbread
Christian Krohg (1852–1925), Woman Cutting Bread (1879), oil on canvas, 80 x 60 cm, Bergen kunstmuseum, Bergen, Norway. Wikimedia Commons.

Christian Krohg’s early painting of Ane Gaihede as a Woman Cutting Bread (1879) marked the start of his social realism. Krohg documents her in almost ethnographic detachment. She is aligned in profile, against an almost bare wall, perfectly framed at three-quarter length.

Finally, bread is occasionally featured in still life paintings.

vallayercostermackerelglassware
Anne Vallayer-Coster (1744–1818), A Still Life of Mackerel, Glassware, a Loaf of Bread and Lemons on a Table with a White Cloth (1787), further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.

Anne Vallayer-Coster painted A Still Life of Mackerel, Glassware, a Loaf of Bread and Lemons on a Table with a White Cloth in 1787, when she was at her artistic zenith.

美国宣布超100亿美元对台军售计划 北京表达强烈不满

18 December 2025 at 20:17
德正
2025-12-18T11:16:20.898Z
美国基于《台湾关系法》与“六项保证”,持续协助台湾维持足够的自我防卫能力

(德国之声中文网)本周三(17日),美国国防部表示,美国国务院已批准M109A7自走炮、海马斯远程精准打击系统、战术导弹等8项总额超过111亿美元的对台军售案。

美联社报道指出,在特朗普的第二个任期内,美中关系时而紧张时而缓和,主要源于贸易和关税问题,但也与中国对台湾日益强硬的态度有关。

周三宣布的军售协议涵盖82套高机动性火箭炮系统(HIMARS)和420套陆军战术导弹系统(ATACMS),总价值超过40亿美元。此外还包括价值超过40亿美元的60套自行榴弹炮系统及相关设备,以及价值超过10亿美元的无人机。

该军售计划还包括价值超过10亿美元的军事软件、价值超过7亿美元的“标枪”和“陶”式导弹、价值9600万美元的直升机零部件以及价值9100万美元的“鱼叉”导弹翻新套件。

今年5月,台湾测试海马斯远程精准打击系统

美国国务院发表的声明表示,这些军售“符合美国的国家、经济和安全利益,支持受援国持续推进军队现代化建设,并维持可靠的防御能力,同时有助于维护该地区的政治稳定、军事平衡和经济发展”。

更多阅读:美国挺台升级?特朗普2.0拟加码对台军售

北京方面对美国做出的这一军售决定表示强烈不满。中国外交部发言人郭嘉昆周四在例行记者会上称,“台独”势力“大肆挥霍老百姓血汗钱购买武器,不惜把台湾变成火药桶,挽救不了台独必然灭亡的命运,只会加速把台海推向兵凶战危的境地”。他还说:“美方以武助‘独’,只会引火烧身,以台制华绝对不会得逞。台湾问题是中国核心利益中的核心,是中美关系第一条不可逾越的红线。”

台湾国防部则对美国的对台军售决定“表达诚挚感谢”。台湾国防部表示,美国基于《台湾关系法》与“六项保证”,持续协助台湾维持足够的自我防卫能力,并快速建立强韧吓阻战力,发挥不对称作战优势,是维持区域和平稳定的基础。

台湾政府承诺明年将国防开支提高至占台湾GDP的3.3%,并在2030年达到5%。此前,特朗普和五角大楼要求台湾将国防开支提高至占GDP的10%,这一比例远高于美国及其任何主要盟友的国防开支水平。这一要求遭到了台湾在野党国民党和部分民众的反对。

台湾总统赖清德上个月宣布了一项400亿美元的特别军事预算,用于从美国购买更多灵活、机动的武器。这项预算将在2026年至2033年的八年内分期拨付。

更多内容:台湾国防部:解放军尚不具备全面攻台能力

不过今年8月,台湾三立新闻曾报道称,美国乔治梅森大学沙尔政策与政府学院(George Mason University Schar School of Policy and Government)根据台湾国防部6月送交立法院的“美对台军售案执行情形”报告研究发现,美国积欠台湾的军火价值高达215.4亿美元,其中仅2成已开始交付,但尚未执行完成。包括56枚AGM-154C滑翔炸弹,原定2023年就要交付,却被美方以产能不足为由拖延3年,预计2026才可能交运。意味着该军售案从2017年送出立法院后,耗时8年都没能完成。

报道称,美国2023年同意出售台湾100枚AIM-9X响尾蛇飞弹,采分批交运,预计2030年底前才会全数交付。而美方2020年卖给台湾专供F-16V战机使用的先进侦照荚舱MS-110,则于今年起分批执行装备交运,但并未公告交付截止日期。

相关图集:2020年美国对台军售总额创历史最高

年末再添一笔军售:路透社报道,美国本周宣布了对台2.8亿美元的“野战资讯通信系统”军售,帮助台湾军事现代化,加强防御能力。这是是美国今年第六度对台军售,中国外交部发言人华春莹在周二的例行发布会上敦促美国停止售台武器和美台任何军事联系,她表示,美国对台出售武器装备严重违反一中原则和中美三个联合公报规定,严重损害中美关系。(图为幻影战机资料图片)
2020年美国对外军售的最大买家:11月28日,美国在台协会台北办事处处长郦英杰(William Brent Christensen)在台湾出席一场研讨会时声称,台湾已是全世界公认的美国武器最大采购方,今年美国对台计划中的军售额总计高达118亿美元,是台湾史上单年最高的年度防务采购。他强调,美国对台军售获得美国两党的支持,这些军售对台湾提升“不对称作战能力”具有相当关键的力量。他还透露,放眼2021年,美国政府已通知国会对台军售52亿美元。
台北谨慎回应:11月29日,台湾国防部就骊英杰的表态做出了回应。声明指出,美国对台出售防卫性武器,有助强化整体防卫战力,确保台海及印太区域的和平与稳定,国防部对此表示感谢。但同时声明也强调,明年并无规划新增对美提出52亿美元的重大军购项目。(图为台湾空军资料照片)
特朗普任内军售频繁:10月26日,华盛顿方面公布2020年内第四波对台军售案,表示美国国务院已核准将100枚鱼叉反舰飞弹出售给台湾。据台湾中央社报道,这笔军售交易总额高达23.7亿美元。鱼叉海岸防御系统(HCDS)射程在200到300公里之间,可对沿岸、港湾以及陆上目标实施打击,符合台湾近年机动、不对称战力的诉求。这是也是美国总统特朗普上任以来的第九个对台军售案。
40余年,上百次对台军售案:美国向台湾出售武器,源于1979年美国与台北断交,转而与北京建交之后,制定的《台湾关系法》。在撤离驻台美军之后,美国开始依照该法律为台湾提供防御性军武。根据1982年时任总统罗纳德·里根建立的备忘录,美国对台提供武器之性能与数量“视中共所构成之威胁而定”。
具有标志性意义的F16战机:在数十年的历次对台军售案当中,最为引人注目的先进武器之一莫过于美国的F16战斗机。这是由洛克希德·马丁公司研制的轻型战斗机,在战机世代上归类于第四代战斗机,同时也是第四代战机中产量最高的机种。台北方面从70年代就开始要求向美国采购这种先进战机,但是直到90年代才得以达成交易。1997年,台湾采购的首批F16战机进行交付。之后该系列战机又经历了多次升级和换装,美方提供的飞行训练和技术支援也都包括在军售交易之内。
基隆级驱逐舰:纪德级驱逐舰(Kidd class)是美国海军已除役的飞弹驱逐舰,2005年到2006年期间,美国海军陆续将该系列一共四艘驱逐舰交接给台湾海军,并改称为基隆级驱逐舰。图为台湾总统蔡英文2018年视察该舰。
爱国者导弹:爱国者导弹(Patriot)是美国雷神公司制造的中程地对空导弹系统,该系统曾在海湾战争中成功拦截了伊拉克军队发射的飞毛腿导弹,从而声名大噪。这款具有代表性的美军武器在之后经多次升级,从90年代起台湾多次向美国采购爱国者导弹。2020年7月达成的美国对台军售案中还包括爱国者三型导弹的零组件相关更换、维修、测试与后勤支援等内容。
将台湾打造成一个“堡垒”:近年来,随着中国军事装备力量的不断壮大,以及美中关系的日益紧张,美国出售给台湾的武器种类也发生了变化。美国兰德公司的研究员葛莱斯曼 (Derek Grossman)10月中旬在接受德国之声采访时表示:“美国过去卖给台湾许多不同类型的武器,有时是能提升台湾不对称防御战力的武器,有时是像F-16战机这种标志性的武器。不过现在美国的对台军援政策似乎做了一个明显的调整。”他认为,为了要阻止中国透过两栖登陆的方式入侵台湾,美国要协助台湾成为一个“坚不可摧的堡垒”。
北京如何应对?:历来的美国对台军售案都会引起北京方面的反对,但大多数情况下都仅限于口头抗议。10月26日,中国外交部发言人赵立坚在例行记者会上表示,中国将对参与上周对台军售案的洛克希德·马丁丶波音防务丶雷神等美国企业与个人实施制裁。其实洛克希德·马丁公司鲜少与中国做生意,多年来一直向台湾提供武器和国防设备。然而,如果中国对波音(Boeing)实施制裁,这可能对其造成沉重打击,因为该公司也向中国出售民航飞机。

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