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How I fell for jailed amputee surgeon's sepsis lie

Instagram/Bionicsurgeon Neil Hopper is sitting in a chair wearing blue scrubs and glasses with his prosthetic limbs on show. The prosthetic limbs have a Welsh dragon pattern and are white, red and green. He is smiling at the camera. Instagram/Bionicsurgeon
Neil Hopper told the world his legs were amputated after he got sepsis - but he was not telling the truth

When I interviewed surgeon Neil Hopper in 2023 for BBC News, I believed I was speaking to a man who had been humbled by the life-changing experience of losing his legs to sepsis.

Little did I know, Hopper had a sexual interest in amputation and had frozen his own legs so they would be removed.

Hopper, a consultant vascular surgeon who had carried out hundreds of amputation operations, told me he had come down with a mystery illness on a family camping trip which had led to sepsis and below-knee amputations of both his legs.

In reality, he had used ice and dry ice to freeze his own legs, causing damage that meant they eventually had to be amputated in hospital.

Watching him being jailed on Thursday it was hard to reconcile the reflective man I had interviewed in my capacity as a journalist, with the often graphic details heard in court.

When I interviewed him, I had not doubted the version of events he had told me for one moment. He was a respected surgeon, and why would anyone lie about such a thing?

Warning: Contains information some readers may find upsetting

Instagram/Bionicsurgeon Neil Hopper is sitting on the side of a hospital bed wearing a grey T-shirt, black shorts and glasses. He is not wearing prosthetic limbs so his bilateral leg amputations are on show. He is smiling at the camera.  Instagram/Bionicsurgeon
Neil Hopper returned to work six months after his leg amputations

Back in 2023 Hopper, who grew up in Aberystwyth and Swansea and was living in Truro, Cornwall, appeared almost grateful for the opportunity his life-changing surgery had given him to reassess his life.

"You have to make a lot of sacrifices to be a surgeon and family time is one of them," the father-of-two told me. "I know that was a mistake."

He seemed relaxed, at peace, like a man who had gone through something horrific but had come out the other side changed for the better.

He said losing his legs had led him to "audit" his life and try new things, including applying to become Nasa's first disabled astronaut.

He told me he passed the medical and made it to the final 27 applicants but the space agency eventually selected Paralympic sprinter John McFall.

"My life is more interesting because of what's happened to me," he insisted.

He also praised his wife.

"This didn't happen to me, it happened to us," he said.

Instagram/Bionicsurgeon A shot of Neil Hopper's prosthetic legs shot from behind. They have a blue and grey pattern and he is wearing black and white trainers. Instagram/Bionicsurgeon
Neil Hopper spent part of his insurance claim on prosthetic limbs

The truth behind his amputations was finally laid bare in court on Thursday.

Having his legs amputated was a long-standing ambition for Hopper, the court was told. He had both an obsession and a sexual interest in removing parts of his own body.

The court heard how he had suffered body dysphoria since childhood and his feet were an "unwelcome extra" and a "persisting never-ending discomfort".

For some time, Hopper had been paying to access videos of body mutilation.

The court heard he had bought three videos from the website for £10 and £35, respectively, showing men willingly having their genitals removed.

He also exchanged about 1,500 messages with Marius Gustavson, an amputee who ran the website.

Some of the messages were Hopper seeking advice from Gustavson about how he had brought about his own lower leg amputation.

In one message Hopper told Gustavson: "I've dreamt of this for 20 years."

In another he wrote: "It's going to be awesome being a double amputee."

After his amputations he sent him another message: "It feels so cool. No feet!"

Devon and Cornwall Police A custody picture of Neil Hopper. He has grey hair and is looking into the camera with a blank expression.Devon and Cornwall Police
Hopper has been jailed for two years and eight months for insurance fraud and possessing extreme pornography

Hopper returned to work for the Royal Cornwall Hospitals NHS Trust just six months after his amputations.

He went on to make fraudulent claims from two insurance firms, lying that the injuries to his legs were the result of sepsis and not self-inflicted.

During this time he messaged a friend to say he felt he should "milk this as much as possible".

The money - totalling more than £466,000 - was quickly spent on luxury items including home improvements, a campervan and a hot tub.

Hopper's unique insight as an amputee who carried out amputation operations, as well as his bid to go into space garnered plenty of media attention.

"He enjoyed the attention that this generated," the court was told.

Elizabeth Cook/PA Wire Court artist sketch of surgeon Neil Hopper. He is sitting and has one hand to his face and is holiday his glasses with his other hand. Elizabeth Cook/PA Wire
A court artist's sketch of Hopper, who was arrested in March 2023 and has been suspended from the medical register since December 2023

It was the police investigation into Gustavson that would be Hopper's undoing.

Gustavson was jailed for life in 2024 for leading an extreme body modification ring.

Hopper was arrested in March 2023 and has been suspended from the medical register since December 2023.

On Thursday he was jailed for two years and eight months for insurance fraud and possessing extreme pornography. The court heard Hopper did not regret the operations, but "bitterly regrets" the "dishonesty" about their cause.

Elizabeth Cook/PA Wire Court artist sketch of surgeon Neil Hopper. He is standing next to a female member of staff and looking down.  Elizabeth Cook/PA Wire
The court heard that Hopper did not regret the operations but "bitterly regrets" the "dishonesty" about their cause

When news of the charges against Hopper broke in July, I was shocked.

Then I was confused - what exactly was he accused of doing? And why would someone inflict those injuries on themself?

Then I was concerned. Was I wrong to have taken what he told me at face value?

Fact-checking is an essential part of journalism, but on the face of it this did not appear to be a difficult story to confirm.

I was communicating with Hopper through his place of work, his work as a surgeon was well-documented, and his bilateral amputations were plain to see.

In court Hopper's case was described as "very unique", a "saga" and "difficult to comprehend".

He had managed to pull the wool over the eyes of medics, two insurance companies, and those who knew him - who expressed shock in character references read to the court.

Remembering my conversation with Hopper while watching his sentencing on Thursday, it was clear that as a journalist you never quite know where a story will take you.

The sunscreen scandal shocking Australia

Marianna Massey/Getty Images Two women wipe sunscreen on the backs of two men on a beach. The men are wearing swimming shorts while the women are in shorts ad in one case a bikini top and the other a sleeveless white topMarianna Massey/Getty Images
Sunscreens are at the heart of a national scandal in Australia

Like many Australians, Rach grew up "terrified of the sun" in a country that has the unenviable title of skin cancer capital of the world.

Her childhood was characterised by the infamous "no hat, no play" rule that is commonplace in Australian schools, 90s advertisements that warned the sun would give you cancer, and sunscreen tubes that stood guard at every door in her home.

It made the now 34-year-old the kind of person who religiously applies sunscreen multiple times a day and rarely leaves the house without a hat.

So she was shocked when doctors found a skin cancer on her nose during a check last November, something they said was abnormal given her age and ray-dodging regime.

Though technically classified as a "low grade" skin cancer – a basel cell carcinoma – it had to be surgically removed, leaving the Newcastle mum with a scar just below her eye.

"I was just confused, and I was a little bit angry because I was like, 'Are you kidding me?'" Rach – who asked that her surname not be used – told the BBC. "I thought I'd done all the right stuff and it still happened to me."

That rage grew when she learned the sunscreen she had been using for years was unreliable and, according to some tests, offered next to no sun protection at all.

ABC News/Billy Cooper A purple and blue tube of sunscreen stands on a counter, with a range of other sunscreens blurred in the backgroundABC News/Billy Cooper
This Ultra Violette product is at the centre of the sunscreen controversy

Independent analysis by a trusted consumer advocacy group has found that several of Australia's most popular, and expensive, sunscreens are not providing the protection they claim to, kicking off a national scandal.

There has been a massive backlash from customers, a probe launched by the country's medical watchdog, multiple products pulled from shelves, and questions raised about the regulation of sunscreen around the globe.

"It's definitely not an issue isolated to Australia," cosmetic chemist Michelle Wong told the BBC.

The reckoning

Australians have a complicated relationship with the sun: they love it, but they also fear it.

Effective public health messaging – which has drilled "Slip, Slop, Slap" into their heads – competes with a beauty culture which often idolises bronzed skin.

The country has the highest incidence of skin cancers in the world and it is estimated that two out of three Australians will have at least one cut out in their lifetime.

So when Choice Australia released its damning report in June, it immediately made waves. The group had tested 20 sunscreens in an independent accredited Australian lab, finding 16 did not meet the SPF, or skin protection factor, rating listed on the packet.

Ultra Violette's Lean Screen SPF 50+ Mattifying Zinc Skinscreen, a facial product that Rach says she used exclusively, was the "most significant failure" identified. It returned a result of SPF 4, something that shocked Choice so much it commissioned a second test that produced a similar reading.

Other products that did not meet their SPF claims included those from Neutrogena, Banana Boat, Bondi Sands and the Cancer Council - but they all rejected Choice's findings and said their own independent testing showed their sunscreens worked as advertised.

Getty Images A young cricket player, her red hair braided over her shoulder, rubbing in sunscreenGetty Images
For decades Australians have been urged to slip on a shirt, slop on sunscreen and slap on a hat

The uproar was immediate for the brands named in the report, and also prompted a swift response from the Therapeutic Goods Association (TGA), which said it would investigate the findings and "take regulatory action as required".

Ultra Violette bit back, saying they were "confident that Lean Screen is safe and effective" and detailing extensive testing of the product – which has been sold in almost 30 countries, including the UK, and retails for upwards of A$50 (£24, $33).

But less than two months later, it announced that Lean Screen would be recalled after it returned inconsistent results across eight different sets of lab testing.

"We are deeply sorry that one of our products has fallen short of the standards we pride ourselves on and that you have come to expect of us," read a statement published to the brand's Instagram account.

It added that it has "since ended the relationship with the initial testing lab".

In the past fortnight, other brands have "paused" the sale of at least four more products, none of which were included in the Choice report.

Rach knows there is no way to prove that there is a link between her diagnosis and the brand of sunscreen she relied on. She says she is not alleging there is such a connection.

But she said Ultra Violette's response to the scandal was like "a kick in the guts".

She felt that they took no real accountability for the pitfalls of their product, and was let down by their decision to continue selling it for two months despite doubts over its efficacy.

"I just had like the five stages of grief, you know?" she said. "I was angry, I was upset, I was almost in denial."

Getty Images Ava Chandler-Matthews and Rebecca Jefferd of Ultra VioletteGetty Images
Ava Chandler-Matthews and Rebecca Jefferd founded Ultra Violette in 2019

Like Rach, a horde of annoyed customers say the saga has shaken their faith in the industry.

"A refund isn't really going to reverse years of sun damage, is it?" one wrote in response to Ultra Violette's recall statement.

Choice has urged the TGA to conduct further investigations into the sunscreen market, and also urged any brands who had reason to question the SPF protection listed on their products to remove them from sale immediately.

"It is clear there is a serious issue in the Australian sunscreen industry that urgently needs to be addressed," said Rosie Thomas, the director of campaigns, in a statement to the BBC.

How did this happen?

While in Europe sunscreen is classed as a cosmetic, Australia regulates it as a therapeutic good – essentially a medicine – which means it is subject to some of the most robust sunscreen regulations in the world.

And that's something many of the brands caught up in this saga trade on. So, how did this happen?

An investigation by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation found that a single US-based laboratory had certified at least half of the products that had failed Choice's testing, and that this facility routinely recorded high test results.

It also found that several of the sunscreens pulled from shelves shared a similar base formula and linked them to a manufacturer in Western Australia.

The TGA says it does not usually speak about ongoing investigations because it does not want to compromise them, but that it is also looking into "reviewing existing SPF testing requirements" which can be "highly subjective".

"The TGA is also aware that it is common practice for different sunscreen products to share the same or similar base formulations," a spokesperson said in a statement to the BBC.

"Ultimately it is the sponsor's [seller's] responsibility to ensure that their medicine remains compliant with all applicable legislative requirements."

Consistent and comfortable sunscreens which offer high protection are very technical and difficult to make, says Dr Wong, founder of Lab Muffin Beauty Science.

Everyone's skin responds differently to the product, he adds, and it's one that is almost always being stress-tested – by sweat, water, or makeup.

It is very difficult to rate effectively for the same reasons. Historically, it has been done by spreading the sunscreen on 10 people at the same thickness, then timing how long it takes for their skin to start burning both with and without the product applied.

Getty Images A spectator uses an umbrella to shield herself from the sun as another applies sunscreen during the men's singles third round match between Luxembourg's Gilles Muller and Spain's Pablo Carreno Busta on day five of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on January 19, 2018.Getty Images
Effective and popular sunscreens are hard to get right, experts say

While there are clear guidelines as to what you are looking for, Dr Wong says there is still a lot of variability. That is down to skin texture or tone, or even the colour of the walls, and "different labs get different results".

But she says results are also quite easy to fake, pointing to a 2019 probe by US authorities into a sunscreen testing laboratory which resulted in the owner being jailed for fraud.

Many sunscreen brands from all over the world use the same manufacturers and testing labs - and so this issue is unlikely to be isolated to Australia, she adds.

"Until someone goes out and tests a whole bunch of sunscreens in other countries, we just don't know the extent of it."

She says the scandal is a reminder that regulations are only as good as they are enforced.

But while it has touched a nerve for many people who are at high risk for skin cancer simply by virtue of being Australian, Dr Wong said she felt the panic triggered by the investigation was blown out of proportion.

She points to the world's largest clinical trial of sunscreen, done in the 90s, which found that the daily use of an SPF 16 sunscreen dramatically dropped skin cancer rates.

"95% of the sunscreens tested [by Choice] have high enough SPF to more than half the incidence of skin cancer," Dr Wong said.

"Some of the SPF testing, I feel, has become a bit more of a marketing exercise than a real reflection of efficacy."

The most important thing you can do when choosing a sunscreen, she says, is actually wear enough of it – a full teaspoon at least for each part of your body, face included.

And ideally you should apply it about every two hours, especially if you have been sweating a lot or swimming.

Experts also advise that you combine the sunscreen with other safety methods, such as wearing protective clothing and seeking out shade.

Humble & sweet, but a lion - the story of the first female £1m player

Article: published on 6 September 2025

Olivia SmithImage source, Getty Images
  • Published

Olivia Smith has already made history.

The 21-year-old has a legacy before she steps out in front of Emirates Stadium's crowd for the first time on Saturday as the first £1m women's footballer.

Arsenal broke the world record to sign her from Liverpool in July and, although it has since been surpassed, she will forever be the women's game's first seven-figure player.

"Everything was leading to this. She was born for this," her former Penn State University head coach Erica Dambach told BBC Sport.

"Yes, it's happened young, but it hasn't happened without years of preparation to get into this environment.

"Sometimes when it happens to young players, it comes on quickly and maybe they've got six months to deal with the emotions and the media training. Liv has been experiencing this stuff since she was 15 years old."

It was at that age she made her debut for Canada - the youngest player to appear for Les Rogues - so the scrutiny and bubbling pressure that will come after signing for the European champions will not be an alien experience for Smith.

'She's still just Liv'

Olivia SmithImage source, Sporting CP
Image caption,

Smith, who only turned professional in 2023, joined Liverpool from Portuguese side Sporting a year ago for a club record fee of just over £200,000

Despite her meteoric rise, her former coaches say she has not changed.

When Liverpool were on the verge of breaking their transfer record - with Smith arriving on Merseyside to complete her medical in a £210,000 deal from Portuguese side Sporting - then-manager Matt Beard met his new prodigious signing in person for the first time over dinner.

"I like to get to know people as people rather than footballers, because I know the footballer that we signed, and we had a lot in common, it was surreal," Beard told BBC Sport.

"She's just a great kid, she's very down to earth. But we just hit it off really well. She's great, and the thing with Olivia is she just takes everything in her stride.

"She's a kid at heart. She's human and I think from my perspective I tried to allow everyone to be themselves and she settled in really quickly. That's just how her personality is."

The relationship that built between player and coach was deep and, even after both departed Liverpool, they stayed in touch. Smith called Beard to thank him after her new club Arsenal's pre-season game against Tottenham Hotspur.

This is a common trait of the Canadian. Smith texted Sporting's head of women's football, Margarida Batlle y Font, after her move to Arsenal and also visited AFC Toronto this summer to meet Marko Milanovic and Billy Wilson, two people who played an instrumental part in her development when they were all at North Toronto Nitros.

"The best thing about Olivia is she's still just Liv," Wilson told BBC Sport. "She's not changed at all. She's still got the exact same group of friends.

"She's just a kid who loves to love life, has a great outlook, loves her football, is always smiling.

"She's not changed a bit and I think that's the biggest testament to who she is. None of this has fazed her."

'Her dad is a bit like Serena and Venus' father'

Her parents have played a vital part in their daughter's impressive rise and have been there to support her along every step.

Sean Smith and Sulee Riquelme-Smith were also at that dinner table in Liverpool - along with the forward, Beard and Russ Fraser, Liverpool's former women's managing director - and that will hardly surprise anyone who has followed the player's career.

"The mum and dad have done an unbelievable job in preparing her for this," said Beard. "They've made a lot of sacrifices as a family.

"They have done a fantastic job raising her and preparing her for this moment as an athlete."

As a child, her passion was always football. Her parents encouraged her to follow her other interests, which have in turned helped her grow as a footballer.

"She played numerous sports such as hockey, and she did a martial arts discipline," said Beard.

"I just think that education alone, if you are looking at martial arts as a sport, it's more about discipline and it's not about the fighting side of it… that's obviously benefited her.

"Smith has - which I never, ever want to take out of players, and you saw it a few times [last season] - a frustration. And I think the top players are like that. So you don't want to take that out."

Batlle y Font also got to experience the big role that Sean played in his daughter's career on the day Smith signed for Sporting, her first move to Europe.

"Her dad is a figure a bit like the father of Venus and Serena Williams," said Sporting's head of women's football.

"He was that kind of mentor to her when she was young and still keeps being on her side. He was very proud of Olivia."

'How did we fool this girl to be here?'

Olivia SmithImage source, Martin Bazyl
Image caption,

Olivia Smith won the golden boot in her debut campaign with Toronto Nitros

In 2022 Smith was playing at North Toronto Nitros. She ripped League1 Ontario up.

By the time the semi-professional league came to an end, she had scored 18 goals in 11 games and it would be the last time playing club football in her home country.

That summer she moved south of the border, to Penn State University in Pennsylvania. Again, her time there was fleeting.

Despite arriving at Penn State with a serious cruciate ligament injury, sustained at the Under-20 World Cup, and a frail run of form, the calls from Europe arrived by the end of her freshman year.

"It was neat to watch her be able to be an 18-year-old because I don't think there's been a lot of times where she's been able to be her actual age," said former Penn State University head coach Dambach.

"Since leaving Penn State she has put herself out there and put herself in uncomfortable situations and I think through those she was able to really grow and develop."

And so, one year on from that season in Canada, she had left college and moved to Portugal to join Sporting, despite heavy interest in France and England.

Batlle y Font was instrumental in persuading Smith to move to the relatively obscure Portuguese league - and reaped the rewards.

"I won't say that our project is better than those clubs, obviously it's different," said the 30-year-old. "I think she understood that we really wanted her.

"I think that she chose us because she understood that she would have the same rights and same duties as other players, but she would not be one more player.

"Once she made the decision, we never felt that she was looking at us as a minor club, compared to the other clubs interested in her."

It did not take her long to make an impression in Portugal.

"She was 18 and she was playing against experienced players and she would make a bit of a fool of them.

"When she played we would look at each other and say, 'how did we fool this girl to be here? How lucky are we?'"

Again by the end of another fruitful season, she was packing her bags and Batlle y Font was receiving enquiries from multiple clubs in Europe.

"There were more clubs interested and, to be honest, with better offers than Liverpool, but not the kind of project that Olivia wanted," said Batlle Y Font. "Once again, this shows how very grounded Olivia is."

Her debut season in the WSL saw her score seven goals in 20 games for Liverpool, as well as being named the PFA young player of the year. When she arrived at Arsenal this summer, it was her third club in three years.

"I definitely think it's not comfortable, but you have to be comfortable being uncomfortable," said Smith, speaking to reporters in pre-season. "And it's been quite tough for me personally, not knowing what's going to come next.

"Like my first season, I never expected to leave after one season, especially last season, only having one season in what I think is the best league in the world and then coming here.

"So it's certainly not easy, especially with my family so far away, but it does make transitions easier."

Dealing with the price tag

Olivia SmithImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Olivia Smith's world record fee has since been eclipsed by Lizbeth Ovalle, who joined Orlando Pride from Tigres for £1.1m

This summer has shown the rapid growth of the women's game. Smith's world record transfer lasted 35 days, with Orlando Pride signing Lizbeth Ovalle for £1.1m from Tigres.

But Smith will always be the player who was the first to breach the seven-figure mark, like Trevor Francis in the men's game in 1979, and that comes with its own, unique pressure.

"It's definitely an honour, especially coming from Liverpool," said Arsenal's new forward.

"To come with, obviously, such a hefty price tag for such a young player like me, I think they see the potential that I have, and they see my mindset.

"I'm hungry, I'm driven, I want to learn, I want to grow, and I want to win things, ultimately.

"And I think that was a big piece. But with the money, it's not really a big deal for me."

For those who have worked with her, they believe this money will be justified with her performances on the pitch and that she will use the price tag as motivation.

"She just had everything at that age," said Beard. "For me, she's going to be the best player in the world without a shadow of a doubt."

Wilson added: "It's an amazing mentality and some players when they get there, they stay on that limit. She is always trying to overcome limits. It's hard to be consistent and she is consistent."

And for Arsenal, they should have the luxury that Penn State, Sporting and Liverpool were not able to have - more than a year with Smith in their side.

"We knew that she would be [at Sporting] a short time and now Arsenal know that they can have her for quite a while because she's reached the top of European football," said Batlle y Font.

"I have no doubt that even though she's just got to the Champions League winners, she will keep pushing.

"She's very humble, she's quiet and she's a sweet girl. On the pitch, she's a lion."

Ellen White, Jen Beattie and Ben Haines

Ben Haines, Ellen White and Jen Beattie are back for another season of the Women's Football Weekly podcast. New episodes drop every Tuesday on BBC Sounds, plus find interviews and extra content from the Women's Super League and beyond on the Women's Football Weekly feed

Russia targets WhatsApp and pushes new 'super-app' as internet blackouts grow

NATALIA KOLESNIKOVA/AFP via Getty Images Photograph showing a woman looking at her phone as she walks across a bridge in central Moscow - with the Russian Foreign Ministry building in the backgroundNATALIA KOLESNIKOVA/AFP via Getty Images
For many Russians, going online has become harder as censorship has tightened access to popular apps

Marina, a 45-year-old freelance copywriter, has relied on WhatsApp for her work and personal life for years.

But one day last month that abruptly changed when a call to a colleague did not go through properly. They tried Telegram - another messaging app popular in Russia - but that did not work either.

She was one of millions of Russians facing new restrictions imposed in mid-August by Russia's media regulator, Roskomnadzor, on calls made through the two platforms - the country's most popular apps.

The timing coincides with the rollout of a new "national messenger" app known as Max and created by a Russian firm closely controlled by the Kremlin.

Monthly user numbers of WhatsApp and Telegram are estimated to be 97 and 90 million respectively — in a country of 143 million people.

From parents' chats to tenants' groups, much of daily life runs through them. WhatsApp - whose owner, Meta, is designated an extremist organisation in Russia - is especially popular with older people because of how easy it is to register and use.

AFP via Getty Images Photograph showing the mobile messaging and call service Telegram logo and US instant messaging software WhatsApp logo on a smartphone screen.AFP via Getty Images
For years, WhatsApp and Telegram have been the most popular ways for Russians to stay connected

In some parts of Russia, particularly in remote and sparsely connected places in the Far East, WhatsApp is much more than chatting with friends and colleagues. Mobile browsing is sometimes painfully slow, so people use the app to coordinate local matters, order taxis, buy alcohol, and share news.

Both apps offer end-to-end encryption which means that no third party, not even those who own them, are able to read messages or listen to calls.

Officials say the apps refused to store Russian users' data in the country, as required by law, and they have claimed scammers exploit messaging apps. Yet Central Bank figures show most scams still happen over regular mobile networks.

Telecom experts and many Russians see the crackdown as the government trying to keep an eye on who people talk to and potentially what they say.

"The authorities don't want us, ordinary people, to maintain any kind of relationships, connections, friendships or mutual support. They want everyone to sit quietly in their own corner," says Marina who lives in Tula, a city 180km (110 miles) south of Moscow.

She asked us to change her name, worrying that speaking to foreign media can be dangerous.

A state-approved super-app

The new Max app is being aggressively promoted by pop stars and bloggers, and since 1 September all devices sold in Russia must have Max pre-installed.

It was launched by VK, which owns the country's largest social network of the same name. The Facebook-like platform is controlled by oil-and-gas giant Gazprom and one of Vladimir Putin's closest confidantes, billionaire Yuri Kovalchuk.

Max is set to become a super-app, bringing together multiple functions, including government digital services and banking.

The model mirrors China's WeChat - central to daily life but also a tool of censorship and surveillance.

Max's privacy policy states it can pass information to third parties and government bodies, potentially giving access to the security services or making user data vulnerable to leaks.

In Russia, where people are prosecuted for critical comments or private messages, and a black market of personal data feeds an epidemic of scam calls, this is a real concern.

Although many Russians are worried about the new restrictions on WhatsApp and Telegram, and by the introduction of Max, the state already has vast means to spy on its citizens.

Getty Images Photograph of a smartphone displaying the logo of the Russian messaging app Max on its screen, with the WhatsApp logo visible in the background.Getty Images
Russians don't want to lose their favourite messaging apps, but the Kremlin is forcing them to install Max.

By law, you can only buy a sim card with your national ID, and the security services have access to telecom operators' infrastructure. This means they can find out who you call as well as your whereabouts.

From this month it is now illegal to share your sim card with anyone other than a close relative.

But Max can potentially allow the authorities to read your messages as well - and avoiding the app is getting harder.

Mikhail Svetlov/Getty Images Photograph showing Russian President Vladimir Putin holding an iPhone, with Russian officials standing behind him in a formal setting.Mikhail Svetlov/Getty Images
Vladimir Putin has spent more than a decade pushing to bring the internet under government control

Schools are now obliged to move parent chats to the app.

In Rostov region, which borders Ukraine, Max is being adopted as an alert system; in St Petersburg, it is being tied to emergency services.

Despite the push, Max remains far behind its rivals - this week it claimed to have 30 million users.

The Kremlin has long been uneasy of the freedoms offered to people by the internet, which Vladimir Putin once called a CIA project.

The first legislative restrictions came in 2012, soon after mass opposition protests, officially to protect children from suicide-related content.

Ten years later, when Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the government blocked popular social media sites, such as Facebook, Instagram and X, and most independent media, leaving them accessible only through VPNs.

New restrictions keep coming: as of this month, Russians face fines for "deliberately searching" online for extremist materials - more than 5,000 resources from an ever-growing blacklist compiled by the ministry of justice. Examples include a book by opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who died in prison in 2024, and Ukrainian songs.

Another ban targets adverts on platforms linked to "extremist" organisations, in effect ending advertising on Instagram which many small businesses had relied on as a shopfront.

Ads for VPNs are also banned, and while using these apps is not illegal, it may now be treated as an aggravating factor in criminal cases.

State-induced digital detox

Apart from their problems with WhatsApp and Telegram, many Russians are now getting used to life without mobile internet altogether, as entire cities face regular cut-offs.

Since May, every Russian region has seen mobile internet go down.

Blackouts surged through the summer, with up to 77 regions hit by shutdowns simultaneously at the peak, according to the Na Svyazi (In Touch) project.

The authorities justify the measures by the need to protect people and infrastructure from attacks by Ukrainian drones - Kyiv's response to Russia's relentless and deadly bombardments of Ukrainian cities.

But some experts doubt that switching off mobile internet - which many Russians use instead of broadband - is an effective tool against long-distance drone attacks.

Local authorities, who were made responsible for countering drone attacks, have no other means to do it, explains telecom expert Mikhail Klimarev.

"There are no air defence systems, no army - everything's on the frontline," he says. "Their logic goes: we've switched off the internet and there were no drones, hence it works."

In Vladimir, 200km (125 miles) east of Moscow, two of the city's three districts have been offline for almost a month.

"It's impossible to check bus routes or timetables," says Konstantin, a resident who also asked to change his name. "The information boards at stops also show errors."

Taxi fares have risen as drivers cannot accept orders online.

State TV in Vladimir spun the shutdown as "digital detox", showing residents who said they now enjoyed more walking, reading and spending time with friends.

In Krasnoyarsk, a city of more than a million people in Siberia, mobile internet vanished citywide for three days in July and still works poorly.

Some officials rejected complaints, with one Krasnoyarsk bureaucrat suggesting remote workers who lost income should "go and work for the special military operation", as the war in Ukraine is known in Russia. She later apologised.

The government is now working on a scheme that will allow Russians to access only vital online services during shutdowns, such as banking, taxis, deliveries - and the Max messenger.

This is a dangerous step, warns Sarkis Darbinyan, lawyer and co-founder of digital rights group RKS Global.

"There's a possibility the authorities will use this measure for other goals apart from fighting drones," he tells the BBC.

He believes the Kremlin's current approach to the internet mirrors Beijing's.

"Unlike the Chinese, Russians have spent decades enjoying cheap, fast internet and foreign platforms," he says. "These services became deeply ingrained not only in people's daily lives but also in business processes."

For now those who are wary of installing Max on their devices can still find a way around it.

Marina from Tula says her mother, a school teacher, was instructed to download the messenger but claimed to her superiors that she didn't have a smartphone.

People can still call each other using regular mobile networks, although that is more expensive, especially when talking to someone abroad - and not secure.

There are other means available too, like using VPNs or alternative messaging apps, previously reserved for tech nerds and those handling sensitive information.

But as government control over the internet increases, fewer and fewer people will find ways to escape it - and that is assuming the internet is still available for them to try.

Additional reporting by Yaroslava Kiryukhina

Fire breaks out at BBC's former HQ Television Centre

London Fire Brigade Fire crews tackle fire on top of tall buildingLondon Fire Brigade

About 100 firefighters are tackling a blaze at the BBC's former headquarters, Television Centre, in west London.

London Fire Brigade said 15 engines were at the nine-storey building on Wood Lane, White City, after a fire broke out in the early hours of Saturday morning.

The building is now home to a restaurant and flats, as well as television studios. Authorities said an unspecified number of homes were affected and people had been evacuated.

It is not known what caused the fire or whether there have been any injuries.

London Fire Brigade said it was called out 03:08 BST, with crews drafted in from Hammersmith, North Kensington, Kensington and Chiswick.

Two large turntable ladders were being used to tackle the fire from a height.

"The Brigade is working alongside multi-agency partners, including the Metropolitan Police, to evacuate buildings in the area as a precaution," it said in a statement.

"A rest centre is being set up for residents who have been evacuated from their homes.

"Wood Lane is currently closed to traffic and people are advised to avoid the area as the incident will remain ongoing for some time."

香港吸毒人数持续下降 政务司长吁迈向“无毒城市”

香港政务司长陈国基说,过去几十年香港禁毒工作显著见效,吸毒人数较70年代末减少逾七成,并呼吁继续努力实现“无毒城市”的目标。

据港府新闻公报,陈国基星期五(9月5日)在粤港澳大湾区禁毒高峰会上致辞说,一直以来,港府都以多管齐下的策略应对毒品问题,不仅从源头堵截、强化执法和加强宣传教育入手,全面打击毒品危害,也为吸毒人士提供戒毒治疗与康复服务,协助他们重返社会、重拾健康人生。

他提到,过去几十年,香港禁毒工作取得明显成效,被呈报的吸毒人数较70年代末大幅减少逾七成,但绝不能松懈,要继续努力实现“无毒城市”的目标。

陈国基指出,毒品问题不断演变,必须与时并进。以近期在中国大陆、港澳及东南亚备受关注的新型毒品依托咪酯为例,港府已迅速修例将其列为毒品,依法严厉打击,并通过宣传教育提升公众警觉,同时加强监测和研究,及时应对新型毒品威胁。

他说,毒品问题是全球挑战,犯罪手法越来越复杂,跨境贩毒层出不穷,禁毒工作需要凝聚多方力量,香港特区政府将继续与中国大陆、澳门及其他地区执法机关保持紧密合作,交流情报并开展联合行动,共同打击毒品流通。

电影《731》英文名曝光 预售票房破2000万

截至星期六(9月6日)10时59分,中国抗战主题电影《731》预售总票房突破2000万元(人民币,约360万新元)。电影英文片名为“Evil Unbound”,直译为“罪行无界”。

据灯塔专业版官方微博消息,将于9月18日在中国上映的电影《731》星期四(9月4日)开启预售,一小时排片已超3万场,排片占比高达99.7%。

《731》星期五(5日)发布“勿忘”版预告。同日,影片预售突破千万元,并不断攀升。灯塔专业版实时数据显示, 截至星期六10时59分,《731》预售总票房突破2000万元。

电影《731》由赵林山执导,姜武、孙茜、冯文娟、温碧霞等主演,中共山东、吉林、黑龙江省委宣传部以及哈尔滨、青岛市委宣传部联合制作,长春电影集团等联合出品。

据报道,影片将镜头对准二战期间侵华日军“731部队”在中国东北地区实施的细菌实验,以平民的视角揭开上千名中国及国际遇难者被作为活体实验材料的黑暗历史。

中国近期推出多部抗战相关影视作品,并在9月3日举行了纪念抗日战争暨世界反法西斯战争胜利80周年大阅兵。

此前,以1937年南京大屠杀为题材的电影《南京照相馆》7月25日起在中国公映,口碑和票房都创下亮眼成绩,累计票房本周四(4日)已超过29亿元,进入中国影史票房榜前25。

厦航班机机械故障起飞滑行中断 客舱传出尖叫声

中国厦门航空一趟内陆航班起飞滑行时,因机械故障而急刹中断起飞,客舱也传出旅客尖叫声。

据中国《新京报》报道,这趟厦航MF8468航班从贵阳飞往杭州,计划星期五(9月5日)晚上7时55分起飞,晚上10时30分抵达目的地。

执行这一航班的飞机在跑道上滑行,突然急刹后客舱传出旅客尖叫声,机场采取应急措施。《新京报》从厦门航空客服获悉,厦门航空从厦门调派飞机到贵阳,并顺利保障旅客到达目的地。

《新京报》也引述航旅纵横提供的信息报道,班机最终在星期六(6日)凌晨2时55分起飞,凌晨4时51分落地。

厦门航空星期六下午在微博发文证实,厦航MF8468航班星期五在地面出现机械故障,为确保飞行绝对安全,机组按程序果断处置,及时中断起飞。

厦航也说:“公司第一时间从厦门调派飞机前往贵阳,顺利保障旅客安全抵达目的地。厦航始终将旅客的安全放在首位,由此带来的航班延误,我们深表歉意,感谢大家的理解与支持。”

中国车企威马汽车拟复产

中国电动车制造商威马汽车星期六(9月6日)披露,在新股东深圳翔飞汽车销售有限公司接手部分资产后,公司计划恢复生产,并推出新车型。

威马汽车官方微博星期六发布的《致供应商白皮书》显示,公司计划9月在浙江温州基地恢复EX5和E5车型的量产,并在未来五年推出10余款新产品,适配全球市场多样化需求。

根据白皮书,新威马的复工复产得到了上海和温州两地政府的协调与支持,为企业营造了稳定有利的环境。

公司计划在2025年底保底生产1万辆EX5和E5车型,并于2026年实现年产10万辆的满产目标;远期目标是在2030年达到年产100万辆、营收1200亿元(人民币,下同,216亿新元)。温州市政府还在新投资方翔飞的融资方面提供了支持,并考虑为产线升级提供补贴。

过去几年,威马汽车面临资本市场低迷、原材料价格剧烈波动以及融资受阻等多重挑战。中国新能源车企也因竞争激烈而陷入长期价格战,市场趋于饱和。

威马成立于2015年,曾获百度支持,但因难以在资金密集的汽车行业实现盈利,于2023年启动重组。根据为筹备香港上市而提交的招股书,公司在冠病疫情期间业务受挫,三年累计亏损翻倍至82亿元,最终未能成功上市。

路透社下架习近平和普京谈器官移植长生不老视频

06/09/2025 - 10:08

路透社解释下架习近平和普京谈器官移植可长寿视频的原因,是中国国家电视台撤销了使用该视频的合法许可。

路透社9月5日宣布:中国国家电视台要求删除一段时长四分钟的视频并撤销使用该视频的合法许可后,路透社于周五撤回了该视频。这个视频中包含俄罗斯总统普京和中国国家主席习近平之间的对话,双方讨论了人类活到 150 岁的可能性。

这段录像是北京纪念二战结束 80 周年阅兵式上的公开麦流,获得了中国国家电视台中央电视台 (CCTV) 的许可。

这个视频显示,在登天安门城楼之前,普京通过翻译跟习近平谈到“器官移植”可让人长生不老这一在中国越来越敏感的话题,习近平则说有预测在本世纪可以活到150岁...。普习二人此番话受到广泛传播,引发对专制者迷恋“永生”的讨论。



赖清德:行政干预司法时代已过去

台湾在野民众党前主席柯文哲获准交保后,总统赖清德星期六(9月6日)在一场律师节庆祝大会上提出,行政干预司法的时代已经过去。

台湾总统府官网公布,赖清德上午出席全台律师联合会律师节庆祝大会,致词时形容律师是法治社会的基石。

赖清德说,几十年来台湾从专制走向民主获致许多成就,其中一项就是司法独立,必须持续深化法律教育,让民众了解不论是检察官侦办案件或法官审判案件,都本于专业独立自主,行政干预司法的时代已经过去。

赖清德承诺,未来政府将持续与律师界合作,深化法治教育,保障人权,让社会大众更尊重司法。也期待与律师公会继续完善相关制度,让在第一线为人民服务的律师有更宽广的空间,发挥专业与对社会的热情。目前社会关心包括强化打击经济犯罪、保护营业机密及打击诈骗等议题,政府将持续与律师界共同合作,一一面对解决,降低对社会的冲击。

台湾《联合报》报道,近来在野不分蓝白多次向赖清德喊话,认为应释放被政治收押的柯文哲及国民党党工。

柯文哲涉嫌在台北市长任内贪污收贿、图利、洗钱,被羁押禁见一年后,星期五(5日)获台北地方法院裁定以新台币7000万元(302万新元)交保,但筹款不及。此外,在大罢免期间因涉伪造连署的国民党党工,目前仍有多人在羁押中。

国民党发言人邓凯勋针对赖清德的说法回应时说,希望赖清德不要仅停留在口号,而是能落实在实际行动上。

消息称易会满被查时家人也被带走 多名老同学已落马

中国媒体称,中国证券监督管理委员会前主席易会满被带走调查时,多名家人也被一并带走。他在浙江银行学校就读时的数名同学,已在过去一段时间里先后落马。

中共中央纪委国家监委网站星期六(9月6日)通报,十四届全国政协经济委员会副主任、中国证监会前主席易会满,涉嫌严重违纪违法,正接受纪律审查和监察调查。

《经济观察报》引述多名消息人士报道,易会满在上周五(8月29日)左右被带走调查,几名家人也被一并带走。熟悉易会满的人士称,易会满父亲曾在供销社系统工作,育有四子一女,易会满是其中年龄最小的。

路透社星期五(9月5日)引述消息人士称,针对易会满的调查内容包括他担任证监会主席期间,亲属是否获取不当利益。

易会满此番被查前几个月里,他在上世纪80年代就读浙江银行学校时的数名同学,已先期落马。

中国农业银行数据中心原党委委员、纪委书记林鹏,4月因涉嫌严重违纪违法被查。报道引述未具名的浙江金融界人士称,林鹏毕业于浙江银行学校,与易会满同为温州苍南人,他的职场升迁得力于易会满的举荐。

中国工商银行浙江分行原党委书记、行长沈荣勤,5月同样因涉嫌严重违纪违法被查。他与易会满同属浙江银行学校1984届校友。

在林鹏和沈荣勤之前,曾任中国农业银行原党委委员、副行长的楼文龙也在去年5月被查,在今年8月的法院一审宣判中,他被认定受贿金额逾8400万元人民币(1512万新元),因受贿罪被判无期徒刑。楼文龙1980年从浙江银行学校毕业后,曾留校担任城市金融教研室主任,易会满所学专业即为城市金融。

报道称,浙江银行学校一度有“浙江金融界的黄埔军校”之称,曾培养众多金融系统干部。熟悉易会满的人士说,易会满对母校一直有比较深的感情,曾到现场参加浙江银行学校校庆。

一名曾与易会满接触过的上市公司实际控制人透露,易会满赴任证监会主席前后,特意对部分同学表态,如果是同学自己的事情可以来找他,别人的事情则不要管。

公开资料显示,现年60岁的易会满曾在中国工商银行工作长达35年,2019年出任证监会主席,跻身正部级干部。

易会满去年2月突然被免去证监会主席职务,当时正值中国股市大幅下跌,沪深300指数触及五年新低,机构和散户投资者纷纷止损。中国官方未说明易会满被免职的原因。

他也是二十届中央委员,去年2月卸任证监会职务后,同年6月转到全国政治协商会议退居二线,担任十四届全国政协委员、经济委员会驻会副主任。据人民政协网报道,今年6月17日,易会满还曾出席一场全国政协举办的座谈会。

加澳军舰驶入台海 中国官媒:解放军全程跟踪

加拿大与澳大利亚各一艘军舰星期六(9月6日)驶入台湾海峡,中国官媒报道,解放军全程跟监警戒。

据加拿大CTV报道,军舰自动识别系统应答器资料显示,加拿大“魁北克市”号(Ville de Québec)护卫舰和澳大利亚“布里斯班”号(Brisbane)导弹驱逐舰当天过航台海。

《环球时报》引述消息人士报道,解放军对两艘军舰全程跟监警戒,情况尽在掌握。

目前,中国大陆、台湾、澳洲和加拿大军方均未证实或回应此事。

此前,魁北克市舰本周早些时候在菲律宾附近海域参加菲澳加联合巡航,引起中国方面的不满。解放军南部战区星期四(9月4日)在微博针对菲澳加联合巡航发文,批评菲律宾拉拢域外国家进行联合巡航,破坏地区和平稳定。

加拿大CTV报道称,魁北克市舰与菲律宾军方、澳洲和美国方面展开航行自由演习。

保金缺口2000万新台币 柯妻不排除抵押房筹钱

台湾民众党前主席柯文哲获裁定以7000万元新台币(下同,302万新元)交保,但筹款仍有2000万缺口,柯文哲妻子陈佩琪说,已在商借筹钱,也会请律师转告柯文哲,不论跟谁借钱,她会在最短时间内用房子抵押将钱还给对方。

柯文哲涉嫌在台北市长任内贪污收贿、图利、洗钱,遭羁押禁见一年后,星期五(5日)获台北地方法院裁定7000万元交保,但筹款不及。

律师团发布声明指,柯文哲需要再行深思,下星期一(8日)律见后,再决定是否办理交保。

陈佩琪星期六(9月6日)在脸书发声表示,她已将5000万汇入柯文哲的保释金专户,其中3000万是上次交保返还,2000万是卖新竹土地的钱,家中可动用的钱都已用罄,她已和柯文哲妹妹柯美兰及柯妈再商议,看能否于最短时间内凑到剩下的2000万。

陈佩琪称,“中华民国”律法很奇怪,现在证人也都问完了,还是要跟年初一样7000万交保,对于这种奇特司法要如何处置,从星期五下午起到下星期一,他们的律师会接续到北所和柯文哲律见沟通,“谢谢大家关心他、一直询问我他的想法,但我也无法回答,我们家属这一年都被当跟京华城案有关的证人或共犯,全部被禁见中”。

对于外传柯文哲不想欠人情,陈佩琪说,她也会请律师转告柯文哲,不论是跟谁借来的钱,她会在最短的时间内用房子抵押将钱还给人家。

对于柯文哲获裁定交保,民众党星期五通过声明表示,全体党公职充分理解柯文哲捍卫清白的决心与意志,也能充分体会柯文哲此时针对交保仍须思考的心情。民众党将协助柯文哲家人做好一切准备,待柯文哲下星期一指示律师同意后,立即向北院办妥交保,迎接柯文哲出来。

Rosenberg: What's behind Putin's uncompromising stance?

Foreign troops in Ukraine "considered a danger to Russia", Kremlin tells BBC

Sometimes it's not what's said that makes the biggest impression.

It's the reaction.

In the Russian Far East, Vladimir Putin delivered a warning to the West: don't even think about sending soldiers - and that includes peacekeepers - to Ukraine.

"If some troops appear there," the Russian president said, "especially now while the fighting's going on, we proceed from the premise that these will be legitimate targets for destruction."

Then the reaction.

The audience at the economic forum in Vladivostok burst into applause, with Russian officials and business leaders apparently welcoming the threat to "destroy" Western troops.

Observing the scene in the hall, I found the applause quite chilling.

And this came just a day after Kyiv's allies, the so-called Coalition of the Willing, had pledged a post-war "reassurance force" for Ukraine.

SPUTNIK/KREMLIN POOL/EPA/Shutterstock Russian President Vladimir Putin in Vladivostok. Photo: 4 September 2025SPUTNIK/KREMLIN POOL/EPA/Shutterstock
Putin said he would only meet Zelensky in Moscow - a proposal dismissed outside Russia as a non-starter

The audience applauded again when the Kremlin leader suggested that he would be prepared to meet Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky - but only on home soil.

"The best place for this is the Russian capital, in Hero City Moscow," said Putin.

Outside Russia, Putin's proposal has been dismissed as unserious, a complete non-starter. A case of political trolling.

But in many ways it encapsulates the Kremlin's current position on the war in Ukraine: "Yes, we want peace, but only on our terms. You reject our terms? No peace then."

This uncompromising stance is being fuelled by a combination of factors.

First, by the Kremlin's belief that, in Ukraine, Russian forces have the initiative on the battlefield.

Second, by diplomatic success. In China this week, Putin shook hands and shared smiles with a string of world leaders. The optics were all about demonstrating that Russia has powerful friends, such as China, India and North Korea.

And then there's America. Last month US President Donald Trump invited Putin to Alaska for a summit meeting. Back home pro-Kremlin commentators hailed the event as evidence that Western efforts to isolate Russia over the war in Ukraine had failed.

To convince the Kremlin to end the fighting Trump has previously set ultimatums and deadlines; he's threatened further sanctions if Russia won't make peace.

But Trump hasn't followed through on his threats - and that's another reason for Russia's confidence.

Putin publicly praises Trump's peace efforts. And yet he has rejected Trump's ceasefire proposals and shown no desire to make concessions over the war in Ukraine.

So where does that leave prospects for peace?

Putin said recently that he could see "light at the end of the tunnel".

It seems to me that right now Russia on the one hand, and Ukraine and Europe (and to some extent America) on the other are in different tunnels, on different roads, with different destinations.

Ukraine and Europe are focused on ending the fighting, shaping security guarantees for Kyiv and making sure that the Ukrainian army is strong enough post-war to prevent another invasion.

When Putin talks about "light at the end of the tunnel", I believe he imagines a path that leads to a Russian victory in Ukraine, and more widely, to the construction of a new global order that benefits Russia.

In terms of peace, it's hard to see where and when these two very different highways will converge.

Man dies after suspected shark attack in Sydney

Getty Images Signs warning swimmers and saying "swimming prohibited beach closed" and "shark sighted" on a beach in the Sydney area, Australia. Getty Images
Signs warning swimmers and saying "shark sighted" on a beach in the Sydney area

A man has died on a Sydney beach after being bitten by a suspected "large shark", Australia's New South Wales police have said.

In a statement, the police said emergency services pulled the man out of the morning surf onto the shore at Long Reef Beach - but he "died at the scene".

"Two sections of a surfboard have been recovered and taken for expert examination," the statement read.

Saturday's incident has resulted in a string of closures in the popular area known as the Northern Beaches.

The state police said the emergency services acted after receiving reports shortly after 10:00am local time on Saturday (00:00 GMT) that "a man had suffered critical injuries".

The victim's identity was yet to be confirmed.

Local police officers and experts would work together to "determine the species of shark involved".

The last deadly shark attack in the Sydney area in 2022, when Simon Nellist - a British diving instructor - was mauled by a great white shark.

Prior to that, there had not been a fatal attack since 1963.

Australia typically records about 20 shark attacks each year, with most in New South Wales and Western Australia.

Historically, dying from a shark bite is uncommon. In over a century of records, Australia's shark attack mortality rate is 0.9 - less than one person per year.

中国零售业景气指数升至今年1月以来新高

中国零售业景气指数在9月升至今年1月以来的新高。

中国商业联合会星期六(9月6日)公布,中国零售业景气指数(CRPI)从8月份的50.1,升至9月份的为50.6,创近八个月新高。今年1月份的指数为51.1。

从行业分类来看,商品经营类指数为50.6,上升0.9;租赁经营类指数为51.4%,下降0.7;电商经营类指数为50.2,上升0.4。

央视新闻报道,分析表明,随着中国各地以旧换新补贴政策调整更新,以及开学季的来临,商品消费需求继续回升,零售企业积极备货,盈利信心显著增强,行业发展趋势明显向好。

西安警方通报“饮料机出现老鼠”:男子故意投放已刑拘

中国一家知名连锁餐饮品牌被指“饮料机上出现老鼠”,陕西西安警方调查后通报,是一名男子故意放置,已将他刑事拘留。

西安市公安局经开分局星期五(9月5日)晚在官微发布警情通报称,经开分局辖区某餐饮店星期三(3日)报警称,店内饮料机上发现老鼠,怀疑是人为投放。

警方调查发现,8月31日12时许,25岁王姓男子将一只死老鼠故意放置于上述餐饮店饮料机上,导致公众对该店食品卫生的严重怀疑和对有关食品安全的担忧,造成不良社会影响。

王姓男子涉嫌寻衅滋事罪已被警方刑事拘留,案件正在进一步侦办。

综合极目新闻和《新京报》报道,有网民称,在魏家凉皮西安市明丰伯马都店就餐时,在可乐机上发现一只老鼠,“发现老鼠就这么水灵灵地喝可乐”,“已经找经理退款。”

涉事门店工作人员回应称,已排查所有监控,“消杀人员来查了所有的轨迹,我们店里是根本没有一只老鼠的,连老鼠的活动轨迹都没有。”

工作人员还称,门店夜间的监控只要拍到像苍蝇、小飞虫等活物,就会发出警报。

魏家凉皮品牌相关负责人星期四(9月4日)回应说,确有此事,事发时间为8月31日中午,“门店已经报警了,警方已经立案调查。我们正在关注相关的警情通报。”

公开信息显示,魏家凉皮是陕西魏家餐饮旗下品牌,以凉皮为主打产品。目前在中国全国拥有门店约400家。

DW事实核查:如何识破虚假名人名言?

Uta Steinwehr
2025-09-06T06:13:05.267Z
“月亮比太阳更有用”这句话同时被虚假地挂到两位议员头上,左图是博伯特,右边是奥卡西奥-科尔特斯。

(德国之声中文网)“欧洲正在被摧毁。这是对乌克兰提供无意义援助的后果。”部分社媒帖文显示,这句话出自德国战车(Rammstein)摇滚乐队主唱林德曼(Till Lindemann)之口。然而,正如乐队经纪团队向德新社(DPA)所确认的那样,林德曼从未发表过此类言论。

这只是散布虚假信息的一种常见模式:利用名人的知名度,在有争议的政治议题上煽动或影响公众观点,从而制造分裂。林德曼并不是唯一被用来传播反乌克兰言论的名人,一些德国演员和国际明星也被卷入其中。这些假语录卡片通常附有相关人士的照片,以德语形式、主要通过Facebook广告传播,后来才被删除。

德国联邦内政部已将这些事件与2022年曝光的所谓“俄罗斯双重身份”(Doppelganger)虚假信息行动联系起来。该行动的操作者建立了多个仿冒欧洲各大媒体网站的假网站,用于传播假新闻和亲俄宣传内容。

据德新社报道,内政部表示,从2023年11月起,这些幕后人员开始采用新的手法:捏造虚假名人语录。

林德曼没发表过这种反乌言论,这只是散布虚假信息的一种常见模式。

如何识别?

当你遇到可疑内容时,可以考虑以下几点:此人过去是否说过类似的话?这句话是否让人感到意外,甚至完全违背这个人以往的立场?

林德曼就是一个典型例子。2022年,俄罗斯刚对乌克兰发动战争不久,他便在柏林中央车站为抵达的乌克兰难民提供志愿服务。德国战车乐队也发表声明支持乌克兰人民,这份声明至今仍可在其官网查阅。

如果你想核实一则语录,首先应查看该名人的社交媒体账号——看他或她最近是否发布过类似内容?

另可将语录内容与该人姓名一并输入搜索引擎搜索。如果某个名人确实说过一些争议性言论,通常会有新闻媒体进行报道。若搜索无果,那就很有可能是编造的。这时你甚至可能找到相关的事实核查文章

如果你在社交媒体上看到带图片的语录卡,不妨看一看评论区。往往已经有人指出其为虚假信息,并附上相关报道或资料链接。

警惕偏见与情绪操控

多张关于美国民主党议员奥卡西奥-科尔特斯(Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez)的语录卡曾一度在社交媒体上流传。其中一条在X平台上的帖子,浏览量超过50万次。

这些帖子称,这名女议员曾说:“月亮比太阳更有用(有些版本是‘更重要’),因为月亮在黑暗的夜晚给予我们光明;而太阳只在白天发光,而白天本来就是亮的。”

你可能会觉得,一名高级别政客说出这种话未免太离谱了?正如路透社和事实核查网站Snopes所证实的,并无证据表明奥卡西奥-科尔特斯说过这句话。她已多次成为伪造新闻诋毁的对象。

讽刺的是,同一句话也曾被错误归因于共和党议员博伯特(Lauren Boebert),她因力挺持枪权而闻名。

尽管这段话非常荒唐,但评论区的反应表明,仍有人信以为真。例如,针对奥卡西奥-科尔特斯的评论包括:“还有人会投票给这个傻子”、“要是她有点脑子就好了”。而博伯特则被评论为:“她真是耻辱”、“真是白白浪费了好空气”。

在浏览社交媒体时,不要让情绪左右了你。多数假新闻的目的就是要激起你的情绪。相反,应该停下来想一想,这段话是否是真的,再决定是否转发。

还要警惕偏见。每个人都会有既定观念和成见,而散布虚假信息的人正是在利用这些偏见。冷静一下,试着用中立的眼光去看待问题。你可以问问自己:是谁在传播这段话?此人的动机可能是什么?

模仿新闻网站排版

如果一张语录卡上注明了来源和日期(比如这句话是谁、在何时何地说的),你就可以进行交叉核对,看看是否真的能在那个来源中找到这段话。 

假冒媒体案例之一:新闻网站kenyans.co.ke从未发布过这张有关奥廷加的语录卡

举个来自肯尼亚的例子:这张图片曾在Facebook上被多次转发,画面显示肯尼亚前总理奥廷加(Raila Odinga)与现任总统鲁托(William Ruto)并肩行走。据该语录所称,奥廷加有意支持鲁托竞选2027年连任。

这张截图看起来像是肯尼亚新闻平台kenyans.co.ke发布的帖子。其设计风格极像该媒体在社交网络上使用的语录卡:标志、版面布局、字体等乍看之下都非常“专业”。

然而,该语录卡是伪造的,kenyans.co.ke已发布声明澄清未曾发布此内容,事实核查机构 AfricaCheck和PesaCheck也证实了这一点。

这就是所谓的“假冒媒体”,发布者仿照新闻网站的视觉风格,以增加虚假内容的可信度。其实只要去查一下该新闻平台的社交媒体页面,就能发现这张图根本不存在,而且无论在网站页面上还是通过网络存档工具都找不到相关内容。

此外,光是语录本身就值得怀疑。奥廷加与鲁托是政敌;2022年的肯尼亚总统大选中,奥廷加败给鲁托,并拒绝承认选举结果。自那以后,他多次动员支持者抗议。如今,竟有语录称他支持鲁托竞选连任?距离下届选举还有两年,这种说法实在难以令人信服。

确实,自从两年前的大规模抗议后,两人关系有所缓和。但考虑到他们此前的紧张关系,若这句语录属实,肯尼亚国内和区域媒体一定会广泛报道。

互联网是有记忆的

有时候,虚假的名人语录会在网络上流传多年。

这句假语录已经流传了将逾二十年。

例如:在以色列—哈马斯冲突爆发后,人们在Instagram、LinkedIn和X等社交平台上分享了一张语录卡,图中是美国女演员安吉丽娜·朱莉(Angelina Jolie),配文为:“阿拉伯人和穆斯林不是恐怖分子。全世界应该团结起来反对以色列。”

正如这条帖文所示,这句错误归于安吉丽娜·朱莉的假语录已经流传了逾20年。事实核查网站Snopes甚至发现,这句话最早可以追溯到2006年。

然而,没有任何证据显示这位知名女演员曾在冲突期间或之前说过这些话。 所以,一定要小心!哪怕你看到的截图看似来自名人的官方社交媒体账号,也不要轻易相信,因为截图也是可以伪造的,并不能当作确凿证据。

Etienne Gatanazi亦参与了本文的撰写。

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© 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。

德国遣返人数突破2万大关 扩大监督与透明度呼声高涨

Marcel Fürstenau
2025-09-06T06:14:59.624Z
德国大部分遣返都是通过空中交通实现的

(德国之声中文网)2024年,仅在德国杜塞尔多夫一家机场,就有超过2800人被从这里遣返出境。这些被遣返的人员要么是庇护申请被拒,要么是因为其他原因无法留在德国。

默特·萨伊姆(Mert Sayim)在德国一家宗教福利救助机构工作。他的职能是为难民和移民提供咨询和帮助。他的工作内容还包括观察驱逐出境的现场情况,记录遣返过程中可能存在的不当行为。

2022年以来,德国每年遣返的人员数量从近1.3万增加到超过2万人。

根据德国联邦内政部的数据,今年上半年已有1.2万人被驱逐出境。这也就意味着萨伊姆的工作量也随之增加了。

萨伊姆希望未来执行机构能够行事更加灵活,且增加必要的同理心。

在介绍年度观察报告时,萨伊姆举了一个例子。他说,有一名儿童在接受心脏手术后被驱逐出境。但是手术后必要的康复检查虽然已经安排好时间,这名儿童却未能接受检查就被驱逐出境。萨伊姆希望未来执行机构能够行事更加灵活,且增加必要的同理心。

年度报告提出了一般性建议:“在驱逐患病人员时,必须逐案审查和监测相关人员在目的地国是否能够获得必要的医疗服务。在这一过程中,必须考虑治疗是否是他们个人能够实现的、负担得起的和可获得的。” 如果存在重大健康风险,则必须暂停驱逐出境。

更多内容:德国内政部长:将重新审核叙利亚难民的庇护问题

暂停驱逐出境的情况很少发生,即便发生,大多也是出于其它原因。例如,如果被驱逐出境的人行为具有攻击性,飞行员有时会拒绝起飞。

圣奥古斯丁地区警察局警督安德里亚·霍夫迈斯特(Andrea Hoffmeister)对遣返事务相当熟悉。她表示,不会有不惜一切代价的遣返。

她表示,所有参与驱逐工作的同事都接受过培训,其中一些人还接受了专门的培训。机场还为被驱逐的家庭和儿童设立了专有房间。

遣返飞机上,两名警察坐在被遣返的阿富汗男子的两侧

萨伊姆对遣返过程的观察也只能到登机口,被遣返人员走进登机口之后会经历什么,萨伊姆不得而知。所以他呼吁,对驱逐出境措施的监督必须扩大,并从结构上需要得到加强。他同时呼吁提高遣返过程的透明度。

更多内容:难民不断涌入:德国调整政策 市县濒临极限

他认为应该在联邦以及州一级以法律法规的形式做出具体规定,例如应该允许观察员监督观察整个遣返过程。他说:“具体指的是把被遣返人员从他们的居住地接走,一直到整个遣返飞行过程都应该得到监督。”他表示,2008年欧盟已经就此做出了相关规定。

然而,德国无视这项指令,并与其他国家一起推动进一步收紧遣返政策。德国联邦内政部长亚历山大·多布林特(Alexander Dobrindt)于7月邀请奥地利、丹麦、法国、捷克和波兰的内政部长协调他们的工作。他们在一份联合声明中表示:“有效的遣返是建立对平衡的欧洲移民政策信心的必要先决条件。”

负责监督驱逐出境的北威州牧师拉斐尔·尼科德穆斯(Rafael Nikodemus)希望以另一种方式获得信任:“在这个受保护的领域保持透明度,对所有参与驱逐出境程序的机构都有益。重要的是,政府和非政府组织要就人道主义角度的正当性达成共识。”

尼科德穆斯牧师也感受到了日益加剧的政治压力和有关移民问题两极分化的辩论的影响,面临驱逐出境威胁的人往往会在教堂找到最后的避难所。尼科德穆斯表示,2024年,北威州新增了329个教会庇护案例。此前几年的案例数要少得多。

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© 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。

Rosenberg: What's behind Putin's uncompromising stance?

Foreign troops in Ukraine "considered a danger to Russia", Kremlin tells BBC

Sometimes it's not what's said that makes the biggest impression.

It's the reaction.

In the Russian Far East, Vladimir Putin delivered a warning to the West: don't even think about sending soldiers - and that includes peacekeepers - to Ukraine.

"If some troops appear there," the Russian president said, "especially now while the fighting's going on, we proceed from the premise that these will be legitimate targets for destruction."

Then the reaction.

The audience at the economic forum in Vladivostok burst into applause, with Russian officials and business leaders apparently welcoming the threat to "destroy" Western troops.

Observing the scene in the hall, I found the applause quite chilling.

And this came just a day after Kyiv's allies, the so-called Coalition of the Willing, had pledged a post-war "reassurance force" for Ukraine.

SPUTNIK/KREMLIN POOL/EPA/Shutterstock Russian President Vladimir Putin in Vladivostok. Photo: 4 September 2025SPUTNIK/KREMLIN POOL/EPA/Shutterstock
Putin said he would only meet Zelensky in Moscow - a proposal dismissed outside Russia as a non-starter

The audience applauded again when the Kremlin leader suggested that he would be prepared to meet Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky - but only on home soil.

"The best place for this is the Russian capital, in Hero City Moscow," said Putin.

Outside Russia, Putin's proposal has been dismissed as unserious, a complete non-starter. A case of political trolling.

But in many ways it encapsulates the Kremlin's current position on the war in Ukraine: "Yes, we want peace, but only on our terms. You reject our terms? No peace then."

This uncompromising stance is being fuelled by a combination of factors.

First, by the Kremlin's belief that, in Ukraine, Russian forces have the initiative on the battlefield.

Second, by diplomatic success. In China this week, Putin shook hands and shared smiles with a string of world leaders. The optics were all about demonstrating that Russia has powerful friends, such as China, India and North Korea.

And then there's America. Last month US President Donald Trump invited Putin to Alaska for a summit meeting. Back home pro-Kremlin commentators hailed the event as evidence that Western efforts to isolate Russia over the war in Ukraine had failed.

To convince the Kremlin to end the fighting Trump has previously set ultimatums and deadlines; he's threatened further sanctions if Russia won't make peace.

But Trump hasn't followed through on his threats - and that's another reason for Russia's confidence.

Putin publicly praises Trump's peace efforts. And yet he has rejected Trump's ceasefire proposals and shown no desire to make concessions over the war in Ukraine.

So where does that leave prospects for peace?

Putin said recently that he could see "light at the end of the tunnel".

It seems to me that right now Russia on the one hand, and Ukraine and Europe (and to some extent America) on the other are in different tunnels, on different roads, with different destinations.

Ukraine and Europe are focused on ending the fighting, shaping security guarantees for Kyiv and making sure that the Ukrainian army is strong enough post-war to prevent another invasion.

When Putin talks about "light at the end of the tunnel", I believe he imagines a path that leads to a Russian victory in Ukraine, and more widely, to the construction of a new global order that benefits Russia.

In terms of peace, it's hard to see where and when these two very different highways will converge.

'The great Rayner reshuffle' and 'Nightmare on Downing Street'

The headline on the front page of the Times reads: "The great Rayner reshuffle".
Every Saturday paper leads on Angela Rayner's resignation - after she failed to pay enough stamp duty on her flat in Hove - and the ministerial shake-up it triggered. The Times headline reads "The great Rayner reshuffle", reporting on Sir Keir Starmer's new cabinet appointments as he tries to "overhaul his top team".
The headline on the front page of the Daily Mail reads: "Nightmare on Downing Street".
The Daily Mail calls it "nightmare on Downing Street". The paper says Yvette Cooper is appointed foreign secretary after "failing to tackle the small boats crisis" from her position in the Home Office. Former Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood will take up Cooper's previous position.
The headline on the front page of the i Paper reads: "Rayner loses her job - as PM tells Mahmood to stop boat migrants".
The i Weekend says Shabana Mahmood, the new home secretary, is a "rising star" in the Labour Party, and has been "installed" in the Home Office to take a "harder line" on migrants and "slow Nigel Farage's momentum".
The headline on the front page of the Telegraph reads: "Exit Rayner, now Starmer takes the fight to Reform".
"Exit Rayner, now Starmer takes the fight to Reform" reads the headline of the Daily Telegraph, picturing MPs Pat McFadden and Ed Miliband alongside an image of Rayner. According to the paper, Miliband will retain his post as net zero secretary, while McFadden has been given a new "super-charged" department that will focus on "growth, containing benefits, pensions and skills briefs".
The headline on the front page of the Financial Times reads: "Starmer upends his cabinet after Rayner resigns over tax scandal".
"Starmer upends his cabinet after Rayner resigns over tax scandal" says the Financial Times. The paper calls the reshuffle a "big gamble", and says that the moving of 11 ministers into new roles raises questions about whether they will perform better after the change.
The headline on the front page of the Guardian reads: "PM battles to contain crisis after Rayner forced to resign".
"PM battles to contain crisis" says the Guardian, writing that fallout from the controversy is "likely to further damage Labour's reputation". The front page features a quote from Rayner's resignation letter, which reads "for a teenage mum from a council estate to served at the highest level of government has been the greatest honour of my life".
The headline on the front page of the Mirror reads: "Stamp duty 'hypocrite'".
The Mirror brands Reform UK leader Nigel Farage a "stamp duty 'hypocrite'", alleging that he would have had to pay additional stamp duty for a home in Clacton were it not purchased by his partner.
The headline on the front page of the Express reads: "They are not fit to govern".
Farage says Labour is "not fit to govern", is a quote carried by the front page of the Daily Express. The paper writes that the Reform UK leader has urged voters to "kick Sir Keir Starmer's government out of No10", vowing to "save Britain".
The headline on the front page of the Star reads: "Rayn's over".
"Rayn's over" says the Saturday edition of the Star, labelling the subsequent changes to cabinet a "government meltdown" and "frontbench mayhem".
The headline on the front page of the Sun reads: "Sunk".
"Sunk" declares the Sun, with a photo of Rayner in an inflatable boat emblazoned on the front page.

The resignation of Angela Rayner, and the resulting reshuffle, is the main story on all the front pages. The Daily Mail calls it a "Nightmare on Downing Street", saying Labour is in "meltdown". It calls the reshuffle "chaotic" and "desperate". The Guardian says Sir Keir Starmer is "battling to get a grip" on a crisis, and that the sweeping changes are an attempt to restore order and "get back on the front foot".

The Times calls it "The Great Rayner Reshuffle" and thinks its scale, just over a year after winning a landslide election, reflects deep concern about the government's collapse in the polls and the rise of Reform UK. The Financial Times calls the reshuffle a "big gamble" - because many ministers have simply been moved to new jobs rather than been sacked, raising questions about whether their performance will actually improve.

The Daily Mirror describes the loss of Rayner as a "serious blow" for Sir Keir Starmer. It says the row will have caused damage to the government, stoking anger about politicians breaking the rules - but that her absence will be felt.

The paper says: "Angela Rayner is someone who could reach places that the PM can't, which is part of why their opposites-attract partnership made sense." The Sun says she was "cut adrift" but thinks the trouble she has caused the prime minister could get a lot worse. "To her legions of militant supporters," it says, "she is far from a busted flush - she is a martyr, and soon quite possibly their Red Queen over the water".

The Daily Telegraph says Downing Street hopes the reshaped top team can counter the threat from Reform UK, and even "take the fight" to Nigel Farage.

Farage is the focus for the Daily Express. It leads with his warning that Labour are "not fit to govern" - saying he "twisted the knife" in a stricken government with his claim that his party could win a general election in two years' time.

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只给少数人看|广州惊现“免费送房”

最近,一些自媒体说,广州惊现中年男子免费送婚房。

假如这事是真的,那这个男子真的挺惨。

他2019年花90万在广州荔湾湾长寿东路247号买了一套30平米的房子,总价90万,他付了首付。房子基本没怎么装修,可以说是大众舆论眼里典型的“刚需”。到今年,他已经还了6年月供了。

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CDT 档案卡
标题:广州惊现“免费送房”
作者:邓新华
发表日期:2025.9.5
来源:微信公众号“只给少数人看”
主题归类:中国房地产
CDS收藏:公民馆
版权说明:该作品版权归原作者所有。中国数字时代仅对原作进行存档,以对抗中国的网络审查。详细版权说明

本来这套房子是打算结婚用的,结果,今年5月,他女朋友又和他分手了。雪上加霜的是,大环境不好,行业不好做,他的收入断崖式下降。

他对这样的日子,看不到希望,所以想把这套房子免费送给想要的人,只要对方还剩下的55万月供就行。首付、6年月供近40万,他都当“沉没成本”了。“沉没成本”不是我加给他的,是他自己知道这个概念。

不太清楚此事是真是假,不过,自媒体倒是把房子内部和产证都亮出来了,看起来很像真的。

其实去年媒体就已经报道过不少地方“免费送房”的新闻。

不知道你看了这个案例,会怎么想?

多年来,大众舆论一直呼吁严厉打下来房价。太多的人们认为,只要把房价打下来了,“刚需”人群就买得起房了。

可现在呢?房价确实打下来了,但“刚需”人群不但不买房,还被迫卖房!甚至被迫“免费送房”给别人!

这就是经济学上常说的“事与愿违”:行政调控的结果与宣称的目的总是截然相反。

如果目的是让“刚需”卖得起房,正确的做法应该是改革土地体制,实现市场化供地,如此,房子供给大,城市化大发展,人们搞钱容易,“刚需”人群自然买房更容易。

可大众却要求采用行政调控的做法,结果就是事与愿违。

为什么房价打下来了,“刚需”人群反倒被迫卖房?

因为行政管制削减了房子的价值,这使得现金紧张的“刚需”人群更加不愿意持有房子。另外,地产下行带动经济下行,“刚需”人群搞钱的前景更加不明朗,所以被迫“免费送房”给别人。

类似的事与愿违的例子,这些年老在发生。

我有个朋友,是个小企业老板。他这个行当,如果能搞到风险投资,是可以实现跨越式发展的。他还经常举同学、朋友拉到风险投资,没几年就上市的例子。

前几年,他跟着舆论喊“一鲸落万物生”,痛斥互联网巨头“不搞芯片,眼里只盯着卖菜的生意”。

我说:“你有没有想过,如果互联网巨头受锤,你也会受到严重的影响?”

他说:“那怎么可能呢?打它们,跟我们中小企业有什么关系?”

前些天他也有点醒过味来了,自己在那说:“印了这么多钱,但大家都感觉没钱,钱去哪了?因为企业信心不足,风险投资不活跃,所以大家都没钱。”

我跟他说:“你有没有想过,风险投资为啥不活跃?因为风险投资去组织资金投资你,是希望你能够做大。如果做大就会被打,风险投资当然就懒得搞了。”

前些年喊“一鲸落万物生”的,有不少人是中小企业老板。他们想的是,倒下一鲸,不就给他们这些中小企业家腾出机会来了吗?那是多么美好、多么欣欣向荣的景象啊。

他们没想到的是,风险投资怕了、缩了,他们中小企业更没机会了,这个就叫事与愿违。

房地产遭受连续重击的时候,你说饭店老板们是不是心中暗喜自己可以买便宜房子了?我相信肯定有不少老板这样想。谁知道缺了房地产行业的消费力,饭店瞬间生意萧条,老板们别说买便宜房子了,能保住店就不错了,这又是事与愿违。

经济学反复说,对于大部分人来说,非市场的做法,总是事与愿违、事与愿违、事与愿违。可能有局部、少数人可以从非市场的做法中获利,但大部分人只能收获事与愿违。

可惜得很,哪怕事与愿违的例子已经数不胜数,但人们打死都不相信干预竟然会事与愿违。

仿佛有一群塞壬海妖,在人们耳边唱着干预之歌,使得人们沉醉其中,无法自拔。

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小干体|留置37,跳楼一人,老板们迎来大时代

青山如故

人心亦不变

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CDT 档案卡
标题:留置37,跳楼一人,老板们迎来大时代
作者:家传研究员
发表日期:2025.9.5
来源:微信公众号“小干体”
主题归类:民营企业
CDS收藏:公民馆
版权说明:该作品版权归原作者所有。中国数字时代仅对原作进行存档,以对抗中国的网络审查。详细版权说明

一边股市大好,一边是截至9月4日,今年留置的大型企业家已达37人。

相比2024年全年,41家上市公司的51人被留置,包括27名实控人兼董事长、12名董事长、5名董事、2名独董、5名高管。

凤凰网「风财讯」据此得出结论:大概率会超去年水平。

在开展「检察护企」「入企检查清单」行动,为企业保驾护航、创造安心发展环境的同时,留置手段亦紧步跟上,坚决打击侥幸资本家。

这下,大家的安全感都提高了,对未来的预期大幅改善,安心创新、安心创业的人想必会大大增加。

有人被留置,但也不乏有人事不大,被解除的。

9月2日永安药业(002365.SZ)公告,此前被立案调查并实施留置的公司实际控制人、董事长陈勇,已被解除留置。

相对于那些从此进入高墙出不来的,解除留置的总是好事。

怎么个好法?

7月27日上午,57岁的居家智家实控人、湖北首富汪林朋跳楼身亡。

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这距他被解除留置正好三天时间。

4月17日,他被留置并立案调查。三个月后的7月24日,他被解除留置、变更为责令候查。

更早前的另一位「创二代」、常州华立董事长承勇,则是在「小屋子」里被约谈,不知是不是正式留置。

总之,2023年11月11日凌晨,承勇留下一张说明后,在楼顶徘徊到4时36分,「跳楼身亡自证清白」。

他最后一条朋友圈说:近期我被XXX约谈YKC副区长放款的事宜,我本人发誓没有拿他的800万存款和现金行贿的事情,在里面一开始只是想尽快交钱走人,没想到遇到的是进退两难,审讯小屋子有点难熬,太压抑,可能是我的心理素质太差了,度日如年,后面还要继续,我觉得太累了,先走一步,拜拜。

这一切像极了1950年代,时任上海市长陈毅称跳楼企业家为「空降兵」。

有一次,陈毅在广播里不解地说:「我搞不懂,为什么许多资产阶级愿意跳楼自杀而不肯坦白?!」

既然资本家还不愿意向人民投降,那也没办法,陈毅早上一到办公室,便问「今天又有多少空降兵」?

至于我曾采访写过家传的另一位江苏企业家,多年前被关7个月后无罪释放。万念俱灰之下,他让公司退市,本人流连境外赌场十来年,一直到90高龄才回乡养老《一位上市公司老总「浴火」7个月(全文)

不算公职人员,中国的人民群众中,企业家群体近些年有两个鲜明的特点。

  • 失信、限高人群中,老板的比例高得异乎寻常。

  • 留置比例,也比普通人高得多。

是中国企业家的法治观念和德行特别低吗?

既低于国外同行,也低于普通人民群众,仅高于D校校友?

那些被抓的官员,为什么总说被民企老板腐蚀,是中国老板没事干就特别喜欢赔笑脸、送钱、送美女吗?

在新中国历史上,企业家第二次跳楼的高潮,应该是2008年的全球金融危机。

这些年,大家都不容易,地方财政尤其不容易。既然不让铁骑远洋捕捞,那就?

虽是留置,但谢若林说了,两根金条放在这,哪一根是高尚的,哪一根是龌龊的?

一位雷军的前手下邢燕军,被草原铁骑从北京捉去后,检方不批捕,也绝不放人。下面这个视频,是他们从北京捉人「凯旋而归」的场景。对付老板的阵仗之大,只叫人用一个词来形容:见猎心喜。

根据绑票原理,死了人,那就是个事了,这个案子后来被最高检纠正。

但人已弄死,这个宣传作品,仍高挂官网。

这一次,被凤凰网称为上市公司高管「留置潮」的飓风过后,会有多少度的残温?

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我写了300多部家传、整理了1200部家庭相册,发现旺族多出自读书人、绅士、企业家、地主,少数平民子弟则通过读书、从军、创业改变命运。

讲述我们的故事、写作家传,是人类延续文明和创造意义的基本方式。长按下面微信二维码,识别加我好友,一起抢救和传承家庭记忆:

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家传编辑部系列,点击关注

为什么从南宋起,浙江人既会读书又会做生意?我参与的这本书,上线当月就登上浙江省好书榜:

◆  推荐阅读

【404文库】猫笔刀|总动员了?

CDT 档案卡
标题:总动员了?
作者:moomoocat
发表日期:2025.9.5
来源:微信公众号“猫笔刀”
主题归类:中国股市
CDS收藏:话语馆
版权说明:该作品版权归原作者所有。中国数字时代仅对原作进行存档,以对抗中国的网络审查。详细版权说明

今天涨舒服了,我把昨天+前天亏的都找回来了,就差周二那天。最重要的是周五涨一天算三天,心情敞亮,明天开开心心出发旅游。

行情具体周日晚上再分析,先说两个事。

第一件事很离奇,今天盘后大量的政府蓝V集体转发了一篇文章《外资金融机构:当前中国股市估值合理投资者对后市普遍乐观》。离奇的不是文章内容,而是转发的这些体制内账号,很多和股票,甚至和泛财经一点关系都没有。

比如某些地市的公安局,审计局,社保局,县政府官V、药监局、市政府官V、司法局、文旅局..各市各县,各个部门,都在群推同一篇文章。我一开始还怀疑是不是体制内宣传口操作故障,但等了半天这些号也没删帖,那看来就是刻意为之。

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这事以前没见过,这算什么信号?我可以把它理解为公务员牛市总动员嘛,告诉那8000万人不要慌,大家一起上?

文章本身没什么特殊的,我留个国家药监局的链接,你们有兴趣自己点过去看,真没啥,就是比较典型的乐观唱多贴,估值合理,行情火热,预计还要涨。

国家药监局《当前中国股市估值合理投资者对后市普遍乐观》

另一件事是白天那会财新报道某个官员被查,但是文章发出后又迅速删除,不过已经被人截图转发,各个群广为传播。财新之所以发了又删,肯定是因为还没官宣的不能说,他们不能说我更不能说。该官员大家都认识,该职位历任就很少有善始善终的。

今天晚些时候,路透社也发了这条信息补刀,所以置信度很高,我觉得超过90%了,等过几天官宣吧。

……

明天我就出发去敦煌了,接下来两天夜报内容估计都是游记为主。

敦煌是我很早就想去的景点,中国三大石窟我已经去了两个,从时间顺序上最早是敦煌(十六国°),再是云冈(北魏)、龙门(北魏、隋唐)。

好奇心重的人会有一个疑问,为什么是这3个地方有大型石窟?

原因很简单,这三当年都是交通主干道。龙门石窟在洛阳的门户要道,云冈在大同西线要道,洛阳和大同曾经都是北方政权首都。而敦煌,它是丝绸之路河西走廊最西边的重镇。

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敦煌再往西就是阳光(丝路南线)和玉门关(丝路中线),从中原去往西域的商队在敦煌这里即将一分为二,小时候学过的古诗“春风不度玉门关”、“西出阳关无故人”都是在这里写的。

佛教盛行的南北朝、隋唐,权贵阶层喜欢雇工匠在人流量大的交通要道两边修佛像,弘扬佛法的同时给自己积攒功德,于是就有了流传至今的三大石窟。

后来到了明清时期,贸易路线转移,丝绸之路荒废,敦煌也随之没落。直到1900年有一个姓王的道士发现了藏经洞,里面有5万多册藏书,外国文物商人闻声而来,连蒙带骗搞走了大部分,只给我们留下了1万多册。

4万多册敦煌藏书流散海外多个国家,这当然是中国考古文物的重大损失,但也让敦煌文化在全世界广泛传播,从上世纪二三十年代开始,敦煌学就是世界文化圈里的显学,敦煌文化也成为现代中国在全球第一个知名IP。

我说个小故事你们感受一下。上世纪五十年代某个贵州酒厂试图拓展海外市场,但它们的品牌当时在国际上几乎没有名气,需要一个更具国际辨识度、更容易被海外消费者接受和记忆的商标,于是就在1958年选用了敦煌高窟第321窟的“飞天仙女°”团作为商标logo,至今沿用。

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无论是全国重点文物保护单位,还是世界文化遗产目录,敦煌都是中国第一批,如果你对咱们华夏的历史文化感兴趣,那敦煌是此生必去的景点。我早几年就想去,之所以一直拖到今年,主要是还是那里有点远,我带着两个老人出行不能走太远太久,否则老婆一个人在家照顾2个孩子就会比较辛苦。这次我出去4天,她已经嘟嘟囔囔我好几天了

……

从敦煌文化在世界广泛传播,我有一个感触,就是文物的流散并不完全是一件坏事。试想如果那5万册书全部被保护在国内,敦煌文化的世界影响力一定差了很多个数量级。

同理还有圆明园被抢的十二生肖,很多人不清楚那些铜像其实只是大水法的12个水龙头,要论当年被抢的宝贝怎么排也轮不到它们,但现如今十二生肖已经是圆明园最有名的被盗文物,甚至在很多场合已经是爱国主义的标志载体。

你们有想过原因吗,就是因为它这一套有12个,流散各地,流动性好,隔几年就会有交易或者归还的新闻,一遍又一遍的强化公众的认知。目前已经找回来7个,还有5个下落不明,所以这个ip还有很旺盛的生命力和成长性。

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多年后当最后一个生肖回归中国,全套集齐,我都难以想象这会产生多么轰动的舆情。文物本身的艺术价值固然可贵,但更稀缺的是文物在历史变迁中承载的故事。十二生肖从当年被抢流散至全球各地,再到一件一件被找回来,重新集齐成套,这背后的故事和隐喻只要想一想就会浑身起鸡皮疙瘩,我看好它们最终会成为中国最有影响力的文物,没有之一。

从上面这两个例子,我觉得一个ip想要更大的扩张影响,最有效的办法就是让渡股份,让更多人参与持有,参与交易,增加流通曝光。

再引申一步,把IP换成公司,上面这段话也是成立的,这也是那么多家族企业寻求上市的原因。

今晚就这些,发射~

李慧琼称阅兵展现国家自信 倡加强港青近代史教育

中国星期三(9月3日)举行纪念抗日战争胜利80周年阅兵式。赴京出席阅兵式的全国人大常委、香港立法会议员李慧琼说,阅兵展现强国应有的自信及民族凝聚力,香港未来应加强近代史教育,让青年明白“弱国被人欺负”的定律,支持国家发展强国建设。

综合香港明报、星岛日报报道,李慧琼星期六(6日)在电台节目《政经星期六》中说,此次阅兵规模相比10年前更庞大和庄严,军事力量明显提升,反映国家实力不断进步,为国家军备发展及民族凝聚力持续提升而感动。

身兼香港爱国主义教育小组组长的李慧琼坦言,在殖民地教育下成长的一代,对抗战历史的认识非常片面,须加强年轻人的爱国主义教育,从中学习“弱国就被人欺负”的道理,并了解国家从“挨打”到“强起来”的艰辛历程。年轻人也要学习先辈们的勇敢及爱国情怀,珍惜来之不易的和平。

她认为,香港的历史课可以有更多篇幅教授近代历史,期待有更多的爱国主义教育基地,让年轻人亲历其中、更能沉浸式体验和认识历史。

全国港澳研究会顾问刘兆佳在同一节目上分析指,中国国家主席习近平在阅兵及上海合作组织会议上的讲话,均反映中国正带领全球南方国家,挑战由西方主导的霸权,并推动建立更公平合理、以联合国为核心的全球治理体系。

刘兆佳称,阅兵展示不少新型武器,估计国际秩序将出现很大变化, 整个亚太地区的军事平衡会作出改变,美国军事霸权将受到很大冲击。

香港特首李家超星期二(2日)率领约360人的代表团到北京参加抗战胜利80周年纪念活动,星期四(4日)返港。李家超星期三说,香港观礼人员占比相当大,充分显示中央对香港特区的重视,此次阅兵也极大提升香港市民保家卫国的决心和民族自豪感。

请假疑被带往海外诈骗园 港警返回递交辞呈

香港一名警员请假离港后失踪,疑似被带往柬埔寨诈骗园区,脱困后致电同僚求助。香港警务处处长周一鸣针对此事说,这名休班警员已经递交辞职信。

据香港星岛头条报道,此事始于8月22日,隶属马鞍山警署的这名男警,以家人在广西遇严重车祸为由请假离港,其后失联。马鞍山警署五天后(8月27日)接到数通无来电显示电话,对方自报警员编号及全名,声称被带到柬埔寨诈骗园区,脱困后身处当地派出所,要求救援。

港府发言人8月29日确认,警方已与这名警员联络并知悉其身在柬埔寨,将派员赴当地协助。

综合香港01和Yahoo新闻报道,港府发言人回复查询时说,这名警员星期四(9月4日)返港,警方正向他了解事件,将作出适当跟进。

周一鸣星期六(9月6日)说,这名警员已在星期四返港,并已递交辞职信。他也说,这起案件交由有组织罪案及三合会调查科跟进。

被问及派出多少人手到柬埔寨参与行动、案件是否反映警队内部防骗意识不足,周一鸣回应说,警方早前一行四人前往柬埔寨,到当地了解情况。他也说,不会用“营救”来形容本次行动,并感谢柬埔寨当局、外交部驻港特派员公署、中国驻柬埔寨大使馆,以及香港入境处的协助。

律政司长:香港可为一带一路项目提供世界级法律服务

香港律政司长林定国指出,“一带一路”项目都涉及跨境法律事务,而香港凭借健全和高效的法律制度,可以为相关项目提供世界级的法律与仲裁服务。

据港府新闻公报,林定国星期五(9月5日)出席“向一带一路高峰论坛十周年献礼:一带一路的一百个香港故事网上巡礼”项目启动发布会并致辞。

他说,香港是“一带一路”的积极参与者、贡献者及受益者,并指港府一直推动共建“一带一路”工作走深走实,未来也会全方位参与和助力共建“一带一路”,积极融入中国发展大局。

林定国提到,他今年7月以“一带一路”发展小组组长身份率团赴京,出席第八次“一带一路”建设联席会议。

会议上,中国国家发改委肯定了香港参与“一带一路”建设的重要进展,并承诺继续支持香港全面参与,包括:推动香港与大陆在国际合作平台、海外市场拓展及全球资源配置的协同联动;打造“一带一路”关键枢纽,强化国际金融、航运和贸易中心功能;支持香港参与创新科技、数字经济、绿色发展和健康产业等新领域合作,培育经济新增长点。

林定国重申,“一带一路”必须是一条法治之路,他指出,任何“一带一路”项目都涉及跨境法律事务,而香港作为中国唯一的普通法司法管辖区,凭借健全、高效且享有盛誉的法律制度,可以提供世界级的法律与仲裁服务。

他提到,国际调解院总部今年落户香港,彰显国际社会对香港法律制度的认可。香港法律界在项目融资、风险管理等方面经验丰富,能有效协助投资者与政府促成交易及解决争议。

林定国说,选择香港法律服务对促成交易及解决争议均具优势。此外,新成立的“香港国际法律人才培训学院”也将致力培养熟悉国际法、普通法及大陆法等多种法律体系的人才。

他最后指出,希望香港各界积极争取其他国家和地区的合作方同意采用香港法律,并选择香港作为交易促成及争议解决地,更好发挥香港法律服务,以及在这方面的独特优势。

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