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意大利总理梅洛尼将出席特朗普就职典礼


2025-01-09T14:54:00.869Z
梅洛尼上周末在海湖庄园与特朗普会晤

(德国之声中文网)意大利右翼总理梅洛尼计划出席1月20日特朗普的就职典礼。梅洛尼证实,受到特朗普的亲自邀请。她说,如果时间允许,将前往华盛顿。“我将很高兴出席。”

在欧洲政府首脑中,梅洛尼被视为与特朗普阵营的关系最为紧密。这位右翼政党意大利兄弟党主席刚刚于周末前往特朗普位于佛罗里达的海湖庄园,进行了短暂的拜访。

周四(1月9日),梅洛尼在记者会上称,与特朗普的关系“十分牢固”。她表示,自己与即将离任的美国总统拜登也有很好的关系。她说,两位保守派领导人之间的认同度越高,对意大利以及欧洲都将加分。

对特朗普巴拿马运河及格陵兰言论不予批评

与此同时,梅洛尼也为特朗普关于格陵兰巴拿马运河的言论作出辩护。梅洛尼表示,她认为可以排除美国会在未来数年内使用暴力兼并领土。

有鉴于中国和俄罗斯的影响力,她补充说,特朗普的言论“更多是针对一些其它的重要的全球行动方,而不是针对(巴拿马和格陵兰)这些国家。”

梅洛尼称,特朗普的言论是“一种有力的方式,表达美国不会坐视其它全球重要的行动方在对于美国有战略利益的领域采取行动”。

此前,德国总理肖尔茨周三对特朗普的言论回应称,国际边界不容通过暴力改变。法国政府则称特朗普的表态是“一种帝国主义”。

梅洛尼称,她与特朗普“关系牢固”

否认与马斯克亲自谈SpaceX协议

与此同时,梅洛尼否认与马斯克的美国SpaceX公司谈及签署网络安全协议。“我从未亲自与马斯克谈及这些事情”,梅洛尼周四在罗马向媒体表示。

梅洛尼同时表示,SpaceX的确向其政府介绍了相关技术,以实现“在国家、特别是全球层面进行安全的通讯”。她说,对她的政府而言,重要的是,“确保与我们的外交使节以及例如与我们在海外的驻军进行安全的通讯”。

梅洛尼访问特朗普后,意大利媒体曾报道,梅洛尼政府与SpaceX已进入谈判的“进深阶段”,并称协议价值15亿欧元。

与特朗普关系密切的马斯克周一在其X平台写道,愿意为意大利提供最安全、最先进的通讯技术。

(德新社、法新社)

© 2025年德国之声版权声明:本文所有内容受到著作权法保护,如无德国之声特别授权,不得擅自使用。任何不当行为都将导致追偿,并受到刑事追究。

三名德国人因涉嫌为中国进行间谍活动被起诉


2025-01-09T15:08:32.530Z
联邦检察院:他们被指控收集军事技术信息,并将其转交给中国国家安全部(MSS)

(德国之声中文网)因涉嫌为中国进行间谍活动,德国联邦检察院已对三名德国人提起诉讼。据位于卡尔斯鲁厄的联邦检察办公室表示,他们被指控收集有关军事技术的信息,并将其转交给中国国家安全部(MSS)。杜塞尔多夫高等法院的国家安全法庭将决定是否以及何时展开审判。

涉案的为两名男性和一名女性,2024年4月在杜塞尔多夫和巴特洪堡(Bad Homburg)两地被逮捕。当时警方搜查了他们的住所以及办公场所。

据当时的报道,这三人被指控最晚从2022年6月起为中国情报部门工作,向中方提供了军事技术情报,同时还违反了德国《对外贸易法》(Außenwirtschaftsgesetz)。

联邦检察院方面指出,嫌疑人被捕时正在就可能有助于扩大中国海军战斗力的研究项目进行谈判。

(通讯社)

© 2025年德国之声版权声明:本文所有内容受到著作权法保护,如无德国之声特别授权,不得擅自使用。任何不当行为都将导致追偿,并受到刑事追究。

Russia says it is keeping close eye on Trump's claim to Greenland

EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock A plane on the tarmac at Nuuk airport in GreenlandEPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
Earlier this week Donald Trump Jr amplified his father's claims with a private visit to Greenland

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said Russia is closely monitoring the situation, after US President-elect Donald Trump refused to rule out military action to take Greenland from Denmark.

Peskov said the Arctic was in Russia's "sphere of national and strategic interests and it is interested in peace and stability there".

Trump's remarks on Greenland - a largely autonomous Danish territory - have drawn a warning from European leaders.

EU foreign affairs chief Kaja Kallas has stressed that "we have to respect the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Greenland", and Germany's Olaf Scholz has made clear that "borders must not be moved by force".

Trump said earlier this week that the US needed both Denmark and the Panama Canal "for economic security", and refused to rule out using either economic or military force in taking them over.

He also referred to the border with Canada as an "artificially drawn line". Denmark and Canada are both close Nato allies of the US.

Dmitry Peskov said Trump's claims were a matter for the US, Denmark and other nations, but Russia was watching the "rather dramatic" situation surrounding his remarks. "We are present in the Arctic zone, and we will continue to be present there," he said.

Map of Greenland

Outgoing US Secretary of State Antony Blinken sought to dampen concern about the president-elect's remarks during a visit to Paris: "The idea is... obviously not a good one, but maybe more important, it's obviously one that's not going to happen."

About 56,000 people live in Greenland, and it is home to US as well as Danish military bases. It also has considerable untapped mineral and oil wealth.

Greenland Prime Minister Mute Egede has been pushing for independence, although the territory's economy relies heavily on Danish subsidies.

Both he and the Danish leader have emphasised that it is "not for sale" and that its future is in the hands of Greenlanders themselves.

UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy played down Trump's comments, although he acknowledged the "intensity of his rhetoric and the unpredictability sometimes of what he said can be destabilising".

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has said Copenhagen has a clear interest in ensuring that the US - "absolutely its closest ally" - plays a key role at a time of rising tensions in the North Atlantic, particularly involving Russia.

The European Commission said Trump's threat to Greenland was "extremely theoretical" and "wildly hypothetical", considering he was not yet in office.

However, it has confirmed that Greenland, as an overseas territory, does come under a mutual assistance clause requiring all EU states to come to its aid in case of attack.

The Kremlin ridiculed the European response, suggesting it was reacting "very timidly... almost in a whisper".

Last week, Greenland's leader said the territory should free itself from "the shackles of colonialism", although he made no mention of the US.

A former Greenland foreign minister, Pele Broberg, who now heads the biggest opposition party, told the BBC that most Greenlanders he talked to believed the US was vital for their defence and safety.

"We are part of the North American continent, that's why the defence of the US is in such a great place with regards to Greenland, because we create a buffer zone that doesn't need to be militarised."

He has called for a "free association agreement" with the US covering trade and defence which would give Greenland independence but hand the US responsibility for security.

Trump's allies have reinforced his views on Greenland.

Keith Kellogg, chosen by Trump to bring an end to the war in Ukraine, said a lot of the president-elect's remarks on Greenland made sense, "putting the United States in a position of global leadership".

Republican congressman Mike Walz told Fox News that the issue was "not just about Greenland, this is about the Arctic", because Russia was trying to take control of the polar region, with its mineral and natural resources.

"Denmark can be a great ally, but you can't treat Greenland, which they have operational control over, as some kind of backwater - it's in the Western hemisphere."

Truss issues legal threat to PM over claim she crashed economy

Getty Images Liz Truss speaking at the launch of the Popular Conservatives grouping, PopCon, in London in February 2024Getty Images

Former Prime Minister Liz Truss has sent a legal "cease and desist" letter to Sir Keir Starmer demanding he stop saying she "crashed the economy".

Her lawyers argue the claim made repeatedly by Sir Keir is "false and defamatory" and harmed her politically in the run-up to losing her South West Norfolk seat in the general election.

Truss was the UK's shortest-serving PM, forced to resign after just 49 days in office when borrowing costs soared in the aftermath of her government's mini-budget.

Downing Street has been approached for comment.

But Commons leader Lucy Powell told MPs "we won't cease and desist from telling the truth that they [the Conservatives] crashed the economy".

Also speaking in the Commons, Chief Secretary to the Treasury Darren Jones said the actions taken by the Conservatives in government were "not just reckless and negligent - they had a direct impact on family finances".

Meanwhile, the pound has dropped to its lowest level in over a year and government borrowing costs have continued to rise as concerns about the public finances mount.

Sterling began to fall in value after UK 10-year borrowing costs rose again, surging to their highest level for 16 years.

Economists have warned these rising costs could force further tax rises or cuts in spending as the government tries to meet its self-imposed borrowing targets.

Powell said the cost of government debt often fluctuated "because of global markets", but argued the Truss government's mini-budget, in September 2022, which included wide-ranging tax cuts, had led to a market reaction "directly and immediately".

A "cease and desist" letter usually represents a warning that the recipient will face legal action if they continue the allegedly unlawful activity.

In the letter sent to Sir Keir on Wednesday, Truss's lawyers say his statements about their client are "false and misleading".

"Their publication is not only extremely damaging but also grossly defamatory and indefensible... It would be hard to avoid a conclusion that they were made maliciously," the letter adds.

Truss's lawyers say they are seeking "an amicable basis on which you will agree to cease repetition of what is clearly a factually incorrect and defamatory statement about our client.

"This request is made in the context of the basic levels of civility which is due between senior politicians, and we trust that you will respond accordingly."

The letter argues that the movements in financial markets during Truss's tenure in No 10 should not be classified as an economic crash.

The weeks following the mini-budget saw adverse market reaction and mortgage costs soar.

At the Conservative Party conference in October, Truss said it would be "economic illiteracy" to suggest that tax rises from Labour - at that point anticipated in Rachel Reeves' upcoming first Budget - were a result of her economic inheritance.

Before and after: How wildfires tore through the county

Getty Images A person runs past a building on fireGetty Images
More than 100,000 people had to be evacuated due to the deadly wildfires

Deadly wildfires have devastated parts of the city of Los Angeles and the wider county, destroying many homes and businesses, as well as schools and places of worship.

Here are some of the most striking images of places seen before and after the wildfires tore through them.

Pacific Palisades

This affluent suburb is among those that have been the hardest hit, with many residents being unable to gather much or anything of value before they were had to flee.

Below are images showing the destruction some businesses have suffered.

A graphic shows a Pacific Palisade business before and after it was destroyed by fire
A graphic showing the damage done to a cafe in the Pacific Palisades

The Palisades Charter High School is among landmarks in the Pacific Palisades area to have been damaged in the fires.

The well-known school counts celebrities including Will.i.am and Forest Whitaker among its alumni, and has been a filming location for Hollywood hits including Carrie, Teen Wolf and Freaky Friday.

Read more about what happened to the school here.

Palisades Charter High School/Facebook An exterior view of Palisades Charter High SchoolPalisades Charter High School/Facebook
Getty Images Pali High School rests across the street from homes destroyed in the Palisades fireGetty Images
Pali high school has reportedly suffered significant damage in the fire, which destroyed the homes opposite it

Pacific Coast Highway

Houses that sit along parts of the major state highway have also been hit by the Palisades fire, including in the city of Malibu.

Satellite imagery below shows what the coastline looked like before and after the fires took hold.

Reuters A satellite image shows the Pacific Coast Highway along the Malibu coastline before devastating wildfiresReuters
Reuters A satellite image shows smoke covering the Pacific Coast Highway along the Malibu coastline due to the devastating wildfires.Reuters

Altadena

The Eaton Fire has destroyed hundreds of homes and businesses in Altadena, which lies behind the mountains north of Los Angeles.

Below you can see the damage the fire caused to one home, as well as a wider look at the full extent of the damage the neighbourhood has suffered.

A before and after gfx of a wildfire destroying an Altadena home

Pasadena

In nearby Pasadena, a Jewish temple was among the buildings lost to the Eaton Fire.

According to its website, the temple's congregation has more than 100 years of history in the area.

A gfx showing the Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center before and after it was destroyed by flames

Powerful photos reveal dramatic scenes as LA fires rage

Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg via Getty Images Silhouetted firefighters gather in front of a fire engine next to a burning house in the Pacific Palisades areaKyle Grillot/Bloomberg via Getty Images
The blaze started in the wealthy Pacific Palisades neighbourhood, and quickly spread with strong winds and dry conditions

A wildfire that started in the Pacific Palisades area of Los Angeles on Tuesday morning has spread across the west of the city at an alarming rate throughout Tuesday and overnight.

High winds and very dry conditions further fuelled the flames, causing the blaze to rip through neighbourhoods at alarming speeds. The fires reportedly spread from a size of 10 acres to nearly 3,000 in a matter of hours.

Firefighters have been battling the flames throughout the night, as residents were forced to flee amid evacuation orders affecting tens of thousands of people.

Photographers have captured dramatic scenes across the west of the city as firefighters work to control the fires.

David Swanson/AFP A helicopter drops water over burning hills, with a huge plume of smoke rising above them, in Pacific Palisades.David Swanson/AFP
Thick smoke has engulfed huge areas of the city as wind gusts of more than 80mph (126km/h) fanned the flames

The BBC's Regan Morris reported on fires raging out of control, leaving those without power and phone signal unable to receive updates on the latest evacuation alerts.

Meanwhile, CBS reporter Jonathan Vigliotti said firefighters were no longer "trying to save" houses in the Palisades, "they're trying to prevent these flames from jumping to other neighbourhoods".

Ringo Chiu/Reuters Sparks and debris fly through the air with a firefighter holding a water cannon in the foreground and a fence and trees in the background, on the west side of LA.Ringo Chiu/Reuters
Firefighters battled windy conditions as debris blew through residential areas
Caroline Brehman/EPA A group of firefighters walk through a clearing in woods with a burning hill in the background, in the Pacific Palisades.Caroline Brehman/EPA
California Governor Gavin Newsom said that more than 1400 firefighters have been deployed to tackle the "unprecedented" fires
Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images A police officer escorts a homeless woman pushing her belongings on a trolley, on a street with a police car and burning mountain in the background, in Topanga Canyon Blvd.Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
Police officers have been out on the streets, escorting people to safety and aiding evacuation efforts
Caroline Brehman/EPA A close up view of a group of firefighters as they climb a smoky burnt hill with trees on it, in the Pacific Palisades.Caroline Brehman/EPA
Los Angeles County firefighters took up positions to tackle the blaze
Caroline Brehman/EPA A woman holds her dog and belongings while evacuating, as she walks down a street with fire in the background, in the Pacific Palisades.Caroline Brehman/EPA
More than 30,000 people have been ordered to evacuate the area
David Crane/Los Angeles Daily News Firefighters are silhouetted against a yellow sky as they battle fire from the on the beachfront along Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu.David Crane/Los Angeles Daily News
Beachfront homes along the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu are at risk of being engulfed by the flames
Caroline Brehman/EPA A Los Angeles firefighter drags a hose past cars trying in a smoky street in Pacific Palisades.Caroline Brehman/EPA
Firefighters had to dodge residents evacuating areas affected by the fires
Caroline Brehman/EPA Rear view of a firefighter wearing a yellow helmet with the word 'Williams' on the back of it, as they fire a water cannon at a burning building in the Pacific Palisades.Caroline Brehman/EPA
They deployed water cannons to extinguish the flames in affected areas
David Crane/Los Angeles Daily News A sign saying 'Malibu: 21 miles of scenic beauty' is seen in front of a burning building with firefighters in front of it, in MalibuDavid Crane/Los Angeles Daily News
The Pacific Palisades area of Los Angeles borders well-known Malibu and Santa Monica
Mike Blake/Reuters People walk through a car park carrying luggage and belongings, with a smoky background and palm trees bending in high winds, on the west side of LA.Mike Blake/Reuters
People rushed to gather important belongings and pets while fleeing
Josh Edelson/AFP A McDonald's restaurant is seen behind a burning palm tree bent by high winds in PasadenaJosh Edelson/AFP
The usually iconic-looking palm trees of Los Angeles have bent and burned in the wake of the wildfires
David Swanson/AFP A silhouetted firefighter fires a water cannon in front of huge flames in a valley with burning hills and a fire helicopter in the background in Pacific PalisadesDavid Swanson/AFP
Helicopters worked alongside fire officers to try and stop the spread across hilly, wooded areas of west LA
Caroline Brehman/EPA A firefighter helps their colleague wrap up in gear with burning forestry in the background in the Pacific Palisades.Caroline Brehman/EPA
Weary firefighters have been battling the wildfires throughout Tuesday and into Wednesday

当网格员管理失效时,这个县让"人情网"参与基层治理

传统网格员通常是外派人员,工作范围广,职责不够明确,且不一定是本地居民,对当地社会不够熟悉。相比之下,乡村综合治理员由村民推选产生,在当地拥有扎实的社交网络与社会威望,能够得到大多数村民的信任。

乡村综合治理员的固定工资每月在1800元至2200元之间,在当地经济条件下已属较高水平。总体来看,固定工资加上与工作成果挂钩的奖励机制,较为有效地调动了乡村综合治理员的积极性。

南方周末记者 翟星理 南方周末实习生 杜培

责任编辑:钱炜

2022年7月,研究团队在云南D县一户居民家中调研。(受访者提供)

2022年7月,研究团队在云南D县一户居民家中调研。(受访者提供)

基层治理是国家治理的基石。网格化管理作为一种典型实践,通过细化管理单元,显著提升基层政府对社区事务的响应能力。这项制度实践短短数年间风行全国。

然而,在一些地区,居民之间依赖长期形成的人情关系网络构建生活秩序,与行政主导的网格化治理模式存在冲突,如何协调两种网络之间的关系,需要发挥地方政府的治理智慧。

云南大学特聘教授、博士生导师郭台辉长期关注基层治理,一直谋划在该领域寻找实际案例展开研究。他的团队里有一名成员来自云南D县,便推荐团队关注自己的家乡。

在D县进行了三次实地调研之后,郭台辉的研究团队发现,网格员上报的信息质量比较差,当地村民在解决事务时的积极性也不高。

当地政府一直在寻求对策,直到2022年4月,该县开启了基层治理模式的改革,引入乡村综合治理员来代替网格员。

与后者相比,前者是当地人,有丰富的人情资源和社会资源。这些基层“达人”“能人”迸发出远超网格员的工作热情,使D县的基层治理成效焕然一新。

基于这些研究,郭台辉与他的博士生牛朝佳将研究成果形成学术论文《科层制嵌入“人情网”的基层治理机制创新——以D县为案例》(科层制也称官僚制,社会学术语),发表在《治理研究》2024年第6期。

以下是南方周末记者和郭台辉、牛朝佳的对话。

“快速化解矛盾”

南方周末:为什么选择云南省D县作为研究案例?

郭台辉:我们关注到D县的基层治理,和它独特的区位有关,适合用来作为一个案例,反思全国风行的网格化治理模式。

D县地处世界自然遗产“三江并流”核心区,属于山区农业县,财政高度依赖转移支付,其转移支付水平远超全国和云南省的平均值。这可能反映出当地经济基础薄弱,基层治理在财政支持上面临着较大的挑战。另外,D县的民族文化多样性比较强,且社会人员流动性非常弱,几乎没有外来人口,社会内部的人情关系紧密,形成了独特的社会生态。

我们关注的是,为什么在这样一个资源匮乏、民族文化多样性突出的复杂环境中,D县能够实现比较有效的基层治理。

南方周末:能否简单介绍一下你们的研究方法?

牛朝佳:我们采用定性研究方法,主要通过访谈法和数据收集来挖掘案例背后的治理机制和深层次原因。从2022年6月到2023年2月,我们先后进行了三次实地调研,共访谈了六十多人,涵盖村民、乡村综合治理员、村两委干部、乡镇

登录后获取更多权限

校对:吴依兰

欢迎分享、点赞与留言。本作品的版权为南方周末或相关著作权人所有,任何第三方未经授权,不得转载,否则即为侵权。

Powerful photos reveal dramatic scenes as LA fires rage

Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg via Getty Images Silhouetted firefighters gather in front of a fire engine next to a burning house in the Pacific Palisades areaKyle Grillot/Bloomberg via Getty Images
The blaze started in the wealthy Pacific Palisades neighbourhood, and quickly spread with strong winds and dry conditions

A wildfire that started in the Pacific Palisades area of Los Angeles on Tuesday morning has spread across the west of the city at an alarming rate throughout Tuesday and overnight.

High winds and very dry conditions further fuelled the flames, causing the blaze to rip through neighbourhoods at alarming speeds. The fires reportedly spread from a size of 10 acres to nearly 3,000 in a matter of hours.

Firefighters have been battling the flames throughout the night, as residents were forced to flee amid evacuation orders affecting tens of thousands of people.

Photographers have captured dramatic scenes across the west of the city as firefighters work to control the fires.

David Swanson/AFP A helicopter drops water over burning hills, with a huge plume of smoke rising above them, in Pacific Palisades.David Swanson/AFP
Thick smoke has engulfed huge areas of the city as wind gusts of more than 80mph (126km/h) fanned the flames

The BBC's Regan Morris reported on fires raging out of control, leaving those without power and phone signal unable to receive updates on the latest evacuation alerts.

Meanwhile, CBS reporter Jonathan Vigliotti said firefighters were no longer "trying to save" houses in the Palisades, "they're trying to prevent these flames from jumping to other neighbourhoods".

Ringo Chiu/Reuters Sparks and debris fly through the air with a firefighter holding a water cannon in the foreground and a fence and trees in the background, on the west side of LA.Ringo Chiu/Reuters
Firefighters battled windy conditions as debris blew through residential areas
Caroline Brehman/EPA A group of firefighters walk through a clearing in woods with a burning hill in the background, in the Pacific Palisades.Caroline Brehman/EPA
California Governor Gavin Newsom said that more than 1400 firefighters have been deployed to tackle the "unprecedented" fires
Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images A police officer escorts a homeless woman pushing her belongings on a trolley, on a street with a police car and burning mountain in the background, in Topanga Canyon Blvd.Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
Police officers have been out on the streets, escorting people to safety and aiding evacuation efforts
Caroline Brehman/EPA A close up view of a group of firefighters as they climb a smoky burnt hill with trees on it, in the Pacific Palisades.Caroline Brehman/EPA
Los Angeles County firefighters took up positions to tackle the blaze
Caroline Brehman/EPA A woman holds her dog and belongings while evacuating, as she walks down a street with fire in the background, in the Pacific Palisades.Caroline Brehman/EPA
More than 30,000 people have been ordered to evacuate the area
David Crane/Los Angeles Daily News Firefighters are silhouetted against a yellow sky as they battle fire from the on the beachfront along Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu.David Crane/Los Angeles Daily News
Beachfront homes along the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu are at risk of being engulfed by the flames
Caroline Brehman/EPA A Los Angeles firefighter drags a hose past cars trying in a smoky street in Pacific Palisades.Caroline Brehman/EPA
Firefighters had to dodge residents evacuating areas affected by the fires
Caroline Brehman/EPA Rear view of a firefighter wearing a yellow helmet with the word 'Williams' on the back of it, as they fire a water cannon at a burning building in the Pacific Palisades.Caroline Brehman/EPA
They deployed water cannons to extinguish the flames in affected areas
David Crane/Los Angeles Daily News A sign saying 'Malibu: 21 miles of scenic beauty' is seen in front of a burning building with firefighters in front of it, in MalibuDavid Crane/Los Angeles Daily News
The Pacific Palisades area of Los Angeles borders well-known Malibu and Santa Monica
Mike Blake/Reuters People walk through a car park carrying luggage and belongings, with a smoky background and palm trees bending in high winds, on the west side of LA.Mike Blake/Reuters
People rushed to gather important belongings and pets while fleeing
Josh Edelson/AFP A McDonald's restaurant is seen behind a burning palm tree bent by high winds in PasadenaJosh Edelson/AFP
The usually iconic-looking palm trees of Los Angeles have bent and burned in the wake of the wildfires
David Swanson/AFP A silhouetted firefighter fires a water cannon in front of huge flames in a valley with burning hills and a fire helicopter in the background in Pacific PalisadesDavid Swanson/AFP
Helicopters worked alongside fire officers to try and stop the spread across hilly, wooded areas of west LA
Caroline Brehman/EPA A firefighter helps their colleague wrap up in gear with burning forestry in the background in the Pacific Palisades.Caroline Brehman/EPA
Weary firefighters have been battling the wildfires throughout Tuesday and into Wednesday

Russia keeping close eye on Trump's claim to Greenland

EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock A plane on the tarmac at Nuuk airport in GreenlandEPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
Earlier this week Donald Trump Jr amplified his father's claims with a private visit to Greenland

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said Russia is closely monitoring the situation, after US President-elect Donald Trump refused to rule out military action to take Greenland from Denmark.

Peskov said the Arctic was in Russia's "sphere of national and strategic interests and it is interested in peace and stability there".

Trump's remarks on Greenland - a largely autonomous Danish territory - have drawn a warning from European leaders.

EU foreign affairs chief Kaja Kallas has stressed that "we have to respect the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Greenland", and Germany's Olaf Scholz has made clear that "borders must not be moved by force".

Trump said earlier this week that the US needed both Denmark and the Panama Canal "for economic security", and refused to rule out using either economic or military force in taking them over.

He also referred to the border with Canada as an "artificially drawn line". Denmark and Canada are both close Nato allies of the US.

Dmitry Peskov said Trump's claims were a matter for the US, Denmark and other nations, but Russia was watching the "rather dramatic" situation surrounding his remarks. "We are present in the Arctic zone, and we will continue to be present there," he said.

Map of Greenland

Outgoing US Secretary of State Antony Blinken sought to dampen concern about the president-elect's remarks during a visit to Paris: "The idea is... obviously not a good one, but maybe more important, it's obviously one that's not going to happen."

About 56,000 people live in Greenland, and it is home to US as well as Danish military bases. It also has considerable untapped mineral and oil wealth.

Greenland Prime Minister Mute Egede has been pushing for independence, although the territory's economy relies heavily on Danish subsidies.

Both he and the Danish leader have emphasised that it is "not for sale" and that its future is in the hands of Greenlanders themselves.

UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy played down Trump's comments, although he acknowledged the "intensity of his rhetoric and the unpredictability sometimes of what he said can be destabilising".

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has said Copenhagen has a clear interest in ensuring that the US - "absolutely its closest ally" - plays a key role at a time of rising tensions in the North Atlantic, particularly involving Russia.

The European Commission said Trump's threat to Greenland was "extremely theoretical" and "wildly hypothetical", considering he was not yet in office.

However, it has confirmed that Greenland, as an overseas territory, does come under a mutual assistance clause requiring all EU states to come to its aid in case of attack.

The Kremlin ridiculed the European response, suggesting it was reacting "very timidly... almost in a whisper".

Last week, Greenland's leader said the territory should free itself from "the shackles of colonialism", although he made no mention of the US.

A former Greenland foreign minister, Pele Broberg, who now heads the biggest opposition party, told the BBC that most Greenlanders he talked to believed the US was vital for their defence and safety.

"We are part of the North American continent, that's why the defence of the US is in such a great place with regards to Greenland, because we create a buffer zone that doesn't need to be militarised."

He has called for a "free association agreement" with the US covering trade and defence which would give Greenland independence but hand the US responsibility for security.

Trump's allies have reinforced his views on Greenland.

Keith Kellogg, chosen by Trump to bring an end to the war in Ukraine, said a lot of the president-elect's remarks on Greenland made sense, "putting the United States in a position of global leadership".

Republican congressman Mike Walz told Fox News that the issue was "not just about Greenland, this is about the Arctic", because Russia was trying to take control of the polar region, with its mineral and natural resources.

"Denmark can be a great ally, but you can't treat Greenland, which they have operational control over, as some kind of backwater - it's in the Western hemisphere."

Man with crocodile skull in luggage arrested at Delhi airport

Delhi Customs/X A crocodile skull seen placed on a piece of newspaperDelhi Customs/X
An analysis carried out by the wildlife department found it was the skull of a baby crocodile

Indian authorities say they have arrested a Canadian man at Delhi airport for carrying a crocodile skull in his luggage.

The 32-year-old man was at the airport on Monday to catch his flight to Canada when he was first stopped during security check.

"Upon examination, a skull with sharp teeth, resembling the jaw of a baby crocodile, weighing approximately 777g (1.71lb), was discovered wrapped in a cream-colored cloth," Delhi customs said in a statement on Thursday.

The man was arrested and the skull was handed over to the Department of Forests and Wildlife, they said.

Officials said the possession of crocodile skull violated India's wildlife protection law and its Customs Act.

An analysis of the skull by the Department of Forests and Wildlife found that it belonged to a species protected under India's Wildlife Protection Act.

"The texture, tooth pattern, well-developed bony palate, and nostrils confirmed the item as the skull of a baby crocodile," they said.

A forest official told the Times of India newspaper that the man had allegedly bought the skull from Thailand.

"The man did not possess the mandatory permission required to carry wildlife items," forest officer Rajesh Tandon said.

The man also told officers he had not hunted or killed the crocodile, the Hindustan Times reports.

Further tests are being carried out to identify the exact sub-species of the animal.

Meanwhile, Delhi customs says a case has been registered against the man and an investigation is under way.

Last year, a 32-year-old Canadian woman was stopped at Delhi airport after she was found to have horns of an unidentified animal in her luggage. The woman told officials she had picked them up during a trek in the northern Ladakh region and decided to take them back as a souvenir.

特朗普为何对巴拿马运河如此痴迷?

Darko Janjevic
2025-01-09T13:36:33.879Z

(德国之声中文网)美国候任总统特朗普已多次表示,要将巴拿马运河置于美国的控制之下。而巴拿马政府则一再重申,运河的主权“不容讨论”。于是,连接太平洋和大西洋的巴拿马运河,突然间成了全球舆论关注的焦点。

巴拿马运河是谁建的?

特朗普表示,世人不应忘记,是美国人在一百多年前修建了巴拿马运河,并为这个改变人类海运业的工程付出了惨重的生命代价。1914年以前,从大西洋前往太平洋的船只,必须绕行整个南美洲,整个航程历时数月,而且航道十分危险。巴拿马运河修通之后,航程被大大缩短,现在只需8到10小时,就能完成在两大洋之间的穿梭。

特朗普前不久声称,1904年至1914年开凿巴拿马运河的过程中,共有35000名至38000名“美国男子”丧生。事实上,修筑运河的过程中,疟疾、黄热病、施工事故以及其他原因,的确造成了数千人死亡,但特朗普提供的数据却是无从考证的。

官方数字显示,运河建造过程中大约有5600人死亡,当然实际数字可能会更高。不过,运河工地上的大多数工人主要来自巴巴多斯。《死亡峡谷-为修建巴拿马运河而战》一书的作者帕克( Matthew Parker)认为,整个修建过程中,大约有三百名美国工人丧生。

特朗普有可能是将美国人的巴拿马运河工程和此前法国人开凿运河的失败经历混为一谈了。1880年代,法国人曾尝试修建巴拿马运河,并为此付出了两万至两万五千人的生命代价,不过,这些死难者当中并没有一名美国人。

为什么运河现在由巴拿马人掌管?

运河开通后,美国在此经营了数十年之久。1977年,时任美国总统的吉米·卡特批准逐步将运河控制权移交给巴拿马政府。相关条约规定,运河将保持中立,向所有国家的船只开放。美国还保留了保卫该水道不受任何威胁的权利。 1999年,美国完成了从巴拿马的撤军行动。运河自此由巴拿马城政府管理。现在,特朗普指责“中国的优秀士兵”正在非法经营这条运河。巴拿马总统穆里诺(Jose Raul Mulino) 则驳斥特朗普的说法纯属无稽之谈。今年一月,穆里诺表示:“谢天谢地,运河里并没有中国士兵。”

巴拿马总统穆里诺:巴拿马运河没有中国士兵。

尽管没有任何迹象能证明中国在巴拿马地区的军事存在,但令一些美国观察家不安的是,巴拿马两座港口已经交由香港长江和记实业公司所管理,这有可能会导致美国过往船只的数据被泄露。此外,巴拿马与中国政府合资在运河上建造新桥也引起了华盛顿的关注。

为何巴拿马运河如此重要?

管理方表示,每年约有13000至14000艘船只穿过全长82公里的运河。每天数十艘的过往船只借助闸门、水道和水库,被提升最高26米,然后再在运河另一端逐渐降至海平面。

穿过运河时,船只需根据大小缴纳费用。美国、中国和日本是巴拿马运河的主要客户,而巴拿马运河货运量的72%都同美国有关,要么是从美国港口运出的货物,要么则是正在运往美国的货物。

美国总统特朗普:不排除武力收回巴拿马运河的可能性。

前不久,受干旱天气影响,巴拿马运河管理方减少了通行船只数量,并同时提高了费用。2024年财政年度,巴拿马运河的运营净利润为34.5亿美元。

由于巴拿马运河的通行业务中美国的占比极高,因此,运河涨价自然也会对美国经济造成冲击。今年12月,特朗普指责巴拿马当局“漫天要价”,简直是一种“宰客”行为。

美国能收回运河吗?

1977年由美国总统卡特签署的协议中规定,巴拿马必须保持中立,也就是说,巴拿马当局不得向为美国运送货物的船只提供特殊优惠。不过,可以想象的是,在特朗普政府的压力之下,巴拿马当局会普遍下调船只通行费,下次出现危机时,也不会轻易提价。

另一种可能选项则是,美国派兵进入巴拿马,恢复对运河的军事控制。1989年底,美国曾出兵巴拿马,推翻了军事独裁者、中央情报局前特工诺列加( Manuel Noriega)。

美国出兵后扶持起来的巴拿马新政府取消了该国的军队。目前,巴拿马只拥有一支小规模民兵武装。

迄今为止,美国候任总统特朗普并没有排除以军事手段解决“巴拿马问题”的选项。  

© 2025年德国之声版权声明:本文所有内容受到著作权法保护,如无德国之声特别授权,不得擅自使用。任何不当行为都将导致追偿,并受到刑事追究。



长平观察:人类命运共同体——可以去武汉调查病毒源头了吗?

长平
2025-01-09T13:40:22.319Z
习近平2020年1月28日在北京会见世卫总干事谭德塞。中国至今没有允许世界卫生组织专家团队前往武汉进行有关新冠病毒起源的独立调查。

(德国之声中文网)人类命运共同体?中共的一个谎言。

首先,从命名权看,这是一个谎言。新年送大礼,人类命运共同体研究中心1月2日在北京成立。在揭牌仪式上,中国外长王毅说,“构建人类命运共同体是习近平的重大原创性思想,是习近平外交思想的核心理念”。

声称人类命运共同体是当今某人的原创思想,就跟说吃饭睡觉是某人的专利发明一样荒唐。大同世界、空想社会主义、共产主义、联合国、地球村……这些从古至今未曾断续的观念和构思,不都是在谈人类命运共同体吗?

相关图集:美国新冠病亡者家属亲述:痛苦永在

最悲惨的事情 :这是14岁的朱利叶斯·加尔萨(Julius Garza)。他在疫情中失去了养父大卫·加尔萨(David Garza)。朱利叶斯比弟弟记得更清楚,2015年养母和养父收养他们的那天之前,生活是什么样子。他说:“爸爸死亡是迄今为止发生在我身上的最悲伤的事情。我永远无法释怀。”
纪念爸爸 :朱利叶斯和他12岁的弟弟艾丹为死于新冠肺炎的养父祈祷。每月30号,全家人都会举行纪念仪式,共同缅怀大卫·加尔萨的一生。2020年12月30日,他在德克萨斯州的康弗斯(Converse)死于新冠肺炎。
如何消化痛苦?:养母玛格丽特和养子朱利叶斯紧紧相拥。他的生母抛弃了他们哥儿俩。他们的生父因性侵他们的继妹而入狱。他们由此进入收养家庭系统。有了这么多艰难经历的朱利叶斯,现在尽力试图面对和消化失去养父的痛苦。
无法弥补的损失 :2020年5月,在伊利诺伊州马特森市(Matteson),13岁的贾斯蒂斯·麦高恩(Justise McGowan)也因新冠病毒失去了父亲史蒂文·麦高恩(Steven McGowan)。爸爸生日那天,她坐在台阶上。新近,美国死于新冠肺炎人数突破100万。拜登总统在电视讲话说:100万例新冠死亡,100万张家庭餐桌旁出现一张空椅,每一个都是无法弥补的损失。
“她做了他会做的事情”:贾斯蒂斯的头靠在母亲桑德拉肩膀上。丈夫史蒂文去世后,桑德拉·麦高恩-瓦茨(Sandra McGowan-Watts)试图尽可能保持女儿贾斯蒂斯的生活习惯。去夏,修剪花园灌木的时间到了,贾斯蒂斯找到了父亲的绿篱修剪机,立刻开始了工作。桑德拉说,“她做了他会做的事情”。
一个共同的传统 :贾斯蒂斯从烤箱里取出一盘烤好的饼干,回忆起她和爸爸曾有的传统。许多儿童的生活一夜之间剧变,不得不面对情感上的挑战。
成千上万儿童至少失去父母一方:各级政府的计划中都未包含对像朱利叶斯和艾丹兄弟这样因新冠大流行瘟疫而至少失去一个主要照顾人的美国儿童做登记。研究人员估计,相关儿童超过21.3万。
“就像触摸一朵云” :艾丹常用现在时态提到爸爸,仿佛大卫仍坐在客厅对面他最喜欢的那把扶椅上,叫这个12岁的孩子过来看《星球大战》系列。艾丹说:“他这么开心。每回拥抱他时,我都会觉得自己就像在触摸一朵云。
永远回不去了:艾丹、朱利叶斯和玛格丽特对着他们称为“那个容器”的大卫的骨灰盒祈祷。失去他们的爸爸后,玛格丽特确保养子们得到心理咨询。即使疫情终会终结,像她这样的家庭仍会受到的深刻而持久的影响。她说,“我们的‘常态’会和他人的不同,因为,我们失去了一个亲人”。

“没有人是自成一体、与世隔绝的孤岛”

中共的叙事本身就前后矛盾,一方面称自己是马克思主义政党,一方面又声称习近平发明了人类命运共同体的思想,完全不在乎马克思和恩格斯怎么想——这两位被供奉在全球共产党祖先牌位上的先驱者,1848年就在《共产党宣言》的末尾号召:“全世界无产者,联合起来!”

想到人类是一个命运共同体,并不需要等到一个不世天才来脑洞大开,但有些人说得诗意一些,更容易让人记住。比如,英国诗人约翰·多恩(John Donne)在四百年前写下《丧钟为谁而鸣》(For Whom the Bell Tolls),诗云:

没有人是自成一体,

与世隔绝的孤岛,

每一个人都是广袤大陆的一部分。

……

每个人的死亡都是我的哀伤,

因为我是人类的一员。

所以,

不要问丧钟为谁而鸣,

它就为你而鸣。

到了二十世纪,美国作家海明威以“丧钟为谁而鸣”作为一部小说的书名,并以整首诗作为题词,让它传播更广,脍炙人口。

新华社2016年的一篇报道说,“习近平熟悉美国作家惠特曼、马克·吐温、杰克·伦敦,尤其喜欢海明威。”看来尤其喜欢也没让他读明白,这首诗的意思就是人类命运共同体。

如果说受制于时代局限,约翰·多恩在这首诗里写的“人类”还主要是指欧洲白人的话,那么到了二十世纪,第一次世界大战之后成立的“国际联盟”,第二次世界大战之后发展成为“联合国”,以及各类国际组织,在理念上已经是包括全世界所有人的人类命运共同体了。

中共宣传盗用西方既有观念和术语,然后进行篡改和扭曲,包装成推销专制政治的口号,早已经不是第一次。比如,多元包容是西方冷战之后的一个主流价值观,指的是在民主自由社会中,对各种不同的政治立场、文化习俗、性别取向、宗教信仰等等的承认和尊重,但是中共宣传挪用过去,扭曲成了相反的意思:要求世界各国“包容”自己建立专制政权,打压不同的价值立场、公民社会和异议人士

“中国式现代化”是一个宣传话术

其次,人类命运共同体的实践运作,在中共的宣传中,这更是一个谎言。

王毅说,构建人类命运共同体是对“建设一个什么样的世界、如何建设这个世界”这一时代课题给出的中国答案。“中国答案”是什么呢?同一天,中共中央理论刊物《求是》杂志刊登习近平两年前的讲话《以中国式现代化全面推进强国建设、民族复兴伟业》,称中国式现代化展现不同于西方现代化模式的新图景,打破了“现代化=西方化”迷思。“新时代以来‘东升西降’、‘中治西乱’的鲜明对比,使广大发展中国家看到了新的希望,有了新的选择。”

原来,构建人类命运共同体的含义被扭曲成了推广“中国式现代化”。所谓“中国式现代化”,是一个宣传话术。就跟把医学分为中医和西医一样,它把现代化分为中国式和西方式,以构建人类命运共同体之名,行反人类命运共同体之实。

正如中西医的实质区别是传统医学和现代医学,中国式现代化和西方式现代化的实质区别,是传统专制与现代民主。把传统专制称为现代化,这本身就和现代化的通行定义是矛盾的。

中共宣传试图说服人们,没有人权、自由和民主,同样可以实现物质现代化。对于这一点,2024年诺贝尔经济学奖获得者、美国麻省理工大学教阿西莫格鲁(Daron Acemoglu)、约翰逊(Simon Johnson)和芝加哥大学教授罗宾森(James Robinson)早就给出了答案:长期的经济增长靠的是民主与法治的社会制度(包容性政治制度+包容性经济制度),而不是极权专制的社会制度(攫取性政治制度+攫取性经济制度)。(参见《长平观察:今年的诺贝尔经济学奖,十年前就让中共不高兴了》

“倘一人为奴隶,则举世无自由”

其实,人们从不同的政治立场和分析方法,都可以得出类似的结论。《共产党宣言》中说,“代替那存在着阶级和阶级对立的资产阶级旧社会的,将是这样一个联合体,在那里,每个人的自由发展是一切人的自由发展的条件。”

1963年,时任美国总统肯尼迪在柏林发表了一个著名的演讲,其中谈到人类命运共同体,他说:“自由不可分割,倘一人为奴隶,则举世无自由。”

相关图集:“我是柏林人”:外国名人在德演说回顾

“全世界的人民,看看柏林吧”(柏林胜利纪念柱前):这张图摄于2008年奥巴马访问柏林之际,当时的奥巴马还是美国总统候选人。今年6月19日,他以美国总统的身份再次访问柏林并在勃兰登堡发表演说前,众人翘首以待。在过去的这种正式访问中,也有不少政要留下了值得回忆的语句。
“伟大人民的孩子们”(路德维希堡宫前):著名的演讲之一就是前法国总统戴高乐于1962年9月9日在路德维希堡宫前发表的“对德国年轻人的讲话”。在当时的德国总统吕布克的陪伴下,戴高乐向“法德人民的友谊”宣誓。这次讲话是促成签订德法友好条约的关键一步。
“我是柏林人!”:在奥巴马今年访问的整整一个星期后,正好是这句大概是历届美国总统在德国土地上留下的最著名的语句50周年的日子。1963年6月26日,肯尼迪在柏林舍纳贝格议会厅前发表讲话,他在精神鼓舞的众人前,将柏林墙描述成“共产主义体系失败的最生动、最鲜明的例证。”
肯尼迪讲话节选:“两千年以前,最自豪的炫耀,莫过于:‘我是一个罗马公民’。而今天,自由世界里最令人引以为豪的语句就是‘ 我是一个柏林人’。 […] 因为我不知道还有哪个城市,能够在被围困十八年后,仍可以保持今日西柏林的这种生机、力量、希望和决心。”
“戈尔巴乔夫先生,推倒这堵墙!”:在柏林750周年的纪念活动上,前美国总统里根向包括东柏林人在内的所有柏林人发表讲话。随后,他向前苏联国家领导人戈尔巴乔夫呼吁:“请打开这扇大门!推倒这堵墙!”两年之后,1989年11月9日,矗立28年的柏林墙真的被推倒了。
“随机应变”:1989年前民主德国领导人庆祝40周年国庆。前苏共中央委员会总书记戈尔巴乔夫也受到邀请(图中左侧是戈尔巴乔夫,右边是前民主德国领导人昂纳克)。10月7日,戈尔巴乔夫在其讲话中重点强调了“开放和改革”,他也提及那些“无法随机应变的人”将面临危险。
“重建和平”:2002年2月28日,安南作为首位出现在德国联邦议会的联合国秘书长发表讲话。他对德国在阿富汗冲突中所起到的作用给予称赞,特别是警察机构的重建。“当人们愿意尽义务帮助战争难民重建和平时,就必须要留下可以允许他们继续这一进程的系统结构。”
“展开对话的世纪”:精神领袖也在德国留下了警句。2008年,达赖喇嘛在结束其德国访问前在柏林表示希望中国可以有一个宗教和文化自由的西藏。“21世纪应该是展开对话的世纪。所有问题应该通过对话解决,而不是使用暴力。”
“服务于权利”:前教宗本笃十六世是近代首位德国籍教宗,也是首位在德国联邦议会前发表讲话的教宗。在其德国访问期间,他提到法治社会的基础和纳粹时期。当今政客的任务是“服务于权利并与不正当的政权作斗争。”

近几十年来,国际社会对于真正的人类命运共同体理想有过很多实践探索,包括组建联合国维和部队、国际法院、世界粮食计划署和联合国儿童基金会等等。在2019年武汉爆发新冠疫情之前,世界卫生组织(WHO)被认为是比较成功的合作,在防治全球传染疾病方面功不可没。比如,2014年爆发的埃博拉病毒,就得到了及时的控制。

为什么呢?因为埃博拉病毒虽然厉害,但是它“不幸”出现在非洲小国,在那里没有一个号称要“建构人类命运共同体”的政权来阻止国际专家的介入。按照世界卫生组织网站的记载,“几内亚卫生部于2014年3月13日发布了首个关于不明疾病的预警。同一天,世卫组织非洲区域办事处的工作人员以拉沙热为疑似目标正式启动了突发事件管理系统”,“3月14日至25日,在几内亚卫生部、世卫组织非洲区域办事处和无国界医师组织人员的参与下,开展了一次重要调查,对基西杜古、马森塔、盖凯杜和恩泽雷科雷等市进行了实地考察”。

2019年,新冠病毒“有幸”在中国武汉爆发,中国政府先是隐瞒疫情,随后又阻止国际专家进行及时而独立的调查。疫情蔓延全球各地,肆虐时间长达三年,导致至少700多万感染者死亡,世界经济遭受重大打击。

一元复始,万象更新。既然人类命运共同体研究中心在北京挂牌了,那么世界卫生组织是否可以再次派遣国际专家,前往武汉完成对于新冠病毒源头的独立调查呢?

 

作者长平是中国资深媒体人、时事评论作家,六四记忆 · 人权博物馆总策展人,现居德国。

德国之声致力于为您提供客观中立的新闻报导,以及展现多种角度的评论分析。文中评论及分析仅代表作者或专家个人立场。

© 2025年德国之声版权声明:本文所有内容受到著作权法保护,如无德国之声特别授权,不得擅自使用。任何不当行为都将导致追偿,并受到刑事追究。

What's the latest on the LA fires, and what caused them?

Moment house collapses in Studio City as LA wildfires rage on

Out-of-control wildfires are ripping across parts of Los Angeles, leading to at least five deaths, burning down hundreds of buildings, and prompting more than 130,000 people to flee their homes in America's second-largest city.

Despite the efforts of firefighters, the biggest blazes remain totally uncontained - with weather conditions and the underlying impact of climate change expected to continue fanning the flames for days to come.

What's the latest?

More than 137,000 people have been forced to leave their homes - many of them simply carrying whatever belongings they can.

Police say at least five people have died, and their bodies found near the Eaton Fire - but their cause of death is not yet known.

Like the even larger Palisades Fire, the Eaton Fire remains totally uncontained. Meanwhile, the new Sunset Fire is menacing the well-known Hollywood Hills area.

More than 1,000 structures are known to have been destroyed - including houses, schools and businesses on the iconic Sunset Boulevard. A fire ecologist has told the BBC that "entire neighbourhoods... have been wiped out".

Among the celebrities who have lost their homes are Leighton Meester and Adam Brody, who attended the Golden Globes just days ago, and Paris Hilton.

There is a glimmer of hope for firefighters, as the fire weather outlook for southern California has been downgraded from "extremely critical" to "critical".

But BBC weather forecaster Sarah Keith-Lucas says there is no rain forecast in the area for at least the next week, meaning conditions remain ripe for fire.

Mass disruption has been reported due to traffic buildup. A number of schools and the the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) have been forced to close.

A political row about the city's preparedness has erupted after it emerged that some firefighters' hoses have run dry - an issue seized upon by US President-elect Donald Trump.

Where are the fires?

A BBC map plots the locations of five fires in Los Angeles - the Palisades, Eaton, Sunset, Hurst and Lidia fires. Prominent locations including the Hollywood Hill are marked nearby

There are at least five fires raging in the wider area, according to California fire officials early on Thursday:

  • Palisades: The first fire to erupt on Tuesday and the biggest fire in the region, which could become the most destructive fire in state history. It has scorched a sizable part of land, covering more than 17,200 acres, including the upscale Pacific Palisades neighbourhood
  • Eaton: It has struck the northern part of Los Angeles, blazing through cities such as Altadena. It's the second biggest fire in the area, burning around 10,600 acres
  • Hurst: Located just north of San Fernando, it began burning on Tuesday night and has grown to 855 acres, though firefighters have had some successlimited in containing it
  • Lidia: It broke out on Wednesday afternoon in the mountainous Acton area north of Los Angeles and grew to cover almost 350 acres. Authorities say it has been 40% contained
  • Sunset: It broke out Wednesday evening in Hollywood Hills, growing to about 20 acres in less than an hour. It now covers around 43 acres

The earlier Woodley and Olivas fires have now been contained, according to local fire authorities.

How did the LA fires start?

Officials have pointed to high winds and drought in the area, which has made vegetation very dry and easy to burn.

The likely impact of climate change has also been cited been blamed - although the exact circumstances remain unclear.

Some 95% of wildfires in the area are started by humans, according to David Acuna, a battalion chief at the Californian Fire Service, although officials are yet to state how they think the current fires started.

An important factor that has been cited in the spread of the blazes is the Santa Ana winds, which blow from inland towards the coast. With speeds of more than 60mph (97 km/h), these are believed to have fanned the flames.

Malibu seafront left devastated after wildfires

What role has climate change played?

Although strong winds and lack of rain are driving the blazes, experts say climate change is altering the background conditions and increasing the likelihood of such fires.

US government research is unequivocal in linking climate change to larger and more severe wildfires in the western United States.

"Climate change, including increased heat, extended drought, and a thirsty atmosphere, has been a key driver in increasing the risk and extent of wildfires in the western United States," the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says.

And following a very warm summer and lack of rain in recent months, California is particularly vulnerable.

Fire season in southern California is generally thought to stretch from May to October - but the state's governor, Gavin Newsom, has pointed out earlier that blazes had become a perennial issue. "There's no fire season," he said. "It's fire year."

Speaking to the BBC, Mr Acuna said the Palisades Fire represented only the third occasion in the past 30 years that a major fire had broken out in January.

A map titled: "How big is the area burnt by the Palisades wildfires on the outskirts of LA?" This shows an outline of the shape and size of the fire superimposed on maps of New York City and London - showing that the fire would cover a significant area of both city centres

Pound falls to lowest in over a year as borrowing costs soar

Getty Images Three pound coins placed on top of British bank notes.Getty Images

The pound has fallen to its lowest level for nine months after UK government borrowing costs continued to rise.

The drop came as UK 10-year borrowing costs surged to their highest level since the 2008 financial crisis when bank borrowing almost ground to a halt.

Economists have warned the rising costs could lead to further tax rises or cuts to spending plans as the government tries to meet its self-imposed borrowing target.

The government said it would not say anything ahead of the official borrowing forecast from its independent forecaster due in March.

"I'm obviously not going to get ahead ... it's up to the OBR (Office for Budget Responsibility) to make their forecasts."

"Having stability in the public finances is precursor to having economic stability and economic growth," the Prime Minister's official spokesman said.

Shadow chancellor Mel Stride claimed that the Chancellor's significant spending and borrowing plans from the Budget are "making it more expensive for the government to borrow".

"We should be building a more resilient economy, not raising taxes to pay for fiscal incompetence," he said in a post on X.

Gabriel McKeown, head of macroeconomics at Sad Rabbit Investments, said the rise in borrowing costs "has effectively eviscerated Reeves' fiscal headroom, threatening to derail Labour's investment promises and potentially necessitate a painful recalibration of spending plans."

The warning comes after the cost of borrowing over 30 years hit its highest level for 27 years on Tuesday.

Meanwhile the pound dropped by as much as 1.1% to $1.233 against the dollar, marking its lowest level since April last year.

The government generally spends more than it raises in tax. To fill this gap it borrows money, but that has to be paid back - with interest.

One of the ways it can borrow money is by selling financial products called bonds.

Globally, there has been a rise in the cost of government borrowing in recent months sparked by investor concerns that US President-elect Donald Trump's plans to impose new tariffs on goods entering the US from Canada, Mexico and China would push up inflation.

Laith Khalaf, head of investment analysis at AJ Bell, said chancellor Rachel Reeves' Budget in October, which increased borrowing, may have had a small impact but said the UK rises were similar to those in the US.

"In the UK higher yields put pressure on government finances and increase the risk that Reeves will come back with another tax raising Budget," he said.

But he also said the current rises in borrowing costs could be "a storm in a tea cup which dissipates quickly."

The official forecaster, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), will start the process of updating its forecast on government borrowing next month to be presented to parliament in late March.

How many houses need to be built in your area? Use our postcode tracker

BBC Promotional image for the housing target tracker. There is a young couple in the middle looking at some paperwork. Around them are various images of details from buildings and stylised charts. The palette is predominantly orange.BBC

Some local councils in England would need to see at least a five-fold increase in new housing to meet government targets, analysis by BBC Verify suggests.

The BBC's figures lay out the immense challenge Labour has set itself in government with its "milestone" of building 1.5 million new homes in England over five years.

In total, 16 local authorities across England have new annual targets that are five times or more what they have recently delivered.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has said setting a specific target will "give the British people the power to hold our feet to the fire".

With that in mind, the BBC has created a new online tool for tracking the government's progress towards this key goal.

Type in your postcode and see the house building situation in your own area.

The government has also set annual housing targets for each local authority in England, based on what it judges their contribution to the overall total should be.

The most demanding target is for the London Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, which has been set a target for new homes nearly 22 times its recent average.

The target for Sevenoaks in Kent is five times what it has been delivering on average in recent years, while the target for Portsmouth is more than eight times the average.

These specific targets will enable us to incorporate information into the tracker on what's happening on house building in every district in England.

It will show the number of homes added in an area and compare it with the local target set by ministers.

Our postcode lookup tool also shows the share of planning applications for new homes granted permissions in an area in the most recent year there is data for, and compares it with the England-wide average rate, so you can judge whether your council is approving enough building plans.

The tracker will be updated when relevant official data becomes available.

Hugely ambitious

The new government has described its housebuilding objective as "hugely ambitious" and that is no exaggeration.

To deliver 1.5 million homes, defined as "net additional dwellings", over five years implies a strike rate of about 300,000 a year - a number not achieved since the 1970s.

Chart showing how challenging Labour's target of building 1.5 million new homes in the next five years is. It implies an average of 300,000 net additional dwellings per year, which has not been achieved over the period covered by the chart going back to 1992. The most managed over that period was just under 250,000 in 2019 and 2020.

But while the England-wide target is highly ambitious in a historical context, the targets handed down to some local authorities are arguably even more so.

To create our postcode tracker we processed local data on:

  • the number of annual net additional dwellings required
  • the number of net additional dwellings created on average each year since 2021
  • recent residential planning decisions by councils.

BBC Verify's analysis shows Kensington and Chelsea, a London borough, has been given a target of 5,107 new homes every year for the next five years. But the borough delivered an average of only 236 net additional dwellings between 2021-22 and 2023-24.

It did, however, approve 89% of planning applications for housing in the year to June 2024, considerably higher than the national rate of 71%.

Portsmouth, on the south coast, also has a very stretching target. The local council is being asked to deliver 1,021 new homes per year, almost nine times the 120 it delivered on average over the most recent three years.

Hastings has been tasked with a smaller total: 710. But this is still five times the 142 it has delivered on average in recent years.

Portsmouth approved 74% of residential planning applications in the year to June 2024 and Hastings 75%.

Councils were consulted on the targets last summer, with many expressing concerns they were "unrealistic", and the numbers were revised.

Councillor Elizabeth Campbell, leader of Kensington and Chelsea, said it was "out of touch to let algorithms set targets without understanding local context".

"You only have to walk through the streets of our densely built borough to see how unachievable it would be to build 5,107 homes a year here; this borough is only 4.5 miles squared."

She said there were two major sites in the borough that would provide 6,000 new homes in total.

Councillor Darren Sanders, cabinet member for housing at Portsmouth City Council, said the target "does not work" because "most of the city is an island" with a dense population and "important heritage and natural assets".

"Portsmouth has approved more than 4,000 new homes in 2023 and 2024. Any lack of delivery is down to the rising cost of development," he said, "not whether the council approves them."

Sevenoaks councillor Julia Thornton said it was a "top priority" to protect greenbelt land, but added: "We will have a duty to do everything possible to meet the government's new housing targets."

Sir Keir's housing minister, Matthew Pennycook, has said if councils fail to deliver enough houses the government could intervene.

"The government can take a local plan off a local authority that is resisting putting one in place, and we are absolutely willing to do it, if we have evidence that [they] are refusing to comply," he told the BBC.

The obstacles

The government said it had "inherited the worst housing crisis in living memory" and "all areas must play their part".

It has set out "a major planning overhaul… unblocking barriers to building, and setting out targets for councils to ramp up housebuilding, so new homes are built where they are most needed."

Most housing experts agree planning reform is necessary.

Yet analysts say it is not the only obstacle.

The construction industry has warned it is dealing with a chronic shortage of skilled workers.

The Home Builders Federation has cited aging workers and Brexit as some of the factors behind shortages.

The Construction Industry Training Board estimates the sector needs to attract the equivalent of 50,300 extra workers per year to meet the levels of work expected.

There are also concerns about the availability of basic building materials including bricks and timber.

The Construction Leadership Council has warned a shortage of these could hinder the government's ability to get near its target.

Finally, many housing experts doubt private housebuilders are capable of delivering enough new homes each year to reach the targets.

This is because private housebuilders have a commercial interest in not building so many new homes that their average price declines.

The Competition and Markets Authority concluded in February 2024 "private developers produce houses at a rate at which they can be sold without needing to reduce their prices".

A sharp decline in residential planning permissions in England in the year to June 2024 - hitting a new record low - was due to a collapse in applications from private builders, not a decline in the share of applications being approved by local authorities.

This collapse in applications probably reflected the impact of still-high mortgage interest rates and high house prices relative to average incomes, undermining the ability of people to afford newly built houses.

That's why some argue meeting the government's targets will also require a major increase in Whitehall grants to not-for-profit local housing associations, enabling them to build tens of thousands of new social and affordable homes, mainly to be rented out, in the coming years.

Interactive tool developed by Allison Shultes, Scott Jarvis and Steven Connor

About the data

Annual data on new homes for England comes from the government's "net additional dwellings" statistics.

These figures are estimates of changes in the total number of homes in each area, taking account of new build homes and existing building conversions, minus any demolitions.

The targets are the government's new "local housing need" calculations, released following a public consultation.

Planning statistics are taken from quarterly data and combine applications decided for "minor" housing developments (fewer than 10 homes) and "major" schemes (10 homes or more).

The planning data for England is at local authority level. Applications decided by special authorities, such as those in charge of national parks, are not included.

We have included the latest data on new housebuilding "completions" by local authority area for Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, but the 1.5 million homes target applies only in England.

BBC Verify logo

Rugby star Stuart Hogg sentenced for domestic abuse

PA Media A man with a stubbly beard and short hair heads into a court building wearing a zip up top and shirt and tiePA Media
Stuart Hogg admitted acting in an abusive manner towards his estranged wife

Former Scotland rugby union captain Stuart Hogg has been given a one-year community payback order after he admitted a domestic abuse charge against his estranged wife.

The 32-year-old was previously given a five-year non-harassment order and fined £600 after breaching bail conditions.

He had admitted shouting and swearing and acting in an abusive manner towards his wife Gillian.

Appearing at Selkirk Sheriff Court, he was given a payback order - meaning he will do supervised work in the community - and the non-harassment order was imposed again.

Getty Images A man in a rugby top stands next to a woman with blonde hair both smiling on a rugby pitch and holding a childGetty Images
A court heard Hogg regularly shouted and swore at his wife

Last year, Hogg, who plays for Montpellier, admitted a single charge which related to repeated abusive behaviour towards his now estranged wife.

Over a five-year period, up to August last year, he engaged in a course of conduct which caused her fear or alarm.

The court previously heard how he regularly shouted and swore at his wife while they lived in Hawick, as well as when they lived in Exeter when Hogg played for Exeter Chiefs.

The charge also involved Hogg monitoring his wife's movements through the Find My Phone app after they had split up in 2023, and him sending her sometimes hundreds of text messages in the space of a few hours.

Reuters A man with blond hair in a Scotland rugby top raises his fist in the air in celebrationReuters
Hogg remains among the leading try scorers for his country

The former Glasgow Warriors fullback amassed a century of senior caps for his country and was involved in three British and Irish Lions tours.

He remains one of Scotland's all-time leading try scorers and was awarded an MBE in the 2024 New Year honours list for services to rugby union.

Hogg came out of retirement last summer to sign a two-year contract with Montpellier.

Million year-old bubbles could solve ice age climate mystery

PNRA_IPEV Air and particles formed hundreds of thousands of years ago are trapped in the ice corePNRA_IPEV
Air and particles formed hundreds of thousands of years ago are trapped in the ice

What is probably the world's oldest ice, dating back 1.2m years ago, has been dug out from deep within Antarctica.

Working at temperatures of -35C, a team of scientists extracted a 2.8km-long cyclinder, or core, of ice - longer than eight Eiffel Towers end-to-end.

Suspended inside the ice are ancient air bubbles which scientists hope will help solve an enduring mystery about our planet's climate history.

The European scientists worked over four Antarctic summers, racing against seven nations to be first to reach the rock under the frozen continent.

PNRA_IPEV Scientists dug up the ancient ice and stored it inside frozen caves on the ice sheetPNRA_IPEV
Scientists dug up the ancient ice and stored it inside frozen caves on the ice sheet

Their work could help unravel one of the major mysteries in our planet's climate history - what happened 900,000-1.2 million years ago when glacial cycles were disrupted and some researchers say our ancestors came close to extinction.

"It's an amazing achievement," says Prof Carlo Barbante at Ca' Foscari University of Venice who co-ordinated the research.

"You have in your hands a piece of ice that is a million years old. Sometimes you see ash layers coming from volcanic eruptions. You see the tiny bubbles inside, some bubbles of air that our ancestors breathed a million years ago," he says.

The team was led by the Italian Institute of Polar Sciences and included 10 European nations.

PNRA_IPEV The international team worked for weeks in -35C temperatures to drill the icePNRA_IPEV
The international team worked for weeks in -35C temperatures to drill the ice

It had to transport the drilling equipment, laboratories and camp 40km by snow mobiles from the nearest research base.

The drilling site, called Little Dome C, is on the Antarctic plateau on the east of the continent, at almost 3000m elevation.

Ice cores are a vital to scientists' understanding of how our climate is changing.

They trap bubbles of air and particles that reveal levels of greenhouse gas emissions and temperature variation that help scientists plot how climatic conditions have altered over time.

Data from other ice cores, including one called Epica, helped scientists conclude that the current rise in temperature linked to greenhouse gas emissions is caused by humans burning fossil fuels.

PNRA_IPEV The ice core is cut into 1m pieces and will eventually be divided among scientific institutions for analysisPNRA_IPEV
The ice core is cut into 1m pieces and will eventually be divided among scientific institutions for analysis

But scientists wanted to go further back in time.

Now with this project Beyond Epica: Oldest Ice they have gained potentially another 400,000 years of history.

"There is a lot of the past in our future. We look at the past to understand better how the climate works and how can we project it into the future," says Prof Barbante.

The team had a "nail-biting last few days" as they were able to drill even deeper than anticipated from radar data, says Dr Robert Mulvaney, an ice core scientist at British Antarctic Survey.

A map showing the location of the drilling site about 40km from the Italian-French research station Concordia
The drilling took place about 40km from the Italian-French research station Concordia

The core was slowly pulled from the ice sheet using a drill machinery and scientists carefully carefully cleaned the ice using cloths.

It is now being cut into one metre pieces for transportation at -50C from Antarctica by boat.

The pieces will eventually reach the freezers of numerous European institutions, including the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, where scientists will begin their analysis.

Experts want to understand what happened in a period 900,000 to 1.2 million years ago called the Mid-Pleistocene Transition.

At this time, the length of the cycle between cold glacial and warm interglacials switched from being 41,000 years to 100,000 years. But scientists have never understood why.

This is the same period when, according to some theories, the ancestors of present-day humans almost died out, perhaps dropping to around just 1000 individuals.

Scientists do not know if there is a link between this near-extinction and the climate, explains Prof Barbante, but it demonstrates it is an unusual period that it is important to better understand.

"What they will find is anybody's guess but it will undoubtedly enlarge our window on our planet's past," Professor Joeri Rogelj from Imperial College in London, who was not involved in the project, told BBC News.

Follow Georgina on BlueSky.

Russell Brand caught speeding at 95mph on M4

Reuters A head-and-shoulders photo of Russell Brand wearing a grey blazer and looking slightly past the camera.Reuters
Russell Brand is currently under investigation over allegations of sex crimes against women

Actor and comedian Russell Brand has pleaded guilty to speeding.

The 49-year-old was caught driving his Mini at 95mph on the M4 near Slough on 16 June 2024.

He also drove the car at 37mph in a 30mph zone in Shiplake, near his Oxfordshire home, on 23 March, High Wycombe Magistrates' Court heard.

The former Radio 2 presenter was fined £3,457 and handed eight points on his licence.

Brand, who did not attend the short hearing, was given three penalty points for the 37mph breach and five for the other.

He is currently under investigation by police over allegations of sex crimes made against him by multiple women.

An evidence file has been passed to the Crown Prosecution Service to decide if he should face charges.

It came after a joint investigation by The Sunday Times, The Times, and Channel 4 Dispatches revealed last year that four women had accused him of sexual assaults between 2006 and 2013.

Brand denies the allegations and previously said all his sexual relationships were "absolutely always consensual".

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

Fresh weather warnings for ice across UK

PA Media A 4x4 makes its way through a snow-covered road in Scotton, Harrogate, North YorkshirePA Media
A 4x4 makes its way through a snow covered road in Harrogate, North Yorkshire

Commuters are being warned of icy roads and travel disruption, as temperatures plummeted again overnight across the UK.

Fresh weather warnings have been issued, with snow, ice and fog forecast across southern England, Wales, Northern Ireland and northern Scotland on Thursday.

It will be mainly dry elsewhere with winter sunshine, but temperatures could fall again to as low as -16C on Thursday night.

The cold snap has already brought heavy snowfall to some areas, and dozens of flood alerts and warnings are in place due to either heavy rain or melting snow.

On Wednesday the lowest temperature recorded was -8.4C (16F) in Shap, Cumbria, according to the Met Office.

It comes as an amber cold health alert remains in place for all of England until Sunday, meaning the forecast weather is expected to have significant impacts across health - including a rise in deaths.

The Hills/BBC Weather Watcher A sheep in Huddersfield in snow The Hills/BBC Weather Watcher
A sheep walks in snow in Huddersfield

The Met Office says travel disruption to road and rail services is likely on Thursday in areas covered by warnings, as well potential for accidents in icy places.

There are five warnings in place:

  • A yellow warning for snow and ice is in place for northern Scotland until midnight on Thursday
  • A yellow warning for ice has been issued until 10:30 across southern England and south-east Wales
  • Two yellow warnings for snow and ice are in force until 11:00 GMT - one across western Wales and north-west England, and south-west England; and another for Northern Ireland
  • A yellow warning for fog until 09:00 in Northern Ireland
Sue B/BBC Weather Watchers A snow sculpture in a garden in LeedsSue B/BBC Weather Watchers
A teenager made a snow sculpture of Venus in her garden in Leeds

On Wednesday snow caused some roads to close and motorists to be stationary for "long periods of time" in Devon and Cornwall, according to authorities there.

Gritters working into Thursday morning have been fitted with ploughs to clear routes in the area.

Car insurer RAC said it has seen the highest levels of demand for rescues in a three-day period since December 2022.

"Cold conditions will last until at least the weekend, so we urge drivers to remain vigilant of the risks posed by ice and, in some locations, snow," said RAC breakdown spokeswoman Alice Simpson.

National Rail have also advised passengers to check before they travel, as ice and snow can mean speed restrictions and line closures.

On Wednesday evening, poor weather was affecting Northern and Great Western Railway.

Buses are also replacing trains between Llandudno Junction and Blaenau Ffestiniog until Monday.

Reuters An car covered in snow in Buxton Reuters
A car covered in snow on a road in Buxton, Derbyshire

The wintry conditions have caused significant disruption across the UK since snow swept many parts of the country at the weekend.

Hundreds of schools were closed in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland, including schools in Yorkshire, Merseyside, the Midlands and Aberdeenshire.

The country has also been hit by widespread flooding in recent days. Currently there are 68 flood warnings - meaning flooding is expected - in England and three in Wales.

The weather is expected to be less cold over the weekend.

特朗普“第一哥们”干涉德国大选 欧盟选择避免与马斯克发生冲突


2025-01-09T13:15:27.028Z
马斯克德国时间周四晚间将与德国极右翼选项党党首韦德尔在社交平台X上举行对谈。

(德国之声中文网)欧盟委员会数字问题发言人托马斯·雷格尼尔(Thomas Regnier)强调,无论是在欧盟的线上还是线下,马斯克都可以表达自己的政治观点。即使与选项党(AfD)领导人韦德尔举行对谈也不违反欧盟《数字服务法案》(DSA) 。雷格尼尔解释道:“DSA中没有任何条款禁止此类直播。”

欧盟的这项法案要求大型网络平台比以前更快地删除虚假信息和“非法内容”,例如美化恐怖主义或描述性暴力的内容。成员国的法律具有决定性作用——例如,在德国传播纳粹宣传是被禁止的。

此外,欧盟对线上的选战宣传活动也做出指导规范,德国联邦政府也参考了这些指导方针。因此,如果能证明X系统地偏袒德国选项党,那么这就属于违规做法。不过,雷格尼尔承认,核实这一点需要花费时间。

“我们必须醒悟过来。”法国外交部长巴罗周三(8日)在接受电视采访时敦促道。他呼吁欧盟委员会“坚定地”执行其规则。

不激化同马斯克的争论是一项政策

目前生病仍在休养中的欧盟委员会主席冯德莱恩和欧盟负责数字政策的专员维克库宁(Henna Virkkunen)都尚未对此事发表评论。冯德莱恩的发言人为委员会主席保持沉默辩护称:“不去激化这场争论是一项政治决定。”

自去年11月特朗普当选以来,欧盟一直在努力避免冲突。这也可能影响到被特朗普任命为特别顾问的马斯克。理论上欧盟委员会可以向X处以高达数十亿欧元的罚金惹恼马斯克。

去年以来,布鲁塞尔一直在抱怨马斯克的平台X存在多项违规行为。 X通过使用标注蓝钩或者白钩欺骗用户,让用户相信这些账号是真实的和经过验证的。然而,实际上每个付费客户都会获得一个蓝钩或者白钩“认证”。 X上的广告发布者信息通常也不透明。

欧洲监管中心 (CERRE) 数字研究项目学术主任德·斯特里尔 (Alexandre de Streel) 表示:“毫无疑问,人们不愿意正面攻击特朗普和马斯克,因为害怕对方有可能做出的反应。”

还有其它公司收益

其他受到欧盟调查的美国公司可能会从这种克制中受益。布鲁塞尔多位消息人士称,委员会已推迟就针对iPhone制造商苹果的竞争罚款作出决定。

布鲁塞尔也正在对Facebook母公司Meta进行诉讼。Facebook首席执行官扎克伯格周二宣布,将停止美国在Facebook和Instagram上进行事实核查。该公司表示,不会在欧盟地区迅速采取同样的做法,但从长远来看,并不排除这种可能性。

欧洲监管中心数字研究项目学术主任德·斯特里尔表示,欧盟委员会对来自中国的社交媒体采取了更为严厉的行动。布鲁塞尔方面正在调查中国字节跳动公司旗下的视频平台Tiktok罗马尼亚总统竞选活动的干涉。鉴于可能存在的不平衡,德·斯特里尔警告说,委员会不应该“完全失去自己的信誉”。

(法新社)

© 2025年德国之声版权声明:本文所有内容受到著作权法保护,如无德国之声特别授权,不得擅自使用。任何不当行为都将导致追偿,并受到刑事追究。

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