广东汕头住宅火灾致12死 官方成立调查组彻查原因
中国广东省汕头市一处住宅突发火灾,造成12人死亡。广东省政府成立事故调查组,彻查火灾事故原因。
广东省汕头市潮南区消防大队发布警情通报,星期三(12月9日)晚9时20分,潮南区峡山街道丹凤路一住宅突发火灾。接报后,消防部门迅速调派力量赶赴救援。当天晚上10时03分,现场明火被扑灭。
目前,事故已造成12人死亡,起火原因仍在调查。
据央视新闻报道,广东省政府已经成立由应急管理、消防救援、公安、纪检监察等部门组成的事故调查组,彻查火灾事故原因。
中国广东省汕头市一处住宅突发火灾,造成12人死亡。广东省政府成立事故调查组,彻查火灾事故原因。
广东省汕头市潮南区消防大队发布警情通报,星期三(12月9日)晚9时20分,潮南区峡山街道丹凤路一住宅突发火灾。接报后,消防部门迅速调派力量赶赴救援。当天晚上10时03分,现场明火被扑灭。
目前,事故已造成12人死亡,起火原因仍在调查。
据央视新闻报道,广东省政府已经成立由应急管理、消防救援、公安、纪检监察等部门组成的事故调查组,彻查火灾事故原因。
台湾亲绿媒体报道,在野党国民党主席郑丽文将在农历年前后与中共总书记习近平会面,并指北京提出“三张门票”作为前提。中国大陆国台办说,相关报道无中生有,但大陆愿意在坚持九二共识、反对台独的基础上,与台湾各政治团体和人士交流往来。
《自由时报》上周报道,“郑习会”将在农历年前后登场,北京提出“三张门票”为前提,包括要国民党挡下民进党政府提出的军购案等。
国台办发言人陈斌华星期三(12月10日)在例行记者会上说,相关报道是无中生有,并称民进党和有关媒体“恶意炒作、造谣生事”,目的是抹黑破坏两岸正常交流交往,打压政治异己,捞取选票和政治利益,司马昭之心路人皆知。
他提出,中国大陆愿在坚持九二共识,反对台独的共同政治基础上,与国民党和台湾内部各政治团体、有识之士加强交流往来,巩固增进政治互信,保持联系互动,顺应两岸民众的愿望,共同推动两岸关系和平发展,维护和平稳定,造福两岸民众。
国际货币基金组织上调中国2025年的经济增速至5%,相较10月的预测值上调了0.2个百分点。
据IMF在官网星期三(12月10日)在官网发布的报告,IMF预计中国经济在2025年和2026年将分别增长5.0%和4.5%。
IMF表示,相较10月《世界经济展望》,上述预测值分别上调了0.2个和0.3个百分点,主要原因是当局采取了宏观经济刺激措施,且中国出口面临的关税低于预期水平。
但IMF同时指出,尽管经济增长呈现出韧性,但在内需疲软且存在通缩压力的情况下,失衡问题仍然显著。与贸易伙伴相比,中国的通胀处于较低水平,这导致实际汇率贬值,从而推动了强劲的出口和经常账户顺差的扩大。
IMF认为,关键的政策优先事项是推动向消费拉动型增长模式转型,为实现这一转型,当局需要更紧迫地采取更有力的扩张性宏观经济政策,实施改革来降低高企的家庭储蓄,并缩减不必要的产业政策支持和低效投资。这样的一揽子政策也将减少外部失衡。
此外,为了应对增加的风险并在中期维持稳健增长,IMF也建议当局实施财政和金融框架改革;清理广义政府、房地产和金融部门的资产负债表;推进市场化改革,包括开放服务业和促进企业间的竞争中性。

夺去160人性命的香港大埔宏福苑夺命火灾,不单在香港批评或作出呼吁会被警方国安人员约谈,在中国内地发文亦面对类似命运。中国独立记者高瑜在死难者「头七」(即去世后第七天)发布两篇评论文章,狠批香港特首李家超,并列出官方在火灾后的带风向行为,其后遭到警察上门进行笔录。她事后再发文批评,指这是为李家超充当保护伞。
港府昨(9日)把大火的死亡人数提升至160人。警务处处长周一鸣指出,清空大埔宏福苑各幢大楼周围的棚架时,发现一件疑似人类骸骨,经比对DNA后,确认骸骨属于一名婆婆和一名家佣中的一人,因此将找到的遗体数字由159人增至 160人。
至于失联人数方面,警方表示,在排查后,已找到和联系到部分失联人士,遂把失联人数由 31人修正为 6人。另外,与火灾相关的骗案有 21宗,目前有两人被拘捕。
关注此次大火的中国独立记者高瑜,曾发文批评李家超打压民间追责的声音,指出保安局局长邓炳强曾称「棚网合符要求」,是将起火成因归咎于竹棚,并列出新华网副总编刘洪在其微博公众账号「牛弹琴」中配合港府言论,称中国基本上已全面用金属棚架取代竹棚,有做「舆论导向」之嫌。
她续称,驻港国安公署称有人「以灾乱港」,国安警拘捕发起「四大诉求」的联署人、女义工和前区议员,约谈评论员王岸然等发起民间记者会的人,是用强硬镇压手段阻挡市民向官方追责。
她在文章中还引用法新社记者问李家超为什么觉得自己还有资格担任特首,并指李的回应是在回避问题。高瑜批评,李家超的所作所为,只能「把香港人独立、自由、具有权利意识的价值观进一步碾碎,让香港人更加失去信心,让香港变得更糟」。
这两篇文章在《光传媒》刊登后,高瑜被公安上门查问。她周一(8日)在其 X 账号透露,有两名朝阳区和平街派出所的警察上门找她,表示要进行笔录,查问期间,提到她在这两篇与大埔火灾相关文章中所写的内容。她引述说,警察要求她解释为何要写这些文章;高瑜回应说,火灾死伤惨重,不关心还是中国人吗?警察要求她说明文章资料来源,以及提到港府用强硬镇压手段阻挡市民追责的内容。
高瑜回答北京警察道,现在香港监狱关押的很多都是民主人士,都是她的朋友,又说李家超是镇压了「反送中」(即2019年反对修订逃犯条例)运动才当上特首,而在前鬼首林郑月娥时期,香港确实没有发生如此大的火灾,反问警察「不向他(李家超)追责向谁追责?」
高瑜进一步质问警察,香港市民提出「四大诉求」,要求成立独立调查委员会,全面彻查潜在利益输送;要求全力追究监管疏忽、问责政府官员,为何不符合法律?她还指出李家超不但不接受,反而罗织国安法例的罪名,抓捕发起签名的大学生和一名前区议员,「不是阻止市民追责又是什么?」
高瑜又忆述回应警察质问时称,这场大火不是天灾,是人祸,因为宏福苑居民去年已不断报告火灾隐患,但没有部门理睬,大火起因已证实为劣质不阻燃的防护网,以及用易燃泡沫板当玻璃窗,制度漏洞如此之多,「不是人祸是什么?」
高瑜表示,已拒绝警察要求她在有关大埔火灾的纸上签名的请求,并指出警察的行为,是禁止向李家超追责,是北京傅政华的流毒,在继续充当李家超的保护伞,她反过来要求警察把这些话写入记录。

港府首次动用《维护国家安全条例》(又称《基本法》23条)第88条,起诉时事评论员王岸然,指其在油管(YouTube)披露有关火灾记者会「被取消」前遭警方国安约见的情况,另又指控他发布具煽动意图的影片,成为首名因涉及大埔火灾而被控以触犯国安法例者。联合国人权事务高级专员蒂尔克(Volker Türk)敦促港府停止以国安法律追究公民要求彻查火灾真相,不要打压异见,并要求废除或大幅修改不符国际人权法的香港国安法例。
包括香港老牌政党民主民生协进会(简称「民协」)主席廖成利在内的多名专业人士,于本月初发起召开香港民间记者会,以探讨大埔大火及就灾后工作提出建议,但记者会在接获「有关部门通知」后取消,而出席者则被国安约谈。曾是民协创会评议长的时事评论员王岸然事后在其个人频道透露国安就民间记者会一事约见他,被控涉嫌违反《基本法》23条下的「妨害调查危害国家安全的罪行」及「明知而发布具煽动意图的刊物」罪。
案件昨(9日)午提堂,法官拒绝王岸然的保释申请,并祇控方要求,将案件押后至明年1月20日再讯,以便警方搜证,包括观看逾 2400条视频。
控罪指,71岁丶原名黄觉岸的王岸然,被控在其个人频道披露被国安警约谈和查询的内容,罔顾会妨害进行中的国家安全调查,涉嫌违反《维护国家安全条例》第88条的妨害调查罪。一旦罪成,被告最高可被判监七年。
警方同时控告王岸然「新煽动罪」,指他在今年1月3日至12月6日期间,在个人频道发布具煽动意图的影片,引起中港居民对国家根本制度的憎恨或藐视,涉嫌煽惑他人改变中央就特区依法制定的事项等。
控方散庭前要求传媒唱好当局
按法例,传媒如未获法庭豁免,是不可披露保释申请内容的。根据专门报道法庭消息的网媒《法庭线》报道,控方在散庭前不单无必要地提醒媒体此项规定,还希望媒体提及被告涉及的其他案件,并要求「必须强调惩教署依法对有关羁留人士提供适切照顾」。
翻查资料,警方国安处人员在大埔火灾后至少曾扣捕四人,包括提出成立独立调查委员会和问责政府官员等「四大诉求」联署的中文大学学生关靖丰丶民主派前区议员张锦雄及参与协助灾民筹集物资的义工阿澄,他们被国安扣查不同时间后获得保释出外候查。四人中暂时只有王岸然被正式起诉,且不淮保释。
联合国人权事务高级专员蒂尔克在国际人权日前夕(9日)发表声明,在慰问香港大埔火灾受害者的同时,对港府针对公民社会采取的行动深表关切。
蒂尔克表示,香港公众对火灾受害者的声援,彰显了香港公民精神的深度与韧性;而港人在伤痛之时仍希望知道真相及追究责任,实属理所当然。他认为,香港此刻就重大公共利益及关注议题进行讨论,比以往任何时候都更为重要,这可让数以百计的受害者获得合理赔偿,并避免悲剧再次发生。
人权专员特别点出港府未设「独立调查委员会」
蒂尔克亦特别点出,港府未有成立「独立调查委员会」来调查火灾,指「调委会」才具备全面调查权力。翻查资料,港府在上周宣布成立「独立委员会」来「审视」火灾成因及相关问题,而非前高官建议的「调委会」。
对于港府以严苛的国安相关法律针对公开呼吁透明独立调查及追究政府责任者,蒂尔克深感忧虑。他敦促港府撤回对寻求追责人士的案件,并呼吁废除或大幅修改与国安相关的法律,以确保香港符合《公民权利和政治权利国际公约》的要求。
另外,蒂尔克对刚结束的香港立法会选举也表达关切,指政治多元化能为问责提供必要的制衡机制,关注香港民主派的组织已被迫解散;大改后的选举制度亦把地区直选议席降至不足总数的两成,并设立审查机制以排除反对派候选人。他要求港府撤销限制政治参与和压制异见的措施,重申联合国人权事务高级专员办事处将与中方持续对话,继续就这些议题与香港当局保持接触。

ReutersUkraine is "ready for elections", President Volodymyr Zelensky has said, after US President Donald Trump repeated claims Kyiv was "using war" to avoid holding them.
Zelensky's five-year term as president was due to end in May 2024, but elections have been suspended in Ukraine since martial law was declared after Russia's invasion.
Speaking to reporters following Trump's comments in a wide-raging Politico interview, Zelensky said he would ask for proposals to be drawn up which could change the law.
Elections could be held in the next 60 to 90 days if security for the vote was guaranteed with the help of the US and other allies, he said.
"I'm asking now, and I'm stating this openly, for the US to help me, perhaps together with our European colleagues, to ensure security for the elections," he told reporters.
"The issue of elections in Ukraine, I believe, depends first and foremost on our people, and this is a question for the people of Ukraine, not the people of other countries. With all due respect to our partners," he said.
"I've heard hints that we're clinging to power, or that I personally am clinging to the presidency" and "that's why the war isn't ending", which he called "frankly, a completely unreasonable narrative".
Russia has consistently claimed Zelensky is an illegitimate leader and demanded new elections as a condition of a ceasefire deal – a talking point which has been repeated by Trump.
"They talk about a democracy, but it gets to a point where it's not a democracy anymore," the US president told Politico. He has suggested without evidence that Zelensky is the main obstacle to peace as US-led efforts to broker a peace deal to end the war in Ukraine continue.
Such a vote would only be fair if all Ukrainians could participate, including soldiers fighting on the front line, a Ukrainian opposition MP told the BBC.
"In order for these elections to be fair all of the People of Ukraine would need to be allowed to vote," Lesia Vasylenko told the BBC World Service's Newsday programme.
She said that "elections are never possible in wartime", alluding to the suspension of elections in the UK during World War Two.
Discussions around holding elections have made headlines since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. They have been routinely dismissed by Ukraine's government, opposition and public alike, arguing unity in the war effort must come first.
A poll by the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology (KIIS) in March found about 78% of people opposed holding elections even after a complete settlement of the war.
"Even a year ago, Zelensky said that he was ready for elections as soon as the conditions allow" in the face of previous pressure, Hanna Shelest, a foreign policy analyst with the think tank Ukrainian Prism, told the BBC.
The question was, however, how to create the conditions Zelensky outlined, Shelest told the Newsroom programme on the BBC World Service, given there were around one million soldiers and four million refugees who would be voting - as well as unsecured areas in the country and ongoing strikes.
"You cannot guarantee the security of the polling stations," she said.

GettyHumans are a bit like meerkats when it comes to pairing up, according to a study that examined the monogamous lifestyles of different species.
In our romantic life, we more closely resemble these social, close-knit mongooses than we do our primate cousins, a "league table" of monogamy compiled by scientists suggests.
At 66% monogamous, humans score surprisingly highly, far above chimps and gorillas – and on a par with meerkats.
However, we are by no means the most monogamous creature. Top spot goes to the Californian mouse - rodents that form inseparable, lifelong bonds.

Getty"There is a premier league of monogamy, in which humans sit comfortably, while the vast majority of other mammals take a far more promiscuous approach to mating," said Dr Mark Dyble at the University of Cambridge.
In the animal world, pairing up has its perks, which may be why it has evolved independently in multiple species, including us. Experts have proposed various benefits to so-called social monogamy, where mates match up for at least a breeding season to care for their young and see off rivals.
Dr Dyble examined several human populations throughout history, calculating the proportions of full siblings – where individuals share the same mother and father – compared with half-siblings, individuals who share either a mother or a father, but not both. Similar data was compiled for more than 30 social monogamous and other mammals.
Humans have a monogamy rating of 66% full siblings, ahead of meerkats (60%) but behind beavers (73%).
Meanwhile, our evolutionary cousins fall at the bottom of the table - with mountain gorillas at 6% rating, while chimpanzees come in at just 4% (alongside the dolphin).
In last place is Scotland's Soay sheep, where females mate with multiple males, with 0.6% full siblings. The Californian mouse came top, at 100%.

GettyHowever, being ranked alongside meerkats and beavers doesn't mean our societies are the same - human society is poles apart.
"Although the rates of full siblings we see in humans are most similar to species like meerkats or beavers, the social system that we see in humans is very different," Dr Dyble told BBC News.
"Most of these species live in colony-like social groups or perhaps live in solitary pairs that go around together. Humans are very different from that. We live in what we call multi-male, multi-female groups, within which we have these monogamous, or pair-bonded, units."

GettyDr Kit Opie at the University of Bristol, who is not connected with the study, said this is another piece in the puzzle over how human monogamy arose.
"I think this paper gives us a very clear understanding that across time and across space humans are monogamous," he said.
"Our society is much closer to chimps and bonobos – it just happens that we've taken a different route when it comes to mating."
The new study is published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society: Biological Sciences.

Indianapolis ZooThe Prince of Wales has paid tribute to pioneering elephant conservationist Iain Douglas-Hamilton, who died aged 83 at his home in Nairobi on Monday.
Douglas-Hamilton spent his life studying and campaigning to protect African elephants, becoming a world-leading expert on their behaviour in the wild.
His groundbreaking research exposed the devastating effects of poaching - often at great risk to his own safety - and was instrumental in the banning of the international ivory trade.
Prince William praised the zoologist as "a man who dedicated his life to conservation and whose life's work leaves lasting impact on our appreciation for, and understanding of, elephants".
"The memories of spending time in Africa with him will remain with me forever," added Prince William, who is a royal patron for the African wildlife conservation charity, Tusk, of which Douglas-Hamilton was an ambassador.
"The world has lost a true conservation legend today, but his extraordinary legacy will continue," the charity's founder Charles Mayhew said in a statement.

Oria Douglas-HamiltonBorn in 1942 to an aristocratic British family in Dorset, England, Douglas-Hamilton studied biology and zoology in Scotland and Oxford before moving to Tanzania to research elephant social behaviour.
It was there at Lake Manyara National Park that he began documenting every elephant he encountered, eventually becoming so familiar with the herds he could recognise them by the unique shapes of their ears and wrinkles on their skin.
"The thing about elephants is that they have a lot in common with human beings," he said in a 2024 documentary about his work, A Life Among Elephants.
Friend and fellow conservationist Jane Goodall, who died in October, was featured in the documentary, and said he had shown the world that elephants are capable of feeling just like humans.
"I think his legacy will be one of a man who did so much to help people understand how majestic, how wonderful elephants are, and to learn more about their way of life," Goodall said.

Oria Douglas-HamiltonBut that work did not always come easy: he was charged at by elephants, almost killed by a swarm of bees and shot at by poachers. In 2010, a flood destroyed his research facility in Kenya and years of work was lost.
Despite the hardships, Douglas-Hamilton remained steadfast in his mission to raise awareness of the plight of African elephants, becoming one of the leading voices to alert the world of the ivory poaching crisis, which he described as "an elephant holocaust".
He later campaigned for an international ban on the commercial trade in ivory, and in 1989 the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species was signed, an international agreement between governments.
After the agreement failed to wipe out the trade completely, Douglas-Hamilton turned his attention to China and the US, the two main markets for ivory. Chinese President Xi Jinping and then-US President Barack Obama agreed to a near-total ban on its import and export in 2015.
Douglas-Hamilton established Save the Elephants in 1993, a charity dedicated to safeguarding the animals and deepening human understanding of their behaviour.
The organisation's CEO Frank Pope, who is also his son-in-law, said: "Iain changed the future not just for elephants, but for huge numbers of people across the globe. His courage, determination and rigour inspired everyone he met."
In his own words, Douglas-Hamilton expressed optimism for the future of his life's work.
"I think my greatest hope for the future is that there will be an ethic developed of human-elephant coexistence," he once said.
Iain Douglas-Hamilton is survived by his wife Oria, children Saba and Dudu, and six grandchildren.

During the eight-and-a-half years he has spent at Liverpool, Mohamed Salah has been beloved by supporters, who rank the 'Egyptian King' among the club's greatest ever players.
But since his unexpected declaration he feels scapegoated by Liverpool for the club's poor run, having been picked as a substitute for three consecutive matches by manager Arne Slot, Salah's character has been called into question by fans, former players and beyond.
So who is Salah the man - away from the latest headlines?
Over the past few months, BBC Sport has spoken to some of those who know him best to find out more about the personality and resilience of the man behind the goals, the glory, and the gossip.
Salah's relentless intensity and refusal to accept lower standards from himself or those around him have underpinned Liverpool's success, and perhaps also explain why he has found criticism of his diminished role tough to handle.
"We are all massively influenced by our past - how we were raised, where we grew up," says Jurgen Klopp, who won every major trophy in English and European football while managing Salah at Anfield. "Mo knew early on [in his life] that he had to do more than others.
"He always developed. He never stops. That is his mindset.
"After each summer break he came back and had a new skill. It was like he had spent the whole time just practising one particular type of pass.
"We pushed each other, just to make sure that we would never stop. And we never did stop. That moment lifting the Premier League bonded us for life. He will be remembered as one of the greatest of all time.
"I wouldn't say he is easy to manage, but he is also not difficult to manage. You [only] have problems with Mo Salah if he is not playing or you take him off."
Salah has been criticised by some for not giving more frequent media interviews before his intervention in the mixed zone at Leeds' Elland Road, particularly after defeats and poor performances.
He has been accused of demonstrating a lack of leadership. But he has often delivered calls to arms to fans on social media, external in difficult moments, and those who have played alongside him describe Salah as a man who refuses to give up and is capable of inspiring others.
"He will always be trying to prove someone wrong," says former Liverpool team-mate Adam Lallana.
"He is not macho. I would often tell my children about how he behaves, how he doesn't get too high in good moments, doesn't beat himself up too much in low moments. He would always remain completely focused on the job in hand.
"I would look at him and it would make me feel calm because of how in control he would be all the time.
"Knowing Mo, he will always be fighting, being resilient, and trying to find ways to better himself."

"Never give up - did it ever fit to a situation better than this one?" says Klopp about the T-shirt an injured Salah wore during Liverpool's 4-0 Champions League win over Barcelona in 2019. Lallana says the shirt "inspired" the team. James Milner keeps one at home.
Salah defended his record when speaking at Elland Road, and compared himself to England captain Harry Kane - delivering what he felt was a reminder to those inside and outside of Liverpool who have forgotten what he is capable of.
A level of arrogance is perhaps to be expected in all elite athletes, and some believe it has powered Salah to the heights he and Liverpool have reached.
"He is a really nice guy, considering the success he has had - being a superstar around the globe," says James Milner - Liverpool's vice-captain during most of Salah's time at the club.
"He plays as if he has a chip on his shoulder. He wants to be the best at everything - he even got a chess teacher to improve his game, and gave me a thumping a good few times.
"You need different types of leaders, and Mo is a big leader in that group, in terms of the standards he set every day. When you have young players come and sign, they see him and it's 'this is what is takes to be a top player, this is what it is to be a Liverpool player'."
That desire to always be the best became competition - fraught at times - with team-mate Sadio Mane, Liverpool's other flying forward who played on the opposite wing to Salah for five seasons.
"Were they best friends? No," Klopp says. "Could Mo have passed the ball a few times when he tried to finish it off himself? Yes. But on the pitch they supported each other, they fought for each other."

Throughout his time with Liverpool, Salah has demonstrated his competitiveness on and off the pitch
Salah is more than just a footballer - he is a global sociocultural icon, being named one of the world's most influential people, steering conversations on human rights, and changing attitudes towards Muslims through demonstrations of faith.
He was born in a rural village - Nagrig - about 100 miles from Cairo, where most of the roughly 15,000 inhabitants work as farmers and more than half live in poverty.
That such a region could produce one of the world's greatest athletes borders on impossible.
"What already set him apart as a kid was his discipline," says Maher Anwar Shtiyeh - mayor of Nagrig. "He remains deeply tied to his roots, despite fame and global recognition.
"He only finds real happiness in his village spending time with his family and friends. He is a role model for the youth of Egypt, the Arab youth, and the youth of the whole Islamic world. He has lifted the heads of all of us."
As a child, Salah would travel up to five hours by minibus from his village to the capital, where he played youth football for top-flight club Arab Contractors.
That helped instil a resilience that has guided him throughout his professional career, alongside support from loved ones.
"You have to be mentally so strong as a young kid following your dream like that," says former international team-mate Ahmed Elmohamady.
"His wife is from the same village. They grew up together, which is great because she knows everything about him and has supported him all the way.
"Now anyone in the village who asks him for support, he supports them. It shows what a great human being he is."
Since leaving Egypt, Salah has maintained close ties with Nagrig and financed an ambulance station, a charitable foundation and a religious institute in the area.
Salah has proudly made his faith visible throughout his career - he prays both when walking onto the pitch and after scoring goals.
"When I first met Mo, he was coming here quite regularly," says Shafique Rahman - Imam at Liverpool Mosque and Islamic Institute. "He would arrive a little bit late after finishing training. We had people waiting outside who wanted to see him, but nobody would bother him during prayer.
"The nature of the religion is that everybody is the same in the eyes of God. When people come to prayers they stand extremely close, touching each other's shoulders. Mo felt very safe here."
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When Salah first moved to England - signed by Jose Mourinho's Chelsea after impressing for Basel in Switzerland - he struggled to impose his personality in a squad full of established stars, and lacked self-belief.
"When I first met him, he was 21 - very innocent," says former team-mate Mark Schwarzer. "He was coming to London - a big city, different culture - and I think he was a bit timid.
"When he signed, he was coming into a changing room packed full of international stars - players that were used to winning, and a manager that was a legend of the club. For new players, it was sink or swim.
"The more he didn't score, the more frustrated he became. There was a moment in the changing room when Jose actually kicked a table, and was directing a lot of his frustration towards Mo, and he took him off. Mo was visibly upset.
"It's credit to him, his determination, his dedication, everything, to go on and deliver what he has done."
Salah rebuilt his career in Italy's Serie A - first in a loan spell with Fiorentina then at Roma, developing a reputation as an on-field leader and ultimate professional.
"He was just different," explains BBC pundit and former England and Manchester City defender Micah Richards, who played alongside Salah at Fiorentina. "You get those characters that just do everything by the book - he was that guy.
"He would always be in bed early, always be eating healthily. He clearly thought, 'I'm going to show everyone exactly what I can do. All those who have doubted me are going to eat their words.' That's exactly what he did."
For a young African man to set standards for European colleagues to follow was a challenge in itself.
"To succeed in Europe you have to understand the culture of where you are playing, where you are living, without losing any of your principles," says former Egypt striker Mido, who played for Tottenham, Roma and Ajax among others. "This is the balance that he has achieved.
"He has made young boys in Africa dream - 'If someone who comes from the background as I do made it to the top, why couldn't I make it?'"

Football fans in Nagrig were overjoyed when Salah, one of their own, scored the opening goal in the 2019 Champions League final
Even before Salah's comments following the 3-3 draw with Leeds, doubts about his future were arising.
Inside Liverpool, concerns had already been raised about his performances, before transfer rumours were given further encouragement this week, with sources telling the BBC the Reds are open-minded about selling the 33-year-old.
Salah is not the only Liverpool hero whose time at the club - which he and Slot have said could be up in the January transfer window - has (potentially) ended with public denigration.
In different contexts, Javier Mascherano, Fernando Torres and Trent Alexander-Arnold have met similar fates, while shirts bearing the legendary Steven Gerrard's name were set alight in the street when he was on the verge of joining Chelsea in 2005.
If this is the end of Salah and Liverpool's love affair, the human impact he has had on those around him will not be forgotten any time soon.
"He was one of the first people to welcome me, and did so in such an incredible way," says Luis Diaz, who played alongside Salah in Liverpool's forward line for three-and-a-half years before joining Bayern Munich earlier this year.
"He came over to me and said: 'if you ever need my help, I'm here for you.' I remember him telling me on the pitch: 'Let's try this... let's make this move so that it works.' And then it would work in the match.
"To share the moment lifting the Premier League with him, to see how happy he was, how much he was enjoying it, was an incredible feeling.
"He is always wanting to be a better player, to be a better person, and he has left a profound mark on me."



中方就雷达照射事件公开音频,称事先已经通报训练,是日本有意滋扰中方训练。对此,日本防卫相小泉进次郎表示,中方事前的确通报了将在现场海域实施训练,但未包含训练规模和具体场所,“没有足够的信息”。
中国航母打击群近期在靠近日本的海域航行并举行演练,引发双方军机海上对峙。日方指中国辽宁号航母舰载机歼-15上星期六(12月6日)在冲绳岛东南方向的国际海域,两度对日本航空自卫队F-15战机进行雷达照射。
中国央视旗下媒体“玉渊潭天”星期二(12月9日)晚间公布音频称,12月6日,中国辽宁舰航母编队在宫古海峡以东海域开展远海训练,事先公布了训练海空域。并在训练前两次向附近海域日舰现场通报,日舰已回复收到。
“玉渊谭天”称,这一音频实证日本有意滋扰中方训练,反问日方恶意炒作所谓“雷达照射”,搬弄是非,意欲何为?
据日本共同社报道,日本防卫相小泉进次郎星期三(10日)就中国军机雷达照射问题召开记者会,承认中方事前就航母舰载机起降训练进行了通报,然后主张说未包含训练规模和具体场所,“没有足够的信息”。
中日关系紧张之际,中国海警舰艇编队在钓鱼岛(日本称尖阁诸岛)巡航。
中国海警微信公众号星期三(12月10日)下午发布:“中国海警2501舰艇编队在我钓鱼岛领海内巡航。这是中国海警依法开展的维权巡航活动”。
俄罗斯和中国的九架军机星期二(12月9日)进入韩国防空识别区,韩国国防部通过外交渠道向中俄两国提出严正抗议。
据韩联社报道,韩国国防部国际政策官李光锡星期三(12月10日)上午致电中国驻韩大使馆和俄罗斯驻韩大使馆的防务武官,就有关情况提出抗议。
韩国国防部强调,韩军将在遵守国际法的前提下,积极应对防空识别区内邻国军机的活动。
韩国联合参谋本部早前通报,七架俄罗斯军机和两架中国军机当地时间星期二上午10时许(新加坡时间上午9时许),分别飞入位于东部海域的郁陵岛和独岛上空的防空识别区,以及位于南部海域的离於岛上空的防空识别区,中俄军机过后在对马岛上空会合。
韩军在中俄军机进入防识区前已探测到相关动向,并出动空军战机应对,以防突发情况。
据法新社报道,自2019年以来,中国和俄罗斯常以联合演习名义,未经事先通报定期进入韩国防空识别区。去年11月,首尔曾紧急出动战机应对五架中国军机和六架俄罗斯军机飞入防空识别区。类似事件还曾发生在2023年6月、12月,以及2022年5月和11月。
中国晶片设计公司摩尔线程将揭晓新一代处理器架构,星期三(12月10日)公司股价飙升,一度上涨27%。
摩尔线程星期二(9日)公布,12月19日至20日,摩尔线程将举行首届MUSA开发者大会。摩尔线程创始人、董事长兼CEO张建中会系统阐述以MUSA为核心的全栈发展战略与未来愿景,并重磅发布新一代图形处理器(GPU)架构、推出涵盖产品体系、核心技术及行业解决方案的完整布局,分享多领域落地案例与生态建设进展。
公司股价在星期三收涨17.78%至每股740元(135.76新元)。
得益于市场对中国科技自给自足的乐观预期,公司总市值已接近500亿美元(647.96亿新元)。
摩尔线程被视为英伟达在中国的挑战者,因为它效仿了英伟达设计GPU的路径,GPU最初主要用于渲染影片游戏中的高质量图像,后来被用于AI训练。摩尔线程的大多数国内AI晶片竞争对手,如华为(Huawei)和寒武纪,设计的是订制的专用集成电路(ASIC)。
据道琼斯的报道,尽管投资者对摩尔线程的股票热情高涨,但分析师仍将其视为排在华为和寒武纪之后的国内二线AI晶片供应商。

ShutterstockA sperm donor who unknowingly harboured a genetic mutation that dramatically raises the risk of cancer has fathered at least 197 children across Europe, a major investigation has revealed.
Some children have already died and only a minority who inherit the mutation will escape cancer in their lifetimes.
The sperm was not sold to UK clinics, but the BBC can confirm a "very small" number of British families, who have been informed, used the donor's sperm while having fertility treatment in Denmark.
Denmark's European Sperm Bank, which sold the sperm, said families affected had their "deepest sympathy" and admitted the sperm was used to make too many babies in some countries.

Getty ImagesThe investigation has been conducted by 14 public service broadcasters, including the BBC, as part of the European Broadcasting Union's Investigative Journalism Network.
The sperm came from an anonymous man who was paid to donate as a student, starting in 2005. His sperm was then used by women for around 17 years.
He is healthy and passed the donor screening checks. However, the DNA in some of his cells mutated before he was born.
It damaged the TP53 gene – which has the crucial role of preventing the body's cells turning cancerous.
Most of the donor's body does not contain the dangerous form of TP53, but up to 20% of his sperm do.
However, any children made from affected sperm will have the mutation in every cell of their body.


This is known as Li Fraumeni syndrome and comes with an up to 90% chance of developing cancer, particularly during childhood as well as breast cancer later in life.
"It is a dreadful diagnosis," Prof Clare Turnbull, a cancer geneticist at the Institute of Cancer Research in London, told the BBC. "It's a very challenging diagnosis to land on a family, there is a lifelong burden of living with that risk, it's clearly devastating."
MRI scans of the body and the brain are needed every year, as well as abdominal ultrasounds, to try to spot tumours. Women often choose to have their breasts removed to lower their risk of cancer.
The European Sperm Bank said the "donor himself and his family members are not ill" and such a mutation is "not detected preventatively by genetic screening". They said they "immediately blocked" the donor once the problem with his sperm was discovered.
Doctors who were seeing children with cancer linked to sperm donation raised concerns at the European Society of Human Genetics this year.
They reported they had found 23 with the variant out of 67 children known at the time. Ten had already been diagnosed with cancer.
Through Freedom of Information requests and interviews with doctors and patients we can reveal substantially more children were born to the donor.
The figure is at least 197 children, but that may not be the final number as data has not been obtained from all countries.
It is also unknown how many of these children inherited the dangerous variant.


Dr Edwige Kasper, a cancer geneticist at Rouen University Hospital, in France, who presented the initial data, told the investigation: "We have many children that have already developed a cancer.
"We have some children that have developed already two different cancers and some of them have already died at a very early age."
Céline, not her real name, is a single-mother in France whose child was conceived with the donor's sperm 14 years ago and has the mutation.
She got a call from the fertility clinic she used in Belgium urging her to get her daughter screened.
She says she has "absolutely no hard feelings" towards the donor but says it was unacceptable she was given sperm that "wasn't clean, that wasn't safe, that carried a risk".
And she knows cancer will be looming over them for the rest of their lives.
"We don't know when, we don't know which one, and we don't know how many," she says.
"I understand that there's a high chance it's going to happen and when it does, we'll fight and if there are several, we'll fight several times."


The donor's sperm was used by 67 fertility clinics in 14 countries.
The sperm was not sold to UK clinics.
However, as a result of this investigation the authorities in Denmark notified the UK's Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) on Tuesday that British women had travelled to the country to receive fertility treatment using the donor's sperm.
Those women have been informed.
Peter Thompson, the chief executive of the HFEA, said a "very small number" of women were affected and "they have been told about the donor by the Danish clinic at which they were treated".
We do not know if any British women had treatment in other countries where the donor's sperm was distributed.
Concerned parents are advised to contact the clinic they used and the fertility authority in that country.
The BBC is choosing not to release the donor's identification number because he donated in good faith and the known cases in the UK have been contacted.
There is no law on how many times a donor's sperm can be used worldwide. However, individual countries do set their own limits.
The European Sperm Bank accepted these limits had "unfortunately" been breached in some countries and it was "in dialogue with the authorities in Denmark and Belgium".
In Belgium, a single sperm donor is only supposed to be used by six families. Instead 38 different women produced 53 children to the donor.
The UK limit is 10 families per donor.
Prof Allan Pacey, who used to run the Sheffield Sperm Bank and is now the deputy vice president of the Faculty of Biology Medicine and Health at the University of Manchester, said countries had become dependent on big international sperm banks and half the UK's sperm was now imported.
He told the BBC: "We have to import from big international sperm banks who are also selling it to other countries, because that's how they make their money, and that is where the problem begins, because there's no international law about how often you can use the sperm."
He said the case was "awful" for everybody involved, but it would be impossible to make sperm completely safe.
"You can't screen for everything, we only accept 1% or 2% of all men that apply to be a sperm donor in the current screening arrangement so if we make it even tighter, we wouldn't have any sperm donors – that's where the balance lies."
This case, alongside that of a man who was ordered to stop after fathering 550 children through sperm donation, has again raised questions over whether there should be tougher limits.
The European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology has recently suggested a limit of 50 families per donor.
However, it said this would not reduce the risk of inheriting rare genetic diseases.
Rather, it would be better for the wellbeing of children who discover they are one of hundreds of half-siblings.
"More needs to be done to reduce the number of families that are born globally from the same donors," said Sarah Norcross, the director of the Progress Educational Trust, an independent charity for people affected by infertility and genetic conditions.
"We don't fully understand what the social and psychological implications will be of having these hundreds of half siblings. It can potentially be traumatic," she told BBC News.
The European Sperm Bank said: "It is important, especially in light of this case, to remember that thousands of women and couples do not have the opportunity to have a child without the help of donor sperm.
"It is generally safer to have a child with the help of donor sperm if the sperm donors are screened according to medical guidelines."
Sarah Norcross said these cases were "vanishingly rare" when you consider the number of children born to a sperm donor.
All of the experts we spoke to said using a licensed clinic meant the sperm would be screened for more diseases than most fathers-to-be are.
Prof Pacey said he would ask "is this a UK donor or is this a donor from somewhere else?"
"If it's a donor from somewhere else I think it's legitimate to ask questions about has that donor been used before? Or how many times will this donor be used?"
If you or someone you know has been affected by the issues raised, details of help and support are available at BBC Action Line.

© Adriana Loureiro Fernandez for The New York Times

针对韩国电子入境卡将台湾标注为“中国(台湾)”,台湾总统赖清德说,希望韩国能够尊重台湾人民的意志,让双方携手前进,稳定区域和平,并促进区域繁荣发展。
综合台湾《联合报》《自由时报》报道,赖清德星期三(12月10日)出席亚洲民主人权奖颁奖典礼前受访时就此事说,台湾与韩国民间交流非常密切,经贸往来也很多,希望台湾与韩国能够维持友好关系,以促进两国各方面合作,增进两国的福祉。
赖清德说,在这种状况之下,希望韩国也能够尊重台湾人民的意志,让双方携手前进,稳定区域和平,并促进区域繁荣发展。
韩国自2月起在电子入境卡的“出发地”及“下一目的地”栏位将台湾标示为“CHINA(TAIWAN)”。台湾外交部上周发布新闻稿指出,这一标示与事实不符,不仅造成台湾民众填写时的混淆与不便,也引发对韩国政府此一不友善作法的失望与不满。
根据新闻稿,台湾外交部与驻韩代表处已多次向韩国政府严正关切并要求尽速更正,但迄今未获正面回应,深表遗憾。
台湾外交部呼吁韩国尽快修正电子入境卡中的错误标示,并称在问题未解决前,台方将继续与韩方沟通,为台湾民众的权益尽最大努力。
中华全国总工会部署开展工会发布通知,决定至2026年春节前系统治理欠薪冬季行动,做好被欠薪农民工工会帮扶救助工作,并建立群体性事件应急工作机制,对恶意欠薪引发的风险,推动把问题化解在基层,解决于萌芽。
中华全国总工会星期三(12月10日)在网站发布,总工会近日印发《关于开展治理欠薪冬季行动的通知》,决定至2026年春节前,配合中国国务院就业促进和劳动保护工作领导小组,在全国工会系统开展治理欠薪冬季行动,聚焦重点领域有效预防和推动化解拖欠农民工工资问题,做好被欠薪农民工工会帮扶救助工作,维护农民工合法权益。
《通知》要求,各级工会要深入开展工会常态化推动治理职工欠薪工作。建立舆情线索核实、欠薪案件处置工作机制,充分发挥全国工会欠薪业务工作管理平台作用,及时监测核实舆情线索,跟踪处置欠薪案件,坚持分类处置,实现线索核实、案件登记、协办结案一体化。
《通知》还称,各级工会要建立健全欠薪引发的突发性、群体性事件应急工作机制,事件发生时属地工会及相关企业工会应立即深入职工一线,引导职工理性合法维权,并第一时间向同级党委政府和上级工会报告,协助党委政府妥善解决突发事件。对恶意欠薪引发的风险,及时发现苗头性问题并向同级党政部门报告,推动把问题化解在基层,解决于萌芽。
《通知》也要求,各级工会要全面摸排讨薪劳动者实际生活状况,及时提供针对性帮扶与援助。在“两节”送温暖及常态化帮扶活动中,重点关注讨薪劳动者,加大关怀力度,保障基本生活需求。加强就业援助,详细掌握因欠薪失业劳动者的就业意向,积极提供职业介绍、技能培训等服务,助力其尽快实现再就业。
在哈尔滨马拉松夺冠的福建医科大学附属第一医院护士张水华,因在采访中表达希望领导支持调休跑马拉松引发舆论关注后,被医院以虚假理由申请调休等为由给予警告处分六个月。
综合极目新闻和《新京报》报道,网络流传的一份名为《福建医科大学附属第一医院关于对张水华的处理决定》的医院内部通报显示,张水华因违规兼职取酬、以不实理由申请调休,被处以警告处分六个月,并不得参与2025年度评优。
通报列举的主要问题包括:一,违规兼职取酬。张水华与361°体育用品有限公司签约代言并获得报酬,但未按规定履行报批手续,违反《福建医科大学附属第一医院职工兼职管理办法》。
二,张水华为参加马拉松比赛多次申请调班,并在2025年11月1日以虚假理由申请11月2日调休,实际前往湖北宜昌参赛,导致科室临时调配人手、增加同事负担,违反她与医院签订的《事业单位聘用合同》相关条款。
医院认为,张水华上述行为破坏正常工作秩序并造成恶劣影响,经研究决定给予她警告处分六个月,期间不得聘用到高于现在岗位和职员的等级,并取消她2025年度评优资格。极目新闻星期三(12月10日)从福建医科大学附属第一医院获悉,上述通报属实。
张水华今年8月底在哈尔滨马拉松夺冠后接受采访时哭诉希望单位领导支持她调休参加比赛,引发广泛讨论。有网民认为她利用周末参赛无可厚非,也有人指出她的调休意味着其他同事需要加班。

BBCInternational talks to revolutionise how the European Court of Human Rights handles migration cases will begin on Wednesday.
The British government is urging partners to modernise the way states tackle the continent-wide illegal migration crisis.
The talks are the most significant sign yet that international human rights law could be reinterpreted to make it easier for states to target people smuggling and set up 'returns hubs' to hold people with no right to be in Europe.
Writing ahead of the major meeting in Strasbourg, Sir Keir Starmer and Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said other nations should rethink human rights laws to make protecting borders easier.
Critics say the ECHR is getting in the way of removing more illegal migrants, while supporters say claims about the ECHR's role in migration are exaggerated.
The BBC understands that the aim is for member states to reach a political declaration by the spring which would set how the European Convention on Human Rights is applied in migration cases.
If such an agreement was achieved, it could be one of the most important reforms to how human rights law is applied in the 75-year history of the convention.
The meeting at the Council of Europe, the political body that agrees the human rights laws which are then applied by the court, comes after months of pressure over migration.
Nine members of the human rights body, led by Italy and Denmark, called earlier this year for reforms.
The UK did not sign that open letter - but it has been lobbying behind the scenes for talks on reforms.
Membership of the convention has become increasingly contentious in the UK in recent years.
Both the Conservatives and Reform UK have said they would leave it if they won the next election.
Kemi Badenoch has said leaving would not be a "silver bullet" but was a necessary step to "protect our borders, our veterans and our citizens".
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said he would oppose such a move saying the convention "upholds our freedom" and would "do nothing to stop the boats or fix our broken immigration system".

EPAWriting in the Guardian newspaper ahead of the talks, Sir Keir and his Danish counterpart Mette Frederiksen said that the member states meeting on Wednesday must "go further in tackling" the "shared challenges" of "uncontrolled migration" that they said were undermining public confidence in governments.
"Europe has faced big tests before and we have overcome them by acting together. Now we must do so again," said the leaders.
"Otherwise, the forces that seek to divide us will grow stronger.
"So our message is this: as responsible, progressive governments we will deliver the change that people are crying out for.
"We will control our borders to protect our democracies – and make our nations stronger than ever in the years to come."
The UK delegation to the talks will be led by Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy.
He is expected to tell the meeting that the UK remains committed to the ECHR - but its interpretation must not stand in the way of combating people smuggling.
The UK's already-announced domestic plan includes legislating to restrict how the right to private and family life applies in removal cases.
The BBC understands that if the meeting in Strasbourg is a success, officials will begin working with the member states on a political declaration to clarify how human rights laws should be applied to migration challenges - with a deadline of next May for the final wording.
The talks are expected to cover some of the most difficult issues including combating migrant smuggling and how to create human rights compliant 'returns hubs' - centres outside of Europe where migrants could be forcibly housed if they can not be returned to dangerous countries.
The talks are also expected to cover the complex rules of Article 8, the right to family life, and Article 3, the ban on inhumane treatment which features in many migration cases.
In October Alain Berset, the head of the Council of Europe, told the BBC that he was "absolutely ready" to discuss human rights reforms.
That olive branch to member states came after months of diplomatic talks paving the way for Wednesday's meeting.
"The European Convention on Human Rights provides the framework we need to address these issues effectively and responsibly," said Berset ahead of the meeting.
"Our task is not to weaken the Convention, but to keep it strong and relevant — to ensure that liberty and security, justice and responsibility, are held in balance."

ShutterstockA sperm donor who unknowingly harboured a genetic mutation that dramatically raises the risk of cancer has fathered at least 197 children across Europe, a major investigation has revealed.
Some children have already died and only a minority who inherit the mutation will escape cancer in their lifetimes.
The sperm was not sold to UK clinics, but the BBC can confirm a "very small" number of British families, who have been informed, used the donor's sperm while having fertility treatment in Denmark.
Denmark's European Sperm Bank, which sold the sperm, said families affected had their "deepest sympathy" and admitted the sperm was used to make too many babies in some countries.

Getty ImagesThe investigation has been conducted by 14 public service broadcasters, including the BBC, as part of the European Broadcasting Union's Investigative Journalism Network.
The sperm came from an anonymous man who was paid to donate as a student, starting in 2005. His sperm was then used by women for around 17 years.
He is healthy and passed the donor screening checks. However, the DNA in some of his cells mutated before he was born.
It damaged the TP53 gene – which has the crucial role of preventing the body's cells turning cancerous.
Most of the donor's body does not contain the dangerous form of TP53, but up to 20% of his sperm do.
However, any children made from affected sperm will have the mutation in every cell of their body.


This is known as Li Fraumeni syndrome and comes with an up to 90% chance of developing cancer, particularly during childhood as well as breast cancer later in life.
"It is a dreadful diagnosis," Prof Clare Turnbull, a cancer geneticist at the Institute of Cancer Research in London, told the BBC. "It's a very challenging diagnosis to land on a family, there is a lifelong burden of living with that risk, it's clearly devastating."
MRI scans of the body and the brain are needed every year, as well as abdominal ultrasounds, to try to spot tumours. Women often choose to have their breasts removed to lower their risk of cancer.
The European Sperm Bank said the "donor himself and his family members are not ill" and such a mutation is "not detected preventatively by genetic screening". They said they "immediately blocked" the donor once the problem with his sperm was discovered.
Doctors who were seeing children with cancer linked to sperm donation raised concerns at the European Society of Human Genetics this year.
They reported they had found 23 with the variant out of 67 children known at the time. Ten had already been diagnosed with cancer.
Through Freedom of Information requests and interviews with doctors and patients we can reveal substantially more children were born to the donor.
The figure is at least 197 children, but that may not be the final number as data has not been obtained from all countries.
It is also unknown how many of these children inherited the dangerous variant.


Dr Edwige Kasper, a cancer geneticist at Rouen University Hospital, in France, who presented the initial data, told the investigation: "We have many children that have already developed a cancer.
"We have some children that have developed already two different cancers and some of them have already died at a very early age."
Céline, not her real name, is a single-mother in France whose child was conceived with the donor's sperm 14 years ago and has the mutation.
She got a call from the fertility clinic she used in Belgium urging her to get her daughter screened.
She says she has "absolutely no hard feelings" towards the donor but says it was unacceptable she was given sperm that "wasn't clean, that wasn't safe, that carried a risk".
And she knows cancer will be looming over them for the rest of their lives.
"We don't know when, we don't know which one, and we don't know how many," she says.
"I understand that there's a high chance it's going to happen and when it does, we'll fight and if there are several, we'll fight several times."


The donor's sperm was used by 67 fertility clinics in 14 countries.
The sperm was not sold to UK clinics.
However, as a result of this investigation the authorities in Denmark notified the UK's Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) on Tuesday that British women had travelled to the country to receive fertility treatment using the donor's sperm.
Those women have been informed.
Peter Thompson, the chief executive of the HFEA, said a "very small number" of women were affected and "they have been told about the donor by the Danish clinic at which they were treated".
We do not know if any British women had treatment in other countries where the donor's sperm was distributed.
Concerned parents are advised to contact the clinic they used and the fertility authority in that country.
The BBC is choosing not to release the donor's identification number because he donated in good faith and the known cases in the UK have been contacted.
There is no law on how many times a donor's sperm can be used worldwide. However, individual countries do set their own limits.
The European Sperm Bank accepted these limits had "unfortunately" been breached in some countries and it was "in dialogue with the authorities in Denmark and Belgium".
In Belgium, a single sperm donor is only supposed to be used by six families. Instead 38 different women produced 53 children to the donor.
The UK limit is 10 families per donor.
Prof Allan Pacey, who used to run the Sheffield Sperm Bank and is now the deputy vice president of the Faculty of Biology Medicine and Health at the University of Manchester, said countries had become dependent on big international sperm banks and half the UK's sperm was now imported.
He told the BBC: "We have to import from big international sperm banks who are also selling it to other countries, because that's how they make their money, and that is where the problem begins, because there's no international law about how often you can use the sperm."
He said the case was "awful" for everybody involved, but it would be impossible to make sperm completely safe.
"You can't screen for everything, we only accept 1% or 2% of all men that apply to be a sperm donor in the current screening arrangement so if we make it even tighter, we wouldn't have any sperm donors – that's where the balance lies."
This case, alongside that of a man who was ordered to stop after fathering 550 children through sperm donation, has again raised questions over whether there should be tougher limits.
The European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology has recently suggested a limit of 50 families per donor.
However, it said this would not reduce the risk of inheriting rare genetic diseases.
Rather, it would be better for the wellbeing of children who discover they are one of hundreds of half-siblings.
"More needs to be done to reduce the number of families that are born globally from the same donors," said Sarah Norcross, the director of the Progress Educational Trust, an independent charity for people affected by infertility and genetic conditions.
"We don't fully understand what the social and psychological implications will be of having these hundreds of half siblings. It can potentially be traumatic," she told BBC News.
The European Sperm Bank said: "It is important, especially in light of this case, to remember that thousands of women and couples do not have the opportunity to have a child without the help of donor sperm.
"It is generally safer to have a child with the help of donor sperm if the sperm donors are screened according to medical guidelines."
Sarah Norcross said these cases were "vanishingly rare" when you consider the number of children born to a sperm donor.
All of the experts we spoke to said using a licensed clinic meant the sperm would be screened for more diseases than most fathers-to-be are.
Prof Pacey said he would ask "is this a UK donor or is this a donor from somewhere else?"
"If it's a donor from somewhere else I think it's legitimate to ask questions about has that donor been used before? Or how many times will this donor be used?"
If you or someone you know has been affected by the issues raised, details of help and support are available at BBC Action Line.
Madeleine McCann's father is calling for greater scrutiny of the UK's media, complaining that his family was subjected to "monstering" by sections of the press.
He said the media "repeatedly interfered with the investigation" into his daughter's disappearance in 2007 and believes this has hindered the search for her.
Gerry McCann told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that more than a year on from Labour coming into power, "press regulation is no longer a priority".
He wants a resumption of the cancelled second phase of the Lord Leveson Inquiry, which would have examined unlawful action by the media, plus journalists' relationships with politicians and police. It was scrapped by the Tories in 2018.
Madeleine's disappearance during a family holiday in Portugal has never been solved.
In a rare interview, Mr McCann said that for months after her disappearance his family had "journalists coming to the house, photographers literally ramming their cameras against our car window when we had two-year-old twins in the back who were terrified".
"We are lucky we survived. We had tremendous support - but I can promise you, there were times where I felt like I was drowning. And it was the media, primarily," he told the BBC.
"It was what was happening and the way things were being portrayed, where you were being suffocated and buried, and it felt like there wasn't a way out."
Mr McCann and his wife, Kate McCann, are among more than 30 people to have signed a letter being sent to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and calling on him to reverse the decision not to hold the second phase of the Leveson Inquiry.
Among the other signatories are the families of Hillsborough victims, and the mother of TV presenter Caroline Flack.


The letter, seen by the BBC, requests a meeting with the prime minister, saying: "We understand that you recently had time to meet News Corp chairman Lachlan Murdoch.
"We hope you will now meet with some of the British citizens whose lives have been upended by the illegal practices and abuses associated with his company."
Mr McCann told the Today programme: "It's quite obvious that press barons can meet the prime minister, but the people who have suffered at the hands of them can't."
News UK, the UK branch of News Corp, declined to comment.
The first part of the Leveson Inquiry was held from 2011 to 2012, in the wake of the phone-hacking scandal.
Its findings were published in 2012, and led to the creation of the industry-funded press regulator Ipso.
Mr McCann told the BBC that the inquiry's second phase had "almost certainly" not happened because he believes that politicians in the UK are fearful of the press.

PA MediaHe said that in the run-up to last year's general election, Labour politicians had committed to implementing the recommendations made in the first part of the Leveson Inquiry, and that he was "extremely disappointed" that they hadn't done so.
"We're over a year into the government, and there haven't been any changes," he said.
"It's not acceptable to me now, more than a year on, that Leveson and press regulation is no longer a priority."
A DCMS spokesperson told the BBC it "recognises that for victims and their families, incidents of harassment and intrusion from the media cause significant distress".
"The Culture Secretary has met with individuals and families who have experienced this intrusion in the past and the government is committed to ensuring that these failings are never repeated," they said.
Mr McCann added that he and his wife had "supped with the Devil" by working with the Sun in 2011, in order to have the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance reviewed - illustrating the newspaper's influence.
"There was a front page letter published in The Sun, and [then-prime minister] David Cameron ordered the review," he said.
"That's the power they had. So we put our morals aside to work with them to achieve what we wanted."
Criticising media coverage of the investigation, he said: "Published material which should have been confidential, should be passed on to the police, witness statements, many other things that have gone out," he said.
"So if you were the perpetrator, you knew a lot more than you should have done - and as a victim, as a parent, it's absolutely dismaying."
Mr McCann gave a witness statement at the Leveson Inquiry on behalf of himself and his wife in November 2011.
In it, he described news outlets "making stories up" about them, as well as a "sustained, inaccurate and malicious series of headlines in a number of papers which gave the impression that we were in some way responsible for or involved in Madeleine's disappearance".
He also said around the time their daughter disappeared, the now-closed News of the World newspaper had published complete transcripts from Kate McCann's personal diary.
That diary had been seized by police in Portugal as part of their investigation into Madeleine's disappearance, and the couple were "unsure as to how the [News of the World] obtained a copy", the inquiry heard.
In his interview with the Today programme, Mr McCann said: "Madeleine's been missing for 18 years, and the bottom line is, we still don't know what's happened to her."
He added that there is "no evidence".
"I don't even mean 'convincing' evidence - there is no evidence to say she's dead," he said.
"Now we fully understand she may be dead, it may even be probable, but we don't know that."
A spokesperson for press regulator Ipso told the BBC that it can intervene directly in cases of press harassment.
"We encourage anyone with concerns about press behaviour to contact us for help," it said.
"Would I catch a bus? No, not out of choice now," says Andy Collett. "I feel much happier using my own car."
His sentiment isn't unusual among passengers. But Mr Collett is a bus driver.
"It can be very intimidating," he says. "I've been assaulted twice, spat at numerous times, and I've had incidents of broken windows – it's just part and parcel of the job, unfortunately."
He describes a "lawlessness" among some of the travelling public - mostly younger people - which he believes has got worse in 38 years of driving Birmingham's bus routes.
The BBC has spoken to passengers, transport staff and other bus drivers in the West Midlands about what they say is a growing national trend of antisocial behaviour on public transport.
The British Transport Police recorded 40,034 incidents of antisocial behaviour in 2024-25, an increase of 24% on the previous year.
Buses are the most commonly used form of public transport but they're also where passengers feel least safe, according to a recent Transport for the North survey.

BBC/Andy AlcroftOne incident gives Mr Collett flashbacks.
"I was attacked by about 30 schoolkids," he says. "I had cuts, bruises. They actually bent the fingers back on my hand when I was trying to hold [the door] to stop them getting on the vehicle."
Mr Collett now mostly trains other drivers, warning them of the dangers. When he does get shifts behind the wheel, he tries to avoid routes known for antisocial behaviour.
Antisocial behaviour hotspot Chelmsley Wood in the West Midlands is a snapshot of this national problem. Its interchange has suffered vandalism and graffiti, while drivers have been threatened and buses damaged.
Security camera footage shows masked teenagers aiming barrages of fireworks at buses over Halloween and Bonfire Night.
Passenger Emma Banks, 52, says she has witnessed a similar incident.
"They [were] hitting the bus. I've got learning difficulties and sometimes it does scare you," she tells me on a cold evening, waiting in the interchange.
Ms Banks says she regularly sees overcrowding and people smoking on buses.
She can't drive so relies on public transport but, tonight, Ms Banks doesn't feel confident enough to catch the bus.
"I'll be getting a taxi because I know that I'll get home safely."
A Public Space Protection Order has been imposed at Chelmsley Wood to stop gatherings of young people and to require the removal of masks and hoods. But 17-year-old Elle Furlong says she's still afraid.
"They smash windows, purposely pull the fire alarm, light their lighters on the chairs. It's just horrendous."
The probability of becoming a victim of crime on public transport is very low - Transport for West Midlands estimates one crime for every 50,000 bus journeys. But perceptions can outweigh statistics and drive people like Ms Furlong away.
"If I can walk it, I'll walk it. If it's far enough, I'll get an Uber. If it's really far, I'll get my dad to drop me off. I avoid buses at all costs," Ms Furlong says.

BBC/Andy AlcroftThe drivers have no choice but to carry on with their jobs, although many are afraid to speak openly about the risks. Even trade union officials have refused to go on the record.
"You come to work not knowing what you're going to face," says a driver who asks to remain anonymous. "It can cause a lot of anxiety and stress. I go home sometimes and just want to break down and cry because it's a horrible job."
They describe the daily grind of disrespectful teenagers, aggressive drug addicts, even passengers defecating on the bus. Then there's the racial abuse.
"You have to hold back. I've known a few drivers who have kicked off, but then they've lost their job because of it."
I saw for myself what drivers and passengers are facing when I sat on the top deck of the 94 from Chelmsley Wood, shortly after the school bell. A group of kids soon boarded without paying.
"I've been driving buses for 33 years and it's changed," driver Neil Evans says through the screen protecting his cab. "Society has changed. No one cares anymore. They just walk onto the bus and do what they want, when they want, how they want, and nothing's done about it."
Today, Mr Evans has backup. Esha Sheemar is one of 13 Transport Safety Officers (TSOs) patrolling the West Midlands. She warns the kids if they don't behave they'll be thrown off the bus.
TSO roles were introduced in 2019. They are not police officers, but they have limited powers to tackle issues on public transport.

BBC/Andy AlcroftAcross the bus station, Ms Sheemar's colleague Lee Clarke has spotted a face from their most-wanted list: a 13-year-old accused of vandalising a bus shelter. The boy's details are taken but he is allowed to get on the bus, as Mr Clarke's limited powers mean he'll need to pass the case to police officers.
TSOs are funded by the Combined Authority and belong to the West Midlands Safer Travel Partnership, which includes West Midlands Police, British Transport Police, as well as bus and train companies.
At its control room in the city centre, hundreds of screens flicker with security camera images from stations and interchanges across the region's roads and rail lines; they can even get live pictures from most of the buses.
Kerry Blakeman is head of security for the West Midlands Safer Travel Partnership and says they have access to more than 5,000 fixed cameras. He says his staff capture about 30 incidents each day, although he is keen to stress millions of journeys are safe and uneventful.
"We are trying to do our best to keep the travelling public safe. Behind each camera is an operator looking out for your safety whilst you travel around the bus, train and tram network."
Last summer, a teenager was filmed threatening people at Chelmsley Wood bus station with a machete. He was identified and sentenced to six months in juvenile custody.
The footage of the firework attacks has been handed over to West Midlands Police - and efforts to trace the hooded youths are ongoing.

BBC/Andy AlcroftBus driver Bryan Cook recently called police after being threatened with a weapon while working. It was one of four times in the past three months that he's phoned for assistance while driving the 72 bus to Chelmsley Wood.
On this chilly evening, he takes his chance to tell the TSOs how their timetable fails to match that of the vandals. "Where are you on the weekends? Where are you on school holidays?" he asks.
TSO Mr Clarke starts to reply, but the driver has more to say.
"We're the ones getting threatened, we're the ones getting stuff thrown at us, broken windows. Where are you lot?"
Mr Clarke emphasises the importance of reporting incidents so patrols can be targeted in problem areas.
"We keep telling everyone. No one does anything," says Mr Cook, in exasperation.
It outlines the challenge for a small team covering such a large area. The number of TSOs doubled a year ago and is set to rise to 25 across the West Midlands. Some areas have similar teams - and others have piloted them - but many places are uncovered, relying on the police. Bus routes can be especially vulnerable.
The anonymous bus driver questions the effectiveness of Transport Safety Officers and urges more support from their employer.
"They [management] know what goes on. Do they care? I don't know. Doesn't feel like it, to be fair."
National Express West Midlands told the BBC that all reports of antisocial behaviour or crime are "fully investigated to ensure perpetrators are held accountable, to identify any learnings, and to provide support for those affected".
It added that antisocial behaviour "will always be a subject we need to keep challenging and working on".
The UK government's recent Bus Services Act allows local authorities to apply for extra powers to deal with issues such as smoking, vaping and fare evasion, the sort of problems TSOs can tackle already on trains.
The legislation also requires bus drivers to receive training in dealing with antisocial behaviour and spotting the signs of harassment and abuse faced by women and girls.
The Department for Transport told the BBC that abuse of passengers and staff is "unacceptable" and pointed to the new powers the Bus Services Act will give to help tackle antisocial behaviour.
Transport for West Midlands promises greater use of drone cameras and AI technology, capable of recognising known troublemakers and even identifying concealed weapons. It recently launched a campaign prioritising the safety of women and girls.
Mr Blakeman insists his team is having a positive impact but says he recognises passenger confidence is fragile.
"I respect why some members of the public wouldn't feel comfortable travelling, but I want them to know that we're actually doing everything we can behind the scenes."
Back on the 72 bus, Mr Clarke is trying to restore Mr Cook's faith. He promises someone will make contact to explain their role and discusses the most efficient way to flag issues.
The West Midlands Safer Travel Partnership is regarded as a model of good practice. And yet, this frosty exchange reveals a clash of perspectives – one that speaks of "intelligence-led tasking" and "visible reassurance"; the other of lone working under the stark reality of sustained abuse and the risk of attack.
Mr Cook sums it up like this: "Two weeks ago I had two windows broken on my bus, I got threatened with a knife - and that's all in a day's work".

BBCThe leader of France's far-right National Rally (RN) Jordan Bardella has welcomed "for the most part" concerns raised about Europe in US President Donald Trump's new National Security Strategy.
Last week, the White House published a document which outlined Trump's vision of the world and the state of the European continent, which many have characterised as harshly critical of Europe.
Speaking to the BBC's Nick Robinson for his Political Thinking podcast, Bardella praised what he said was Trump's "appeal to American pride" - but he made clear he did not want Europe to be "subservient to any major power".
He said there was a "wind of freedom, of national pride blowing all over Western democracies".
In a wide-ranging interview, the 30-year-old, who opinion polls suggest leads in the race to be France's next president, was also challenged on the RN's political history and his stance on immigration.
Bardella said he shared the majority of the concerns outlined by the Trump administration about Europe facing "civilisational erasure", which the White House said is being fuelled by a range of policies, including on migration.
"Mass immigration and the laxity of our governments in the last 30 years with regards to migration policy are shaking the balance of European countries, of Western societies, and namely French society," Bardella said.
Snap parliamentary elections in June 2024 made the RN the largest single force in parliament, although an alliance of left-wing parties clinched victory.
The next French presidential election is due to be held in 2027. A recent poll for Le Figaro suggests Bardella would win with 44% of the vote - just ahead of Marine Le Pen, the RN figurehead whose candidacy is in doubt after she was found guilty of embezzling EU funds and barred from standing in an election for five years.
An appeal due early next year will determine whether Le Pen can run - otherwise, the expectation is that Bardella will step in.
Bardella batted away suggestions this was sparking tensions between them, stating they were united by "trust and friendship".
"I will fight by her side so she can win the appeal. Until the appeal we will campaign together, as we will after, hand-in-hand," he said in his interview.
The RN was founded by Le Pen's father Jean-Marie in 1972. Known then as the National Front (FN), it has since become a decisive force in French politics. Jean-Marie Le Pen was convicted several times for Holocaust denial and was an unrepentant extremist on race.
In his interview with Nick Robinson, Bardella distanced himself from Jean-Marie Le Pen's comments, as have many other RN politicians in recent years.

Reuters"I am fighting against the caricature of my political movement, of my ideas," he said, adding his responsibility was to bring together the French people and present the country with "a project of national recovery".
"My people's expectations for a break with the past are numerous," Bardella added.
Challenged on the racist and antisemitic history of the RN's precursor, Bardella rejected accusations that the National Front had ever put forward arguments that could "offend" some sections of the population
"A lot of Jewish people vote for us and consider us a bulwark against extremism," he said.
The RN is primarily known as an anti-immigration party and has long pushed for France to have stricter immigration rules, including limiting social spending to French citizens.
"If tomorrow I am the head of government, France will no longer be the target of mass immigration," he said, adding that if elected his first provision would be to trigger a referendum on immigration. "It will allow us to take back control of our borders."
However, according to the French constitution, a referendum can only be held on certain subjects which do not include immigration, so the constitution would have to be amended first. In order to do so, the RN would have to clinch the presidency and have either an absolute majority in Parliament or enough allies.
Bardella - who grew up in the Paris region but himself has parents of immigrant origin - drew a clear distinction between people who he said were born in France but "reject republican institutions like the police or values like secularism", and others who "do everything to become French - espouse the language, culture and national patrimony".
When pressed on what it means to be French if being born in the country is not sufficient, Bardella said he felt being French was an "honour" that transcended bureaucracy.
"Being French is adhering to some values and lifestyles, believing in equality between men and women," he argued.
"I defend secularism and I feel that Islamism has today become a separate political project... which wants to impose its rules on French society," Bardella added, before promising to close down radical mosques and banning "hate preachers" from the country if elected.
Although he did not expand on France's frequent and longstanding financial woes - the country's debt is more than €3 trillion, or around 114% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) - Bardella said the French economy was "sick".
"We face two ailments – excessive taxation and excessive regulation," he said, promising to free the country from the "shackles" that limit growth. The RN has repeatedly voted down the yearly budgets put forward by governments since last year, and has promised to similarly vote down this year's.
Bardella's position on Ukraine also bears some differences with that of the current centrist government. While he stated Russia represented a "multidimensional threat to French and European interests", and that Kyiv will need security guarantees even in the event of a peace deal, he also said that he was "firmly opposed" to sending soldiers to Ukraine.
Emmanuel Macron's government, on the other hand, has proposed deploying a steady military presence, albeit far from the front line.
But such a decision "would contribute to an escalation," Bardella said, "especially given that we have nuclear weapons and that President Putin has intentions whose limits are unclear".
If Bardella does stand at the next presidential election and wins, he will be 31.
Macron was 39 when he became France's youngest ever president in 2017. While Macron was finance minister for two years under François Hollande, Bardella, in comparison, has never been in government.
"It's true I am 30 years old. Unfortunately I can't do anything about that," he argued.
"I recognise the existential questions facing our country... And I'd rather be told that today is 'too soon' rather than tomorrow is 'too late'."
School is out for the year, but the summer holidays aren't exactly a break for 15-year-old Breanna Easton - that is when she's hard at work mustering cattle on the family's station.
"It's the freedom, the space you have to move," Breanna says, listing all the things she loves about her life, 1,600km north-east of Brisbane in Australia's sparsely-populated outback.
With grazier parents and grandparents, the industry runs in her blood. The vast hinterland is her own backyard.
And yet, like most teenagers, she's also attached to her smartphone.
The all-terrain buggy she uses to herd cattle is fitted with an internet extender, enabling her to message friends on Snapchat while working. On days she gets a little bored, she likes to make funny TikTok videos with her siblings.
With nearly all her friends living at least 100km away, social media is a lifeline. But not anymore, now that Australia's social media ban for children has taken effect.
"Taking away our socials is just taking away how we talk to each other," Breanna says.
While she can still text her friends, it's not the same as a quick "snap" or a "like" on a photo that allows her to play a part in their lives even when she is far away.
The ban has been in the making for a year now.
Throughout, supporters have argued it's for the wellbeing of children who they say are spending too much time online and risk being exposed to uncontrollable pressures, bullying and predators.
Opponents say restricting children's access to the internet runs the risk of pushing them to even less regulated corners of it - and they question the effectiveness of the age-verification tech the ban relies on.
The debate is far from settled but Australia's experiment has now begun, and Breanna is among millions of children under the age of 16 who are no longer allowed to use social media.
And among them are children who are seen as both winning - saved from the potential dangers of social media - and losing out - no longer having the community and connections that may have been harder to forge offline.


For Breanna's mum Megan Easton, the ban is a mixed blessing. While she agrees kids need to be protected, she remembers her own childhood on a cattle station was far more isolating.
"We did feel very behind the other children at school because we had a somewhat sheltered life."
Breanna, her older sister Olivia and younger brother Jacob all did remote classes for children in the outback who are unable to attend a physical school.
For senior grades though, boarding school is the only option for a good education. So from the age of 11 or 12, the siblings have lived six hours away from home during term-time.
"We might be incredibly geographically isolated but we're not digitally illiterate and we have taken great measures in our family to make sure that we educate our children appropriately for the world ahead of them," Ms Easton says. "I do think that it is a bit of government overstepping."
One of her concerns is that delaying access to social media to 16 takes away power from parents to educate their children.
"Usually around 12 is when they start looking for their peers to be more influential than their parents," she says. "Even though it's young to get them on social media, we've staged their experiences with it and it's a great opportunity for us to let them have a few mistakes and then talk them through the processes of self-correcting."


More than 2,000km away, teens in Sydney lead very different, far more connected lives. But they share similar worries.
"It's a bit insulting that they think we can't handle it," says 14-year-old Jacinta Hickey who attends Rosebank College in Sydney's inner west. "I'm definitely mature enough to distinguish right from wrong and to know what's good and bad for me."
Her teachers though couldn't be happier. "I feel really passionate that as long as we can, we should preserve the innocence that comes through childhood," says Iris Nastasi, the principal at Rosebank.
When smartphones started becoming popular in the early 2000s, she thought it would be an opportunity to teach children about technology. She embraced the change. Twenty years later, Ms Nastasi thinks very differently.
"It's two in the morning, he or she does something that they wouldn't normally do and the fallout happens here. Relationships are damaged and we have to look into it."
At 12, Lola Farrugia isn't on social media yet - and with the new law, she now won't be for another four years. But that doesn't faze her. She's happy enough with a flip phone.
"They're my school friends so I see them at school, I see them in sport - they're everywhere," says Lola, who's had coaching from her parents about the ills of social media.
"My mom explained to me that social media is junk food for the brain," she says.
"If you have a pantry and you clear [it], you're not craving anything, you know what I mean?"


Peter Malinauskas, the Premier of South Australia, is the man credited – or blamed, depending on your age - for clearing out the pantry.
After his wife read The Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt, an American psychologist who sets out the ills of the smartphone and how it is rewiring childhood, Malinauskas set out to introduce state-level legislation hoping it could win federal support too.
"She put the book down on her lap and turned to me and said you've really got to do something about this," he told the BBC. "And then I stopped and thought about it and thought maybe we actually can."
Not even Malinauskas expected the speed at which it happened though. The Anxious Generation was published in March 2024. By late November, a federal law banning social media for under-16s was passed.
There's still a High Court challenge brought by two teens pending, possible battles with tech firms and a warning from US President Donald Trump about targeting American companies.
"Of course you think through the potential repercussions of any move like this," Malinauskas says. "But when you are talking about protecting young people, all other considerations become secondary."
But one of the biggest criticisms of the law is that a blanket restriction could do the opposite for minority groups.
According to a survey of nearly 1,000 young people carried out by Minus18, a group that supports under-18 LGBTQ+ communities, 96% of respondents said social media was important to access friends and support, and 82% believed a ban would leave them disconnected.
Brisbane schoolgirl Sadie Angus is one of them. She turned 13 just a few weeks ago and opening an Instagram account was a rite of passage for her. But it was a short-lived one - the law means she's now being kicked off it and she's frustrated.
"I can admit more things on there than I can in real life," says Sadie who often prefers to keep her anonymity online.
"I use it as a safe space to share what I've had to go through and since nobody knows who I am, they can't come to me in real life and talk about it and that feels kind of comforting."
Sadie's mother Kath felt it was an important step in her daughter - the youngest in their family - growing up and now that has been taken away from her.
"She's being exposed to some really amazing role models through social media, particularly in the queer community which I think is really healthy for young adolescents," Ms Angus says.
Other minority groups have also voiced concern over the ban.
"I am quite nervous about what this is going to mean for autistic young people," says Sharon Fraser, the CEO of Reframing Autism.
"We communicate and socialise differently," says Sharon who also has an autistic son. "Online can be a very beneficial place for autistic people and there are ways to connect online that are just not accessible to them in real life."
For every young person who feels like they're losing out, campaigner Emma Mason thinks there will be far more winners.
Nearly four years ago, her daughter Tilly killed herself. She was 15.
Emma blames the rise of social media for Tilly's death. Face-to-face bullying started when Tilly was just eight. It moved to messaging and then to platforms including Tiktok, Snapchat and Instagram. But it got worse after a fake image of Tilly was spread by children at her school.
Emma recalls how hysterical Tilly was when she found out: "She was subject to something she had no control over, a harm that was instant, a harm that she could not stop. It was one of those moments in her life where she just lost it, she just thought I can't do this anymore, I can't keep fighting the demons."
Ms Mason doesn't want this to happen to other children, which is why she's been standing alongside Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to support this law.
"These are agents of harm that are unregulated and I think our children have been the social experiment," Emma says. "It's a government's job to protect the vulnerable of our society and to provide guardrails for how things need to go."
She admits though, for those who are already teenagers, they might not be clear winners.
"I don't know that we can save the children that have had access to it already," she says. "But those children that are 13 and below that aren't supposed to be on it now, they won't have to grow up in a world where it's acceptable that you just get on social media and you can say what you want, how you want, to whoever you want."
Additional reporting by Simon Atkinson

© Adriana Loureiro Fernandez for The New York Times