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贸易紧张或导致德国外长中国之行取消

24/10/2025 - 17:45

德国外交部周五宣布,原定“近日访问中国”的德国外交部长约翰·瓦德富尔将“推迟”行程。法新社说,此举正值北京与欧盟之间贸易紧张局势加剧之际。

这一消息传出之际,正值美国和欧洲对全球最大稀土生产国中国当局宣布对稀土实施贸易限制深感不满之际。

德国外交部发言人在柏林举行的例行政府新闻发布会上表示:“除了中国外交部长与约翰·瓦德富尔的会晤外,中方未能确认其他足够多的会晤安排”,德方对“短期内无法进行面对面的接触”表示遗憾。

她强调说:“贸易限制,特别是在稀土和半导体领域,令德国企业深感担忧。”

这位发言人还表示,中国作为对俄乌战争中的俄罗斯拥有无可替代影响力的国家,为乌克兰实现公正、持久的和平作出贡献,是十分重要的。

路透社说,这位发言人拒绝透露是中国还是德国取消了此次行程,但强调鉴于中国在贸易领域的重要地位,以及作为“对俄乌战争中的俄罗斯拥有无可替代影响力的国家”,德方对此事态发展深表遗憾。

她表示,德国外长瓦德富尔先生“计划近期与中方同行通电话”。

法新社说,德国尤其受到与北京贸易紧张局势的影响,这些紧张局势特别波及对德国经济至关重要的战略领域,如机床和汽车行业,这些行业高度依赖中国半导体。

正在基辅访问的德国经济部长卡特琳娜·赖希表示,德国正与欧盟委员会就此事“与中国政府保持联系”。

她说:“我们已主动联系中国商务部长,希望恢复芯片出口。目前,该问题尚未得到解决”。

After Teen Suicide, Character.AI Lawsuit Raises Questions Over Free Speech Protections

A mother in Florida filed a lawsuit against an A.I. start-up, alleging its product led to her son’s death. The company’s defense raises a thorny legal question.

© Naila Ruechel for The New York Times

Megan has become an advocate for children’s safety online and in September gave testimony at a congressional hearing on “Examining the Harm of A.I. Chatbots.”

A Restaurant Run by Teens in a Town Overrun by Guns

Shootings have long plagued the city of Montgomery, Ala., where poverty levels are high and good jobs are scarce. That’s My Dog Jr. offers teenagers a moneymaking opportunity — and $3.99 hot dogs.

© Charity Rachelle for The New York Times

Since opening in 2019, That’s My Dog Jr. has been entirely staffed by teenagers through a mentorship nonprofit.

AWS Cloud-Computing Outage Left Smart Bed Customers Without Sleep

The widespread outage involving the cloud-computing provider Amazon Web Services ensnared unexpected consumers earlier this week: people who just wanted a good night’s sleep.

© Jeenah Moon for The New York Times

Some Eight Sleep customers drawn to the company’s smart-bed systems were surprised to find a cloud service’s outage left them without the usual comforts this week.

GOP redistricting effort in New Hampshire is frozen

Republicans’ redistricting push is on ice in New Hampshire, in a blow to the White House’s aggressive effort to protect the GOP’s House majority in the midterms.

State Sen. Dan Innis has yanked his own bill that would have kicked off a mid-decade redraw of the state’s two congressional districts in the face of resistance from GOP Gov. Kelly Ayotte.

“The governor wasn’t that supportive of it since it’s in the middle of the normal redistricting cycle,” Innis, a Republican who recently ended his U.S. Senate campaign, told POLITICO. “Rather than create a difficult situation in my own house, the New Hampshire State House, I thought it made sense to save this for another time.”

Innis’ decision to withdraw his bill deals the White House another setback in its pressure campaign to strong-arm GOP-led states into redistricting. Indiana Senate Republican leadership said this week that they lack the votes to pass a mid-cycle redraw in the Hoosier State, though Gov. Mike Braun is still eyeing a special session to redo the state’s maps. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment about New Hampshire.

The White House had been ratcheting up pressure on New Hampshire Republicans to put forward a new map for months, threatening a take-no-prisoners approach that included weighing a primary challenge to Ayotte. Trump ally and longtime New Hampshire resident Corey Lewandowski, who is serving as a Department of Homeland Security senior adviser, said days later he was considering running for governor against Ayotte.

There is some interest among Granite State Republican lawmakers in remapping, because New Hampshire has been using a court-approved congressional map since then-Gov. Chris Sununu, a Republican, vetoed plans the Legislature sent him in 2022. Democrats need to net three seats in next year’s midterms in order to win back control of the House, and the Trump team was hoping to secure one seat in a New Hampshire redraw.

Both of the districts are currently represented by Democrats, although the state’s open 1st District will likely be a battleground next November even without new lines.

State lawmakers say they would want buy-in from Ayotte, who isn’t budging.

The first-term governor has repeatedly rejected the idea of a mid-decade redraw, saying the “timing is off” and insisting the Trump team’s pressure tactics wouldn’t change her mind.

“We’re in the middle of the census, I don’t think the timing is right for redistricting,” Ayotte recently told local television station WMUR, adding that “the thing [Granite Staters are] talking to me about is not redistricting.”

© Charles Krupa/AP

欧盟峰会计划动用俄冻结资产援乌 比利时等国继续反对

24/10/2025 - 16:46

周四在布鲁塞尔举行的欧盟峰会要求欧委会探讨未来两年为乌克兰提供融资途径,包括使用俄罗斯冻结资产,并为12月的欧盟峰会留下讨论这个议题的空间。但比利时等国继续持保留态度。

由于西方制裁,这些俄罗斯冻结资产目前无法动用,总额约为2100亿欧元,其中大部分存放在比利时,欧盟委员会提议用这些资产为基辅提供 1400 亿欧元的贷款。

比利时因担心独自承担风险而一直反对这个做法。比利时首相巴特·德韦弗在峰会开始时威胁说,如果得不到满意的结果,他将阻止整个进程。

他在讨论结束时强调:“拥有坚实的法律基础并非奢望”,并说:“我只是个小小的比利时;我唯一能做的就是指出问题,并礼貌地寻求解决方案。”

据一位外交官称,其他几个国家也表达了保留意见。

据政客新闻消息,比利时首相德韦弗继续反对动用俄罗斯冻结资产,也拒绝支持欧盟领导人发表的一份声明,该声明原本要为使用1400亿欧元的俄罗斯冻结资产作为乌克兰“赔偿贷款”的基础提供初步政治绿灯。

比利时首相要求在结论中使用淡化措辞,消除任何提及赔偿贷款的内容。最终版本只简单声明各国领导人承诺解决乌克兰的“紧急需求”,并“邀欧盟委员会尽快提出为乌克兰提供财政支持的方案”。

法国总统马克龙承认:“这一解决方案引发了法律问题和风险分担问题”。但他同时强调,这仍然是未来几年向乌克兰提供经济援助最有前景的途径。

泽连斯基在布鲁塞尔参加了部分讨论,他敦促各国领导人采取积极行动。政客新闻称,尽管美国宣布了对俄罗斯的新制裁,但并未承诺提供任何新的财政支持。乌克兰总统泽连斯基在峰会期间对记者表示,如果没有新的资金注入,基辅明年可能会面临严重的财政困难。

几乎与特朗普推迟与普京在普达佩斯会谈,并决定制裁俄罗斯两大石油公司同时,欧盟于周三宣布对莫斯科实施新一轮制裁,也是自2022年2月以来的第19轮制裁。

制裁措施包括,到2026年底,欧洲完全停止进口俄罗斯液化天然气(LNG),并对莫斯科用来规避西方制裁的“幽灵油轮”采取额外措施,12个中国公司也在被制裁之列。

US strikes another alleged drug boat in Caribbean

Pete Hegseth on X Sureveillance image of boat on water - it says declassified above it in green capped lattersPete Hegseth on X

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced Friday that the US had carried out another strike against a ship alleged to belong to drug traffickers.

The operation took place in the Caribbean Sea, against a group Hegseth identified as the Tren de Aragua criminal organisation.

Hegseth said "six male narco-terrorists" were on board and killed.

The US has carried out a series of strikes on ships in the region, in what President Donald Trump has described as an effort to curtail drug trafficking.

Hegseth posted a video on X showing the operation. The video begins by showing a boat in a crosshairs, before it explodes into a cloud of smoke.

This is the tenth strike the Trump administration has carried out against alleged drug traffickers since early September. Most have taken place off of South America, in the Caribbean, but on 21 and 22 October it carried out strikes in the Pacific Ocean.

Members of Congress, both Democrats and Republicans, have raised concerns about the legality of the strikes and the president's authority to order them.

Trump said he has the legal authority to order the strikes, and has designated Tren de Aragua a terrorist organisation.

German police seize fake Picassos in multi-million euro forgery raid

Reuters Counterfeit paintings on display in a wood-panelled room, showing copies of works by Pablo Picasso among othersReuters
Forged art claiming to show works by famous artists, including Picasso and Rembrandt, has been seized by police

Bavarian police have seized millions of euros worth of forged art claiming to show works by Picasso, Rembrandt and Kahlo in an operation spanning Germany, Switzerland and Liechtenstein.

Authorities in Bavaria said the main suspect is a 77-year-old German man who, along with 10 alleged accomplices, is facing charges of conspiracy and fraud.

Investigators first became suspicious when the septuagenarian ringleader attempted to sell two supposedly original paintings by Picasso on the art market.

He then wanted to sell De Staalmeesters, a famous oil painting by Dutch old master Rembrandt, for 120 million Swiss francs (£113m) - despite the original hanging in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.

The Bavarian State Criminal Police Office (BLKA) said the forged De Staalmeesters - which is sometimes referred to as the Masters of the Clothmakers' Guild - was owned by an 84-year-old Swiss woman.

She is now being investigated by the Amberg public prosecutor's office, the BLKA and Swiss authorities after the forged piece was confiscated in Switzerland.

At the time, after being examined by an art expert, the police said: "It was, as suspected, a copy and not a lost masterpiece by Rembrandt van Rijn."

The painting was seized during a co-ordinated series of dawn raids across Germany, Switzerland and Liechtenstein on Wednesday 15 October.

During the searches, a large number of suspected art forgeries were found and seized, the BLKA said, along with "documents, records, mobile phones, storage media and cloud data".

Bavarian police said the main suspect attempted to sell a further 19 counterfeit works, purportedly by world-famous artists for between €400,000 (£349,000) and €14m (£12.2m).

They included copies of work by Mexican painter Frida Kahlo as well as Flemish old master Peter Paul Rubens, Italian sculptor Amedeo Modigliani and Spain's Joan Miró.

He was assisted by 74-year-old German man who "prepared expert reports specifically to confirm the authenticity of the artworks".

The BLKA said that he and the main suspect were arrested on the day of the raids before being conditionally released.

The police said that the investigation is in progress.

"Among other things, all confiscated paintings will be examined in detail by experts and appraisers in the coming weeks," police said.

Brazil's Lula, 79, to seek fourth term as president

Reuters Lula is wearing a fitted navy suit with a white shirt on underneath. He is wearing a funky red, white and blue striped tie and is standing behind a lectern in mid speech. He has a grey beard and grey hair. Reuters

Luiz Inácio da Silva has announced he will run for a fourth term as Brazil's president in the nation's elections in 2026.

The 79-year-old had indicated during his last election campaign that it would be his last - but stressed he did not feel his age in comments during a state visit to Indonesia on Thursday.

"I'm about to turn 80 years old, but you can be sure I have the same energy I had when I was 30. And I will run for a fourth term in Brazil," Lula told reporters.

The decision to run comes despite Lula suffering health problems in office after winning in the tightest run-off election in the South American nation's history.

Already Brazil's oldest president when inaugurated, in December last year he underwent surgery for a brain bleed caused by a blow to the head he sustained in a fall in the presidential palace.

The left-wing leader beat then-incumbent Jair Bolsonaro by 51% to 49% in 2022.

The right-wing firebrand is unlikely to be able to challenge Lula again, as he is serving a 27-year sentence for plotting a military coup aimed at keeping him in power after he lost the last election.

Bolsonaro's incarceration has drawn the ire of US President Donald Trump, prompting him to impose a 50% tariff on imports of Brazilian goods.

However, the two described having a "friendly" call earlier in October as Lula seeks to reduce those levies, and are expected to meet on Sunday.

Lula, who turns 80 on Monday, has himself been imprisoned - for 18 months on corruption charges - but was freed in 2018 after the case was overturned.

He has hinted at a possible fourth run for president since returning to office, but had so far stopped short of a formal announcement.

Brazil's constitution limits presidents to two consecutive terms. Lula previously served a two-term stint between 2003 and 2011.

中国前国脚孙继海:苏超只能推动文旅 和足球发展关系不大

中国男足名宿、前国脚孙继海谈到今年在中国火爆的“苏超(江苏省城市足球联赛)”时说,“苏超”的走红和足球发展的关系并不大,因为“苏超”只能起到推动当地文旅的作用。

孙继海在腾讯视频星期四(10月23日)播放的访谈节目《从何说起》中说,自己“完全没有关注过苏超”, 但他知道苏超,看了苏超的火爆后,他觉得大家还是喜欢足球,热爱足球,证明足球确实是第一大运动,但它也就只能带动文旅。

对于主持人提到,有人表示中国不要搞职业足球、专心发展群众体育,孙继海说,这其实不太一样,一个是草根的群众体育,一个是竞技体育,“体育强,国家强,这是不争的事实,它是国力的象征。奥运会升国旗的时候,你作为中国人是不是很骄傲,这就是它的意义。当然,足球是不太有机会升起国旗了。”

孙继海还对一直支持国足的中国球迷表达了感谢,称自己作为球员的时候,从来没觉得中国的球迷多么伟大。退役之后,反倒有几次在现场观看国家队比赛的时候,“必须给球迷点个赞。”

他说:“在国家队成绩这么差的情况下,比赛过程也不是特别的精彩,球迷们依然选择来到现场,座无虚席,然后营造出来的氛围让人感动,一直唱一直欢呼,甚至玩人浪。真的让我很感动。”

Plaid wins by-election as Labour loses 100-year grip on Caerphilly

Getty Images Lindsay Whittle hugs Plaid Cymru Senedd member Heledd Fychan on the steps of the Welsh Parliament building. Plaid leader Rhun ap Iorweth can be seen clapping on the left hand side of the picture.Getty Images
Plaid Cymru Senedd members and activists welcomed Lindsay Whittle to Cardiff Bay on Friday

Labour suffered its first parliamentary defeat in Caerphilly for 100 years as Plaid Cymru claimed victory in the Welsh Parliament by-election.

Nigel Farage's Reform pledged to "throw everything" at the campaign but could only finish second to Plaid's Lindsay Whittle, who took 47% of the vote with a majority of 3,848.

The result saw a swing of 27% from Labour, which has held the seat in Westminster since the 1920s and in the Senedd since it began at the turn of the century.

Whittle promised to work like "a Trojan for every man, woman and child" and said he was proud to call Caerphilly his home.

Celebrating victory outside the town's castle he said: "I believe the world is watching Wales, an emerging nation starting to control our lives again."

Plaid leader Rhun ap Iorwerth, who hopes to form the next Welsh government at May's Senedd election, said the party can "now win in any part of Wales" but was "taking nothing for granted".

"It is a momentous win, a historic win for Caerphilly, for Plaid Cymru and for the story of Welsh politics," he added.

Plaid Cymru, which celebrated the 100th anniversary of its founding over the summer, is seen as being on the centre-left of Welsh politics.

Achieving Welsh independence has long been an article of faith for activists.

But ap Iorwerth is downplaying independence for now, promising a plan but not in the first term of any Plaid-led government.

Labour First Minister Eluned Morgan told BBC Wales she had spoken to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer on Friday morning and said he understood he "has a responsibility to help us out in Wales" following the party's humiliation.

She admitted it was a "bad result for Labour" but insisted she would not resign.

Whittle, a former Caerphilly council leader and councillor for almost 50 years, paid an emotional tribute to the late Caerphilly Member of the Senedd (MS) Hefin David, whose death triggered the by-election, saying his "kindness" was the "guiding spirit" of his campaign.

In his overnight victory speech to jubilant supporters, Whittle said: "Listen Westminster, this is Caerphilly and Wales telling you we want a better deal."

Ap Iorwerth said Caerphilly voters had "chosen hope over division, and progress over the tired status quo, and backed Plaid Cymru's positive, pro-Wales vision".

Turnout was just over 50% - higher than 2021's 44% in Caerphilly - compared to the national average for a Senedd vote has never been over 50%.

The moment Plaid win the Caerphilly by-election

Reform won only 495 votes four years ago but ended in battle with Plaid Cymru, coming second with 36% of the vote.

Labour's Richard Tunnicliffe won just 11% of the vote and came third.

The constituency was visited by a series of senior figures from the party in the last few days, including Farage, who campaigned in Caerphilly on Thursday.

Despite the result Llŷr Powell said he thought Reform would form the next Welsh government.

"We've got more people turning out to vote now when they've got a party they believe in."

On Friday, Farage predicted May's Senedd election would be a "two-horse race between Reform UK and Plaid Cymru".

"The total collapse of the Labour vote to Plaid was to a party that people know well and to a popular local politician," he wrote on social media.

Sam Robinson/BBC Llyr Powell speaking to reporters, with a brick wall behind him. Reporters are holding microphones and mobile phones in front of him.Sam Robinson/BBC
Llŷr Powell was Reform's candidate for the by-election and finished second

Labour had held Caerphilly since the National Assembly, as the Welsh Parliament - or Senedd - was then called, opened in 1999.

The result leaves the party two seats short of a majority, making it harder for it to govern ahead of a crucial vote on its budget in January.

It has already begun talks with opposition leaders in an effort to work out how it can get through its spending plans on the NHS, education and other services.

Morgan congratulated the Plaid Cymru candidate and said the by-election was held "in the toughest of circumstances and in the midst of difficult headwinds nationally".

She said Labour had heard "the frustration on doorsteps" and insisted the party was "listening, we are learning the lessons and we will be come back stronger".

Whatever happens next, Caerphilly has written itself into the pages of Welsh political history as 100 years of Labour rule came crashing down.

We are about to find out if this result is an eye-opening anomaly or a genuinely new chapter.

Read more analysis from Wales political editor Gareth Lewis here

Prince Andrew's banner removed from chapel at Windsor Castle

BBC Banners hang near the ceiling of a chapel BBC
It appears the remaining three banners in the row have been spaced out to fill the gap

Prince Andrew's banner bearing his coat of arms has been removed at Windsor Castle as the controversy continues over his links to late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The flag, linked to his membership of the Order of the Garter, which the prince gave up last week, was on display inside St George's Chapel but is no longer hanging there.

Last Friday, Andrew announced he would also no longer use his royal titles, including Duke of York, after the publication of a posthumous memoir by Virginia Giuffre revived claims about his ties to Epstein.

The prince is under increasing pressure to lose further privileges, including the formal removal of his titles and his residence at Royal Lodge in Windsor.

The book, Nobody's Girl, was written by Ms Giuffre before she died earlier this year. She accused the prince of sexually assaulting her - allegations Prince Andrew has strenuously denied.

Prince Andrew's banner, which he was given when he became a Knight of the Garter (KG) in 2006, had been hanging in the quire - the area where clergy and the choir sit for services.

A virtual tour of the area available on the website for St George's Chapel shows it still hanging near the door leading into the quire. It is not known when the tour was created.

However, the banner has now been removed and only three now hang in the space. It is thought it was taken down earlier in the week.

College of St George Prince Andrew's banner was hanging second from the left in this rowCollege of St George
Banners hang near the roof of a chapel

Prince Andrew's banner was hanging second from the left in this row
A photograph taken on Friday shows the banner is no longer there

The Order of the Garter is the oldest and most senior order of chivalry in Britain and includes other senior members of the royal family and those said to have contributed notably to public life.

Current non-royal members include former prime ministers Sir Tony Blair and Sir John Major.

Prince Andrew is facing scrutiny over his Royal Lodge home in Windsor Great Park, where he has paid a "peppercorn rent" for more than 20 years.

The government this week refused to give MPs time to debate Prince Andrew's titles or taxpayer-funded home, despite growing pressure for scrutiny.

The Metropolitan Police, meanwhile, has said it is "actively" looking into media reports that Prince Andrew tried to obtain personal information about Ms Giuffre through his police protection.

On Friday, it emerged the prince was paid tens of thousands of pounds by British businessman linked to a wealth management company which ripped off pension savers.

Documents from the High Court in London showed Andrew received £60,500 from a British businessman, Adrian Gleave in December 2019, a few weeks after the BBC Newsnight interview which led to his withdrawal from public life.

Lily Allen is 'vicious' and 'raw' on her tell-all break-up album

Getty Images Lily Allen attends the Perfect Issue 9 Party in London in SeptemberGetty Images
Lily Allen has had two previous UK number one albums
Getty Images Lily Allen pictured half-smiling wearing a black outfit against a stylised yellow backgroundGetty Images
Lily Allen has had two previous UK number one albums

As break-up albums go, Lily Allen's new record West End Girl is one for the history books.

Written and recorded in just 10 days, it's a real-time account of her shock, grief, confusion and anger, as her four-year marriage to actor David Harbour fell apart, amid accusations of infidelity.

In interviews, Allen has stressed the lyrics aren't necessarily the gospel truth - because she "wasn't sure what was real, and what was in my head" as she processed the end of the relationship.

But critics have lavished praise on the record, calling it a "jaw-dropping" and "brutal" act of "personal exorcism", while praising Allen's gift for melody, on songs that span flamenco, bossa nova, and "infectious pop".

'Rooted in darkness'

West End Girl is the star's first album in seven years, following 2018's Mercury Prize-nominated No Shame.

Speaking to Perfect Magazine earlier this week, Allen said she had continued writing in the intervening years, but had struggled to feel "emotionally attached" to the material.

"I just didn't think it was any good," she said, before confessing: "It's easier to write funny things that are rooted in darkness or anger or... terminal hatred."

West End Girl marries all of those emotions to pithy, witty storytelling that's been Allen's trademark since her debut, Alright, Still in 2006.

Reuters Lily Allen and David Harbour (left) attend a premiere for the film Violent Night in Los Angeles in 2022Reuters
Lily Allen and her ex-husband, Stranger Things actor David Harbour, pictured in 2022

Narratively, it begins with the singer falling in love, moving to New York with her two daughters, and setting up home in "a nice little rental near a sweet little school".

But the first signs of trouble begin when she's cast in a West End Play (Allen received a Laurence Olivier nomination for her stage debut in 2:22 A Ghost Story, in 2021).

"That's when your demeanour started to change," she sings, as clouds gather over the breezy musical backdrop. "You said that I'd have to audition, I said 'You're deranged'".

As the album progresses, the relationship continues to sour.

Her husband disappears for weeks on end, and Allen reluctantly accepts the conditions of an open marriage.

"He had an arrangement, be discreet and don't be blatant / There had to be payment, it had to be with strangers."

It all blows up when she realises he isn't playing by the rules. She finds text messages and secret Instagram accounts, and confronts one of her husband's extra-marital partners, demanding: "Is it just sex or is there emotion?"

In one of the album's most brutal scenes, Allen, or the character she is portraying, visits an apartment where she believed her husband was practising karate, only to discover a room scattered with sex toys and "a shoebox full of handwritten letters from brokenhearted women".

When she finally ends the relationship, she's bewildered and wounded by his indifference, wondering over and over, "why won't you beg for me?"

It's only on the two final tracks where she accepts the need to move on and burn her bridges.

"I will not absorb your shame, it's you who put me through this," she sings over a stripped-bare beat on Let You W/in. "I can walk out with my dignity if I lay my truth out on the table."

'Sharp, pithy pop'

It is "a brutal, tell-all masterpiece," said The Independent's Hannah Ewens in a five star review.

"This musical of deceit and suffering puts her in the starring role, seizing control of her narrative and holding little back."

"Despite the heartache, or perhaps because of it, she sounds artistically reinvigorated," argued Adrian Thrills in the Daily Mail, awarding the album four stars.

"There's a touch too much auto-tune on her voice at times, but no doubting her ability to convey raw emotion with sharp, pithy pop."

It's a "victorious comeback" that represents the star "at her very best", said the NME's Ali Shutler.

"There's a lot of grief and misery [but] Allen's always had a knack for making devastation sound exciting."

"Anyone who's been betrayed will welcome the bravery of her honesty," wrote Helen Brown in The Telegraph, "while no doubt counting their blessings not to live in the emotionally detached celebrity world of sad sex and lonely mansions."

"It's hard not to wonder whether West End Girl is going to get the reception it deserves," noted The Guardian's Alexis Petridis, calling it a "great pop album regardless of the subject matter".

"Perhaps some listeners will view it as too personal to countenance. Or perhaps fans who have grown up alongside Allen, now 40, will find something profoundly relatable in the story it has to tell."

BMG Music/PA The cover artwork by Nieves Gonzalez for the new Lily Allen album, West End Girl. It shows a portrait of the singer wearing a blue and white spotted outfit
BMG Music/PA
West End Girl is a pun on the singer-turned-stage star's west London roots
BMG Music/PA Album artwork showing Lily Allen stylishly dressed but having dropped her groceries
BMG Music/PA
West End Girl is a pun on the singer-turned-stage star's west London roots

The musician has been careful to clarify that some of the songs are written "in character", saying that the lyrics "could be considered autofiction" - a genre that combines autobiography and fiction.

Harbour has also been circumspect about the end of the marriage. "I'm protective of the people and the reality of my life", he told GQ magazine in April.

"There's no use in that form of engaging [with tabloid news] because it's all based on hysterical hyperbole."

West End Girl will no doubt fuel a renewed tabloid frenzy. Heck, I've just spent 800 words summarising Allen's account.

But in her own words, the album was necessary. At the start of the year, she took time off her hit BBC podcast Miss Me? to deal with her spiralling mental health and checked into rehab.

"The feelings of despair that I was experiencing were so strong," she told Vogue.

"The last time that I felt anything like that, drugs and alcohol were my way out, so it was excruciating to sit with those [feelings] and not use them."

Writing West End Girl, it seems, was her way of coping, of healing and, just maybe, of settling scores.

"If what you're doing isn't provocative, what's the point?" she told Perfect Magazine. "And if it's not scary, what's the point? I'm not here to be mediocre.

"My strength is my ability to tell a story. And so I'm going to lean into that. I have to. It's all I have."

Men jailed over arson attack for Russia on Ukrainian business in London

BBC Breaking NewsBBC

A drug dealer who organised a Russian-ordered arson attack on a warehouse providing aid to Ukraine has been sentenced to 17 years in prison.

Dylan Earl, 21, admitted a National Security Act offence over the attack on industrial units in Leyton, east London, on 20 March 2024.

He was jailed alongside five other men for their part in the plot.

An investigation by the Metropolitan Police's Counter Terrorism Command found Earl, from Leicestershire, was working under the instruction of Russian mercenary Wagner Group, who are proscribed by the UK government as a terrorist organisation. The case is the first to be brought under the National Security Act 2023.

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

You can receive Breaking News on a smartphone or tablet via the BBC News App. You can also follow @BBCBreaking on X to get the latest alerts.

'Behind closed doors it's sheer panic': OCD symptoms among under-25s triple in a decade

BBC A woman with flowing long brown hair, wearing a black jacket and black top looks pensively into the camera. Behind her are several cars out of focus. Overlaid on top of the photo is a black and white graphic reading 'your voice, your BBC News' in caps.BBC
Sophie says obsessive compulsive disorder is still misunderstood

The number of 16-24 year olds in England reporting symptoms of obsessive compulsive disorder, or OCD, has more than tripled in a decade, BBC analysis of NHS data has found.

The condition is now the second-most widespread mental health disorder for young adults, according to statistics from a major NHS England survey.

"OCD, I like to think of it as a bully, it attacks everything, everything you care about, everything you love," says Sophie Ashcroft.

"A lot of people do associate OCD with cleanliness, and being clean, and getting all your socks in a certain order. It's so much more than that."

The 22-year-old is one of a number of young people and their families to have contacted us through Your Voice, Your BBC News explaining how they can't access NHS treatment for their symptoms.

Those who could get seen spoke of a shortage of expert staff and effective treatments.

The average referral time figure for young people to be seen at a national OCD centre in London was 41 weeks last year, nearly three times as long as it was five years previously.

The government told us it was "turning services around", hiring 8,500 extra mental health workers, delivering more talking therapies and providing better access to help through the NHS App. It also said it was expanding the rollout of mental health support teams in schools.

Sophie sometimes struggles to leave her home because she feels compelled to repeat small tasks - such as getting into the shower or cleaning her teeth - to dispel intrusive or distressing thoughts.

"If I had a bad thought during the day, it would ruin the rest of my day. I'd think something bad was gonna happen," she tells us.

'Behind closed doors it's sheer panic'

The people who have contacted BBC News say lives have been devastated, with some families who haven't been able to get NHS help telling us they have spent hundreds of thousands of pounds on private care.

Charities insist there is an OCD crisis and say the figures should be a wake-up call for the government.

OCD symptoms can affect adults and children, and can begin as early as six years old - but they are often triggered during puberty and early adulthood.

Sophie's symptoms first appeared when she was aged nine, she says, but it was a decade later, when a close friend died, that things became a lot worse.

To dispel troubling thoughts, she says it led her to repeat actions again and again - things most people would consider mundane and would do without a second thought.

"It's something telling me you have to do that again, you have to hug that person again, and it just takes over," says Sophie. "It's such an awful, awful feeling."

Despite all this, Sophie has just finished drama school. "I'm really, really good at hiding it, but behind closed doors it's sheer panic," she explains.

Getty Images Close up on a woman's hands and lower arms as she washes her hands with soap under a running bathroom tap. The sink is ceramic white, and the woman is wearing a white shirt and striped trousers.Getty Images
OCD is so much more than being fixated on cleanliness, says Sophie

About 370,000 young people in England reported OCD symptoms in the financial year 2023/24, our analysis of the latest NHS Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey (June 2025) has found.

That is more than three times the number from 2014, when the figure stood at around 113,000.

It means OCD is now second in the list of named mental health disorders - placing it and other anxiety disorders well ahead of depression:

  • Generalised anxiety disorder (GAD) 7.6%
  • Obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) 5.7%
  • Phobias 4.8%
  • Depressive episodes 3.8 %

Why is OCD on the rise among young people?

Improved awareness of the condition has likely contributed to people seeking help, say experts - but, according to charities and many of those with OCD, societal problems, combined with the pressure of social media, are the main driver for the reported rise.

Leigh Wallbank, chief executive of charity OCD Action, describes many young people's lives as a "pressure pot".

"They're facing financial issues, educational issues, global issues - the environment is such a big issue," she tells us. "I think of them living in this pressure pot, and then underneath that, giving heat to this pressure pot, is social media."

The Covid-19 pandemic also played a part, says Minesh Patel, associate director of policy and influencing at the mental health charity, Mind.

The pandemic put a "particular and unique strain" on people with OCD, with disruption to routine, an inversion of social norms and a hyperfocus on hygiene, he says.

"Barriers to social interaction, including treatment and support services, meant that many coping mechanisms were disrupted or unavailable for an extended period of time," he adds.

NHS help for OCD patients includes specialist talking therapy called Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) - which can include Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP).

Through ERP patients are helped to manage their anxiety by gradually being exposed to their fears, while preventing them from performing their usual compulsive behaviours.

Medication is also offered - usually a type of antidepressant.

Getty Images A young woman, wearing a dark red top but with bare arms, anxiously digs her fingers of one hand into the top of her arm. The woman, whose face is out of shot, has long red curly hair.Getty Images
The NHS is blind to the real scale of obsessive compulsive disorder, says Leigh Wallbank from OCD Action

But not everyone can access these treatments.

Sophie was told by her GP that it is likely she does have OCD - but, two years on, she still hasn't received an appointment to see a specialist for a formal diagnosis.

In the meantime, her GP has referred her for a limited course of CBT which comes to an end soon. Sophie says she is "absolutely petrified" of what the future holds.

Leigh Wallbank from OCD Action is critical of the government for failing to collect regular quarterly data on obsessive compulsive disorder, and outcomes for patients who have it, as it does for many other conditions.

Without data, says the charity, the NHS is blind to the real scale of OCD, the success of treatments and who is being left behind.

We asked health officials in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland if they knew the number of young people with OCD symptoms, but they all said they do not collect that information.

'The system could not, or would not, provide help'

A mum from the south of England, who wants to remain anonymous, told us her autistic daughter first showed signs of OCD when she was 10 years old. Her daughter is now 17 and the OCD is severe, she says.

"My daughter has gone from being a scholarship-winning student, to being sectioned multiple times."

Some specialist treatment has been offered to the teenager, but her mum tells us her daughter is often too unwell to leave the house to attend appointments, or even take her medication.

"The impact on [all] our children, and us, is devastating. Our lives have been decimated not just by the illness, but by a system that could not, or would not, provide the help she needed, when she needed it."

The mother says the UK is failing in its treatment of young people with severe OCD. There are not enough specialists, beds or treatment options, she believes.

Children and adolescents with OCD across England can receive treatment at a national centre at the Maudsley Hospital in London.

However, the average wait time for a referral to the service rose from 15 weeks in 2020, to 41 weeks in 2024, according to a response to the BBC's Freedom of Information Act request.

But the hospital trust says that wait time is being cut.

Ade Odunlade, chief operating officer for South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust said: "We have worked incredibly hard to reduce delays and have lowered the average wait for assessments to around 20 weeks.

"We empathise with anyone who has had to wait for their assessment as we know how difficult that is."

The trust says it has now been able to secure additional funding which will allow them to employ further staff and drive down the waiting list even further.

It expects an approximate wait for assessment of about 12-16 weeks by early Spring 2026, it told us.

Marie Fuller A woman with short dark brown hair, wearing black sunglasses and a black and white checked shirt is hugging a young girl, also with shoulder-length brown hair. The girl, whose face has been blurred, is wearing a dark top and and a red life vest. On the right hand side of her is a man with receding hair and a blue t-shirt which says Russell Athletic on it.Marie Fuller
Marie and Graham Fuller felt they had no choice but to pay for OCD treatment abroad for their daughter

But even when people can access all the available help, it is sometimes not enough.

Graham and Marie Fuller, from Norwich, contacted the BBC to say their daughter had been hospitalised with OCD aged 12.

They described a revolving-door pattern of going backwards and forwards between NHS services for different treatments, with their daughter improving and then repeatedly relapsing.

After years of their daughter struggling with the condition, the family then decided to go to Texas to try a rare and radical procedure.

Their daughter, who is now 20, underwent deep brain stimulation (DBS) surgery - where electrodes are implanted in the brain to deliver electrical impulses to help manage OCD symptoms.

The treatment is approved by US regulators, but in the UK the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) says DBS can only be used for research studies, because there is not enough evidence on how safe or effective the practice is for OCD.

Having a loved one with OCD "has taken its toll on all of us, but we had to do all we could to help", says Marie, explaining how, before undergoing DBS, her daughter had discussed going to Switzerland to end her life.

Marie says her daughter is now back at university, though she concedes it is still early days in terms of the success of the treatment.

The UK's health guidelines for obsessive compulsive disorder are 20 years old - they are currently being reviewed by NICE. In 2019, it was agreed that policy around OCD treatment needed to reflect updated technologies and possible new drugs.

But for Leigh Wallbank from OCD Action she says better funding is imperative if young people are to get the help they need.

"Policymakers and the government need to invest in OCD services. [OCD] is preventable and it is a crisis that can be changed."

A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Social Care said the government had inherited a broken NHS with mental health services suffering following years of neglect - adding that funding was now being boosted by £688m.

But people with OCD such as Sophie are scared about what the future holds.

The limited course of CBT that she's been prescribed is coming to an end and she fears a return of her symptoms.

"What am I going to do? What if it happens again?"

First snowfall of season possible for some as weekend cold snap arrives

First snowfall of season possible for some as weekend cold snap arrives

Man hiking in hills with patchy snow laden and blue, sunny skies overheadImage source, Getty
Image caption,

Showers are expected to turn wintry over hills in the north UK this weekend

Temperatures across the UK are set to fall this weekend, triggering the first snowfall of the season for some areas.

This coincides with the end of British Summer Time as the clocks go back with the weather reflecting the shift towards a more wintry feel.

Temperatures will be below average with strong, gusty winds making it feel especially cold and raw.

This change in weather is driven by the position of Storm Benjamin in the North Sea, drawing down a cold Arctic northerly airflow across the UK.

Airmass chart showing cold air (represented by the blue colours) spreading down from the arctic across the UK
Image caption,

Cold arctic air will affect all of the UK this weekend

Beware the biting wind

In the wake of Storm Benjamin, the UK will come under the influence of a brisk northerly wind, which could reach gale force at times along eastern counties on Saturday.

Frequent showers are expected in coastal areas—especially along north-facing shores.

Whilst there will be some autumnal sunshine, temperatures are set to dip slightly below average for the time of year, with daytime highs ranging between just 8 and 11C.

But with that biting, Arctic wind it could feel up to 5C colder, especially on the east coast of Scotland and north-east England.

Where will it snow?

If showers fall over high ground - mainly above 400m - there is the chance these will turn to snow.

This is most likely over the highest ground in Scotland where a few centimetres of snow accumulation are possible.

There may also be a touch of wintriness over the highest hills of northern England, Wales, and Northern Ireland.

But it's all change again next week.

A change in wind direction will bring milder temperatures. Then by the end of the week, heavy rain and strong winds look likely.

You can keep up to date with the weather where you are on the BBC Weather app or by checking the forecast online.

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When the clocks change in the UK - and why we follow daylight saving time

When do the clocks go back in the UK?

A stock photo of an old-fashioned analogue yellow alarm clock sitting on a pile of yellow, brown, green and red fallen leavesImage source, Getty Images

The clocks will go back by one hour in the UK on the last Sunday of October.

It marks the end of British Summer Time (BST) and a return to Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), a shift that has been taking place for well over a century.

Most of us will get an extra hour in bed - or at the pub - but it is not such good news for night shift workers who will have to spend an extra hour at work.

The clocks go forward again in March 2026.

You may already have noticed that the nights are drawing in - in fact we are currently losing four or five minutes of daylight every day.

However the clock change will bring sunset forward by an hour in one fell swoop which may come as a shock to the system.

What time do the clocks go back?

The clock change happens at 02:00 BST on Sunday 26 October in the UK.

The clocks will go forward again at 01:00 GMT on 29 March 2026, when we return to British Summer Time.

The easy way to remember which way the clocks change is the phrase "spring forward, fall back".

In other words, we turn the time forward an hour in spring and back an hour in fall - or autumn.

What is Daylight Saving Time?

The first country to make use of Daylight Saving Time (DST) was Germany, in 1916 during World War One.

It was intended to maximise evening daylight meaning less heating and lighting was needed, reducing fuel consumption during wartime.

Many other countries followed suit just a few weeks later, including the UK where it was named British Summer Time.

The time shift has mostly continued ever since, although during a short period in World War Two there was British Double Summer Time, where the clocks went forward by two hours.

An experiment between 1968 and 1971 trialled year-round BST and there continue to be some debates about whether the UK should wind its clocks forward permanently.

A picture of the sea and the beach at sunset with layers of high cloud in the sky, a few people sitting on the beach and the ruins of Brighton's burnt out West Pier visible.Image source, BBC Weather Watchers / Rainbow Watcher
Image caption,

A permanent switch to BST would mean lighter evenings but darker mornings - especially in winter

Arguments for keeping the time zone in summer mode include a potential boost in economic productivity as well as a possible reduction in evening road accidents.

It would also eliminate the minor disruption caused to sleep patterns by the annual gaining - and losing - of an hour.

However, it would also mean some very gloomy winter mornings, especially in Scotland.

In Edinburgh and Glasgow the sun does not rise until around 08:45 GMT in the second half of December, which would equate to 09:45 BST.

It would leave Scottish commuters and schoolchildren making their winter morning journeys in darkness - bringing increased risks on the roads.

Will my clock change automatically?

Most smartphones, digital devices and even modern cars will adjust the time automatically when GMT begins.

However analogue clocks will need switching manually, especially important if you are relying on an old-fashioned alarm clock to wake you up.

And if you are anything like me the clock on the oven will present a particular challenge.

What countries have Daylight Saving Time?

We are certainly not alone in switching time zones twice a year.

Most of North America and Europe observes Daylight Saving Time, although only small parts of Asia, Oceania, South America and Africa take part.

However different countries change their clocks on different dates.

For example in the USA the switch takes place on 2 November this year, while in Egypt it happens on 30 October.

One benefit of an earlier sunset is that it might be easier to get out and capture it on camera.

If you do, feel free to sign up and send your photos to BBC Weather Watchers.

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德语媒体: 离开中国 气候保护无从谈起

null 媒体看中国
2025-10-20T14:37:27.132Z
德语媒体: 离开中国 气候保护无从谈起

(德国之声中文网)柏林出版的《日报》发表评论写道,在太阳能发电、风力发电以及电动车技术领域,中国扮演着至关重要的角色。因此,要想实现减排目标,中国是一个不可或缺的护合作伙伴。这篇题为《离开中国寸步难行》的评论写道:

“对于中国在全球气候变化中所扮演的角色,存在着两种截然相反的叙事:一种说法认为,中国是全球最大的温室气体排放国,并仍在不断兴建新的燃煤发电厂。另一种说法则着重强调,中国已经成为绿色能源技术研发方面的引领者,使世界各国得以用更低的成本去推进去碳化努力。

两种说法都是正确的,中国乃至整个世界在制定气候政策时,也都应正视这一现实。2022年,中国的二氧化碳排放量为157亿吨,远超美国的60亿吨和欧盟的36亿吨。即便考虑到中国庞大的人口基数,其11吨的人均排放量也远远超过了欧盟的8.1吨和英国的6.3吨。而欧盟和英国有望在2040年前,将人均二氧化碳排放量降至两吨以下的水平。中国已经承诺,在2030年前达到排放峰值,并在2060年实现碳中和。但依照当前的趋势,届时中国的累计排放量将高达2500亿吨,相比之下,英国和欧盟的累计排放量则分别是45亿吨和450亿吨。而2500亿吨的碳排量将占据全球‘碳排预算’的绝大部分,要想实现巴黎气候协定中有关‘本世纪末气温升幅明显低于2°C的目标’,维持上述‘碳排预算’至关重要。这也意味着,2100 年前全球气温的走向将在很大程度上取决于中国的减排政策,而非欧盟或英国。 

中国每年碳排量中的59亿吨来自仍以煤炭为主的能源体系。中国计划在2029年前新建总装机容量为280千兆瓦的火力发电厂。除此之外,中国庞大的钢铁和水泥工业更占据全球同行业碳排总量的50%以上。当然,随着中国基建活动的降温,钢铁和水泥产业的碳排量已经有所下降。

在绿色能源技术领域,中国占据全球领先地位

而与此同时,在能源转型的五大核心技术领域:太阳能、风能、电池、电动车以及热力泵,中国则占据了全球领先地位。使用上述技术,有望替代全球化石能源的四分之三。目前,中国汽车销量中,电动车的占比已经超过50%,而欧盟的这一比例仅为23%。”

“在太阳能、电动车等新能源领域,中国已经成为技术领军者。”

《日报》评论指出,中国在绿色技术领域的快速发展,本可为全球能源转型提供巨大的推动力,但中美两国间日益加剧的地缘政治紧张关系以及贸易冲突却削弱了这一积极效应。有鉴于此,在气候保护领域,欧盟同中国开展合作已经势在必行。 

“在此背景下,欧中双方应着重聚焦三个优先选项。首先,中国应制定更宏伟的减排目标。否则,一向宣称气候保护‘耗费金钱且没有意义’的欧洲右翼民粹主义势力就等于得到了更多的论据。而一旦中国提升减排目标,欧洲也应扩展减排努力,以履行长久性的减排义务。其次,中国应在钢铁、水泥以及化工等重工业领域推动去碳化进程,为此目的,中国应在所有工业领域提高碳排价格,如能接近欧洲水准则更为理想。第三,欧洲应认可中国在洁净能源技术领域的领先地位,并在竞争力和安全考量方面采取务实态度。根据能源转型委员会(Energy Transitions Commission)的建议,欧盟应允许进口光伏组件等低风险中国产品,并鼓励中国在电池、电动车等未来产业领域的对欧投资合作。

中国在绿色技术领域的领先地位,为整个世界带来了历史性机遇,一个绝不容错过的机遇。为此目的,欧洲必须同中国开展合作。”

"同中俄建立伙伴关系只是一个极其危险的幻想而已"

《新苏黎世报》发表评论称,在国际政治舞台上,美国总统特朗普非常喜欢以“成功交易者”的姿态现身,但其所谓的成功却常常值得商榷。在谈到特朗普的对华战略时,这篇评论写道:

新苏黎世报:特朗普的对华战略不切实际。

“在对华战略问题上,特朗普已经暴露出了明显的无力感。特朗普原本以为,凭借美国的强大实力,施加关税足以迫使中国签订符合美国意愿的广泛交易。但事实证明,这种想法完全脱离了现实。习近平既不是特朗普口中的‘朋友’,更不会按照美国的意愿行事。面对来自华盛顿的压力,中国采取以牙还牙的策略,并以地缘经济工具进行全面反击。中国认为,自身实力同美国至少不相上下,甚至略胜一筹。

特朗普目前所采取的外交政策,介乎其自己打造的伙伴关系和共和党传统的实力外交路线之间。特朗普不断向俄罗斯、中国和伊朗等对手发出交易建议。对特朗普来说,能够制造和谐气氛并解决问题,是衡量外交政策的绝对标准,但现实却迫使他不得不向国会和核心幕僚的立场所靠拢。国务卿卢比奥以及财政部长贝赛特等人认为,中国和俄罗斯是必须遏制的对手,因为他们追求的是另类国际秩序,并为此目的不惜试图牺牲美国及其盟友的利益。在卢比奥和贝赛特等人看来,同中俄建立伙伴关系只是一个极其危险的幻想而已。”

摘编自其他媒体的内容,不代表德国之声的立场或观点。

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移民与“市容”:梅尔茨“问问您的女儿”

Jens Thurau
2025-10-24T14:24:57.650Z
梅尔茨表示并无要收回的表态。不过,他之后略作澄清,称德国需要移民。

(德国之声中文网)上周二(10月14日),德国总理梅尔茨(也译默茨)有关德国“市容市貌”的说法引发争议。他当时谈的是政府收紧移民政策,特别是继续打击非法移民。但他随后补充说:“我们的市容市貌还是存在这个问题,因此内政部长也正大举促成遣返并落实。”

此言既出,受到在野党绿党、左翼党以及联合执政的自民党批评。

梅尔茨的解释

本周初,梅尔茨被问及是否打算收回这一言论,他表示:“我不知道您是否有孩子。如果您有女儿,那就问问您的女儿,我可能是什么意思。我估计,您会得到相当明确的回答。我没有任何要收回的话。”在一再追问下,他又补充说:“有很多人也这样说,这样评估。我重申:问问您的孩子,问问您的女儿,问问您的亲朋好友。大家都会证实,这的确是个问题。最迟到天黑的时候。”

两天后,梅尔茨在访问伦敦期间,不得不再次面对相关提问。这次他表示,未来需要移民,欧盟各国都是如此,现如今已有很多有移民背景的人是“我们就业市场不可或缺的组成部分”,“无论他们来自那里,何种肤色,是否是第一代、第二代、第三代或第四代在德国生活工作。”

梅尔茨称,存在问题的是那些没有长期居留、不工作、“不遵守我们规则”的移民。他们中有许多人对城市样貌产生影响。“因此,如今在德国以及其它欧盟国家有不少人…害怕去一些公共空间。”

梅尔茨称,这涉及到火车站、地铁、一些公园以及整片的城区,“给我们的警察也制造了很大的问题”。他说,这一问题的原因必须与欧盟伙伴共同应对,重建过去这些年里失去的对法治国家的信任。

柏林10月19日数千人抗议梅尔茨的“市容”表态

批评:有意游走在边界地带、满足特定不满情绪

换句话说,总理梅尔茨并未改变核心表态。副总理、财政部长克林拜尔(Lars Klingbeil,社民党)则于周三表示出不同的看法。他说,他希望生活在一个“政界为社会建立桥梁、促进团结,而不是用语言来分裂”的国家。他补充说:“我们作为从政者必须极度谨慎,会引发什么样的讨论,倘若我们又把人分为‘我们’和‘那些人’,有移民背景和没有移民背景的人。”

莱比锡大学民主研究者戴克(Oliver Decker)在接受德新社采访时,也作出类似分析。他认为,梅尔茨并非仅仅是“脱口而出”,而是有意为之。“梅尔茨先生有意在界限上游走。”戴克认为,总理尽管没有公开表达某些特定的不满情绪,“但他知道这些信号会被理解,因此既满足了这些不满情绪,又不会激起基民盟内不同意见者的抗议。”

社民党的副总理克林拜尔:政治家必须极度谨慎

一项问卷:六成受访者支持梅尔茨言论

如今,这场有关“市容”的辩论逐渐平息。最新的一项问卷调查显示,多数德国民众认为总理的说法有道理。“德国电视二台(ZDF)政治晴雨表”周五公布的问卷结果显示,63%的受访者认为,原则上同意梅尔茨的说法。33%的受访者表示,在公共空间的确感到不安全;不过,66%的受访者并无这一感受。女性受访者感到不安全的人数明显多于男性;年长者对市容感到忧虑的人数多于年轻人。

梅尔茨的言论也在德国引发了多场集会游行。周二柏林有数千人走上街头,呼喊“我们就是女儿们”的口号。周三基尔有1500人参加抗议。周四科隆和明斯特也有上千人抗议。此外,一项网络抗议请愿活动在24小时内就吸引了超过10万人签名。

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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。

中美第五轮经贸谈判在即 中国商务部长称双方“完全可以找到办法”解决贸易争端

24/10/2025 - 10:23

中美高级别经济官员周五(10月24日)即将抵达马来西亚首都吉隆坡,展开第五轮经贸谈判。中国商务部长王文涛今天在记者会表示,中美有能力通过协商找到解决贸易争端的办法。

 

中共20届四中全会昨天闭幕,王文涛在国务院办公室周五举行的全会相关记者会上,就中美经贸问题表示,“此前的四轮中美经贸磋商证明,中美在相互尊重、平等协商的基础上,完全可以找到解决彼此关切的办法,找到正确的相处之道、推动两国经贸关系健康、稳定、可持续发展。”

自今年1月特朗普重返白宫以来,中美陷入了新一轮激烈的贸易角力。在经历短暂的缓和期后,随着中国宣布加强对稀土及其提炼相关技术的出口管制,10月份两国间的紧张关系再度升级。

中国商务部周四宣布,中国国务院副总理何立峰周五至下周一将率代表团前往马来西亚,与美方举行新一轮经贸谈判。美国方面则确认,美国贸易代表格里尔将随同总统特朗普赴亚洲访问,并在马来西亚与中方代表团举行谈判。

马来西亚周日(10月27日)开始在首都吉隆坡主办东盟(ASEAN)峰会。美中谈判自周六开始,在峰会间隙举行。这是双方今年五月以来的第五次会晤,前几轮都在欧洲城市举行。路透报道指,此次谈判再次聚焦于中国对全球稀土矿产及磁体供应的限制上,北京一直以来利用稀土供应作为对华盛顿施压的有力筹码。

在美中贸易战此前脆弱停火仅维持两周后,中国回应美国商务部扩大出口黑名单,于10月10日宣布实施全球稀土出口管制,要求所有使用中国稀土或采用中国开发的稀土提炼、加工、分离技术的产品出口都需获得许可证。美国批评中国此举,誓言不会接受这一限制。据路透报道,华盛顿正考虑进一步扩大出口限制,涵盖从笔记本电脑到喷气发动机等多种高科技产品。

分析人士指出,美国此次谈判的主要目标是寻求途径恢复到此前的现状,确保稀土及磁体继续供应,避免美国大幅提高关税。如果谈判失败,下周四在韩国APEC峰会期间举行的特朗普与习近平的会晤可能受到影响。

马克龙对禁止热力发动机坚称:定为2035年的目标“很好” !

24/10/2025 - 15:55

在布鲁塞尔举行的欧盟峰会上,法国总统马克龙,对于禁止热力发动机的议题,坚持称赞说:2035年目标“很好” !然而,马克龙也在布鲁塞尔呼吁:应该采取更多“灵活性”以保住就业岗位。 

法国总统埃马纽埃尔·马克龙周四晚间表示,针对汽车工业,2035年仍应是禁用内燃机的目标日期,但他呼吁采取更多的“灵活性”以保住欧盟的就业岗位。他在布鲁塞尔欧洲理事会会议后的新闻发布会上表示:“2035年的这个目标是好的,因为它能让利益相关者朝着同一个目标迈进。它鼓励实践上的改变,并为已进行的投资增添可信度。” 

马克龙说:“如果明天我们就放弃2035年的目标,忘记欧洲电池工厂等等的,那么,我们在电池方面所做的一切努力都将付诸东流。” 

这项措施是欧洲绿色协议最具象征意义的措施,但受到汽车制造商越来越多的质疑,他们强烈要求放宽规则。 

马克龙也恳求道说:“我们必须‘明智’,‘保住我们的工作机会’,而且‘这绝不能是一场彻底的盲目打击’。” 他继续说道:“我们希望到2035年尽可能地实现汽车行业的脱碳。” 但他强调,我们必须“开放灵活性”,并提供“其他能够大幅减少二氧化碳排放的解决方案”。 

备受争议的法律 

目前,欧盟委员会保证将坚持执行,但压力与日俱增:现行法律规定,该措施及其影响将于2026年重新评估。欧盟执委会承诺将在年底前解决这一问题。 

欧盟的制造商希望,对规条文本的重新评估至少能够允许引入灵活性,甚至完全解除禁令。十月初,德国总理弗里德里希·默茨 (Friedrich Merz) 曾经承诺将“竭尽全力”在 2035 年前解除对于内燃机汽车的销售禁令,此举给该计划制造了障碍,而法国和西班牙对此表示反对。

特朗普中断与加拿大的贸易谈判 斥其反关税广告歪曲里根言论

24/10/2025 - 15:48

美国总统特朗普周四晚间决定中断与加拿大的贸易谈判,指责加拿大当局在反关税广告中歪曲前共和党总统罗纳德·里根的言论,以图影响美国司法裁决”。该广告在美国多家媒体播出。

据唐纳德·特朗普称,加拿大当局试图“影响美国最高法院和其他法院的裁决”,这些法院正在审理美国总统提高关税行政令的合法性问题。

据《环球邮报》报道,在加拿大总理马克·卡尼与唐纳德·特朗普计划于本月底在韩国举行的亚太经合组织(APEC)峰会上会晤之前,渥太华与华盛顿之间关于钢铁、铝和能源的贸易协议似乎即将达成,但情况却突然发生了逆转。

加拿大是美国的第二大贸易伙伴,也是美国企业重要的钢铁和铝材供应商。

美国总统周四晚间在其社交平台真相社交(Truth Social)上写道:“鉴于他们的可耻行为,现正式终止与加拿大的所有贸易谈判。”

周五早晨,特朗普在社交媒体上再次发表了一系列对邻国大加挞伐的言论。

特朗普总统在帖子中称:“罗纳德·里根基金会刚刚宣布,加拿大欺诈性地使用了一则虚假广告,其中罗纳德·里根对关税发表了负面评论。”

白宫主人还说 "加拿大作弊被抓现行!!!他们欺诈性地发布了一则大广告,声称罗纳德·里根不喜欢关税,而实际上,他喜欢关税,因为关税有利于我们的国家及其国家安全。加拿大正试图非法影响美国最高法院......"。

他还写道,"美国再次变得富有、强大且国家安全得到保障,这一切都归功于关税!美国最高法院正在审理有史以来最重要的案件。愿上帝保佑美国!!!"。

罗纳德·里根基金会表示,加拿大广告“有选择性地截取”了1987年4月共和党人前总统里根在广播讲话中关于贸易的音频和视频片段。

该基金会认为,这个广告“歪曲”了罗纳德·里根(1981-1989年)的言论,并补充说,它“正在研究在此案中的法律选择”。

这项耗资约7500万美元的广告活动由加拿大安大略省制作,在美国多家电视台播出。

据彭博社说,法院定于 11 月 5 日听取此案的口头辩论。

罗纳德·里根总统基金会和研究所曾批评安大略省播放这则广告,称他们没有寻求使用这些讲话的许可,并且广告中的“选择性音频和视频”歪曲了里根的完整讲话。

里根的言论支持他对日本进口产品征收关税的决定,同时捍卫自由贸易并警告关税的长期影响。

加拿大经济因特朗普的关税政策而遭受重创,去年加拿大约四分之三的出口商品销往美国。安大略省人口约1600万,是加拿大钢铁和汽车行业的中心,因此一直处于贸易战的漩涡之中。特朗普在这两个行业打击了外国生产商。

特朗普这一声明给全球最大的双边贸易关系之一注入了新的不确定性。去年,美加商品和服务贸易额超过9000亿美元。受特朗普言论影响,加元小幅下跌。

下午察:冒死攀爬“中华龙脊”为何屡禁不止?

鳌太线被誉为“中华龙脊”,是秦岭山脉海拔最高的一段山脊路线,纵贯秦岭第二高峰鳌山(海拔3476米)与第一高峰太白山(海拔3771.2米)而得名,被称为中国五大最艰难徒步线路之一。 (大河报)

“穿越过去是‘大神’,穿不过去是‘鬼魂’。”

中国一名年轻男子本月独闯秦岭山脉“鳌太线”失联多日,引发舆论再度关注这条被称为“中国死亡率最高的徒步线路”。

极目新闻引述救援人员10月21日称,搜救数日只找到疑似失联者的包,还未找到本人。

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