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中国多家银行将清理长期不动户

中国多家银行近期公告,将对低余额、长期无主动交易的个人和单位账户进行清理。

据《中国证券报》报道,湖北远安农商银行星期四(10月16日)宣布,将开展个人银行账户清理,包括个人长期不动户、个人开立多个银行结算账户、身份信息缺失或过期的账户。

据《新京报》贝壳财经不完全统计,10月以来,凤台农村商业银行、葫芦岛银行、湖北枝江农商银行等多家地方商业银行公告,将进一步清理个人长期不动户。

不过各银行认定标准不同,如账户未发生交易的期限方面,银行的认定标准从一年到三年不等;在卡内金额方面,银行的认定标准则从10元(人民币,下同,1.8新元)以内至100元以内不等。

业内人士认为,这么做有助于防范电信诈骗、洗钱等金融风险,保障消费者账户与资金安全,同时提升银行运营效率。

也有业内分析指出,一行动绝非简单的账户管理优化,而是银行在风险防控、资源配置与合规经营多重压力下的必然选择,深刻折射出金融行业高质量发展的内在要求。

“进一步清理个人长期不动户是响应政策导向的 ‘必答题’”,主要是为了堵截违法犯罪的灰色通道,同时也有助于释放金融体系的沉淀成本。

中国人民银行星期三(15日)发布的2025年前三季度金融统计数据报告显示,今年前三季度人民币存款增加22.71万亿元,其中住户存款增加了12.73万亿元。存款的高增长持续体现居民巨大的消费、投资潜力有待释放,居民的消费需求仍然偏弱。

四川发现首例HIV-2感染者

中国四川省发现首例HIV-2感染者,是一位67岁的女性。

据医疗资讯平台“医学界”,9月份的《中国艾滋病性病》杂志发布一项研究,报告了四川省首例HIV-2感染者的诊断过程。

病例于今年1月在四川省眉山市下辖县区被发现,经过一系列严谨的实验室检测和流行病学调查,最终确诊为HIV-2感染。

感染者是一位67岁的女性,自述曾有过八名性接触者。

艾滋病(新加坡译为“爱之病”)病毒,即人免疫缺陷病毒,可分为HIV-1和HIV-2两种类型。专家介绍,HIV-2在中国临床少见,主要有两个原因。一是中国的HIV-2型感染者人数极少;二是与HIV-1型相比,HIV-2型的传播能力较弱、致死率较低。

专家称,以四川这例HIV-2感染者来看,社会等多方还需加大对老年人群性安全教育的宣教工作,减少艾滋病在老年群体中的传播风险。

包钢当选内蒙古自治区政府主席

包钢正式当选为内蒙古自治区政府主席,接替此前任上落马的王莉霞。

据中新社报道,内蒙古自治区第十四届人民代表大会第四次会议星期六(10月18日)举行,选举王伟中为内蒙古自治区人大常委会主任,选举包钢为内蒙古自治区人民政府主席。

公开资料显示,包钢今年56岁,长期在内蒙古自治区内工作,曾任内蒙古国资委党委委员、纪委书记,呼和浩特市委常委、市纪委书记,呼和浩特市副市长,乌海市委副书记、纪委书记,乌海市委副书记、市长,包头市委副书记、市长,阿拉善盟盟委书记等职。包钢2018年7月出任内蒙古自治区政府副主席,2021年任内蒙古自治区党委常委、呼和浩特市委书记。

王伟中现任内蒙古自治区党委书记,自治区人大常委会主任、党组书记,内蒙古党校(行政学院)校长(院长)。

Israel receives two bodies that Hamas says are Gaza hostages

Reuters Heavy machinery seen amid the rubble of Gaza CityReuters
Hamas says it has been working to recover the remains of dead hostages beneath the rubble left by Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip

The Red Cross has received two bodies in Gaza that Hamas says are hostages, the Israeli military has said.

The remains will be transported to Israel and formally identified. Hamas earlier said the bodies had been recovered in the Palestinian territory on Saturday.

Prior to Saturday, the remains of 10 of 28 deceased hostages had been returned to Israel.

The delay has caused outrage in Israel, as the terms of last week's ceasefire deal stipulated the release from Gaza of all hostages, living and dead. Hamas says it has struggled to find the remaining bodies under rubble.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office has ordered the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt to remain closed until further notice, and said its reopening would be considered based on the return of the final hostage remains and the implementation of the ceasefire agreement.

The IDF has stressed that Hamas must "uphold the agreement and take the necessary steps to return all the hostages".

But the US has downplayed suggestions that the delay amounts to a breach of the ceasefire deal, which President Donald Trump claimed as a major victory on a visit to Israel and Egypt last week.

The text of the deal has not been published, but a leaked version that was seen in Israeli media appeared to account for the possibility that not all of the bodies would be immediately accessible.

Hamas has blamed Israel for making the task difficult, as air strikes on Gaza have reduced many buildings to rubble, and Israel does not allow heavy machinery and diggers into the territory.

UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher told the BBC News Channel that the Gaza Strip "is now a wasteland", with people picking through the rubble for bodies and trying to find their homes - many of which have been flattened.

As part of the US-brokered ceasefire deal, Hamas also returned all 20 living hostages to Israel.

Israel's military confirmed the identity of the tenth deceased hostage returned by Hamas on Friday. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) named him as Eliyahu Margalit, whose body was taken from Nir Oz kibbutz after he was killed on 7 October 2023.

Hostages and Missing Families Forum Eliyahu Margalit in a blue shirt sat near flowers outsideHostages and Missing Families Forum
Israel's Hostages and Missing Families Forum described Mr Margalit as "a cowboy at heart" who managed a horse stables for many years

Also as part of the deal, Israel freed 250 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails and 1,718 detainees from Gaza.

The bodies of 15 Palestinians were handed over by Israel via the Red Cross to officials in Gaza on Saturday, the Hamas-run health ministry said, bringing the total number of bodies it has received to 135.

Separately on Saturday, 11 members of one Palestinian family were killed by an Israeli tank shell, according to the Hamas-run civil defence ministry, in what was the deadliest single incident involving Israeli soldiers in Gaza since the start of the ceasefire.

The Israeli military said soldiers had fired at a "suspicious vehicle" that had crossed the so-called yellow line demarcating the area still occupied by Israeli forces in Gaza.

There are no physical markers of this line, and it is unclear if the bus did cross it. The BBC has asked the IDF for the coordinates of the incident.

The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to the 7 October 2023 attack, in which Hamas-led gunmen killed about 1,200 people in southern Israel and took 251 others hostage.

At least 68,000 people have been killed by Israeli attacks in Gaza since then, according to the Hamas-run health ministry, whose figures are seen by the UN as reliable.

In September, a UN commission of inquiry said Israel had committed genocide against Palestinians in Gaza. Israel categorically rejected the report as "distorted and false".

'I miss the past, but we like the money': The Bali-fication of a laidback surfers' island

Getty Images Back view of a man lying on his surf board at sunset as a wave crashes into him. In the background are fishing boats and a large hill.Getty Images
Indonesia is on a mission to turn Lombok island into another Bali - and put it on a tourist bucket list

Damar, one of the best surf guides on the Indonesian island of Lombok, feels right at home taking tourists out to sea.

With his fluent English and effortless banter, you would never guess what was his childhood fear: foreigners.

"When I was 10 or maybe seven, I used to cry - I used to just pee in my pants when I saw white people," Damar, now 39, tells the BBC.

That diffidence waned as the laidback island he calls home slowly found its popularity among Western travellers.

Just east of Bali, Lombok boasts the same azure beaches and stunning views as its famous neighbour, but without the exasperating crowds. Lombok's beaches are still a hidden gem among surfers, as is Mount Rinjani for hikers. Travel sites still liberally use the word "untouched" to describe the island as they offer reasons to venture beyond Bali.

So it should come as little surprise that the Indonesian government has sensed the opportunity to create another lucrative tourist haven on the sprawling archipelago.

The mission is to create more "Balis" - and Lombok will be one of them.

For islanders, this promise of "Balification" is a welcome opportunity but they are also wary of what it brings.

And the change has already begun to hit home in more ways than one.

Getty Images An aerial view of a volcano, with white smoke billowing from the crater. It's surrounded by green water in a crater lake.Getty Images
Mount Rinjani, an active volcano sitting at Lombok's highest point, is a hiker's dream

Mandalika in the south has been chosen as the heart of the "new Bali".

Its rustic coastline has already given way to glitzy resorts, cafes and even a racetrack. Earlier this month, nearly 150,000 spectators showed up to watch the motorcycle Grand Prix.

Between 2019 and 2021, dozens of families were evicted from their village homes for the construction of the Mandalika circuit. Damar's was among them.

Confronted with what activists decried as a messy resettlement plan and unfair compensation, he and his neighbours were helpless, Damar recalls.

"I was angry, but I cannot do much. I cannot fight against the government," he says.

Since the eviction, Damar has bought a plot of land and built his own house, something that many of his neighbours haven't been able to do. As a surf guide, he estimates that he earns twice as much as a fisherman - a generational profession in his community.

"I've never really been to school, so joining the tourism industry was one of the best choices that I have ever made," Damar says. "Meeting a lot of people from many different countries… It has opened my mind."

Damar's indignation about his eviction even comes with a scrupulous caveat: "I'm not angry at the tourists. I'm just angry at my own government."

Supplied Damar wearing a bucket hat, black t-shirt and board shorts surfing on a wave, with water splashing around him. His hand is pointed in the air for balance, and he is looking intently into the distance.Supplied
Damar's own story mirrors the transformation of Lombok from a quiet island to a budding tourist spot

The makings of a tourist magnet

The drive to transform Lombok is part of a wider effort to lure travellers away from Bali, which has for decades played an outsized role in Indonesia's tourism industry.

The island makes up less than 1% of the country's land area and less than 2% of its 280 million-plus population. Yet last year it accounted for nearly half of all visitors to Indonesia.

But increasingly Bali's unrelenting traffic and pollution - a direct result of its success as a top tourist pick- are leaving those very tourists disappointed with what has long been touted as the "last paradise".

As it turns out, that elusive paradise lies just an hour's boat ride away.

But perhaps not for long.

More and more travellers are catching on to Lombok's appeal. Last year, 81,500 foreign tourists touched down at its airport, a 40% jump from the year before - still, a far cry from the 6.3 million foreigners who flocked to Bali.

Eager for Lombok to follow in Bali's footsteps, Indonesian authorities have secured hundreds of millions of dollars in investment, along with a $250m loan from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.

Getty Images Aerial view of a beach lined with green trees. A giant sign that reads "Kuta Mandalika" can be seen on a structure covered by green plants. Boats can be seen floating in the sea in the distance.Getty Images
"Bali-fication" has come to Kuta

This has accelerated the island's makeover.

In Kuta, a popular town in Mandalika, scrappy surfers' hostels have been replaced by a mosaic of chlorinated pools and plushy sunbeds, and an international school for the children of expats.

While authorities are hailing it as Lombok's success story, some see a cautionary tale.

The cost of paradise

A stone's throw away on the beach of Tanjung Aan, cafe owner Kartini Lumban Raja told the BBC that locals there "don't want to be 'organised' like Kuta".

"When beaches start to look like Kuta, they lose their charm. We lose opportunities. We lose natural beauty," she said.

For months, rumours of evictions had been swirling on Tanjung Aan, which was earmarked for ambitious development plans.

Days after the BBC's visit in July, they came like a rolling wave.

Security forces descended upon the beach to demolish nearly 200 stalls, including Kartini's.

Videos from that day show masked men tearing shop fences down with their bare hands as stall owners protested.

"They were banging on things, kicking plywood… it's truly inhumane," Ella Nurlaila, a stall owner, told the BBC. "My goodness, this eviction was so cruel."

Just Finance International Ella Nurlaila in a peach coloured long-sleeved shirt, looking into the camera with a burrowed eyebrows. Behind her is a large banner that reads: "Save Tanjung Aan, let the local build the grow, don't let us suffer, don't destroy our nature, say no to ITDC".Just Finance International
Ella Nurlaila had sold food on Tanjung Aan for three years before the beach was cleared of all stalls in July

The state-owned company leading Mandalika's tourism drive, InJourney Tourism Development Corporation (ITDC), has secured 2.1 trillion rupiah ($128m; £96m) to build a luxury hotel on Tanjung Aan.

Authorities said the project will create jobs and boost the local economy. But that's little consolation for stall owners like Ella and her husband Adi, who have sold coconuts and coffee on the beach for the past three years.

"Thousands of people here depend on [coastal land] for their livelihood," Adi said. "Where else are we supposed to go to earn a living?"

The couple said they had paid taxes for their stall - which, according to Adi, sat on land belonging to his parents.

But ITDC representatives told the BBC that Tanjung Aan is "state-owned land", and that the tax paid by those businesses "does not equate to legal ownership or land legitimacy".

This is just the latest bout of tensions over Mandalika's tourism push.

Just Finance International, a development finance watchdog, has repeatedly flagged "a pattern of rights violations linked to the Mandalika project" in recent years.

Just Finance International Police with helmets and riot shields, as well as men in green camouflge uniform,  crowd in front of a hut that has a large wooden sign that reads "Aloha".Just Finance International
Security forces arrived on 15 July to demolish the stalls on Tanjung Aan beach

UN human rights experts estimate that more than 2,000 people "lost their primary means of livelihood overnight" because of the Tanjung Aan evictions. Stall owners were given neither "adequate notice" nor "suitable" resettlement plans, they said in a statement in August.

"The people of Mandalika must not be sacrificed for a project that promises economic growth at the expense of human rights," they said.

'If they want Bali, they should go to Bali'

In its quest for a remarkably different future, Lombok will also have to contend with what this means for local culture.

The predominantly Muslim island is home to thousands of mosques and the indigenous Sasak ethnic group. Compared to Bali, alcohol is not as readily available in parts of the island. On travel forums, tourists are encouraged to ditch bikinis and hot pants for more modest attire.

Such conservative sensitivities may change, or at least be driven further inland, as tourism heats up along the coastline. Travellers who have come to love Lombok are not happy about that either.

"Lombok is so special because it still has its own nature and people come to see that," said Swiss tourist Basil Berger, a sceptic of the"Bali-fication" of the island.

"If they want to see Bali, they [should] go to Bali," he said. Turning Lombok into another Bali "is the "the worst thing that they can do".

There are also environmental concerns. The motorcycle Grand Prix last year drew 120,000 spectators to Mandalika, leaving behind 30 tonnes of rubbish that authorities struggled to clear.

"Before it gets to Bali's stage of development, Lombok could learn. Because it's showing the same kind of strain," says Sekar Utami Setiastuti, who lives in Bali.

The government should ensure "tourism development brings welfare to a lot of people, instead of just bringing tourists to Lombok", she adds. "Lombok has to find its own identity - not just [become] a less crowded Bali."

Getty Images Aerial view of a large motorcycle race track along the coast, with blue sea seen to the right of the circuit.Getty Images
The race track is just one of many development plans that worry locals and regular visitors who have come to love a quieter Lombok

No matter where that search leads, a new era has dawned on Lombok.

Andrew Irwin is among the foreign investors who have taken an early interest in Lombok's budding tourism. The American is the co-owner of LMBK Surf House, one of Mandalika's most popular surf camps.

The way he sees it, businesses like his are helping to uplift local employees and their families.

"It's giving people more opportunities to earn more money, send their kids to proper school, get proper insurance, get proper healthcare, and essentially live a better quality of life," he said.

While there's "not necessarily much one can do" about Lombok's changing landscape, he says, "we can just hope to bring a positive change to the equation".

Tourism has certainly ushered prosperity into the lives of many locals, who have decided to try their hand at entrepreneurship.

"As long you want to work, you'll make money from tourism," says Baiq Enida Kinang Lare, a homestay owner in Kuta, known to her guests as Lara. Her neighbours too have started homestays.

Lara started her business in 2014 with four rooms. She's now at 14, not counting a separate villa under construction.

As excited as she is about her prospects, she is also a little wistful as she recalled life before the hustle.

"It's difficult to find time to gather and see everyone. This is what we miss. We feel like the time flies very, very fast because we're busy," she says.

This is a feeling that would surely be shared by locals from Bali to Mykonos to Cancun, whenever tourism took off in their patch of paradise: "I miss the past, but we like the money."

US to repatriate survivors of strike on 'drug-carrying submarine', Trump says

Reuters Donald Trump at a podium in the Oval Office pointing as he takes questions from reporters. Reuters

President Donald Trump has said the US will return two people who survived a strike on what he called a "drug-carrying submarine" to their countries of origin, Ecuador and Colombia.

Writing on social media, Trump said two other people were killed in the US strike on the vessel, which he said US intelligence confirmed was "loaded up with mostly Fentanyl, and other illegal narcotics".

The attack on Thursday is at least the sixth US strike on ships in the Caribbean Sea in recent weeks. It is the first time survivors have been reported.

At least 27 people were killed in the prior five boat strikes in the waters off Venezuela, according to figures released by the administration.

The two survivors were rescued by a US military helicopter and then shuttled onto a US warship in the Caribbean, unnamed US officials told US media earlier.

In recent weeks, Trump has ramped up threats against Venezuela's leadership over claims that the country is sending drugs to the US. Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has accused Trump of trying to make the South American nation "an American colony".

Trump has defended the ongoing boat attacks, saying they are aimed at stemming the flow of drugs from Latin America into the US, but his government has not provided evidence or details about the identities of the vessels or those on board.

"It was my great honor to destroy a very large DRUG-CARRYING SUBMARINE that was navigating towards the United States on a well known narcotrafficking transit route," Trump said in his Truth Social post on Saturday.

"The two surviving terrorists are being returned to their Countries of origin, Ecuador and Colombia, for detention and prosecution."

He added that no US military personnel were injured in the attack.

On Friday, the US president had said the submarine targeting the latest attack was "built specifically for the transportation of massive amounts of drugs".

"This was not an innocent group of people. I don't know too many people who have submarines, and that was an attack on a drug-carrying, loaded submarine," he added.

UN-appointed human rights experts have described the US strikes as "extrajudicial executions".

Trump earlier told reporters that he had authorised the CIA to conduct covert operations in Venezuela, and that he was considering launching attacks on Venezuelan soil.

Narco-subs have become a popular way to transport drugs as they can go largely undetected, and can be sunk after delivery. They are often homemade and constructed using fibreglass and plywood.

The US, as well as other coastal nations, have previously intercepted some of these subs.

Kaito|iPhone Air撬开了中国的eSIM,真讽刺

iPhone Air宣布后天在中国开卖了(只支持eSIM),这意味着中国手机市场「无卡时代」真的来了。

从iPhone Air宣布只支持eSIM开始,我就一直好奇这款手机在中国怎么卖,运营商是否会开绿色通道大力支持eSIM?

这两天三大运营商宣布全力开放eSIM业务,以支持iPhone Air,整件事让我感觉有些悲哀和讽刺。

CDT 档案卡
标题:Kaito|iPhone Air撬开了中国的eSIM,真讽刺
作者:Kaito
发表日期:2025.10.18
来源:微信公众号“水滴与银弹”
主题归类:esim
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

国产手机这么多年争先恐后的创新,新技术层出不穷,各种花样目不暇接,造一个只支持eSIM的机型技术上早不是问题(没有实体卡槽还多了空间放其他模块,肯定是利好手机厂商),但中国手机厂商没有一个敢吃eSIM这个螃蟹的。

之前的现状是,eSIM在中国除了Apple Watch蜂窝版有小部分支持,三大运营商都是消极态度(反正市场需求小,我干嘛吃力不讨好去推eSIM)。

结果iPhone Air来了,只能用eSIM,三大运营商在这么短的时间内就通过了审批,宣布全力支持,不知道是不是所谓的无利不起早?

从手机市场的角度看,整体给我感觉是,国内这些手机厂商也不傻,都在观望苹果怎么撬开中国运营商的eSIM服务,如果没有撬开,就保持原来的动作,正好也少了iPhone Air和他们竞争,如果撬开了,那就立即跟进推出eSIM手机(多家手机厂商已经宣布在测试这种新机型了),坐享其成享受这个福利。

中国手机市场无卡时代开创,竟然还是靠苹果,真的有点讽刺。虽然我是苹果粉,但心里还是希望国产手机能在国内的一些重大标准上作为开创和引领者,但这件事让我感觉中国手机还是在跟随,没有走出自己的路来。

现在比较确定的是,接下来2年内,国内各大手机厂商都会陆续发布没有实体卡的机型了。

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Israel receives two bodies that Hamas says are Gaza hostages

Reuters Heavy machinery seen amid the rubble of Gaza CityReuters
Hamas says it has been working to recover the remains of dead hostages beneath the rubble left by Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip

The Red Cross has received two bodies in Gaza that Hamas says are hostages, the Israeli military has said.

The remains will be transported to Israel and formally identified. Hamas earlier said the bodies had been recovered in the Palestinian territory on Saturday.

Prior to Saturday, the remains of 10 of 28 deceased hostages had been returned to Israel.

The delay has caused outrage in Israel, as the terms of last week's ceasefire deal stipulated the release from Gaza of all hostages, living and dead. Hamas says it has struggled to find the remaining bodies under rubble.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office has ordered the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt to remain closed until further notice, and said its reopening would be considered based on the return of the final hostage remains and the implementation of the ceasefire agreement.

The IDF has stressed that Hamas must "uphold the agreement and take the necessary steps to return all the hostages".

But the US has downplayed suggestions that the delay amounts to a breach of the ceasefire deal, which President Donald Trump claimed as a major victory on a visit to Israel and Egypt last week.

The text of the deal has not been published, but a leaked version that was seen in Israeli media appeared to account for the possibility that not all of the bodies would be immediately accessible.

Hamas has blamed Israel for making the task difficult, as air strikes on Gaza have reduced many buildings to rubble, and Israel does not allow heavy machinery and diggers into the territory.

UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher told the BBC News Channel that the Gaza Strip "is now a wasteland", with people picking through the rubble for bodies and trying to find their homes - many of which have been flattened.

As part of the US-brokered ceasefire deal, Hamas also returned all 20 living hostages to Israel.

Israel's military confirmed the identity of the tenth deceased hostage returned by Hamas on Friday. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) named him as Eliyahu Margalit, whose body was taken from Nir Oz kibbutz after he was killed on 7 October 2023.

Hostages and Missing Families Forum Eliyahu Margalit in a blue shirt sat near flowers outsideHostages and Missing Families Forum
Israel's Hostages and Missing Families Forum described Mr Margalit as "a cowboy at heart" who managed a horse stables for many years

Also as part of the deal, Israel freed 250 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails and 1,718 detainees from Gaza.

The bodies of 15 Palestinians were handed over by Israel via the Red Cross to officials in Gaza on Saturday, the Hamas-run health ministry said, bringing the total number of bodies it has received to 135.

Separately on Saturday, 11 members of one Palestinian family were killed by an Israeli tank shell, according to the Hamas-run civil defence ministry, in what was the deadliest single incident involving Israeli soldiers in Gaza since the start of the ceasefire.

The Israeli military said soldiers had fired at a "suspicious vehicle" that had crossed the so-called yellow line demarcating the area still occupied by Israeli forces in Gaza.

There are no physical markers of this line, and it is unclear if the bus did cross it. The BBC has asked the IDF for the coordinates of the incident.

The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to the 7 October 2023 attack, in which Hamas-led gunmen killed about 1,200 people in southern Israel and took 251 others hostage.

At least 68,000 people have been killed by Israeli attacks in Gaza since then, according to the Hamas-run health ministry, whose figures are seen by the UN as reliable.

In September, a UN commission of inquiry said Israel had committed genocide against Palestinians in Gaza. Israel categorically rejected the report as "distorted and false".

US to repatriate survivors of strike on 'drug-carrying submarine', Trump says

Reuters Donald Trump at a podium in the Oval Office pointing as he takes questions from reporters. Reuters

President Donald Trump has said the US will return two people who survived a strike on what he called a "drug-carrying submarine" to their countries of origin, Ecuador and Colombia.

Writing on social media, Trump said two other people were killed in the US strike on the vessel, which he said US intelligence confirmed was "loaded up with mostly Fentanyl, and other illegal narcotics".

The attack on Thursday is at least the sixth US strike on ships in the Caribbean Sea in recent weeks. It is the first time survivors have been reported.

At least 27 people were killed in the prior five boat strikes in the waters off Venezuela, according to figures released by the administration.

The two survivors were rescued by a US military helicopter and then shuttled onto a US warship in the Caribbean, unnamed US officials told US media earlier.

In recent weeks, Trump has ramped up threats against Venezuela's leadership over claims that the country is sending drugs to the US. Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has accused Trump of trying to make the South American nation "an American colony".

Trump has defended the ongoing boat attacks, saying they are aimed at stemming the flow of drugs from Latin America into the US, but his government has not provided evidence or details about the identities of the vessels or those on board.

"It was my great honor to destroy a very large DRUG-CARRYING SUBMARINE that was navigating towards the United States on a well known narcotrafficking transit route," Trump said in his Truth Social post on Saturday.

"The two surviving terrorists are being returned to their Countries of origin, Ecuador and Colombia, for detention and prosecution."

He added that no US military personnel were injured in the attack.

On Friday, the US president had said the submarine targeting the latest attack was "built specifically for the transportation of massive amounts of drugs".

"This was not an innocent group of people. I don't know too many people who have submarines, and that was an attack on a drug-carrying, loaded submarine," he added.

UN-appointed human rights experts have described the US strikes as "extrajudicial executions".

Trump earlier told reporters that he had authorised the CIA to conduct covert operations in Venezuela, and that he was considering launching attacks on Venezuelan soil.

Narco-subs have become a popular way to transport drugs as they can go largely undetected, and can be sunk after delivery. They are often homemade and constructed using fibreglass and plywood.

The US, as well as other coastal nations, have previously intercepted some of these subs.

'I miss the past, but we like the money': The Bali-fication of a laidback surfers' island

Getty Images Back view of a man lying on his surf board at sunset as a wave crashes into him. In the background are fishing boats and a large hill.Getty Images
Indonesia is on a mission to turn Lombok island into another Bali - and put it on a tourist bucket list

Damar, one of the best surf guides on the Indonesian island of Lombok, feels right at home taking tourists out to sea.

With his fluent English and effortless banter, you would never guess what was his childhood fear: foreigners.

"When I was 10 or maybe seven, I used to cry - I used to just pee in my pants when I saw white people," Damar, now 39, tells the BBC.

That diffidence waned as the laidback island he calls home slowly found its popularity among Western travellers.

Just east of Bali, Lombok boasts the same azure beaches and stunning views as its famous neighbour, but without the exasperating crowds. Lombok's beaches are still a hidden gem among surfers, as is Mount Rinjani for hikers. Travel sites still liberally use the word "untouched" to describe the island as they offer reasons to venture beyond Bali.

So it should come as little surprise that the Indonesian government has sensed the opportunity to create another lucrative tourist haven on the sprawling archipelago.

The mission is to create more "Balis" - and Lombok will be one of them.

For islanders, this promise of "Balification" is a welcome opportunity but they are also wary of what it brings.

And the change has already begun to hit home in more ways than one.

Getty Images An aerial view of a volcano, with white smoke billowing from the crater. It's surrounded by green water in a crater lake.Getty Images
Mount Rinjani, an active volcano sitting at Lombok's highest point, is a hiker's dream

Mandalika in the south has been chosen as the heart of the "new Bali".

Its rustic coastline has already given way to glitzy resorts, cafes and even a racetrack. Earlier this month, nearly 150,000 spectators showed up to watch the motorcycle Grand Prix.

Between 2019 and 2021, dozens of families were evicted from their village homes for the construction of the Mandalika circuit. Damar's was among them.

Confronted with what activists decried as a messy resettlement plan and unfair compensation, he and his neighbours were helpless, Damar recalls.

"I was angry, but I cannot do much. I cannot fight against the government," he says.

Since the eviction, Damar has bought a plot of land and built his own house, something that many of his neighbours haven't been able to do. As a surf guide, he estimates that he earns twice as much as a fisherman - a generational profession in his community.

"I've never really been to school, so joining the tourism industry was one of the best choices that I have ever made," Damar says. "Meeting a lot of people from many different countries… It has opened my mind."

Damar's indignation about his eviction even comes with a scrupulous caveat: "I'm not angry at the tourists. I'm just angry at my own government."

Supplied Damar wearing a bucket hat, black t-shirt and board shorts surfing on a wave, with water splashing around him. His hand is pointed in the air for balance, and he is looking intently into the distance.Supplied
Damar's own story mirrors the transformation of Lombok from a quiet island to a budding tourist spot

The makings of a tourist magnet

The drive to transform Lombok is part of a wider effort to lure travellers away from Bali, which has for decades played an outsized role in Indonesia's tourism industry.

The island makes up less than 1% of the country's land area and less than 2% of its 280 million-plus population. Yet last year it accounted for nearly half of all visitors to Indonesia.

But increasingly Bali's unrelenting traffic and pollution - a direct result of its success as a top tourist pick- are leaving those very tourists disappointed with what has long been touted as the "last paradise".

As it turns out, that elusive paradise lies just an hour's boat ride away.

But perhaps not for long.

More and more travellers are catching on to Lombok's appeal. Last year, 81,500 foreign tourists touched down at its airport, a 40% jump from the year before - still, a far cry from the 6.3 million foreigners who flocked to Bali.

Eager for Lombok to follow in Bali's footsteps, Indonesian authorities have secured hundreds of millions of dollars in investment, along with a $250m loan from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.

Getty Images Aerial view of a beach lined with green trees. A giant sign that reads "Kuta Mandalika" can be seen on a structure covered by green plants. Boats can be seen floating in the sea in the distance.Getty Images
"Bali-fication" has come to Kuta

This has accelerated the island's makeover.

In Kuta, a popular town in Mandalika, scrappy surfers' hostels have been replaced by a mosaic of chlorinated pools and plushy sunbeds, and an international school for the children of expats.

While authorities are hailing it as Lombok's success story, some see a cautionary tale.

The cost of paradise

A stone's throw away on the beach of Tanjung Aan, cafe owner Kartini Lumban Raja told the BBC that locals there "don't want to be 'organised' like Kuta".

"When beaches start to look like Kuta, they lose their charm. We lose opportunities. We lose natural beauty," she said.

For months, rumours of evictions had been swirling on Tanjung Aan, which was earmarked for ambitious development plans.

Days after the BBC's visit in July, they came like a rolling wave.

Security forces descended upon the beach to demolish nearly 200 stalls, including Kartini's.

Videos from that day show masked men tearing shop fences down with their bare hands as stall owners protested.

"They were banging on things, kicking plywood… it's truly inhumane," Ella Nurlaila, a stall owner, told the BBC. "My goodness, this eviction was so cruel."

Just Finance International Ella Nurlaila in a peach coloured long-sleeved shirt, looking into the camera with a burrowed eyebrows. Behind her is a large banner that reads: "Save Tanjung Aan, let the local build the grow, don't let us suffer, don't destroy our nature, say no to ITDC".Just Finance International
Ella Nurlaila had sold food on Tanjung Aan for three years before the beach was cleared of all stalls in July

The state-owned company leading Mandalika's tourism drive, InJourney Tourism Development Corporation (ITDC), has secured 2.1 trillion rupiah ($128m; £96m) to build a luxury hotel on Tanjung Aan.

Authorities said the project will create jobs and boost the local economy. But that's little consolation for stall owners like Ella and her husband Adi, who have sold coconuts and coffee on the beach for the past three years.

"Thousands of people here depend on [coastal land] for their livelihood," Adi said. "Where else are we supposed to go to earn a living?"

The couple said they had paid taxes for their stall - which, according to Adi, sat on land belonging to his parents.

But ITDC representatives told the BBC that Tanjung Aan is "state-owned land", and that the tax paid by those businesses "does not equate to legal ownership or land legitimacy".

This is just the latest bout of tensions over Mandalika's tourism push.

Just Finance International, a development finance watchdog, has repeatedly flagged "a pattern of rights violations linked to the Mandalika project" in recent years.

Just Finance International Police with helmets and riot shields, as well as men in green camouflge uniform,  crowd in front of a hut that has a large wooden sign that reads "Aloha".Just Finance International
Security forces arrived on 15 July to demolish the stalls on Tanjung Aan beach

UN human rights experts estimate that more than 2,000 people "lost their primary means of livelihood overnight" because of the Tanjung Aan evictions. Stall owners were given neither "adequate notice" nor "suitable" resettlement plans, they said in a statement in August.

"The people of Mandalika must not be sacrificed for a project that promises economic growth at the expense of human rights," they said.

'If they want Bali, they should go to Bali'

In its quest for a remarkably different future, Lombok will also have to contend with what this means for local culture.

The predominantly Muslim island is home to thousands of mosques and the indigenous Sasak ethnic group. Compared to Bali, alcohol is not as readily available in parts of the island. On travel forums, tourists are encouraged to ditch bikinis and hot pants for more modest attire.

Such conservative sensitivities may change, or at least be driven further inland, as tourism heats up along the coastline. Travellers who have come to love Lombok are not happy about that either.

"Lombok is so special because it still has its own nature and people come to see that," said Swiss tourist Basil Berger, a sceptic of the"Bali-fication" of the island.

"If they want to see Bali, they [should] go to Bali," he said. Turning Lombok into another Bali "is the "the worst thing that they can do".

There are also environmental concerns. The motorcycle Grand Prix last year drew 120,000 spectators to Mandalika, leaving behind 30 tonnes of rubbish that authorities struggled to clear.

"Before it gets to Bali's stage of development, Lombok could learn. Because it's showing the same kind of strain," says Sekar Utami Setiastuti, who lives in Bali.

The government should ensure "tourism development brings welfare to a lot of people, instead of just bringing tourists to Lombok", she adds. "Lombok has to find its own identity - not just [become] a less crowded Bali."

Getty Images Aerial view of a large motorcycle race track along the coast, with blue sea seen to the right of the circuit.Getty Images
The race track is just one of many development plans that worry locals and regular visitors who have come to love a quieter Lombok

No matter where that search leads, a new era has dawned on Lombok.

Andrew Irwin is among the foreign investors who have taken an early interest in Lombok's budding tourism. The American is the co-owner of LMBK Surf House, one of Mandalika's most popular surf camps.

The way he sees it, businesses like his are helping to uplift local employees and their families.

"It's giving people more opportunities to earn more money, send their kids to proper school, get proper insurance, get proper healthcare, and essentially live a better quality of life," he said.

While there's "not necessarily much one can do" about Lombok's changing landscape, he says, "we can just hope to bring a positive change to the equation".

Tourism has certainly ushered prosperity into the lives of many locals, who have decided to try their hand at entrepreneurship.

"As long you want to work, you'll make money from tourism," says Baiq Enida Kinang Lare, a homestay owner in Kuta, known to her guests as Lara. Her neighbours too have started homestays.

Lara started her business in 2014 with four rooms. She's now at 14, not counting a separate villa under construction.

As excited as she is about her prospects, she is also a little wistful as she recalled life before the hustle.

"It's difficult to find time to gather and see everyone. This is what we miss. We feel like the time flies very, very fast because we're busy," she says.

This is a feeling that would surely be shared by locals from Bali to Mykonos to Cancun, whenever tourism took off in their patch of paradise: "I miss the past, but we like the money."

How George Santos Won His Freedom

On Friday evening, President Trump commuted the sentence of former Representative George Santos. “Good luck George, have a great life!” the president said.

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

George Santos, the disgraced former congressman from New York, had pleaded for mercy for months before President Trump commuted his sentence on Friday.

Cuomo Tries to Tie Mamdani to Muslim Leader’s Anti-Gay Stance

Andrew Cuomo, trailing in the New York City mayor’s race, sought to contrast his role in legalizing same-sex marriage with the views of some of Mr. Mamdani’s supporters.

© Shuran Huang for The New York Times

Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo campaigning in the Bronx on Saturday. Mr. Cuomo criticized his opponent Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani after Mr. Mamdani met with an imam who has opposed homosexuality.

No Kings protests draw huge crowds as anti-Trump rallies sweep across US

Getty Images A person waves a flag that reads, "NO KINDS IN AMERICA" with the blue sky above it at a Washington DC rally on 17 October - one day before the No Kings protests scheduled in cities across the US. Getty Images

Republican governors in several US states have placed National Guard troops on standby in preparation for a nationwide protest to oppose Donald Trump and his policies.

The organisers of the "No Kings" protests say that gatherings will take place at more than 2,500 locations around the US. Trump allies have accused the protesters of being allied with the far-left Antifa movement.

Governors in Texas and Virginia have activated their state's National Guard troops, however it is unclear how visible the military presence will be.

Organisers say that at the last No Kings protest, held in June, more than five million people took to the streets to denounce Trump's political agenda.

The protest organisers say the protest will challenge Trump's "authoritarianism".

"The president thinks his rule is absolute," they say on their website.

"But in America, we don't have kings and we won't back down against chaos, corruption, and cruelty."

Some Republicans have dubbed the protests "Hate America" rallies.

"We'll have to get the National Guard out," Kansas Senator Roger Marshall said ahead of the rallies, according to CNN.

"Hopefully it'll be peaceful. I doubt it."

Texas Governor Greg Abbott on Thursday activated the state's National Guard ahead of a protest scheduled in Austin, the state's capital.

He said the troops would be needed due to the "planned antifa-linked demonstration".

Democrats denounced the move, including the state's top Democrat Gene Wu, who argued: "Sending armed soldiers to suppress peaceful protests is what kings and dictators do — and Greg Abbott just proved he's one of them."

Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin also ordered the state National Guard to be activated.

Wrongfully imprisoned for more than 40 years, US man now faces deportation to India

Getty Images Subramanyam “Subu” Vedam walks with handcuffs around his wristsGetty Images

After serving 43 years in prison for a murder he did not commit, Subramanyam "Subu" Vedam was finally free.

New evidence had exonerated him earlier this month of the murder of his former roommate.

But before he could reach his family's arms, Mr Vedam was taken into custody by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), who want to deport him to India - a country he has not lived in since he was a baby.

Now, Mr Vedam's legal team is fighting a deportation order and his family is determined to get him out of custody, for good.

His family are now working to navigate a new and "very different" situation, his sister Saraswathi Vedam told the BBC.

Her brother has gone from a facility where he knew inmates and guards alike, where he mentored fellow inmates, and where he had his own cell, to a facility where he shares a room with 60 men and where his history of good behaviour and mentorship is unknown.

Mr Vedam has been repeating one message to his sister and other family members in the wake of the new situation: "I want us to focus on the win."

"My name has been cleared, I'm no longer a prisoner, I'm a detainee."

The 1980 murder

More than 40 years ago, Mr Vedam was convicted of murdering his once-roommate Tom Kinser, a 19-year-old college student.

Kinser's body was found nine months after he went missing in a wooded area with a bullet wound in his skull.

On the day of Kinser's disappearance, Mr Vedam had asked him for a ride. While the vehicle Kinser drove was returned to its usual spot, no one saw it being returned.

Mr Vedam was charged with Kinser's murder. He was denied bail, had his passport and green card seized by authorities and was labelled a "foreigner likely to flee".

Two years later he was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison. In 1984, he was sentenced to a separate two-and-a-half to five years for a drug offence, as part of a plea agreement. That sentence was to be served simultaneously with his life sentence.

Throughout that time, Mr Vedam maintained his innocence on the murder charges.

His supporters and family members stressed there was no physical evidence tying him to the crime.

Getty Images Saraswathi Vedam speaks at microphone outside courthouse as protestors gather with signs that read "Free Subu"Getty Images

Mr Vedam's exoneration

Mr Vedam repeatedly appealed the murder conviction and a few years ago new evidence in the case surfaced which exonerated.

Earlier this month, Centre County District Attorney Bernie Cantorna said he would not pursue a new trial against Mr Vedam.

But Mr Vedam's family knew there was one hurdle left before he was free: he still had a 1988 deportation order, based on his convictions for murder and a drug offence.

The family expected they would have to file a motion to have his immigration case reopened, Ms Vedam said.

The facts of the case are different now, she stressed.

But when they arrested him, ICE cited the immigration order as their reasoning for quickly detaining him in a different Pennsylvania facility.

While he was exonerated for the murder charge, his drug conviction still stands, they have said. The immigration agency said it acted on a lawfully issued order.

ICE did not respond to the BBC's request for comment, but told other US outlets that Mr Vedam will remain in custody pending his deportation.

Mr Vedam's family has said his decades of good behaviour, completion of three degrees and community service while behind bars should be considered when the immigration court examines his case.

"What was deeply disappointing was that we didn't even have a moment to hold him in our arms," Ms Vedam said. "He was held wrongly and one would think that he conducted himself with such honour and purpose and integrity that that should mean something."

Potential deportation to India

The family has stressed Mr Vedam's ties to India - where ICE has said they would like to deport him to - are weak at best.

While he was born there, he moved to the US at nine months old. What relatives are still alive, are distant ones, Ms Vedam told the BBC.

His community - Ms Vedam, her four daughters and other cousins - are in the US and Canada.

"He will again be robbed and miss out on the lives of the people closet to him, by being half way across the world," she said. "It's almost like having his life stolen twice."

Mr Vedam, who is a legal permanent resident, had his citizenship application accepted before he was arrested. Both of his parents were also both US citizens.

"We believe deportation from the United States now, to send him to a country where he has few connections, would represent another terrible wrong done to a man who has already endured a record-setting injustice," his lawyer, Ava Benach said in a statement to the BBC.

特朗普:运毒幸存者将被遣返回原籍国

18/10/2025 - 22:40

美国总统在其“真相社交网络”上写道,潜艇上有四名“毒品恐怖分子”,其中两人被击毙。他还补充说,两名幸存者“将被遣返回原籍国——分别是厄瓜多尔和哥伦比亚,在那里将被拘留和起诉”。

特朗普周五透露,一艘“运毒潜艇”是美国最近在加勒比海地区袭击的目标之一,该潜艇“专门用于运输大量毒品”。

他在周六的帖子中表示,美国情报部门“已经证实,这艘潜艇主要装载了芬太尼和其他非法毒品”。华盛顿以打击贩毒为名,向加勒比地区部署了包括七艘舰艇和隐形战斗机在内的重要军事力量。自9月初以来,华盛顿已在那里进行了至少六次袭击,造成至少27人死亡。

这些针对在外国或国际水域既未拦截也未接受讯问的嫌疑人实施的袭击是否合法,目前仍存在争议。特朗普尤其将矛头指向委内瑞拉,指责该国总统尼古拉斯·马杜罗领导着一个庞大的贩毒组织,并将其运往美国。

加拉加斯对此予以坚决否认,并指责华盛顿以贩毒为借口,“在委内瑞拉实施政权更迭”,并攫取其丰富的石油储备。

英国脱欧对其经济增长产生负面

18/10/2025 - 22:44

英国央行长期以来一直认为,尽管英国与欧盟于2020年达成协议,维持零关税贸易,但2016年脱欧公投通过增加监管阻碍了英国的出口。

安德鲁·贝利在三十国集团(G30)会议上表示,“如果你问我脱欧对经济增长有何影响……答案是,在可预见的未来,它是负面的,但从长远来看,应该会出现积极的、尽管只是部分的抵消作用”。贝利是在30国集团经济会议的小组讨论上发表的上述看法。

本周,美国首都成为关注的焦点,国际货币基金组织(IMF)和世界银行的年度会议重点讨论了特朗普关税政策的影响。

贝利表示,英国脱欧证明企业能够适应更具挑战性的贸易环境,但这需要时间,而且增长速度始终低于其潜力。

他解释道,“如果降低经济体的开放程度,增长将受到限制,但从长远来看,贸易将会调整和重建。这种情况似乎已经发生。同样的道理也适用于全球经济和关税”。

英国预算责任办公室的预测显示,与留在欧盟相比,英国脱欧将使该国的长期生产力水平降低4%。

 

美中东特使怨以色列“不守信用”

18/10/2025 - 22:51

法新社报道,卡塔尔是华盛顿的盟友,也是加沙战争的调解人。10月中旬,特朗普的特使史蒂夫·维特科夫(Steve Witkoff)及其女婿贾里德·库斯纳(Jared Kushner)曾抵达埃及参加停火谈判,随后特朗普把加沙停火协议归为自己的功劳。

2025年9月9日,在加沙战争期间,以色列国防军以导弹对位于卡塔尔多哈莱克泰菲亚的哈马斯领导层发动袭击,目标直指正在开会的哈马斯领导层。此次袭击造成六人死亡,其中包括哈马斯高级领导人哈利勒·哈亚的儿子、哈亚办公室主任、三名保镖和一名卡塔尔安全官员。不过,哈马斯说,高层领导人在袭击中幸存。

以色列的突袭引发卡塔尔和海湾邻国的愤怒,这些国家严重依赖美国提供安全保障。根据哥伦比亚广播公司(CBS)采访内容透露,参与结束加沙战争谈判的贾里德·库什纳也表示,特朗普“觉得以色列人有点失去对自己行动的控制,是时候采取强硬措施,阻止他们做他认为不符合以色列长远利益的事情了”。

完整采访内容定于19日播出。

同一消息报道称,史蒂夫·维特科夫表示,卡塔尔“在谈判中发挥了关键作用,埃及人和土耳其人也是如此”。他还补充说,他是在第二天早上得知袭击事件的。

​​

维特科夫补充说,“我们失去了卡塔尔人的信任。所以哈马斯又躲了起来,很难联系到他们”。

在加沙地带遭受两年战争蹂躏后,以色列和哈马斯之间的停火协议于10月10日生效,该协议基于特朗普提出的20点和平计划。在美国总统的压力下,以色列总理本雅明内塔尼亚胡在白宫向卡塔尔道歉。

中国一航班因锂电池自燃备降上海浦东

18/10/2025 - 22:56

据乘客在社交媒体发文描述,飞机行李架突然起火,伴随“砰”一声,“火直接喷出来”,火光和浓烟迅速在机舱内蔓延。

该航班原计划于当日上午9时10分从杭州萧山国际机场起飞,12时20分抵达首尔仁川国际机场。一名亲历乘客回忆,起飞约一小时后,机舱内传出类似爆炸的声响,随后行李架上方出现火光。

影片显示,机舱内烟雾弥漫,空乘紧急赶往现场灭火。乘客则受到惊吓,还有疑似韩籍乘客用韩文大叫:“快点(灭火)。”

据《新京报》报道:18日下午,贝壳财经记者采访到了搭乘该趟航班的乘客舒先生,“我坐在飞机靠尾部的位置,航班应该已经飞了差不多一半路程了,当时乘务员正在空中发小食品和面包,我突然听见‘砰’的一声,就看到中部靠前的行李架火冒出来了。当时,整个客舱都是烟,乘务员们反应很快,拿水、灭火器去扑灭,其间也有乘客接力帮忙。后来火被灭了,但那一排的行李架都被熏黑了。”

CA139航班,9时47分从杭州萧山机场起飞,原计划于当地时间14时抵达韩国仁川机场。

 

内塔尼亚胡:拉法口岸将暂时不开放

18/10/2025 - 23:05

声明继续写道:“将根据哈马斯如何履行其在归还人质和遇难者遗体方面的义务,以及商定框架的执行情况来考虑是否重新开放。”

周六早些时候,巴勒斯坦驻开罗大使馆宣布,加沙与埃及之间的拉法口岸将于周一重新开放,允许居住在埃及的巴勒斯坦人返回。

周四,以色列当局澄清,重新开放口岸后,只允许人员通行,不允许人道主义援助物资通行。 2024年5月初,以色列军方控制了拉法口岸巴勒斯坦一侧,声称该设施“被用于恐怖主义目的”和武器走私。

占领后,所有进入该口岸的通道均被暂停,包括联合国人员。此前,在以色列与哈马斯于2025年1月19日达成的停火协议期间,该口岸曾短暂重新开放。

联合国人道主义事务副秘书长兼紧急救济协调员汤姆·弗莱彻(Tom Fletcher)18日表示,“七、八个月前我来过这里。这些建筑大多没有都倒。但现在,看到这座城市的大部分地区变成废墟,真是令人震惊”。18日他在谢赫拉德万街区视察污水处理厂时告诉法新社。

到本台截稿前,以色列军方表示,“根据红十字会提供的信息,两具装有人质遗体的棺材已被转交给红十字会保管,并正在运往加沙地带的以色列军队。”

萨科齐入狱服刑前 其子发出声援呼吁

18/10/2025 - 23:09

大儿子路易(Louis)在X上写道,“让我们大家聚集起来,表达对尼古拉·萨科齐的支持。”儿子路易还上传了一个不到一分钟的小视频,回述了父亲在万众欢呼、国旗飘扬声中步入爱丽舍宫的辉煌成就。视频中还展示了父亲萨科齐怀中抱着路易小时候的慈父形象。

我们在视频中可隐约听见”每一次都有找到解决办法的时刻“!

萨科齐的小儿子在 Instagram上呼吁大家声援父亲的话语是这样描述的:”如果判你的人能像我一样了解你的内心,我不知道它是否会抗拒看到自己的倒影。”

萨科齐是以”结伙从事犯罪活动“被判5年徒刑,检方告知他具体入狱时间,牢底是否需要坐穿现在无法得知。昔日的前总统成为阶下囚,被关在约9平米的单独房间,不论对谁来说都是一个人生的考验。

萨科齐于2007年-2012年任法国总统,竞选连任失败后,司法缠身。2024年2月,巴黎上诉法院判决他在2012年法国总统选举期间非法使用竞选资金的罪名成立,判处1年有期徒刑。其中,6个月为缓刑,其余6个月在监狱外执行。

2024年12月18日,法国最高法院裁定,萨科齐腐败案和以权谋私案上诉失败,维持对他3年有期徒刑、其中2年缓刑的判决。

除了共谋犯罪,法官在被动腐败、非法竞选融资以及隐匿公款贪污所得等三项罪名上都没有能锁定他。

在他的两个儿子发出声援父亲的呼吁之后,萨科齐的律师团立即表示,这不是刻意安排好的,而是“尼古拉·萨科齐两个儿子发自内心的呼声,他们只是传达了所有匿名支持者的心声,他们希望表达对尼古拉·萨科齐的爱戴和支持。“

律师团再次强调,把前总统萨科齐”送入“监狱是史无前例的判例,在社交网上引发强烈的反弹。

 

欧锦赛男团 法国击败德国强手进入团体决赛

18/10/2025 - 22:48

2025年欧洲乒乓球团体锦标赛于2025年10月12-19日在克罗地亚扎达尔的克雷希米尔·乔西奇体育馆举行。

法国《队报》18日报道,在过去的12届欧洲杯中,德国队都曾九次闯入决赛。自2010年以来,德国队一直是法国队的“杀手锏”,五次将法国队淘汰出局。

队报报道说,面对18日贝内迪克特·杜达(Benedikt Duda)、邱党(Dang Qiu)、帕特里克·弗朗西斯卡(Patrick Franziska)三个强手,法国队费利克斯.勒布伦(Félix Lebrun)、艾利克斯·勒布伦(Alexis Lebrun)、西蒙.高茨( Simon Gauzy)没有手软。

比赛开始后,第一盘艾利克斯·勒布伦0-3杜达:大勒布伦发挥不佳,以7-11、9-11、6-11连输三局败北;第二盘争夺激烈,费利克斯.勒布伦3-2弗朗西斯卡:小勒布伦发球和接球都比较稳健,比分为11-6、7-11、11-6、8-11、11-7,前面双方打个平手,决胜局费利克斯·勒布伦没有被打乱手脚,逼迫对方多次失误。

第三盘,西蒙.高茨3-0邱党:原本很多球迷认为西蒙.高茨打邱党略输一筹,没想到西蒙.高茨以11-8、11-6、12-10连胜三局,直接零封对手。第四盘是一单对决,费利克斯·勒布伦3-1杜达:比分为11-8、10-12、11-2、11-9,小勒布伦独得两分为团队进入决赛立下汗马功劳。

最终法国3-1胜德国晋级决赛,巴黎奥运会男团亚军瑞典队、东京奥运会男团亚军德国队。

 

朝鲜派出至少上万人渗透到多个西方国家企业

18/10/2025 - 22:40

法国费加罗报(Le Figaro)报导,大批朝鲜“士兵”伪造身分和履历,假扮成远距离自由工作者,渗透到西方企业,伺机偷盗钱财汇回朝鲜以资助军事和核计划,甚至窃取资料。

报导引述多家资讯安全公司报告指出,朝鲜派出至少上万人渗透到多个西方国家的企业。

专门分析网路犯罪威胁的资安公司DTEX追踪到近千名任职于大企业的朝鲜骗子,并公布他们的个人电邮地址作为警告。在这些曝光的朝鲜人当中,有两人渗透到加密货币产业,他们使用伪造的日本和新加坡护照,假名分别是“村野直树”(Naoki Murano,音译)和“柯林斯”(Jensen Collins)。

这两人先被派到老挝,然后前往俄罗斯,利用假身分向多家寻找开发人员的企业求职。数年前,加密货币平台DeltaPrime看中“村野直树”的履历,聘用他担任远距自由工作者,但“村野直树”取得网站管理员密钥,从公司帐户盗取了600万美元。

目前朝鲜骗子主要锁定加密货币企业。区块链开发专家马尼安(Zaki Manian)甚至评估,在整个加密产业,看似来自朝鲜的求职者和履历的比例超过50%。他曾于2021年聘用两名在新加坡的程式设计师,长达一年几乎每天与他们联络,也很满意他们的工作成果。然而,这两名工程师离职后数月,美国联邦调查局(FBI)通知,这两人把薪水全数汇到了朝鲜。

有资安专家说,大企业常常请外部公司来处理琐碎工作,这给了朝鲜大盗可乘之机,他们最青睐的产业是加密货币,但金钱已不是他们唯一的动机,他们现在想要的是智慧财产权和敏感资讯。

美国资安企业Kela研究发现,最近至少有一组朝鲜人假扮成独立工程师和建筑师在美国提供服务;他们建立线上3D图样“作品集”,实际上未取得设计建筑的政府许可,有些在他们协助下建好的建筑如今状况堪忧,但他们仍拿到了报酬,并立刻汇入与朝鲜相关的帐户。

资安公司麦迪安(Mandiant)今年4月发布的报告指出,朝鲜在欧洲的行动也有增加,例如一名朝鲜资讯工程师2024年底至少利用12个不同身分在欧洲各地和美国活动,积极向多个欧洲机构求职,尤其在国防领域和政府部门。这些朝鲜远距工作者实际上很多是朝鲜情报部门下的227秘密部队成员,被称为“士兵”。其他人可能与朝鲜国防部或参与研发飞弹的军需工业部直接相关。

这些人在俄罗斯网路犯罪论坛受训,求职手法大同小异,包括用人工智慧(AI)创造虚假人物和假照片、伪造身分证件、建立假网站骗取招募人员的信任,还在面试时使用即时变脸软体。

麦迪安表示,在欧洲,这些人是透过Upwork、Telegram、Freelancer等线上平台被聘用,利用TransferWise、Payoneer等服务以加密货币收款,显示他们有意隐藏金钱来源和流向。

根据Kela说法,这些人一旦进入企业,就会暗中把薪水汇到朝鲜,或利用自己的权限安装恶意软体、窃取资料或勒索。

报导指出,联合国估计,朝鲜数以千计骗徒大军靠著薪水、窃取资料和加密货币,每年为朝鲜带来2.5亿到6亿美元收入,这些钱主要用于军队和核计划。根据联合国报告,朝鲜核计划超过50%的资金来自网路盗窃。

“No Kings”抗议再起 全美数百万人上街怒斥特朗普专制

18/10/2025 - 22:47

华盛顿特区成为今日全美“No Kings”(不要国王)抗议行动的核心之一。上午10点起,集会者从维吉尼亚州阿灵顿出发,经阿灵顿纪念大桥,跨越波托马克河,然后游行到宾夕法尼亚大道和西北第三街参加集会。

接近中午,抗议者在国会大厦前方的国家广场高喊口号、挥舞旗帜,气氛热烈如街头节庆。警方加强戒备,沿途设置路障,目前未传出重大冲突。

这场示威是全美超过2700场活动之一。从纽约、洛杉矶、芝加哥到小镇社区,数百万人走上街头,表达对美国总统特朗普(Donald Trump)政策的不满。共和党批评这些行动为“仇恨美国”集会,而支持者则称这是捍卫民主、反对专制的民众行动。

示威者普遍愤怒于特朗普政府近月一系列强硬措施,包括对无证移民的镇压、动用国民警卫队进入洛杉矶、华盛顿与孟菲斯,以及对政治对手的起诉。抗议者指责这些举措显示出“浓厚的独裁倾向”。

“No Kings”运动组织者在官网声明中指出:“总统以为他的权力是绝对的。但在美国,我们没有国王。我们不会向混乱、腐败与残酷屈服。”

除华盛顿外,洛杉矶主办方预估有10万人参与;波士顿、亚特兰大、新奥尔良及旧金山等城市亦出现庞大人潮。乡镇地区也有数百场规模不一的集会,使“No Kings”成为特朗普重返白宫以来第三次全国性群众动员。

佛蒙特州参议员桑德斯(Bernie Sanders)在华盛顿集会上,痛批特朗普政府“服务亿万富翁阶级”,并点名科技巨头马斯克(Elon Musk)、贝索斯(Jeff Bezos)与祖克伯格(Mark Zuckerberg)_“在特朗普上任后财富暴增”。桑德斯指出:“当一位总统威胁逮捕政治对手,包括纽约州检察长与加州州长时,国家正陷入危险。”

前电视节目主持人、“科学人比尔·奈”(Bill Nye)在华盛顿集会上警告:“我们正面临共和制度可能终结的危机。”他指责特朗普政府压制言论自由、否认科学事实,削减美国航太总署(NASA)经费,“这是对国家健康、福祉与竞争力的严重威胁。”

参议院少数党领袖舒默(Chuck Schumer)与工会成员一同参与纽约游行,并鼓励美国人“不被特朗普与共和党吓得噤声”。他在社交媒体上写道,“这正是他们想要的。他们害怕真相。要发声,用你们的声音捍卫自由。”

加州州长纽森(Gavin Newsom)也在X上呼吁群众和平示威:“当加州人今天走上街头反对总统的威权剧本时,我敦促大家注意安全、和平表达。”

在芝加哥的格兰特公园,民主党籍国会议员拉米雷斯(Delia Ramirez)带领群众高喊:“当我说人民时,你们要回应力量!”她表示:“愿这股声音从芝加哥传遍华盛顿与全国每个角落。”

在纽约皇后区,一名36岁的医疗工作者史蒂芬妮告诉法新社:“这位总统让美国蒙羞。我希望今天有上百万人站出来告诉他,我们不会沉默。”

不过,共和党却传来不同声音。共和党议员埃默(Tom Emmer)称示威者为“民主党的恐怖分支”,并使用“仇恨美国”一词形容抗议。维吉尼亚州州长杨金(Glenn Youngkin)提前启动国民警卫队并增派警力,表示将“零容忍任何暴力、破坏或扰乱秩序的行为”。德州州长阿博特(Greg Abbott)也下令增援奥斯汀的治安部队。

特朗普本人目前在佛罗里达海湖庄园(Mar-a-Lago)度周末,并举行百万美元级募款晚宴。他于出发前接受福克斯新闻采访时表示:“他们说我像国王,但我不是国王。”

除美国境内外,巴黎、柏林、罗马与斯德哥尔摩的美国大使馆外也有群众集会,声援美国抗议者,手举“拒绝法西斯”、“没有国王”等标语。这场抗议正值美国政府停摆、行政与立法冲突升温之际,反映社会对权力集中与民主倒退的深层忧虑。

Disappointment in Kyiv as Zelensky leaves White House empty-handed

Reuters Donald Trump, wearing a white short and chequered violet and white tie speaks as Volodymyr Zelensky all in black looks up to him smilingReuters
Trump says he has faith in Putin, but Zelensky does not

One word sticks out in the Ukrainian leader's description of his latest high-stakes foray into the nerve-centre of American power.

His White House conversation with President Donald Trump, Volodymyr Zelensky wrote on X, was "pointed".

But we don't need to parse his semantic description of the exchange to know that this was not the meeting that the Ukrainian side had been expecting.

If the old British adage holds true that a week is a long time in politics, then Zelensky appears to have set a new record.

A short transatlantic flight, it seems, is now an age.

As they set off for Washington on Thursday, the Ukrainian side was in high spirits.

Listen to the words of Ruslan Stefanchuk, the speaker of Ukraine's parliament – effectively the country's second in command – and a politician fiercely loyal to Zelensky.

In an interview with the BBC shortly before the president's plane took off, Stefanchuk described the trip as a "very important historical moment".

The meeting, he said, would leave the world in no doubt that Trump "finally understands that Putin is a liar, he can't be trusted, and actions are needed to stop the war".

And, he appeared to suggest, the crucial question for Ukraine – whether Trump would agree to its use of American long-range Tomahawk missiles - was close to being "solved".

But it was as Zelensky's flight was in the air that news of the two-and-a-half-hour Trump-Putin phone call began to emerge and, before its wheels were even on the Washington tarmac, we had the announcement that another summit between the two was in the offing.

The Ukrainians descended the steps, to be met with a low-key American greeting, and with their optimism, like a piece of waylaid luggage, lost somewhere en route.

Trump tells BBC Putin 'wants to make a deal', cites threat of Tomahawks

Just a few weeks ago, the US president appeared to be running out of patience with Russian President Vladimir Putin, suggesting he thought he might be stringing him along, that his continuing attacks on Ukraine were "crazy" and that he was growing "very angry" with him.

But Friday's meeting confirmed that the sense of frustration was gone.

"I think he wants to make a deal," Trump said, and then proceeded to repeat some of his old talking points, framing the conflict as, in essence, a personal gripe between two leaders.

"There's a lot of bad blood," he said.

Zelensky has learned from bitter experience that there are great risks in being seen to challenge Trump inside the walls of the White House.

And so, the underlying tension was - once again - palpable as Trump, his secretary of state, the war secretary and treasury secretary looked on sternly, while prominent members of the MAGA (Make America Great Again)-leaning media clustered around the back of his chair.

As expected, Zelensky was careful to offer effusive praise for the host's prowess as a peacemaker and to repeatedly express his gratitude.

Flattery is the currency of diplomacy in Washington nowadays.

But Zelensky also made it clear he did not share Trump's apparent confidence that Russia is acting in good faith.

"We understand that Putin is not ready," he said.

The outcome, though, appears to have been a foregone conclusion.

Trump ended the day insisting that the war should simply be frozen on the existing battle lines and both sides should simply "go home to their families".

For Ukraine and its allies, the conflict is not a personal dispute but a war of aggression being fought by an authoritarian state, with imperial ambitions, against a European democracy.

Ukraine wants the US Tomahawk missiles to help it pressure Putin into genuine negotiations, and it wants US security guarantees to make sure he is forced to abide with any future peace settlement.

Zelensky left the White House without either of those things.

Watch: How might Tomahawk missiles change the Ukraine-Russia war?

What do Ukrainians think of it all?

In a suburb of Kyiv, recently hit by two Russian missiles, I spoke to some of the residents still working to repair the damage to their homes and businesses.

I asked Volodymyr Tsepovatenko - still busy fixing windows that were blown out of the small shop he owns – for his views on where Ukraine stands after the latest White House meeting.

Volodymyr Tsepovatenko, wearing a black jacket and a grey beanie, standing in front of a glass door and windows.
Volodymyr Tsepovatenko has been fixing windows at a shop he owns after Russian missiles struck a suburb in Kyiv

"If we make a peace deal now," he told me, "Russia will start to prepare a new more professional war against Ukraine, or maybe other countries."

"I see one way for our safety and it's to destroy the possibility of Russia occupying or fighting any country in Europe."

Ukraine needs to keep fighting, he said.

Oleksandr Vilko's car was destroyed by the blast wave when the missiles struck. He is not too worried, he says, about the decision on the Tomahawks.

"The only power who decides what's going to be next is our army," he told me.

Oleksandr Vilko, who has a beard and is wearing a black vest and beanie, points to his car, which has a shattered windshield.
Oleksandr Vilko's car was damaged by the blast wave when the missiles struck

While Ukraine is grateful for any assistance provided so far, he said, it was Washington's sovereign right whether or not to give Ukraine its own long-range missiles to fight back.

But with or without them, Ukrainians would fight on, he said.

"It's almost the fourth year of the war with the biggest country in the whole world," he said.

"And still we survived."

No Kings protests draw huge crowds as anti-Trump rallies sweep across US

Getty Images A person waves a flag that reads, "NO KINDS IN AMERICA" with the blue sky above it at a Washington DC rally on 17 October - one day before the No Kings protests scheduled in cities across the US. Getty Images

Republican governors in several US states have placed National Guard troops on standby in preparation for a nationwide protest to oppose Donald Trump and his policies.

The organisers of the "No Kings" protests say that gatherings will take place at more than 2,500 locations around the US. Trump allies have accused the protesters of being allied with the far-left Antifa movement.

Governors in Texas and Virginia have activated their state's National Guard troops, however it is unclear how visible the military presence will be.

Organisers say that at the last No Kings protest, held in June, more than five million people took to the streets to denounce Trump's political agenda.

The protest organisers say the protest will challenge Trump's "authoritarianism".

"The president thinks his rule is absolute," they say on their website.

"But in America, we don't have kings and we won't back down against chaos, corruption, and cruelty."

Some Republicans have dubbed the protests "Hate America" rallies.

"We'll have to get the National Guard out," Kansas Senator Roger Marshall said ahead of the rallies, according to CNN.

"Hopefully it'll be peaceful. I doubt it."

Texas Governor Greg Abbott on Thursday activated the state's National Guard ahead of a protest scheduled in Austin, the state's capital.

He said the troops would be needed due to the "planned antifa-linked demonstration".

Democrats denounced the move, including the state's top Democrat Gene Wu, who argued: "Sending armed soldiers to suppress peaceful protests is what kings and dictators do — and Greg Abbott just proved he's one of them."

Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin also ordered the state National Guard to be activated.

What Prince Andrew's titles loss means for Sarah Ferguson, Beatrice and Eugenie

PA Media Sarah, Duchess of York and her daughters Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie speak to a patient  at University College Hospital, London, earlier this year.PA Media
Princess Eugenie and Princess Beatrice with their mother Sarah Ferguson

Prince Andrew's removal from the last vestiges of royal life has not only reshaped his future - it's sending ripples through his family too.

His ex-wife has now lost her duchess title and will simply be known as Sarah Ferguson.

Their daughters, Beatrice and Eugenie, will continue to have the title of princess as scandal surround their parents.

Prince Andrew lost use of his Duke of York title over his links with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

So, what does life after the royal shake up look like for the women of the York Family?

For Ferguson, 66, the change will be the most visible.

For all these years, she has kept the courtesy royal divorcee title Sarah, Duchess of York. Now, she reverts to her maiden name of Ferguson.

And while arguably we've always referred to her as "Fergie", royal commentator Richard Palmer said that will "no doubt" have an impact.

"She will have lost a bit of cachet over this," he said. "She certainly does use the title – even her Twitter bio is @SarahTheDuchess."

But the loss of her title may impact her much less than the scandal she's facing separately about her own links with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Last month, several charities dropped her as patron or ambassador after an email from 2011 revealed that she called Epstein her "supreme friend" and seemed to apologise for her public criticism of him.

"I think as far as Sarah is concerned, her own recent controversy involving the email she is said to have sent Epstein is what has had the biggest impact for her of late," said royal commentator Victoria Murphy.

"Prior to that, she had sidestepped the firing line of the controversy around Epstein and I think may have continued to do so, albeit without calling herself Duchess of York, had that not happened."

Away from her philanthropy, Ferguson also has various business ventures.

And these, too, are more likely to be affected by the Epstein controversy than any change in title, says Murphy.

"I would say it's likely they will be impacted by the revaluations of her own contact with Epstein, in the same way her charity work was and the fact that charities didn't want to be associated with her."

But Ferguson has been a great survivor in royal circles. She's kept bouncing back.

Even though she split from Prince Andrew more than three decades ago, she has remained his strong supporter and still lives in his Windsor estate.

The Christmas before last, she was back in the royal fold, joining a royal Christmas gathering in Sandringham the first time in decades. That was despite she and her ex-husband not being working royals or allowed to be part of official royal events.

That ability to bounce back may help her this time too.

"She's the ultimate survivor and master of reinvention," said royal author Katie Nicholls.

"Not only has she been reaccepted by the public, but the late Queen Elizabeth II brought her back into the fold, and Charles is also very fond of her."

Nicholls argues that Ferguson, over the years, has been through "much worse", and won't be too impacted by the loss of her title.

"Having been a royal outcast for all these decades, she's learnt not to attach too much weight to things like that."

Getty Images Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie attend a Coronation Big Lunch in Chalfont St Giles, BuckinghamshireGetty Images
Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie pictured at a Coronation Big Lunch in Chalfont St Giles, Buckinghamshire in 2023

For the couple's two daughters, Beatrice, 37, and Eugenie, 35, there's no formal change.

They will still be known as princesses, which they have been entitled to since birth.

There is also no change to the line of succession.

Andrew remains eighth in line to the crown, followed by his daughters Beatrice and Eugenie, in ninth and twelfth place respectively.

But in reality their positions are "low down" and will likely become much further down as time goes on, says Murphy.

"So practically, their positions have little meaning for the future," she says.

Beatrice and Eugenie are also currently non-working royals, and while they do sometimes take on roles – Princess Eugenie was recently announced as a mentor for the King's Foundation's 35 under 35 network for example - Murphy also says she "can't see a world" in which they would step up into royal duties in any official way.

"I don't think that was ever really on the cards, and I certainly don't see it as an option," she said.

They have also benefited from all of the contacts their parents have made over the years, says Palmer. And while Andrew still remains a prince, losing the dukedom could have a knock-on impact there.

Prince Andrew will also no longer join the King and the rest of the royal family at Christmas at Sandringham, but it's possible his daughters will still attend, says Palmer.

"As far as Beatrice and Eugenie go, I think there's an appreciation of the fact that this scandal doesn't involve them, and it's not fair for it to impact them directly in the independent lives they are carving out for themselves," says Murphy.

"Their daughters are most unfortunate victims, they've had to suffer in silence and have been dignified in their silence," adds Nicholls.

"It can't be easy to see their parents dragged through something like this, and they remain very much loved nieces for the King. It wouldn't surprise me at all to see them at Christmas occasions in the future. They're largely untarnished."

Ultimately, there seems to be little doubt that the person who will be most affected by all of this will be Prince Andrew himself.

For a man who always liked the trappings of royalty, the pomp and the ceremony, the loss of his titles is deeply humiliating.

So to not have those, on a personal level, will really matter.

“不要国王”再出现在美街头 “权力属于人民”

18/10/2025 - 22:37

《时代》杂志写道,数以百万的美国人走上街头抗议特朗普政府的独裁。“我们要提醒总统及其支持者,美国没有国王,权力属于人民。”法国国家科学研究中心社会学家兼研究主任塞巴斯蒂安·鲁(Sébastien Roux)在接受BFMTV采访时表示:走上街头的美国人抗议的是总统的暴力。“他们奋起反抗的是司法不公、反对派的暴力镇压”。

不愿意透露姓氏的斯蒂芬妮( Stéphanie)告诉法新社,有这样的总统我们都觉得丢脸,我希望今天上街的人多多的。37岁的抗议者阿什利(Ashley)在接受法新社采访时怒气冲冲地说道:特朗普违反法律和宪法。

参加游行的人会有2024年败给特朗普的卡玛拉·哈里斯(Kamala Devi Harris);好莱坞男演员罗伯特·德尼罗(Robert De Niro)。2025年6月参加反特朗普游行的脱口秀演员吉米·基梅尔(Jimmy Kimmel),他的节目一度被叫停。

维护特朗普的共和党人说这是民主党发起的不理智的攻势。

明尼苏达州众议员汤姆·埃默(Tom Emmer)指责民主党人屈服于“党内恐怖分子”。参议院民主党领袖查克·舒默(Chuck Schumer)周六反驳道:“不要让特朗普和共和党人恐吓和压制你们”,请“发出你们自己的声音”。

2025年6月14日,在特朗普庆祝自己生日的这一天曾举行过“不要国王”的全国示威活动。

谈到“针对美国的仇恨动员”,众议院共和党领袖迈克·约翰逊(Mike Johnson)说:“我敢打赌,示威人群中,你会看到哈马斯的支持者和反法西斯分子”,他指的是最近被总统指定为“恐怖组织”的政治运动。

特朗普对这些抗议活动轻描淡写。这个周末,特朗普在福克斯新闻上评论道:“他们称我为国王。我不是国王。”

 

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