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台海开战将引发经济危机,美国尚未做好准备
台海开战将引发经济危机,美国尚未做好准备
Men on secret 1970s pro-paedophile list could still work with children today
A secret list of more than 300 people who belonged to a network that called publicly for the legalisation of sex with children has been handed to the BBC.
A small number of those named on the list may still have contact with children through paid work or volunteering, the BBC has discovered.
They were all members of a group called the Paedophile Information Exchange (PIE).
The Metropolitan Police had the list for about 20 years from the late 1970s, a BBC Radio 4 podcast team has been told.
Spread across several dozen pages, with a pink cover page added by police in the early 1980s, the typed list contains 316 names - all but a handful men, most with addresses alongside.
Most PIE members were based in the UK - but there are also details of people in other parts of western Europe, Australia and the US.
The BBC has established that a small number of the men are still alive and may currently be in contact with, or have care of, children through paid work or volunteering. The BBC has found no evidence any of them has carried out abuse.
The Met told us it was unable to provide specific information about its historical investigations into the Paedophile Information Exchange - but will still investigate crimes if sufficient evidence exists and alleged perpetrators are still alive.
PIE was formed in 1974 - when the country was going through rapid transformative social change. Its leaders sought to further their cause by attempting to align themselves with feminist, anti-racist and gay rights movements. It was not an illegal organisation and cost £4 a year to join, and to receive its members' magazine.
Over a decade, PIE spokesmen gave interviews to the media arguing that adults and children had a human right to have sex with each other. Four years old, they argued, was an age at which most children could give consent.
However, while PIE's leaders may have been happy to speak publicly, the names of rank-and-file members were very much kept secret.
The list - and dozens of other documents relating to PIE members - were given to the BBC team and journalist Alex Renton, who has written extensively about historical institutional child sexual abuse and presents the BBC podcast, In Dark Corners.
We then searched for the names in media archives, crime reports and death register listings from the past 50 years.
They found records or further information for 45% of the people on the list - with a reasonable degree of certainty - and discovered that half of them had been convicted or cautioned (or had been charged and died before trial) for sexual offences against children. Charges included distributing abuse images, kidnap and rape.
Of the small number of men who may still be in contact with children professionally, none has any criminal conviction that the BBC has been able to find - meaning they could have passed in-depth background checks when applying for jobs.
Those men are part of a wider group of nearly 70 on the list, who the BBC team has identified as having been in work likely to bring them into contact with minors.
Teachers make up half that group - work addresses are typed alongside some of the names on the list. The rest include social workers, sports coaches, youth workers, doctors, clergy, lay preachers and military officers involved in youth activities.
The podcast team tried to contact all those people still alive and working - most of whom are believed to be living in the UK.
One claimed his name was on the list because of PIE's links in the 1970s with a gay youth support group.
A second admitted he had been a member, but only because he had agreed with PIE that the disparity in the age of consent laws was unjust. Men in England and Wales had to be 21 to have sex with other men prior to 1994 - when the legal age was lowered to 18. Six years later it was reduced to 16, in line with straight sex. The man told the BBC he was not and never had been a paedophile.
A third man, currently teaching children in a private school outside of the UK, refused to speak any further after PIE was mentioned to him.
No-one else has so far responded to approaches by the BBC.
The BBC team obtained the PIE list from a former senior social worker - Peter McKelvie - who handed over a shopping bag full of historical documents, letters, internal memos and old newspaper cuttings spanning three decades.
Through his work, Mr McKelvie had started seeing connections between child abusers in the information he collected through his work - but gradually became frustrated about the abilities of police or social services to stop paedophile networks.
The PIE list came into his possession in 1998. Until then, for about 20 years, it had been in the hands of the Metropolitan Police's Obscene Publications Unit, known internally as "The Dirty Squad".
The former officer who handed it over, Dave Flanagan, told the BBC he believed the list may originally have been seized in a police raid in the late 1970s.
The document given to the BBC has scribbled notes in the margins - and Mr Flanagan, a detective constable at the time, says he wrote some of them.
He also attached and dated the pink cover page - as he and colleagues added more up-to-date PIE intelligence during the 1980s.
Police raided plenty of people on the list, he says - but, on its own, it was unusable as information for a search warrant.
"You couldn't go in front of a magistrate and say: 'Look, we believe he's a paedophile. We believe there'll be indecent photographs of children because he's on the PIE list.'"
Legally, being a member of a pro-paedophile group didn't make someone a sex offender.
Police did manage to close in on PIE in the early 1980s - focusing on three senior members who all had links to contact adverts in the members' magazine, Magpie.
The men were prosecuted under a 17th Century law of "conspiracy to corrupt public morals". Two received conditional discharges, while the third was jailed for two years.
Publicly, PIE ceased to exist in 1984.
Dave Flanagan says his team's detective work on the membership list also ground to a halt.
"Information was passed to other police forces and they did what they did with it - we had no control over any of that."
The BBC understands the PIE list was digitised in 1994 by a police team that no longer exists. The National Crime Agency, which was formed in 2013 and whose officers deal with child abuse cases, told us it has "no knowledge of receiving the [digitised] list".
Dave Flanagan kept the original in his briefcase until he retired in 1998, when he handed it to Peter McKelvie.
Mr McKelvie told the BBC that over the past 30 years he had pushed police, a Labour MP and a Conservative government minister to look at PIE members linked to social services and special schools, but without success.
He wrote to the Department of Health in 1993 outlining his concerns. His letter began: "The infiltration of the social work profession by paedophiles appears to be an extensive and serious problem..."
He suggested the formation of a specialist team of social workers and police to track down every member of PIE working in social care. The letter got no response, he says.
The Department for Health and Social Care told the BBC it could not comment on "individual historic cases".
On Monday, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said those who cover up or fail to report child sexual abuse could face professional or criminal sanctions under a new offence to be introduced this year.
The proposal was one of 20 recommendations made by Prof Alexis Jay following her seven-year inquiry into child sex abuse, which concluded in 2022. The Independent Inquiry Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) was set up in response to concerns that some organisations had failed to protect children.
In a statement, Det Supt Nicola Franklin, from the Met's Central Specialist Command, said the force was "committed to tackling" paedophilia, "an abhorrent crime".
"If anyone has information that should be shared with police we would urge them to do so. Despite the passage of time, we will still investigate provided sufficient evidence exists to do so and the perpetrator is still alive."
Reporting team: Alex Renton, Caitlin Smith, Gillian Wheelan
Meghan 'devastated' after death of rescue dog
The Duchess of Sussex has said she is "devastated" following the death of her dog, Guy.
In a post on Instagram, Meghan said had "cried too many tears to count" over the dog's passing and thanked him for "so many years of unconditional love".
The duchess said she had adopted the beagle from an animal rescue in Canada in 2015 and that he had been "with me for everything" ever since.
She did not say when the dog had died or its cause of death.
The post was accompanied by a montage of photos and video showing the duchess and her family playing with Guy.
In one, she is seen boiling fruit on a stove to make jam and telling the dog, "We're jamming, Guy". In another her husband, the Duke of Sussex, is seen running along a beach with him.
At the end, Meghan can be heard with one of the couple's children singing: "We love you Guy, yes we do".
The duchess said staff at the shelter from where she had adopted the dog "referred to him as 'the little guy' because he was so small and frail".
"So I named him 'Guy'. And he was the best guy any girl could have asked for," she said.
"He was with me at Suits, when I got engaged, (and then married), when I became a mom….
"He was with me for everything: the quiet, the chaos, the calm, the comfort."
The duchess added that Guy would feature in her upcoming Netflix series, titled With Love, Meghan.
"I hope you'll come to understand why I am so devastated by his loss. I think you may fall a little bit in love too," she said.
"I have cried too many tears to count - the type of tears that make you get in the shower with the absurd hope that the running water on your face will somehow make you not feel them, or pretend they're not there. But they are. And that's okay too.
"Thank you for so many years of unconditional love, my sweet Guy. You filled my life in ways you'll never know."
In Tibet, Earthquake Survivors Face Freezing Weather Conditions
“取消公摊”之后:销售更透明,但契税、物业费没变
取消公摊后,衡阳市多家中介均表示购房总价不会变。
一楼盘工作人员表示,现在肇庆市新房总价是不变,但会有按建筑面积和套内面积计价两种方式,“套内面积比较小,因而单价会更高”。
无论取消公摊已有23年的重庆,还是落地8个多月的肇庆,均没有改变契税、物业费等仍按建筑面积计算的模式。
南方周末特约撰稿 周倩欣
责任编辑:张玥
取消公摊后,衡阳市多家中介均表示购房总价不会变。视觉中国/图
每当有取消公摊的信息放出,总能一石激起千层浪。
2024年12月12日,湖南省衡阳市发布通知,自2025年1月1日起,在全市实行商品房按套内建筑面积计价销售。五天后,河北省张家口市发布政策鼓励实行“现房销售”,逐步推进取消公摊。很快,话题“多地官宣取消公摊”登上微博热搜榜。
2024年以来,广东省肇庆市、湖南省湘潭市也出台了取消公摊相关政策。更早一些,2023年安徽省合肥市提出“积极探索商品房销售按套内面积计价”。而“公摊”的起源地香港,在2013年取消了公摊,重庆早在2002年就探索了取消公摊。(详见2023年南方周末报道《合肥“取消公摊”?重庆已经试了21年,香港更彻底》)
近两年,取消公摊的城市,落地效果如何?对当地房价产生了怎样的影响?
购房“所见即所得”
行至小区楼栋的一楼,沿着外墙边缘画上一圈,这个圈起来的图形就是该栋一层的建筑面积,乘以楼层则是这栋楼总的建筑面积。
这个算法不精确,但很好地展示了何为建筑面积。建筑面积,包含了每个单元住户的套内面积和公摊面积。而公摊面积,一般包括电梯井、管道井、楼梯间、变电室、设备间、公共门厅、过道、值班警卫室、共用墙体以及整栋建筑的共有房屋和管理房屋等。
1995年,建设部颁布《商品房销售面积计算及公用建筑面积分摊规则》,“公摊面积”从中国香港进入内地。此后,内地商品房实行按建筑面积计价销售,其中包含的公摊面积因测算透明度低而饱受诟病。
根据湖南省衡阳市自然资源和规划局、衡阳市住房和城乡建设局、衡阳市发展和改革委员会联合发布的《关于全市商品房销售实行套内建筑面积计价的通知》,2025年1月1日起,湖南省衡阳市商品房销售实行套内建筑面积计价。
上海易居房地产研究院副院长严跃进对南方周末表示,取消公摊的准确含义,不是要取消公摊这类建筑形态,而是“住房销售环节取消公摊”,让购房者“所见即所得”,清楚地知道所购房产的实用面积。
取消公摊后,衡阳楼市发生了什么变化?
2025年1月3日,衡阳资深房产中介老刘形
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校对:星歌
中国公益慈善2024年十大进展与2025年五大趋势
2024年中国公益慈善事业在政策体系、组织发展、捐赠形式、技术赋能、区域探索等均取得不同程度进展。2025年,随着公益慈善的价值提升和结构调整,呈现出五大发展趋势。
北京师范大学中国公益研究院慈善研究中心
责任编辑:钟金秀
2024年,“支持发展公益慈善事业”被写入中共二十届三中全会通过的《中共中央关于进一步全面深化改革 推进中国式现代化的决定》,体现了党中央对公益慈善事业的高度重视。修改后的《慈善法》正式施行,中国慈善法律政策体系进一步完善,志愿服务、慈善信托、慈善捐赠取得不同程度的进展;应急慈善、社区慈善和个人求助有法可依,取得重要进展;互联网技术继续赋能慈善创新;慈善区域合作和国际交流深化。展望2025年,慈善事业进入价值提升和结构调整期,呈现五大趋势。
2024年十大进展
进展一:多层次法律政策体系日益完善
2024年9月5日,修改后的《中华人民共和国慈善法》正式施行。新修改的《慈善组织公开募捐管理办法》和《慈善组织认定办法》,以及新制定的《个人求助网络服务平台管理办法》三个配套政策亦同时施行。12月24日,民政部发布《基金会管理条例(修订稿)》,公开征求社会意见。
近5年来,我国慈善法制建设取得较大突破,国家和地方层面共出台慈善相关法律法规、政策文件400多份,多层次法律政策体系基本建立,为促进慈善事业高质量发展提供法治保障。在修改后的《慈善法》施行后,贵州和吉林两省省级慈善条例也开始施行。据不完全统计,2016至2024年,已有江苏、山东、山西、湖北、上海、重庆、吉林、贵州等8个省份颁布了慈善条例(或慈善事业促进条例),浙江、安徽、江西、陕西、湖南5省颁布了实施《中华人民共和国慈善法》的办法,北京、福建、河北3地出台了慈善事业促进办法(或促进慈善事业若干规定)。
在慈善信托方面,2024年11月15日,民政部会同财政部、税务总局、金融监管总局,就《慈善信托年度支出和管理费用的规定》公开征求意见,旨在规范年度支出和管理费用的比例标准。北京、上海、天津、广东、江苏、山东等6个省份近年来也陆续出台地方政策,规范慈善信托的设立、运行、变更、终止等流程管理与指引。
进展二:志愿服务组织和队伍建设加强
2024年4月12日,中共中央办公厅、国务院办公厅印发《关于健全新时代志愿服务体系的意见》(简称《意见》),为志愿服务事业发展提供了明确的方向指引,推动志愿服务向更加规范化、系统化、专业化方向发展。司法部、生态环境部、文化和旅游部等部门相继制定本领域志愿服务发展支持政策以贯彻《意见》的实施。江苏、宁夏、北京、内蒙古等多地先后出台了健全新时代志愿服务体系意见方面的措施,通过提供制度支撑与组织保障促进志愿服务持续健康发展。
据中国志愿服务网数据显示,截至2025年1月3日,我国实名注册志愿者2.38亿人,各类志愿团队达135万个,志愿项目总数1281万个,覆盖文化、文艺、体育、医疗、环保、法律等多个领域。志愿者队伍不仅在数量上有所增加,人才能力建设也不断加强。9月3日,全国志愿服务重点行业领域和重点项目实施示范培训班在广西南宁开班。各地也积极开展志愿服务人才常态化培训活动,提升志愿服务人才的专业素养。
进展三:亿元捐赠形式多样
2024年,爱心个人和企业以现金捐赠、物资捐赠、股权捐赠、服务捐赠等方式,踊跃支持各类慈善活动的开展。据不完全统计,2024年亿元以上的大额捐赠共33次,善款总额127亿元。
捐赠的财产类型多样,包括现金、股票、物资、服务等。其中,现金类大额捐赠金额最多,接下来依次为股票类、物资类和服务类捐赠。杭州骋风而来数字科技有限公司向浙江大学捐赠价值1亿元的算力服务,开创我国新质生产力捐赠的先河。
2024年大额捐赠的投入方向主要聚焦教育,同时集中在医疗、乡村振兴、文化、环保等领域。11月18日,比亚迪董事长王传福宣布将捐赠30亿元设立慈善基金,投入教育事业,为本年度规模最大的一次慈善捐赠。韦尔股份董事长虞仁荣在年内2次分别捐赠价值15.12亿元和27.99亿元的股票,支持创建宁波东方理工大学。
捐赠主体类型多元,包括比亚迪、蚂蚁集团、茅台集团等大型企业,虞仁荣、段永平、关杰初夫妇、许书典家族等爱心人士和家族,北京小米公益基金会、宁夏燕宝慈善基金会等慈善组织。值得注意的是,香港赛马会、邵氏基金会、印尼国信集团等香港及海外华侨华人主体,心怀大陆慈善事业发展,皆在年内发起亿元以上捐赠。
进展四:慈善信托县级备案范围扩大
2024年,慈善信托总体保持稳健发展态势。截至2024年12月27日,全国新增备案506单,较2023年(454单)增加52单;新增备案财产规模11.41亿元,较2023年(12.77亿元)略有下降。从地域来看,浙江省新备案的慈善信托数量最多,达169单;其次为广东省和北京市,分别为48单和41单。北京市新备案财产规模最大,为3.13亿元,其次为广东省和浙江省,分别为3.02亿元和1.53亿元。
近年来,越来越多的县级民政部门开始接受慈善信托备案。2024年北京市海淀区民政局和上海市浦东新区民政局首次备案慈善信托。目前已有浙江、广东、陕西、四川、安徽、上海、北京、河北、江苏、青海、重庆等11个省份落地县级慈善信托。值得注意的是,浙江省温州市瓯海区成立了全国首家专门开展慈善信托服务的慈善组织——温州市瓯海区善家慈善信托服务中心,旨在破解外地信托机构在本地县级民政部门备案的难题。该中心作为联合受托人,已备案7单慈善信托,财产规模为181.5万元。
2024年共有3单亿元规模、21单千万元规模的慈善信托,大额慈善信托数量较2023年(亿元1单、千万元21单)略有上升。75.1%的新备案慈善信托财产规模在10万元到1000万元之间(百万元126单、千万元254单)。万元和万元以下规模的慈善信托分别有95单和7单。
新备案的无固定期限和永续型慈善信托数量出现较大增长,分别由2023年的211单和43单,增长至2024年的223单和60单。在期限设置方面,越来越多的慈善信托倾向于灵活期限或长期限的设计。
进展五:生成式AI赋能多领域公益
2024年,随着生成式AI的兴起,该技术也被应用在公益慈善的多个领域。互联网平台在网络募捐、技术产品等方面持续赋能公益行业发展。
AI 技术在公益领域的应用已经取得了不少成果,包括在野生动物保护与研究、医疗诊断、文物修复、寻人等领域的应用。今年,生成式AI的兴起为科技公益的发展带来了新的机遇,多款生成式AI产品在不同公益领域得以应用。如赋能行业,专业协助公益从业者日常工作的阿里巴巴“AI公益小蜜”;支持医疗,聚焦健康管理、患者服务、临床诊疗辅助以及医学科研四大领域的医疗大模型“大医”;服务老年人群体,在“银杏时光”公益项目中帮助认知障碍老人进行记忆训练的“豆包”AI;助力乡村教育,激发乡村儿童创造力的快手“可灵”AI等。
在互联网公益方面,以腾讯公益、阿里巴巴公益、字节跳动公益为代表的互联网平台在网络募捐与技术公益创新方面继续发挥积极作用。在9月公益活动热潮中,各大互联网公益平台通过独具特色的公益活动,不仅为众多公益项目募集到可观的款物,更在全社会范围内营造了积极参与公益、奉献爱心的良好氛围。腾讯公益“久久公益节”通过“摇一摇”“点个赞”等多元方式吸引公众募款,公益节期间参与互动人次达到7.1亿。阿里巴巴公益在“95公益周”期间尝试创新公益直播模式,前后带动了2.2亿人参与支持多个乡村公益议题。字节跳动公益平台发起“dou爱公益日”活动,吸引3093位抖音创作者、521家公益机构加入,助力1075个公益项目,通过短视频形式提高了公益的透明度、增加了互动性,带动1250万用户一起做好事。
进展六:个人求助规范化发展
2024年,对个人求助网络服务平台的管理有了明确的法律依据,使个人网络求助在更规范化的运作方式下对我国多层次医疗保障体系起到积极的补充作用。
根据艾瑞咨询发布的《中国大病网络众筹用户调研报告》,与世界主要发达国家相比,中国内地居民医疗支出个人自付比例约43%,居民就医负担较重。在这一背景下,个人求助网络服务平台能够对缓解大病患者经济负担起到积极作用。以水滴筹为例,截至2024年9月,平台累计筹款金额达663亿元,有超过4.66亿爱心人士通过水滴筹平台捐款,帮助超过332万大病患者。
在2024年以前,对于个人求助网络服务平台的管理仅有行业自律公约,因此实践中也存在一些乱象,如求助信息不实,甚至有不法分子通过伪造求助平台获利。2023年,慈善法的修改对求助人和信息发布人、网络服务平台等主体的权利义务做出规范要求。2024年9月5日,修改的慈善法正式施行,同日《个人求助网络服务平台管理办法》(简称《管理办法》)公布施行,对个人网络求助做出了更明确的规定,为网络个人求助发展提供了有力的法律保障。10月14日,民政部发布了《关于遴选个人求助网络服务平台的公告》,并在12月16日公示了拟指定的个人求助网络服务平台名单。通过公示期后,相关平台仍要依据《管理办法》开展服务并规范平台使用者的相关活动。
进展七:应急慈善政社协同深化
2024年,新修订的《突发事件应对法》正式施行,明确鼓励社会力量参与突发事件应对,为应急慈善领域政社协同发展奠定了法律基础。在此背景下,应急慈善政社协同在救灾物资保障和救援方面取得新进展。同时,更多慈善组织关注防减灾与韧性社区建设。
在物资保障方面,2024年汛期,国家防灾减灾救灾委员会和应急管理部多次启动应急物资政社协同保障机制,协调部分基金会向灾区援助物资共约150万份。2024年11月,国家防灾减灾救灾委员会办公室印发《关于进一步强化救灾物资管理工作的通知》,正式提出要建立应急物资政社协同保障机制,鼓励企业和社会组织等按需开展救灾捐赠。
在救援协同方面,7月,在应对南方地区强降雨过程中,应急管理部引导社会应急力量261支7100余人,参与人员搜救、堤防巡查和物资分发等工作,转移安置受灾群众1.6万余人。10月,应急管理部印发《社会应急力量分类分级测评实施办法(试行)》,规范社会应急力量建设,助力提升整体救援效能。
慈善力量参与灾害响应的工作前移,愈发重视基层防减灾能力建设。2023年底积石山地震后,多家慈善组织在当地开展提升防减灾能力的项目或培训,如深圳壹基金公益基金会的“安全家园”、中国乡村发展基金的“应急小站”和“校园减灾教室项目”、中国红十字基金会的“社会救援力量保障提升计划”、爱德基金会的“喇叭地震预警生命守护工程”和北京恒善公益基金会的“积石山县乡村应急能力建设培训”等。2024年8月-12月,腾讯公益慈善基金会启动“云南数字备灾与韧性社区建设项目”和“爱心云备灾项目”北京和广东试点,通过发放数字爱心券,助力韧性社区建设。
进展八:社区慈善进入快速推进期
2024年,社区慈善基金进入快速推进阶段。据不完全统计,截至2024年10月,重庆、山东、四川、湖北、海南和江西6个省份已出台社区慈善基金发展指引,通过规范社区慈善基金运作来促进社区慈善发展。山东、四川、安徽、江苏、湖南、湖北、广东7省份在全省范围内设立的社区慈善基金数量均超过1000支。辽宁、黑龙江2省份首次设立社区慈善基金。山东首次公布100支“金种子”社区慈善基金,对优秀的社区慈善基金进行表彰。
“幸福家园”村社互助工程由中华慈善总会联合全国各地慈善会于2020年9月4日启动实施,为全国所有社区设立具备互联网筹款功能的冠名基金。截至2024年12月25日,共激活全国各地村社53067个,累计筹款超21.78亿元,超207.75万人次献爱心。
社区慈善对新就业群体的关注进一步提升。2024年,辽宁、海南、重庆等地出台相关政策,鼓励打造新就业群体友好社区,为外卖员、快递员等提供暖心驿站、暖心食堂等便利服务。截至2024年9月,中国物业管理协会联合美团在全国各地共建近600个骑手友好社区。北京朝阳区、上海长宁区、广州白云区、青岛黄岛区和兰州新区等多地均为新就业群体设立了慈善暖心驿站。
进展九:多个区域探索“慈善一体化”
2024年,长三角、京津冀、粤港澳大湾区持续推进引领区域慈善协同发展,丝路沿线省份也开启了区域化慈善协同发展的探索。
长三角区域在慈善协同发展领域已有多年经验。2024年,在过往实践基础上,长三角慈善一体化加强了理论研究,在10月的长三角慈善一体化会长联席会议上由各成员单位共同发起设立“长三角公益慈善发展报告”研究项目,探索如何更好发挥长三角慈善一体化引领示范和辐射带动作用。
京津冀地区按照2023年签署的《京津冀慈善事业协同发展合作框架协议》,联合推出了“十大协同发展合作示范项目”和“百个资源互助项目”,推动京津冀慈善事业高质量发展。发布首批社会支持签约名单,三地共同探索区域协同慈善资源的创新合作方式。
粤港澳大湾区充分发挥平台交流作用。6月28日,粤港澳大湾区“一老一小”社会服务创新交流会在广州南沙举办,探讨大湾区社会福利和公益创新发展方向和路径。下半年,广州粤港澳大湾区社会组织合作发展中心、粤港澳大湾区(南沙)社会组织合作创新基地联合举办了两期“粤港澳大湾区社会服务公益伙伴学习营”,通过实地参访港澳社会服务机构、与港澳学者和资深实务专家展开对话等多种方式,加强慈善专业人才的培养,并促进慈善组织之间的协同合作。
丝路沿线省份也开始了区域慈善协同的积极探索。10月,首届“丝路慈善大会”在银川举办,以“丝路共善,东西协同”为主题,聚焦公益金融、乡村振兴与东西部均衡发展。
进展十:慈善国际交流稳步深化
2024年,我国慈善国际交流稳步推进,在亚洲构建慈善生态,与非洲深化合作,国际影响力持续增强。
在亚洲交流方面,9月,香港国际慈善论坛宣布启动亚洲公益慈善研究计划,为期3年,计划与10家亚洲顶尖基金会合作,构建“植根亚洲、惠泽亚洲”的慈善生态系统。11月,第二届亚洲公益论坛聚焦“多元合作、永续发展”,来自18个国家和地区的公益慈善组织以及24个国际组织的近400名中外嘉宾,共同探讨交流亚洲公益发展的新趋势和新使命。
在中非合作方面,7月,第七届中非民间论坛开设公益慈善与中非减贫合作论坛。中国和平发展基金会在会上宣布未来五年将对非投入1000万元人民币,在教育公平、性别平等、消除贫困、绿色能源和人文交流等领域开展更多以人为本的公益民生项目。9月,中非合作论坛峰会召开,会上发布的《中非合作论坛—北京行动计划(2025-2027)》提出,在未来三年中方单方面支持非洲重点举措中,将深入开展“百企千村”活动,在妇幼健康、教育培训、乡村发展、清洁饮水等领域实施500个公益项目。
根据2024年10月发布的《中国民间组织国际化发展基线调研项目报告》,中国民间组织覆盖的区域从过去以东南亚和东非为主,拓展到南亚、中东、中欧等区域,实施项目的社区也正在从单点向多点扩大,超过一半的受益民众认为“中国是一个帮助我们的友好大国”。
2025年五大趋势
趋势一:慈善的功能价值融入中国式现代化建设
慈善事业进入法律政策进一步完善、监管进一步加强、行业进一步自律的高质量发展期。这也是进一步认知慈善价值、凝聚社会共识的时机。
慈善事业是中国特色社会主义事业的重要组成部分。在进一步全面深化改革、推进中国式现代化建设的大局中,公益慈善的社会和经济价值将更为凸显。
慈善是社会价值的重要载体。第一,探索社会创新。慈善力量发现社会问题,以试点或小切口探索社会问题的解决思路,采用新的技术方法,创新工作机制,进而推动系统性变革。第二,丰富精神文明。慈善服务、爱心捐赠等慈善行为,将仁爱、互助、与人为善的中国传统慈善文化价值观,与公益、利他、志愿等现代慈善理念相结合,有助于弘扬慈善文化,提升社会价值认同和文化凝聚力,丰富精神文明。第三,健全社会治理体系。通过社会组织治理、社会力量参与城乡基层治理体系建设、志愿服务体系建设、社会工作体制机制建设等,慈善在促进社会治理体系和治理能力现代化方面也将发挥积极作用。
慈善将发挥更显著的经济功能。第一,形成社会服务产业。中国进入社会服务的量质双重需求提升期,慈善力量作为政府和市场之外的社会服务重要提供主体,将有更广阔的发展空间。其服务的领域覆盖民生、公共文化、生态文明建设、乡村振兴、国际交流等中国式现代化建设的方方面面,形成巨大的社会服务产业。第二,创造就业机会。慈善在成为社会服务主要提供主体的同时,将吸纳大量就业,形成庞大的社会服务队伍。第三,推动共同富裕。通过提供广泛的社会服务,慈善将创造更多直接经济价值,向服务提供者进行第一次分配。通过扩大捐赠、志愿服务等,慈善将深化第三次分配的功能,进一步调节社会财富分配格局,促进社会公平正义、推动实现共同富裕。
趋势二:步入“慈善+”时代,慈善趋向专业化、精细化发展
随着慈善事业覆盖的领域日趋扩大,要解决的社会问题也日益复杂化,带动慈善服务价值链不断延展,慈善行业趋向专业化、精细化发展。最明显的体现是,慈善行业逐步与更广泛的产业相结合,形成“慈善+金融”“慈善+科技”“慈善+家族传承”等创新领域。
党中央提出要做好科技金融、绿色金融、普惠金融、养老金融、数字金融五大领域。金融工作需要更好地服务民生需求,推动慈善与金融的交叉领域逐步成型。信托公司、保险公司、商业银行等金融服务机构将慈善融入主营业务范围。一方面,通过慈善信托、慈善保险等创新工具,为慈善事业提供资源供给。另一方面,为慈善机构开发专属的财务管理产品,保障慈善资产的增值保值。
公益慈善与科技之间的融合态势愈发显著且深入,呈现出相辅相成、协同共进的崭新格局。一方面,慈善借助科技力量,能够不断优化服务模式、拓展服务范畴。修改后的《慈善法》要求完善互联网公开募捐服务平台和个人求助网络服务平台管理、建立全国统一的慈善信息平台、加强慈善组织的应急信息共享,数字化慈善的需求进一步增强。信息技术相关主体逐步开发拓展慈善相关的数字化服务,既为社会公众提供更快捷的慈善捐赠渠道,又为慈善机构提供更高效的管理、沟通工具。人工智能技术也在教育、医疗、环保等多个关键领域为公益服务质量的提升贡献卓越力量。另一方面,科技将吸引更多慈善资源涌入,加速自身迭代。二者携手共进,为社会发展注入源源不断的动力。
近年来,随着国民财富的不断增长、精神文化的不断丰富,高净值爱心人士逐步把慈善与家族传承结合起来,希望以慈善事业为纽带,链接子孙后代的家族向心力。私人银行、家族办公室等财富管理机构,为高净值人士开发带有慈善属性的家族理财产品,既解决家族的传承需求,又为慈善事业提供了新的资源。
律师事务所、会计师事务所等服务保障机构,加大对于慈善领域的资源倾斜,为慈善机构、慈善项目、慈善信托等提供法务或会计等专业服务,保障捐赠人、慈善信托委托人、受益人的权益。此外,高校、智库等研究咨询机构,也投入到慈善行业研究中,为促进慈善事业的发展提供智力支持。
趋势三:慈善和政府、市场的跨部门协同合作更加密切
从实践探索看,为解决复杂的社会问题,提高资源的使用效率,慈善与政府、市场不断拓展合作领域。比如在公共卫生领域,盖茨基金会推动“共建式慈善”,支持中国企业开发的脊髓灰质炎、乙脑等疫苗通过世界卫生组织的预认证、扩大产能,并通过“开放获取政策”,促进产能扩大和中低收入国家地区对疫苗的公平获取。在应急领域,腾讯公益慈善基金会捐赠15亿资金,设立“抗击新型冠状病毒感染肺炎疫情综合保障基金”,联合41家国内外企业保障抗疫物资的供应、运输和战疫后备,联合39家数字科技企业支持全国各地抗疫小程序开发,形成一个覆盖全国、多主体共同参与的社会应急网络。应急管理部与多家慈善组织、电商平台等探索救灾物资保障的协同机制。在助残领域,阿里巴巴公益基金会与残联、各级助残公益组织联合开展助残行动,形成“政府引导、企业行动、社会组织参与、志愿者助力、残疾人受益”多元助残模式。
未来一段时间内,气候变化、人口老龄化少子化、就业等将是全社会共同面临的问题。灾害响应、社区韧性建设、大病救助、公共卫生、养老、托育、教育、环境保护、文化发展等社会议题具有综合性、复杂性,政府、市场、社会等单一主体无法完全承担,需要跨界力量的合作协同,以系统性解决。因此,未来公共部门、企业和慈善力量的合作将更为普遍。政府提供兜底、基础性支持,商业力量解决市场化的需求,慈善开展创新和精细化服务。
趋势四:慈善力量助力建设气候变化适应型社会
气候系统变暖趋势在持续。中国是全球气候变化的敏感区和影响显著区。国家气候中心数据显示,2024年我国平均气温10.9℃,较常年偏高1.01℃,再创历史新高。气候变化加剧灾害风险。在应对气候变化过程中,不同群体和地区的暴露程度和抗灾能力不均衡。老人、残疾人、儿童、妇女和低收入者等群体,以及欠发达地区的人们更为脆弱,更加需要慈善力量的关注。
根据全球气候资助报告,2023年全球减缓气候变化资助总额达到93亿至158亿美元,同比增长20%。但全球减缓气候变化资助占全球慈善捐赠总量依然低于2%。同时,仅有约十分之一的全球气候资金用于气候适应。
按照《国家适应气候变化战略2035》要求和建设“气候变化适应型社会”的目标,国家疾控局、应急管理等13个部委在2024年9月联合发布《国家气候变化健康适应行动方案(2024—2030年)》,明确要“教育、引导、促进公众践行简约适度、绿色低碳、文明健康的生活方式,掌握应对极端天气气候事件的自救互救措施,提升公众应对气候变化与健康素养水平。开展气候变化健康适应城市、乡村、社区、重点场所(医院、工业企业、托幼机构、学校和养老机构等)行动试点,总结可推广的适应模式”。未来,气候变化和适应将成为中国公益慈善持续关注的议题,更多的慈善资源也将随之投入其中。
趋势五:社区慈善发展前景更加广阔
《慈善法》明确支持发展社区慈善事业,鼓励有条件的地方设立社区慈善组织,加强社区志愿者队伍建设,为社区慈善的发展奠定法律基础。随着社会治理重心下沉,社区作为社会治理的基本单元,在防范化解社会矛盾方面的重要性日益凸显。当下,各个公益领域在不断向基层延伸,使得社区慈善的服务内容持续拓展,从传统的救助困难及特殊群体,逐步转变为向社区群众提供涵盖教育、文化、体育、环保和应急等多元的社会服务。
社区慈善具备“看得见”的特性,捐赠者能直接看到捐赠款项给社区带来的改变,受益者就在身边,这种“人人参与,人人受益”的模式更能激发参与热情。同时,与国外相比,中国大部分慈善捐赠来自于慈善家和企业,公众捐款占比较低且多用于社区之外,这反映出中国社区慈善蕴藏着巨大发展潜力。
未来,随着公益事业从大范围公益向社区慈善的转变,社区成员之间的互助将成为主流,社区慈善将迎来更加广阔的发展前景。
• (本文作者系北京师范大学中国公益研究院慈善研究中心王明媚、周佳如、尹力子、赵延会、程芬)
校对:赵立宇
OpenAI boss denies sister's allegations of childhood rape
OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman's sister, Ann Altman, has filed a lawsuit alleging that he regularly sexually abused her between 1997 and 2006.
The lawsuit, which was filed on 6 January in a US District Court in the Eastern District of Missouri, alleges that the abuse started when she was three and Mr Altman was 12.
In a joint statement on X, with his mother and two brothers, Mr Altman denied the allegations, saying "all of these claims are utterly untrue."
"Caring for a family member who faces mental health challenges is incredibly difficult," the statement added.
"This situation causes immense pain to our entire family."
In the filing, which has been seen by the BBC, Ms Altman alleged that the abuse, which took place over many years, included rape.
The lawsuit added the last instance of the alleged abuse took place when Mr Altman was an adult but she was still a minor.
The lawsuit requested a jury trial and damages in excess of $75,000 ($60,100).
Ms Altman has previously made similar allegations against her brother on social media platforms such as X.
Mr Altman is one of the technology world's most high profile figures.
In late 2022, OpenAi launched the ChatGPT generative artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot.
Additional reporting by Lily Jamali
Mahout charged after elephant gores tourist to death
Thai police have charged a mahout after an elephant in his care gored a Spanish tourist to death last week.
Theerayut Inthaphudkij, 38, was charged with negligence causing death, local authorities said Monday.
The tourist - 22-year-old Blanca Ojanguren García - was bathing the elephant at the Koh Yao Elephant Care Centre in southern Thailand when she was attacked by the animal.
This has renewed concerns over Thailand's booming elephant tourism industry, which animal rights groups have long criticised as unethical and dangerous.
Activists say that elephant bathing is disruptive to natural grooming behaviours and could injure the animals, exposing them to unnecessary stress.
After the attack, experts weighed in to say that the elephant might have been stressed because of the interaction with tourists.
García sustained a head injury - and later died in the hospital - after the elephant, 45-year-old female Phang Somboon, pushed her with its tusk. Her boyfriend, who was travelling with her, witnessed the attack.
There are nearly 3,000 elephants held in tourist attractions across Thailand, according to an estimate by international charity World Animal Protection.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta) told the BBC in a statement that "such incidents highlight the dangers to both humans and animals alike."
"Any 'sanctuary' that allows humans to touch, feed, bathe, or closely interact with elephants in any way is no place of refuge for elephants and puts the lives of tourists and animals in critical danger," said Peta senior vice president Jason Baker.
Similar charges of negligence have previously been pressed against mahouts whose elephants killed tourists.
In 2017, an elephant camp owner and a mahout were charged with recklessness causing death and injuries after an elephant killed a Chinese tour guide and injured two tourists in the Thai beach town, Pattaya. In 2013, a 27-year-old elephant had its tusks cut after it attacked and killed a woman.
García, a law and international relations student at Spain's University of Navarra, was living in Taiwan as part of a student exchange programme. She and her boyfriend arrived in Thailand on 26 December 2024.
Spain's foreign minister, Jose Manuel Albares, said the Spanish consulate in Bangkok was assisting García's family.
Additional reporting by Kelly Ng
Bezos-owned Washington Post cuts more jobs, reports say
The Washington Post announced it will lay off nearly 100 workers, or 4% of its staff, in an attempt to stem growing losses, according to media reports.
The cuts reportedly will affect mainly employees on the business side of the storied US newspaper owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.
The publication is among many news outlets struggling in the digital age as a growing number of online platforms compete for advertising revenues.
The layoffs, announced on Tuesday, come at a time of turmoil at the company after Mr Bezos broke with tradition and blocked an endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris ahead of the US presidential election in November.
In 2023, the Washington Post reported losses of $77m (£45m) and falling readership on its website. That same year, the newspaper announced it was offering workers voluntary buyouts in a bid to cut headcount by 10%.
Mr Bezos wrote an opinion piece explaining that blocking the endorsement was necessary because of growing public perception that the "media is biased."
Still, the newspaper said 250,000 of its readers canceled their subscriptions in protest.
Since then, several high-profile journalists, including investigative reporter Josh Dawsey, who confirmed on X that he was taking a job at The Wall Street Journal, have also left the newspaper. Managing editor Matea Gold is joining Post competitor The New York Times, the Times confirmed.
The apparent conflict between Bezos and the newspaper's top talent took a turn for the worse on Saturday when Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist, Ann Telnaes, said she was resigning from the Washington Post.
That came after the newspaper refused to publish a satirical cartoon that showed Mr Bezos and other tycoons kneeling before a statue of President-elect Donald Trump.
Last month, Mr Bezos announced Amazon would donate $1m to Trump's inauguration fund and make a $1m in-kind contribution. Mr Bezos also described Trump's re-election victory as "an extraordinary political comeback" and dined with him at the president-elect's Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida.
'Run for your lives!' LA residents abandon cars to flee wildfire on foot
Screaming Los Angeles residents left their cars behind to flee a fast-moving wildfire as it closed in on a picturesque celebrity enclave, eyewitnesses said, describing scenes straight out of a Hollywood disaster movie.
A windstorm whipped a seemingly typical brush fire into a raging inferno within a matter of hours on Tuesday, sending the blaze racing towards the Pacific Palisades area.
Thirty thousand people were ordered to evacuate as the conflagration surrounded the neighbourhood in the west of the city, exploding rapidly from 10 acres to several thousand in size.
Bordering Malibu, Pacific Palisades is a haven of hillside streets and winding roads nestled against the Santa Monica Mountains and extending down to beaches along the Pacific Ocean.
But the Pacific Coast Highway, the main route in - or out - quickly became gridlocked, leading many motorists to ditch their vehicles near Sunset Boulevard as the flames drew near.
One resident, Marsha Horowitz, said firefighters told people to get out of their cars as the blaze, fanned by gusts sometimes topping 100mph (160km/h) in the mountains and foothills, approached.
"The fire was right up against the cars," she said.
Another Pacific Palisades resident told ABC News that she rushed home from her job in Hollywood once she heard about the evacuations.
After abandoning her car, she went home to grab her cat. While running to safety, flaming pieces of palm tree fell on her.
"I'm getting hit with palm leaves on fire, I ran into a car," said the woman, who did not give her name.
"It's terrifying. It's like a horror movie. I'm screaming and crying going down the street."
Some evacuees described seeing homes burn as they fled.
Hollywood actor James Woods was among celebrities forced to flee their properties.
Actor Steve Guttenberg, also a Pacific Palisades resident, urged people who abandoned their cars to leave their keys inside so the vehicles could be moved to make way for fire trucks.
"This is not a parking lot," Guttenberg told KTLA. "I have friends up there and they can't evacuate."
Bulldozers later cleared abandoned vehicles to open the route for emergency vehicles.
Jennifer Aniston, Bradley Cooper, Tom Hanks, Reese Witherspoon, Adam Sandler and Michael Keaton also have homes in the Pacific Palisades, according to the Hollywood Reporter.
People fled wildfire flames in the nearby Los Angeles suburb of Topanga Canyon, where Ewan McGregor has a home.
One resident named Melanie told KTLA she tried to get out, but the path was engulfed by flames and she was forced back home.
She was trying to take Palisades Drive down to the Pacific Coast Highway and said had to make "a very fast U-turn because there were flames coming down the hill to the road".
"I would have been driving right into the fire," she said. "We're stuck up here. I don't see any flames but I know they're close by."
Residents in Venice Beach, some six miles (10km) away, reported seeing the flames, too.
Kelsey Trainor said ash fell all around as the fire jumped from one side of the road to the other.
"People were getting out of the cars with their dogs and babies and bags, they were crying and screaming," she told the Associated Press news agency.
"The road was just blocked, like full-on blocked for an hour."
Ellen Delosh-Bacher told the Los Angeles Times how she rushed from downtown Los Angeles to her home, where her 95-year-old mother and their two dogs live.
She, too, hit gridlock at Sunset Boulevard and Palisades Drive.
Ms Delosh-Bacher described fire exploding behind a nearby Starbucks and police rushing down the road shouting to stuck motorists: "Run for your lives!"
She left her car, keys still in the ignition and ran half a mile down to the beach.
"This is like an apocalypse," she said.
Justin Trudeau Was His Own Worst Enemy
In Tibet, Earthquake Survivors Face Freezing Weather Conditions
Justin Trudeau Was His Own Worst Enemy
Thandiswa Mazwai Is the Voice of South Africa’s First Post-Apartheid Generation
拜登的总统任期:四大错觉和四大欺骗
拜登的总统任期:四大错觉和四大欺骗
How Canada's immigration debate soured - and helped seal Trudeau's fate
Immigration has long been a polarising issue in the West but Canada mostly avoided it - until now. With protests and campaign groups springing up in certain quarters, some argue that this - together with housing shortages and rising rents - contributed to Justin Trudeau's resignation. But could Donald Trump's arrival inflame it further?
At first glance, the single bedroom for rent in Brampton, Ontario looks like a bargain. True, there's barely any floor space, but the asking price is only C$550 (£300) a month in a Toronto suburb where the average monthly rent for a one-bedroom flat is C$2,261. Inspect it more closely, however, and this is actually a small bathroom converted into sleeping quarters. A mattress is jammed up next to the sink, the toilet is nearby.
The ad, originally posted on Facebook Marketplace, has generated hundreds of comments online. "Disgusting," wrote one Reddit user. "Hey 20-somethings, you're looking at your future," says another.
But there are other listings like it - one room for rent, also in Brampton, shows a bed squashed near a staircase in what appears to be a laundry area. Another rental in Scarborough, a district in Ontario, offers a double bed in the corner of a kitchen.
While Canada might have a lot of space, there aren't enough homes and in the past three years, rents across the country have increased by almost 20%, according to property consultancy Urbanation.
In all, some 2.4 million Canadian families are crammed into homes that are too small, in urgent need of major repairs or are seriously unaffordable, a government watchdog report released in December has suggested.
This accommodation shortage has come to a head at the same time that inflation is hitting Canadians hard - and these issues have, in turn, moved another issue high up the agenda in the country: immigration.
For the first time a majority of Canadians, who have long been welcoming to newcomers, are questioning how their cities can manage.
Politics in other Western countries has long been wrapped up in polarised debates surrounding immigration but until recently Canada had mostly avoided that issue, perhaps because of its geography. Now, however, there appears to be a profound shift in attitude.
In 2022, 27% of Canadians said there were too many immigrants coming into the country, according to a survey by data and research firm Environics. By 2024, that number had increased to 58%.
Campaign groups have sprung up too and there have been marches protesting against immigration in Ottawa, Vancouver and Calgary, and elsewhere around the country.
"I would say it was very much taboo, like no one would really talk about it," explains Peter Kratzar, a software engineer and the founder of Cost of Living Canada, a protest group that was formed in 2024. "[But] things have really unfrozen."
Stories like that of the bathroom for rent in Brampton have fuelled this, he suggests: "People might say, like, this is all anecdotal evidence. But the evidence keeps popping up. You see it over and over again."
"People became concerned about how the immigration system was being managed," adds Keith Neuman, executive director at Environics. "And we believe it's the first time the public really thought about the management of the system."
- Who might replace Trudeau as Liberal Party leader?
- Why the Trudeau era has come to an end now
- What happens next for Canada?
Once the golden boy of Canadian politics, prime minister Justin Trudeau, resigned on 6 January during a crucial election year, amid this widespread discontent over immigration levels.
His approval levels before his resignation were just 22% - a far cry from the first year of his premiership, when 65% of voters said they approved of him.
Though immigration is not the main reason for his low approval levels nor his resignation - he cited "having to fight internal battles" - he was accused of acting too late when dealing with rising anxiety over inflation and housing that many blamed, in part, on immigration.
"While immigration may not have been the immediate cause of the resignation, it may have been the icing on the cake," says Professor Jonathan Rose, head of the department of political studies at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario.
Under Trudeau's administration, the Canadian government deliberately chose to radically boost the numbers of people coming to the country after the pandemic, believing that boosting quotas for foreign students and temporary workers, in addition to skilled immigrants, would jumpstart the economy.
The population, which was 35 million 10 years ago, now tops 40 million.
Immigration was responsible for the vast majority of that increase - figures from Canada's national statistics agency show that in 2024, more than 90% of population growth came from immigration.
As well as overall migration levels, the number of refugees has risen too. In 2013, there were 10,365 refugee applicants in Canada - by 2023, that number had increased to 143,770.
Voter dissatisfaction with immigration was "more a symptom than a cause" of Trudeau's downfall, argues Prof Rose. "It reflects his perceived inability to read the room in terms of public opinion."
It's unclear who might replace Trudeau from within his own Liberal Party but ahead of the forthcoming election, polls currently favour the Conservative Party, whose leader Pierre Poilievre advocates keeping the number of new arrivals below the number of new homes being built.
Since Donald Trump won the US presidential election in November, Poilievre "has been speaking much more about immigration", claims Prof Rose - "so much that it has become primed in the minds of voters".
Certainly Trump's arrival for a second term is set to pour oil on an already inflamed issue in Canada, regardless of who the new prime minister is.
He won the US election in part on a pledge to carry out mass deportations of undocumented migrants - and since his victory, he has said that he will enlist the military and declare a national emergency to follow through on his promise.
He also announced plans to employ 25% tariffs on Canadian goods unless border security is tightened.
Drones, cameras and policing the border
Canada and the US share the world's longest undefended border. Stretching almost 9,000km (5,592 miles), much of it crosses heavily forested wilderness and is demarcated by "The Slash," a six-metre wide land clearing.
Unlike America's southern border, there are no walls. This has long been a point of pride between Ottawa and Washington - a sign of their close ties.
After Trump first entered office in 2017, the number of asylum claims skyrocketed, with thousands walking across the border to Canada. The number of claims went from just under 24,000 in 2016 to 55,000 a year by 2018, according to the Canadian government. Almost all crossed from New York state into the Canadian province of Quebec.
In 2023, Canada and the US agreed to a tightened border deal that stopped most migrants from crossing the land border from one country to another. Under the agreement, migrants that come into contact with the authorities within 14 days of crossing any part of the border into either the US or Canada must return to whichever country they entered first — in order to declare asylum there.
The deal, reworked by Trudeau and Joe Biden, is based on the idea that both the US and Canada are safe countries for asylum seekers.
This time around, Canada's national police force – the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) – says it began preparing a contingency plan for increased migrant crossings at the border well ahead of Trump being sworn in.
This includes a raft of new technology, from drones and night vision goggles, to surveillance cameras hidden in the forest.
"Worst-case scenario would be people crossing in large numbers everywhere on the territory," RCMP spokesperson Charles Poirier warned in November. "Let's say we had 100 people per day entering across the border, then it's going to be hard because our officers will basically have to cover huge distances in order to arrest everyone."
Now, the national government has committed a further C$1.3bn (£555m) to its border security plan.
'We want our future back!'
Not everyone blames the housing crisis on the recent rise in immigration. It was "30 years in the making" because politicians have failed to build affordable units, argues Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow.
Certainly the country has a long history of welcoming newcomers. "Close to 50% of the population of Canada is first or second generation," explains Mr Neuman. "That means either they came from another country, or one or both of their parents came from another country. In Toronto, Vancouver, that's over 80%."
This makes Canada "a very different place than a place that has a homogeneous population," he argues.
He has been involved in a survey examining attitudes towards newcomers for 40 years. "If you ask Canadians: what's the most important or distinctive thing about Canada, or what makes the country unique? The number one response is 'multiculturalism' or 'diversity'," he says.
Nonetheless, he says the shift in public opinion - and the rise in concerns about immigration - has been "dramatic".
"Now there is not only broader public concern, but much more open discussion," he says. "There are more questions being asked about how is the system working? How come it isn't working?"
At one of the protests in Toronto, a crowd turned out with hand-painted signs, some proclaiming: "We want our future back!" and "End Mass Immigration".
"We do need to put a moratorium on immigration," argues Mr Kratzar, whose group has taken part in some of them. "We need to delay that so wages can catch up on the cost of rents."
Accusations against newcomers are spreading on social media too. Last summer, Natasha White, who describes herself as a resident of Wasaga Beach in Ontario, claimed on TikTok that some newcomers had been digging holes on the beach and defecating in them.
The post generated hundreds of thousands of views and a torrent of anti-foreigner hatred, with many arguing that newcomers should "go home".
Tent cities and full homeless shelters
People I interviewed who work closely with asylum seekers in Canada say that the heightened concerns around the need for more border security is making asylum seekers feel unsettled and afraid.
Abdulla Daoud, executive director at the Refugee Center in Montreal, believes that the vulnerable asylum seekers he works with feel singled out by the focus on migrant numbers since the US election. "They're definitely more anxious," he says. "I think they're coming in and they're feeling, 'Okay, am I going to be welcomed here? Am I in the right place or not?'"
Those hoping to stay in Canada as refugees can't access official immigration settlement services until it has been decided they truly need asylum. This process once took two weeks but it can now take as long as three years.
Tent cities to house newly-arrived refugees and food banks with empty shelves have sprung up in Toronto. The city's homeless shelters are often reported to be full. Last winter, two refugee applicants froze to death after sleeping on Toronto's streets.
Toronto mayor Olivia Chow, an immigrant herself having moved to Canada from Hong Kong at age 13, says: "People are seeing that, even with working two jobs or three jobs, they can't have enough money to pay the rent and feed the kids.
"I understand the hardship of having a life that is not affordable, and the fear of being evicted, absolutely, I get it. But to blame that on the immigration system is unfair."
Trudeau: 'We didn't get the balance quite right'
With frustrations growing, Trudeau announced a major change in October: a 20% reduction in immigration targets over three years. "As we emerged from the pandemic, between addressing labour needs and maintaining population growth, we didn't get the balance quite right," he conceded.
He added that he wanted to give all levels of government time to catch up – to accommodate more people. But, given that he has since resigned, is it enough? And does the Trump presidency and the increasing anti-immigrant sentiment on that side of the border risk spilling further into Canada?
Mr Daoud has his own view. "Unfortunately, I think the Trump presidency had its impact on Canadian politics," he says. "I think a lot of politicians are using this as a way to fear-monger."
Others are less convinced that it will have much of an impact. "Canadians are better than that," says Olivia Chow. "We remember that successive waves of refugees helped create Toronto and Canada."
Politicians wading into the debate around population growth ahead of the next election will be conscious of the fact that half of Canadians are first and second-generation immigrants themselves. "If the Conservatives win the next election, we can expect a reduction in immigration," says Prof Jonathan Rose. But he adds that Poilievre will have to walk "a bit of fine line".
Prof Rose says: "Since immigrant-heavy ridings [constituencies] in Toronto and Vancouver will be important to any electoral victory, he can't be seen as anti-immigration, merely recalibrating it to suit economic and housing policy."
And there are a large number of Canadians, including business leaders and academics, who believe that the country must continue to pursue an assertive growth policy to combat Canada's falling birth rate.
"I really have high hopes for Canadians," adds Lisa Lalande of the Century Initiative, which advocates for policies that would see Canada's population increase to 100 million by 2100. "I actually think we will rise above where we are now.
"I think we're just really concerned about affordability [and] cost of living - not about immigrants themselves. We recognise they're too important to our culture."
Top picture credit: Getty Images
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'Music is back' as sales hit a 20-year high
Captivated by major new releases from Taylor Swift, Coldplay and Billie Eilish, music fans in the UK spent more on recorded music in 2024 than ever before, new figures show.
Streaming subscriptions and vinyl sales shot up, with consumers spending a total of £2.4 bn over the last 12 months.
That overtakes the previous high of £2.2bn, achieved at the peak of CD sales in 2001.
The biggest-selling album of the year was Taylor Swift's The Tortured Poets Department which sold 783,820 copies; while Noah Kahan had the year's biggest single with Stick Season, which generated the equivalent of 1.99 million sales.
The figures came from the Digital Entertainment and Retail Association (ERA), which said subscriptions to services like Spotify, Amazon Music and Apple Music accounted for almost 85% of the money spent on music last year.
The market for vinyl records grew by 10.5%, with 6.7 million discs sold last year, generating £196m.
CD sales remained flat at £126.2m - although the format still sells more than vinyl in terms of units, with 10.5 million albums bought.
The head of ERA, Kim Bayley, called 2024 a "banner year" for music, with sales at more than double the low point of 2013.
"We can now say definitively - music is back," she added in a statement.
However, music industry revenue still lags far behind the 2001 figures in real terms.
Adjusted for inflation, the industry made the equivalent of £4bn in 2001, when Dido's was the year's biggest album, with sales of 1.9 million.
There are also lingering questions over how artists get paid in the streaming economy. According to the Musicians Union, almost half of working musicians in the UK earn less than £14,000 a year.
Elsewhere, ERA said video was the most popular form of home entertainment, with cinephiles and telly addicts spending more than £5bn on streaming services, movie rentals and DVDs.
The biggest-selling title of the year was the comic book movie Deadpool & Wolverine, with sales of 561,917, more than 80% of which were digital.
Video games saw a drop in revenue, from £4.8bn in 2023 to £4.6bn last year.
The figures reflect a year of high-profile flops, with A-list games like Concord, Suicide Squad and Skull & Bones all failing to find an audience.
There was also a huge shift away from boxed physical games, whose sales fell by 35%.
The biggest-selling game of the year was once again EA Sports FC 25 – formerly known as FIFA – which sold 2.9m copies, 80% of them in digital formats.
However, only four of the games in the top 10 were new releases, and two of those were updates to existing franchises.
The power of Nintendo's Switch was also apparent, with half of the top 10 including games comprised of titles that are exclusive to the console.
Rising costs force 'difficult choices' on schools
Head teachers say they face "difficult choices" over what their schools can afford, as a new report says they could be forced into further cuts next year.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) says costs will outpace funding for schools in 2025-26.
Schools say that means they will struggle to fund the government's proposed pay rise for teachers, as well as the support needed for children with special educational needs.
The Department for Education (DfE) said it would work with schools and local authorities to provide a "fair funding system that directs public money to where it is needed".
The IFS estimates that school funding will rise by 2.8% in the 2025-26 financial year. But Wednesday's report warns that costs are likely to rise by 3.6%, leaving schools facing tough choices.
Staff pay usually takes up the majority of a school budget. The government has suggested teachers' pay should go up by 2.8% for the school year beginning September 2025, in line with plans for school spending.
While spending on schools has grown in recent years - redressing previous cuts - the cost of supporting pupils with special educational needs and disabilities (Send) has also increased.
Marlborough St Mary's School in Wiltshire has had to find money from its existing budget to support pupils like six-year-old Thomas, who is waiting for an autism assessment.
His mum, Penny Reader, says Year One pupil Thomas loves everything about space and creatures who live under the sea.
He has one-to-one support at school, but was declined an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP) - which sets out a child's legal right to support and additional funding - last year. A tribunal date to appeal that decision has been set for November.
Mrs Reader says it is "utterly insane" that the school does not get additional funding to support Thomas, who would previously hide in the classroom getting distressed and upset.
"He just couldn't cope with the other children," Mrs Reader says. "It was too noisy, too chaotic for him."
Now, Thomas loves being at school and can join in with all of his lessons, she says.
"It's just so reassuring," says Mrs Reader. "It's so lovely to see him thrive.
"Without that, Thomas wouldn't be here. That funding has made such a huge difference."
Head teacher Dan Crossman says the school is in an in-year deficit, spending more money than it has got coming in.
He says he faces a choice between meeting the needs of the children, or balancing the books.
Additional funding to support pupils with Send often takes a long time to materialise, he says.
So, Mr Crossman employs six teaching assistants to meet the needs of children awaiting additional support, such as through an EHCP.
"It means that they are safe. It means that they are happy, and it means that they have the opportunity to learn in a mainstream school," he says.
Mr Crossman says schools face "really hard" decisions, like staff redundancies and cutting counselling services.
The school has received financial support from a private donor to set up a forest school.
But Mr Crossman says such resources should come from "core budgets" rather than private investment.
The IFS says per-pupil spending in mainstream schools rose by about 11% between 2019 and 2024, when adjusted for inflation.
But much of that increase was absorbed by the rising cost of Send provision, meaning the actual increase was only about 5%.
The new analysis comes as the government considers its spending plans for 2026 onwards.
Steve Hitchcock, head teacher of St Peter's Primary School in Devon, and the region's National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) representative, says he has also had to come up with innovative ways to raise more money.
He says sourcing top-up funding is now a "really important part" of his role.
"Just in this last year I've managed to find £20,000 myself, which is just going out to our very generous community," he says.
The "absolutely fantastic" parent-teacher association has also raised £20,000 in the last year through sponsored challenges, film nights and discos at the school.
In the past, this money would go to "cherry-on-top" activities like play equipment. But now, it has to fund basic curriculum resources like buying paper, Mr Hitchcock says.
Staff costs take up 85% of the school's budget. Mr Hitchcock says pay rises are "very important" to recruit and retain staff, and to make sure it's a competitive profession.
The government's recommended 2.8% pay rise for teachers next year is being considered by the independent teacher pay review body.
Education unions have already described the proposal as being disappointingly low, but Mr Hitchcock says he does not know where he will find the extra money, even without any further increases.
"A nearly 3% pay rise is going to mean I have to find £30,000, which just isn't possible," he says.
"We were hoping desperately that this government would have a different approach to funding schools. It's going to be enormously challenging for the whole profession."
Daniel Kebede, National Education Union general secretary, says schools have "no capacity to make savings without cutting educational provision".
Julie McCulloch, from the Association of School and College Leaders, says the financial pressures facing the sector are a "death by a thousand cuts".
"Schools and colleges have been expected to absorb relentless financial pressures over the past 15 years, and they have done an incredible job in minimising the impact on students," she added. "But we cannot go on like this."
The Department for Education said school funding will increase to almost £63.9bn in the next financial year, including £1bn for children and young people with high needs.
A spokesperson said the government is "determined to fix the foundations of the education system".
Additional reporting by Hope Rhodes.
Rolls-Royce factory to expand for more bespoke cars
Luxury carmaker Rolls-Royce will expand its Goodwood factory and global headquarters to meet the growing demand for bespoke models.
It will invest more than £300 million so it can build more highly-customised versions of its cars for its super-rich clientele.
The 120-year old British brand came under full control of German carmaker BMW in 2003 and officially opened the site in West Sussex the same year. Rolls Royce says this expansion secures its future in the UK.
Rolls-Royce sold 5,712 cars in 2024, the third highest total in its history.
While that number may seem tiny compared with the millions of cars delivered each year by mainstream manufacturers, Rolls-Royce operates in a highly rarefied market.
The brand said it "does not disclose prices" but it is understood its cheapest model, the Ghost saloon, sells from about £250,000 upwards. Its Cullinan sports utility vehicle and electric Spectre models are thought to start at around £340,000.
In comparison, the average UK house price was £297,000 last year, according to Halifax.
The price of bespoke models can vary widely. When it comes to the most elaborate creations, the final product can cost several times the base price of the car.
There are relatively few buyers who can afford to pay so much for a car. Among those who can are celebrities, who often do not mind flaunting their wealth.
Among them are US stars Kim Kardashian and Nicki Minaj, as well as British rapper Stormzy who was banned from driving after being caught using a mobile phone behind the wheel of his Wraith in London.
'Holographic paint and one-off artworks'
For some customers, simply owning a Rolls-Royce isn't exclusive enough. In recent years, the company has increasingly focused on building highly-customised versions of its cars, which can then be sold at even higher prices.
Rolls-Royce describes this strategy as "creating value for clients through individualised products and experiences and providing opportunities for meaningful personal expression".
In practice, this has included cars with holographic paint, containing one-off artworks, or featuring intricate hand-stitched embroidery. One model, designed as a homage to the 1964 James Bond film Goldfinger, includes features made out of solid 18-carat gold.
Rolls-Royce is not alone in this. Other high-end manufacturers such as Bentley, McLaren and Ferrari also offer detailed customisation.
But making individually tailored cars, while profitable, is a labour-intensive process that requires time and space. At the same time, like other manufacturers the company is preparing for a future in which conventional cars will be phased out and replaced by electric models.
Rolls-Royce said the extension of its factory would "create additional space for the increasingly complex and high value bespoke and coachbuild projects sought by clients who define luxury as something deeply personal to them".
It added that the plan would "also ready the manufacturing facility for the marque's transition to an all-battery electric vehicle future".
The carmaker has already been granted planning permission for the expansion of the Goodwood plant, which was built in 2003 and initially housed 300 workers. There are currently more than 2,500 people working on the site.
"This represents our most substantial financial commitment to Goodwood since its opening," said the Rolls Royce chief executive, Chris Brownridge.
"It is a significant vote of confidence in the Rolls-Royce marque, securing our future in the UK," he added.
As a luxury carmaker focused on export markets, Rolls-Royce is insulated from many of the challenges currently facing the wider European motor industry. However, it has been affected by a fall in demand in China, one of its most important markets.
Earlier this year, Mr Brownridge said rising demand for personalised vehicles was helping to offset that decline.
The announcement comes weeks after another famous British brand generated controversy while setting out its own plans for the future.
Jaguar – a part of Jaguar Land Rover – is to be relaunched as an all-electric marque and moved sharply upmarket as part of a major restructuring at the company.
In December, it unveiled a dramatically styled concept car, which together with a new logo and a divisive online advert sparked a social media storm – and generated plenty of column inches.
BBC Sound of 2025: Barry Can't Swim is a new dance music superstar
Scottish producer Barry Can't Swim is one of the new superstars of dance music, his colourful and woozy grooves winning over packed crowds from Glastonbury to Coachella, and earning Brit Award and Mercury Prize nominations in 2024.
Now, he has started the new year with another accolade - after coming third on the BBC's Sound of 2025 list.
It confirms him as one of pop's breakout names, after five years on a steady upward trajectory, gaining more fans, exposure and acclaim with each release.
When Barry Can't Swim put out his first single in December 2019, it was the latest in a string of projects from Edinburgh-born musician Joshua Mainnie.
He didn't know this was the one that would take off. If he had, he might have thought a bit harder about the name.
"I've just got a mate who's called Barry and he can't swim," he told BBC Radio 6 Music in 2023.
"And when I chose the name, I really wasn't anticipating it was going to become my full-fledged career and everyone was going to think my name's Barry.
"There was really no more thought to it than that. And now I'm sort of stuck with it."
Barry/Joshua has his eagle-eyed, cash-conscious grandfather to thank for setting him on the path to a music career.
"I started playing piano when I was about 10," he told BBC Radio 1's Jack Saunders in an interview revealing his place on the Sound of list.
"My granddad actually saw an advert in a paper for a piano that was going for free, and he picked it up and left it with my mum and dad, and they were like 'we don't have space for this'.
"And that was it. I just started learning how to play."
After catching the music bug, he formed bands in his teens inspired by groups like the Happy Mondays and Stone Roses, who fused indie and dance in the Madchester scene of the late 1980s and early 90s.
Sound of 2025 - The Top Five
- 5) English Teacher
- 4) Myles Smith
- 3) Barry Can't Swim
- 2) Revealed on Thursday
- 1) Revealed on Friday
Those acts were "some of the first people to really try and create a hybrid of the music that I loved, which was 60s psychedelic rock with more modern electronic music", he says.
"And that's exactly what I was trying to do - incorporate the more traditional form of songwriting and melody of 60s music with electronic production.
"That makes it sound a lot better than it was, by the way. But that's what I was trying to do, at least for a bit."
Mainnie decided to dedicate himself to dance music after discovering the nightclubs around Edinburgh's Cowgate as a student, while studying music at Edinburgh Napier University.
"My earliest producing really came from clubbing, really, and going out and just falling in love with dance music that way. So it was a natural progression from bands to electronic music."
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Barry Can't Swim's sound is bright, euphoric and highly danceable, with hazy house rhythms, trance pianos and infectious vocal snippets combining in songs that are intoxicating shots of sonic sunshine.
His debut album When Will We Land? includes exotic-sounding samples of Galician folk and Brazilian funk, as well as a recording of his friend Jack Loughrey aka SomeDeadBeat reciting a poem at 4am.
It was one of 12 albums shortlisted for the prestigious Mercury Prize, and Mainnie was nominated for best dance act at the 2024 Brit Awards.
Live, his sound is beefed out by a drummer, second synth player and guest vocalists, while 32-year-old Mainnie dances behind his keyboard in colourful shirts - occasionally emerging to throw shapes at the front of the stage.
He drew a huge crowd to the Park Stage at Glastonbury last summer, sold out three nights at Brixton Academy in November, and will headline a night of the All Points East Festival in east London in August.
He also does DJ sets - but says it "kind of annoys" him when people just refer to him as a DJ.
"I've been playing instruments for decades and was producing for five years before I even touched a set of decks," he told Rolling Stone.
Now, the two sides of his live performance feed off each other, he told Radio 1's Saunders.
"When I'm DJ-ing a lot, I really miss playing live. And when I'm playing live, I miss DJ-ing.
"Weirdly, it informs what I've been writing in the reverse. Like, when I spend a lot of time playing live with the band, I end up writing clubby music because I long for it.
"And then vice versa - when I'm out DJ-ing, I just miss the more live elements of making music.
"So I feel like I have a passion for both equally and mutually, and I think that's why it's been so easy to transition from DJ-ing into - not just a band, but the music that I make lends itself well to live performance of electronic music. It still holds the basic principles of traditional songwriting, but with electronic production."
Thriving scene
Barry Can't Swim is part of a new wave of intelligently feelgood dance music heroes alongside the likes of Sound of 2023 runner-up Fred Again, Sound of 2024 listee Peggy Gou and Sound of 2025 nominees Confidence Man.
Mainnie says "more leftfield" electronic music like his "definitely feels like it's got a bigger audience than it's ever had".
"I don't really know what's happened in the past few years, but the music I was listening to, and some of the artists that I was listening to a few years ago when I was going clubbing that were quite niche - now they're almost pop stars.
"And you're like, what's happened? But it's amazing. It's such an amazing thing for the scene."
Almost pop stars?
If Barry/Joshua hasn't reached that status already, he surely will in 2025.
One act from the BBC Sound of 2025 top five will be announced on Radio 1 and BBC News every day this week, culminating with the winner on Friday.
'I can't get divorced as I can't get my pension valued'
"I thought I was done crying," says teacher Amy Goldsmith.
"I'm two and a half years into my world having been turned upside down and I would very much like that to be over."
Like hundreds of other teachers, Amy is stuck, unable to go ahead with her divorce because of long delays working out the value of her pension.
This is needed by the courts to decide whether it should be shared with her ex-partner, and without which it is almost impossible to reach a financial settlement.
"I was in limbo over my relationship and naively thought I could get the paperwork and move on," she said.
"I'm now in another limbo and just feel totally impotent."
Amy, 43, is waiting for the valuation from Teachers' Pensions - which runs the teachers' pensions scheme (TPS) on behalf of the Department for Education.
But it has been struggling to meet demand.
The government, which described the calculations as "extremely complex" and requiring a specialised role to complete, said it aims to clear most of the current backlog by the end of February.
A Freedom of Information request - submitted by a member of a teachers' pensions CETV support group and seen by the BBC - suggests just under 2,000 teachers were waiting for CETV valuations at the start of December 2024.
The Department for Education said that number dropped to 1,344 as of 6 January 2025, but that new cases are always coming in.
Amy, from Bristol, teaches history, geography and psychology at a secondary school in Wiltshire.
She has been waiting since July 2024 for a document known as a Cash Equivalent Transfer Valuation, or CETV and can not get divorced without it.
'Hugely stressful'
Both parties in a divorce need to provide accurate information about their finances - including any property, savings, and pensions - even if the split in assets is otherwise straightforward.
"I was initially told [the Teachers' Pension Scheme] would be in touch within 10 working days," she said.
"But then the person I spoke to said they had no timescale for the calculations to be completed. So holding my breath was not recommended."
Amy feels that the delay is making a highly emotional situation much worse.
"I can't have closure and get on with my life," she said.
"You don't wake up one morning and say, 'Oh, we'll get divorced'. I've been through the wringer. It's been hugely stressful."
David Quinton, from Gloucestershire, lectures in construction skills at a further education college. He first applied for his CETV in October 2023 and is still waiting, unable to get divorced without one.
He said: "This is the first time I've ever been divorced, so I hadn't heard of [a CETV] before.
"It's exhausting. It's taken a toll on me mentally because I want to move on with my life and I'm sure my ex-wife wants to do the same. It's financially taking a toll as well. I'm still paying a mortgage on a house."
David has also racked up hundreds of pounds in solicitors' fees because of the protracted divorce process.
He has written a series of complaints to the Teachers' Pension Scheme and his MP, Simon Opher, has raised his case in parliament.
The Teachers' Pension Scheme is one of the biggest in the country, with about two million members.
David said: "There are people mentally on the edge. They see no light at the end of the tunnel.
"The Department for Education have given us stock answers... and there's been no offer of compensation."
Complicated calculations
Steve Webb, former MP for Thornbury and Yate and pensions minister from 2010 until 2015, works at an independent pensions consultancy.
He said: "When a pension scheme works out what your pension is worth, it has to do some complicated calculations.
"But a court judgement means all these public sector schemes have to do some extra complicated calculations. They all need to agree so the teachers and the nurses and the civil service schemes all do it the same way.
"So that's taken time to agree and then they need expert staff to actually do all of these calculations. All of that is just taking time."
The judgement, also known as the McCloud pension remedy, found in 2018 that the government discriminated against younger members of public service pension schemes.
It resulted in the government making changes to public service pension schemes, and calculating valuations in a new way.
Backlog to be cleared
In an update issued on the Teachers' Pensions website in December, the service apologised for the inconvenience caused by the delays.
It said they were due firstly to an embargo on new CETVs between March and July 2023 in order to take account of a change in the way valuations are made.
And once the backlog had built up, new rules came into force after the McCloud judgment meaning that in many cases two calculations were necessary rather than one.
The Department for Education said the delays are not a result of having too few staff and that it is working through cases in date order wherever possible.
It said it aims to clear the "majority" of the current backlog by the end of February 2025, apart from some "small groups".
'No support'
Music teacher Steph Collishaw, 53, from Frome, in Somerset, has been waiting for her CETV since May 2024.
"It's made me feel really angry because I've worked for 29 years and have paid into the pension scheme all that time," she said.
"But when I need to depend on information that is rightfully mine, it's simply not there."
She said her divorce proceedings have become drawn out and she is currently unable to remortgage as her husband's name is still on the title deeds of her house.
And like many caught up in this delay, she has become sceptical of promises that things will improve quickly.
"I could be sitting here in another six months' time, still waiting on my CETV and I have no idea if that's going to happen or not.
"You're just trying to live in a vacuum of information and there is nothing there to support you."
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Nigerian atheist freed from prison but fears for his life
A prominent Nigerian atheist, who has just been freed after serving more than four years in prison for blasphemy, is now living in a safe house as his legal team fear his life may be in danger.
Mubarak Bala, 40, was convicted in a court in the northern city of Kano after, in a surprise move, he pleaded guilty to 18 charges relating to a controversial Facebook post shared in 2020.
"The concern about my safety is always there," he told the BBC in an exclusive interview as he tucked into his first meal as a free man.
Nigeria is a deeply religious society and those who may be seen as having insulted a religion - whether Islam or Christianity – face being shunned and discriminated against.
Blasphemy is an offence under Islamic law – Sharia - which operates alongside secular law in 12 states in the north. It is also an offence under Nigeria's criminal law.
Bala, who renounced Islam in 2014, said there were times during his incarceration that he felt he "may not get out alive". He feared he could have been targeted by guards or fellow inmates in the first prison he was in, in Kano, which is a mainly Muslim city.
"Freedom is here, but also there is an underlying threat I now have to face," he said. "All those years, those threats, maybe they're out there."
He could have been inside for much longer if it was not for an appeals court judge who reduced the initial 24-year sentence last year, describing it as "excessive".
Walking out of the prison in the capital, Abuja, Bala looked tired, but cheerful dressed in a white T-shirt, khaki shorts and flip-flops. He emerged with his beaming lawyer by his side.
"Everything is new to me. Everything is new," he said as he took in his new-found liberty.
Bala, an outspoken religious critic, was arrested after a group of lawyers filed a complaint with the police about the social media post.
He then spent two years in prison awaiting trial before being convicted in 2022.
At the time Bala's guilty plea baffled many, even his legal team, but he stands by his decision, saying that it relieved the pressure on those who stood by him, including his lawyers, friends and family.
"I believe what I did saved not only my life, but people in Kano," he said.
"Especially those that were attached to my case, because they are also a target."
His conviction was widely condemned by international rights groups and sparked a debate about freedom of speech in Nigeria.
His detention also sent shockwaves across Nigeria's small atheist and humanist communities, and his release has come as a relief to many, but there are still concerns.
"It's thanks and no thanks," said Leo Igwe, the founder of the Humanist Association of Nigeria.
"Thanks, that he's out, thanks that he's a free man. But no thanks, because there is a dent on him as if he committed a crime. For us at the Humanist Association, he committed no crime."
As for Bala, he is keen to catch up on lost time – including getting to know his young son who was just six weeks old when he was imprisoned. But he said he had no regrets.
"My activism, my posting on social media, I always knew the worst would happen, When I made the decision to come out, I knew I could be killed. I knew the dangers, and I still decided to do it."
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A mother's mission to stop jaundice causing cerebral palsy in Nigeria
Although Babatunde Fashola, affectionately known as Baba, is 22 years old, he is less than 70cm (2ft 4in) tall.
He has cerebral palsy and requires lifelong care. He can neither speak nor walk and is fed via a tube attached to his stomach.
As a baby, he was abandoned by his parents but 10 years ago, he found a home at the Cerebral Palsy Centre in the Nigerian city of Lagos.
"Baba weighs about 12kg [26lb]. He is doing well," the facility's founder, Nonye Nweke, tells me when I visit.
Ms Nweke and her staff work around the clock to support him and other youngsters living with permanent brain damage.
Although there is a lack of official data, cerebral palsy is believed to be one of the most common neurological disorders in Nigeria. In 2017, a medical professor from the University of Lagos said 700,000 people had the condition.
For many of those living with cerebral palsy in the country, their condition was caused by a common phenomenon among newborns - neonatal jaundice.
This is caused by a build-up of bilirubin, a yellow substance, in the blood, meaning the babies' skins have a yellow tinge.
Professor Chinyere Ezeaka, a paediatrician at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, tells the BBC that more than 60% of all babies suffer from jaundice.
Most babies recover within days. More severe cases need further medical intervention - and even then the condition is easily treatable.
Children are basically exposed to ultra-violet light to dissolve the excess bilirubin in their red blood cells. The treatment lasts a few days depending on the severity.
However, in Nigeria this treatment is often not immediately available, which is why the country is among the five with the most neurological disorders caused by untreated jaundice in the world, according to data from the World Health Organization (WHO).
Any treatment for neonatal jaundice "must occur within the first 10 days of life, else [the condition] could cause permanent brain damage and severe cerebral palsy", says Prof Ezeaka.
To make matters worse, the West African country lacks facilities to care for those with neurological disorders. There are just three cerebral palsy centres, all privately run, in Nigeria, which has a population of more than 200 million.
Ms Nweke - a single mother - set up the Cerebral Palsy Centre after struggling to find support for her own daughter, Zimuzo.
"When I took her to a day-care [centre], they asked me to take her back because other mothers would withdraw their children. As a mum, I must say it was quite devastating," Ms Nweke tells the BBC.
Zimuzo is now 17, and Ms Nweke's Cerebral Palsy Centre provides full-time support for others with similar experiences.
On the day I visit, colourful playtime mats and toys are neatly arranged on the floor. Mickey Mouse and his friends converse on a wide-screen television in the lounge.
Twelve youngsters, some as young as five, gaze at the TV, their bright environment ignored for a moment. They are all immobile and non-speaking.
At lunchtime, caregivers help the youngsters eat. Some take in liquified food through tubes attached to their stomachs.
Carefully and slowly, the carers support their heads with pillows and push the contents of their syringes into the tubes.
The youngsters are fed every two hours and require regular muscular massages to prevent stiffness.
But they are the lucky 12 receiving free care from the Cerebral Palsy Centre, which is funded exclusively by donors.
The facility has a long waiting list - Ms Nweke has received more than 100 applications.
But taking on more youngsters would require extra financial support. The cost of caring for someone at the centre is at least $1,000 (£790) a month - a huge amount in a country where the national minimum wage is about $540 a year.
"As a mum, I must say it's quite overwhelming. You have moments of depression, it gives you heartaches and it is quite expensive - in fact it's the most expensive congenital disorder to manage," Ms Nweke says.
"And then of course, it keeps you away from people because you don't discuss the same things. They are talking of their babies, walking, enjoying those baby moments. You are not doing that. You are sad," she adds.
Ms Nweke explains that she adopted Zimuzo from an orphanage.
A few months after taking her new daughter home, Ms Nweke realised Zimuzo was not developing in the same way as the children around her were. She was assessed at a hospital and diagnosed with cerebral palsy.
Ms Nweke was told she could take Zimuzo, who was then just a few months old, back to the orphanage and adopt another baby instead, but she refused.
"I decided to keep her and I began researching what the disorder was about, the treatment and type of care my child would need - she's my life.
"I was also told by the doctors she won't live beyond two years. Well here we are - 17 years later," says a smiling Ms Nweke.
A lack of awareness and adequate medical support hinders the diagnosis and treatment of neonatal jaundice in Nigeria.
Ms Nweke also says the common local belief that children with congenital disorders are spiritually damaged or bewitched leads to stigmatisation.
Some children with neurological disorders - mostly in Nigeria's rural areas - are labelled witches. In some cases, they are abandoned in prayer houses or cast out of their families.
Ms Nweke is not alone in her mission to dispel myths and improve care.
The Oscar Project - a charity aimed at improving the diagnosis and treatment of neonatal jaundice - recently began operating in Lagos.
The project is named after Vietnamese-born British disability advocate, Oscar Anderson, whose untreated jaundice caused his cerebral palsy.
"We're equipping health facilities at the primary, secondary and tertiary levels with the equipment to treat jaundice, primarily light boxes, but also detection and screening equipment," Toyin Saraki, who oversaw the launch, tells the BBC.
Project Oscar, backed by consumer health firm Reckitt, is training 300 health workers in Lagos. The hope over the first year is to reach 10,000 mothers, screen 9,000 children and introduce new protocols to try and prevent babies with jaundice from developing cerebral palsy.
In a country where the public health system is overstretched, the government has little to say about the disorder, although it lauded the Oscar project's goals.
Treatment for neonatal jaundice is significantly cheaper than the cost of lifelong care, doctors say.
First launched in Vietnam in 2019, Project Oscar has helped about 150,000 children in the Asian country.
Mr Anderson, 22, says he wants to prevent other children experiencing what he has been through.
"People with disabilities are not to be underestimated," he tells the BBC.
He is working to ensure screening for every newborn infant for neonatal jaundice, and, with the support and courage of mums, midwives and medical professionals, ensure there is better understanding and quicker treatment.
However, achieving this is a hugely ambitious goal in Africa's most-populous country, where thousands of babies are born each year with neonatal jaundice.
Regardless, Mr Anderson is determined to defy the odds.
"The work doesn't stop until every baby is protected against neonatal jaundice," he says.
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特鲁多回應特朗普再提议加拿大成为“第51州”
2025-01-07T13:52:03.475Z
(德国之声中文网)特朗普在他自己的社交平台Social Truth发文写道:“许多加拿大人热爱成为第51个州。美国无法再承受与加拿大为维持生存所需的巨额贸易逆差和补贴。特鲁多知道这一点,所以辞职了。”
“如果加拿大与美国合并,就不会有关税,税率也会大幅降低,而且他们会完全不受俄罗斯和中国船只的威胁。两国携手,将会成为一个多么伟大的国家!!!”
特鲁多随后在社群媒体X上发文表示:「加拿大毫无可能成为美国的一部分。我们两国的劳工跟社区因为是彼此最大的贸易和安全伙伴中而受益。」
加拿大外交部长赵美兰(Melanie Joly)也稱特朗普的言论「表明了他完全不了解加拿大如何成为一个强大的国家……面对威胁,我们永远不会退缩。」
特朗普去年11月再度当选美国总统。此后,在海湖庄园的一次晚宴上曾对杜鲁多提出这个建议,引起现场一片哄笑。自此以后,特朗普多次在社交媒体上将杜鲁多称为“加拿大州州长”。
特鲁多周一(1月6日)宣布辞去自由党党魁职务,但将留任总理职务直到自由党选出新领袖。
现年53岁的特鲁多2015年11月上任,两度获得连任,其任期接近10年。大约两年前,他的支持率因民众对房价高涨的愤怒而持续下滑。最新的民意调查显示,自由党在今年秋天的大选中将惨败给目前在野的保守党。加拿大副总理兼财政部长方慧兰(Chrystia Freeland)去年12月中递出辞呈,原因是与特鲁多就应对特朗普的关税威胁存在分歧。
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SAS had golden pass to get away with murder, inquiry told
A former senior UK Special Forces officer has told a public inquiry into alleged war crimes in Afghanistan that the SAS had a "golden pass allowing them to get away with murder".
The accusation was published by the Afghanistan Inquiry on Wednesday as part of a release of material summarising seven closed hearings with members of UK Special Forces.
The officer, a former operations chief of staff for the Special Boat Service (SBS) - the UK's naval special forces - was one of several senior officers who registered concerns back in 2011 that the SAS appeared to be carrying out executions and covering them up.
In one email from the time, the officer wrote that the SAS and murder were "regular bedfellows" and described the regiment's official descriptions of operational killings as "quite incredible".
Asked by the inquiry during the closed hearings whether he stood by his assertion that the SAS's actions amounted to murder, the officer replied: "Indeed."
Pressed by the inquiry counsel about his decision not to report his concerns further up the chain of command in 2011, he said he regretted his lack of action at the time. He agreed that there had been a "massive failure of leadership" by UK Special Forces.
The former SBS operations chief of staff was one of several senior officers from the Royal Navy's special forces regiment who gave evidence to the inquiry behind closed doors in 2024.
The inquiry, which is examining night raids by UKSF between 2010 and 2013, follows years of reporting by BBC Panorama into allegations of murder and cover up by the SAS.
Only the inquiry team and representatives from the Ministry of Defence have been allowed to attend the closed hearings. The public, members of the media, and lawyers for the bereaved families are not allowed to be present.
The material released on Wednesday summarises the testimony from these hearings. Taken together, the documents – totalling hundreds of pages – paint a picture of the SAS's arrival in Afghanistan in 2009 and the way in which it took over hunting the Taliban from the SBS.
Senior SBS officers told the inquiry of deep concerns that the SAS, fresh from aggressive, high-tempo operations in Iraq, was being driven by kill counts – the number of dead they could achieve in each operation.
Another senior SBS officer who gave evidence was asked whether he stood by his concerns in 2011 that the SAS was carrying out extra-judicial killings.
"I thought and think that on at least some operations [the SAS] was carrying out murders," he said.
A junior SBS officer who also gave evidence to the inquiry behind closed doors described a conversation in which a member of the SAS who had recently returned from Afghanistan told him about a pillow being put over the head of someone before they were killed with a pistol.
"I suppose what shocked me most wasn't the execution of potential members of the Taliban, which was of course wrong and illegal, but it was more the age and the methods and, you know, the details of things like pillows," the junior officer said.
He clarified that some of those killed by the SAS had been children, according to the conversation he relayed. Asked by the inquiry counsel if he meant some of those killed would be as young as 16, he replied: "Or younger 100%".
The junior officer told the inquiry that he feared for his safety should his name be linked to testimony that the SAS had been allegedly murdering civilians.
These SBS officers were part of a small group that was privately raising doubts back in 2011 about the veracity of SAS operational reports coming back from Afghanistan.
In one email, one of the senior officers, who held a post at the SBS headquarters in Poole at the time, wrote to a senior colleague: "If we don't believe this, then no one else will and when the next WikiLeaks occurs then we will be dragged down with them."
The two senior officers were in a position to interpret the language in the regiment's reports, having served with SBS operational units in Afghanistan prior to the arrival of the SAS, when the naval unit was forced to take what it saw as a back seat, pursuing anti-narcotics operations rather than hunting the Taliban.
As well as believing that the SAS may have committed murders, they described in their emails what they viewed as a cover-up in Afghanistan. The second officer told the inquiry chair: "Basically, there appears to be a culture there of 'shut up, don't question'."
At the time, support staff in Afghanistan were sceptical about the SAS's accounts of their operations, judging them not credible.
But rather than taking the concerns seriously, a reprimand had been issued "to ensure that the staff officers support the guys on the ground", another senior SBS officer wrote.
He told the inquiry that in the eyes of the Special Forces' commanding officer in Afghanistan, the SAS could do no wrong, and described the lack of accountability for the regiment as "astonishing".
The documents released on Wednesday also reveal new details about an explosive meeting in Afghanistan in February 2011, during which the Afghan special forces that partnered the SAS angrily withdrew their support.
The meeting followed a growing rift between the SAS and the Afghan special forces over what the Afghans saw as unlawful killings by members of the SAS.
One Afghan officer present at the meeting was so incensed that he reportedly reached for his pistol.
Describing the meeting in a newly released email, the SBS officer wrote: "I've never had such a hostile meeting before – genuine shouting, arm waving and with me staring down a 9mm barrel at one stage – all pretty unpleasant."
After intervention from senior members of UKSF, the Afghan units agreed to continue to working alongside the SAS. But it would not be the last time they withdrew their support in protest.
"This is all very damaging," the SBS officer concluded his email.
Additional reporting by Conor McCann
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