With Qatar Attack, Israel Again Leaves Trump in the Dark
© Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters
© Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters
网友恶搞图“邪恶三巨头”
“轴心国”是指第二次世界大战中由德国、意大利和日本主导的军事同盟。该称谓源于1936年德、意签订的《柏林—罗马轴心协定》。1940年日本加入后,形成了三国同盟,又称“轴心国联盟”或“轴心三国”。轴心国以推翻一战后国际秩序、扩张领土和建立势力范围为目标,发动了侵略战争。除三大核心成员外,还有一些国家陆续加入该阵营。最终,轴心国于1945年战败,二战也随之结束。
墨索里尼、希特勒、松冈洋右(日本外相)
911事件后,时任美国总统布什发动反恐战争,并首次将朝鲜、伊朗、伊拉克(萨达姆政权)宣布为支持恐怖主义的“邪恶轴心”。之后,布什的幕僚进一步提出“边缘邪恶轴心”,将古巴、利比亚(卡扎菲政权)、叙利亚纳入。
2022年,在俄罗斯全面入侵乌克兰之前,美国评论员丹妮尔·普莱特卡首次将中国、俄罗斯、伊朗、朝鲜称为“新邪恶轴心”,并将中国视为核心。她的理由包括:中国政府隐瞒新冠疫情,限制香港民主,武力威胁台湾,对新疆实施集中营式管控,并且还同俄罗斯建立了“无上限”伙伴关系。之后,美印太司令部司令也表示,中俄伊朗朝四国“邪恶轴心”处于新生阶段。
丹妮尔·普莱特卡的评论文章
自俄罗斯入侵乌克兰至今,中国虽然在战争问题上一贯声称保持中立,但在政治、外交、经济层面一直助攻俄罗斯,实质上大力支援了其战时经济。朝鲜则向俄罗斯出售了大量的武器,并在2024年底直接派遣军事人员赴乌作战,两国成为了事实上的军事同盟关系。而中国与朝鲜之间则拥有“唇齿相依”的传统伙伴关系,中国多年来一直是朝鲜最大的援助国。
2024年普京、金正恩两人会面
相比之下,当伊朗与以色列交战并遭到美国轰炸核设施时,其余三国并未迅速提供援助,中俄两国只是象征性地谴责了美方行动。因此也有评论认为,伊朗与中俄朝三国的关系不算紧密,并且伊朗在意识形态层面(神权国家)有更大的不同。
中国“强烈谴责”美国袭击伊朗
9月3日,中国国家主席习近平在北京主持大型阅兵,纪念中国人民抗日战争暨世界反法西斯战争胜利80周年。有26位外国国家元首和政府首脑受邀出席纪念活动,其中包括俄罗斯总统普京、朝鲜最高领导人金正恩、伊朗总统佩泽希齐扬,中朝俄伊四国首脑罕见聚首。值得注意的是,参会名单中没有任何西方主要国家。批评者认为,这场阅兵更像是中国在借机集结反西方力量的大联盟,同时中国“把那场不属于自己的胜利,篡改成了为自己权力加冕的政治仪式”。
9·3阅兵无任何西方主要国家参与
当习近平与多国元首齐登天安门城楼时,普京与金正恩分别站在习近平的两侧,三人并肩站在首排,构成了历史性的同框。而上一次类似画面还是出现在七十多年前。在海外社交平台上,不少网友嘲讽三人的同框是“中俄朝新轴心”、“邪恶三巨头”、“独裁者联盟”、“反正义联盟”、“新时代纳粹”、“三个终身制”、“法西斯纪念反法西斯胜利”。讽刺的是,习近平还在阅兵式上强调,“人们应共同铭记伟大真理:正义必胜!和平必胜!人民必胜!”
习近平、普京、金正恩三人历史性同框
多名网友共同总结道“三个国家都深受共产主义的影响,三个国家目前都是专制极权国家,三个国家试图建立反西方的新世界秩序,三国领导人都以不同方式谋求了‘无限连任’,三个国家都具有典型的‘法西斯特征’却在纪念反法西斯战争胜利,三个国家都对邻国进行了武力威胁或直接侵略,对当今世界和平构成了重大威胁”。
习近平“全票当选”连任国家主席
有评论指出,虽然之前伊朗因美国和以色列的打击而被削弱,但中国仍通过这场阅兵向世界传递了重大的信号——一个以中俄朝为主的新轴心联盟已经成形。它们与西方为敌,彼此抱团取暖,与当年的二战轴心国一样,试图颠覆现有的国际秩序。其中,中国凭借工业、资金以及军事上的相对优势成为新轴心之首。这也意味着,一个中美直接对抗的新时代正式被开启。也正如习近平多次强调的那句“当今世界面临百年未有之大变局,进入了新的动荡变革期”。
卡塔尔首都多哈发生爆炸后,中国驻卡塔尔大使馆提醒在当地的中国公民提高安全意识,尽量减少不必要外出。
中国驻卡塔尔大使馆星期二(9月9日)在官方微信公众号发文称,多哈当天发生爆炸事件,并提醒在卡中国公民和机构提高安全意识,尽量减少不必要外出,避免前往高风险地区。
卡塔尔多哈星期二发生爆炸,现场传出巨响,并有目击者称卡塔拉地区升起浓烟。以色列军方随后证实,他们对在卡塔尔参与谈判的哈马斯高层领袖进行精准打击。不过,半岛电视台引述哈马斯的消息指出,没有哈马斯成员在此次攻击中丧命。
星期二(9月9日)是中共已故开国领导人毛泽东逝世49周年,他的孙子毛新宇携妻子刘滨,以及女兒毛甜懿到北京毛主席纪念堂祭奠缅怀。
北京广播电视台“北京时间”官方微博发出的短视频显示,毛新宇穿着军装,刘滨身穿黑色连身裙,毛甜懿则穿着运动装。他们三人在毛泽东雕像前合照。
视频也搭配一段文字,内容写道:“9月9日,毛主席逝世49周年,毛主席的孙子毛新宇少将,携妻子刘滨,女儿毛甜懿,到毛主席纪念堂祭奠缅怀。”
北京上星期三(9月3日)举行中国纪念抗日战争胜利80周年大阅兵,毛新宇携一家四口观礼。相关话题一度登上微博的热搜榜首位。
据湖南省韶山管理局主办的天下韶山网消息,在今年4月清明节期间,毛新宇一家人曾回到韶山祭祖。毛新宇当时在毛泽东祖父坟前说,“毛氏后人一定会清正廉洁”,并表示永远严格要求自己,不断为中共和中国作出新的贡献。
中国8月电商物流业务量持续上升, 国内促进消费政策推动下,主要电商平台销售热度比7月显著提升。
据央视新闻报道,中国物流与采购联合会星期三(9月10日)公布的数据显示,8月中国电商物流指数为112.3点,比上月上升0.3点,继续创年内新高。
分项指数中,电商物流总业务量指数超过131点,比上月上升0.5点,涨速加快。
中国物流信息中心主任刘宇航说,这反映出8月份以来中国国内消费意愿持续增强。主要电商平台数据显示,8月整体电商销售热度、推广热度比7月显著提升,促消费政策效应愈发明显。
刘宇航指出,以旧换新和促进消费场景多元化的系列政策在逐步发挥作用,也为电商物流的需求带来新增长点。
中国对日本参议员石平实施制裁后,中国驻日本大使馆说,石平通过出卖良知来捞取私利的行为令人不齿,并称中方相关举措是对石平之流的强力惩戒和严厉警示。
中国驻日本大使馆星期二(9月9日)在官网以发言人答记者问形式说,石平曾拥有中国国籍,赴日并取得日本国籍后,长期大肆散布虚假有害信息、恶意诽谤中伤中国,顽固采取极端反华仇华言行,严重违背中日四个政治文件精神和一个中国原则,严重干涉中国内政,严重损害中国主权和领土完整。
使馆称,这种通过出卖良知来捞取私利的行为令人不齿。中方依据《中华人民共和国反外国制裁法》对他反制,是维护自身权益的必要举措,是对石平之流的强力惩戒和严厉警示。
中国外交部星期一(9月8日)上午在官网通报,从即日起,冻结石平在中国境内的动产、不动产及其他各类财产;禁止中国境内的组织、个人与他进行有关交易、合作等活动;对他本人及直系亲属不予签发签证、不准入境(包括香港、澳门)。
日本政府就此事提出交涉,要求中国尽快撤回相关措施。日本内阁秘书长林芳正说:“作为国民代表的国会议员,言论自由是我国民主主义的根本,应当受到尊重。中方以我国国会议员的言论等为由,采取类似威吓持不同立场者的单方面措施,我们绝不能接受这样的做法,从日中关系的角度来看也极为遗憾。”
公开资料显示,今年63岁的石平生于中国四川成都,毕业于北京大学哲学系,1988年赴日留学,之后在神户大学考获博士学位。2007年,石平取得日本国籍,隔年担任拓殖大学客座教授,今年7月当选参议员。
石平主张钓鱼台为日本固有领土,必须重视日美同盟,联合美国对抗中国,也支持和肯定日本民主党政要参拜靖国神社。他反对用“侵略”形容南京大屠杀 ,认为中国的“南京大屠杀”记载不符合历史事实。
一位美国官员和一位欧盟外交官说,美国总统特朗普星期二(9月9日)敦促欧盟官员对中国商品征收最高可达100%的关税,作为向俄罗斯总统普京施压战略的一部分。
路透社引述不愿透露姓名的官员称,特朗普还鼓励欧盟对印度征收类似的高额关税。
中国和印度是俄罗斯石油的主要买家,因此在俄罗斯自2022年起扩大对乌克兰的入侵之际,它们在维持俄罗斯经济运转方面发挥着关键作用。
知情人士透露,美国就倍耐力(Pirelli)问题加大对意大利施压,警告称中国国企作为倍耐力的大股东可能会与美国的规定相冲突。
据彭博社报道,因讨论未公开消息而要求匿名的知情人士表示,美国商务部工业和安全局在7月中旬致信意大利官员,称意大利在2023年为了限制中化影响力而对倍耐力动用的否决权,不足以保护公司免受美国限制。
这些知情人士说,这封信函是回应意大利方面要求美国澄清对中化参股倍耐力的立场。
一位知情人士称,中化的代表预计将在未来几天与意大利官员会面,讨论倍耐力相关事宜。
报道称,美国加大力度审查可能与中国存在关联的敏感技术,这使倍耐力以及其他意大利公司陷入困境。倍耐力37%的股份由中化持有,约四分之一的销售来自美国,该公司在Cyber Tyre联网轮胎系统上投入大量资金,这一技术被视为推动其未来增长的关键。
For 13 terrifying seconds on 23 April this year, Turkey's largest city was shaken by a 6.2 magnitude earthquake. It was so strong that 151 people leapt from buildings in Istanbul in panic causing injuries, but no deaths.
But the Mayor, Ekrem Imamoglu, could not lift a finger to help the city he was first elected to run in 2019.
He was behind bars in a high-security prison complex in the district of Silivri, on the western edge of the city – ironically close to the epicentre.
Imamoglu is accused of a raft of corruption charges, which he strongly denies – "Kafkaesque charges" in his words.
Supporters say his only crime is being the greatest threat to Turkey's leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in presidential elections due by 2028.
Many of his fellow prisoners in Marmara jail - on the day of the earthquake - had also fallen foul of President Erdogan during his 22 years in power, some of them as peaceful protesters.
The jail is still widely known by its former name of Silivri. Hence the household phrase to explain why the speaker might be wary of criticising Erdogan: "Silivri is cold now."
Critics say that after Erdogan's early years as a Western-facing reformer, he has become a latter-day Sultan, dismantling human rights, cracking down on dissent and weaponising the courts.
The jailed mayor, leaders of his Republican People's Party (CHP), veteran lawyers, and student protesters are all appearing in the dock this month in separate cases.
"Erdogan has taken a huge step towards turning Turkey into a Russia-style autocracy," argues Gonul Tol, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute (MEI) in Washington, who is from Turkey and now lives in the US.
"What he has in mind is a Turkey where the ballot box has no meaning… where he hand-picks his opponents."
In all, more than 500 people linked to the CHP have been arrested since last October.
Prosecutors accuse the mayor and his associates of taking bribes, rigging tenders, extortion, and having links to terrorism.
But the CHP - which is centrist and secular - argues that the detentions are politically motivated and aimed at silencing the opposition. The party denies the charges.
Some are asking why, as Turkish democracy comes under fire in full view, has the international community said little and done even less? Could it be that Erdogan has fingers in too many pies - including Russia, Ukraine, Syria, and Nato - for European leaders to want to pick a fight?
And is US President Donald Trump's willingness to look the other way on human rights giving Erdogan a freer hand?
Moments before his arrest in March, with hundreds of police on his doorstep, Mayor Imamoglu calmly carried on knotting his tie, while making a social media video for his supporters.
"We are facing great tyranny," he said, "but… I will not be discouraged."
He was composed and defiant - and "a mortal threat to Erdogan", according to Soner Cagaptay, director of the Turkish research programme at the Washington Institute in the US.
"He's charismatic, he's relatable, he's conservative like Erdogan, but also secular. He ticks so many boxes."
But he can tick far fewer in jail.
His arrest came just as the CHP – Turkey's largest opposition party - was poised to nominate him as their candidate for the presidency. (They did it anyway, after he was detained.)
Locking up Imamoglu sparked the biggest anti-government protests in more than a decade. It was mostly the young who surged onto the streets, members of Generation Erdogan who have known no other leader.
"It has reached the breaking point for most people," said one 21-year-old in Istanbul. "They have overstepped the boundaries of justice."
Another said this was "a direct attack on our democracy".
The government banned the demonstrations – which were largely peaceful - but could not stop them.
The turmoil in Istanbul played out in the shadow of a Roman aqueduct. Erdogan's legions of riot police took up positions under the arches, armed with batons, tear gas and rubber bullets.
One photo made front pages around the world: a lone protester dressed as a whirling dervish - in traditional costume plus gas mask – being pepper-sprayed by the police.
Hours after it was taken, the photographer, Yasin Akgul of the AFP news agency, was detained at home, his hands still stinging from tear gas. Several other leading photojournalists were also arrested.
Some 2,000 people were rounded up after the protests – many in pre-dawn raids. More than 800 of them were charged with taking part in "unauthorised demonstrations".
These days, getting arrested is "the easiest thing", according to Gonul Tol. "You just have to like a tweet or a Facebook post criticising Erdogan."
Student protester Esila Ayia, 22, was detained after holding up a poster calling the Turkish leader a dictator. (Insulting the president is a crime in Turkey.) If convicted, she could get four years in jail.
Many Turks are feeling the chill, according to Berk Esen, associate professor of political science at Istanbul's Sabanci University, which has a liberal reputation. He claims there is "rampant pressure and oppression" of opposition figures in politics, civil society, academia and the media.
But he adds that Turkey is "not yet a fully fledged authoritarian regime… there is still some room for dissent".
Yet the arrests keep coming. More than 100 CHP members remain behind bars.
The president claims the CHP is "mired in corruption" with a network like "an octopus whose arms stretch to other parts of Turkey and abroad".
But Emma Sinclair-Webb of the campaign group Human Rights Watch sees a different octopus - the government itself.
It has "many, many, many, tentacles that go everywhere", she says. "There is a clear-sighted attempt by the government to go after critics and to go after the opposition.
"There is a complete loss of trust in the justice system. It's perceived more and more as highly politicised, and detention is being used to muzzle critics."
Members of the judiciary, prosecutors and judges themselves are "all the time looking up for instructions from above", she says.
The government says the judiciary is independent and impartial.
As Istanbul's mayor remains behind bars in Silivri, the international community remains focused elsewhere - chiefly on Israel's war in Gaza, and Russia's war in Ukraine.
The latter gives President Erdogan an edge, according to analysts.
He enjoys relatively good relations with Vladimir Putin, and Volodymyr Zelensky as well as Trump.
"I can't think of many other leaders who are in this position," says Berk Esen of Sabanci University. "I think in the international arena he likes to present himself as a dealmaker, in the room, shaking hands."
President Erdogan has had some success – for instance, helping to broker an agreement for Ukraine to resume grain exports through the Black Sea in July 2022, after they were halted by Russia's invasion five months earlier. And this year he hosted negotiators from Kyiv and Moscow for their first face-to-face talks since 2022.
"Everyone is praising his role in Russia and Ukraine," says Dr Tol. "Western leaders are looking to him to build European defence. And Trump doesn't care [what Erdogan does domestically], so he understands he can get away with it. "
She says Trump's return to the White House "has created an international context where regional autocrats feel empowered".
Dr Cagaptay, of the Washington Institute, says Erdogan has a freer hand because Trump has turned inwards, and the two leaders have "a special chemistry, going back to Trump's first term in office".
"I happen to like him, and he likes me," Trump has said of Erdogan. "He's a tough guy and he's very smart."
Erdogan is also well-placed geopolitically. Turkey's land mass lies partly in Asia, and partly in Europe, a bridge between two continents.
He holds plenty of other cards too - not least his leverage in neighbouring Syria. He backed the winning side there, supporting the Islamist rebels who overthrew President Bashar al-Assad in December.
He also leads the only Muslim nation in Nato, with the second largest army in the alliance, and a population of 85.6 million people. What happens here matters, for East and West.
"What Turkey is doing under Erdogan is leveraging its multiple identities very successfully," says Dr Cagaptay. "With the EU, I think Turkey is playing a middle power game very well…. whether it's about stabilising Syria or stabilising Ukraine after a ceasefire."
Erdogan may be empowered - and enabled - but there is a limit, according to some analysts.
What he won't do is cancel the next presidential elections, according to Onur Isci, professor of history and international affairs at Kadir Has University in Istanbul.
"Historically the Turkish people have been acutely sensitive about the sanctity of the ballot and attempts to curtail it would provoke serious consequences," he says.
Turkish elections are generally free on the day, though far from fair beforehand.
The playing field is not level. Most mainstream media outlets are pro-government. Those that are not, come under strong pressure from the authorities.
During the last election in 2023, Erdogan hung on to power narrowly, winning 52.18% of the vote against the opposition candidate, Kemal Kilicdaroglu.
Recent polls have suggested he could be beaten next time by Imamoglu. But the mayor remains behind bars, facing several different trials, and the opposition will probably be forced to choose a different candidate.
As a two-term president, Erdogan, 71, is barred from running again, but he can solve that problem by calling early elections or bringing in a new constitution.
"I have no interest in being re-elected or running for office again," he said in May.
Mr Esen thinks otherwise. "He will run for the presidency as long as he is alive."
As the longest-serving leader in modern Turkey, he has a loyal base who want him to. Many conservative voters are grateful for the development brought by his Justice and Development Party (AKP) and for his promotion of Islam, in this secular republic.
Plenty of devotion was visible at a rally of the president's supporters before the last election.
One supporter, Ayse Ozdogan, had gone there early to hear her leader's every word, a crutch by her side.
"Erdoğan is everything to me," she said, with a broad smile. "We couldn't get to hospitals before, now we have transportation. He has improved roads. He has built mosques."
But what of his impact on Turkish democracy?
"It's hugely eroded but not dead," according to Ms Sinclair-Webb. "There is a very vibrant democracy, wedded to democratic principles and to elections."
The opposition too is very robust, she says.
Soner Cagaptay cites the example of a doner kebab seller, slicing meat on a spit.
"To me, that's like Turkish democracy under Erdogan. He's taken really thin slices over the past 20 years, and there's very little meat left."
But he says there is a lesson to take from the Erdogan era: "It takes a long time to kill a democracy."
We contacted the president's communication office for an official response but did not receive one.
In a report to the United Nations Human Rights Council, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs here said that Turkey has "stood firm to protect and promote human rights... and has continued its efforts at further compliance with international standards in law."
The report adds that they country "spares no effort to create favourable conditions for civil society, including human rights defenders".
That may ring hollow in the cells in Silivri.
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Contactless card payments are set to exceed £100 and potentially become unlimited under new proposals to allow banks and other providers to set limits.
The proposals from the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) mean entering a four-digit PIN to make a card payment could become even more of a rarity for shoppers.
If approved, purchases which can cost more than £100 - such as a big supermarket shop, or large family meal in a restaurant - could be made with a tap of a card.
The move would bring cards in line with payments made through digital wallets on smartphones which have no restriction, and reflects the ongoing changes in the way people pay.
When contactless card payments were introduced in 2007, the transaction limit was set at £10. The limit was raised gradually, to £15 in 2010, to £20 in 2012, then to £30 in 2015, before the Covid pandemic prompted a jump to £45 in 2020, then to £100 in October 2021.
If approved, the latest plan could be put in place early next year.
Every rise has been met with concerns about theft and fraud, and the FCA said card providers would only permit higher-value contactless payments for low-risk transactions and would carry the burden if things went wrong.
However, the freedom for banks to raise or even scrap the contactless limit suggests the four-digit PIN could soon become relatively redundant.
The FCA has proposed the changes, despite the majority of consumers and industry respondents to a consultation favouring the current rules.
Some 78% of consumers who responded said they did not want any change to the limits.
The FCA said it did not expect any quick changes, but providers would welcome the flexibility over time when prices rise and technology advances. They could also give customers the option to set their own limits.
The idea of high-value payments being made with a tap of a card will raise concern that thieves and fraudsters will target cards.
Various protections are already in place. In addition to the £100 single payment limit, consumers are often required to enter a PIN if a series of contactless transactions totals more than £300, or five consecutive contactless payments are made.
The FCA's own analysis suggests raising the limits would increase fraud losses, but said detection was improving and would continue to get better.
It said any change would be reliant on providers ensuring payments were low-risk, through their fraud prevention systems.
Consumers would still get their money back if money was stolen by fraudsters, according to David Geale, from the FCA.
"People are still protected. Even with contactless, firms will refund your money if your card is used fraudulently," he said.
Many banks already allow cardholders to set a contactless limit of lower than £100, or switch it off completely, and the FCA expected this option to be made widely available.
It argued that time savings, less "payment friction", and a reflection of rising prices over time would make changes in the limits worthwhile.
Payment terminals would also need to be altered, as most are programmed to automatically refuse payments of more than £100 by card.
Smartphones already have an extra layer of security, through thumbprints or face ID. That allows people to pay without limits.
Nearly three-quarters of 16 to 24-year-olds regularly use mobile payments, according to industry research.
Near the appropriately named Bank Street in Sevenoaks, 24-year-old Demi Grady said she rarely bothered carrying her cards around anymore because she used her phone for everything.
"I was in London the other day, my phone died and I couldn't pay for stuff because I couldn't remember my card details," she said.
Her mum, Carrie, in contrast, uses her card when shopping.
"It would worry me more than be of benefit if they were to lose the limit of £100," she said.
Robert Ryan, who had just bought a "winter-ish jacket" at a Harveys Menswear on Bank Street said he did not regard entering a four-digit number when paying as a hassle. Instead it could be a useful budgeting tool.
"I feel more secure in what I'm buying and it does give me a bit of a prompt to make sure I'm not overspending on my tap-and-go," he said.
Richard Staplehurst, the owner of the store, said the majority of his customers were paying via a device.
He said that removing any obstacles to payment was great, but he did not want to be landed with a bill if a card was used fraudulently.
The idea of removing the contactless limit was highlighted as one way the FCA was responding to the prime minister's call to regulators to remove restrictions to create more economic growth.
The government has been striving to improve the UK's economic performance, which has been slow for some time.
Other countries, such as Canada, Australia and New Zealand allow industry to set contactless card limits.
The FCA will consult on its proposals until 15 October.
One of the UK's top planning lawyers has said it would be "unlawful" for the government to grant planning permission for a Chinese "mega embassy" near the Tower of London.
The opinion, from Lord Banner KC, was submitted to the government on Monday, just ahead of the final deadline for those opposed to the scheme to have their say.
Opponents are stepping up their fight against China's plan to turn the historic Royal Mint Court into the largest embassy of any country in Europe.
Residents of flats forming part of the Royal Mint estate commissioned the legal document in a bid to derail the scheme, as they fear China, which is now their landlord, will ultimately force them to leave their homes.
Former housing secretary Angela Rayner called the scheme in last year, ensuring the final decision on the planning application would be taken by her and not Tower Hamlets Council.
One of the most contentious aspects of the planning application has been that sections have been 'greyed out' by China, with the intended use of the rooms in question obscured.
Hong Kong dissidents, and other Chinese pro-democracy activists living in the UK, have expressed fears that these rooms could be used to hold and interrogate opponents of China's Communist regime.
China's response, given by planning consultants working on its behalf, was to clarify the use of some rooms, but to decline to do so for others saying, "the internal functional layout for embassy projects is different from other projects".
They pointed to the fact "the application for the new US embassy in Nine Elms did not disclose details of internal layouts".
In his opinion Lord Banner points to the fact that parts of Royal Mint Court are listed and says "it cannot tenably be said that the detail omitted by the redactions could have no possible planning consequences".
He gave examples of what needs to be assessed, including "the potential uses of the redacted rooms, any structural or safety (including but not limited to fire safety) implications of any physical structures".
Lord Banner also highlights that, no matter what assurances are given, the People's Republic of China (PRC) would "benefit from diplomatic immunity" for any activities occurring on that territory, giving "'carte blanche' in relation to what goes on in the rooms".
He called on Rayner's replacement, the new Housing Secretary Steve Reed, to be provided with unredacted plans, as planning permission "cannot lawfully be granted on the basis of the redacted plans".
A second area where there has been concern about the plans is that China wants to leave one section of the embassy site open to the public so people could view the ruins of a Cistercian abbey and also visit a Chinese heritage centre it hopes to build.
Earlier in the year, the Foreign Office and the Home Office had said this posed "specific public order and national security risks", because they feared that if there was a security or health alert in that paved forecourt, the emergency services would not be able to deal with it.
Any member of the public, including anti-China protestors, could walk into the area - but the police could not enter, as the land would be Chinese territory with "diplomatic inviolability".
They requested China enclose this section inside the embassy's security perimeter. Beijing has declined to do that.
Instead, it said it would agree, as a planning condition, that police or emergency services would be allowed to access the land, if necessary.
In his opinion, Lord Banner says this solution is not adequate, because it would "not be enforceable given the immunity conferred on the Embassy, the Ambassador, and other Embassy employees by virtue of... the Vienna Convention".
"In law the PRC's assurances are meaningless," he says, adding: "The PRC would be free in domestic and international law to U-turn on them at any time and there is nothing that planning conditions could do to stop this."
Despite Rayner's sudden departure, the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) has indicated her replacement Reed is still expected to make a decision on or before 21 October.
A MHCLG spokesperson said it would not be appropriate to provide ongoing commentary which could prejudice any final decision.
The Royal Mint Court Residents' Association said that with Lord Banner's opinion it had "shown why the Chinese Embassy at the Royal Mint cannot be approved".
They said: "The UK government should now put an end to the planning application once and for all, or face a humiliating judicial review."
Reed will have to weigh other issues alongside the planning questions, including serious security concerns.
Conservative politicians have said that if China is allowed to turn Royal Mint Court into its new embassy it could seek to tap into fibre optic cables running near the building that carry sensitive data for financial institutions in the City of London.
The Chinese Embassy in London has previously told the BBC that it "is committed to promoting understanding and the friendship between the Chinese and British peoples and the development of mutually beneficial cooperation between the two countries.
"Building the new embassy would help us better perform such responsibilities".
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Hydrogen is a chemical element with the symbol H and atomic number 1. It is the lightest and most abundant element, constituting about 75% of all normal matter. The Sun is mainly hydrogen in a plasma state. Under standard conditions, hydrogen is a gas of diatomic molecules with the formula H2; it is colorless, odorless, non-toxic and highly combustible. On Earth, hydrogen can exist in its gaseous state and in molecular forms, such as with oxygen in water (H2O). The most common isotope of hydrogen (1H) consists of one proton, one electron and no neutrons. Hydrogen gas was first produced artificially by the reaction of acids with metals. Henry Cavendish, in 1766–1781, identified hydrogen gas as a distinct substance and discovered its property of producing water when burned; its name means water-former in Greek. Its main industrial uses include fossil-fuel processing and ammonia production for fertilizer. Emerging uses for hydrogen include the use of fuel cells to generate electricity. (Full article...)
Plantago lanceolata, also known as the ribwort plantain, among other names, is a species of flowering plant in the plantain family Plantaginaceae. It is native to Europe and western Asia and has also been introduced elsewhere in the world, including North America, Oceania, Japan, South Africa and Chile. The plant is a rosette-forming perennial herb, with leafless, silky, hairy flower stems, typically growing to 45 centimetres (18 in) in height. The flower stalk is deeply furrowed, ending in an ovoid inflorescence of many small flowers each with a pointed bract. Plantago lanceolata is used in herbal teas and other herbal remedies and is also employed as a prop in various children's games. This P. lanceolata inflorescence was photographed in Kulna, Estonia.
Photograph credit: Ivar Leidus
首先肯定的是取消 sim 卡槽肯定提高了空间利用率、更利于防水、手机丢了不会被拔卡断网。
虽然物理 sim 卡有使用寿命, 但是这不代表 esim 是完美的, 纯 esim 是为了手机设计作出的牺牲。
在国外换 esim 需要登陆运营商 app 切换设备(需要短信验证码),如果原始设备坏了,那么必须去线下验证身份,如果是实体卡,拔了插入新手机就可以了。
美版没有卡槽的 iphone 带入国内使用就是大号 ipod ,只能连接 wifi 或者用很贵的漫游(速度还慢)。
如果想把卡插到其他设备比如随身 wifi 、短信转发,esim 卡就不可能做到这些。
分享一个自己经历过的事:之前一个同事辞职回家,他的卡是绝版套餐,流量多价格便宜,直接把卡送给我了,我只需要继续交话费就可以了。如果是 esim ,我就需要把他的手机买了,或者把我的手机给他去线下切换设备,非常的麻烦。
理想状态是实体卡和 esim 都有,让用户自行选择。目前苹果的意思似乎是强推纯 esim 手机,仔细想想,这种情况真的好吗?
住在加拿大,有大陆,香港和加拿大的三个手机号,现在三个都是实体卡,不得已需要两个手机。
加版都是双 esim ,用不了大陆手机号。现在港版 iPhone 17 Pro 支持一个实体卡加一个 esim ,刚好可以把加拿大和香港号码都换成 esim ,大陆卡还是用实体卡,终于只需要一个手机了。港版真香。
苹果官方说明: https://support.apple.com/zh-cn/123879
1 、只有 iPhone Air ,型号 A3518 ,在中国大陆支持中国运营商的 eSIM 。
2 、所有其他 iPhone 型号(包括在中国大陆以外购买的型号)都无法安装来自中国大陆运营商的 eSIM 配置文件。
3 、在中国大陆境内无法安装非中国大陆运营商的 eSIM 卡,在中国大陆以外旅行时,您必须启用定位服务,才能激活当地运营商的 eSIM 卡。
那么问题来了,我想买港版,现在支持了苹果人工智能,然后就不能使用国内运营商的 esim 了,不过能随意添加其他的 esim
你们是选国行还是港版的 iPhone Air ?
有哪些地方是不如的?我知道数字系列的摄像头像素相同但是素质差挺多。 14Pro 还挺强的,但是用了 3 年电池已经不行了,只有主摄 4800 万像素,而且 deepfusion 很垃圾。 趁国补换 256 起步的 17 ,目前看还是不错。14Pro 卖二手还能接近 3000 ?
和小伙伴从 23 年开始自研交易所系统,目前已经在多家客户环境中稳定运行。功能包含现货、永续合约、外汇、自发币、KYC 、多语言、内置客服与 U 盾钱包。
技术栈方面: •后端 Golang:高并发、低延迟、内存安全,适合处理撮合引擎、资金结算等高性能场景。 •前端 Vue3 + Ionic:Vue3 生态成熟,开发效率高; Ionic 可以同时适配 Web 与移动端,降低多端维护成本。
有兴趣的可以交流~ ✈️:@ribtc
根据日本官网页面的底部注释:
“iPhone 17の各モデルとiPhone AirはeSIMを使ってアクティベートされます。物理的なSIMには対応していません。 ”
“iPhone 17 系列的各个型号以及 iPhone Air ,只能通过 eSIM 来激活,不支持实体 SIM 卡。”
所以想买日版的朋友需要谨慎购买了。
可能苹果发觉中国市场真的不在乎这个😅
那我就继续用 s7 吧
标准版终于上高刷了,并且 256GB 起,air 的外观感觉真不错啊,配色也很好看。pro 的外观感觉不太好看,你们觉得呢
iPhone 17 5999 元起
iPhone 17 Air 7999 元起
iPhone 17 Pro 8999 元起
iPhone 17 Pro Max 9999 元起
9 月 12 号晚上 8 点开启预售,9 月 19 号正式发售
A19 / ProMotion / 6.3 寸 / 256G