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Today — 3 April 2026Main stream

'What the hell did he just say?' GOP Iran worries build after Trump speech

President Donald Trump’s primetime address on Iran did little to relieve rising alarm from plugged-in Republicans in key states across the country who see the war as pushing costs higher and their midterm chances ever-lower.

Trump declared Wednesday night that the U.S. offensive in Iran is “nearing completion” but warned that military operations would intensify over the “next two to three weeks.” He attempted to clarify his goals for the war — to destroy Iran’s nuclear capabilities — and insisted it was never about regime change. And he shrugged off the spike in oil and gas prices as a “short-term increase.”

To a number of GOP strategists and local party leaders involved in key congressional and gubernatorial races, the message was too little, too late and too jumbled.

“What the hell did he just say?” one GOP strategist in a battleground state wrote in a text to POLITICO after the president’s address, granted anonymity to speak candidly. “A quick recap and a path forward would’ve been helpful. Instead, it was nonsense left for Sean Hannity to articulate.”

Trump’s decision to attack Iran, and the subsequent spike in oil and gas prices, are the latest sources of heartburn for Republicans who were already feeling queasy about public opinion that has turned against Trump’s domestic agenda. They heard little new information Wednesday night from the president that signaled a course correction.

Conversations with more than half a dozen operatives and party chairs across seven battleground states revealed their anxiety that the prolonged conflict is overshadowing the White House’s affordability message and could hurt their chances of holding onto power this November.

The Republicans who spoke to POLITICO were particularly concerned about Trump’s waving off the financial strain the war has put on day-to-day prices, touting “the strongest economy in history” with “no inflation.” Two different strategists compared the latter comments to President Joe Biden’s repeated insistence that the economy was doing better than they believed.

“Not sure people will buy the strong economy part,” Todd Gillman, a Michigan GOP district chair, said in a message Wednesday night. “Inflation is definitely more under control than it was under Biden, but the prices haven’t come down on a lot of things.”

Without any clear announcements from Trump on an endgame in the region, future markets for U.S. stocks recoiled and average national gas prices topped $4 per gallon. Crude oil prices soared to over $111 per barrel on Thursday morning.

Others were left wanting more specifics from Trump on an exit strategy and the factors that drew the U.S. into the war. “I think it could’ve been a little more specific or expanded on the exact threats that Iran poses to the U.S.,” said one Wisconsin-based GOP strategist. “I don’t know the extent he’s able to get into that stuff based off intelligence, but maybe he could have been a little bit more expansive there.”

Polls have consistently shown a majority of Americans oppose the military operation in Iran by double-digit margins. The conflict is already fracturing the president’s loyal MAGA base, alienating young men who believed in his “America First” message. And Democrats are beginning to go on the attack in campaign ads, accusing vulnerable GOP lawmakers of prioritizing the president’s multibillion dollar offensive over making voters’ lives more affordable.

One GOP operative working on a battleground House race found solace in Trump’s talk of an exit strategy, saying voters would be “relieved to hear that we’re not going to be sticking around.”

“On the other hand, I don't think anybody has confidence that gas prices will just come down on their own,” said the operative, who was granted anonymity to deliver a candid assessment. “Overall, there's really nothing in here that helps to sell this to the public."

Some said the address may have come too late.

“It’s something that probably should have been done at the beginning of the conflict,” said Dennis Lennox, a Michigan-based GOP strategist.

Still, others in the party found that Trump’s address met the moment and lavished praise on the president. Mark Levin, a staunch Trump ally and conservative commentator, said he delivered a “PERFECT SPEECH” in a post on X.

Brent Littlefield, a GOP strategist involved in several races, including in Maine’s battleground 2nd congressional district, lauded Trump’s decision to speak directly to Americans and dismissed concerns that the remarks came too late in the conflict to help him articulate his case to voters.

“It was right for the President to wait to do that until after the conflict began,” Littlefield said. “He did not telegraph the move to the enemy of what the United States was planning to do.”

Samuel Benson contributed to this report.

© AP

In the Birthright Citizenship Hearing, a Story of Asians Fighting for Rights

By: Amy Qin
3 April 2026 at 00:07
Supreme Court justices and lawyers cited a litany of historic cases that reflect the many times Asians turned to the courts, trying to shape immigration law.

© Anna Rose Layden for The New York Times

Demonstrators in support of birthright citizenship on Wednesday at the Supreme Court.

Trump’s Media-Bashing Is Coming Back to Bite Him in Court

2 April 2026 at 23:21
Judges have cited attacks on the press by the president and his appointees when ruling against the government in at least three court cases.

© Doug Mills/The New York Times

President Trump in the Oval Office on Tuesday.

法国总统马克龙回应特朗普有关其婚姻等言论 “既不优雅也不属实” - RFI - 法国国际广播电台

3 April 2026 at 00:15
02/04/2026 - 17:51

法国总统马克龙周四回应了特朗普对其婚姻的嘲讽言论,称其“既不优雅也不属实”,马克龙评论美国总统在中东战争和北约问题上反复无常并“到处在空谈”。

法国总统马克龙今天回应了特朗普对伊朗和北约的威胁,认为这位美国总统“每天都在发表自相矛盾的讲话”,并指出其对法国总统夫妇的言论“不得体”,这些言论不值得回应。”

法国总统在访问首尔期间对记者说 :“现在的言论太多太杂,混乱。我们需要稳定、平静,回归和平,这不是作秀!”来回应美国总统特朗普近日一系列对法国的猛烈抨击和反复无常。

美国总统特朗普周三声称,法国总统夫人布丽吉特“对她的丈夫极其恶劣”等。

另外,针对特朗普一再威胁要退出北约时,法国总统马克龙批评了他的沟通方式,指出 :“如果我们每天都怀疑北约,我们就削弱了北约实质。”

关于北约和中东冲突,法国总统马克龙指出:“我们需要严肃对待,而认真严肃的对待就不能每天都发出自相矛盾的声音。”

特朗普此前敦促法国和其他国家采取军事行动,以便重新开放霍尔木兹海峡,因伊朗回应美以军事行动该海峡实际上已被封锁。

法国总统对此表示,以武力打通这一战略要道的军事行动“不切实际,我们从未考虑过这种方案,这样的行动“将耗时无穷”,并且会“带来诸多风险”。

法国总统马克龙认为只有通过深入谈判并达成协议,才能确保长期的后续行动,并维护所有人的和平与稳定。”

中国航空公司上调燃油附加费 - RFI - 法国国际广播电台

2 April 2026 at 23:45
02/04/2026 - 17:25

随着中东战事推高航空煤油价格,包括中国国航在内的多家中国航空公司宣布,将从周日起上调国内航班的燃油附加费。

中国国际航空、春秋航空以及中国南方航空及其子公司厦门航空周三发布公告称,800公里以内的航班燃油附加费将上调60元,更长航程的航班则上调120元。

根据国际航空运输协会(IATA)的数据,上周全球航空燃油平均价格已升至每桶197美元,而一个月前仅为95.5美元。

法新社北京消息称,许多国际航空公司也采取了类似措施,以应对油价上涨。

香港航空巨头国泰航空上周宣布,其所有航班的燃油附加费将上调34%。此次调价适用于4月1日及之后的机票。

国泰航空表示,鉴于石油及其衍生品价格持续波动,将每两周调整一次燃油附加费。

美国总统特朗普首次有关伊朗战争的全国讲话浇灭了股市和油市的短期希望。周四上午,欧洲股市普遍下跌。格林尼治时间07:10左右:

巴黎下跌1.24%,法兰克福下跌1.55%,米兰下跌1.30%,伦敦下跌0.71%

周四,亚洲尾盘,香港下跌1.19%。东京日经收盘跌2.4%。

北海布伦特原油和美国西得克萨斯原油分别上涨了6.66%和6.06%,升至每桶107美元和106.19美元。

Tina Peters, Colorado Election Denier, Has Prison Sentence Overturned

Ms. Peters, a former county clerk, received a nine-year sentence after being convicted of tampering with voting machines. An appeals court overturned the sentence but did not immediately free her from prison.

© David Zalubowski/Associated Press

Tina Peters, the former clerk in Mesa County, Colo., had been convicted of tampering with voting machines that were under her control.

What Drives Patrick Radden Keefe?

2 April 2026 at 20:36
Patrick Radden Keefe’s carefully applied ambition has propelled him to a rarefied perch.

© Erik Tanner for The New York Times

The writer at the home he shares with Gudzowska and their two sons.

Why People With Chronic Illness Are Turning to AI Chatbots for Health Advice

2 April 2026 at 17:00
Some women with complex chronic illnesses are using chatbots to search for diagnoses or relief from their symptoms.

© Kaoly Gutierrez for The New York Times

With the help of the A.I. chatbot Claude, Ms. Smith concluded that she had long Covid, which was causing a condition called dysautonomia.

Ancient Artifacts Stolen in Dutch Museum Heist Are Recovered

2 April 2026 at 23:18
The golden helmet of Cotofenesti, a highly regarded artifact from Romania, and two elaborate golden bracelets were taken in January 2025.

© Sem Van Der Wal/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The recovered golden helmet of Cotofenesti and two gold bracelets on display in the Netherlands on Thursday.
Yesterday — 2 April 2026Main stream

'Be serious... don't speak every day': Macron criticises Trump approach to Iran war

2 April 2026 at 21:41
Macron calls Trump's remarks on his marriage 'inelegant'

The Iran war requires a "serious" approach that does not change every day, Emmanuel Macron has said, in an apparent reference to US President Donald Trump's seemingly contradictory remarks about the conflict.

"This is not a show. We are talking about war and peace and the lives of men and women," the French president told journalists upon arrival in South Korea for a state visit.

"When you want to be serious you don't say every day the opposite of what you said the day before," Macron added.

"And maybe you shouldn't be speaking every day. You should just let things quieten down."

Macron was answering questions on the US-Israel war in Iran, which has now entered its second month. France and other European countries have supported some of the US operations in the region, but have so far resisted getting dragged into the war.

Trump and his administration have so far offered mixed messages on the conflict, at various times suggesting that a ceasefire was near, that the war had already been won or that the US was going to fight on.

Macron also addressed Trump's recent comments in which the US president said he was reconsidering his country's membership of Nato.

"Alliances like Nato are valuable because of what is unspoken – meaning the trust behind them," Macron said, arguing that casting doubt on one's commitment to the organisation emptied it of its substance.

Partners sign agreements and show up if issues arise, Macron added, "rather that commenting on them every day to say that you will or will not respect them".

"I feel like there is too much chatter, it's all over the place," he said.

He added he was unwilling to comment on an operation that the US and the Israelis "decided on by themselves", Macron said. "They then lament that they are alone in an operation they decided on alone. It's not our operation."

Macron also mentioned the US strikes on Iran in June 2025, which Trump said had "obliterated" Iranian nuclear facilities.

However, in the wake of the February 2026 war the US president said it was the "last best chance to strike at Iran's nuclear weapons programme".

"I remind you that six months ago were told that everything had been destroyed and all had been sorted out," Macron noted.

He argued that international observers were needed to check the nuclear development situation in Iran, and a framework to prevent further enriching.

"You still have today and you'll still have in the future people who have the know-how, hidden laboratories, etc. So it's not targeted military action even lasting a few weeks which can sort out the nuclear problem for good."

Trump has been on the offensive against France, which he accuses of failing to help in the war on Iran.

At a private lunch on Wednesday, Trump mocked Macron by imitating a French accent and saying that his wife Brigitte "treats him extremely badly" and that Macron was still "recovering from the right to the jaw".

Trump was likely referring to a 2025 video which showed Macron being shoved in the face by Brigitte.

Macron dismissed the comments as "neither elegant nor up to standard".

"I won't respond to them, they don't deserve a reply," he said.

The comments on Macron's marriage have been exceptionally bad received in France, where even staunch Macron critics came to his defence.

"For Donald Trump to speak to him like that and to speak of his wife in such a manner - I find that absolutely unacceptable," said Manuel Bompard of hard-left France Unbowed party.

Tehran has retaliated to the strikes on its territory by closing the Strait of Hormuz, a key waterway which enables the passage of a large proportion of the world's energy supply. In the absence of a quick resolution to the closure, Trump has said the countries most affected by the disruption should solve the problem themselves.

Macron pushed back against the idea of a military operation to liberate the strait, saying it was "unrealistic" because it would take too long and be too dangerous.

"It would expose anyone crossing the strait to coastal threats from the [Iranian] Revolutionary Guards, who possess significant resources, as well as ballistic missiles, [and] a host of other risks," he said.

Baby shot dead in pram in New York City, police say

2 April 2026 at 21:43
NYPD CCTV footage of the two suspects on a moped.NYPD
Police believe they have apprehended the shooter while the driver remains at large

A seven-month-old girl was shot and killed in while sitting in her pushchair in "broad daylight" in New York City's borough of Brooklyn, police have said.

Police believe the baby was the unintended victim of a suspected gang-related shooting.

Footage from the scene shows two men driving against the flow of traffic through the Williamsburg neighbourhood when a man sitting on the back of the motorbike takes out a gun and fires "at least two rounds", New York City Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch told a news conference.

The bike then crashed and the suspected shooter was apprehended, but a "massive" manhunt was under way for the driver, she said.

"A life that had barely begun was taken in an instant," New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani said.

"Today is a devastating reminder of how much more work there is to be done to combat gun violence across this city."

Several adults and children, two of whom were in buggies, had been on a street corner when the shooting occurred.

The seven-month-old's parents ran for cover in a nearby corner shop, where they realised their child had been shot, the BBC's US partner CBS reported.

"All the kids started ducking in the corner. The family went to the store and the mom started screaming when she noticed the baby was bleeding from [her] head," witness Bernius Maldonado told CBS.

Emergency services were called at around 13:21 local time (17:21 GMT).

The child was taken to the nearby Woodhull Hospital where she was pronounced dead. Police reported no other people killed or injured in the incident.

"As a mother, I cannot imagine the pain that this family is feeling or the grief that they now carry with them," Tisch said. "It is unspeakable."

Footage seen by police showed the suspects crashing into a car shortly after fleeing the scene.

Both suspects were throw from the moped - but the rear passenger landed so hard he lost "both of his shoes", Tisch said.

An ambulance was called for the injured male and was brought to Brooklyn Hospital, where he was then taken into police custody.

Investigators believe he fits the description of the shooter, based on the clothing he was wearing and his appearance, but was taken into custody as part of an unrelated investigation.

Police are working to connect him to the shooting.

Ancient golden helmet recovered more than a year after Dutch heist

2 April 2026 at 22:20
ANP/AFP A gold helmet and two gold braceletsANP/AFP
Two of the recovered bracelets were exhibited with the crown, but one bracelet is still missing

A 2,500-year-old golden helmet considered one of Romania's greatest treasures has been recovered more than a year after it was stolen during a raid on a Dutch museum.

It and two golden bracelets dating back to about 450BC were unveiled as having been returned to the museum on Thursday, secured behind a glass case with two armed police guarding them. A third bracelet has not yet been found.

The theft of the Coțofenești helmet and bracelets by an armed gang who broke into the Drents Museum in Assen caused outrage in Romania and raised questions about security for priceless artefacts on loan to other countries.

"It's a long-awaited result," Romanian prosecutor Daniela Buruiană told journalists.

"We are happy that we are now witnessing here the recovery of the Romanian artefacts," she added.

The treasures, which date from the Dacian era - an Iron Age civilisation that existed roughly where Romania is now - had been on loan from Romania's national history museum when they had been stolen.

Their theft prompted a spat between the two governments that led to the Dutch government paying a reported €5.7m (£5m; $6.5m) in insurance compensation.

Romanian officials refused to discuss what would happen to that money now.

Getty Images A golden helmetGetty Images
The helmet was finally returned to authorities on Tuesday, a year and two months after it was stolen

Robert van Langh, director of the Drents Museum in the northern Netherlands, said the helmet had been slightly dented but could be restored. The bracelets remained in perfect condition, he said.

Romanian prosecutor Rareș-Petru Stan spoke of the "major impact" that the theft had had in his home country, and praised his Dutch colleagues for their "hard work and keeping the faith".

"We are continuing the investigation to find the last bracelet," he added, "and we are grateful that we will be able to return this treasure to the Romanian people."

Dutch public prosecutor Corien Fahner revealed that the helmet and bracelets were handed over to authorities on Wednesday following negotiations involving lawyers for the three suspects.

Two men in their mid-30s and one aged 21 will face trial later this month.

The suspects were arrested within days of the gang using explosives to break into the museum, but by then there was no trace of the priceless items.

Art experts have suggested that the helmet and bracelets were stolen to order by a criminal gang.

Several Dutch provincial museums have been targeted in recent years because of the difficulty in providing adequate security for priceless artefacts. The helmet and bracelets were in a glass case that provided little resistance to the armed group.

In 2024, two works by Andy Warhol were stolen from a gallery in the southern Netherlands, and six years ago a Frans Hals painting called Two Laughing Boys was stolen from a small museum in the central town of Leerdam.

The former head of the national history museum in Bucharest, Ernest Oberländer-Târnoveanu, faced considerable domestic criticism for loaning the gold objects abroad and lost his job within days of the theft.

He spoke of his relief that the helmet had been retrieved.

"This is a unique item in European and even global cultural heritage," he told RTL Nieuws. "The helmet is an important social and political symbol of Dacian civilisation."

Four toddlers stabbed to death at Ugandan nursery school

2 April 2026 at 21:50
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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U.K. to Host Talks on Securing Strait of Hormuz

2 April 2026 at 23:33
It was not clear whether the talks, expected to involve dozens of countries, would satisfy President Trump’s demand that other nations take a more active part in the Iran war.

© Pool photo by Leon Neal

Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper of Britain, center, hosted a virtual meeting of foreign ministers on Thursday to discuss fallout from the Iran war.

Trump Faces a Tough Fight With His New Budget

By: Tony Romm
2 April 2026 at 22:21
Last year, the president proposed many steep spending cuts that Congress never granted. This time, he may face an even tougher sell.

© Doug Mills/The New York Times

President Trump is likely to ask lawmakers to pour new money into the military.

11.98 万起,占了同级一半销量的小鹏 MONA M03,又加上了「图灵芯片」和「越级座舱」

By: 芥末
2 April 2026 at 22:42

2025 年,小鹏 MONA M03 以 40.6% 的市场占有率,拿下了 A 级纯电轿车市场销量第一。

这个数字很夸张,它已经超过了第二名到第五名的总和。放在竞争最拥挤、价格战也最凶的区间里看,这样的领先幅度,已经不是一句简单的「性价比高」能概括的了。

那么买这辆车的人,到底是谁?

小鹏官方公布的数据显示,小鹏 MONA M03 53% 的车主年龄不超过 30 岁,49% 是女性,50 岁以上用户只占 8%。

这是一群典型的年轻城市用户,他们在意设计,在意科技感,也在意预算花得值不值。

MONA M03 从立项开始,瞄准的就是这样一批人。到了今天刚刚更新的 2026 款车型上,这套精准的「讨好」逻辑依然在延续。

2026 款小鹏 MONA M03 一共有 6 种版本配置,起售价为 11.98 万元,分了 Plus、Max、Ultra 三个版本,从 Max 开始配备图灵 AI 芯片。

从内到外,都是「降维打击」

乍一看,新款小鹏 MONA M03 在外观上的变化并不大,标志性的回旋镖大灯、C 柱风刃,配合黑色饰条营造出的悬浮式车顶,依然是我们熟悉的那套视觉语言。

车身三围也原封不动,依旧是 4785 / 1896 / 1445 mm,轴距 2815 mm,后备厢容积 621 L,并搭载电动掀背尾门,维持了原本已经足够的竞争力。

但小鹏在细节上做了不少调整。

前后保险杠重新做了造型,换上钢琴烤漆风格的运动包围,后保险杠两侧加入导流槽,底部加上了一条贯穿式红色灯带。整车的视觉重心被进一步压低,看起来更贴地,也更有攻击性。

不仅如此,无边框外后视镜直接给成了全系标配,轮圈也一口气掏出 3 款新样式(1 款低风阻、2 款运动版),19 英寸规格配上了米其林轮胎。

类似的变化,还发生在工艺层面。

新车清漆改用巴斯夫 2K 配方,厚度硬拔了 20%,光泽度冲到了 92 以上。

配色除了原先的暗夜黑、星云白、星雨青、星瀚米、星暮紫、微月灰这 6 款经典色,又添了罗兰紫和牛油果绿,全系共 8 种车漆。

MONA M03 此次改款的重点放在了座舱内,

这些年,国产纯电车在 10-15 万这个价位段,最容易翻车的地方就是座舱,往往是材质透着廉价、做工经不起细看、细节处处敷衍。

但小鹏 MONA M03 是个异类。

新款车型内饰提供拂晓紫、晨雾灰、夜幕灰 3 款配色,软包覆盖面积超过 70%。车顶棚换成了更具高级感的仿麂皮绒材质,中控台和门板开关区域喷上了 UV 触感漆,扬声器网罩用上了全金属蚀刻工艺,现款的氛围灯更是升级成了 256 色寰宇光瀑方案,支持 100 档亮度调节。

实用性上的小修小补也能看得出来小鹏很花了一番心思。

前排杯架后移,给前置的双手机托盘腾出了位置,其中一处支持 50 W 无线快充;门板底部做了封闭处理,可以放雨伞;中央扶手下方采用镂空设计,用来扩展储物空间。

舒适性配置上,小鹏这次也加码了不少。

新车前排座椅坐垫加长,标配 14 点按摩功能,覆盖臀部到大腿区域;全景天幕升级为双层镀银 Low-E 材质,紫外线隔绝比例达到 99.97%;遮阳板化妆镜面积比现款扩大 2.7 倍,还支持 3 档色温和亮度调节。

同时新车前挡风升级为隔音玻璃,前排两侧换成双层夹胶玻璃,还新增了 RNC 主动降噪模块。以及最重要的,新款小鹏 MONA M03 加入了热泵空调,冬季暖风工况下电耗可降低 50%,对应冬季续航最多提升 30 km。

动力部分,虽然新车电机规格没变,依旧提供 190 马力(225 N·m)与 218 马力(250 N·m)两种配置,电池组分为 51.8 kWh 、61. 6 kWh和 62.2 kWh 三档,不过供应商悄然从弗迪切换成了亿纬动力。

倒是电驱升级为了小鹏自研混合碳化硅扁线电驱,峰值效率达到 95%,这套电驱配上 X-HP 3.5 智能热管理系统,官方称让新车在老款的基础上又能多跑 20 到 30 km,CLTC 极限续航来到了 640 km 。

底盘部分,新车全系升级为了自适应阻尼减震器,可以根据路面状态实时调节软硬。最小转弯半径 5.3 m,百公里制动距离 35.63 m。

官方还完成了 5 项极端爆胎稳行测试,自适应阻尼和实时扭矩分配里可以协同控制车身偏移,在 170 km/h 的超高速下单前轮爆胎,靠着自适应阻尼和实时扭矩分配的系统救场,车身依然能保持稳定。

智驾,毫无疑问是小鹏的灵魂,也是这次 M03 最锋利的一把刀。

从 Max 版开始,新车就搭载小鹏自研图灵 AI 芯片,算力达到 750 TOPS,替代原先的双颗英伟达 Orin-X。

在小鹏原有的产品体系里,图灵芯片此前是更高价位车型才有的配置。如今把它下放到 MONA M03,等于把小鹏现阶段最顶级的智驾算力平台,放进了一台 A 级轿车里卖。今年下半年,它还将获得第二代 VLA 的蒸馏版升级。

这套坚持不配激光雷达的纯视觉方案,支持全国高速、城市及快速路 NOA,还有「车位到车位 2.0」,可以从出发地地库自动泊出、过闸机、行驶到目的地园区,再泊入收藏车位,形成完整的自主驾驶链路。

从小鹏官方的实测视频来看,不论是避让神出鬼没的自行车和电摩,还是在拥挤混乱的批发市场里穿梭,系统都果断得毫不迟疑。

在十几万的价格段,这种智驾能力几乎是降维打击。

配合智驾的,是升级后的座舱大脑,新车搭载联发科 MT8676 芯片,15.6 英寸中控屏分辨率升级至 2.5 K,运行天玑 AIOS 6.0 系统,支持全域超感车道级导航。

销量,是把双刃剑

再说回开篇提到的那个 40.6%。

这个份额的形成,显然不是单纯靠低价冲出来的,真论拼刺刀,这个价位从来不缺狠角色。

MONA M03 的成功,本质上是「产品定义」的胜利,它敏锐地圈出了一批特征极度清晰的买家,然后把有限的成本,精准且粗暴地砸在他们最敏感的痛点上。

颜值、内饰质感、储物空间、静谧性、音质、智驾、冬季续航……这些点单独看都是细枝末节,但缝合在一起,就成了一个无法拒绝的购买理由。

但这套凌厉的打法,也给小鹏自己埋下了一个结构性的隐患。

当消费者花十几万,就能享受到小鹏现阶段最顶级的智驾芯片和近乎全套的功能覆盖时,未来 P 系、G 系、X 系在智驾上的差异化护城河,无疑会被极度压缩。

等这种认知在大众层面固化后,用户很容易产生一个很直接的疑问:既然这台车已经给到了这么多,我为什么还要多花十几万去买一台更贵的小鹏?

坦白说,这并不是 MONA M03 的错。这是所有在下沉市场狂飙突进的品牌,迟早要撞上的一堵墙。

破局的解法通常有两个:要么在昂贵的高端车上,建立起智驾之外的绝对壁垒,用更惊艳的设计语言、更炸裂的三电上限、更奢华的材质,让「贵」变得理所当然;要么,就是在智驾功能上强行划出三六九等,让旗舰产品在体验上永远领先半个身位。

MONA M03 的份额越高,这个问题就会来得越快,MONA M03 卖得越疯狂,市场份额占得越大,这个问题就会倒逼得越紧。

它就像一把双刃剑,一边在拓宽着小鹏的疆土基本盘,一边也在无形中,悄悄抬高了品牌下一步向上的门槛。

小鹏目前给出的答案是 GX,一辆定位超过 9 系的旗舰 SUV 。

而它的成败,才是真正决定了小鹏能否重回高端市场。

#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。

【视频】专家解读:特朗普真的能让美国退出北约组织吗? - RFI - 法国国际广播电台

2 April 2026 at 22:45
02/04/2026 - 16:29

美国总统唐纳德·特朗普周三(4月1日)威胁称,由于北约欧洲成员国拒绝派遣船只疏通伊朗附近的霍尔木兹海峡,他将带领美国退出北约。与此同时,特朗普加大了对该军事联盟的谴责力度。但特朗普真的会带领美国撤出已有77年历史的跨大西洋联盟吗 ? 在法律层面,2023年美国国会通过的一个法案禁止任何美国总统暂停、终止、谴责或退出建立北约的条约,除非退出北约的动议得到参议院 100 名成员中三分之二多数的支持。专家也分析认为,如果美国退出北约,是送给中俄的一份“大礼“,但特朗普的难以预测性让这个问题的答案也难以预测.....

地缘政治地震

美国外交关系委员会高级研究员、乔治城大学国际事务教授查尔斯·库普坎 (CHARLES KUPCHAN)接受路透社采访时认为:“如果唐纳德·特朗普退出北约,那将是一场地缘政治地震。这将瓦解自二战后黑暗岁月时的北约成立以来,在许多方面都维系着西方世界的联盟。它不仅仅是一个军事联盟,在许多方面也是一个政治联盟,一个反映共同利益、共同价值观以及对自由民主共同承诺的机构。北约自冷战结束以来,尽管苏联解体,依然存在,这证明它不仅仅是权宜之计,而是有着更深层次的意义。所以我认为,如果特朗普政府退出北约,将会改变世界。在某种程度上,它会将世界推向一个地缘政治丛林,而欧洲将身处其中。”孤立无援。美国将孤立无援。在某种程度上,这将使美国回到1949年北约成立之前那种更加混乱、无政府状态的局面。”

“对伊朗战争中缺乏盟友感到失望”

他指出,特朗普最近关于北约的言论与目前在伊朗战争中的艰难处境有关。他说:“特朗普很早就表达过对北约以及美国在欧洲和东亚的盟友关系的遗憾。我认为他并非毫无道理地认为,盟友们在搭美国的便车,没有投入足够的资金来保卫自己。他们利用了美国愿意增加国防开支并提供保护伞的意愿。所以,特朗普的言论中贯穿着这样的主线。但我确实认为,特朗普在伊朗问题上处境艰难。这场战争持续的时间比他预期的要长,对国际经济造成的损害也比他预期的要大。因此,他感到沮丧的是,那些比美国更依赖波斯湾能源的亚洲和欧洲盟友,为什么不参与进来?为什么不参与打通霍尔木兹海峡的努力?所以我认为,他这些新的言论之所以如此激烈,是因为他对伊朗战争中缺乏盟友感到失望。“

库普坎教授也提醒美国的盟友,无论是德国、英国、韩国还是日本,都必须认真对待美国总统的声明,也必须有备选方案,必须质疑美国是否还像几十年来那样是可靠的盟友。话虽如此,但他不认为特朗普会退出北约,因为美国从北约获得了诸多好处。例如,目前一些飞越伊朗的军事行动就是从北约成员国的基地起飞的,比如英国。

“送给中俄的一份大礼”

但这位专家国际问题专家也认为,如果特朗普退出北约,西方的对手,俄罗斯和中国就会暗自窃喜,享受这种局面,因为他们非常乐见北约解体。如果美国撤回对韩国和日本的保护伞,他们也会非常高兴。他们喜欢看到西方分裂。因此,从某种程度上说,这相当于送给了美国及其盟友的对手——俄罗斯和中国——一份大礼。所以他猜测这是唐纳德·特朗普不会对此威胁采取行动的另一个原因。他认为北约仍将继续存在,将继续运转。到特朗普卸任时,美军仍将驻扎在欧洲。但是,这位专家认为,由于特朗普的难以预测性,所以当他说他对特朗普不退出北约的前景有信心时,他更是祈祷如此。

库普坎教授在采访中也强调,美国宪法没有赋予总统退出条约的权利,宪法规定条约需要参议院三分之二的同意。但自乔治·华盛顿以来,历任总统都曾违背过经参议院批准的条约。如果特朗普想要退出北约,他完全可以这样做。即使作为三军统帅,他这样做是否合法存在争议,他也可以命令美军撤出欧洲,这实际上意味着跨大西洋联盟的终结。

据路透社报道,美国宪法规定,总统有权在参议院的建议和同意下缔结条约,但须经参议院100名成员中的三分之二同意。然而,它并未提及退出条约的问题。

美国法律是怎么规定的?

2023 年,美国国会通过了一项法案,时任总统、民主党人乔·拜登签署该法案使其生效。该法案禁止任何美国总统暂停、终止、谴责或退出建立北约的条约,除非退出北约的动议得到参议院 100 名成员中三分之二多数的支持。

路透社报道称,这项立法是以修正案的形式提交给2024财年国防授权法案的,该法案是一项规模庞大的年度法案,旨在为五角大楼制定政策。该修正案的主要发起人是弗吉尼亚州民主党参议员蒂姆·凯恩和当时的佛罗里达州共和党参议员马可·卢比奥。

现任特朗普国务卿兼国家安全顾问的卢比奥周二表示,在伊朗战争爆发后,华盛顿将不得不重新审视与北约的关系。这场战争始于2月28日,由美国和以色列的空袭引​​发。

《国防授权法案》修正案还规定,美国不得动用任何资金退出北约。

北约条约是怎么规定的?

北约由欧洲国家、美国和加拿大组成,成立于1949年,旨在应对苏联的攻击风险,自此成为西方安全的基石。

1949 年《北大西洋公约》第 13 条规定,任何缔约方均可提前一年通知美国政府退出该条约,美国政府随后会将“退出通知”告知其他政府。迄今为止,没有任何北约成员国退出过北约。

接下来会发生什么?

根据国际法,如果条约允许退出,并且该国遵守退出程序,则该国元首通常有权退出条约。

美国法律对此不太明确,尽管历任总统都曾在未经国会批准的情况下退出过几项条约,包括特朗普在 2020 年退出由 35 个国家组成的《开放天空条约》,该条约允许在成员国上空进行非武装侦察飞行。

如果此事最终诉诸法庭,对特朗普决定的挑战将面临重重阻碍。其中包括确定谁有资格——即谁与结果有切身利害关系——来挑战这一决定。

美国最高法院保守派占多数,经常做出有利于特朗普的裁决,但从未就条约退出案件的实质内容进行过审理。



Funeral director who kept bodies for months admits 30 counts of preventing lawful burial

2 April 2026 at 21:49
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.

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.

We thought we'd buried my grandma, but her body was still at the funeral home

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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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.

Fifa is charging up to $10,990 for World Cup final tickets in first open sale

2 April 2026 at 21:10

The $11k World Cup final ticket - what we learned from first open sale

The World Cup on display on a white stand prior to the draw in December in Washington with Fifa World Cup 2026 in big gold letters in the background.Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

World Cup tickets were put on open sale for the first time on Wednesday

By
Football issues correspondent

The first open sale of tickets for the 2026 World Cup showed Fifa is charging up to $10,990 (£8,333) to be at the final.

It is thought to be the most expensive ever general admission to a football match.

In its World Cup bid book, the US, Canada and Mexico said tickets to the final would cost a maximum of $1,550 (£1,174).

Then, when the first batch of tickets went on sale in December, the most expensive was listed at $8,680 (£6,581).

Tickets for the Qatar World Cup final cost the equivalent of $1,604 (£1,214) for the top-priced seat.

Establishing the actual cost of tickets for this summer's tournament is difficult as Fifa has never released its pricing structures.

It is also using a version of dynamic pricing, whereby prices change at the start of each sales point depending on past demand.

Late last year the cost of the initial ticket releases was described as a "monumental betrayal". In December, Fifa announced a small number of $60 (£45) tickets.

On Wednesday tickets were put on open sale for the first time - and gave another glimpse at what is being charged.

What prices have been observed for the final

It is impossible to assess the overall ticket pricing with no information on the prices, or the volume available in each category.

Going through the Fifa ticketing website and seeing what is still available and what is being charged gives a good indication. However, that does not confirm if there are either more expensive tickets still, or if more were available in more affordable categories.

From what has been observed, ticket prices for the World Cup final increased by as much as 38% in the open sale compared to December's release.

Apart from the $10,990 (£8,333) category one ticket:

  • Category two was up 32.78% from $5,575 (£4,227) to $7,380 (£5,596).

  • Category three increased 38.23% from $4,185 (£3,173) to $5,785 (£4,386).

Fifa also gave no advanced notice of which games would be available on Wednesday, or at what prices, as the "last-minute sales" period began.

Those who did get through found that prices had gone up for the most in-demand fixtures - including the top teams and other key knockout games.

What we learned when we joined the queue

BBC Sport joined the queue for World Cup tickets alongside the supporters on Wednesday at about 15:20 BST.

A holding message was in place, and at 16:00 this changed to a red circle with the message: "Almost there…"

By 17:00 a countdown clock had appeared. We were two minutes from the front when the time suddenly jumped back up to 15 minutes.

When we did gain access, we experienced the same technical glitch as thousands of fans.

Supporters who logged on early were wrongly directed into a queue for "PMA tickets", reserved for fans of this week's play-off winners.

Once through, users were sent to a page where a code was required to open up a sale for those fixtures.

By the time the mistake was realised, those supporters were forced to start again at the back of the correct virtual line. Any chance of securing a ticket for one of the more attractive matches had gone.

Fifa did not provide a reason for the error but said that by 17:00 the links were working properly.

Once back in the queue it took six hours and 14 minutes to be granted access to the ticket page.

Of the 72 group games, 35 matches were listed with tickets available - but there was no allocation for the England or Scotland games, or any of the knockout matches, when we initially made it through.

Across the 35 matches, prices ranged from $140 (£106) to $2,985 (£2,261). The average price of those displayed was $358 (£271).

The most expensive group stage match seen was the first of the tournament between Mexico and South Africa at $2,985 (£2,261), with only a tiny proportion of the 87,000 capacity available.

Additionally, we were able to view corporate hospitality packages, including one for England v Panama which was $124,800 (£94,444) for a luxury suite with 24 match tickets, food and drink - $5,200 (£3,935) per person.

The availability of games appears to be changing all the time, and Fifa has indicated new tickets could be released for any game right up to kick-off.

By 08:00 on Thursday, 13 games were still showing - though six of these only had wheelchair companion tickets, which should not be sold to the general public.

Controversially, Fifa has not made free tickets available to the assistants of fans using wheelchairs. Tickets must be bought at full price and they may not be situated next to each other.

The USA's opening game against Paraguay on 13 June had the most tickets still on sale, with 1,406 category one tickets priced at $2,735 (£2,072).

Canada's first match against Bosnia-Herzegovina was the only other match with relatively good supply - 846 category one tickets still on sale at a cost of $2,240 (£1,697).

Fifa's resale platform, which will likely bring even higher prices - with both buyer and seller charged a 15% fee - reopens on Thursday.

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."

Ancient golden helmet recovered more than a year after Dutch heist

2 April 2026 at 22:20
ANP/AFP A gold helmet and two gold braceletsANP/AFP
Two of the recovered bracelets were exhibited with the crown, but one bracelet is still missing

A 2,500-year-old golden helmet considered one of Romania's greatest treasures has been recovered more than a year after it was stolen during a raid on a Dutch museum.

It and two golden bracelets dating back to about 450BC were unveiled as having been returned to the museum on Thursday, secured behind a glass case with two armed police guarding them. A third bracelet has not yet been found.

The theft of the Coțofenești helmet and bracelets by an armed gang who broke into the Drents Museum in Assen caused outrage in Romania and raised questions about security for priceless artefacts on loan to other countries.

"It's a long-awaited result," Romanian prosecutor Daniela Buruiană told journalists.

"We are happy that we are now witnessing here the recovery of the Romanian artefacts," she added.

The treasures, which date from the Dacian era - an Iron Age civilisation that existed roughly where Romania is now - had been on loan from Romania's national history museum when they had been stolen.

Their theft prompted a spat between the two governments that led to the Dutch government paying a reported €5.7m (£5m; $6.5m) in insurance compensation.

Romanian officials refused to discuss what would happen to that money now.

Getty Images A golden helmetGetty Images
The helmet was finally returned to authorities on Tuesday, a year and two months after it was stolen

Robert van Langh, director of the Drents Museum in the northern Netherlands, said the helmet had been slightly dented but could be restored. The bracelets remained in perfect condition, he said.

Romanian prosecutor Rareș-Petru Stan spoke of the "major impact" that the theft had had in his home country, and praised his Dutch colleagues for their "hard work and keeping the faith".

"We are continuing the investigation to find the last bracelet," he added, "and we are grateful that we will be able to return this treasure to the Romanian people."

Dutch public prosecutor Corien Fahner revealed that the helmet and bracelets were handed over to authorities on Wednesday following negotiations involving lawyers for the three suspects.

Two men in their mid-30s and one aged 21 will face trial later this month.

The suspects were arrested within days of the gang using explosives to break into the museum, but by then there was no trace of the priceless items.

Art experts have suggested that the helmet and bracelets were stolen to order by a criminal gang.

Several Dutch provincial museums have been targeted in recent years because of the difficulty in providing adequate security for priceless artefacts. The helmet and bracelets were in a glass case that provided little resistance to the armed group.

In 2024, two works by Andy Warhol were stolen from a gallery in the southern Netherlands, and six years ago a Frans Hals painting called Two Laughing Boys was stolen from a small museum in the central town of Leerdam.

The former head of the national history museum in Bucharest, Ernest Oberländer-Târnoveanu, faced considerable domestic criticism for loaning the gold objects abroad and lost his job within days of the theft.

He spoke of his relief that the helmet had been retrieved.

"This is a unique item in European and even global cultural heritage," he told RTL Nieuws. "The helmet is an important social and political symbol of Dacian civilisation."

Baby shot dead in pram in New York City, police say

2 April 2026 at 21:43
NYPD CCTV footage of the two suspects on a moped.NYPD
Police believe they have apprehended the shooter while the driver remains at large

A seven-month-old girl was shot and killed in while sitting in her pushchair in "broad daylight" in New York City's borough of Brooklyn, police have said.

Police believe the baby was the unintended victim of a suspected gang-related shooting.

Footage from the scene shows two men driving against the flow of traffic through the Williamsburg neighbourhood when a man sitting on the back of the motorbike takes out a gun and fires "at least two rounds", New York City Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch told a news conference.

The bike then crashed and the suspected shooter was apprehended, but a "massive" manhunt was under way for the driver, she said.

"A life that had barely begun was taken in an instant," New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani said.

"Today is a devastating reminder of how much more work there is to be done to combat gun violence across this city."

Several adults and children, two of whom were in buggies, had been on a street corner when the shooting occurred.

The seven-month-old's parents ran for cover in a nearby corner shop, where they realised their child had been shot, the BBC's US partner CBS reported.

"All the kids started ducking in the corner. The family went to the store and the mom started screaming when she noticed the baby was bleeding from [her] head," witness Bernius Maldonado told CBS.

Emergency services were called at around 13:21 local time (17:21 GMT).

The child was taken to the nearby Woodhull Hospital where she was pronounced dead. Police reported no other people killed or injured in the incident.

"As a mother, I cannot imagine the pain that this family is feeling or the grief that they now carry with them," Tisch said. "It is unspeakable."

Footage seen by police showed the suspects crashing into a car shortly after fleeing the scene.

Both suspects were throw from the moped - but the rear passenger landed so hard he lost "both of his shoes", Tisch said.

An ambulance was called for the injured male and was brought to Brooklyn Hospital, where he was then taken into police custody.

Investigators believe he fits the description of the shooter, based on the clothing he was wearing and his appearance, but was taken into custody as part of an unrelated investigation.

Police are working to connect him to the shooting.

What nearly went wrong on Nasa's space mission - and what still could

2 April 2026 at 22:04
Getty Images NASA's Artemis II Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft blasts off from the Kennedy Space Center. A vertical pillar of flame erupts from the rocket as it shoots off into the blue sky.Getty Images

In the tense final hours before Nasa's astronauts flew into space, a series of technical issues threatened to ground their landmark mission.

A faulty toilet and issues involving two safety systems were reported over the radio.

Nasa managed to resolve the problems by being "quick on their feet", an official later said.

The Artemis II crew are now hurtling around the Earth's orbit, carrying out final tests and checks before they head towards the Moon.

Here's what nearly went wrong - and what still could.

'Toilet is go'

The crew quickly discovered that even a trip to the Moon comes with very down‑to‑earth plumbing problems.

Sensors in the spacecraft's waste‑management system threw up some readings they did not expect, according to flight controllers.

Astronaut Christina Koch reportedly acted as a plumber, dismantling parts of the toilet under instruction from mission control.

Watch: How will the Artemis astronauts go to the toilet in space?

"Happy to report that toilet is go for use," mission control later said over the radio. "We do recommend letting the system get to operating speed before donating fluid".

The lack of gravity in space means waste management is a key issue in space travel.

Nasa has spent more than $23m (£17.4m) developing the "Universal Waste Management System".

Both men and women are able to use the system, which includes a funnel attached to a hose to process urine while using gentle airflow to eliminate spills.

A specialised seat allows for stools to be sucked into a sealed container, with tethers and restraints being used to stop the crew from floating away.

The Orion - the spacecraft on which they're travelling - also has plenty of backup options, from alternative collection bags to different ways of routing liquids.

Issue with safety systems

There were also issues reported with the flight termination system and the launch abort system - two safety systems that protect astronauts and the public.

The flight termination system allows engineers on the ground to destroy the rocket if it veers off course. It reportedly had a communications issue, which was resolved by using hardware from the previous Space Shuttle programme.

The launch abort system is Orion's emergency escape tower, designed to pull the crew capsule away from the rocket in the event of an emergency during launch or ascent. It reportedly gave a higher-than-expected temperature reading, but it was judged that it wouldn't affect the launch.

With these issues resolved, the countdown clock was held at 10 minutes while engineers went through final preparations.

We then heard the staccato rhythm of the calls by each engineer responsible for the rocket's critical systems.

One by one the voices came back: "Booster, go", "GNC, go", "Range, go" - each reply, a tiny release of tension and a build-up of expectation.

"Artemis II, this is Launch Director – you are go for launch," the crew was told. "We go for all humanity," Commander Reid Wiseman responded.

The rocket then launched into the sky, to the awe of those watching at the Kennedy Space Centre and around the world.

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

Trying to break spacecraft

Now safely in the Earth's orbit, the crew have been directed to spend hours quietly trying to break their spacecraft - on purpose.

They cycle computers through different modes, switch radios between ground stations and relay satellites, and deliberately move around the cabin to see how the life‑support system copes as carbon dioxide and humidity build up.

Engineers also command small thruster firings and check the European‑built service module responds exactly as the models predict.

All of this is designed to answer a simple question: is the ship healthy enough to risk flying hundreds of thousands of kilometres from home with no quick way back?

If any of these tests throws up something they do not understand, Nasa will not hesitate to call off the trans-lunar injection burn and use Orion's engine to bring the astronauts straight back to earth.

Additional reporting by Esme Stallard and Tom Bennett

How a chance meeting shaped Canadian Jeremy Hansen's mission to the Moon

2 April 2026 at 17:28
Watch the BBC's interview with Artemis astronaut Jeremy Hansen

Long before he was chosen to orbit the Moon in the ongoing Artemis II mission, Jeremy Hansen was a young cadet at the Royal Military College of Canada. He carried a dream - and had a chance interaction that would help shape his future.

In 1995, during his first year at the military college, Hansen met one of his heroes: Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield.

That was before Hadfield had served as commander of the International Space Station. But Hansen saw in his compatriot much of what he aspired to be: a fighter pilot and an astronaut.

Hansen asked Hadfield for his email address, and got it on the spot.

The brief encounter marked the beginning of a journey that would see Hansen follow closely in his hero's footsteps - first as a fighter pilot, and then by joining the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) in 2009.

Throughout his astronaut training, his mentor along the way was Hadfield, a young Hansen told the BBC in 2014.

The simple but lasting advice he was given: follow what makes you passionate.

"Jeremy has been getting ready for this flight since he was five years old," Hadfield told Canadian singer Emm Gryner in a podcast in March.

Hansen, now 50, grew up on a farm near London, Ontario, where his fascination with aviation began early.

As a child, he came across a page in an encyclopedia featuring Neil Armstrong and the picture of an astronaut on the Moon from the 1969 Apollo mission.

"That page is still burnt in my brain," Hansen told Spaceflight Now in an interview posted last month.

Soon after, he transformed his childhood treehouse into his own imaginary rocket ship.

In his teens, he went on to join the air cadets youth programme, and to study space science and physics at university.

He eventually became a fighter pilot, flying CF-18s out of the army base in Cold Lake, Alberta, and working with North American Aerospace Defense Command (Norad).

Fourteen years after joining the CSA, Hansen was selected for Artemis II: the first crewed mission to travel around the Moon in more than 50 years.

Over the course of 10 days, the crew of four astronauts will travel farther from Earth than any human before them.

Hansen is the only non-American on board. He is joined by mission commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, and fellow mission specialist Christina Koch.

Watch the moment Artemis II blasts into space on historic mission

In an interview with the CSA, Hansen said he was aware that the Artemis II mission might not go smoothly.

"To do something that has never been done before means that your team is very likely to face failure," Hansen said. "I like the fact that in space, we are committed to bold goals to the extent that we will not let periodic failure stop our forward progress," he said.

For the mission, Hansen is carrying four Moon-shaped pendants, each with a birthstone representing his wife and three teenage children.

His blue spacesuit has a mission patch he commissioned Anishinaabe artist Henry Guimond to design, with contributions from Dave Courchene III of Sagkeeng First Nation, Manitoba.

The heptagonal shape and the animals on it refer to a set of indigenous teachings that guide how people should treat one another - with love, respect, courage and humility.

Hansen has said the patch is his way of recognising the Indigenous peoples in Canada and their traditional knowledge.

Earlier this week, he told the BBC science editor Rebecca Morelle and 13 Minutes podcast presenter Tim Peake that he was excited for his first views of Earth during his first hour of space flight.

He anticipated that the mission would later afford him a view with the Moon in the foreground and Earth hanging in the distance.

"I hope humanity will stop for a moment when four humans are on the far side of the Moon, and just look at some of the imagery that we are sharing - and just be reminded that we can do a better job as humans of just lifting each other up," he said.

"Not destroying but creating together."

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