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继续推进“一国两制”实践行稳致远——论学习贯彻习近平主席在庆祝澳门回归祖国25周年大会重要讲话

  在庆祝澳门回归祖国25周年大会暨澳门特别行政区第六届政府就职典礼上,习近平主席深刻总结香港、澳门回归以来的实践经验,指出继续推进“一国两制”实践行稳致远需要把握好以下4条:一要坚守“一国”之本、善用“两制”之利,二要维护高水平安全、推动高质量发展,三要发挥独特优势、强化内联外通,四要弘扬核心价值、促进包容和谐。

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国台办回应美对台军售:“倚美谋独”“以武谋独”是自寻绝路

  中新网12月22日电 据国台办发布微博消息,国台办回应美对台军售时表示,“倚美谋独”“以武谋独”是自寻绝路。

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审计署:进一步加大对重大问题的查办力度

  中新社北京12月22日电 (记者 阮煜琳)受国务院委托,审计署审计长侯凯22日向十四届全国人大常委会第十三次会议作了《国务院关于2023年度中央预算执行和其他财政收支审计查出问题整改情况的报告》。审计署政策研究室相关负责人解读该报告时对记者表示,有关部门高度重视充分发挥审计在反腐治乱方面的重要作用,加大对审计移送重大问题的查办力度,把审计及整改情况纳入领导班子和领导干部考核,作为领导干部日常调整配备等重要参考。

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“登录态”入侵!网警@游戏玩家 注意了

  在网吧等公众场合登录个人游戏账号时,最好使用人脸识别或令牌验证进行登录,有效防止游戏账号被盗。

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Let China build electric cars in UK, Tory ex-chancellor tells Rachel Reeves ahead of trade trip

Despite ‘spy’ scandal, Philip Hammond says Britain should now adopt a ‘pragmatic approach to Beijing’

China should be encouraged to build electric cars and renewable energy technology in the UK as part of a new pragmatic trading relationship that would benefit both countries, a former Tory chancellor has said ahead of a landmark visit by Rachel Reeves to Beijing early in the new year.

Philip Hammond, who was chancellor from 2016 to 2019, and the last UK minister to take part in formal economic discussions with China before the process was abruptly ended, told the Observer that while Reeves should never “compromise security for trade”, there were vital economic sectors where deals could be struck.

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国台办回应美对台军售:“倚美谋独”“以武谋独”是自寻绝路

  12月22日,国务院台办发言人朱凤莲答记者问。

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外交部驻港公署坚决反对美方借有关报告干涉香港事务和中国内政

  中新社香港12月22日电 针对美国“国会——行政部门中国委员会”再次炮制所谓年度报告,其中抹黑香港法治人权状况,叫嚣对港制裁打压,粗暴干涉香港事务和中国内政,中国外交部驻香港特别行政区特派员公署(外交部驻港公署)发言人21日表示强烈不满和坚决反对,予以严厉谴责。

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美国宣布对台提供军援军售 中方提出严正交涉

  中新社北京12月22日电 中国外交部发言人22日就美国宣布向中国台湾地区提供军援军售答记者问时表示,中方强烈不满、坚决反对,已第一时间向美方提出严正交涉。

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多地明确:元旦上班

  近日

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全国铁路2025年1月5日实行新的列车运行图

  中新网12月22日电 据中国铁路微信公众号消息,2025年1月5日零时起,全国铁路将实行新的列车运行图。调图后,全国铁路安排图定旅客列车13028列,较现图增加230列;开行货物列车22859列,较现图增加91列,铁路客货运输能力、服务品质和运行效率进一步提升。

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第1视点|习近平:不断开创“一国两制”事业高质量发展新局面

  庆祝澳门回归祖国25周年大会暨澳门特别行政区第六届政府就职典礼12月20日上午在澳门东亚运动会体育馆隆重举行。中共中央总书记、国家主席、中央军委主席习近平出席并发表重要讲话。

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广东省茂名市人民检察院原检察长王天鸿被查

  中新网广州12月22日电 (记者 程景伟)据广东省纪委监委“南粤清风网”22日通报,广东省茂名市人民检察院原党组书记、检察长王天鸿涉嫌严重违纪违法,目前正接受广东省纪委监委纪律审查和监察调查。(完)

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第一观察|特别的叮嘱

  “中央决定开发横琴,目的就是促进澳门经济适度多元发展、便利澳门居民生活就业。这个定位要把握好,不能发展一些与这个定位不一致的产业项目。”

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中共中央港澳工作办公室 国务院港澳事务办公室:领航具有澳门特色的“一国两制”实践行稳致远

领航具有澳门特色的“一国两制”实践行稳致远

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时政新闻眼丨习近平寄语澳门:实现更好发展 作出更大贡献

  12月20日,澳门,这片南海潮涌的热土,迎来了回归祖国25周年的喜庆日子。

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外交部发言人就美国宣布向中国台湾地区提供军援军售答记者问

  中新网12月22日电 据外交部网站消息,外交部发言人就美国宣布向中国台湾地区提供军援军售答记者问时表示,中方将采取一切必要措施,坚定捍卫国家主权、安全和领土完整。

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“我一直惦念着这里的发展和全体居民的福祉”——习近平主席对澳门的深情牵挂

  “始终坚持以人民为中心,解决好广大居民最关心最迫切最现实的问题,创造更多更好的发展机会,营造更加公平的社会环境,不断实现居民对美好生活的向往。”

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关于2023年度中央预算执行和其他财政收支审计查出问题整改情况报告的答记者问

  2024年12月22日,受国务院委托,审计署审计长侯凯向十四届全国人大常委会第十三次会议作了《国务院关于2023年度中央预算执行和其他财政收支审计查出问题整改情况的报告》(以下简称《审计整改报告》)。为进一步了解2023年度审计整改有关情况,记者采访了审计署政策研究室相关负责同志。

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审计署发布2023年度审计整改报告 共整改问题金额5380多亿元

  审计署发布2023年度审计整改报告 共整改问题金额5380多亿元

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“80后”地级市政府“一把手”再添新例:全国至少已有6人

  “80后”地级市政府“一把手”再添新例。

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浙江明确新一年目标打法 列出九大重点任务

  中新网杭州12月22日电(记者 王逸飞)12月21日,浙江省委十五届六次全体会议暨省委经济工作会议在杭州举行,明确浙江新一年经济社会发展的目标、打法。聚焦“经济大省要挑大梁”,以及高质量发展的首要任务,该省共列出九方面重点任务。

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我国软件开发者数量突破940万!开源参与者增速全球最快

  2024开放原子开发者大会20到21日在武汉举办。工业和信息化部负责人透露,我国软件开发者数量突破940万。

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守护国家安全 这些快递小哥立功了

  给这些快递小哥点个赞

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人类首份月背古磁场信息来了!月球“土特产”透露哪些秘密?

  地球有磁场,但你知道,月球曾经也有磁场吗?此前研究认为,31亿年前,月球磁场强度曾急剧下降,之后一直很弱。昨天(20日),国际学术期刊《自然》杂志发表了一项来自我国科学家对嫦娥六号取回样品的研究结果,这个研究结果给出了不一样的答案。

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内地民众对香港印象调研报告出炉:因多元文化爱上香港

  中新社北京12月21日电 (记者 徐雪莹)香港特别行政区政府驻北京办事处21日公布的一则调研报告显示,“文化多元,东西交融”已成为多数内地受访者爱上香港的理由。

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说“闻”解字丨从“澳”字,读懂澳门发展的密码

  “澳”,形声字,始见于篆文,字形从水,表示海边弯曲可以停船的地方。澳门之名,相传就因半岛的两个湾口如两扇门而来。

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中央广播电视总台2024年度乡村振兴十大新闻

  中央广播电视总台今天(21日)发布2024年度乡村振兴十大新闻。

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国防部:美发布报告曲解中国国防政策 中方坚决反对

  中新社北京12月21日电 中国国防部新闻发言人张晓刚21日就美方发布2024年《中国军事与安全发展报告》发表谈话。

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看图学习·盛世莲开丨把琴澳一体化提升到更高水平 总书记强调“三个联通”

  横琴地处广东珠海南端,与澳门一水之隔,是促进澳门经济适度多元发展的重要平台。12月19日,习近平总书记来到横琴粤澳深度合作区考察,同居住在这里的市民代表、青年创业者代表以及参与合作区规划、建设、管理、服务等各方面代表亲切交流。总书记对合作区各项工作取得的进展给予肯定,勉励大家牢记开发横琴的初心,在新的起点上,锐意改革、聚力攻坚,携手开创合作区建设新局面。一起来学习!

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澳门特色“一国两制”实践取得巨大成功

  澳门特色“一国两制”实践取得巨大成功

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习近平澳门之行,这些话语重心长

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Bros’s Matt Goss on love and loss; ‘my father, the serial killer’; Marina Hyde on Prince Andrew and the spy; and Philippa Perry on finding purpose at 80 – podcast

The Duke of York is a royal problem, says Marina Hyde: it’s time they owned it. Matt Goss discusses mega-fame, political correctness and loneliness with Simon Hattenstone. After April Balascio’s foster brother was killed, she started piecing together evidence that revealed her father was a serial killer. And Philippa advises an 80-year-old reader how to face the existential void that is overwhelming them.

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Ros Atkins On... Four reasons why the relationship between the UK and China is strained

The BBC's Analysis Editor Ros Atkins looks at how relations between the UK and China became so strained.

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Xi Jinping urges Macau to diversify economy away from casinos

Chinese president calls for city to ‘focus on cultivating new industries’ as he attends inauguration of new leader

China’s president, Xi Jinping, has urged the gambling hub of Macau to diversify away from casinos, as he addressed the Chinese territory at the inauguration of its new leader.

Xi was in Macau to mark the 25th anniversary of its return from Portuguese to Chinese rule on 20 December 1999. In the quarter-century since then, Macau has been run as a special administrative region of China, a semi-autonomous territory with a similar legal status to Hong Kong, but it has traditionally been much more pliant to Beijing’s rule than the former British territory. More than half of its 700,000 population have immigrated from China in recent decades.

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The US supreme court’s TikTok case will put free expression on the line | Trevor Timm

Let’s hope the court does the right thing, and strikes down this potential censorship before it spins out of control

The US supreme court surprisingly decided, this week, to hear TikTok’s emergency appeal to its imminent ban in the United States. It may be the most important case at the intersection of the first amendment and national security in decades. Whether or not you see China as a nefarious threat, all Americans who care about free expression should worry about the precedent this case could set – and should want the TikTok ban overturned.

After a fifth circuit court of appeals ruling earlier this month, TikTok’s owner, ByteDance, has until 19 January to either sell the popular video-sharing app or face a nationwide ban. The decision stems from Congress passing a law last year that essentially proclaims that if the government says a foreign-owned platform threatens national security, then it can force its sale or censor it.

Trevor Timm is executive director of the Freedom of the Press Foundation

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Nigel Farage and other MPs are mistaken over parliamentary privilege | Letter

Stephen Sedley writes in response to MPs threatening to name Yang Tengbo in parliament last week before the high court identified him

Contrary to what Nigel Farage and many other MPs and peers appear to believe (MPs consider naming Chinese ‘spy’ linked to Prince Andrew, 15 December), there is no parliamentary privilege in our constitutional law that allows them to defy court orders or decisions if they think it right to do so.

Insofar as we have a written constitution, the Bill of Rights 1689 forbids the courts to adjudicate on anything said or done in parliament. This is the immunity incorrectly referred to as parliamentary privilege. Parliament has for centuries reciprocated by respecting court decisions and orders, however strongly members object to them.

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Macau: a city of contrasts – in pictures

Macau is marking the 25th anniversary of its handover to China. It was administered by the Portuguese until 20 December 1999 and was the last outpost under European rule in Asia. Photographer Eduardo Leal documents a city that has gone through enormous development

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Will Japan’s close ties with US survive the caprice and quirks of Donald Trump?

Japan’s complex defence alliances built up over years as protection against China could be put at risk in a Trump-launched trade war

Arguably, no country in Asia has better reason to be in a state of anxiety over the return of Donald Trump to the White House than Japan, since the US has been the linchpin of Japanese foreign and security policy since the second world war.

Back in 2017, well before he became prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba described Trump’s method as one of “placing his counterpart in a state of anxiety and tension, creating psychological instability and then initiating a deal”.

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Fiji defence minister welcomes US security deal and criticises China missile test

Pio Tikoduadua tells the Guardian the Pacific is ‘not a space for missile testing’ after China’s launch earlier this year raised concern in the region

Fiji’s defence minister has stressed the need for stability in the Pacific and welcomed moves to strengthen security ties with the US, while adding to criticism over China’s recent missile test for posing a threat to peace in the region.

Fiji, a country of about 1 million people strategically located in the Pacific, maintains ties and receives support from Washington and Beijing amid a wider struggle for influence by the two powers in the region.

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United Front: China's 'magic weapon' caught in a spy controversy

The UFWD is a decades-old - and increasingly controversial - arm of China's Communist Party. What does it do?

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US Senate passes defense bill that raises troop pay and strips trans care for kids of military

Bill authorizes pay raises, strips coverage of trans medical treatments for children and aims to counter China’s power

The Senate passed a defense bill on Wednesday that authorizes significant pay raises for junior enlisted service members, aims to counter China’s growing power and boosts overall military spending to $895bn while also stripping coverage of transgender medical treatments for children of military members.

The annual defense authorization bill usually gains strong bipartisan support and has not failed to pass Congress in nearly six decades, but the Pentagon policy measure in recent years has become a battleground for cultural issues. Republicans this year sought to tack on to the legislation priorities for social conservatives, contributing to a months-long negotiation over the bill and a falloff in support from Democrats.

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New York man pleads guilty to running Chinese police station in Manhattan

Chen Jinping pleads guilty to conspiring to act as an agent of China’s government and faces up to five years in prison

A New York man has pleaded guilty to running an undeclared police station for the Chinese government in lower Manhattan, more than a year after the US justice department unveiled efforts aimed at disrupting Beijing’s efforts to locate and suppress Chinese American pro-democracy activists.

Chen Jinping, 60, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to conspiring to act as an agent of the government of the People’s Republic of China, in connection with opening and operating an overseas police station for the PRC’s ministry of public security, or MPS.

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Supreme court agrees to hear TikTok challenge to law ending its US operations

Court will hear two hours of oral arguments on 10 January and consider the social media app’s challenge to the law

The US supreme court said on Wednesday that it would hear TikTok’s challenge to a law that could make the company’s popular video app disappear from the US.

In its order on Wednesday, the supreme court said it would set aside two hours for oral arguments on 10 January to consider TikTok’s lawsuit against the justice department and the attorney general, Merrick Garland.

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Prince Andrew to miss royal family’s traditional pre-Christmas lunch

Duke of York said to have pulled out of Buckingham Palace event after controversy over links to Chinese ‘spy’

The Duke of York will not attend the royal family’s traditional pre-Christmas lunch at Buckingham Palace on Thursday amid controversy over his links with an alleged Chinese spy.

Prince Andrew is said to have decided to pull out of the occasion after speaking to his ex-wife and close friend, Sarah, Duchess of York. He had already withdrawn from joining senior royals at Sandringham for the festive period.

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The prince and the spy – podcast

Prince Andrew is in trouble again, this time for meeting a businessman who has denied spying for China.

In parliament, it has sparked fears about how far the British establishment has been infiltrated by spies. In Beijing, there has been outrage. For Prince Andrew, it has led to him missing Christmas dinner at Sandringham with the rest of the royal family.

It is fair to say the accusation that the Chinese businessman Yang Tengbo has been spying for China has caused a serious stir. Dan Sabbagh and David Pegg report

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Fleeing Xi’s China: following the trail of migrants trying to reach Australia through Indonesia

A new and high-stakes escape route has been revealed, through the Indonesian archipelago to a smuggler’s boat

Paul, an Indonesian fisherman, says he was working as a rideshare driver in the dusty streets of Kupang in West Timor when he came across half a dozen Chinese men on the side of the road. They were wet up to their waist, carrying a backpack each, and spoke no Indonesian.

“They had walked from the beach, from the mangrove forest to the main road. They said they had difficulty with their boat engine,” Paul recalls. They asked for directions to a nearby hotel … and went on their way. Paul, a former people smuggler from Rote Island, called the police. “I used to bring people like this.”

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Chinese AI chip firms blacklisted over weapons concerns gained access to UK technology

Imagination Technologies had licences with two Chinese firms – but said it had not ‘implemented transactions’ that would enable the use of technology for military purposes

Chinese engineers developing chips for artificial intelligence that can be used in “advanced weapons systems” have gained access to cutting-edge UK technology, the Guardian can reveal.

Described by analysts as “China’s premier AI chip designers”, Moore Threads and Biren Technology are subject to US export restrictions over their development of chips that “can be used to provide artificial intelligence capabilities to further development of weapons of mass destruction, advanced weapons systems and hi-tech surveillance applications that create national security concerns”.

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What does the China 'spy' row show? That Starmer can't just muddle through on foreign policy | Rafael Behr

The PM’s attitude to China exposes the void where there should be a strategic concept of Britain’s place in the world

When Keir Starmer met Xi Jinping at the G20 summit in Rio last month he declared that Britain should build a “pragmatic and serious relationship” with China, which would be a meaningful ambition if anyone was calling for the opposite. Who stands for impractical and unserious dealings with Beijing? Prince Andrew, maybe.

The hapless royal scandal-magnet has no influence over policy, but he has enough elite contacts and cupidity to have made him worth cultivating by a Chinese businessman who is now banned from the UK on grounds of espionage. Yang Tengbo denies spying. He says he is the casualty of “sour” anti-China sentiment.

Rafael Behr is a Guardian columnist

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Prince Andrew’s ‘opaque’ finances provoke calls for register of royal interests

Claims of refused FOI requests into Duke of York’s business dealings come as controversy over alleged Chinese spy continues

Getting information from government departments about the Duke of York’s past business dealings is like playing “whack-a-mole”, it was claimed, as fallout over the alleged Chinese “spy” controversy continues, with China saying it was an attempt to “smear” it.

Calling for a register of royal interests, similar to that for MPs, and a full inquiry by the public accounts committee into royal finances, researchers trying to investigate Prince Andrew’s “opaque” finances claim their freedom of information (FoI) requests are regularly refused, making their work “impossible”.

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The prince and the ‘spy’ – podcast

Prince Andrew is in trouble again, this time for meeting a businessman who has denied spying for China. Dan Sabbagh and David Pegg report

In parliament, it has sparked fears about how far the British establishment has been infiltrated by spies. In Beijing, there has been outrage. For Prince Andrew, it has led to him missing Christmas dinner at Sandringham with the rest of the royal family. It is fair to say the accusation that the Chinese businessman Yang Tengbo has been spying for China has caused a serious stir.

While Dan Sabbagh tells Michael Safi what we know about the extent of Chinese spying in the UK and how it works, David Pegg examines how the scandal unfolded and caused Tengbo’s meetings with everyone from Prince Andrew to Theresa May to be put under scrutiny – and why, for the man at the centre of the story, it is all an unfair smear on someone who loves the UK and only wants to build better business relations between the UK and China.

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Labour’s review of UK-China relations on hold until after chancellor visits Beijing

Exclusive: Despite calls for more scrutiny in light of Prince Andrew spy allegations, Starmer’s instinct is not to do anything to hamper growth

A review of UK-China relations has been delayed until after the chancellor makes her first trip to Beijing next month, the Guardian has learned, amid a row over an alleged spy who befriended Prince Andrew.

Rachel Reeves will travel to China in early January as part of a charm offensive by the Labour government. The trip will be focused on financial services, and Tulip Siddiq, the City minister, is expected to travel with the chancellor.

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Nigel Farage and Nick Candy say they met Musk at Mar-a-Lago to discuss doing ‘great things together’ – as it happened

Farage and Reform UK treasurer met Musk at Donald Trump’s Florida home, party says

Jonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, has announced that the scope of the compensation programme for victims of the Post Office scandal will be extended to cover earlier potential victims.

The government already has four schemes in place offering compensation to post officer operators who suffered because faulty Horizon IT software led to them being wrongly blamed for missing money. More than 900 people were prosecuted, more than 100 were jailed, but many more lost out because they were forced to repay money they were accused of losing or stealing, and/or because they lost their jobs.

A significant amount of time has also passed, and we recognise that this means that timescales are far greater, and the population of postmasters that used Capture will be more advanced in age, or a greater proportion of the population may have unfortunately died. We also recognise that the passage of time means that evidence of shortfalls and consequential losses, and evidence relating to suspensions, termination, prosecution, or convictions, will be far more difficult to find. It will therefore be difficult for claimants to corroborate their claims with contemporary evidence. Postmasters, the Post Office, or the UK government may not have enough evidence, and we may never find enough evidence to determine liability to the level that would be expected by the courts.

It is thanks to testimony of postmasters that this has been brought to light and failings have been discovered.

We must now work quickly to provide redress and justice to those who have suffered greatly after being wrongly accused.

We are considering the right form of redress for victims who have suffered.

This is a challenging exercise given the passage of time and the significant lack of records and evidence.

Cabinet Office minister Nick Thomas-Symonds said that those whose brothers or sisters were infected with potentially deadly viruses while receiving care should be fairly compensated.

He also announced in a written ministerial statement that the government “accepts in full or accepts in principle” all of the 12 recommendations made as part of the Infected Blood Inquiry.

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China jails ex-football head coach for bribery

Li Tie, who also played for Everton in the English Premier League, was handed a 20-year sentence.

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Top Chinese language novelist dies in apparent suicide

Chiung Yao's work has been adapted to movies and TV and launched the careers of big name stars.

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Filipino vessel 'sideswiped' by China Coast Guard

The incident happened near the disputed Scarborough Shoal and Beijing said it acted "in accordance with the law".

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‘Italian’ purees in UK supermarkets likely to contain Chinese forced-labour tomatoes

Some products described as “Italian” appear to contain Chinese tomatoes, BBC investigation suggests.

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Taiwan president's Hawaii trip draws Chinese anger

Lai Ching-te's trip to the US state is being billed as a stopover, but has been condemned by Beijing.

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Silenced and erased, Hong Kong's decade of protest is now a defiant memory

The BBC speaks to Hongkongers whose hopes for a freer city have withered.

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China's giant sinkholes are a tourist hit - but ancient forests inside are at risk

These caves were unexplored for thousands of years, protected by swirling mists and terrifying tales.

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Who are the activists jailed in Hong Kong's largest national security trial?

They include prominent campaigners, former lawmakers and ordinary citizens who joined the pro-democracy movement.

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Trump and Xi Jinping’s ‘loving’ relationship has soured - can they rebuild it?

What their dynamic means for the future of US-China relations

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We want 'strong' UK-China relationship, says Starmer

The first in-person meeting since 2018 comes as the PM prioritises shoring up support for Ukraine.

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Pic story: inheritor of traditional Tibetan mask making technique in Xizang

A craftsman checks a traditional Tibetan mask in Dagze District of Lhasa, southwest China's Xizang Autonomous Region, Dec. 9, 2024.In recent years, the cooperative has provided a space for local people to learn mask-making skills, created employment opportunities, and contributed to the protection and development of intangible cultural heritages. (Xinhua/Tenzin Nyida)

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