青岛市委原副书记王文华被查
中国官方通报,中共青岛市委原副书记王文华被查。
据中央纪委国家监委网站星期四(12月18日)消息,青岛市人大常委会原党组书记、主任王文华涉嫌严重违纪违法,目前正接受中央纪委国家监委纪律审查和监察调查。
公开信息显示,王文华今年68岁,曾任青岛市委副书记,2012年当选青岛市人大常委会主任,直至2017年卸任。此后,他担任了青岛市关工委主任等职务。
中国官方通报,中共青岛市委原副书记王文华被查。
据中央纪委国家监委网站星期四(12月18日)消息,青岛市人大常委会原党组书记、主任王文华涉嫌严重违纪违法,目前正接受中央纪委国家监委纪律审查和监察调查。
公开信息显示,王文华今年68岁,曾任青岛市委副书记,2012年当选青岛市人大常委会主任,直至2017年卸任。此后,他担任了青岛市关工委主任等职务。

官方数据显示,中国11月非在校青年失业率写下五个月新低。
中国国家统计局星期四(12月18日)在官网发布11月分年龄组失业率数据。
数据显示,中国11月城镇不包含在校生的16至24岁劳动力失业率为16.9%,是今年7月以来最低;不包含在校生的25至29岁劳动力失业率为7.2%,连续四个月持平;不包含在校生的30至59岁劳动力失业率为3.8%,连续两个月持平。
中国16岁至24岁失业率在2023年6月达到创纪录的21.3%后,官方以需要进一步健全优化劳动力调查统计为由,暂停发布青年失业数据数月。
2023年12月起,中国统计局对分年龄组失业率统计进行了调整完善,发布不包含在校生的16至24岁、25至29岁、30至59岁劳动力失业率。
中国统计局星期一(15日)发布的数据显示,中国11月城镇调查失业率达5.1%,与上月持平。数据还显示,今年前11个月,全国城镇调查失业率平均值为5.2%。
庆祝中国民主建国会成立80周年大会星期三在北京举行。民建中央常务副主席秦博勇在会上回顾了民建成立80年的历史。此前有港媒报道称,秦博勇和民建中央委员会主席郝明金从10月下旬起至今,已双双“失踪”至少40天。
据新华社报道,庆祝民建成立80周年大会星期三(12月17日)在北京举行。中共中央统战部部长李干杰出席大会并代表中央致贺词。
报道称,秦博勇在会上回顾了民建成立80年的历史,号召全体会员更加紧密地团结在以中共总书记习近平同为核心的中央周围,全面贯彻习近平新时代中国特色社会主义思想,始终保持同中国共产党同心同德、团结奋斗的政治本色,为以中国式现代化全面推进强国建设、民族复兴伟业作出新的更大贡献。
不过,星岛头条网称郝明金没有参加大会。星岛头条网也引述消息说,郝明金因为身体原因仍在休养。
星岛头条网12月9日刊发的“中国观察”文章,梳理了郝明金和秦博勇的行踪,指两人从10月下旬起,已“神隐”至少40天;他们缺席的会议包括李干杰10月28日向党外人士通报中共二十届四中全会精神的会议,民建中央10月30日召开的学习四中全会精神会议,以及这期间举办的全国人大常委会和全国政协常委会会议。
公开信息显示,今年69岁的郝明金现任全国人大常委会副委员长,61岁的秦博勇则是全国政协副主席。

© Associated Press

EPAThe 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.

Moose Campbell/BBCWe're driven blindfolded to a secret location where Ukraine is making one of its latest weapons.
We're told to turn off our phones - such is the secrecy around the production of Ukraine's Flamingo cruise missile.
For Ukraine, dispersing and hiding the production of weapons like this is key to survival. Two factories belonging to the company that make it - Fire Point - have already been hit.
Inside the one we're visiting we're told not to film any features such as pillars, windows or ceilings. We're also asked not to show the faces of workers on the assembly line - where Flamingo missiles are at various stages of completion.
Even under fire, Ukraine is ramping up its arms industry. President Volodymyr Zelensky says the country now produces more than 50% of the weapons it uses on the front line. Almost its entire inventory of long-range weapons is domestically made.
At the start of the war Ukraine mostly relied on its old Soviet-era arsenal. Western military support helped modernise the country's armed forces, but it now leads much of the world in developing unmanned systems – like robots and drones.
Now, domestically produced cruise missiles are adding to Ukraine's long-range capability.

Moose Campbell/BBCIryna Terekh is the chief technical officer of Fire Point – one of Ukraine's largest drone and missile manufacturers whose Latin motto translates to "if not us, then who".
The 33-year-old once studied architecture, but she is now trying to help dismantle the Russian war machine.
She cuts a tiny figure in front of the giant Flamingo missile, which she tells me is painted black not pink (unlike early prototypes) "because it eats Russian oil".
The end product looks similar to the German V1 rocket from World War Two. It consists of a large jet engine placed on top of a tube the length of a London bus.
They've already been used in combat, though the company won't confirm specific targets.

Moose Campbell/BBCThe Flamingo is the kind of deep-strike weapon that Western nations have been reluctant to supply.
The cruise missile is said to have a range of 3,000km (1,900 miles). That's similar to a US-made Tomahawk – the more sophisticated and expensive weapon that US President Donald Trump refused to give Ukraine.
But deep strikes are seen as a critical part of the war, for which Ukraine mainly uses long-range drones. It is still losing ground to Russia on a front line that stretches for more than a thousand kilometres. So Ukraine is increasingly trying to target Russia's war economy, to slow those advances.
The head of Ukraine's Armed Forces, General Oleksandr Syrskyi, says Ukraine's long-range strikes have already cost the Russian economy more than $21.5bn this year.

Moose Campbell/BBCRuslan, an officer in Ukraine's Special Operations Forces, says the strategy is simple: "To reduce the enemy's military capabilities and their economic potential."
He says Ukraine's Special Operations Forces have carried out hundreds of strikes on oil refineries, weapons factories and ammunition dumps - deep inside enemy territory.
Of course Russia has been doing the same, and on a greater scale. On average it has been launching around 200 Shahed drones a day; Ukraine's response has been about half that number.
Nor is Russia limiting its strikes to military targets. Its long-range missile and drone attacks have led to massive power cuts right across the country – making life harder for millions of civilians. "I'd like to launch as many drones as Russia does," Ruslan says. "But we're scaling up very quickly".
Ms Tarekh, of Fire Point, says Ukraine may not be able to match Russia's resources, but, she says, "we are trying to fight with brains and tactics".
Denys Shtilerman, the chief designer and co-founder of the company, admits there is no "Wunderwaffe" – or wonder weapon.
"The game changer is our will to win," he says.

Kevin McGregor/BBCFire Point didn't even exist before Russia's full-scale invasion. But the start-up is now producing 200 drones a day. Its FP1 and FP2 drones, each the size of a small aeroplane, have carried out 60% of Ukraine's long-range strikes. Each drone costs around $50,000 – three times cheaper than a Russian Shahed drone. Russia is still producing nearly 3,000 of those a month.
Ukraine still needs outside help, not least with intelligence, targeting and money. But it is trying to be more self-sufficient.
Ms Terekh says they've made a deliberate decision to source as many of their components as possible from within Ukraine.
"We are following the principle that no one can influence the weapons we build," she says. They avoid parts from two specific countries – China and the United States.
Asked why there should be no American components, she says "we're on an emotional roller coaster [with the US]. Tomorrow somebody may want to shut it down, and we would not be able to use our own weapons."
Until the end of last year, under President Biden, the United States supplied nearly $70bn-worth of military support to Ukraine. That was soon stopped under President Trump – instead he has set up a scheme to allow European Nato to purchase US weapons. The US is no longer Ukraine's biggest military backer, and Europe has struggled to fill the gap left by America or to match its previous support.
Concerns about future US support spills over into talk of future US security guarantees – a key issue of the current peace talks. Ms Terekh dismisses the ongoing negotiations as "capitulation talks", and says that Ukraine making its own weapons "is the only way to really provide security guarantees".
The former architecture student also hopes that the rest of Europe will be watching, and learning lessons.
"We are a bloody example," she says, "in terms of being prepared for war."
Ms Terekh says she wants to shock them into action, and believes that if any other country had faced the same onslaught as Ukraine "then they'd already have been conquered."
Additional reporting by Volodymyr Lozhko and Kyla Herrmannsen.

BBCA student who worked as a sales assistant has settled a sexual harassment case against her former employer JD Sports for £65,000.
Jayla Boyd worked part time in a Belfast store while studying for her A-levels.
During a shift, Ms Boyd, who was 17 at the time, was slapped on the bottom by a male supervisor and was upset that her employer failed to offer her support after the incident.
In settling the case, JD Sports Fashion PLC acknowledged and apologised for the significant upset to Ms Boyd. It also agreed to liaise with the Equality Commission for Northern Ireland (ECNI), who supported the case, to review its policies.
A JD Sports Fashion plc spokesperson said the individual involved is no longer employed by the company.
In a statement the company said: "This incident occurred in July 2024 and was promptly addressed in line with our policies."
They also apologised to Ms Boyd.
Following the incident, on the same day, Ms Boyd made a report to her manager and was told that CCTV had captured the incident.
However, the supervisor was allowed to continue to work alongside her for the rest of the shift.
She said he approached her twice during that time to talk to her and apologised for what he had done, explaining that it was "muscle memory".
Despite raising a complaint of sexual harassment, Ms Boyd claimed that while she made a written statement, she was not formally interviewed about her experience.
She said she felt upset and distressed that her employer failed to offer her support after the incident, so she used some annual leave to take time away from her job.
Upon her return, she said no return-to-work meeting was arranged.

ReutersMs Boyd said she was not updated about the investigation or outcome of her complaint.
"I didn't really ever hear much, I didn't want to ask because I thought it was standard procedure that I was kept out of an investigation... I learned that wasn't really standard procedure and I should have been involved," Ms Boyd told BBC News NI.
She also believes that her personal information relating to the incident was seen by other staff on a manager's computer.
Ms Boyd experienced further embarrassment during a staff training session when an example involving a woman being slapped on the bottom by a supervisor was discussed.
She felt certain the example referred to her own experience.
Ms Boyd later resigned from her job.
"I never expected this to happen to me. The initial incident was embarrassing, but it was made worse because I felt like they were trying to ignore what had happened to me instead of dealing with it properly," Ms Boyd said.
"I had to remain working with this male supervisor after he had sexually harassed me. Everyone deserves to feel safe and supported at work.
"It took me a long time to understand that it was really serious and I think that came from the stigma around it, I was so worried about what other people thought... because of how people would see me... but now I am so glad I said something," she continued.
"I hope that by speaking out I can give others the confidence to challenge this type of behaviour."
In a statement, Chief Commissioner Geraldine McGahey said a "zero-tolerance approach" by employers to sexual harassment in the workplace "will remind everyone how seriously it will be dealt with should any instances arise".
"In order to prevent it, employers must ensure that all staff know what behaviour is acceptable, and unacceptable, in the workplace," she added.
"Employers must have clear policies and procedures in place to deal with harassment, and managers must be trained to use them appropriately. This type of behaviour must be investigated thoroughly, with the complaint dealt with sensitively and in a timely manner."
In settling the case, ECNI said JD Sports Fashion PLC "acknowledged and apologised for the significant upset, distress, and injury to feelings experienced by Ms Boyd".
The company reaffirmed its strong commitment to the principle of equality of opportunity.
It has also agreed to liaise with the commission to review its policies, practices and procedures, the ECNI added.

Getty ImagesPolicymakers at the Bank of England are expected to cut interest rates - bringing the Bank rate down to its lowest level since February 2023.
Analysts are widely predicting a fall from 4% to 3.75%, although they do not expect a unanimous decision among the nine-member Monetary Policy Committee (MPC).
This would be the sixth cut in interest rates from August last year.
The Bank rate heavily influences the cost of borrowing by consumers, but also the returns given to savers.
The MPC has a target to keep inflation - which charts the rising cost of living - to 2%. The Bank rate is the committee's primary tool for achieving its ambition.
The latest inflation data, published on Wednesday, showed a bigger drop to Consumer Prices Index (CPI) inflation than analysts had been expecting.
The rate of CPI fell to 3.2% in November, from 3.6% in October, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.


While inflation remains above the Bank's target, the latest fall in the rate and signs of rising unemployment and a relatively stagnant economy are likely to push the committee towards an interest rate cut.
At the previous meeting in November, the four members of the MPC who voted for a cut were only just outvoted by the five who wanted to keep rates on hold.
At the time, the Bank's governor, Andrew Bailey, said he would "prefer to wait and see" whether inflation continued to drop back.
James Smith, developed market economist for ING, said the sharp drop in the November rate of inflation "green lights" a rate cut.
He said the "latest drop in inflation fits into a broader body of evidence suggesting that price pressures are cooling".
He is forecasting another two cuts to interest rates in February and April next year, although not all analysts agree with this suggestion.
About 500,000 homeowners have a mortgage that "tracks" the Bank of England's rate. If a 0.25 percentage point cut does come, it is likely to mean a typical reduction of £29 in their monthly repayments.
For the additional 500,000 homeowners on standard variable rates, there would typically be a £14 a month fall, assuming there is a cut in the Bank rate and lenders pass on the cut to their customers.
The vast majority of mortgage customers have fixed-rate deals. Rates on these deals have been falling recently, owing to the expectation among lenders of a Bank rate cut in December.
As of 17 December, the average two-year fixed residential mortgage rate was 4.82%, according to financial information company Moneyfacts. A five-year rate was 4.90%.
Mortgage rate cuts should also reduce some financial pressure on landlords, and perhaps ease the likelihood of rent rises for tenants.
However, savers are likely to see a further fall in returns as a result of any Bank rate falls.
The current average rate on an easy-access savings account is 2.56%, according to Moneyfacts.

PA MediaPrime Minister Sir Keir Starmer is set to unveil the agenda for the next phase of his government in the immediate aftermath of May's crucial elections.
The King's Speech has been pencilled in for May 12 or 13 next year, the BBC has been told, just days after elections across Britain on 7 May.
The elections in May cover the Scottish parliament and the Welsh Senedd as well as thousands of council seats in England and a handful of directly elected mayoralties.
Labour is braced for a bad night at the polls, which many Labour MPs believe could precipitate a challenge to Sir Keir's leadership.
One government source told the BBC: "It will be much harder for somebody to challenge the PM and say we need to go in a different direction when the King is about to come to parliament to announce what we're doing for the next year."
Others dispute that there is any connection between the threat to Sir Keir's leadership and the date selected for the King's Speech, pointing out that in some recent years - most recently 2022 - the speech has taken place in May, when local elections are always held.
The speech also took place very soon after local elections in 2021 and in 2016.
The King's Speech is part of the state opening of Parliament, a ceremonial event marking the start of a parliamentary session, which typically lasts for a year but can run for much longer.
The current session is on the long side, having begun after the general election in July 2024.
The speech is written by the government but read by the Monarch from a throne in the House of Lords.
It sets out the government's agenda for the coming session, specifying what pieces of legislation the government intends to pass.
Cabinet ministers began the process of formally "bidding" for legislation they want to be included in the King's Speech around early October.
Most ministers now know which bills Sir Keir wants to include in his post-May agenda, a source said.

ReutersBP has appointed a new chief executive, making Meg O'Neill the first woman to run a major global oil firm.
The London-based energy giant said its current boss Murray Auchincloss would step down less than two years after he replaced Bernard Looney, who was found to have committed "serious misconduct" in failing to disclose relationships with colleagues.
BP executive vice president Carol Howle will serve as interim chief executive until Ms O'Neill, who has led Australian energy firm Woodside Energy since 2021, takes up her new role on 1 April.
Ms O'Neill said she looks forward to helping BP "do our part to meet the world's energy needs".
Mr Auchincloss, who took over from Mr Looney in September 2024, said he had told BP's chairman in September that he was open to stepping down "were an appropriate leader identified".
"I am confident that BP is now well positioned for significant growth and I look forward to watching the company's future progress," he said after Ms O'Neill's appointment was announced. He will serve in an advisory role until December 2026.
Ms O'Neill said she would prioritise re-establishing the oil giant's market leadership, as well as advancing safety and driving innovation and sustainability.
BP praised Ms O'Neill's time as chief executive of Woodside Energy, pointing to the firm's takeover of BHP Petroleum International in 2022.
It said she had grown the business into the largest energy company listed on the Australian Securities Exchange.
Before joining Woodside, Ms O'Neill spent 23 years in technical, operational and leadership positions at Texas-based energy firm ExxonMobil.
Mr Looney was dismissed without notice, and forfeited up to £32.4m ($43.3m) in salary and benefits, after admitting that he was not "fully transparent" about his past personal relationships.
BP's board said they had been "knowingly misled" by Mr Looney.
At the time, Mr Looney said in a statement that he was "disappointed with the way this situation has been handled".
Ms O'Neill's appointment comes as BP is cutting its renewable energy investments and instead focusing on increasing oil and gas production.
In February, the energy giant said it would shift its strategy following pressure from some investors who were frustrated that its profits and share price had lagged behind rivals.
Rivals Shell and Norwegian company Equinor have also scaled back plans to invest in green energy and US President Donald Trump's call to "drill baby drill" has encouraged firms to invest in fossil fuels.

Parts of Scotland enjoyed the most recent white Christmas in 2023
Are you dreaming of a white Christmas? With the big day a week away, it is possible that some of us might have some festive snow - but only just.
After a couple of weeks of milder conditions it's about to turn noticeably colder. Temperatures for many parts of the UK may be a degree or two below the average for this time of year, hitting the 6-9C mark.
The drop will be a result of an influx of cold air from eastern Europe.
And if there are some small changes to that, there is a slight chance that even colder air from Scandinavia might come this way, and the possibility that any showers falling in eastern areas might turn to sleet or even snow.
The change in fortunes is down to a high pressure system which is going to build close to the north of the UK and a low pressure one forming around France or Spain.
Although they will not be directly over the UK, the precise position of the centres of these highs and lows will determine the direction of the wind. In turn, that will influence how cold the air will be and therefore the chances of snow falling.

A change in wind direction will bring colder weather just in time for Christmas
As well as becoming much colder generally in time for Christmas it will probably be quite cloudy with showers developing over the North Sea and affecting eastern areas.
The best of any sunshine would be in the north and west but there will be also be a risk of some morning frost and fog.
Weather for the week ahead
Currently the forecast is for east-southeasterly winds but there is a very small chance that we get east-northeasterlies instead.
This small change in wind direction could then pull in much colder air from Scandinavia resulting in showers over eastern areas that could turn to sleet or snow in places.
Although a white Christmas is still unlikely for most of us, it can't completely be ruled out just yet.
Either way, very wet weather is off the Christmas menu this year. This spell of quieter spell of weather will be very much welcomed in areas which have recently seen heavy rain such as Cumbria and south Wales.
Our experience of Christmas past should tell us that it's rare to see snow actually fall on Christmas day - and getting rarer.



























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BBC Sports Personality of the Year is back for 2025, celebrating a phenomenal 12 months of sporting drama and triumph.
It has been a year to remember in sport, including England winning the Women's Euros and Women's Rugby World Cup, Team Europe winning the Ryder Cup, Liverpool's Premier League title, Arsenal's Women's Champions League success, and the Lions' series win in Australia.
There were also record-breaking moments in cricket, athletics, golf, tennis, rugby league and many more.

Gabby Logan, Clare Balding and Alex Scott will host the event
The star-studded show will be broadcast live from the home of BBC Sport at MediaCity, Salford, on Thursday 18 December from 19:00 GMT.
Send us your questions
BBC Sports Personality of the Year 2025 will be broadcast live on BBC One, BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website and app (UK only).

A shortlist of six contenders has been announced for the 2025 BBC Sports Personality of the Year award
Hannah Hampton (football)
Chloe Kelly (football)
Ellie Kildunne (rugby union)
Luke Littler (darts)
Rory McIlroy (golf)
Lando Norris (Formula 1)
Full information on the nominees can be found here.
Voting will take place during the show on BBC One and the BBC iPlayer on Thursday, 18 December.
The public can vote online on the night for the main award, with full details announced during the show.
This video can not be played
How to vote for SPOTY 2025
An expert independent panel consisting of 12 representatives from the world of sport - chaired by BBC Director of Sport Alex Kay-Jelski - selects a shortlist.
They are selected on the basis of the following criteria:
Reflected UK sporting achievements on the national and/or international stage;
Represented the breadth and depth of UK sports; and
Took into account 'impact' of the person's sporting achievement beyond the sport in question.
Non-playing coaches or management are not eligible.
The panel produces a shortlist based on reaching a consensus view. If a consensus cannot be reached on all or some of the candidates, the panel will be asked to vote for the remaining candidates. In the event of a tied vote, the decision of the chair is binding.
The panel has the right to amend elements of this or other awards such as the criteria or numbers shortlisted, should a consensus view be reached - provided such changes remain within the spirit of the award.
Seven awards will be presented on the night:
Sports Personality of the Year
World Sport Star of the Year
Helen Rollason award
Young Sports Personality of the Year
Coach of the Year
Team of the Year
Lifetime Achievement award

Voting has now closed for the BBC Sports Personality World Sport Star of the Year 2025 award
Mariona Caldentey (football)
Terence Crawford (boxing)
Armand Duplantis (athletics)
Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone (athletics)
Shohei Ohtani (baseball)
Mohamed Salah (football)
Full information on the nominees can be found here.
Voting for this award closed at 12:00 GMT on 14 December.
The award will be presented during the live show on BBC One on Thursday, 18 December.
This is a special BBC award recognising outstanding achievement in the face of adversity. It will be decided by senior management in BBC Sport.
The award will be presented during the live show.

Agyemang, Littler and Perrin are contenders for this year's award
Michelle Agyemang (football)
Luke Littler (darts)
Davina Perrin (cricket)
More information on the nominees can be found here.
This award goes to the outstanding young sportsperson aged 18 or under on 1 January 2025, with the winner decided by the panel.

England's Euro 2025-winning women's football team, the country's Women's Rugby World Cup champions, and the triumphant European Ryder Cup team have been shortlisted for the prize
England women's football team (Lionesses)
England women's rugby union team (Red Roses)
European Ryder Cup team
Voting is now open for the Team of the Year award that will be presented at Sports Personality of the Year 2025.
Voting will close and the winner will be announced during the live show on Thursday, 18 December.

Thierry Henry scored 228 goals in 377 matches for Arsenal across his two spells with the Gunners
Former Arsenal and France striker Thierry Henry will be honoured with the Lifetime Achievement award this year.
This award honours someone who has made a major impact on the world of sport during their lifetime. It has been decided by senior management in BBC Sport.
The 48-year-old, widely considered to be one of the Premier League's greatest players, retired in 2014.
He will be presented with the award at the live show on Thursday night.
"Football has given me everything and I gave it my all," said Henry.
"To be recognised as part of its history with this Lifetime Achievement award and to have made my mark for the fans and my team-mates is something I'll never take for granted."
This article is the latest from BBC Sport's Ask Me Anything team.

Ukrinform/NurPhotoEuropean 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/AFPThe 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.

EPAGerman 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.
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就在刚刚,ChatGPT 应用商店已经正式推出。
在 ChatGPT 里的「应用(BETA)」页面里,我们可以看到 OpenAI 按「精选 / 生活方式 / 工作效率」等分类列出多款应用,如 Adobe Photoshop、Apple Music、Canva、Figma、Booking.com 等,点开即可查看或使用对应能力。
当然,用户也可以直接访问 chatgpt.com/apps 浏览精选应用。
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这些应用能够为 ChatGPT 对话带来新的上下文,让用户在聊天中执行各种实际操作——订购、将大纲转化为幻灯片、搜索酒店公寓等等。
用户连接应用后,可以通过「@ 应用名」直接触发,或从应用栏中选择。更智能的是,ChatGPT 还会根据对话上下文、使用习惯和用户偏好,自动推荐相关应用。
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实际体验下来发现,可能由于仍处于 Beta 阶段,连接速度相对较慢,且首次使用时需要登录对应账号。
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而根据 OpenAI 昨天发布的官方博客,开发者已经可以正式向 ChatGPT 提交应用进行审核和发布。这标志着 OpenAI 在构建 AI 生态系统上迈出了关键一步。
为了帮助开发者打造高质量应用,OpenAI 提供了完整的资源体系:
最佳实践指南、开源示例应用、专门的 UI 库,以及处于测试阶段的 Apps SDK。开发者可以在 OpenAI 开发者平台提交应用,内容包括 MCP 连接详情、测试说明、目录元数据等等。
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首批通过审核的应用将陆续上线。符合质量与安全标准的应用会被收录至应用目录,而深受用户喜爱的应用可能会被重点推荐,或由 ChatGPT 在对话中主动提示。
在早期阶段,开发者可将 ChatGPT 应用与其网站或原生应用相连,用于完成实体商品的交易。OpenAI 还在探索更多变现方式,包括数字商品,并会根据反馈持续更新。
所有应用必须遵守严格的安全和隐私规定:需符合 OpenAI 使用政策、提供清晰的隐私政策、仅请求实现功能所需的必要信息。用户始终掌握主动权——可随时断开应用连接,一旦断开,该应用将立即失去访问权限。
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OpenAI 并不是第一次尝试做类似平台。
之前那个 GPT Store,上线之初讨论声不小,但热度下滑得也很快。即使是 OpenAI 的死忠粉也不得不承认,GPTs Store 更像是 prompt 的集散地,而非真正的商业护城河。
OpenAI 大概也很清楚,于是这次干脆推倒重做。
今天亮相的应用商店,形态明显更接近我们熟悉的苹果应用商店。不是简单把一个个 GPT 名字挂在列表里,而是把复杂能力封装成可以被点击、被订阅、被组合的「应用」。
一旦这种封装方式成熟,ChatGPT 那个看似普通的对话框,就会逐渐变成一个总入口。前台是聊天,后台接着的,却是一整片由第三方应用支撑的能力网络。
那个曾在 2008 年登上苹果年度开发者大会,用 App Store 给自己应用做推介的奥特曼,大概没想到多年后的自己,会试图在 AI 时代复刻当年苹果的玩法。
只不过这回,他不再是被平台挑选的开发者,而是那个要亲手搭出下一个「App Store」的人。从过往的操作来看,ChatGPT 不满足于做浏览器里的一个 Chatbot,而是想要向 OS 靠拢,把自己变成 AI 时代的基础层。
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历史的子弹像是绕了一大圈,最终还是对准了他自己的眉心。
模型能力可以被追平,生态惯性却一旦形成,就很难被轻易迁移。这也正是 Google 多年来最大的底牌之一: 它有完整的操作系统、有浏览器入口、有开发工具链,还有一个已经运转多年的应用体系。
为了在这场生态之战中获得优势,OpenAI 正在寻求更多资本支持。
今天凌晨,The Information 报道,OpenAI 已与部分投资者进行了初步洽谈,计划以大约 7500 亿美元的估值筹集新一轮资金。根据知情人士的说法,OpenAI 可能筹集数百亿美元,最高可能达到 1000 亿美元。目前谈判仍处于早期阶段,尚未有任何最终决定。
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对厂商而言,这是一次极具诱惑力也同样危险的选项。
一方面,挂靠在 OpenAI 的生态之上,意味着你可以更快接触到全球范围的用户;另一方面,你对平台的依赖度也会逐步加深,一旦分发规则或抽成模式发生变化,整个商业规则都要重新计算。
而当 AI 成为默认入口,未来的我们或许也会慢慢形成一种新习惯: 不是先打开浏览器找网址,而是先打开任何一个 AI 工具,说一句「帮我找一个能做某件事的应用」,然后在对话中完成查找、试用、付费和调用。
这种交互方式一旦普及,传统的搜索引擎和应用商店,可能都要被重新定义。OpenAI 显然也看到了这个机会,所以才会在应用商店这件事上下这么大的功夫。
模型是起点,生态是终点。
面对来自 Google 的持续竞争,OpenAI 的故事还远未结束,但它需要在接下来的几个月里证明,自己不仅能做出好的模型,还能搭建起一个让开发者和用户都愿意留下的生态系统。
#欢迎关注爱范儿官方微信公众号:爱范儿(微信号:ifanr),更多精彩内容第一时间为您奉上。
中国工业和信息化部部长李乐成在会见到访的美国科技巨企超微(AMD)首席执行官苏姿丰时说,希望超微继续深耕中国市场。
据中国工信部官网消息,李乐成星期三(12月17日)在北京会见美国超微半导体公司董事会主席兼首席执行官苏姿丰,双方就加强数字经济、人工智能(AI)领域合作等议题进行交流。
李乐成表示,中国拥有丰富的数据资源和应用场景,数字技术、人工智能等正快速发展、赋能千行百业。中国将坚定不移推进新型工业化,不断扩大高水平对外开放,为包括AMD在内的外资企业提供更多合作机遇。
他希望AMD继续深耕中国市场,与中国产业链上下游企业一道创新成长,实现互利共赢发展。
苏姿丰感谢中国工信部对AMD在华发展的支持,表示将继续深化在华投资,进一步加强对华合作,共同促进产业创新发展。
据第一财经报道,苏姿丰星期二(16日)率高管团队造访中国联想集团位于北京的全球总部。在联想集团多名高管陪同下,AMD一行参观了包括人形机器人在内的多项联想最新产品与技术成果。
另据每日经济新闻报道,苏姿丰并非首次与联想集团开展互动。在人工智能浪潮下,AMD成为仅次于英伟达的第二大数据中心图形处理单元(GPU)厂商,作为终端厂商的联想集团自然是AMD争夺的关键。
今年3月,苏姿丰到达中国后造访的第一家企业就是联想集团。双方随后宣布将在AI PC(人工智能电脑)领域展开多项合作。
值得关注的是,联想集团同时也在加速深化与英伟达的关系。知情人士介绍,约一个月前,联想集团全体董事会成员及核心高管团队受邀访问了英伟达位于美国加州的总部,双方围绕AI基础设施、企业级算力解决方案以及潜在的生态级合作进行了交流。两家企业均未披露关于这次交流的相关信息。
此外,联想集团此前披露的信息显示,公司将于2026年1月6日在拉斯维加斯Sphere举办联想科技创新大会。届时,英伟达首席执行官黄仁勋及苏姿丰均将现身。
中国海南自由贸易港从星期四(12月18日)起正式启动全岛封关。
封关是一个海关术语,即海南全岛成为一个“境内关外”区域,海南岛内可以享受零关税等优惠政策。
央视新闻客户端也报道,至此进口征税商品目录、货物流通税收政策、禁限清单、加工增值内销免关税政策、海关监管办法等一系列封关政策及配套文件同步实施。
《海南日报》引述海南省委深改办(自贸港工委办)副主任王奉利说,选择星期四启动全岛封关,本身就有特殊的历史意义。他说,1978年12月18日,中共十一届三中全会全面开启了中国改革开放和社会主义现代化建设的伟大征程。建设海南自由贸易港的战略目标,就是要把海南自由贸易港打造成为引领中国新时代对外开放的重要门户。
王奉利也说,封关之后,免税的商品税目由1900种扩大到6600多种,零关税水平由之前的21%提高到74%,加工增值超过30%销往中国内地还免关税。
台湾新竹市长高虹安涉贪污案二审获判无罪后,外界关注她明年是否争取连任。国民党组织发展委员会主委李哲华说,考量“蓝白合作”基础及现任者优先原则,将选择礼让高虹安竞选连任。
综合中时新闻网、《上报》、ETtoday新闻云等报道,高虹安先前因涉贪助理费遭停职,不过二审台湾高等法院宣判,撤销贪污罪部分,改认定构成伪造文书罪,判处有期徒刑六个月。新竹市政府随后向台湾内政部提出复职申请。
高虹安星期三(12月17日)说,已正式收到内政部核发的复职公文,预计星期四(18日)上午返回市府恢复市长职务。
高虹安也说,复职后一定会把一天当三天拼,目的是让市民感受到安定且进步的新竹。
李哲华受访时说,基于“蓝白合”诚意及现任优先原则,明年新竹市长选举将礼让高虹安竞选连任。
至于其他涉及蓝白协调的县市,包括新北市、宜兰县及嘉义市等地,李哲华说明,相关协商将待国民党内部人选确认后,再与民众党进行进一步讨论。

Ukrinform/NurPhotoEuropean 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/AFPThe 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.

EPAGerman 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.

Getty ImagesDan Bongino has said he will leave his role as the FBI's deputy director in January.
In a post on X, he thanked President Donald Trump, as well as the director of the FBI and the attorney general "for the opportunity to serve with purpose".
It comes after Trump said earlier on Wednesday that the former podcast host "did a great job" in office, and "wants to go back to his show".
Bongino, who was appointed to the role by Trump in February, was previously a New York City police officer and a US Secret Service agent assigned to protect Barack Obama. In recent years, he built a large following through his podcast and other media appearances.
Bongino, a staunch Trump ally, was considered a surprise pick for the role – which had previously been held by career agents – because he had no prior experience with the agency.
The FBI Agents Association, which represents around 14,000 current and former agents, had opposed his appointment to the position.
Announcing his decision in a social media post on Wednesday, he said: "I will be leaving my position with the FBI in January. I want to thank President Trump, AG [Pam] Bondi, and Director [Kash] Patel for the opportunity to serve with purpose.
"Most importantly, I want to thank you, my fellow Americans, for the privilege to serve you. God bless America, and all those who defend Her."
Before joining the agency, Bongino had echoed disinformation and conspiracy theories about Trump's false claim that he won the 2020 election, and about the 6 January 2021 pipe bomb investigation.
Bongino had also questioned whether sex offender Jeffrey Epstein had taken his own life in a New York prison cell in 2019 as he awaited trial.
In July, the US justice department and FBI released a memo that said Epstein did take his own life.
The memo frustrated many of Trump's supporters, who echoed the Epstein conspiracy theories and rejected the justice department's findings.
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.
You can receive Breaking News on a smartphone or tablet via the BBC News App. You can also follow @BBCBreaking on X to get the latest alerts.

© Al Drago for The New York Times

© Audra Melton for The New York Times

© Allison Robbert for The New York Times
这次西部之行包括El Paso。El Paso是得克萨斯西部荒漠中的一座边城。格兰德河从这里流过,形成得克萨斯跟墨西哥之间的天然边界。河对岸就是墨西哥。一百多年前,一位美国将军,以一己之力,不顾《排华法案》的禁止,把500多名中国人和他们的家眷,从这里带进美国,让他们脱离了墨西哥叛军的枪口和绞索。
这段往事已经很少被人提起,今天,我们把这段被掩埋了一个世纪的往事,重新挖出来,从头到尾讲一讲。这是个关于战争、逃亡、忠诚、偏见、良知、报恩、契约精神和军人荣誉的故事。
现在一说得州的华人,很多人可能首先想到的是休斯顿、达拉斯。但100年前,得州华人最多的城市,既不是休斯顿,也不是达拉斯,而是El Paso。
El Paso的很多华人,可能跟美国任何一个地方的华人都不太一样,他们的爷爷、老爷爷来自中国,但他们的奶奶、老奶奶是墨西哥人。这些华人有个奇特的名字,叫“Pershing Chinese”——“潘兴华人”。
潘兴(John Pershing)是美国历史上最受尊崇的军队将领之一。在第一次世界大战中,他是美国远征军总司令。大家耳熟能详的几位二战名将——艾森豪威尔、麦克阿瑟、巴顿、马歇尔,都曾经是潘兴将军的手下,可以说是潘兴将军的学生。
很多听众可能了解,从1882年到1943年,有61年时间,美国实施《排华法案》,禁止华人劳工入境,禁止境内的华人归化为公民。“潘兴华人”是怎么来的呢?
一边是战功卓著的美国名将,一边是在美国社会夹缝中生存的华人,这两个名字是怎么在El Paso这座荒漠边城连在一起的呢?为什么在排华法案最严酷的时代,500多名华人和他们的家眷,却能被美军用军车浩浩荡荡地接进美国?为什么一位美国将军为了他们,去跟美国总统和国会硬刚?
1881年5月,南太平洋铁路从加州修到El Paso,即将跟贯穿路易斯安那和得州的铁路连通。1200多名修建铁路的华工,跟着铁轨来到这片荒漠,很多人留下来,定居在这里,形成了得克萨斯最早的唐人街。第二年,美国通过《排华法案》,堵上了华人劳工合法入境的渠道。
既然不能合法进入,就会出现非法偷渡,就像前几年的“走线”一样。当时,中国还是满清帝国。大清国的走线客,先坐船到墨西哥,再坐火车北上,到达El Paso边境线另一侧的华亚雷斯落脚,等待时机偷渡进入美国。El Paso自然成了偷渡进入美国的第一站。
南太平洋铁路开通后的几十年,El Paso成了各种冒险家的乐园,汇聚了形形色色的人物,包括各个阶层的华人:有老实巴交的菜农,有精明的商人,也有开杂货店、洗衣店的小业主。
在格兰德河对岸,墨西哥境内的华亚雷斯,也有着规模庞大的华人社区。生活在那里的华人,有些是本来要偷渡进入美国,但却最终留下来,就地谋生的劳工,有些是开杂货铺的店主,也有些是生意人。很多华人精明能干,日子过得比墨西哥本地人要好。这自然会招来一些当地人的羡慕、嫉妒、恨。羡慕、嫉妒、恨,这是人性,在任何地方、任何人群,都避免不了。
当年住在墨西哥的中国人大多是苦力和偷渡客,男多女少。他们到了成家立业的年龄,大多数娶墨西哥本地女子,他们的孩子就成了中墨混血。这当然更会加剧一些当地人的羡慕、嫉妒、恨。在正常情况下,虽然双方关系有点紧张,有点微妙,但总体上能和平相处。
这种微妙的平衡,在1910年代被一场突如其来的风暴打破了。这场风暴就是“墨西哥革命”。
第三世界的革命都少不了打家劫舍的草莽英雄。墨西哥革命的草莽英雄名叫Pancho Villa。革命了,每个人都要选边站,不是站墨西哥政府,就是站Pancho Villa的叛军。很多墨西哥的华人更倾向于站在墨西哥政府一边。很多人因此被叛军杀害。Pancho Villa的叛军不仅杀害当地华人,而且会灭门,把他们的墨西哥太太和孩子一起杀掉。
1916年3月9日,Pancho Villa干了一件令人震惊的事。他率领一小股叛军进攻美国,在新墨西哥的边城哥伦布镇,杀死了18名美国士兵和平民。当时的美国总统是威尔逊,他下令驻扎在得克萨斯布利斯堡基地(Fort Bliss)的约翰·潘兴少将,率军进入墨西哥征讨叛军。
布里斯堡基地就在El Paso旁边,离哥伦布也只有一百多公里。哥伦布是个小镇,坐落在边境线上。边境线另一侧就是墨西哥的Puerto Palomas。几年前,我们骑车穿越美国的时候,曾经在哥伦布越过边境线,到Palomas吃了顿午饭。那里的广场上有Pancho Villa的雕像。我们还在他的雕像下面照了张相。
在那个年代,革命者和匪徒并没有明确的界限。
潘兴将军率领一万多名美军,浩浩荡荡杀进墨西哥北部。但他很快发现,美军面临的最大威胁,并不是Pancho Villa的叛军,而是后勤补给。
美国科技巨企谷歌指控一个中国网络诈骗团伙策划了一场大规模的网络钓鱼活动,诱骗美国人交出信用卡号码。
据彭博社报道,谷歌星期三(12月17日)提交的起诉书显示,被谷歌称 为“Darcula”的犯罪团伙开发了一套恶意软件工具包,使得缺乏技术知识的用户也能自动发送成批短信,假称提供免费版YouTube Premium等谷歌服务。实际上,这些短信诱使收件人交出金融信息,诈骗分子可利用这些信息窃取受害者钱财。
起诉书称,Darcula网络犯罪团伙在七个月内窃取了近90万张信用卡号码,其中包括美国人的四万个号码。
谷歌称,这一诈骗行动曾一度占到所有钓鱼短信的80%,涉及的网络犯罪分子在高峰时期多达600人。
谷歌和微软等科技企业经常采取这类法律行动,以获得法院授权,查封网络犯罪团伙用来实施犯罪活动的网络基础设施。接管这些域名及其他服务可干扰诈骗分子的运作,迫使其开发新手段或彻底放弃行动。
起诉书称,上述软件的最新版本提供了一项工具,可借助人工智能在数分钟内伪造几乎任何网站。
彭博社目前尚无法联系到Darcula团伙置评。谷歌起诉书中列出的团伙成员所使用的一个Telegram频道已不存在。
曾是中国最大房企的万科,正逐步逼近一场可能成为中国史上规模最大的债务重组之一。
彭博社引述知情人士说,万科已要求部分商业银行同意公司对部分借款延迟支付利息。此前,万科正努力说服一组债券持有人,将12月15日到期的20亿元人民币(3.67亿新元)票据的到期日予以延长。另外,万科还要求一笔将于12月28日到期的债券持有人,同意再延长12个月以履行相关债务义务。
知情人士透露,在与商业贷款方的最新一轮会谈中,万科星期三(12月17日)下午在深圳会见了银行和保险公司的代表。
至少有一家贷款机构被要求同意万科将一笔利息支付延期一年。此外,万科当天晚些时候提交的文件显示,华夏银行已同意将其向万科一家子公司提供的担保贷款展期一年。
两名知情人士说,在深圳举行的会议上,万科在与债权人进行多轮面对面的小范围讨论时,要求其中部分债权人给予公司更多时间,以制定一项整体性的债务解决方案。
目前尚不清楚该计划是否仅涵盖出席会议的贷款机构所涉借贷,还是也会纳入万科更大范围的整体负债。银行和保险公司一直是万科私募债务的投资者之一,几个月前,万科曾短暂延迟支付其中部分借款的利息。
近几个月来,万科一直承受不断加大的流动性压力,公司债券价格已跌至深度困境水平。
受半导体短缺影响,日本汽车公司本田的中日工厂将面临停产。
据日本共同社报道,本田汽车星期三(12月17日)透露,由于半导体短缺,公司计划从12月下旬至明年1月上旬,让旗下日本和中国工厂暂停或减少整车的生产。
本田汽车称,与中国国企巨头广汽集团合资的工厂将从12月29日起停产五天。日本的工厂将在明年1月5日至6日停产两天,7日至9日的产量也将少于原计划。
本田汽车未公布所涉及的日本工厂,但极可能是位于埼玉县寄居町和三重县铃鹿市的两座工厂。生产调整的整个规模尚不清楚。本田汽车称,今后的生产将视半导体的供应情况等而定。
本田汽车曾在10月和11月暂停了墨西哥工厂的生产,美国和加拿大的工厂也被迫减产,原因是中资半导体企业安世半导体(Nexperia)受到出口管制。本田汽车北美工厂均在11月下旬恢复生产,主要是安世已开始恢复半导体供应。
本田汽车未提及这次短缺的半导体是否为安世产品。
根据本田汽车11月公布的截至2026年3月的财年合并财报,因半导体短缺导致产量低于预期,反映主营业务盈利状况的营业利润将缩减1500亿日元(约12.45亿新元)。
台湾官方通报,美国启动逾111亿美元(143亿新元)对台军售案。
台湾国防部星期四(12月18日)在官网发布新闻稿时说,美国政府于美东时间星期三(12月17日)下午5时30分,就台湾战术网络(TTN)暨部队觉知应用套件(TAK)、陆军AH-1W型直升机零附件、M109A7自走炮、海马士远程精准打击系统续购、拖式导弹续购、反装甲型无人机导弹系统、海军标枪反甲导弹续购、鱼叉导弹可修件检修等,总额111亿540万美元对台军售八案,进行知会国会程序,可望于一个月后正式生效。
国防部指出,美政府这次同意供、售的武器装备,M109A7自走炮、海马士远程精准打击系统续购、拖式导弹续购、反装甲型无人机导弹系统、海军标枪反甲导弹续购等五案,均为强化防卫韧性及不对称战力特别预算中的案项,国防部将于立法院审议通过特别预算后,依程序办理军购案发价书签署作业。
国防部强调,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;国防部对美方决定,表达诚挚感谢。
这是美国继11月之后,对台湾推进的第三次军售案。华盛顿11月13日批准向台湾出售价值3.3亿美元的战斗机及飞机零部件,是美国总统特朗普1月上任以来的首笔此类交易。
美国五角大楼11月17日宣布,已向台湾出售曾在乌克兰接受实战检验、价值近7亿美元的先进防空导弹系统(NASAMS)。

© Eric Lee for The New York Times