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Ukraine struggling to keep lights on under Russian attack, says energy boss

YURIY DYACHYSHYN/AFP Employees stand next to the building of a power plant of Ukrainian energy provider DTEK, which was heavily damaged during air attacks, at an undisclosed location on December 10, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of UkraineYURIY DYACHYSHYN/AFP
Across Ukraine electricity is being rationed – with supplies turned on for a few hours each day

Ukraine's biggest energy provider is living in permanent crisis mode because of Russian attacks on the grid, its chief executive has told the BBC.

Most of Ukraine is suffering from lengthy power cuts as temperatures drop and Maxim Timchenko, whose company DTEK provides power for 5.6 million Ukrainians, says the intensity of strikes has been so frequent "we just don't have time to recover".

President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Tuesday that Russia knew the winter cold could become one of its most dangerous weapons.

"Every night Ukrainian parents hold their children in basements and shelters hoping our air defence will hold," he told the Dutch parliament.

As the fourth anniversary of Russia's full scale invasion approaches, Maxim Timchenko says Russia has repeatedly targeted DTEK's energy grid with "waves of drones, cruise and ballistic missiles" and his company has found it difficult to cope.

Tens of thousands of people in the southern city of Odesa have been without electricity for three days this week, following a co-ordinated Russian attack.

Reuters Odesa at dusk during a power outage on SundayReuters
Much of Odesa has been without power in recent days

"Life has been difficult, but people are very supportive of each other," says Yana, who is among those lucky enough still to have power. She has invited friends to her home to charge their phones.

Power outages also cut off heat and water supplies and Yana says those still connected to the grid have offered strangers the chance to wash or take a shower.

Across Ukraine electricity is being rationed – with supplies turned on for a few hours each day.

Many Ukrainians rely on power banks and generators as a back-up, and the sound of generators in the capital is now more constant than the air raid warnings.

Kyiv resident Tetiana says the first thing she does in the morning is to check her phone to find out the daily schedule for when her power will be switched on. Like many she has invested in power banks to make life more bearable:

"You need to remember when you leave home to leave the powerbanks on so that you have them charged when you get back home."

Shutterstock A local woman speaks by phone with a reading lamp connected to a power bank, during a blackout.Shutterstock
Many Ukrainians rely on powerbanks and generators during regular power cuts

About 50% of Ukraine's energy is currently supplied by three large nuclear power plants in central and western Ukraine. But the network that transfers that power has been severely damaged.

DTEK runs about 10 power stations, most of them fuelled by coal.

One was recently targeted by five 5 ballistic missiles and Mr Timchenko said some of their power plants and sub stations had been attacked "every three or four days".

"I don't remember a single day when I had no reports about some damage to our grid."

Matthew Goddard/BBC A man sits in a blue jacket in a darkened classroomMatthew Goddard/BBC
DTEK chief executive Maxim Timchenko says his company has found it hard to cope

Finding spare parts to repair damaged equipment has become a significant challenge.

The energy provider used to be able to source equipment from within Ukraine, but now it has to scour the ret of Europe for replacement parts.

This year DTEK has had to spend $166m (£123m) on repairing its damaged thermal power plants and coal facilities.

"We will not give up," Maxim Timchenko insists: "We have a responsibility to millions of mothers to have power and heat".

DTEK's origins are in the Donbas in Eastern Ukraine where the fighting is fiercest and where power supplies have been disrupted the most.

Eight of its engineers have been killed doing their job.

"Every day they risk their lives to keep power in this area," Mr Timchenko said.

Additional reporting by Anastasia Levchenko and Kyla Herrmannsen.

Bondi Beach gunman originally from India, police say

Getty Indian police in brown uniform and cap with back to camera holding walkie talkieGetty

One of the two men suspected of carrying out a mass shooting at Bondi Beach was originally from southern India but had "limited contact" with his family there, police sources have said.

Sajid Akram, who died at the scene in Sydney on Sunday, was originally from the city of Hyderabad, a police official from the Indian state of Telangana said.

He had travelled to India just six times since moving to Australia in 1998 and his family "expressed no knowledge of his radical mindset or activities," the official added.

Sajid, 50, and his 24-year-old son Naveed are suspected of killing 15 people and injuring dozens more at an event celebrating the Jewish festival of Hanukkah on Sunday.

Hyderabad, where Sajid Akram's family is based, is the capital of Telangana state in southern India.

The Telangana police official told BBC Telugu Sajid had "visited India on six occasions after migrating to Australia, primarily for family-related reasons such as property matters and visits to his elderly parents".

"It is understood that he did not travel to India even at the time of his father's demise," the official said.

"The factors that led to the radicalisation of Sajid Akram and his son, Naveed appear to have no connection with India or any local influence in Telangana."

The official also said Sajid Akram had no criminal record in India, he had completed a degree and had moved to Australia in search of employment before marrying a woman "of European origin".

Sajid Akram was an Indian passport holder, but his children were born in Australia and are Australian citizens, the official added.

Police are currently investigating why the father and son travelled to the Philippines in the weeks leading up to the attack. They arrived on 1 November and left on 28 November, the country's immigration bureau confirmed to the BBC.

Sajid travelled using an Indian passport, while his son used Australian identification, the authorities said.

Citing security sources, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) said that the pair travelled to the island nation to receive "military-style training", but officials have not been able to confirm those reports.

Philippines foreign affairs minister Maria Theresa Lazaro and her Australian counterpart, Penny Wong, have agreed to "keep each other closely informed" of any developments related to the investigation into the Bondi Beach shooting, according to a text message Lazaro sent to the media.

It is understood that Naveed Akram was previously investigated over ties to a Sydney-based IS terrorism cell, ABC reported.

IS is an extremist Islamist militant group that has claimed responsibility for a number of terrorist attacks across Europe and America, including the 2015 Paris attacks.

The Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Naveed Akram first came to the attention of the authorities in 2019 "on the basis of being associated with others".

However, at the time, an "assessment was made that there was no indication of any ongoing threat or threat of him engaging in violence".

Lizzo celebrates as fat-shaming claims dismissed

Reuters LizzoReuters
Lizzo said the fat-shaming claims had "haunted" her for the last two years

Pop star Lizzo is celebrating a legal victory after a judge dismissed allegations of fat-shaming from a 2023 lawsuit filed by three of her former dancers.

The singer, whose hits include body positive anthems such as Good As Hell and Juice, marked the development with a video statement posted to her Instagram and TikTok feeds.

"There was no evidence that I fired them because they gained weight," Lizzo said. "They were fired for taking a private recording of me without my consent and sending it off to ex-employees."

While those specific allegations have been dropped, the case against Lizzo and her production company will continue, over claims that three dancers were subject to sexual harassment.

Lizzo's team has called the lawsuit a "fabricated sob story," but a Los Angeles judge ruled that the case could move forward last year.

Arianna Davis, Crystal Williams and Noelle Rodriguez say they were pressured into attending sex shows and interacting with nude performers between 2021 and 2023.

The claims against Lizzo - whose real name is Melissa Viviane Jefferson - include that she "pressured Ms Davis to touch the breasts" of a dancer in a nightclub in Amsterdam.

Although she initially resisted, Ms Davis eventually acquiesced, "fearing it may harm her future on the team" if she didn't do so, according to court documents.

Other incidents cited in the case include the claim that dancers were asked to eat fruit from the naked bodies of sex club workers.

Over the summer, Lizzo's lawyers appealed the decision to let those claims got to trial, arguing that group outings were part of the singer's creative process and thus should be shielded by First Amendment free speech protections.

In response, a lawyer for the dancers rejected that claim, saying it was not enough to say the sex shows had inspired Lizzo's own performances.

"Under that standard," wrote Ari Stiller, "Johnny Cash could shoot 'a man in Reno just to watch him die' and claim protection if he hoped it would inspire his performance".

Stiller urged the court to allow the claims to proceed to trial.

Getty Images Lizzo performs on stage with several dancers - none of whom are thought to be part of the current lawsuitGetty Images
Lizzo said she had worked to celebrate people with larger bodies throughout her career (none of the dancers pictured are thought to be part of the current lawsuit)

Lizzo's attorney, Melissa Glass, claimed that Stiller's brief "regurgitates the false accusations from their [original] complaint".

"As was true two years ago, the dancers cannot find a single person to corroborate their meritless claims," she Glass said in a statement to Billboard magazine.

"In contrast, 18 witnesses who worked with Lizzo on the Special tour submitted sworn statements refuting the claims made by Davis, Williams and Rodriguez. We look forward to the Court of Appeals ruling on this matter."

Lizzo has adamantly denied the allegations against her.

"I am very open with my sexuality and expressing myself but I cannot accept or allow people to use that openness to make me out to be something I am not," she said when the claims first emerged in 2023.

In her latest statement, the singer added that the fat-shaming allegations had "haunted" her for the last two years, adding that it had been "devastating to suffer through this in silence".

She also stressed that she has "only encouraged and supported people with bigger bodies and shared my platform with them."

Thanking her lawyers, Lizzo said she intended to keep fighting the lawsuit.

"I am not settling," she said. "I will be fighting every single claim until the truth is out.

Sudan's RSF trying to cover up mass killings in el-Fasher, researchers say

Reuters Two women wearing headscarves sit side by side, holding young children in their arms.Reuters
Many of those displaced by the violence in el-Fasher have ended up living in camps

Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has been trying to cover up mass killings in the city of el-Fasher by burying and burning bodies, a research team from Yale University says.

The RSF had drawn international condemnation amid reports of executions and crimes against humanity when its fighters captured the city in October.

Now, analysis of satellite images by Yale's Humanitarian Research Lab (HRL) shows the RSF likely disposed of tens of thousands of bodies after seizing el-Fasher.

The RSF has not responded to the report, but its leader previously admitted his fighters had committed some violations in the city.

The HRL's report said the RSF "engaged in a systematic multi-week campaign to destroy evidence of its widespread mass killings" and "this pattern of body disposal and destruction is ongoing".

The paramilitary group has been fighting Sudan's regular army since April 2023, when a power struggle between the two parties erupted into a brutal civil war.

The United Nations (UN) has described the conflict as the world's worst humanitarian disaster.

After 18 months of besieging el-Fasher, the RSF captured the city - a major victory pushing the army out of its last foothold in the vast Darfur region.

The UN was among the many global voices accusing the RSF of massacring civilians as el-Fasher fell.

The HRL has been monitoring the situation in the city for months, and its latest report is part of efforts to understand the extent of the violence suffered by the city's residents.

Fresh analysis of satellite imagery found clusters in multiple locations changing in size in the weeks after el-Fasher fell, the HRL says, adding that this demonstrates continued efforts by the RSF to clean up evidence of massacres.

The images also show more than 80 clusters located outside of the city, which, the HRL says, shows that the RSF was killing people as they tried to flee.

Reuters A desk bearing signs of shelling in a school where displaced people are sheltering, in el-FasherReuters
El-Fasher was repeatedly shelled during the RSF siege - this picture from 7 October shows a wrecked classroom where people were sheltering

Satellite evidence from November suggests limited civilian activity in the city since it was seized, the researchers say.

Following an international backlash, RSF leader Gen Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo declared an investigation into what he called violations committed by his soldiers during the capture of el-Fasher.

However, the group continued to deny widespread allegations that killings in the city are ethnically motivated and follow a pattern of the Arab paramilitaries targeting non-Arab populations.

The latest HRL report follows warnings from aid agencies about the low number of civilians who managed to succesfully flee el-Fasher after the RSF seizure.

The UN estimates roughly 250,000 people were still trapped in the city, with less than half of that number thought to have arrived in external camps for displaced people.

The RSF has used the seizure of el-Fasher to consolidate its power in western Sudan, and has established a parallel government in Darfur's city of Nyala.

Sudan's army still controls most of the country, with fighting between the two groups rumbling on.

More than 13m people are believed to have been displaced since the war began in April 2023.

More BBC stories about Sudan:

Getty Images/BBC A woman looking at her mobile phone and the graphic BBC News AfricaGetty Images/BBC

Go to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.

Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica

英国会报告严批政府:面对中国威胁,安全长期让位给经济 - RFI - 法国国际广播电台

16/12/2025 - 15:52

英国国会情报暨安全事务委员会(Intelligence and Security Committee, 简称 ISC)在最新年度报告中对英国政府处理对华关系的方式提出尖锐批评,直指政府长期以来在与中国的互动中,未能积极将国家安全置于优先地位。

综合中央社等报道,根据 ISC 于 12 月 15 日发布的《2023 至 2025 年委员会年度报告》,委员会指出,尽管在国家安全和经济利益之间取得平衡必然需要艰难的权衡取舍,但英国政府在涉及中国的议题上,却屡次展现出不愿将安全利益放在首位的记录。

ISC 明确表示,他们要求政府未来在制定相关决策时,必须“完整说明”决策过程,包括衡量了哪些因素。委员会强调,提出这样的要求是为了确保“安全考量未受经济因素影响而被忽视”。

外国影响力登记制度对中国“拖延不决”

报告对英国 2023 年《国家安全法》实施的外国影响​​力登记计划(Foreign Influence Registration Scheme, FIRS)的运作情况和具体成效表达了深切关切。

FIRS 已于今年 7 月上路,目前仅将伊朗和俄罗斯列入“加强管控”(Enhanced Tier)级别。面对国会多次质询为何不将中国纳入,政府官员一再重申正在持续检讨。

ISC 对此表示忧心,认为鉴于中国对英国国家安全的威胁程度,特别是中国日益增长的干预和影响力活动,英国政府在是否将中国纳入 FIRS 加强管控级别这一问题上存在“拖延不决”的情况。

委员会敦促政府迅速就此作出决定,并在未来两年内向国会提交 FIRS 运作成效的报告。

中国与俄伊并列,警示网络和代理人活动

在最新年度报告的涉中部分,ISC 在“安全威胁图像”一节将中国与俄罗斯和伊朗并列,指出与这三个国家有关的敌意活动对英国构成“多面向”且复杂的威胁。

报告示警,外国间谍活动日益关注经济相关资讯,包括智慧财产及研发计划,而不仅仅是以政府机关和国防领域为目标。此外,国家级行为者正日益频繁地运用不具官方身分的“代理人”,委托他们执行对其他国家、外国政府及境外异议人士的敌意活动。

在网络领域,报告形容中国持续是“极老练且能力出色”的攻击行为者,攻击目标横跨全球。

报告还示警,许多国家级行为者和网络罪犯已开始运用人工智能(AI),以提升网络攻击活动的总量、规模和冲击力。预计在未来五年内,商业性质的“网络入侵”活动将明显扩张,威胁来源将更难预测。

与国会安全报告几乎同步发声,英国新任国防参谋长理查德·奈顿(Richard Knighton)于周一在皇家联合军种研究所(RUSI)的讲话中发出警告,指出由于当前世界局势日益危险,需要更多英国人做好保卫国家的准备。这进一步突显了英国对全球安全挑战,特别是地缘政治竞争加剧的深切忧虑。

针对 ISC 的最新年度报告,英国首相斯塔默向国会发布书面声明,欢迎并肯定 ISC 行使重要的独立监督职能。

英国政府一名发言人则回应称,国家安全是政府的首要责任;政府正在采取讲求连贯一致、放眼长远、具战略意义的策略管控对华关系,并重申英国对中国的立场是:在可行之处合作,并在必要之处提出挑战。

港大律师公会回应黎智英案:法官不作政治考量

针对香港壹传媒集团创始人黎智英案的裁决,香港大律师公会回应媒体询问时说,香港司法制度一向独立运作,法官审理案件不作政治考量。

香港大律师公会星期二(12月16日)在官网发布声明说,从原则上说,公会不会评论个别的法庭案件,尤其与讼人可能行使上诉权。由于该案是在《香港国安法》下,勾结外国或境外势力危害国家安全罪的首起裁决,公会认为此案对香港在“一国两制”下的独特法理发展非常重要。

公会指出,香港是奉行普通法的司法管辖区,香港的司法制度一向独立地运作,法律执业者在制度中,也一直独立地及专业地履行职责,维护法治。

公会表明,香港法官审理案件时,纯粹考虑法例及证据,不会作出任何政治考虑;代表与讼双方的大律师也必须遵从“不可拒聘原则”,确保当事人获得公平审讯。

公会称,香港大部分刑事审讯,包括黎智英案,都是以公开聆讯形式进行,过程完全透明,所有诉讼人也都有权视乎情况提出上诉。

公会有信心香港司法界会继续独立地、保持政治中立地运作,不受外来的任何影响或干预,也希望公众及关心香港司法制度的人士,详细地阅读裁决理由及尊重香港的司法程序。

英国军情六处局长:普京以“游走在战争边缘”的策略试探西方

德正
2025-12-16T14:41:25.968Z
梅特雷韦利两个月前开始担任英国情报机构军情六处的局长

(德国之声中文网)英国新任军情六处局长梅特雷韦利(Blaise Metreweli)表示,普京正在“拖延”停止冲突的谈判,并且仍然决心“征服乌克兰并骚扰北约成员国”。

梅特雷韦利两个月前开始担任英国情报机构军情六处的局长。她在上任以来的首次公开讲话中谈到更广泛的全球威胁形势时说:“我们现在正处于和平与战争的边缘地带。”

梅特雷韦利指责莫斯科资助针对他国关键基础设施的网络攻击、在欧洲机场附近使用无人机入侵、开展纵火、破坏和散布虚假信息的活动,以及“在海域进行水上和水下的侵略性活动”。

“输出混乱是俄罗斯对外交往推进的特点,我们应该做好准备,这种情况会持续下去,直到普京被迫改变他的算盘。”她说道。

梅特雷韦利拥有近三十年的秘密特工经验,并具备人类学、心理学和人工智能方面的背景。她曾任英国军情六处技术与创新主管,相当于现实版的邦德电影中的“Q”——一位装备大师。

她表示,精通科技和人类智慧对于应对“错综复杂的”安全威胁至关重要,军情六处官员“必须像熟悉人脉一样熟悉代码,像精通多种编程语言一样熟练地使用Python”。

“我们的世界比几十年来任何时候都更加危险,竞争也更加激烈,”她说道,“从海洋到太空,从战场到战情室,甚至我们的大脑都面临着竞争,因为虚假信息正在操纵我们对彼此和自身的认知。”

梅特雷韦利发表的这次讲话是西方安全机构就俄罗斯、伊朗以及在某种程度上包括中国等国日益增长的混合威胁发出的一系列警告中的最新一次。这些国家利用网络工具、间谍活动和影响力威胁着全球稳定。

上周,英国以涉嫌信息战为由,对多家俄罗斯媒体机构实施制裁,并以“大规模且不加区分的网络活动”为由,对两家中国科技公司实施制裁。

英国国防参谋长奈顿(Richard Knighton)此前在英国皇家国防安全联合军种研究所发表讲话时曾说,普京的目标是“挑战、限制、分裂并最终摧毁北约”。他认为,英国需要更强大的军队和更具韧性的基础设施来应对不断演变的威胁。

“我们的目标必须是避免战争,但维护和平的代价正在上升。”他说。

DW中文有Instagram!欢迎搜寻dw.chinese,看更多深入浅出的图文与影音报道。

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泰国军方缴获柬埔寨中国制反坦克导弹等武器 並将依法保留 - RFI - 法国国际广播电台

16/12/2025 - 15:09

中央社曼谷消息,泰柬边境冲突持续之际,泰国陆军昨日12月15日表示,他们从柬埔寨士兵手中缴获大量中国制武器,其中包括第五代反坦克导弹等,引发议论。泰国军方表示,目前尚无证据显示中国秘密向柬埔寨提供武器,并指出依法泰方有权保留这些武器。

泰国皇家陆军15日晚间在社交媒体发布消息称,泰军第17步兵团成功攻占柬埔寨基地后,从柬埔寨士兵手中缴获了中国制的GAM-102LR反坦克导弹等武器。

《曼谷邮报》(Bangkok Post)今日报道,泰国国防部发言人苏拉桑(Surasant Kongsiri)表示,根据国际法,即使北京提出要求,泰国也没有义务将该武器归还给制造国。

《曼谷邮报》指出,GAM-102LR是一款现代化的第五代反坦克导弹系统,配备先进的瞄准技术,标准射程为6至10公里。

报道称,该系统专为反装甲和精确打击任务而设计,并于今年初正式亮相,目前仍在全球范围内有限部署。该系统由中国保利防务公司(Poly Defence)生产,可安装在军用车辆上。

此事引发泰国社会高度关注,外界质疑中国是否秘密向柬埔寨提供武器。

泰国公共电视台(Thai PBS)今日报道,泰国军方表示,目前尚无证据显示中国持续秘密向柬埔寨军队提供武器。

事实上,《纽约时报》9月底曾以“中国武器如何改变两邻国之争”为题报道,泰国情报文件显示,在泰柬7月冲突爆发前数周,中国向柬埔寨运送了火箭弹与炮弹。

报道指出,在中国促成泰柬停火上,中国扮演积极角色,但有关运送武器的报道,使北京在东南亚扮演中立和平斡旋者的作为,变得更为复杂。

中国驻泰国大使馆10月2日曾通过声明坚决否认柬埔寨在泰柬冲突中使用中国制造火箭弹的说法。

冲突未缓解:泰国称柬埔寨须首先宣布停火

自12月7日以来,泰柬边境多地爆发激烈冲突,双方互指对方“先开火”。冲突已持续一周以上,造成至少11名柬埔寨平民死亡,15名泰国士兵、7名泰国平民死亡,数十万人逃离家园,其中泰国7个府超过40万居民、柬埔寨5省19万余人流离失所,大量学校、医院、民用基础设施受损或关闭。

12月12日,泰国看守政府总理阿努廷、柬埔寨首相洪玛奈分别与美国总统特朗普通电话,特朗普声称促成停火,但泰方隔天13日否认,冲突仍在继续。

同于13日,柬埔寨宣布全面暂停与泰国的边境口岸通行,直至另行通知,以保障安全。

另据法新社报道,泰国外交部发言人玛拉迪今天16日在曼谷对记者说:“作为侵略泰国领土的一方,柬埔寨必须首先宣布停火。” 她补充说,柬埔寨必须“真诚地”配合边境排雷工作。

自金边13日关闭与柬埔寨的陆路边境口岸以来,约有5000至6000名泰国公民滞留在柬埔寨边境城镇波贝。

Stephen Lawrence killer David Norris denied parole

PA Media David Norris's mugshotPA Media

David Norris, who murdered Stephen Lawrence, has been denied parole, the BBC understands.

He sought release during a parole hearing in October, having been jailed in 2012.

Stephen, 18, was stabbed to death in a racist attack in south London in 1993.

Only two of his killers have been convicted, with police always saying six people were involved.

At the parole hearing, Norris admitted he was part of the attack but refused to name the other killers. He had previously denied involvement.

Norris gave evidence via a video link from prison during the public hearing, in which he was bidding for release on licence.

Stephen's mother, Baroness Doreen Lawrence, said at the hearing that Norris remained a danger to the public and must remain in prison. The justice secretary also opposed Norris's release.

The hearing took place 13 years after Norris was jailed for life, with a minimum sentence of 14 years and three months.

Stephen was stabbed by a gang as he waited at a bus stop in Eltham, south-east London.

Witness evidence in the case records that an extreme racist slur was used towards Stephen just before the gang attacked.

In his evidence to the parole hearing, Norris said he was the last person to punch Stephen. He had tried to hit him two or three times and one of his punches connected.

For decades Norris publicly denied involvement in the murder, giving no-comment interviews to police, and claiming he was innocent during his trial.

However, the hearing heard confirmation that he had admitted involvement since being in prison, but denies stabbing Stephen or using a knife.

It also heard Norris continued to use racist language in prison, with him having been recorded in 2022 using the same racial slur that was hurled at Stephen before he was stabbed.

In a prepared statement that Norris read out, he apologised to the Lawrence family and wider black and ethnic community for the "fear" and "horror" his role in the attack had caused.

In a statement read on her behalf at the hearing, Baroness Lawrence said Norris had "killed my son in the most brutal and callous fashion. In doing so he changed my life and life of my family members forever".

She said she could not forgive Norris because he has not "expressed any acceptance, any contrition and certainly has no humanity".

Stephen's father previously told the BBC that Norris should name the other killers before he could be judged to be safe for release from prison.

Handout Stephen Lawrence in a family photoHandout
Stephen Lawrence was murdered in a racist attack in 1993, when he was 18

Dentists to prioritise urgent care and save some patients more than £200 under plans

Getty Images Male dentist examines the teeth of a male patient who is lying back the chair with his mouth open. A female assistant sits in the background.Getty Images

People needing urgent dental treatment and patients requiring complex care will be prioritised under government plans to improve access to NHS dentists in England.

The proposals could mean a saving of £225 for patients requiring numerous appointments for complicated treatments.

For years, many patients have found it increasingly hard to find a dentist, with some towns in England referred to as "dental deserts", with no access to NHS dentists at all.

The British Dental Association (BDA) said that without more funding and real reform, the plans wouldn't solve current issues.

Speaking on Radio 4's Today programme, health minister Stephen Kinnock said the plans were intended to "prioritise" urgent care.

He said there was "a lot of unnecessary routine care going on" in NHS dentistry services at the moment.

If a patient has "good oral health" he said they don't need to see a dentist "more than about once every two years".

He said the current practice of most patients being offered NHS check-ups every six months was "not the right use" of dentists' time, and added that it was "sucking up a lot of money in NHS dentistry".

Under the current system, which dates back to 2006, dentists are paid for what are called Units of Dental Activity, known as UDAs.

Different procedures - fillings, extractions and more complicated work - are assigned a different number of UDAs.

Dentists who provide NHS care have a contract that says how many UDAs they will carry out each year and are paid accordingly.

But this has meant that more money was available to dentists for carrying out simple check-ups, rather than spending longer with patients who needed more complex, time-consuming care.

For years dentists have been complaining that the contract for NHS work fails to cover the costs of what they're being asked to carry out.

As a result many dentists have been walking away from NHS work – meaning it's increasingly hard for people to access care. There are parts of the country where there is simply no access to NHS dentistry.

'Chronic underfunding'

Under the government plans, there would be new incentives for dentists to offer longer-term treatments for major issues such as gum disease and tooth decay through the NHS.

Currently, a patient with tooth decay in several teeth or severe gum disease - both of which require complex treatment - would need to be treated over multiple appointments, which is costly and time consuming.

But under proposed changes to the dental contract for NHS work, dental practices would be able to offer patients a single comprehensive package of treatment over a longer period, tailored to their needs.

And ministers argue that this could save a patient up to £225 in fees.

Shiv Pabary, chair of the BDA's General Dental Practice Committee said "a dental crisis" had come about directly as a result of the contract put in place in 2006.

"The reforms announced today are trying to tweak a system that's broken."

He added that until the "chronic underfunding" and wider systemic problems were addressed, NHS dentistry would continue to fail to work for "dentists and for patients".

"To try and deliver comprehensive care within the same budget that we have at the moment is going to be hugely challenging."

Mr Kinnock said the government had a "massive issue to fix" in dental care and was negotiating with the BDA on a "radical overhaul" of the NHS dentistry contract.

Government considers advertising or subscription model for BBC

BBC A woman operating a TV camera in front of the BBC Logo on an LED wall.BBC

The government has formally begun the process which will decide the future of the BBC.

It has published a consultation document - or green paper - laying out plans to future-proof the BBC, put it on a sustainable financial footing and bolster trust.

This begins the renewal of the BBC charter - the corporation's rulebook and licence to exist - which expires in 2027.

The culture secretary Lisa Nandy said: "The BBC is fundamental to the health of our nation and we want to make sure that we put it on a firm footing for decades to come.

"We're asking everybody to get involved and play their part in helping to shape its future."

Outgoing BBC director general Tim Davie said in a statement: "We welcome the publication of the government's green paper and the start of the public consultation on the future of the BBC. We urge everyone who cares about the success of the UK's world-leading creative industries to have their say.

"At the BBC, we want change, so we can continue to deliver for the UK for generations to come. We want to secure a public service BBC that is independent, sustainably funded for the long term, and meets our audience's needs."

Former BBC controller of editorial policy, Richard Ayre, described the consultation as "the most encouraging start of a charter process in decades, with the government apparently committed to giving the BBC a sustained and financially sustainable future".

The licence fee brought in £3.8 billion last year. Other funding streams - advertising, subscription and fee reform, including charging wealthier people more - are on the table for now, although many media commentators expect the licence fee to remain, with some changes.

Nandy said: "We're keeping all options open. The only option for funding the BBC that we've ruled out is general taxation and that is because it is essential that the BBC can hold governments of any persuasion to account, including ours, without fear or favour and without being heavily reliant on direct funding from government."

She described the BBC as "an institution that matters deeply to the democratic process in this country and to the health of our nation" and said it "has to have sustainable funding in order to thrive".

But she also acknowledged recent issues at the corporation: "There have been serious concerns about developments at the BBC, including editorial standards and about political interference.

"These aren't new challenges for the BBC. Throughout its history it's had to navigate them, but we believe that through this charter we can strengthen the amount of accountability within the BBC."

Former BBC director general Tony Hall suggested there should be careful consideration of a household tax charged in line with council tax bands.

The government rejects that model. It does, however, accept that public funding of the BBC will remain in some form and Lord Hall suggests an independent body, like a pay review body, to "take the politics out of the licence fee debate".

"Give them the task every three years of reviewing whether the money the BBC has got matches our ambitions for the BBC," he said.

He agrees the licence fee needs to be reformed and made "fairer".

The Reform party wants to scrap the licence fee altogether, while Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, threatened to withdraw support for it earlier this year.

The Liberal Democrats are supportive of the licence fee up until 2027. The Green Party did not specifically mention the BBC in its 2024 manifesto.

PA Media Culture, Media and Sport Secretary Lisa Nandy leaves after attending a Cabinet meeting at 10 Downing Street, London. Picture date: Tuesday December 9, 2025PA Media
Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy has ruled out general taxation but is otherwise keeping "all options open"

There will be a 12-week public consultation and the government is seeking views on how to ensure the BBC commands the public's trust, is accountable to audiences and fully represents communities.

This includes potentially giving the corporation new responsibilities to counter misinformation and disinformation, updating the BBC's mission to put accuracy on the same footing as impartiality and strengthening the BBC's independence, including examining political appointments to the BBC's board.

Labour MPs raised concerns around this issue in Parliament after the recent BBC controversy over the misleading edit of a Donald Trump speech on a Panorama prompted the resignations of the BBC director general and the CEO of News.

Trump is now suing the BBC for defamation over the edit.

Lord Hall told BBC News: "I think trying to take the politics as much as possible out of the organisation would be good. That means really looking carefully at appointments. I don't think there should be any political appointments to the board."

Others argue these appointments (there are five government-appointees on the BBC board including the chairman) ensure accountability and help challenge groupthink.

The BBC has faced a series of controversies in recent months for which it has had to apologise.

These include a documentary about children in Gaza that had to be taken down from BBC iPlayer after it emerged the child narrator was the son of a Hamas official and the failure immediately to remove the punk duo Bob Vylan's set from a Glastonbury live stream after offensive comments were made on stage.

Nandy termed the Labour government "unashamedly supporters of the BBC as an institution, even as we've had serious frustrations with some of the decisions and failings that have taken place at the BBC in recent months".

She said the review of the charter was the chance "to make sure that it can not just survive, but thrive. It's an institution that belongs to us all. If it didn't exist, we would have to invent it".

The consultation will also look at how to devolve more commissioning to the regions and whether there should be a new obligation on the BBC to drive economic growth, build skills and support the UK economy.

The BBC is the only organisation operating under a royal charter with an expiry date. In a speech in November 2024, the BBC chairman Samir Shah said "there are more than 1,000 charter bodies, and I am not aware of any other that needs to be renewed like the BBC".

He asked: "Should we consider the BBC also having a permanent charter like the others?"

The government appears to be consulting on this, with some suggesting the threat of a future Reform government is focusing minds on the uncertainty renewal every decade creates and whether it allows too much political interference.

Ayre said: "It's interesting that the government chooses the word 'future-proof' for the BBC. Can that really mean that they're considering not a 10-year charter, which is the norm, but a sort of self-sustaining charter which will see the BBC continuing in its key position as the national broadcaster for what the government calls decades to come?

"Of course future governments can always try to undo that, but actually a royal charter, it's quite difficult to undo because technically it is the will of the monarch rather than of the government of the day".

Hall said "the great thing about the charter review this time is that I believe the government wants to secure the BBC's future for the long term. It could be a great legacy."

Next year, following the consultation, the government will publish its own vision for the BBC.

Paris St-Germain ordered to pay former striker Kylian Mbappe €60m

PSG ordered to pay Mbappe €60m

Kylian MbappeImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Mbappe spent seven seasons at PSG before moving to La Liga

  • Published

Paris St-Germain have been ordered to pay former striker Kylian Mbappe 60 million euros (£52.5m) in unpaid salary and bonuses by a French court.

Mbappe had been seeking 263m euros (£231.5m) from his former club after the long-running dispute reached a Paris labour court in November.

The European champions were counter suing the France captain for 240m euros (£211m).

The 26-year-old Real Madrid forward claimed the nine-figure sum, which included 55m euros (£46.3m) in unpaid wages, as damages in response to a contract dispute and ill-treatment by the club.

However, he has only been awarded a fraction of that amount, with the court recognising that PSG had failed to pay three months of his salary between April and June 2024 as well as an ethics bonus and a signing bonus under his contract.

"We are satisfied with this ruling. This is what you could expect when salaries went unpaid," Mbappe's lawyer Frederique Cassereau said.

PSG had been seeking compensation for Mbappe's failed 300m euros transfer to Saudi Arabian side Al-Hilal in 2023.

He joined Spanish giants Real Madrid on a free transfer the following summer.

More to follow.

Police shot in the front, not the back, NSW premier says after criticism of response

Police 'put their lives on the line', says New South Wales premier

The New South Wales (NSW) premier has strongly rejected criticism of the police response to the attack on a Jewish festival at Bondi Beach, saying officers acted with "bravery and integrity".

Some witnesses have suggested police were too slow to disarm the two gunmen, who killed 15 people and injured dozens at an event celebrating Hanukkah at Australia's best known beach.

"There are two officers in critical care... at the moment," Chris Minns said after sustained questioning from reporters. "They weren't shot in the back as they were running away. They were shot in the front."

There have also been questions about whether adequate security was provided before the shooting took place.

"They shoot, shoot, change magazine and just shoot," one witness, Shmulik Scuri, told reporters the day of the assault, adding he thought officers "froze".

Asked about these criticisms, Minns said the "rush to conclusions" about the police operation was "disrespectful".

"They didn't take a backward step. They engaged the gunmen on the footbridge with handguns. The offenders had long range rifles," Minns said.

"If there's any suggestion that NSW Police didn't live up to their responsibilities to the people of this state, it should be rejected because it's not consistent with the facts."

NSW Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon avoided questions about how many officers had been deployed to police the event in advance. He told reporters police "regularly patrol that area as we did on that day" and that police presence was based "on the threat that exists at the time".

Australia's security agency has said the younger alleged gunman in the father-son duo, Naveed Akram, had come to their attention in 2019 due to his associations, but that there was nothing to suggest he was a risk of violence.

"Had there been intelligence that there was a particular threat at that location, or to that event, we may have had a different policing response," Commissioner Lanyon said.

NSW Police established Operation Shelter after the 7 October 2023 Hamas attack on Israel to investigate antisemitic hate crimes. As part of the operation, regular patrols are conducted of high-risk locations. The eastern suburbs of Sydney, including Bondi, which has a significant Jewish population, is a key focus.

Another taskforce, Strike Force Pearl, was set up later to investigate hate crimes in Sydney.

Getty Four police officers stand on a promenade at Bondi beachGetty
NSW Premier Chris Minns says police responding to the attack at Bondi 'didn't take a backwards step'

Police received reports of gunfire at a park in Bondi Beach at 18:47 (07:47 GMT) on Sunday. The gunmen carried out a shooting spree that lasted around ten minutes before police shot both men, killing one and critically injuring the other.

Dr Vincent Hurley, a former police officer who lectures on policing at Macquarie University, told the BBC it was "unrealistic" to expect police to be able to know how to react to every possible scenario.

"To respond to a mass shooting and mass killing event like that, there's no training that can be done."

He pointed out that police officers would have initially been reliant on calls to emergency operators "and everyone would have given them a different story".

"Then they have to fight through traffic at Bondi Beach which is a nightmare at the best of times."

At the scene, police would have been confronted with "absolute chaos" as thousands of people attempted to flee.

Individual officers would also have been faced with difficult choices such as whether to stop and render assistance to injured individuals or to go and look for the gunmen, decisions for which there is no protocol.

And even once the offenders had been identified, he says the risk of hurting bystanders in the crossfire would have complicated responses.

"There would be no way as a police officer, I would have drawn my firearm because all of the innocent individuals", he added. "It's not what you see on Netflix."

Who are the victims?

AFP via Getty Images Two women comfort each other as they stare at flowers left in tribute to the victims of Sunday's shooting attack at Bondi beach. One of the women, dressed in a yellow shirt, is sitting on the road, while the other kneels next to her with her hand on her shoulder. AFP via Getty Images

At least 15 civilians have been confirmed dead in Sunday's shooting attack at Bondi beach.

Many were attending an event to mark the first day of the Jewish festival of Hanukkah.

Authorities have confirmed that two rabbis, a Holocaust survivor and a 10-year-old girl were among the victims.

This is what we know about those identified so far:

Matilda, 10

Authorities confirmed that a 10-year-old girl, named by her family to local media as Matilda, was among the dead.

Irina Goodhew, who organised a fundraiser for the girl's mother and said she was the child's former teacher, wrote: " I knew her as a bright, joyful, and spirited child who brought light to everyone around her.'

The Harmony Russian School of Sydney also confirmed that she was one of its students.

"We are deeply saddened to share the news that a former student of our school has passed away in the hospital due to injuries sustained from a gunshot," the school wrote on Facebook.

"Our thoughts and heartfelt condolences go out to her family, friends, and everyone affected by this tragic event … Her memory will remain in our hearts, and we honor her life and the time she spent as part of our school family."

Meanwhile her aunt spoke to ABC news and said that Matilda's sister, who was with her when she was shot, was struggling to come to terms with the loss.

"They were like twins — they've never been separated," she told the ABC.

Rabbi Eli Schlanger

Supplied A middle aged man with glasses looks at the camera, behind him is a grassy field.Supplied
Eli Schlanger was known as the Bondi rabbi

Known as the "Bondi Rabbi", Eli Schlanger, 41, was one of the key organisers of Sunday's event. He was head of the local Chabad mission, an international Hasidic Jewish organisation based in Brooklyn.

The death of the British-born father of five was confirmed by his cousin, Rabbi Zalman Lewis.

"My dear cousin, Rabbi Eli Schlanger @bondirabbi was murdered in today's terrorist attack in Sydney," Zalman wrote on Instagram. "He leaves behind his wife & young children, as well as my uncle & aunt & siblings … He was truly an incredible guy".

In a post on its website, Chabad said Schlanger's youngest child was just two months old.

"He was the most godly, humane, kind, gracious human being I think I've ever met," Alex Ryvchin of the Executive Council of Australia Jewry, told reporters at Bondi on Monday morning.

Dan Elkayam

The death of French national Dan Elkayam was confirmed by Frances's Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot.

"It's with immense sadness that we have learnt that our compatriot Dan Elkayam was among the victims of the terrorist attack that hit Jewish families gathered on the beach at Bondi in Sydney," he wrote on social media. "We mourn with his family and loved ones, with the Jewish community and the Australian people."

According to his LinkedIn profile, Elkayam worked as an IT analyst for NBCUniversal and had moved to Australia last year.

He was also a keen footballer, and "an integral member" of our premier league squad, the Rockdale Ilindin Football Club in west Sydney wrote on its Facebook page.

He was "an extremely talented and popular figure amongst team mates. Our deepest and sincerest condolances to Dan's family, friends and all that knew him. He will be missed," the club wrote.

Alexander Kleytman

Alexander Kleytman was a holocaust survivor who came to Australia from Ukraine.

"I have no husband. I don't know where is his body. Nobody can give me any answer," his wife Larisa Kleytman told reporters outside a Sydney hospital late on Sunday.

"We were standing and suddenly came the 'boom boom', and everybody fell down. At this moment he was behind me and at one moment he decided to go close to me. He pushed his body up because he wanted to stay near me," she told the Australian.

Chabad wrote on X that Alexander "died shielding her from the gunman's bullets. In addition to his wife, he leaves behind two children and 11 grandchildren."

The couple shared some of their life story with Jewish Care in 2023.

"As children, both Larisa and Alexander faced the unspeakable terror of the Holocaust," the health organisation wrote in its annual report.

"Alex's memories are particularly harrowing; recalling the dreadful conditions in Siberia where he, along with his mother and younger brother, struggled for survival."

How Bondi Beach shooting unfolded minute by minute

Peter Meagher

Former police officer Peter Meagher was working as a freelance photographer at the Hanukkah event when he was killed, his rugby club confirmed.

"For him it was simply a catastrophic case of being in the wrong place and at the wrong time," Mark Harrison, the general manager of Randwick Rugby Club, wrote on its website.

"'Marzo, as he was universally known, was a much loved figure and absolute legend in our club, with decades of voluntary involvement, he was one of the heart and soul figures of Randwick Rugby."

The club said he had spent almost four decades in the NSW Police Force where he was "hugely respected by colleagues".

"The tragic irony is that he spent so long in the dangerous front line as a Police Officer and was struck down in retirement while taking photos in his passion role is really hard to comprehend," the club said.

Reuven Morrison

Reuven Morrison migrated to Australia from the former Soviet Union in the 1970s as a teenager, according to an interview he gave to the ABC exactly a year ago.

"We came here with the view that Australia is the safest country in the world and the Jews would not be faced with such anti-Semitism in the future, where we can bring up our kids in a safe environment," he told the national broadcaster.

Confirming his death, Chabad said that he was a longtime resident of Melbourne, but that he "discovered his Jewish identity in Sydney".

"A successful businessman whose main goal was to give away his earnings to charities dear to his heart, notably Chabad of Bondi," the organisation wrote on X.

Australian PM praises 'inspirational' Bondi hero on hospital visit

Watch: 'Your courage is inspiring' Australian PM tells Bondi shooting 'hero'

Australia's Prime Minister has visited Bondi hero Ahmed al Ahmed in hospital, after the bystander tried to disarm one of the gunmen in the nation's deadliest gun attack since 1996.

"Your heart is strong", PM Anthony Albanese told the father-of-two, later calling him "the best of our country".

The fruit shop owner, who was born and raised in Syria, was shot several times in the shoulder after tackling one of the alleged gunmen. Albanese said Mr Ahmed would "undergo further surgery" on Wednesday.

At least 15 people have been confirmed dead after Sunday's attack in Sydney during an event to mark the first night of Hanukkah.

Police have declared the attack as a terrorist incident targeting the Jewish community.

"He was trying to get a cup of coffee and found himself at a moment where people were being shot in front of him," Albanese said after the bedside visit.

"He decided to take action, and his bravery is an inspiration for all Australians. He is a very humble man."

"At a moment where we have seen evil perpetrated, he shines out as an example of the strength of humanity," the prime minister added.

"We are a brave country. Ahmed al Ahmed represents the best of our country."

He later added: "Ahmed, you are an Australian hero."

There has been nationwide support for the 43-year-old including from US President Donald Trump who commended his courage, and a US billionaire who donated $99,999 (US$ 65,000; £49,000) to Mr Ahmed, calling him a "brave hero".

Watch: Eyewitness captures moment man tackles and disarms Bondi shooter

In the footage, Mr Ahmed is seen hiding behind a parked car before he leaps out.

He runs at the alleged gunman and seizes his weapon, before turning the gun round on him. The suspected attacker then begins to retreat.

Mr Ahmed then lowers the weapon and raises one hand in the air, appearing to show police he was not one of the attackers.

Mr Ahmed's father previously told the BBC that his son was driven to act by his "sentiment, conscience and humanity".

He "saw the victims, the blood, women and children lying on the street, and then acted".

亚运会冠军举报被索求奖金 云南省体育局调查

中国云南省官方通报,将设调查组对旗下亚运会冠军运动员被索求奖金,开展全面调查。

云南省体育局星期一(12月15日)在官网通报,近期网上出现关于王姓运动员对云南省松茂体育训练基地范姓人士有关举报信息。

云南省体育局高度重视,第一时间成立调查组全面开展调查。根据调查结果,省体育局将依规依纪依法进行处理。

综合《新京报》《中国青年报》等报道,2023年杭州亚运会三金得主王莉上星期四(11日)发布视频,实名举报云南松茂体育训练基地范姓主任(同时兼任皮划艇队主教练)向她索要15万元人民币(2万7473新元)比赛奖金。她拒绝给付这笔奖金后遭到恶意边缘化、禁止训练等对待,最终被迫离开训练基地,“断送参赛之路”。

王莉还称,她在不知情的情况下,被人擅自上报退役材料。有关部门证实,确实存在王莉的退役材料,她所在的单位已审批,目前尚未报送到省体育局。

上述视频星期一在社媒引起广泛关注,云南省体育局当天通报将全面开展调查。

公开资料显示,23岁的王莉是云南省松茂体育训练基地皮划艇队运动员,第19届杭州亚运会中国国家龙舟队主力队员。在2023年杭州亚运会上,王莉和队友共获得女子龙舟200米、500米、1000米三枚金牌,成为云南历史上首个亚运会三金得主。

特朗普正式起诉BBC 索赔100亿美元

德正
2025-12-16T13:04:43.698Z
特朗普正式递交诉状,起诉英国广播公司BBC

(德国之声)BBC旗舰节目《全景》(Panorama)曾播出的一部纪录片,剪辑了特朗普2021年1月6日在国会大厦外演讲中的两段片段,包括他呼吁支持者游行至国会大厦,以及他喊出“拼死一搏”(fight like hell)的内容,但省略了他呼吁和平抗议的部分。

特朗普的诉讼称,BBC对他进行了诽谤,同时违反了佛罗里达州禁止欺骗性和不公平贸易行为的法律。针对以上两项指控,每项索赔50亿美元。

BBC已向特朗普道歉,承认剪辑造成了错误印象,让人误以为他直接呼吁采取暴力行动。但BBC表示,没有法律依据提起诉讼。

11月3日,英国《每日电讯报》网络版独家披露一名BBC顾问撰写的内部备忘录,批评该纪录片的相关剪辑“完全具有误导性”,指责BBC在公正性方面存在“严重且系统性的问题”。事件曝光后,BBC两名高管宣布辞职

英国政府代表金诺克(Stephen Kinnock)此前接受媒体采访时表示,BBC道歉是正确的,反对法律诉讼也是正确的。周二(12月16日)他对“天空新闻”表示,“BBC在这一点上的坚定立场是正确的。”BBC的资金来源于所有观众必须缴纳的电视费。

特朗普周一称,BBC尽管道歉,“但并未对错误行为表现出真正的悔意,也没有做出任何有意义的制度性改革,防止未来再次发生新闻滥用行为。”

路透社评论认为,美国宪法对言论和新闻自由进行法律保护的门槛很高,特朗普团队不仅需要证明剪辑是虚假、且是诽谤性的,还需要证明BBC明知故犯地刻意误导观众。

法律专家表示,BBC可以为自己辩护,称这部纪录片基本属实,其剪辑并未造成虚假印象;也未损害特朗普的声誉,因为特朗普最终还是当选了总统,且这段长达一个小时的纪录片中,也包含了多位支持特朗普的受访者观点。

除BBC外,特朗普还对《纽约时报》、《华尔街日报》和爱荷华州的一家报纸提起诉讼,而上述三家媒体均否认有任何不当行为。

(美联社)

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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。

为何北京对房产崩盘数据讳莫如深?

Nik Martin
2025-12-16T13:07:35.609Z
无论是2008年全球金融危机、2015年股市动荡,还是疫情期间,中国政府都曾出手干预

(德国之声中文网)据路透社援引知情人士报道,中国房地产开发商万科计划在本周稍晚与债券持有人会面,计划将一笔20亿元人民币债券的还款宽限期从目前的5个工作日延长至30个工作日,以避免违约。此前,债权人已否决万科将付款期限延期一年的方案

消息一出,万科人民币债券价格大幅下跌,其中一只2028年到期债券单日下挫26%,公司在深圳和香港的股票亦双双走低。

繁荣越盛,崩盘越严重、越持久

万科的最新动向发生在中国房地产行业持续低迷之际。经历了二十多年的高速增长,至2020年,中国房地产泡沫已将房价推高至平均工资的17倍以上。

多重因素共同推动了这轮繁荣:1998年的住房制度改革将住房从国家分配转向私人所有,近5亿中国人从农村涌入城市,以及国有银行提供的充足信贷。

建筑热潮彻底改变了中国的城市天际线,家庭将大量积蓄投入房产,房地产投机成为常态,数以百万计的中产家庭因此“感觉更富有”,并增加消费。

转折点出现在新冠疫情首轮封控期间。习近平领导的政府对房地产开发商的举债规模施加了全面新规,即所谓的“三条红线”政策。恒大、碧桂园等房地产巨头以及数十家中小企业相继违约,超过70家开发商破产,或只能依靠国家支持勉强维持生存。

五年多过去,这场崩盘仍未显现缓和迹象。英国巴克莱银行估算,随着房价暴跌,中国家庭财富已蒸发逾18万亿美元。与此同时,曾是国内生产总值关键引擎的建筑业大幅萎缩,反而拖累整体经济增长,使其低于北京设定的目标。

北京审查民间房地产数据

上月,中国官员要求民间数据机构停止发布住房销售数据,切断了外界了解房地产市场困境的无数不多的独立窗口之一。

此前,中国房地产信息数据显示,10月百强房企新房销售额同比下降42%,为18个月来最大单月跌幅。

总部位于台北的J Capital Research创始人兼研究主管安妮·史蒂文森-杨(Anne Stevenson-Yang)认为,此举有助于掩盖真实的价格跌幅。

她对德国之声表示:“整体市场跌幅很可能已达到50%,在重新达到平衡之前,甚至可能下探至85%。”

她举例称,一名来自西安的同行被开发商提出“三套房打包卖一套价”的方案,相当于每套房价格下跌了三分之二。

牛津经济研究院9月的报告指出,在北京、上海等一线城市,平均房价较高点已下跌约10%,高端住宅需求降温导致价格回调更为明显。但真正的重灾区是二、三线城市,如成都、东莞等地,房价跌幅高达30%。

半拉子工程与空置住宅遍布城市

房地产崩盘在全国范围内留下大量烂尾项目、“鬼城”,以及数以百万计陷入负资产的家庭,引发众怒和零星抗议,购房者希望北京出台刺激措施提振需求。

英国牛津大学中国中心研究员乔治·马格纳斯(George Magnus)对德国之声表示:“目前仍存在大量供给过剩,相当于3至5年的未售住房库存,主要集中在小城市。要消化这些库存需要很长时间,尤其是在首次购房人群(20至35岁)本身正在萎缩的情况下。”

中国最重要的经济引擎正在熄火

房地产一度占中国GDP的四分之一左右,在2000年代至2010年代初支撑经济保持两位数增长。随着房地产放缓,经济增速被拖累,去年约为5%,虽然仍然不低,但较繁荣时期大幅回落,其连锁反应波及全国

史蒂文森-杨指出:“中国的钢铁、水泥价格和产量都在下降,就业和投资疲软——这些都是房地产崩盘造成的附带损害。”

中国曾是全球最大的铁矿石、铜、钢铁和水泥消费国,其中大量需求与建筑业相关。随着需求下降,澳大利亚、巴西、智利等出口国受到冲击。房价下跌挤压家庭财富,也削弱了消费能力,导致对外国奢侈品和汽车的进口也在减少。

房地产市场低迷带动包括钢铁和水泥在内的建筑原材料需求下降

定向刺激,而非全面救市

北京希望避免新一轮投机泡沫,因此此次房地产刺激措施明显弱于以往几次危机时期。无论是2008年全球金融危机、2015年股市动荡,还是疫情期间,中国政府都曾出手干预

而这一次,许多观察人士认为,当局正允许房价逐步下行,以将政策重心放在稳定和长期结构调整上,而非短期刺激。

史蒂文森-杨说:“到了一定阶段,你已经无法再刺激了,因为所需资金规模过大,会引发通胀。”

彭博社上月报道称,北京仍在考虑出台补贴房贷利息、降低交易费用、并为购房者提供更高额度的个人所得税退税等措施。

房价或仍将下跌多年

房地产崩盘通常需要约五年时间才能完成。在美国,2007年开始的房市崩溃直到2012年才趋于稳定。西班牙2008年之后的房地产下行也持续了约五年才出现复苏迹象。

日本1991年至2000年代的泡沫破裂常被视为最漫长的房地产危机,房价停滞超过十年,且从未完全恢复至泡沫前高点。

史蒂文森-杨认为,中国房地产行业可能面临“未来10年负增长或零增长”。标普全球评级的分析师则认为,这轮下行可能持续至2020年代末,尽管部分预测认为最早明年或2027年可能出现复苏。

这对普通中国家庭而言无疑是沉重打击。许多人将毕生积蓄投入房产,却眼睁睁看着资产缩水,被困在无法脱身的按揭中,也难以将其出售。更糟的是,在可预见的未来,房价很可能长期低于2020年高点。

马格纳斯指出,这种情况在全球并不罕见,房主往往假定房价会永远上涨。

“当好景结束、周期开始反转时……后果可能非常严重,”他对德国之声说道

DW中文有Instagram!欢迎搜寻dw.chinese,看更多深入浅出的图文与影音报道。

© 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。

Five key moments in the assault on the rights of women and girls in 2025

A woman, back to camera, looks out of a window with a metal grille, over the rooftops of the Kibera slum in Nairobi, Kenya. theguardian.org

This time last year, women’s rights organisations were bracing themselves for a second Trump term. Few were prepared for the chaos that would be unleashed in January. The volume and speed of executive orders coming out of the White House were seen as a deliberate tactic to overwhelm and create panic. In many ways it worked – there was confusion, anger and exhaustion as organisations scrambled to fill the gap left by the USAID freeze. But that was just the beginning.

The US administration has been the key driver, supported by intense advocacy work by ultra-conservative groups using the moment to strengthen global ties with political allies.

We look at five moments that affected the safety, dignity and lives of women and girls.

USAID dismantled

In March, six weeks after USAID is frozen, causing turmoil around the world, US secretary of state Marco Rubio confirms that 83% of the agency’s programmes will be eliminated. US diplomats, former presidents and humanitarian and health experts condemn the news, warning that people will die as a result. Rights defenders say that the demise of USAID is more than a funding crisis, it is a savage attack on human rights and family planning and reproductive care. Many organisations say women and girls will be disproportionately affected by diminishing aid, especially in conflict areas. As the year ends, data shows how hundreds of thousands of people have already died from disease, starvation, lack of access to maternal care and gender-based violence, with millions more to come. The UK and the Netherlands, the two largest funders of family planning aid after the US, follow with their own cuts. Nick Dearden, director of Global Justice Now, says Kier Starmer’s decision to slash about £6bn of overseas assistance is a move to appease Trump.

Christian-right groups raise voices during UN Women

In March, several Christian-right organisations meet in an upmarket New York hotel for a two-day conference held in parallel with the annual UN Women gathering. It is an opportunity to share tactics on how to defeat the UN’s “radical agenda”. They are in high spirits as they applaud Trump’s second term and changes in US policy on gender, diversity and abortion. Meanwhile, the UN secretary general, António Guterres, opens the women’s summit with a stark warning that “the poison of patriarchy” is back, after a report shows that anti-rights actors are actively undermining longstanding consensus on key women’s rights issues around the world.

African ‘family values’ conferences

Over the summer, a series of conferences in Africa focused on the traditional family and national sovereignty sparks alarm among rights advocates. On 9 May, Uganda’s president and first lady open the third Interparliamentary Forum on Family, Sovereignty and Values in Entebbe to push back on criminal foreign forces eroding traditional family values. A few days later, the Pan-African Conference on Family Values is held in Nairobi. Both events are attended by leading US and European anti-rights figures, including president of Family Watch International, Sharon Slater; Austin Ruse, president of the Center for Family and Human Rights (C-Fam); and Jerzy Kwaśnewski, co-founder of Poland-based “extremist religious organisation” Ordo Iuris, who calls on African NGOs to push back against “radical global social engineering” of the UN and EU. In June, the Mormon church hosts the Strengthening Families conference in Sierra Leone, an event, reproductive rights advocates say that has become an anti-LGBTQ, anti-gender platform. It is not the first time Americans and Europeans have flown in to strengthen ties with their African allies but campaigners say the scale of their presence has grown significantly.

US threat to burn contraceptives

As clinics in sub-Saharan Africa say they are running out of contraceptives, including emergency kits for survivors of sexual violence, the US announces in July plans to destroy $10m of contraceptives held in a warehouse in Belgium. The International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) says their destruction will deny more than 1.4 million women and girls contraceptive supplies, and lead to 174,000 unintended pregnancies and 56,000 unsafe abortions in the five African countries it surveyed. IPPF says the plan is an ideological decision “about imposing an anti-rights agenda on the entire world” and “an intentional act of reproductive coercion”. Médicins San Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) calls it “callous” and “reckless”. NGOs offer to buy the contraceptives so that they can reach their intended destinations but the US refuses all offers. Today, the situation is at a standstill as the Flemish government will not allow usable products to be destroyed.

‘Global gag rule’ expanded

Reviving the global gag rule, which halts US aid to groups that provide, advocate for or advise on abortion services overseas, is standard practice for republican administrations, so it came as no surprise when President Trump reinstated the rule in his first week of office in January. He also rejoined the Geneva Consensus Declaration, an anti-abortion agreement created by former Trump health adviser Valerie Huber that has gained support from about 40 countries. But in October, the US announces it intends to expand the global gag rule to include governments and multilateral organisations in addition to NGOs, and to cover diversity programmes. More details on the expansion of the global gag rule are expected in early 2026. Rajat Khosla, director of the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health, says widening the scope of the rule will have “unimaginable effects”. Reproductive justice campaigners fear that new US aid packages being negotiated with countries in Africa will become conditional on accepting the expanded global gag.

An anti-abortion activist holds a placard saying ‘Africa does not welcome abortion’ as he looks at a photo of his baby daughter on a mobile phone during a rally organised by CitizenGoA worker in a blue uniform in front of shelves full of medication.A woman wearing sunglasses and gagged with a stars and stripes bandana.

【网络民议】有什么好办法可以收拾高市早苗?

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图为AI生成,关键词“高市早苗、996”

11月22日,今日头条博主“黄教授”发帖问“有什么好办法可以收拾她”(疑为阴阳怪气),并配发了一张日本首相高市早苗的图片。该帖至今展现量达到142万,吸引了两千余条评论,许多网民在评论区出谋划策,其内容大都是反讽、影射中国现实。

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新闻背景:11月7日,日本首相高市早苗在国会答辩中表示,若台湾遭到武力攻击或封锁,日本或认定其为“生存危机事态”,将在必要时依据安保法制行使集体自卫权。这一表态被外界视为日本多年对台政策“战略模糊”的突破。之后,高市早苗重申其立场,并拒绝对相关言论更正或撤回。随后,中国指责日方“公然干涉中国内政”,并开始实施多项反制措施,双方关系陷入长期紧张状态。

部分评论截图:

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截图来自推特网友iPaulCanada

CDT 档案卡
标题:【网络民议】有什么好办法可以收拾高市早苗?
作者:作者名
发表日期:2025.12.16
来源:今日头条
主题归类:政治讽刺
CDS收藏:话语馆
版权说明:该作品版权归原作者所有。中国数字时代仅对原作进行存档,以对抗中国的网络审查。详细版权说明

以下为中国数字时代编辑摘自今日头条网友评论:

天空溪流:改革开放,加速发展,铲除贪官,人民过上更富裕的生活,这是最好对付她的办法。

叶无痕001:军事演习+个人制裁+组织10亿喷子火力全开,看她认不认怂。

读史明智:派我去日本骂他,反正他们可以随便骂。

松林中飘逸的思绪:在芯片等高科技上、在人均GDP上、在足球上打败小日本。

活捉伊万咔:孩子是她的软肋。

基地组织二把手:让她买恒大的房子,买哪吒的车。

百年郝和602:让她每天上班12小时休12小时,一个月休两天。

小小蚂蚁924:不信谣,不传谣。传播谣言把她抓起来。

中山狼:拖欠她工资,敢要就抓她恶意讨薪。

叽咕嘻哈:公布财产,吓死她!

回旋飞镖:加入日本国籍,然后投票不选她。

洒脱湖泊Cz:派出一隊城管人員,在不打招乎的前提下,拆了她家。然後說:不知誰拆的,可能是臨時工做的。

青翠的小草:给她二百多元的养老金!让她交农合400元!

心无所依:给她一辆非标电瓶车,安排二个交警躲树后面逮她。

标6156236254:没收她的电瓶车不给她落户囗。

小牛做设备:给她放汪大使的视频,骗她去柬埔寨电诈园。

情有独钟:给她的行程码赋红码,哪里都去不了。

敏锐铅笔DQ:把她忽悠到这里做全套体检,然后再告诉她问题很严重,还要做深度检查,最好在湘雅医院做手术。

冕宸轩@神奇普洱:在她的办公室里成立一个支部。

柒城love:把她的钱都存到河南村镇银行。

鸟瞰岷州:两只大熊猫分两次要回来, 让她痛苦两次!

月下泉潭:国家能派我去和亲吗?

不亦乐虎681:派张维为陈平司马南三大嘴将出征,定会三战三捷。

头号看官:双手插兜让她没面子。

老鲁闲说:给她定一个寻衅滋事罪拘留!

滇南甲壳虫:每天新闻联播已经安排5分钟骂她了,而且持续1个月了,我觉得她己经无地自容了。

木先生538:倒查30年,然后把她的贪污记录公布天下,让她身败名裂。

韩情脉脉:让她来我们厂打螺丝,一天12小时,还不能休班,累死她。

直爽的桀骜不驯:把她拉入征信黑名单,限高。

云淡风轻:把她孩子从班级前排调到后排。

lwz0419:忽悠她的儿女贷网贷,年利率定在百分之三十六。

博学的柳叶oW2:让她来中国送外卖,顺便来看下中国城市沿途的风景。

三聚克伦特罗:取消她的老干部待遇。

快乐盖州3X8:黄海的鱼恨死她了。

豁达的坚哥看世界:她不是喜欢骑摩托车吗,对她实行禁摩!

远方:限制她的取款金额,故意不让她取她的钱,让她沮丧。

乐意李:取消退休待遇。

自在鲸鱼GPx:罚她再为人民服务8年。

耶斯莫拉猕猴桃:派两个大白去她小区封门。

li那一年:告诉她日本核废水真相,吓死她。

批评会坐牢:告诉她,勿谓言之不预也。

才高八斗奶茶Aw:让她过上我们的生活。

New Yorkers Back Mamdani’s Push for Free Child Care, Poll Shows

A Siena University poll showed that voters support having wealthy New Yorkers pay more in taxes to fund child care statewide, and favored Gov. Kathy Hochul in next year’s election.

© Shuran Huang for The New York Times

The favorability ratings for Zohran Mamdani, the mayor-elect of New York City, have risen statewide and in New York City rise since his election last month.
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