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US lifts sanctions on Venezuelan interim leader Delcy Rodríguez

2 April 2026 at 19:55
REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria Venezuela's interim leader Delcy Rodríguez speaks into a microphone during a meeting with US Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, on 4 March. She is wearing a red jacket and black-rimmed glasses. REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria

The United States has lifted sanctions on Venezuela's interim president, Delcy Rodríguez.

The move comes less than three months after US forces seized the country's previous leader, Nicolás Maduro, and his wife in a military raid in Caracas and took them to New York to face drug trafficking charges.

Rodríguez, a close ally of Maduro who served as his vice-president, had been placed on the sanctions list in 2018, with the US accusing her of undermining democracy.

She was sworn in as interim president by Venezuela's National Assembly, which is dominated by Maduro loyalists, days after the US raid and has been described by Trump as "a terrific person".

Rodríguez welcomed her removal from the Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) List.

Those named on the list have their assets in the United States blocked and US nationals are barred from doing business from them.

In a post on X, Rodríguez called it "a significant step in the right direction to normalise and strengthen relations between our countries".

White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly said the move showed the progress that had been made "between our two countries to promote stability, support economic recovery, and advance political reconciliation in Venezuela".

"As President Trump has said, Delcy Rodríguez is doing a great job and is working with the United States very well," Kelly added.

Opposition activists in the Venezuelan capital, Caracas, however, were critical of the move, arguing that the US should exert pressure on Rodríguez to release all political prisoners still held in the country's jails.

The release of political prisoners had been one of the key demands US Secretary of State Marco Rubio had made of Rodríguez in the wake of Maduro's removal.

And while the National Assembly has passed an amnesty law and hundreds of detainees have been freed, prisoners' rights group Foro Penal says that almost 500 political prisoners remain behind bars.

The lifting of sanctions is the latest sign of warming relations between the Trump administration and Rodríguez's team.

Earlier this week, the US officially reopened its embassy in Caracas, seven years after closing it.

A Venezuelan diplomatic team has also been dispatched to the US to reopen its embassy in Washington.

In the months since Maduro's removal from office, several high-level US delegations have travelled to Venezuela to discuss how the US can expand its access to Venezuela's oil and mineral wealth.

Critics of Rodríguez however have bemoaned the fact that there has been little talk of democratic elections.

Opposition leader María Corina Machado, who has been living in exile since leaving Venezuela to collect the Nobel Peace Prize she was awarded in December, met with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Tuesday.

Despite having been sidelined by Trump in favour of Rodríguez, Machado struck an optimistic note, calling the meeting "excellent" and praising the secretary of state's "dedication to democracy, freedom and Venezuelans' well-being".

Speaking to Fox News after the meeting, Rubio insisted that the US was making progress in Venezuela.

Pointing to the three-prong plan he said the US was pursuing, he assured viewers that Venezuela had moved into the second phase: that of recovery.

"Ultimately, there will have to be a transition phase. There will have to be free and fair elections in Venezuela, and that point has to come," he said.

"It's not forever, but we have to be patient, but we also can't be complacent," he said without giving an indication as to when elections could be held in Venezuela.

Iconic 19th Century painting sets Indian art record with $17.9m sale

2 April 2026 at 20:30
Saffronart A woman wearing a green blouse and a blue saree is seen milking a cow in the oil portrait. A child, who is Hindu deity Krishna, is seen standing next to her wearing jewellery. Saffronart
Raja Ravi Varma painted Yashoda and Krishna in the 1890s

A 19th Century painting by iconic artist Raja Ravi Varma has become the most expensive Indian artwork ever sold, setting a new auction record.

The painting, Yashoda and Krishna, was sold for 1.67bn rupees ($17.9m; £13.6m) at a Saffronart auction in Delhi on Wednesday. It beat the previous record set by MF Husain's Untitled (Gram Yatra) which fetched $13.8m last year.

The surge in sales and records highlight growing demand for Indian and South Asian art, with collectors pushing prices to new highs.

Varma, who was born in 1848 in what is now the southern state of Kerala, is widely regarded as a pioneer of modern Indian painting and one of the most influential artists from the subcontinent.

The painting was bought by billionaire businessman Cyrus Poonawalla, founder and managing director of Serum Institute of India, one of the world's largest vaccine producers.

In a statement released by Saffronart, Poonawalla described the work as a "national treasure", adding that it "deserves to be made available for public viewing periodically".

"It will be my endeavour to facilitate this going forward," he said.

Varma's works have been classified as "art treasure" under India's Antiquities and Art Treasures Act, which means that they cannot be exported and can be sold only to Indian buyers.

Minal Vazirani, president and co-founder of Saffronart, said that the valuation was a "powerful reminder of the enduring cultural and emotional resonance of Indian art".

Ashish Anand, CEO and managing director of DAG (formerly Delhi Art Gallery), said that the impact of the record sale would percolate down to the art market, "giving rise to Indian art being viewed as a serious financial asset and beyond its value for aesthetics and personal delight".

According to Saffronart's catalogue, the work was put up for auction by a private collector.

Getty Images A week-long exhibition organised commemorating the 174th birth anniversary of Raja Ravi Varma at Institute of Oriental Studies, in Thane, on May 7, 2022 in Mumbai, India.Getty Images
Raja Ravi Varma bridged the gap between European academic techniques and Indian tradition

Varma's realistic depictions of scenes from Hindu epics and mythology are widely recognised in India - so much so that prints of his works are often found in household shrines.

Yashoda and Krishna is an oil-on-canvas painting from the 1890s, when Varma was at the height of his career. It portrays a sweet moment between Hindu deity Krishna as a child and his foster mother Yashoda.

In the painting, Yashoda is seen milking a cow, while Krishna stands beside her holding a cup and waiting. The child has a mischievous look in his eyes while Yashoda's face reflects warmth and care. Their ornaments are minimal, but intricately detailed.

"Varma's genius lies in this very balance: the sacred rendered through the familiar," the Raja Ravi Varma Heritage Foundation, which promotes and preserves Varma's legacy, wrote in an Instagram post last month, before the auction.

"The textures of silk, the gleam of jewellery, the softness of skin and the gentle stillness of the cow together create a scene that is both devotional and intimate."

The image of Krishna and Yashoda has long inspired artists across South Asia, who have depicted them in songs, temple carvings and local painting traditions. But Varma portrayed them in a more natural way, as art historians have noted.

Artist A Ramachandran wrote that while an "iconographical image of god [usually] evoked awe and not love and affection", Varma changed that, breaking the distance between Krishna and the person looking at the painting.

The record sale also spotlights how collectors are increasingly willing to pay a premium for Indian art which has historical and cultural significance.

Anand of DAG told the BBC that there is a "clear shift in how Indian art is being perceived".

"As the market matures and benchmarks rise, collectors are recognising both its cultural and financial value," he said, adding that fundamentally, it was quality that was driving this momentum.

"The best works - those with provenance, rarity and historical significance - are now commanding extraordinary prices, reflecting the maturing of the market."

Experts add that exclusivity is also pushing prices higher. Many masterpieces by artists such as Varma, Amrita Sher-Gil and VS Gaitonde are either in private collections or rarely come up for auction.

There is also a growing recognition of mythology as a serious and desirable genre within the global art market, Anand said.

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Iranian Nobel laureate suffered suspected heart attack in prison, family says

2 April 2026 at 20:44
Reuters Narges Mohammadi (file photo)Reuters
Narges Mohammadi was moved to a prison in north-west Iran after being handed an additional seven-year sentence (file photo)

The brother of Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi says he fears her life is in imminent danger after she suffered a suspected heart attack in prison in north-western Iran.

Hamidreza Mohammadi, who is based in Norway, told the BBC that the 53-year-old human rights activist was found unconscious in her bed by fellow inmates at Zanjan Prison last week.

She was taken to the prison infirmary but officials refused to transfer her to a hospital despite her history of heart and lung problems, he said. She also suffers from severe blood pressure fluctuations.

He demanded that she be released immediately for a thorough medical examination.

He also warned that strikes and explosions near the prison since the start of the US-Israeli war with Iran a month ago had only added to her stress.

"This war has had a terrible effect on prisoners in Iran. If the prison gets hit, if the prisoners need immediate medical attention, they will not get anything and their lives are in danger," he told the BBC's Newsday programme.

"It's been really difficult for her family... Her children have gone through a lot. Now they experience very uncertain time when they don't know even if in the future there will be any peace or if their mother is going to live or die," he added.

Narges Mohammadi, the vice-president of the Defenders of Human Rights Center in Iran, was awarded the 2023 Nobel Peace Prize for her activism against female oppression in Iran and promoting human rights.

She has spent more than a decade of her life in prison. In 2021, she began serving a 13-year sentence on charges of committing "propaganda activity against the state" and "collusion against state security", which she denied.

In December 2024, she was given a temporary release from Tehran's notorious Evin prison on medical grounds.

She continued campaigning while undergoing treatment and was arrested in the north-eastern city of Mashhad last December after giving a speech at the memorial ceremony of a fellow human rights activist. Her family said she was taken to hospital after being beaten on the head and neck during the arrest.

A few weeks later protests against Iran's clerical establishment swept across the country. At least 6,508 protesters were killed and 53,000 others arrested in an unprecedented crackdown by security forces on the unrest, according to the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA).

In early February, Mohammadi was sentenced by a Revolutionary Court in Mashhad to an additional seven and a half years in prison after being convicted of "gathering and collusion" and "propaganda activities", her lawyer said.

She was transferred without warning the following week to Zanjan prison and has been allowed only limited communication with her family since then.

Last Sunday, her legal team and one family member were allowed to visit to visit her in prison under heightened surveillance.

The Free Narges Coalition said in a statement on Tuesday that "her general health was extremely poor, and she appeared pale and weak with significant weight loss when brought to the visitation room by a prison nurse".

It then cited Mohammadi's cellmates as saying that on 24 March she "was found unconscious in her bed, with her eyes rolled back", and that this lasted more than an hour. She was carried to the prison infirmary by fellow inmates, where medication was administered to restore her consciousness, it added.

"Despite this medical emergency, and evident indications of a heart attack, authorities refused to transfer Mohammadi to a hospital or allow her to visit a specialist."

Mohammadi also reported that she had suffered debilitating headaches, nausea, double vision since her violent arrest, and that bruises were still visible on her body, according to the coalition.

"According to the Iranian law, in wartime, when they [authorities] cannot guarantee safety of the prisoners, especially prisoners who are not dangerous to society, they must be allowed to leave the prison until the war is over," Hamidreza Mohammadi said.

"But not only [have they not done] it, they have denied all the political prisoners any medical attention, and their excuse is 'it is wartime'. So our demand is that she immediately be released for a thorough medical examination."

"We know her medical history, we know that she has heart problems and pulmonary problems. She must be in a hospital."

Four children stabbed to death at Ugandan school

2 April 2026 at 20:48
Uganda Police Force A low-rise school building with police tape around the gate. Men in military fatigues can be seen standing by the perimeter wall.Uganda Police Force

Four children have been "brutally stabbed and killed" at a school in the Ugandan capital, Kampala, the police have said.

"The suspect has been apprehended, and the motive behind the killings is still under investigation," Uganda's police force added in a brief statement on X.

The school has been named as the Ggaba Early Childhood Development Program school in the capital's Makindye Division.

More details will be provided later, it added.

Uganda's Daily Monitor newspaper is quoting local residents as saying that the suspect posed as a parent to get into the school and then after talking to the administrator attacked the children. The victims were between the ages of two and three, the newspaper adds.

Videos of the aftermath being shared on social media show images of crowds of angry and distressed people.

The suspect was quickly apprehended to "prevent him from being lynched", local journalist Erich Mboowa has reported on X.

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Artemis II is in orbit - what happens next?

2 April 2026 at 20:20
Watch the moment Artemis II blasts into space on historic mission

You could almost hear a sigh of relief from Nasa on Wednesday as its Artemis II rocket finally blasted off.

There's a lot riding on this mission - the safety of its four astronauts, Nasa's reputation, and the credibility of America's claim to be leading the new global space race.

There are mundane questions too: Could the onboard toilet break again? When can the crew nap?

Here's what the next 24 hours should look like for Artemis II.

Where are the astronauts now?

Commander Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen are now orbiting Earth about 42,500 miles away, testing out the Orion spacecraft.

The craft's solar wings were fully deployed not long after launch, giving it power to help sustain its journey.

About the size of a minibus, its never been flown in space before by humans so pilot Victor Glover is spending the day pushing it to the extreme.

Nasa want to be sure Orion is voyage-worthy before the crew push on into deep space from where there is no easy return.

They're testing out the life support systems too. But if something goes wrong, the crew has specially-designed suits that could keep them alive for around six days.

What are the crew doing?

Unlike the Apollo missions in the 1960s and 1970s, we can watch a huge amount of what's happening on this voyage as Nasa livestreams the mission.

Cameras above the astronauts' heads show them checking monitors, holding up mobile phones, and pressing buttons.

Then about eight hours after launch, the crew were allowed their first sleep onboard.

EPA Astronauts Victor Glover, Jeremy Hansen, Reid Wiseman and Christina Koch walk of a Nasa building before launchEPA
The crew are "safe, secure and in great spirits", according to a Nasa official

On the radio the crew use to communicate with mission command, we heard Commander Reid Wiseman asking where are the team's pyjamas.

He asked for their "comfort garments", before the astronauts went into the sleeping area for about four hours.

Schedules in space are incredibly strict. Every minute is accounted for by Mission Control.

The crew can sleep for about four hours at a time, adding up to eight hours over a 24-hour period.

Sleeping in space can be tricky. The crew must strap themselves in, and generally some astronauts struggle to nod off as their bodies adapt to weightlessness.

But others say their best sleep ever is in space.

This crew have strict instructions to exercise for 30 minutes every day to protect their muscle and bone density as they live without gravity.

Reid Wiseman and Victor Glover went first, testing out Orion's "flywheel exercise device", which is about the size of a carry-on suitcase.

Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen were scheduled to exercise later on - using the wheel for rowing, squats and deadlifts.

We assume they've had their first meals too, from Nasa's tailor-made Artemis II menu.

NASA A view of Earth from Orion spacecraftNASA
The crews' view from the Orion spacecraft during the last few hours

There is no fridge in Orion, so a lot of the food is freeze-dried and activated using water from an onboard tap.

The crew were allowed to pick their meals in advance, which include macaroni cheese, beef brisket, and five different hot sauces.

They're allowed two drinks a day, including coffee or a "chocolate breakfast drink".

And crucially, as far as we know, the toilet is working. During launch, the facilities broke, raising worries that the team would have to spend 10 days in a craft without a toilet.

After giving astronaut Christina Koch instructions on how to fix the specially-designed loo, Mission Control radioed the crew: "Happy to report that toilet is go for use.... We do recommend letting the system get to operating speed before donating fluid".

When do they go to the Moon?

Today is building up to the snazzily named "trans-lunar injection" burn. Basically, it is a massive push that will propel them out of Earth's orbit and on course to the Moon.

It is supposed to happen Thursday night UK time, but if there are problems, it could be postponed or even cancelled.

A cancellation would be a major setback for Nasa and America as it tries to become the first country to land humans again on the lunar surface by 2028.

If it all goes to plan, the burn will fire for six minutes to send them on a trajectory around the Moon that also uses lunar gravity to slingshot them back to Earth.

Eventually they should fly 6,400 miles (10,299km) beyond the far side of the Moon, which always faces away from the Earth.

That's meant to happen on Monday (6 April). The astronauts will be the first people to see some areas of the far side, although probes from countries including India and China have previously documented this region.

They'll be taking photographs and making observations of this mysterious place for us to see and learn from back on Earth.

缅甸联邦议会即将选举总统,军政强人敏昂莱几乎胜券在握 - RFI - 法国国际广播电台

2 April 2026 at 21:15
02/04/2026 - 14:56

缅甸联邦议会4月2日举行会议,确定三名总统候选人资格,提交议会明日(4月3日)表决。三名总统候选人均为此前联邦议会的民选议员团与军人议员团于3月31日推举出的副总统。2021年2月发动军事政变上台的敏昂莱几乎笃定当选总统。

的确,过去五年间通过军事政变上台掌握政权的军政府正在完成让军政权披上合法外衣的努力。去年年底,军政权在内战尚在继续的背景下,无视许多地区都无法组织投票的现实,坚持组织全国选举。亲军方的政治力量毫无意外地在这场由政权操控的选举中以压倒性优势胜出。

新联邦议会已经在3月中旬宣誓就职。3月31日,议会两院也就是人民院和民族院的民选代表投票推举两名副总统,军人议员团随后也推举出自己的副总统。这三名副总统4月2日经联邦议会确认总统候选资格,将面对4月3日的议员投票。

目前看来,31日在人民院以压倒性多数当选为副总统的军政强人敏昂莱几乎笃定在4月3日的议会投票中胜出,当选总统。这意味着这位2021年2月率领军队推翻昂山素季领导的民选政府的军政强人正通过有名无实的投票活动,完成从政变军官华丽转身为文官总统的努力。

3月30日,最近五年来一直领导军政府的敏昂莱在联邦议会选举副总统程序启动的前夜,退下已经担任15年内之久的国防军总司令职务,交棒给他的亲信、前军队情报部门负责人耶温乌大将。这意味着他将可以继续在幕后控制军队。卸任军职是敏昂莱为出任总统而做的必要准备。

另外两名要面对4月3日联邦议会总统推举投票的候选人分别是民族院3月31日投票产生的副总统南尼尼埃和军人议员团选出的纽梭。楠尼尼埃是巩发党克伦邦主席,也是首次被提名参选副总统的女性。

新政府预计在四月中旬组建并宣誓就职。

缅甸自2021年的军事政变推翻民选政府之后,就陷于内战状态。曾经的民主派活动人士也拿起武器,与常年与中央政府不和的各路民族武装团伙一道,与政府军对抗。

根据联合国估计的数字,五年多来,缅甸境内至少370万人因为这些武装冲突而流离失所,全国近一半人口说在贫困线以下。

Volunteers in Helicopter Rescue Hiker’s Dog After a Week in the Wilderness

By: John Yoon
2 April 2026 at 19:51
A hiker in New Zealand fell 180 feet down a waterfall and was evacuated without her dog. A crowd-funded rescue effort reunited them.

© Precision Helicopters Ltd, via Associated Press

A rescuer carrying Molly, the dog on the right, away from a remote waterfall on the Arahura River on the South Island of New Zealand, where she was found on Tuesday, a week after being separated from her owner.

Funeral director admits preventing 30 burials and theft

2 April 2026 at 20:08
BBC Breaking NewsBBC

A funeral director has admitted preventing the burials of 30 bodies and stealing donations made to charities by mourners.

Robert Bush, 48, was arrested after police investigated Hull-based Legacy Independent Funeral Directors following a report of "concern for care of the deceased" in March 2024.

Bush, formerly of East Yorkshire and now living in West Yorkshire, pleaded guilty at Hull Crown Court to 30 counts of preventing a lawful and decent burial, and one of theft relating to charitable donations.

He previously admitted presenting families with the ashes of strangers and fraudulently selling funeral plans. He will be sentenced at a later date.

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Storm Dave set to batter UK with gales and blizzards over Easter weekend

2 April 2026 at 18:57

Storm Dave set to batter UK with gales and blizzards over Easter weekend

A man clutches his hat while walking along a windy seafront with rough waves in the backgroundImage source, Adam Vaughan/Shutterstock
ByBen Rich
Lead Weather Presenter
  • Published

Storm Dave has been named by the Met Office and threatens to bring severe gales and blizzards in the north of the UK over the Easter weekend.

Yellow warnings for wind and snow have been issued for Saturday night and Sunday with a deep area of low pressure expected to pass across the north-west of the country.

Damage, power cuts and travel disruption are likely.

It is just one part of a very mixed Easter forecast which will bring heavy downpours alongside spells of warm sunshine.

A storm spun up by a powerful jet stream

Huge temperature contrasts across the USA and Canada have helped to supercharge the jet stream - the flow of strong winds high in the atmosphere that spins up weather systems and guides them around the globe.

And confidence is growing that this will propel a deep area of low pressure towards the UK on Saturday.

A pressure chart showing a deep low and a set of weather fronts passing across the UK
Image caption,

The centre of Storm Dave is expected to pass across the north of Scotland

The Met Office has issued yellow warnings for wind covering all of Scotland and Northern Ireland, as well as large swathes of northern England and north Wales.

The warnings are valid at various times on Saturday afternoon, overnight and into Sunday.

Widespread gusts of 50-60mph (80-97km/h) are expected with the chance of 70mph (113km/h) gusts in exposed areas, especially around coasts.

Central and northern parts of Scotland could see winds peaking at 80-90mph (129-144km/h) with large waves bringing dangerous conditions along the coasts.

Winds as strong as these bring the threat of damage, power cuts and significant travel disruption.

Some roads and bridges could close, which could have major impacts on what is predicted to be the busiest Easter in four years for drivers.

Disruption to train and ferry services is also possible.

A weather map showing yellow warnings across the north of the UK
Image caption,

Numerous yellow warnings have been issued by the Met Office for Saturday and Sunday

A Met Office warning for snow has also been issued for parts of north-west Scotland during Saturday evening and overnight.

5-10cm (2-4in) of snow may accumulate, mainly over high ground above 200m (650ft) elevation, with a small chance of 20cm (8in) in a few locations.

Coupled with the strong winds this could give blizzards, drifting and blowing snow, and very poor visibility on the roads.

A mixed bag of Easter weather

Storm Dave is just one part of a weather story that will bring a real variety of conditions across the UK over the long weekend.

Good Friday will start mostly cloudy with outbreaks of rain.

Many parts of England and Wales will hold on to grey and damp weather for much of the day but in Northern Ireland and Scotland some sunny spells should develop - albeit with a scattering of showers.

It will be fairly windy with a wide range of temperatures - from 7C (45F) in northern Scotland to 15C (59F) in eastern England.

A band of cloud and rain will move northwards across the country on Saturday - turning to snow over Scottish mountains - with a few sunny spells either side of this zone of wet weather.

Winds will strengthen through the day ahead of Storm Dave's arrival.

Sun and snow on Easter Sunday

Easter Sunday will be a day of big weather contrasts as the storm begins to loosen its grip.

Strong winds will continue to blow across Scotland, Northern Ireland and northern England, bringing a chilly feel and frequent showers.

Some of these will be wintry over hills and mountains but snow is even possible at low levels in the north of Scotland for a time.

Further south it will be breezy with a few showers, but for large swathes of Wales and southern England it should be predominantly dry with sunny spells.

Three lambs in a field of green grass, bathed in sunshineImage source, BBC Weather Watchers / Peter and Leah
Image caption,

Temperatures on Easter Sunday will range from 7C (45F) in northern Scotland to 13C (55F) in southern England

As winds ease on Sunday night things will get cold with a touch of frost developing in many areas.

However after a cold start to Monday temperatures will climb through the day thanks to southerly winds, reaching 11-17C (52-63F) by the afternoon.

Most areas will be dry with patchy cloud and sunny spells, which is expected to bring high or very high pollen levels.

UV levels expected to peak at moderate in the sunniest spots.

Beyond the Easter weekend the forecast looks rather changeable with warmth likely to give way to April showers and perhaps more strong winds - although computer weather models disagree on the details.

You can always keep up-to-date with the longer range prospects with our monthly outlook.

King and Queen give away money in ancient Easter tradition

2 April 2026 at 19:52
PA Media King Charles III and Queen Camilla arriving at St Asaph Cathedral, DenbighshirePA Media
It is the second time the service has been held in Wales in its 800-year history

King Charles III and Queen Camilla have been taking part in the annual Maundy service in north Wales, only the second time the service has been held in Wales in its 800-year history.

The King and Queen attended the service at St Asaph Cathedral, Denbighshire, in a ceremony featuring music by Welsh composers and musicians.

The event takes place annually on the final Thursday before Easter Sunday and commemorates the Last Supper and the importance of humility and service to others.

The Dean of St Asaph Cathedral, Nigel Williams, said they were "deeply honoured" to host the service, hoping it would be a "memorable experience" for those who attended.

Reuters King Charles and Queen Camilla posing for a group photo outside St. Asaph Cathedral. Four children can be seen stood infront of the royals, each holding flowers.Reuters
King Charles and Queen Camilla posed for a group photo after attending the service

The first recorded Royal Maundy service was held in 1210 by King John and commemorates the Last Supper of Jesus Christ, with the distribution of alms becoming a tradition.

Charles will present gifts to 77 men and 77 women from Wales and other dioceses across the UK in recognition of outstanding Christian service and for helping people in their communities.

Recipients will be given two purses – a white purse including a set of specially minted silver Maundy coins totalling 77 pennies, to match the King's age, and a red pursue containing a £5 coin marking 100 years since the late Queen's birth, as well as a 50p coin celebrating the 50th anniversary of The King's Trust charity.

The last time the Maundy Service was held in Wales was in 1982 in St Davids, Pembrokeshire.

Gregory Cameron bishop of St Asaph stood outside St Asaph Cathedral
The Bishop of St Asaph, the Rt Revd Gregory Cameron admitted he was "nervous" about leading the "ancient" service on Maundy Thursday

Grahame Davies, director of mission for Church in Wales, said it was "hugely significant" for the service to be held in north Wales for the first time.

The Bishop of St Asaph, Gregory Cameron, said the Royal Maundy was a "deeply meaningful occasion which we are pleased to welcome to St Asaph".

He admitted he was "nervous" about leading the "ancient" service on Maundy Thursday which marks the day of the last supper when Jesus washed his disciples' feet.

The Cross of Wales, a gift from the King to the Christians of Wales, will be used in the service. The Cross headed the King's 2023 coronation at Westminster Abbey.

Diocese of Bangor Susan and Roger stood outside standing next to each other. Susan has long grey hair and glasses on top of her head. She is wearing a black polo shirt and navy blue jacket. Roger has short grey hair. He is wearing glasses, a dark grey blazer, green vest, striped shirt and tie with blue, green and purple fish on it.Diocese of Bangor
Husband and wife Susan and Roger Whitehouse from Tywyn are among those who the King will present Royal Maundy gifts to

Among those who will receive gifts from the King are Susan and Roger Whitehouse from Tywyn, Gwynedd.

The couple said they were "very surprised" to be recognised together, having never sought recognition for their service.

"We've simply tried to serve where needed," they said.

"Our faith informs what we do and why we do it, and it has drawn us deeper into the life of the church while also helping us look outward to the wider community."

Reuters A police officer pulls a tarp over the words "Not Our King" painted on a wall outside St. Asaph Cathedral.Reuters

Crowds lined the high street in St Asaph ahead of the royal couple's arrival, while graffiti saying "Not our King" was also covered up at the cathedral before the visit.

Workers in hi-vis jackets were seen attempting to remove the message which was sprayed using red paint on a wall in the grounds of the cathedral.

A small group of republican protesters with flags and banners calling for the end of the monarchy also gathered across the road from the cathedral as the King and Queen arrived.

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Everything you need to know about Nasa's Artemis II mission

2 April 2026 at 18:08
NASA The image shows four astronauts in bright orange space suits posing for a formal group portrait against a dark background. The suits are bulky with blue joints, straps and pockets, emphasising their technical design. Three astronauts stand behind one who is seated, all facing the camera. They all have fairly neutral expressions, keeping the focus on the uniforms. Mission-style patches and flags, including US and Canadian flags, are visible on their arms and chests. Soft, focused lighting makes the vivid orange suits stand out dramatically.NASA
Artemis II Crew: left Christina Koch, back Victor Glover (pilot), front Reid Wiseman (commander), right Jeremy Hansen

Nasa's target of a March launch for the first crewed mission around the Moon in more than 50 years has been delayed after a fault was detected.

Nasa had set a target of 6 March, but 24 hours later said the newly discovered fault made a March launch "out of consideration".

The Artemis II mission, which will last about 10 days, could take its astronauts further into space than anyone has been before.

It aims to set the stage for an eventual human landing on the lunar surface for the first time since the Apollo missions of the 1960s and 70s.

When will Artemis II launch?

With a March launch no longer being considered, the next possible dates are April 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6.

A potential February launch was ruled out after a pre‑flight test - known as a wet dress rehearsal - was cut short when hydrogen rocket fuel leaked from an umbilical connection linking the launch tower to the rocket.

Beyond resolving the technical issues, mission planners also have to wait until the Moon is in the right part of its orbit, so launch windows are timed accordingly.

In practice, this creates a pattern of roughly one week at the start of each month when the rocket can be pointed in the right direction, followed by about three weeks with no launch opportunities.

Watch: Timelapse shows Nasa rocket's 12-hour journey to launch pad

Who are the Artemis II crew?

Artemis II's crew of four is made up of Nasa commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover and mission specialist Christina Koch. A second mission specialist, Jeremy Hansen of the Canadian Space Agency, will also be on board.

Wiseman is a US Navy veteran of 27 years. A pilot and engineer, he lives in Baltimore, Maryland. He was selected as an astronaut by Nasa in 2009 and served as Flight Engineer aboard the International Space Station (ISS) for Expedition 41 in 2014.

Glover was selected as a Nasa astronaut in 2013. He previously served as the pilot of SpaceX Crew-1 and holds three master's degrees. He was born in California and is married with four children.

Koch grew up in Michigan and became an astronaut in 2013. She worked on the International Space Station in 2019, setting a record for the longest single spaceflight by a woman. She also participated in the first all-female spacewalk.

Hansen joined the Canadian Space Agency in 2009 after a career as a fighter pilot. He became the first Canadian to lead astronaut training at Nasa's Johnson Space Centre and will be the first Canadian to go to the Moon.

What will the Artemis crew do during the Moon mission?

The mission involves the first crewed flight of Nasa's gigantic Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and the Orion space capsule.

Once they are safely in orbit, the astronauts will test how the Orion handles. This will involve manually flying the capsule in Earth orbit to practise steering and lining up the spacecraft for future Moon landings.

They will then head out to a point thousands of kilometres beyond the Moon to check Orion's life‑support, propulsion, power and navigation systems.

Graphic showing the Earth and Moon, with the Artemis II's figure of 8 orbital trajectory highlighted. Specific points are labelled. These are: 1. Lift off at the Kennedy Space Centre, 2. Orbit around Earth, 3. Rocket separation, 4. Main engine fires to take spacecraft to the Moon, 5. Lunar flyby, 6. Return to Earth, 7. Crew module separates, 8. Splashdown in Pacific Ocean.

The crew will also act as medical test subjects, sending back data and imagery from deep space.

They will work in a small cabin in weightlessness. Radiation levels will be higher than on the ISS, which is in low‑Earth orbit, but still safe.

On return to Earth, the astronauts will experience a bumpy return through the atmosphere and a splashdown off the west coast of the US, in the Pacific.

Will Artemis II land on the Moon?

No. This mission is to lay the ground for a lunar landing by astronauts in the Artemis III mission.

Nasa says the launch of Artemis III will take place by 2028. But experts believe that is a very ambitious timeline.

The final choice of a spacecraft to take the crew down to the lunar surface has not yet been made. It will either be SpaceX's Starship lander or a craft designed by Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin.

New spacesuits made by US company Axiom are also not ready.

When Artemis III finally flies, the astronauts will be heading to the Moon's south pole.

After this, the aim is to have a sustained human presence on the Moon.

Artemis IV and V will begin building Gateway, a small space station circling the Moon. That will be followed by more Moon landings, extra sections being added to Gateway, and new robotic rovers operating on the surface.

More countries will be involved in keeping people living and working on and around the Moon for longer periods.

An illustration showing how the Artemis II astronauts will be arranged in the Orion crew module at launch. The four astronauts sit reclined, in two rows of two, facing up with their backs to the ground. During the mission the four crew members will spend 10 days in about nine cubic metres of living space. The image shows that the crew module makes up about half of the Orion spacecraft - with the service module being around the same size - and that, on the launchpad, Orion is only a small section of the 98m (320ft) Space Launch System rocket.

When was the last Moon mission?

The last crewed Moon mission was Apollo 17, which landed in December 1972 and returned to Earth later that month.

In all, 24 astronauts have travelled to the Moon and 12 of them have walked on its surface, all during the Apollo programme. Of the 24 to have been to the Moon, just five are still alive.

America first went in the 1960s, primarily to beat the Soviet Union to assert its geopolitical and technological dominance. Once that goal was achieved, political enthusiasm and public interest ebbed, as did the money for future Moonshots.

The Artemis programme grew out of a desire to return humans to the Moon, but this time for a longer-term presence built around new technology and commercial partnerships.

Do other countries plan to send astronauts to the Moon?

Several other countries have ambitions to put people on the Moon in the 2030s.​

European astronauts are set to join later Artemis missions and Japan has also secured seats.

China is building its own craft, targeting a first landing near the Moon's south pole by 2030.

Russia continues to talk about flying cosmonauts to the surface and building a small base sometime between about 2030 and 2035. However, sanctions, funding pressures and technical setbacks mean its timetable is highly optimistic.

India has also expressed ambitions to one day see its own astronauts walking on the Moon.

Following the success of Chandrayaan 3's landing near the lunar south pole in August 2023, India's space agency set out a goal of sending astronauts to the Moon by about 2040. This would be part of a push to move its human spaceflight programme beyond low Earth orbit.

Additional reporting by Kevin Church and Emily Selvadurai.

How memories of my grandma are tainted by funeral boss's crimes

2 April 2026 at 18:54
Tristan Essex Tristan Essex on the left next to Jessie Stockdale who is in a hospital bed wearing a pink dressing gown.Tristan Essex
Tristan Essex says his memories of his nana, Jessie Stockdale, are "tainted" after Robert Bush kept her body for five months after her funeral

Warning: This article contains details some people may find distressing.

Tristan Essex says his memories of his nana, Jessie Stockdale, are now "tainted" after funeral director Robert Bush kept her body for five months after her family were told her funeral had taken place.

Bush, who ran Legacy Independent Funeral Directors in Hull, has admitted a series of offences, including preventing the burials of 30 bodies, after police uncovered widespread wrongdoing at the business.

According to Tristan, with the benefit of hindsight, there had been warning signs.

"There was an awful smell in the funeral directors," he recalled. "My grandma was changed into different coffins every time we viewed her, and we obviously picked a specific coffin.

"She was put into larger coffins which were wider, longer, different colours, different trims. She was in at least three or four different coffins.

"We complained because the frill on the coffin was splattered with blood.

"There was black, thick mould around the inside of the coffin as well."

Victims and their families have been waiting for justice since the investigation began two years ago.

Bush, 48, specialised in low-cost funerals and claimed on his company's social media to offer "dignified personal care".

Behind the scenes, officers found a very different picture.

Humberside Police described its inquiry as "complex, protracted and highly sensitive", triggered by a report of "concern for care of the deceased" in March 2024.

Within days, 35 bodies and half a tonne of human ashes were recovered from the firm's premises on Hessle Road in Hull.

The body of Tristan's grandmother, Jessie, was among those discovered.

Tristan, 26, said his family were "knocked off our feet" when they were told Jessie was a victim.

"Thirty-five bodies were found inside Legacy and one of them had an ankle bracelet with my nana's name on," he said.

Legacy Independent Funeral Directors Robert Bush has short ginger hair. He is wearing a white shirt, a black tie and a black jumper.Legacy Independent Funeral Directors
Robert Bush, 48, abused the trust of those at their lowest ebb

Bush had been due to stand trial in October, but during a hearing at Hull Crown Court on Thursday he admitted 30 counts of preventing a lawful and decent burial.

He also pleaded guilty to one charge of stealing money from charity collection boxes.

The admissions followed others in October last year, when Bush pleaded guilty to 35 offences of fraud by false representation, relating to the proper care of remains and the return of ashes. Four of the charges related to giving women ashes that he falsely claimed were those of their unborn babies.

He also previously admitted a charge of fraudulently running a business. This related to the sale of funeral plans. There were 172 victims relating to this count alone.

In total, there were 254 victims of Bush's crimes, police said.

Many families were distraught to learn ashes they were given did not belong to their loved ones.

Some had unwittingly worn the ashes of strangers close to their body in the form of specially made jewellery.

One told us how a friend had the ashes mixed with tattoo ink and pushed deep into their skin.

PA Media Police and forensic officers, wearing white suits, stand outside Legacy Independent Funeral Directors off Hessle Road in Hull.PA Media
The parlour in Hessle Road, Hull, has been described as "a hoarder's house"

Bush's disregard for the dead and their families did not end there.

More than 1,000 items, including love letters, baby clothes and treasured possessions belonging to the victims were found on the funeral director's premises, a crisis response team told the BBC.

"It was like a hoarder's house," said Kevin Curreri of Kenyon Emergency Services.

The team is typically brought in by governments in the wake of natural disasters, plane crashes and terrorism incidents.

This time, it was appointed by Hull City Council to recover the scene, after police had finished with it.

According to Curreri, human remains and personal possessions had been treated "so disrespectfully" that it showed "a pretty significant breach of trust".

Linsey Smith/BBC A sign and a bunch of fake flowers attached to the black railings around the former Legacy premises.Linsey Smith/BBC
Families left tributes to their loved ones at the former Legacy parlour in Hessle Road, Hull

Following the police searches, floral tributes were left outside the parlour.

Some of the notes attached to them demonstrated the unbridled rage felt towards the person responsible for causing this close-knit community so much heartache.

In stark contrast to Bush's large detached home in Kirk Ella – a desirable village in the East Riding of Yorkshire – his funeral business, which opened in 2010, stood in Hessle Road, a working-class street that was once the beating heart of Hull's fishing industry.

Bush hid behind a veneer of respectability, his neighbours painting a picture of a family man who was willing to run errands and help complete DIY tasks for them.

Professionally, too, nothing appeared to be too much trouble for Bush, with some of his customers telling the BBC how he had offered them the chance to pay him in installments when they told him they were struggling to cover a relative's funeral costs.

One woman said Bush had personally bought their funeral flowers when they ran out of money.

"I just felt so grateful," she said. "I didn't ask questions."

Emma Hardy, MP for Hull West and Haltemprice, said Bush had deliberately pushed low-cost funerals at a vulnerable community.

"He pretended he was their friend," she said.

Bush was anything but.

Kevin Newton sat on a chair looking directly into the camera. He is wearing a blue top.
Kevin Newton bought a funeral plan from Robert Bush to save his children from financial burden

Not even charities escaped his greed.

Bush stole an unknown amount of cash from charity collection boxes. The donations, in memory of loved ones, were made at funeral services Bush organised.

Families believed the money would go directly to causes close to their hearts.

But it did not.

Between September 2017 and 6 March 2024, a number of good causes, including the Salvation Army, Macmillan Cancer Support, Dove House Hospice, Help for Heroes, the RNLI and Oakwood Dog Rescue were deprived of their funds.

More than 170 people bought non-existent funeral plans through Legacy, including 70-year-old Kevin Newton.

He paid £2,239 in 2012 for his plan.

Kevin said he was "mortified" when he contacted a third-party insurer and was told there was no trace of the plan on its database.

His daughter, Kerry, 36, said: "It's absolutely shocking because it's a lot of money for my dad to fork out and it's not like he can [afford it] again.

"It's unforgivable."

Kevin was able to recover the money as he paid using a card.

The funeral business was dissolved at a court hearing in May 2024 with debts of more than £40,000.

Bush has been bailed to be sentenced on 27 July.

Listen to highlights from Hull and East Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here.

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Dozens more people tell BBC of 'alarming' safety breaches at Travelodge hotels

2 April 2026 at 13:02
Wendy Griffith said her "heart aches" for the victim of a sex attack at a Travelodge in Maidenhead

A woman has told the BBC how she was "trapped" in her Travelodge hotel room for an hour last summer while a naked man banged on her door and performed "vile" sex acts in the corridor.

Wendy Griffith is among a growing number of guests who believe the chain has failed to take "alarming" experiences seriously "for years" and has been consistently "fobbing people off".

Dozens of people have shared their stories after the BBC revealed how a woman woke up to a man sexually assaulting her in her bed at the chain's Maidenhead branch in 2022 after staff gave him a key card and her room number.

A Travelodge spokesperson said it was "deeply sorry" to hear about Wendy Griffth's experience. Earlier this week, Travelodge's CEO, Jo Boydell, apologised to people that have had "frightening" experiences.

Outside of Travelodge London Straford hotel. It looks like a block of flats with branding on the first floor
Wendy Griffth was targeted by a man at Travelodge London Stratford in July 2025

The company, which is based in Thame, Oxfordshire, said it had already "strengthened" its room access policy.

Marketing consultant Wendy Griffith, from Norfolk, was staying at Travelodge London Stratford in July 2025 when she said a man started banging on her door.

She then witnessed him through the door's peephole performing sex acts.

She recalled "rising panic" over the hour as she was "essentially trapped" in the middle of the night trying and failing "multiple times" to contact hotel staff.

With no room phone and no emergency contact number in her room, she used her mobile to try and call the Travelodge website number.

She said she was "incredibly traumatised and not able to summon help", then dialled 999 in desperation.

"The police were incredible," she remembered, "given I was a female staying in a hotel room on my own, three cars pulled up within five minutes to arrest the man.

"It was a very dramatic scene, he attempted to run back in his room, barricade the door, the police had to force their way in, use pepper spray."

The man, Trevor Reece, 40, pleaded guilty to outraging public decency in September 2025.

He was sentenced by magistrates to four months of alcohol dependency treatment and ordered to pay £185 court costs and £50 compensation to his victim, which she says has yet to be paid.

In a previous interview with the BBC, Travelodge chief executive Jo Boydell said the company had made changes to its policies

"The impact that has resulted in terms of the psychological impact, the flashbacks, the impact to my business, my livelihood, all of it, and my situation was not as extreme as the lady in the Travelodge Maidenhead hotel," Wendy Griffth told the BBC.

"When I saw the story break recently, I broke down in tears because it was validation - that other people were experiencing these issues with Travelodge - and just complete and utter devastation that that had happened to that woman.

"That could have potentially happened to me and that's what keeps me awake at night."

She subsequently discovered, during a lull in the hour she was targeted, her tormentor - who was also a hotel guest - had gone to reception and asked for a replacement room key but gave her room number instead of his own.

"That moment when the desk clerk said 'he asked for a key to your room' the blood drained from my body," she recalled.

She said he was only refused as the clerk told her he knew the man was a long staying guest and the number he gave was not his own room.

She insisted Travelodge's responses to her subsequent complaints, which the BBC has seen, have been "categorically not good enough" and she feels "dismissed" and "palmed off".

She said no-one from Travelodge "proactively" offered her a refund, she had to chase them and her case was "pushed out" to the firm's insurers which denied liability.

She also believes CEO Jo Boydell's response to the 2022 Maidenhead attack has been "poor" and was shocked to hear her admit to not being aware of it until the attacker's trial at the end of 2025.

"To take so long to respond," she said, "and now only under media scrutiny and pressure and the fact that their business looks bad," she said.

"If there is ever a situation in your hotel where the police have become involved, that should be an automatic escalation to the CEO for a formal investigation."

A Travelodge spokesperson said: "We were deeply sorry to hear about the distressing experience Ms Griffith had at our London Stratford hotel and our handling of her case.

"We have since rolled out training to all of our hotels to ensure that the hotel phone number is on every key card wallet given to a customer so they can reach our team at any time, day or night."

Charlotte Bingley A woman looks straight at the camera. She has curly brown hair and is wearing a pink topCharlotte Bingley
Charlotte Bingley, from Birmingham, is among many people who have contacted the BBC about their Travelodge experiences

A growing number of MPs have also demanded better hotel safety procedures and the privately-owned hotel chain's crisis over guest safety continues to escalate.

The BBC has been contacted by people who have been "terrified" by "strangers" coming into their rooms and many have provided evidence of their subsequent complaints to Travelodge and direct emails to its CEO.

Others have reported accidentally walking into occupied rooms after being given the wrong room key.

The guests said Travelodge's responses had been "lacking", "dismissive", "totally uninterested" and "appalling".

One described three room key mistakes in one night.

Charlotte Bingley, from Birmingham, checked into a Travelodge in the south west of England in February and within an hour an "intimidating" staff member entered her room without knocking.

"I've never been so scared in my life," she said, "I really thought he was going to really hurt me and I was [shouting] 'just get out of the room'."

She said it took "ages for him to leave" and as there was no inside lock on her door, she was "petrified" he would "come back in the middle of the night", so she left.

She described the company's response to her repeated complaints - which the BBC has seen - as "despicable".

A Travelodge spokesperson said: "Our response to Ms Bingley was wholly inappropriate and we are very sorry.

"The team member has since been dismissed and no longer works for the business

"Any case of unauthorised access to a guest's room is a significant cause for concern and what happened to Ms Bingley was very upsetting and shouldn't have happened."

Gordon Hollingsworth A woman and a man appear together in the photo. The man has short grey hair and he is wearing shaded glasses. The woman has blonde hair and is smilingGordon Hollingsworth
Sian and Gordon Hollingsworth said their complaints about a "total failure" of security procedures were "glossed over"

Gordon Hollingsworth, from Essex, said a stranger walked into his and his "horrified" wife's room at midnight at Travelodge Leatherhead in January.

He recalled the unknown man being "as stunned as I was", having been given the key to the couple's room by staff.

He said he rarely writes complaints, but was so shocked by the "lack of organisational care and procedure", he contacted Travelodge because he "could see the very obvious threat".

He "took exception" to how they responded and said: "They just glossed over it. With no mitigations in place to prevent reoccurrence... that will repeat itself."

A Travelodge spokesperson said: "Any case of an unauthorised person entering a guest's room is a significant cause for concern and what happened to Mr Hollingsworth and his family was very upsetting and shouldn't have happened and we have apologised for this."

Sophia Farley, from Bournemouth, was also dissatisfied by Travelodge's reaction to her complaints about "dark figures" appearing in her room at night at the London Belvedere in June 2025.

She emailed CEO Jo Boydell spelling out that she was "shaken and frightened" and stressed her customer service team's initial reply "minimises what was a significant safeguarding failure" and was "wholly insufficient".

She told the BBC when she heard about the Maidenhead attack: "My first thought was, if that happened years ago, why did that then happen to me?

"Nowhere near as bad for me as it was for that poor young woman, but it could have been."

A Travelodge spokesperson said: "Our initial response to Ms Farley was inappropriate.

"In a subsequent response, our Customer Services team apologised profusely to Ms Farley for what happened during her stay, acknowledged her experience and confirmed we had retrained the hotel team. We subsequently processed a full refund of her stay at her request."

Wendy Griffth A Travelodge key card holder which is showing a phone number for staffWendy Griffth
Travelodge London Stratford has since put its direct-to-staff phone number on the front of its key card holders

In response to growing numbers of people reporting safety issues at the hotel chain, Wendy Griffiths said she felt a "responsibility" to speak up.

"If this many incidences are occurring of reported cases, what is not being reported because women are too afraid to come forward?" she said.

"I want compensation for not just myself, but for [other] victims and I want to make sure that this doesn't happen to other women."

She did receive a "profound and sincere apology" from Travelodge London Stratford's manager and her calls for improvements prompted the hotel to print a staff contact number on its key card holders.

A Travelodge spokesperson said: "We have recently commissioned an independent review which will look at every aspect of our room security procedures and in the meantime we have also strengthened our room access policy and brought in additional training for colleagues.

"Our focus remains on ensuring that everyone feels safe when staying in our hotels."

If you have been affected by issues in this story, BBC Action Line has details of available support.

You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X, or Instagram.

报人刘亚东A|为什么中国人比俄国人更怀念苏联?

2 April 2026 at 19:50

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作者:刘亚东

前几日在北京和几个朋友聚餐时,有位211大学的党委书记给老刘提出一个挺有意思的问题:为什么中国人似乎比俄罗斯人更怀念苏联?借着酒兴,老刘谈了三点看法,在座的人多表认同。事后细想,这确实是一个值得深入琢磨的现象。现把那天所谈整理成文,与大家分享。

上世纪九十年代初的苏联解体,无疑是二十世纪最具震撼性的地缘政治事件之一。三十多年过去,一个耐人寻味的对比愈发清晰:在今日俄罗斯,除俄共等特定群体外,社会整体对苏联解体多持平静和释然的态度,甚至觉得是“翻了篇”的事;而在中国,仍有不少人对苏联的崩塌深感痛惜,视之为巨大的历史遗憾。这种情感的“错位”,并非简单的好恶之别,而是根植于两国不同的历史沿革、身份认同与现实处境。

CDT 档案卡
标题:为什么中国人比俄国人更怀念苏联?
作者:报人刘亚东
发表日期:2026.4.2
来源:微信公众号-报人刘亚东A
主题归类:苏联
CDS收藏:公民馆
版权说明:该作品版权归原作者所有。中国数字时代仅对原作进行存档,以对抗中国的网络审查。详细版权说明

01

记忆的分野:

作为镜鉴的史诗与作为重负的往事

对许多中国人而言,苏联是一段镌刻在集体记忆中的“悲剧史诗”。其鼎盛时期的辉煌与骤然解体的惨烈,构成强烈反差,成为时常回望与深思的历史镜鉴。

苏联的高光时刻,至今仍被许多人铭记。它率先叩开太空时代的大门,把人类第一颗卫星送入苍穹,让第一位航天员翱翔太空;在反法西斯战争中,以数千万人的牺牲铸就了抗击纳粹的中流砥柱;在文学、音乐、科技领域,诞生了影响世界的巨匠与丰碑;更在短短几十年间,建立起完整的重工业体系。这些标志性成就,构成了许多中国人对苏联的核心印象。尤其对经历过国家筚路蓝缕发展历程的一代人而言,苏联的故事承载着对一个强大社会主义国家的复杂想象。

而它崩塌的方式,又为其增添了浓厚的悲剧色彩。一个曾与美国分庭抗礼的超级大国,竟在短时间内分崩离析,国际地位一落千丈,发展道路坎坷曲折。这种“由盛转衰”的宏大叙事,极易引发中国人对自身国家命运的关注与忧思。

反观俄罗斯,苏联对多数民众而言,更多是需要直面和反思的沉重过往,而非值得沉溺的黄金时代。对亲历了苏联后期停滞与解体后震荡的俄罗斯人来说,苏联时代不仅关联着超级大国的荣光,更与计划经济的物资短缺、官僚体系的僵化低效、社会活力的压抑等记忆紧密相连。苏联解体固然带来了转型阵痛,但也常被视为摆脱旧体制束缚、开启新可能的转折。因此,除了特定政治力量,俄罗斯社会整体并未普遍沉浸在对苏联的怀念中,更多人关注的是如何解决现实问题、重振国家实力。

02

身份的差异:

作为参照的他者与作为本体的自我

中国与苏联、俄罗斯与苏联,是两种截然不同的历史关系,这从根本上决定了两国对苏联解体认知视角的本质不同。

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对中国而言,苏联始终是一个重要的“外部参照系”。两国关系经历了从“以苏为师”到论战对峙,再到关系正常化的复杂历程。在这一过程中,中国既借鉴过苏联的经验,也汲取了其教训。苏联解体后,中国社会对其进行了持续而深入的反思,这种反思的核心在于将其视为一部蕴含着丰富历史教训的“教科书”,思考如何避免类似陷阱,走稳自己的道路。

对俄罗斯而言,苏联是其直接的“历史前身”,解体的过程是国家本体一次深刻而痛苦的重构。俄罗斯民众亲身经历了联盟瓦解带来的地缘政治收缩、经济衰退、身份认同危机等切肤之痛。苏联的解体是“自家的事”,是必须消化和处理的内部遗产。这种“身在其中”的沉浸式体验,使得俄罗斯人更倾向于从内部根源理性剖析苏联解体的原因,而非从外部赋予其浪漫化的怀想。

03

认知的距离:

作为象征的符号与作为经验的亲历

认知的距离感,也塑造了不同的情感投射。

许多中国人对苏联的认知,主要通过历史记载、经典文艺作品、科技成就等媒介完成,这容易形成一种聚焦于其高光时刻的、带有一定距离感和理想化色彩的印象。苏联因而成为一种象征强大、秩序与理想的抽象符号。当面临外部压力或内部转型的挑战时,这种符号化的苏联形象,有时会成为一种情感寄托,象征着对某种确定性、秩序感和宏大叙事的向往。

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而俄罗斯人的认知,则始终与鲜活、复杂的直接经验与集体记忆交织在一起。他们既承载着超级大国的历史遗产,也背负着旧体制的沉重包袱;既经历了解体初期的混乱与失落,也面对着重建国家认同与尊严的现实任务。这种植根于生活实践的全方位体验,使得他们的态度更为复杂、务实,也更少浪漫滤镜。

总而言之,老刘的结论是:俄罗斯人对苏联解体的相对平静,源于他们作为继承主体,亲身经历并消化了这场变革,将其视为一个必须翻过的历史篇章;中国人对苏联解体的痛惜与深思,则源于我们作为重要的观察者和参照者,始终将其视为一部关乎大国兴衰、治国理政的深刻教科书。苏联的历史已然终结,但它留下的关于改革、发展、稳定与民生的宏大命题,至今仍在叩问着每一个追求长治久安的国家。

风声OPINION|重庆“没给一个子儿”,为何诞生了创业天才张雪?

2 April 2026 at 19:47

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相比神化和工具化已经“证明”自己的“英雄”,能够有足够的耐心和包容去容纳那些不循规蹈、尚未“成功”的“异类”,显然更重要。

作者丨朱昌俊

资深媒体评论员

毫无疑问,张雪是近几天全网受关注度最高的顶流“素人”。

3月28日至29日,世界超级摩托车锦标赛WSBK葡萄牙站在波尔蒂芒赛道落幕。中国张雪机车ZXMOTO厂队表现惊艳。该车队的法国车手瓦伦丁·德比斯驾驶国产摩托车53号820RR-RS赛车,连夺两回合冠军,拿下周末双冠。张雪机车也因此创下中国摩托车品牌在世界顶级摩托赛事的历史首冠。

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这一幕,被普遍认为,“不仅是车队的胜利,更标志着中国制造在国际摩托赛事技术层面的全面突破,打破了国外品牌数十年的赛场垄断”。再叠加张雪个人从湖南麻阳的摩托车修车学徒,在20年“磨一剑”中成长为新一代中国摩托车企业“掌门人”的励志故事,可以说在方方面面都衍生出了被“赋义”的空间。

CDT 档案卡
标题:风声|重庆“没给一个子儿”,为何诞生了创业天才张雪?
作者:朱昌俊
发表日期:2026.4.2
来源:微信公众号-风声OPINION
主题归类:张雪
CDS收藏:公民馆
版权说明:该作品版权归原作者所有。中国数字时代仅对原作进行存档,以对抗中国的网络审查。详细版权说明

也正是因为这种延展性,“夺冠”后的张雪,采访者来了,消费者来了,投资者来了,连当地政府也宣布将为其提供近200亩全新生产基地……这种连锁反应在流量时代不难预料,也可以理解。

但是,某种程度上,有人为他喝彩,有人借他发声,有人将他视为某种“证明”,也意味着张雪正在被过度符号化。

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重庆“没给一个子儿”,为何诞生了创业天才?

夺冠之后,面对记者的采访,张雪那句“重庆没给我一个子儿”的“真话”,也迅速成为舆论焦点。应该说,这句“反场面”话,击中了不少人的情绪。在很多人看来,这似乎也印证了一种熟悉的逻辑,即像张雪这样“横空出世”的“草根英雄”,从来不是被“扶持”出来的。

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同时,也有不少人从另一个角度提出,对于创业者而言,政府最应该提供的本就不是直接的补贴,一个健全、高效的产业生态才是关键所在。而重庆之所以能走出张雪这样的创业者,恰恰得益于其深厚的摩托车产业积淀,包括完整的上下游产业链、相对成熟的技术工人队伍、浓厚的产业氛围等。事实上,这一点也得到张雪本人的肯定。

当然,当地媒体也更乐于接受这种解读。在他们看来,张雪的夺冠是重庆摩托车产业不断创新的一个有力证明,是这座老牌摩托车制造基地焕发新生的缩影。

这个角度当然有其道理,但如果仅仅停留在“产业生态论”的层面,又难免失之简化。问题的复杂性体现在,不同产业、不同阶段、不同发展目标下,企业和产业发展对于政府角色的需求,其实可能是完全不同的。

比如,前几年合肥的“风投模式”备受推崇。很多人知道,合肥市政府通过敏锐的产业判断和果断的投资,曾先后引进了京东方、蔚来等一批新兴产业龙头,被舆论称为“最牛风投城市”。那种模式的核心,其实就是在新兴产业及其分布格局尚未成型的阶段,地方政府通过前瞻性的布局和真金白银的投入,降低产业和关键企业入驻的风险,从而帮助新兴产业在本地落地生根。很明显,这一模式确实不是简单一句“营造生态”就能实现的。

相比之下,作为全国重要的摩托车制造基地,重庆在摩托车产业上已深耕了几十年,从市场主体到产业链条都已经比较完备,市场竞争也相对充分。在这种情况下,抛开政府的“砸钱”动力不谈,直接出手给某一家企业“投钱”,反而可能带来对市场公平竞争的破坏。

从这个意义上说,张雪那句“没给一个子儿”的直白话,其实未必值得放大。外界最该关注的,也不是重庆方面有没有给他直接扶持,而是到底有没有给所有像他一样的创业者提供公平竞争的机会和稳定的政策预期。包括浙江资本最终投向张雪,其实也包含了这种对本地产业生态和发展环境的“投资”。如果这些做到了,那本身其实就是一种合适的“支持”。

这其实也再次呼应了那个早些年被反复提及的词——“筑巢引凤”。在人才和项目的争夺已经成为城市竞争常态的今天,随着张雪“传奇”的上演,这四个字的含金量或许还在上升。而这里的“巢”,既包括产业生态,也指营商环境。

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“草根英雄”的受捧悖论:该如何看待“天才”的逆袭?

张雪的故事之所以能够迅速“出圈”,除了夺冠本身,更因为他身上确实贴着太多这个时代容易引发共鸣的标签,比如草根、热爱、偏执、坚持、不被看好却最终逆袭等。在“躺平”“求稳”“上岸”等成为高频词的今天,张雪的出现仿佛是一记响亮的耳光,不出意外地被许多人拿来证明“理想主义依然有用”、“拼命依然值得”。

甚至,有人还拿他与张雪峰作对比。的确,这两个人,一个的形象是劝人务实、追求确定性的“规划大师”,一个是靠一腔孤勇赌上一切的“热血疯子”。这种对比固然有戏剧性,但如果因此就把张雪简单塑造成“反躺平”的代言人,恐怕同样是一种一厢情愿的误读。

必须接受的一个事实是,像张雪这样因为“热爱”而坚持数十年,甚至带着某种偏执的“理想主义者”,在任何社会、任何时代,其实都注定是极少数。说得更直白点,他不可能是一种可以量产的成功样本,个人选择也不具备太多可复制性。

这背后其实还有着一个明显的悖论,那就是当很多人一边对张雪不惜溢美之词,一边又希望他能被复制和推广时,其实也同时在消解他的价值。

道理很简单,越是希望这种成功成为普遍现象,他的独特性也就越被稀释,价值也就越低。就像尽管很多人都会去研究和学习乔布斯、马斯克,但恐怕没有多少人会天真地以为按照某种“成功公式”就能批量复制他们。对待张雪,同样需要这样的清醒。

可以说,把他捧上神坛,和把他当作某种社会情绪的宣泄出口,本质上都是一种可疑的简化思维。真正尊重他的方式,就应该承认这种不可复制性,并推动社会去真正思考,到底该如何对待那些不可复制的“天才”?

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不必过于浪漫化想象:夺冠只是企业发展的开始

在将张雪符号化的诸多声音中,还有一种倾向值得警惕,那就是将这次张雪机车夺冠等同于张雪机车这家企业成功本身。仿佛赛场上的一战成名,就意味着一家企业已经站稳了脚跟,未来已是一片坦途。这种认知,其实是对企业成长和市场竞争的浪漫化想象。

确实,从企业家的角度来看,张雪机车的夺冠,在方方面面都可以说,给张雪机车这家企业的发展提供了可遇不可求的泼天流量,可谓是打响了“第一炮”。但是,市场竞争比赛道的比拼要复杂得多。一家摩托车企业在充分竞争的市场中要想真正长远地立足,特别是要在国际市场闯出一片天,说到底还是得靠持续稳定的产品质量、可靠耐久的用户体验、完善的售后服务体系,以及在全球市场上与国际头部品牌正面竞争的综合能力。

其实,张雪本人的认知比很多围观者清醒得多。在接受采访中,他明确提出,“十年的长期目标是成为世界TOP10的摩托车品牌”。这个目标或的确让人振奋,但也必须承认,它其实才刚刚开始。要知道,世界TOP10意味着要与本田、雅马哈、杜卡迪这些动辄数十年甚至上百年历史、拥有深厚技术积累、成熟供应链体系和强大品牌认知的国际巨头同台竞技。

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切不可低估其中的不确定性,它既与技术攻关的难度、资金链的考验有关,也与企业本身的组织管理能力能否同步“进化”密切相关。而其中任何一个环节拖后腿,都可能影响到目标的实现进度。

对此,社会舆论也理当有更成熟、更理性的审视。还是要看到,一家企业从创立到真正成熟,往往得经历数次生死考验,要穿越多个周期。这个过程需要的,不仅是创业者的激情,更是持续的创新活力与稳健经营能力,甚至运气。

更进一步说,围观者也不妨扪心自问:假如未来作为企业的张雪机车褪去了光环,或未能走到张雪所期望的终点,又该如何对待?

是翻出今天的赞美当作嘲讽的素材,还是以“早就知道会这样”的姿态事后诸葛亮式地冷眼旁观?

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包容尚未成功的“异类”,才能孕育更多可能

这其实也引出了一个更为根本的问题,即我们到底需要怎样的社会氛围,才能让更多张雪式的人物有机会冒出来?

张雪早年的一段经历,或许具备一定的参考价值。根据这次“翻红”的节目视频,当年湖南卫视的记者在拍摄他时,曾有过明显的犹豫。但最终,记者怀着恻隐之心,还是答应了拍摄。而正是这份包容,让张雪的故事得以被更多人看见,也更加具象化地增添了今天的“传奇”色彩。

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这个细节,其实颇有象征意味。现实中,像张雪这样的人,虽然“成功”后那份赤子般的“执着”“纯粹”很让人动容,但在之前其实往往都是不被理解的。因为他们太不符合社会主流价值对“正常人生”的想象。特别是在当前这样一个愈发追求确定性的社会里,他们往往更是“极少数”,是那些更不容易被规训、劝退和“矫正”的人。

但是,也恰恰是这样的“异类”,才让一些真正突破和创新变得更具可能性。“伟大不能被计划”,创新也从来不是按计划生产出来的,它们往往就诞生于那些不被看好、被误会但却不肯放弃的“边缘人”手中。

也就是说,一个社会如果只容得下“正常”,只鼓励“稳妥”,也就难免要承受创造力打折的代价。

因此,社会各方对待张雪,相比把他捧成英雄,给予他作为一个创业者和企业家应有的尊重或许就足矣。比如,他坦言目前接受过多的采访已经“没有意义”、“在浪费时间”,这样的心声就应该被正视和理解。

说到底,舆论的纷纷扰扰,主要还是由于不同的围观者在他身上投射了不同的情绪,不同的立场也试图将他纳入不同的叙事。诚然,这或是他“出圈”后不得不承受的“宿命”。

但是,相比神化和工具化已经“证明”自己的“英雄”,能够有足够的耐心和包容去容纳那些不循规蹈、尚未“成功”的“异类”,显然更重要。

本文系凤凰网评论部特约原创稿件,仅代表作者立场。

主编|萧轶‍‍‍

特朗普称在伊朗“目标即将实现” 未来两三周要把伊朗打回“石器时代” - RFI - 法国国际广播电台

2 April 2026 at 20:15
02/04/2026 - 13:53

美国总统特朗普周三晚间向全国发表讲话称:伊朗“不再构成真正”的威胁,美军即将实现其战略目标,并承诺,将在未来两到三周内“猛烈”打击伊朗,将其打回“石器时代”。

在美联社4月2日刊出的讲话全文中,特朗普说:在过去的四周里,我们的武装部队在战场上取得了迅速、果断、压倒性的胜利。伊朗的海军已不复存在,空军已成废墟,其恐怖政权的大部分领导人已丧命。他们对伊斯兰革命卫队的指挥和控制正被彻底摧毁。他们发射导弹和无人机的能力被大幅削弱。他们的武器、工厂和火箭发射器正在被炸成碎片。

特朗普还承诺,要在接下来两到三周,将对他们进行极其猛烈的打击。我们要把他们打回“石器时代”,让他们回到他们该待的地方。

他还说,与此同时,谈判仍在进行中。政权更迭并非我们的目标。我们从未说过要推翻政权,但由于他们原有领导人全部死亡,政权更迭已经发生。新政权不那么激进,也更加理性。

特朗普威胁到,然而如果在此期间未能达成协议,我们已经盯上他们的关键目标。如无法达成协议,我们将对他们的每一座发电厂进行猛烈打击,且很可能同时进行。

特朗普还为他在第一任期退出2015年伊核协议辩护称,我终止了巴拉克·侯赛因·奥巴马的伊朗核协议,那是一场灾难。奥巴马给了他们17亿美元现金。货真价实的现金——从弗吉尼亚州、华盛顿特区和马里兰州的银行里取出来,用飞机运送这些钱,试图收买他们(伊朗)的尊重和忠诚,但这并没有奏效。他们嘲笑我们的总统,继续推进他们拥有核武器的计划。他那个伊朗核协议使伊朗拥有庞大的核武器库。

腾讯会议这波 AI 功能,让我彻底戒掉了整理焦虑

By: 姚桐
2 April 2026 at 19:54

有多少会议的录像,你从来没有回看过?

我想有些人的答案是:几乎全部。

录制文件躺在云端,没有索引,没有摘要,于是我们宁可在手机备忘录里潦草记几行字,也不去动那个文件夹。时间一长,会议录像的意义,就只剩下一种:防止对方事后翻脸说「我没说过这句话」。

作为腾讯会议的深度用户,我用它录过选题会、采访,也录过早八课、小组讨论。录制于我而言,从来只是个存档动作。因为我总要花 3 倍于会议时长的时间,去整理笔记、提炼重点、定位关键信息。稍有不慎就会遗漏核心点,主打一个「摸鱼一时爽,整理火葬场」。

腾讯会议这次「智能录制」的升级动静不小。变的不仅是准确率,还包括整个框架。它引入了多模板机制,不同类型的会议,AI 会用不同的方式帮你整理。

看到「AI 帮你整理会议内容」,可能你和我的第一反应是:又来。这种功能见得太多了。生成出来的东西,要么是逐字稿套了个排版,要么是把你说的话复读一遍加了个标题。

但这次可能真的不一样,我拿了几种完全不同的会议来试,工作周会、大学课堂、客户拜访,看看它到底能整出什么花来。

体验入口:

第一步:在会议中开启「云录制」,会议结束后录制文件将自动保存进入你的「录制」文件中。

第二步:进入腾讯会议客户端/APP,点击「录制」(APP 请从「我」-「录制」),在全部文件中,选择任何一场会议,进入后即可查看该功能。

不同的会,终于有了不同的整理方式

我先拿了一场最常见的周会开刀。

这会会一般信息密度不高但杂乱,我过去通常的处理方式是:打开录制文件,拖着进度条找到关键段落,然后打开备忘录开始手动敲:谁说了什么、结论是什么、谁负责跟进。

这次我什么都没做,会后直接打开录制文件,选择「智能总结」模板。

在这场周会的录制里,AI 把内容切成了大约 6 个段落,排期讨论、预算确认、人员安排,每一段标题都对得上我的记忆。单是这一个功能,就帮我省下了至少一半的整理时间。

对于大多数日常工作会,这个通用模板已经够用了。但腾讯会议这次真正让我觉得有意思的,是接下来这件事。

因为不同类型的会议,对「重要信息」的定义完全不一样。

一节课的核心是知识点和考试重点,一场客户拜访的核心是预算、决策链和痛点,一次项目启动会的核心是里程碑和责任人。让一套 AI 模板包打天下,就像让同一个实习生既写课堂笔记又写销售报告。能用,但不专业。

腾讯会议这次一口气推出了 5 个场景化模板,我拿大学生最刚需的「学霸助手」先测了一场早八课。

周三早八,文学翻译鉴赏课,老师用英文开场,PPT 切换的速度比我意识清醒的速度快一倍。

和往常一样,进入会议我顺手点了云录制,然后把脑子调到了省电模式。

下课后,我先点开了逐字稿,中英夹杂,密密麻麻。「so」和「就是说」交替出现。

图源小红书@亿万

我在屏幕前坐了三秒,头开始疼,算了,直接看「学霸助手」模板整理的纪要。

整齐的语段就这样萌萌地看着我。

我在复盘时发现一个有趣的细节:老师在讲「Memory, like olives, is an acquired taste.」这句话如何翻译时,用了相当长的篇幅分析「acquired」,AI 纪要把这段内容压缩成了要点,而不是一堆原话的堆砌。

最让我觉得贴心的是,组队人数、抽签规则、评分占比等重要细节都无一遗漏。

但 AI 的输出不是终点。我还可以随时在要点下面加一段自己的理解,操作就像在一篇文档里插入注释一样自然。 我的思考、我的补充、我的疑问,都能和课程内容牢牢绑定在一起,随着学习过程不断丰富,最终变成完全属于我的学习资产。

对中小企业来说,多模板可能更值钱

除了学霸助手,腾讯会议还准备了汇报总结、项目启动纪要、客户拜访纪要(MEDDICC)和客户分析(BANT)四套模板。

我有个做 ToB 销售的朋友,团队六个人,没有 CRM 系统,客户信息全靠微信收藏和脑子。每次见完客户回来,主管问一句「对方预算多少?谁拍板?」他就开始翻手机备忘录上潦草的三行字,剩下的全凭印象。

他不是不知道 BANT、MEDDICC 这些专业销售框架好用。客户预算、决策人、需求、时间线,哪条漏了都可能跟错单。但六个人的小团队,哪有精力每次见完客户还坐下来花半小时填表?

行业里有个数据说,用对了销售资格认定框架,成交率能提高 67%。道理大家都懂,卡就卡在执行上。

这次我帮他试了一下 MEDDICC 模板。操作很简单:客户拜访时开着腾讯会议的云录制,聊完之后切到 MEDDICC 模板,AI 直接把聊天里提到的预算范围、谁是最终决策人、客户痛点、竞品情况这些信息,按框架归好了类。

他看完说了句:「我以前花半小时填的东西,它开完会就填好了。」

BANT 模板也是同样的逻辑,预算、决策权、需求紧迫度、时间线四个维度自动归位。对他这种小团队来说,这招属于「轻资产、重方法」。

买不起几十万的 CRM,请不起咨询公司做销售培训,但开个腾讯会议、选对模板,AI 就能帮你把客户信息按专业框架整好。说白了,方法论本身不贵,贵的是执行成本。现在执行成本被 AI 干掉了。

会议能被追问,元宝是我的私人秘书

如果说智能纪要解决的是「会后整理」,那「问元宝」解决的是更深一层的问题:会议内容能不能被追问

我们或许都经历过,在五六个人的工作会议中,大家都在说话,你很难在实时对话中同时追踪每个人的立场演变,注意力往往被最强势的那个声音带走了。

现在你直接点击逐字稿里参会者的昵称,就可以让元宝总结 ta 的全场观点。分人总结之后,这五六个人分别说了什么、各自强调了什么、在哪个问题上有过保留意见,全部清晰呈现。

会后追问,才是「问元宝」更日常的用法。

做访谈时,有位受访者提到了心盲症(Aphantasia)这个概念,我当场不好打断就没追问。会后让元宝结合那段访谈内容和外部资料给我解释,它把受访者的个人描述和认知科学的外部知识结合起来,标注了哪些内容来自录制,哪些来自联网检索。

之前遇到陌生概念,要花几小时翻知网、查文献,既耗时又容易出错。现在元宝直接完成「访谈内容解读 + 权威知识补充 + 信源标注」一站式服务,整理好的内容稍作调整核对,就能直接放进论文附录或注释里了。

大学生们课后如果需要给组员发组队通知,直接输入「根据本节课的分组要求,生成一份组队通知,明确组队时间、人数要求、报告占比、抽签规则」,一份清晰得体的通知立刻生成,复制粘贴就能发到群里。

这样一来,「会议内容」就从一段只能播放的音视频,变成了一个可以被追问、被延伸的知识库。你只需要告诉 AI 你想知道什么,它帮你从里面捞出来。

会议录制的终点,是「随时调用的记忆」

以前我对会议效率的期待,就是开完能有份纪要就谢天谢地了。但纪要只是信息的归档,归档之后的信息怎么再流转、怎么被用起来,才是真正决定效率的环节。

这一年腾讯会议把 AI 嵌进了会议的每一个角落。现在,多模板管整理,元宝管追问,整条链路终于没有断点了。

你可以追着它问、往里面加自己的笔记,甚至让它联网帮你查资料。会议录制文件第一次变成了一个活的东西。

我翻了翻云端那堆从来没打开过的旧录制文件,原来早就支持了,过往文件也能用。

那些在云端躺了几个月的早八课录像,我可能要重新打开了。不是为了复习,只是想知道,那节我快睡着的课,AI 眼里的「核心知识点」到底是什么。

与其说这是会议录制,不如说是把工作生活里,那些过去没有被好好整理的上下文记忆都留存了起来。

这,才是「会议录制」这个动作之后真正应该有的结局。

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Man dies in storm as Saharan dust shrouds Crete

2 April 2026 at 15:54
NIKOS CHALKIADAKIS/EPA/Shutterstock A man takes a picture while cars drive with their headlights on in red air.NIKOS CHALKIADAKIS/EPA/Shutterstock
A man takes pictures as the city of Heraklion that is covered in red dust coming from Africa

A man has died near Athens as a storm hits parts of Greece with gale-force winds and flooding, while a Saharan dust storm enveloped the island of Crete.

The man was found under a car in the Nea Makri rural area early on Thursday, according to the fire department.

Storm Erminio has flooded streets, closed some schools and moored ferries. Meanwhile, some flights were disrupted on Crete on Wednesday after dust from an African storm filled the air, turning the sky red-orange.

The weather is expected to be bad on Thursday in most areas of the country "with long-lasting and intense rains and storms and possibly with local hail", according to the national meteorological service.

Stefanos Rapanis/Anadolu via Getty Images People walk along a waterfront with boats, buildings and the sea in the background. The sky is orange.Stefanos Rapanis/Anadolu via Getty Images
Crete cloaked by a Saharan dust storm on 1 April

A red warning is in place in Crete, mainly in the west and south, from midday until late at night on Thursday.

The fire department received 674 calls for assistance from Wednesday through the early hours of Thursday. The majority were in the Attica region that encompasses Athens, with most calls for fallen trees.

High winds have kept ferries moored in ports, with Greek media reporting some departures may resume on Thursday, weather permitting.

Streets as well as the basement of the local police station in Nea Makri were flooded. A bridge was knocked down on the island of Poros and vehicles have reportedly been swept away. Some schools have also been closed.

Stefanos Rapanis/Anadolu via Getty Images Two people walk in jackets long a street beside a shop and building. The sky and everything is coloured red-orange.Stefanos Rapanis/Anadolu via Getty Images
Crete cloaked by Saharan dust storm on 1 April
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