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2025

Mamdani taps de Blasio alum, Trump critic as NYC’s top lawyer

Mamdani taps de Blasio alum, Trump critic as NYC’s top lawyer 150 150 admin

By Karen Sloan

Dec 30 (Reuters) – Incoming New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani on Tuesday named his pick to be the city’s top lawyer, tapping a former city official who resigned from prominent law firm Paul Weiss this year after it struck a controversial deal with President Donald Trump.

Mamdani at a press conference announced Steve Banks as corporation counsel, a position that oversees hundreds of city lawyers and represents New York in court.

Banks’ role is likely to be a busy one, given Mamdani’s ambitious agenda and his promises to defy Trump’s policies on immigration and other matters. The Democratic Socialist mayor-elect called Trump a despot during his November victory speech, while Trump, a Republican, has called Mamdani a communist.

Banks is the latest veteran of the Democratic Bill de Blasio administration to join the new mayor’s team. He led the city’s Department of Homeless Services while De Blasio was mayor, before joining Wall Street powerhouse Paul Weiss as its pro bono leader.

He resigned from the firm in April, after it pledged to devote $40 million in free legal services to causes aligned with the White House. In return, Trump withdrew an executive order punishing the firm over its connections to his perceived political enemies.

Banks, who did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday, said when he left Paul Weiss that he was turning his attention to representing a group that advocates for the homeless. He later told Reuters that pro bono work was being reshaped into a tool of political coercion under Trump, after eight more law firms cut similar deals with the president.

Banks led the Legal Aid Society, a non-profit that provides civil legal services to low-income New Yorkers, for a decade until 2014.

Mamdani is due to be sworn in as mayor on January 1. 

(Reporting by Karen Sloan; Editing by David Bario and Stephen Coates)

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Body found in Texas identified as missing teen Camila Mendoza Olmos

Body found in Texas identified as missing teen Camila Mendoza Olmos 150 150 admin

The Bexar County medical examiner’s office determined Camila Mendoza Olmos died by suicide.
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Former US Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell, of Colorado, dies at 92

Former US Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell, of Colorado, dies at 92 150 150 admin

DENVER (AP) — Ben Nighthorse Campbell, the former senator and U.S. representative of Colorado known for his passionate advocacy of Native American issues, died Tuesday. He was 92.

Campbell died of natural causes surrounded by his family, his daughter, Shanan Campbell, confirmed to The Associated Press.

Campbell, a Democrat who stunned his party by joining the Republican Party, stood out in Congress as much for his unconventional dress — cowboy boots, bolo ties and ponytail — as his defense of children’s rights, organized labor and fiscal conservatism.

A member of the Northern Cheyenne tribe, Campbell said his ancestors were among more than 150 Native Americans, mostly women, children and elderly men, killed by U.S. soldiers while camped under a flag of truce on Nov. 29, 1864.

He served three terms in the House, starting in 1987. He then served two terms in the Senate, from 1993 to 2005.

Among his accomplishments was helping sponsor legislation upgrading the Great Sand Dunes National Monument in southern Colorado to a national park.

“He was a master jeweler with a reputation far beyond the boundaries of Colorado,” said Colorado Sen. John Hickenlooper on X. “I will not forget his acts of kindness. He will be sorely missed.”

The motorcycle-riding lawmaker and cattle rancher was considered a maverick even before he abruptly switched to the Republican Party in March 1995, angry with Democrats for killing a balanced-budget amendment in the Senate. His switch outraged Democratic leaders and was considered a coup for the GOP.

“I get hammered from the extremes,” he said shortly afterward. “I’m always willing to listen … but I just don’t think you can be all things to all people, no matter which party you’re in.”

Considered a shoo-in for a third Senate term, Campbell stunned supporters when he dropped out of the race in 2004 after a health scare.

“I thought it was a heart attack. It wasn’t,” said Campbell. “But when I was lying on that table in the hospital looking up at all those doctors’ faces, I decided then, ‘Do I really need to do this six more years after I’ve been gone so much from home?’ I have two children I didn’t get to see grow up, quite frankly.”

He retired to focus on the Native American jewelry that helped make him wealthy and was put on display at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of the American Indian. He also worked on a line of outdoor gear with a California-based company, Kiva Designs, and became a senior policy adviser with the powerhouse law firm of Holland & Knight in Washington.

Campbell founded Ben Nighthorse Consultants which focused on federal policy, including Native American affairs and natural resources. The former senator also drove the Capitol Christmas Tree across the country to Washington, D.C., on several occasions.

“He was truly one of a kind, and I am thinking of his family in the wake of his loss,” said Colorado Rep. Diana DeGette on X.

In 1982, he was planning to deliver his jewelry to California, but bad weather grounded his plane. He was killing time in the southern Colorado city of Durango when he went to a county Democratic meeting and wound up giving a speech for a friend running for sheriff.

Democrats were looking for someone to challenge a GOP legislative candidate and sounded out Campbell during the meeting. “Like a fish, I was hooked,” he said.

His opponent, Don Whalen, was a popular former college president who “looked like he was out of a Brooks Brothers catalog,” Campbell recalled. “I don’t think anybody gave me any kind of a chance. … I just think I expended a whole lot of energy to prove them wrong.”

Campbell hit the streets, ripping town maps out of the Yellow Pages and walking door to door to talk with people. He recalled leaving a note at a house in Cortez where no one was home when he heard a car roar into the driveway, gravel flying and brakes squealing.

The driver jumped out, tire iron in hand, and screamed that Campbell couldn’t have his furniture. “Aren’t you the repossession company?” the man asked.

“And I said, ‘No man, I’m just running for office.’ We got to talking, and I think the guy voted for me.”

Campbell went on to win and he never lost an election thereafter, moving from the Colorado House to the U.S. House and then the Senate.

Born April 13, 1933, in Auburn, California, Campbell served in the Air Force in Korea from 1951 to 1953 and received a bachelor’s degree from San Jose State University in 1957. He attended Meiji University in Tokyo from 1960 to 1964, was captain of the U.S. judo team in the 1964 Olympics and won a gold medal in the Pan American Games.

Campbell once called then-Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt a “forked-tongued snake” for opposing a water project near the southern Colorado town of Ignacio, which Campbell promoted as a way to honor the water rights of the Southern Ute and Ute Mountain Ute tribes.

He clashed with environmentalists on everything from mining law and grazing reforms to setting aside land for national monuments.

Despite all this — or perhaps because of it — voters loved him. In 1998, Campbell won reelection to the Senate by routing Democrat Dottie Lamm, the wife of former Gov. Dick Lamm, despite his switch to the GOP. He was the only Native American in the Senate at the time.

He said he was criticized as a Democrat for voting with Republicans, and then pilloried by some newspapers for his stances after the switch.

“It didn’t change me. I didn’t change my voting record. For instance, I had a sterling voting record as a Democrat on labor. I still do as a Republican. And on minorities and women’s issues,” he said.

Campbell said his values — liberal on social issues, conservative on fiscal ones — were shaped by his life. Children’s causes were dear to him because he and his sister spent time in an orphanage when his father was in jail and his mother had tuberculosis.

Organized labor won his backing because hooking up with the Teamsters and learning to drive a truck got him out of the California tomato fields. His time as a Sacramento County sheriff’s deputy in California in the late 1960s and early ’70s made him a law enforcement advocate.

His decision to retire from politics, Campbell said, had nothing to do with allegations that Ginnie Kontnik, his former chief of staff, solicited kickbacks from another staffer and that his office lobbied for a contract for a technology company with ties to the former senator.

He referred both matters to the Senate Ethics Committee. In 2007, Kontnik pleaded guilty to a federal charge of not reporting $2,000 in income.

“I guess there was some disappointment” with those charges, Campbell said. “But a lot of things happen in Washington that disappoint you. You just have to get over them because every day there’s a new crisis to deal with.”
___ This story has been corrected to remove a reference to a massacre occurring at Great Sand Dunes National Monument. The massacre that was referenced took place at the Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site.

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The Media Line: Streamlining the Global Jewish Message: Why Minister Sa’ar Set Up the J50 

The Media Line: Streamlining the Global Jewish Message: Why Minister Sa’ar Set Up the J50  150 150 admin

Streamlining the Global Jewish Message: Why Minister Sa’ar Set Up the J50 

Years of lack of cohesive communication and real time coordination have prevented uniform messaging. Israel’s Foreign Ministry set up a forum to correct the problem. 

By Felice Friedson and Gabriel Colodro/The Media Line 

For Michael Wegier, CEO of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, the shift has been gradual but unmistakable. “For the first time, it feels like we’re not reacting alone,” he told The Media Line, describing how coordination between Israel and Jewish communities abroad has changed over the past year. 

The global Jewish response to antisemitism historically rested on a fragile equilibrium. Israel addressed threats as a state through diplomacy and security, while Jewish communities abroad confronted hostility through local advocacy, education, and ties with law enforcement. The model assumed that antisemitism would remain largely local, shaped by national politics and social conditions. That assumption collapsed after October 7, 2023. 

Against that backdrop, Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar moved to codify and streamline a broken system. 

“We are all under attack, regardless of the size of the community,” said William Daroff, CEO of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, speaking with The Media Line. “Whether it’s New York with millions of Jews or Vienna with 9,000, we are facing the same venomous hate in every corner of the world.” 

From Latin America, Mauro Berenstein, president of the umbrella organization of Argentina’s Jewish community (DAIA), told The Media Line that October 7 marked not only a terrorist attack in Israel, but the beginning of a coordinated effort to export antisemitism globally, particularly through social media. “The world after October 7 became much more antisemitic,” he said, adding that while Argentina has experienced a smaller increase than some countries, the trend is unmistakable. 

Daroff’s assessment captures the premise behind Israel’s J50 forum, an initiative of the Foreign Ministry that brings together leaders of 50 Jewish communities and umbrella organizations worldwide. The forum is not intended as a symbolic gathering. Its stated purpose is functional alignment, an effort to narrow the gap between a globalized threat and responses that have remained largely national. 

The initiative was launched under the leadership of Minister Sa’ar, who has placed the fight against global antisemitism at the center of his diplomatic agenda since taking office. Sa’ar has argued publicly that antisemitism today is no longer a series of isolated local phenomena, but a coordinated global challenge requiring a coordinated response. 

Under his direction, the Foreign Ministry moved to formalize engagement with Jewish communal leadership worldwide through the J50 framework, positioning Israel’s diplomatic corps not only as a state actor, but as a convening platform for communities confronting parallel threats abroad. According to a senior Israeli Foreign Ministry official, speaking on background with The Media Line, the forum was designed to correct a long-standing weakness. Engagement with diaspora leadership existed before, the official said, but it was inconsistent and often slowed by bureaucratic layers. 

J50 links leaders through a secure WhatsApp group that enables real-time communication and rapid information sharing, supplements that with regular briefings from senior officials, and convenes monthly virtual meetings alongside in-person gatherings in Israel twice a year. The goal, the official stressed, is to provide timely, verified information and context, not to dictate messaging. 

Wegier emphasized that Jewish life in Britain continues. Synagogues, schools, and communal institutions remain active, and both government and opposition have taken firm public positions against antisemitism. He rejected alarmist narratives but acknowledged that the threat environment has become more complex. Hostility now emanates simultaneously from the far left, the far right, and Islamist extremism, and increasingly manifests in academic, cultural, NGO, and civil-society spaces. “People are asking longer-term questions than they used to,” he said. “That alone tells you something has changed.” 

Asked about a recent poll by the British nongovernmental organization Campaign Against Antisemitism indicating that a significant number of British Jews are considering leaving the United Kingdom due to rising antisemitism, Wegier said he had seen the figures, even if he had not reviewed the study in full. What stood out to him was a parallel trend often overlooked. “For every two or three Israelis coming into the UK, you also see people thinking about going the other way,” he said. “It’s not dramatic, but it’s real.” 

Since October 7, the distance between threat and response has not merely widenedit has largely disappeared. Incidents, slogans, and accusations now move across borders at digital speed, amplified by social media and activist networks, and increasingly translate into violence. 

J50 forum participants pointed to the shooting attack at Bondi Beach in Australia, the deadly terrorist attack targeting Jewish worshippers in Manchester during Yom Kippur services, and the shooting attack against Israeli diplomatic staff in Washington as examples of how quickly incitement migrates from rhetoric to bloodshed. 

“What our opponents do in one part of the world can be emulated minutes later elsewhere,” Daroff said. “We saw that with campus encampments in the United States that appeared almost immediately in London and other parts of Europe. Being in constant communication allows us to respond quickly, accurately, and with a full grasp of what’s happening.” 

That sense of convergence was evident at a recent J50 in-person meeting in Jerusalem. Participants included representatives from Australia, Poland, the Netherlands, Canada, the United States, Argentina, and several other countries. Communities of vastly different size and political context, attendees noted, are now confronting remarkably similar dynamics, often driven by narratives that originate elsewhere and arrive locally already fully formed. 

The structure of J50 cannot be separated from Israel’s own institutional history on antisemitism. Responsibility for combating antisemitism has shifted repeatedly within the Israeli government. For many years, the issue was handled by the Foreign Ministry. After the creation of the Ministry of Strategic Affairs, it moved there. Under the Bennett–Lapid government, it was returned to the Foreign Ministry. When the current government took office, the portfolio was transferred to the Ministry of Diaspora Affairs, which was formally renamed the Ministry of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism and placed under Minister Amichai Chikli. 

Those shifts created uncertainty abroad about where coordination should reside, particularly during moments of crisis. Several J50 participants, speaking off the record, said that the period in which responsibility for combating antisemitism was concentrated in the Ministry of Diaspora Affairs under Chikli was marked by confusion and weak coordination. Jewish communal leaders, they said, were often left without a clear or reliable counterpart when incidents escalated. “We didn’t know who to call,” one participant said. “There was no clear address and no follow-through. There was a lot of rhetoric, but no operational system behind it.” 

J50 participants said the experience underscored the need to shift coordination back to Israel’s diplomatic infrastructure, arguing that embassies and the Foreign Ministry, through their global reach and daily engagement, are better positioned to maintain continuous and functional contact with Jewish communities worldwide. 

Berenstein argued that Argentina’s relative resilience is linked to strong governmental support and a clear condemnation of Hamas. Even so, he described J50 as a necessary response to a shared challenge. “There was an understanding that if we meet and work as a team, we achieve a better objective,” he said. 

He outlined how DAIA functions within a broader institutional chain, serving as the political representative of Argentina’s Jewish community, while coordinating regionally through the Latin American Jewish Congress and globally through the World Jewish Congress. He said that J50 adds focus and immediacy to the existing structure. “This was not a general meeting,” he said. “We were convened to understand the current situation of antisemitism and what actions can be taken to counter it.” 

One of the clearest examples of that added value lies in the transfer of practical tools. DAIA worked with TikTok to develop a guide aimed at countering antisemitic content, alongside a streamlined reporting mechanism that allows flagged material to be reviewed quickly. “It took us almost a year to get there,” Berenstein said. “Now other countries can use it immediately. If they had to start from scratch, it would take them another year.” 

Daroff described the same dynamic in broader terms. He argued that the ability to share tactics, legal approaches, and language that resonate locally turns isolated successes into cumulative impact. “It’s not one plus one plus one equals 50,” he said. “It’s 50 plus 50.” 

Security concerns form another pillar of the forum’s rationale. After attacks on Jewish targets abroad, the capability to communicate instantly has become critical. While J50 does not handle classified intelligence, the Foreign Ministry source said it allows leaders and officials to understand developments on the ground without relying solely on fragmented media reports. When something happens in one country, others are alerted immediately, allowing communities to reassess risk and posture in real time. 

Beyond immediate response, participants emphasized that J50 is also about narrative. Berenstein argued that after October 7, Israel and Jewish communities were confronted by a coordinated messaging campaign that moved faster than official responses. Accusations hardened into slogans before Israel had begun to explain what had occurred. Addressing that gap, he said, requires both education and law enforcement. 

Daroff framed the same challenge more starkly. He described what he called a “horseshoe effect,” in which ideological extremes converge in demonizing Jews and delegitimizing Israel. “This hate has caused death,” he said, warning that the rhetoric increasingly targets not only Jews but also evangelical Christians who support Israel. 

For Wegier, the lesson is that reaction alone is insufficient. Education and engagement with non-Jewish allies must be central, particularly in universities and civil society. He noted that after a particularly difficult academic year following October 7, conditions on British campuses improved in the most recent year, with increased Jewish participation even as security around events intensified. 

The role of J50 leaders, then, is neither ceremonial nor subordinate. They are not spokespeople for Israel, and they are not policymakers. They are intermediaries who already operate at the intersection of community leadership, media scrutiny, and governmental engagement, and who now have access to faster information and a wider comparative view of how antisemitism manifests globally. 

Whether the model endures remains an open question. Daroff warned that Israeli political turnover could undermine continuity if the framework is not institutionalized. “Foreign ministers come and go,” he said. “What matters is that this infrastructure stays in place.” 

For now, J50 marks an attempt to clarify roles at a moment when antisemitism no longer respects borders or institutional boundaries. Whether coordination can keep pace with the threat will depend not on rhetoric, but on continuity, credibility, and the willingness of all sides to sustain the framework beyond the current crisis. 

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"Rex" the wallaby found and returned after escaping New Jersey animal farm

"Rex" the wallaby found and returned after escaping New Jersey animal farm 150 150 admin

Rex, the wallaby that went missing from a South Jersey animal sanctuary after breaking out of its enclosure, was found safe and returned.
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Mamdani’s inauguration: New York, new year, new mayor

Mamdani’s inauguration: New York, new year, new mayor 150 150 admin

By Maria Tsvetkova

NEW YORK, Dec 31 (Reuters) – Zohran Mamdani was a trailblazing candidate whom many in his city of 8 million  — some with hope, some with trepidation — expect to be a disruptive New York mayor.

The democratic socialist’s plans for his first day in office on Thursday nod to his politics and priorities, without straying far from his predecessors with a sober official midnight oath-taking followed by a more celebratory ceremony in the afternoon.  

New York law spells out that four-year mayoral terms start on the January 1 after elections. To avoid any ambiguity about who’s in charge of America’s most populous city, it has become a tradition to hold a small midnight swearing-in. 

Mamdani has chosen as the site of his midnight oath the Old City Hall subway stop, which was decommissioned in the middle of the previous century and is accessible only a few times a year through guided tours.

The subway site, according to Mamdani’s transition team, reflects his “commitment to the working people who keep our city running every day.”

Mamdani, a 34-year-old former state lawmaker, promised a freeze on rents and free buses and childcare, building a campaign around affordability issues that some have seen as a path forward for his Democratic Party around the country ahead of midterm elections. 

Mamdani inspired a record-breaking turnout of more than 2 million voters and took 50 percent, nearly 10 points ahead of Andrew Cuomo running as an independent and well ahead of Republican Curtis Sliwa. 

New York State Attorney General Letitia James, who was among Mamdani’s earliest prominent backers, was to administer the midnight oath to Mamdani. During the first administration of President Donald Trump, James began investigating his business practices in New York, resulting in a judge finding in 2024 that Trump fraudulently overstated his net worth to dupe lenders. The Trump administration has targeted James during his second term, accusing her of mortgage fraud.

Grant Reeher, a Syracuse University political science professor, said the role James was to play in the inauguration sent a message to core supporters that Mamdani is “going to be independent of the president.”

INAUGURATION OF A NEW ERA

The Uganda-born Mamdani, who will be New York City’s first Muslim mayor, has been a sharp critic of Trump on issues such as immigration and said his differences with the president were numerous after a warm White House meeting. 

But being sworn in by the state attorney general may say more about Mamdani’s political alliances than rivalries. In 2014 Bill de Blasio, whom Mamdani regards as the best New York City mayor of his lifetime, was sworn in privately by then-New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman at the start of the first of his two terms.

Senator Bernie Sanders, a progressive, Brooklyn-born Vermont senator whom Mamdani calls his inspiration, presided over de Blasio’s public inauguration ceremony in 2018 and will play a similar role for Mamdani. Liberal Democratic U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is also on the inauguration ceremony agenda.

Plans for Mamdani’s public inauguration include a ceremony on City Hall’s steps and a program of music and speeches in front of 4,000 guests gathered in City Hall Plaza. In addition, tens of thousands of people will be able to watch a livestream of what Mamdani’s team has dubbed the “Inauguration of a New Era” in free viewing areas set up along Broadway.

Mamdani raised $2.6 million for the transition and celebrations from nearly 30,000 contributors, more than other mayors on record in this century, both by the total and single donations, according to official campaign data that presents disclosures of inaugural expenses beginning with Michael Bloomberg’s first term in 2001.

 Sami Zaman, the owner of Astoria’s low-key Afghan restaurant Sami’s Kabab House, where Astoria resident Mamdani filmed a campaign video with Sanders, was on the inaugural committee alongside filmmakers, writers and activists.  

After becoming mayor, Mamdani will move from his one-bedroom Astoria apartment, protected from sharp price hikes by the city rent-stabilization program, to Gracie Mansion, the official residence of New York City mayors on Manhattan’s upscale Upper East Side.

Bankers and others in New York, the nation’s financial capital, had expressed concern about Mamdani but since his election they have explored how to work with him. The city has had another mayor associated with democratic socialism, David Dinkins. Dinkins did not make much of his association with the Democratic Socialists of America. During his 1990-1993 term he overcame budget deficits and persuaded private businesses to remain in New York, according to city archivists.

(Reporting by Maria Tsvetkova; Editing by Donna Bryson and Nick Zieminski)

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US applications for jobless benefits fell below 200,000 last week with layoffs historically low

US applications for jobless benefits fell below 200,000 last week with layoffs historically low 150 150 admin

WASHINGTON (AP) — Fewer Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week with layoffs remaining low despite a weakening labor market.

U.S. applications for jobless claims for the week ending Dec. 27 fell by 16,000 to 199,000 from the previous week’s 215,000, the Labor Department reported Wednesday. Analysts surveyed by the data firm FactSet forecast 208,000 new applications.

Unemployment benefit filings are often distorted during holiday-shortened weeks. The shorter week can cause some who have lost jobs to delay filing claims.

The weekly report was released a day early due to the New Year’s Day holiday.

Applications for unemployment aid are viewed as a proxy for layoffs and are close to a real-time indicator of the health of the job market.

Earlier this month, the government reported that the U.S. gained a decent 64,000 jobs in November but lost 105,000 in October as federal workers departed after cutbacks by the Trump administration. That helped to push the unemployment rate up to 4.6% last month, the highest since 2021.

The October job losses were caused by a 162,000 drop in federal workers, many of whom resigned at the end of fiscal year 2025 on Sept. 30 under pressure from billionaire Elon Musk’s purge of U.S. government payrolls.

Labor Department revisions also knocked 33,000 jobs off August and September payrolls.

Recent government data has revealed a labor market in which hiring has clearly lost momentum, hobbled by uncertainty over President Donald Trump’s tariffs and the lingering effects of the high interest rates the Fed engineered in 2022 and 2023 to rein in an outburst of pandemic-induced inflation. Since March, job creation has fallen to an average 35,000 a month, compared to 71,000 in the year ended in March.

Earlier this month, the Federal Reserve trimmed its benchmark lending rate by a quarter-point, its third straight cut.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said the committee reduced borrowing costs out of concern that the job market is even weaker than it appears. Powell said that recent job figures could be revised lower by as much as 60,000, which would mean employers have actually been shedding an average of about 25,000 jobs a month since the spring.

Companies that have recently announced job cuts include UPS, General Motors, Amazon and Verizon.

The Labor Department’s report Wednesday also showed that the four-week average of claims, which evens out some of the week-to-week volatility, rose by 1,750 to 218,7500.

The total number of Americans filing for jobless benefits for the previous week ending Dec. 20 fell by 47,000 to 1.87 million, the government said.

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China’s Xi hails nation’s technological progress and renews promise to take back Taiwan

China’s Xi hails nation’s technological progress and renews promise to take back Taiwan 150 150 admin

BEIJING (AP) — Chinese President Xi Jinping on Wednesday hailed his country’s technological progress in areas such as artificial intelligence and semiconductors while once again insisting his country would annex self-ruled Taiwan.

During his New Year’s Eve address broadcast Wednesday evening by state media, Xi praised the country’s advancements in key sectors including military tech and space exploration. Images ranging from humanoid robots performing kung fu to new hydropower projects rolled on the screen as he spoke.

“We sought to energize high-quality development through innovation,” Xi said while thanking Chinese people for contributing to the country’s economic growth over the past five years.

China plans its economic development over periods of five years and is preparing to discuss its new five-year plan at the upcoming legislative session in March.

The country is set to speed up self-reliance in science and technology as the United States imposes increasingly tight controls on access to semiconductors and other high-tech items.

Xi also praised the country’s rising prominence on the world stage by listing high-level political events and exchanges it hosted over the past year.

Regarding Taiwan, a self-ruled democracy that China considers sovereign territory, Xi reiterated Beijing’s annexation intentions.

“We Chinese on both sides of the Taiwan Strait share a bond of blood and kinship,” he said. “The reunification of our motherland, a trend of the times, is unstoppable.”

China this week conducted two days of military drills around Taiwan, launching rockets and sending aircraft and warships in response to a planned arms sale by the U.S. to the island.

Taiwan President Lai Ching-te condemned the drills but said his territory would act responsibly by neither escalating the conflict nor provoking disputes.

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