Beijing issues weather warning for hottest days of year
Beijing issues weather warning for hottest days of year/node/2605500/world
Beijing issues weather warning for hottest days of year
Man holds an ice cream as he crosses the street in Beijing, China. (AFP)
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Updated 23 June 2025
AFP
Beijing issues weather warning for hottest days of year
An orange heat warning â the second-highest in a three-tier system â was issued on Monday as officials encouraged people to limit outdoor activity and drink more fluids to avoid heatstroke
Updated 23 June 2025
AFP
BEIJING: Beijing residents sought shade and cooled off in canals on Monday as authorities issued the second-highest heat warning for the Chinese capital on one of its hottest days of the year so far.
China has endured a string of extreme summers in recent years, with heatwaves baking northern regions even as parts of the south have seen catastrophic rain and flooding.
Authorities in the city of 22 million people urged the public to take precautions, with temperatures expected to peak at around 38 degrees Celsius (100 degrees Fahrenheit) on Monday.
âItâs been really hot lately, especially in the past few days,â intern Li Weijun told AFP on Monday afternoon.
The 22-year-old said he had stopped wearing formal clothes to work and delayed his daily exercise until after 10:00 p.m. to stay safe.
âI think itâs related to climate change, and maybe also to the damage done to nature,â he said.
An orange heat warning â the second-highest in a three-tier system â was issued on Monday as officials encouraged people to limit outdoor activity and drink more fluids to avoid heatstroke.
Construction workers should âshorten the amount of time consecutively spent at labor,â while elderly, sick or weakened individuals ought to âavoid excessive exertion,â according to the guidelines.
Zhang Chen, 28, said she carried an umbrella outdoors to prevent sunburn.
âI used to ride a bike, but once it gets this hot, I basically stop doing that,â the IT worker told AFP.
Despite the beating sun, legions of delivery drivers zipped through downtown areas at noon to bring sustenance to Beijingâs office workers.
A few lazed on the backs of their scooters in a shady spot, while elsewhere, people cooled off with ice creams or by taking a dip in the cityâs canals.
Beijing is still a few degrees short of breaking its record for the hottest-ever June day, set at 41.1C in 2023.
Human greenhouse gas emissions are driving climate change that causes longer, more frequent and more intense heatwaves.
China is the worldâs largest producer of carbon dioxide, a potent greenhouse gas, though it has pledged to bring its emissions to a peak by the end of this decade and to net zero by 2060.
The country has also emerged as a global leader in renewable energy in recent years as it seeks to pivot its massive economy away from highly polluting coal consumption.
In a shady spot near an office building, 42-year-old Lucy Lu spent her lunch break with friends, kicking a shuttlecock through the air â a traditional Chinese game known as âjianzi.â
âI was born and raised in Beijing, and summer here has always been like this,â she said.
âBut I do think when the temperature goes over 40C, there should be some time off or work-from-home options to reduce the risk of heatstroke.â
The government would allow âselectedâ groups to travel for a 10-day festival to celebrate the founder of the Sikh faith
Tensions remain high between New Delhi and Islamabad, after deadly clashes between the nuclear-armed rivals in May
Updated 7 sec ago
AFP
NEW DELHI: Indian Sikh pilgrims have been issued visas for neighboring Pakistan, the first major allowance after travel between the arch-rival nations was frozen during conflict in May. There was no immediate response from New Delhi, but Indian newspapers reported on Saturday that the government would allow âselectedâ groups to travel for a 10-day festival to celebrate the founder of the Sikh faith. Tensions remain high between New Delhi and Islamabad, after deadly clashes between the nuclear-armed rivals in May â the worst fighting since 1999. More than 70 people were killed in missile, drone and artillery exchanges â and the land crossing was shut to general traffic. The Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi said it had issued âover 2,100 visas to Sikh pilgrims from India.â Tens of thousands of Sikh pilgrims are expected to flock to Pakistanâs city of Nankana Sahib, the birthplace of Guru Nanak. Nankana Sahib lies 85 kilometers (52 miles) west of the border with India. Celebrations are expected to begin on Tuesday. The frontier was a colonial creation at the violent end of British rule in 1947 which sliced the sub-continent into Hindu-majority India and Muslim-majority Pakistan. The Attari-Wagah land border between the countries â straddling the state of Punjab on either side â was shuttered to general traffic in May. The border is the site of a daily flag ceremony, where visitors come to watch a sunset parade of strutting soldiers on each side. Conflict broke out in May after New Delhi accused Islamabad of backing an attack targeting tourists on April 22 in Indian-administered Kashmir, claims Islamabad rejected.
Taiwanâs new opposition leader takes over, warning against risk of China war/node/2621058/world
Taiwanâs new opposition leader takes over, warning against risk of China war
Opposition leader takes over amid rising tension with China
Taiwanâs government rejects Beijingâs sovereignty claims
Updated 22 min 34 sec ago
Reuters
TAIPEI: Taiwanâs new opposition leader took office on Saturday, warning of the risk of war with China and pledging to open a new era of peace with Beijing.
Former lawmaker Cheng Li-wun takes the reins of the largest opposition party, the Kuomintang (KMT), at a time of rising military and political tension with Beijing, which views the democratically-governed island as its own territory.
âThis is the worst of times. The Taiwan Strait faces grave military danger and the world is watching closely,â she told party members in a speech at an indoor high school stadium in Taipei. âTaiwanâs security faces the constant threat of war.â
While the KMT traditionally espouses close relations with Beijing, Taiwanâs government, led by the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), strongly objects to Chinaâs sovereignty claims.
Cheng, 55, has already signalled a swing toward even closer ties with Beijing than her urbane, internationalist-minded predecessor Eric Chu, who did not visit China during his term as chairman that began in 2021.
Chinese President Xi Jinping swiftly sent congratulations after her election last month, calling for efforts to advance âreunificationâ in a message to her.
Some Chinese Internet users refer to Cheng as the âreunification goddess,â though she said this week she had been given many monikers online, adding, âIf they are wrong or untrue, just laugh it off.â
The KMTâs new Deputy Chairman Hsiao Hsu-tsen visited China this week and met Song Tao, head of Chinaâs Taiwan Affairs Office.
Cheng did not give any details of her policy toward China in her maiden speech as party leader, nor say whether she would visit, instead saying she would work for peace.
âThe KMT will definitely be the party that opens a new era of cross-Strait peace and leads Taiwan forward,â she said.
Cheng also opposes higher defense spending, a key policy of President Lai Ching-teâs administration. The spending has strong US backing.
While the KMT lost the presidential election last year, the party and its ally the small Taiwan Peopleâs Party together hold the most seats in parliament, creating a headache for the ruling DPP in trying to pass the budget and other legislation.
One of Chengâs first tasks will be preparing for mayoral and local elections late next year. While mostly focusing on domestic issues, these will provide an important gauge of support ahead of the 2028 presidential vote.
US senators want answers on âanti-drugâ strategy as Venezuela tensions rise
Updated 01 November 2025
Reuters
WASHINGTON: Republican and Democratic leaders of the US Senate Armed Services Committee said on Friday the Trump administration had yet to provide details of its operations against drug cartels and their legal basis they had sought.
US strikes on alleged drug trafficking boats in the Caribbean and Pacific have killed dozens of people since early September, raising tension between Washington and Caracas.
In a rare bipartisan action on the strikes, Republican Senator Roger Wicker and Democrat Jack Reed said in a statement hey had not received information sought from the administration about its strategy to fight drug cartels.
Wicker, of Mississippi, is the chairman and Reed, of Rhode Island, is the top Democrat on the committee, which oversees the US military.
The Trump administration insists those targeted were transporting drugs, without providing evidence or publicly explaining the legal justification for the decision to attack the boats rather than stop them and arrest those on board.
President Donald Trump has also ordered a major military buildup in the Caribbean.
Wicker and Reed said they requested âExecute Ordersâ related to the anti-drug trafficking operations in a September 23 letter. In another letter on October 6, they asked for any written opinion regarding the legal basis for the operations.
The lawmakers said they had not received the requested information by Friday.
Asked for comment, Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson said in an email, âSeveral of the requested documents were made available to the chairman, ranking member, and their staffs to review yesterday. Additionally, the Department provided its fourth bipartisan briefing on these operations to Senate staff yesterday.â
Trump denied on Friday that he was considering strikes inside Venezuela, appearing to contradict his own comments last week amid growing expectations that Washington may soon expand its operations related to drug-trafficking.
âWhere would America be without us?â A community of refugees is stunned by White House limits/node/2621046/world
âWhere would America be without us?â A community of refugees is stunned by White House limits
Trumps order caps annual refugee admissions at 7,500, a decrease of more than 90 percent from last yearâs ceiling of 125,000
 Coalition says the directive âshut the door on our proud, centuries-long tradition of welcoming those fleeing violence and persecutionâ
Updated 01 November 2025
AP
MINNEAPOLIS: The woman remembers when she first moved to the neighborhood more than 20 years ago, and the streets were full of empty storefronts and seemingly relentless poverty.
Today, Minneapolisâ Lake Street corridor is jammed with businesses, many owned by Somali refugees.
âLook at what we did around here,â said Nasra Hassan, a community health worker whose family came to Minneapolis fleeing Somaliaâs civil war, speaking one day after the Trump administration slashed the number of refugees allowed into the United States. âBecause of us this place is thriving.â
Minnesotaâs large Somali community was among the immigrant groups that helped revitalize the Lake Street corridor, which has long called out to newcomers to America. But scattered across the city are other communities and many other businesses built by refugees. They came to escape violence in Mexico, and war in Myanmar. Recent years have seen them arrive from the Congo and Ukraine.
âWhere would America be without us?â Hassan asked.
The presidential order caps annual refugee admissions at 7,500, a decrease of more than 90 percent from last yearâs ceiling of 125,000 and the lowest number since the program began in 1980.
Trump indefinitely suspended the refugee resettlement program â which historically had widespread bipartisan support â on his first day in office in 2025, part of his administrationâs crackdown on immigration.
But the Thursday order marks a major break for a nation that has long seen itself as a refuge for people in need.
migrant is detained by federal immigration officers at US immigration court in Manhattan, in New York City, on August 5, 2025.( REUTERS/File Photo)
The directive âshut the door on our proud, centuries-long tradition of welcoming those fleeing violence and persecution, leaving thousands in limbo and many more in peril,â Murad Awawdeh, head of the New York Immigration Coalition, said in a statement. He called for âprioritizing those most at-risk, including Afghans, Sudanese, Congolese, Somalis, religious minorities,â and others.
Traditionally, refugee applicants must show a well-founded fear of persecution because of race, religion, nationality, membership in a social group, or political opinion.
But the Thursday announcement made specific mention of just one group: white South Africans.
Those admitted, it said, âshall primarily be allocated among Afrikaners from South Africa,â the descendants of Dutch and French colonial settlers, and âother victims of illegal or unjust discrimination in their respective homelands.â
Trump insists Afrikaners are victims of racial persecution, including violence, a claim that has little apparent basis in fact and is strongly denied by the South African government.
Afrikaners are a small minority in South Africa but are tightly woven into the countryâs life, whether as farmers, wealthy business leaders or government officials. Minnesotaâs Somali community
Minnesota is home to the largest Somali community in the United States, roughly 87,000 people according to the latest census figures, most of whom live in the Minneapolis area. They have been coming to Minnesota, often as refugees, since the 1990s, drawn by generous social services and an ever-growing diaspora community.
They have become increasingly prominent in the state. Somali-Americans have served on the Minneapolis and St. Paul city councils. They are in the state legislature. Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar represents part of the state in the US House.
Women walk down a street in the predominantly Somali neighborhood of Cedar-Riverside in Minneapolis on May 12, 2022. (AP Photo/File)
Republican leaders reject Trumpâs demands to scrap the Senate filibuster to end the shutdown
Senate Majority Leader John Thune argued that the filibuster is vital to the Senate and has allowed them to halt Democratic policies when they are in the minority
House Speaker Mike Johnson also defended the filibuster Friday, while conceding âitâs not my call,â from his chamber across the Capitol
Updated 01 November 2025
AP
WASHINGTON: Republican leaders in the US Senate on Friday swiftly rejected President Donald Trump's call to scrap the filibuster rule and reopen the government.
Back from a week abroad, Trump threw himself into the shutdown debate, pushing his Republican Party to get rid of the Senate rule that requires 60 votes to overcome objections and gives the minority Democrats a check on GOP power.
In the chamber thatâs currently split, 53-47, Democrats have had enough votes to keep the government closed while they demand an extension of health care subsidies. Neither party has seriously wanted to nuke the rule.
âTHE CHOICE IS CLEAR â INITIATE THE âNUCLEAR OPTION,â GET RID OF THE FILIBUSTER,â Trump said in a late night social media post Thursday.
Trumpâs sudden decision to assert himself into the shutdown now in its 31st day â with his highly charged demand to end the filibuster â is certain to set the Senate on edge. It could spur senators toward their own compromise or send the chamber spiraling toward a new sense of crisis. Or, it might be ignored.
Republican leaders responded quickly, and unequivocally, setting themselves at odds with Trump, a president few have dared to publicly counter.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune has repeatedly said he is not considering changing the rules to end the shutdown, arguing that it is vital to the institution of the Senate and has allowed them to halt Democratic policies when they are in the minority.
The leaderâs âposition on the importance of the legislative filibuster is unchanged,â Thune spokesman Ryan Wrasse said Friday.
A spokeswoman for Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso, the No. 2 Republican, said his position opposing a filibuster change also remains unchanged. And former GOP leader Mitch McConnell, who firmly opposed Trumpâs filibuster pleas in his first term, remains in the Senate.
House Speaker Mike Johnson also defended the filibuster Friday, while conceding âitâs not my call,â from his chamber across the Capitol.
âThe safeguard in the Senate has always been the filibuster,â Johnson said, adding that Trumpâs comments are âthe presidentâs anger at the situation.â
Broad GOP support for filibuster
Even if Thune wanted to change the filibuster, he would not currently have the votes to do so in the divided Senate.
âThe filibuster forces us to find common ground in the Senate,â Republican Sen. John Curtis of Utah posted on X Friday morning, responding to Trumpâs comments and echoing the sentiments of many of his Senate Republican colleagues. âPower changes hands, but principles shouldnât. Iâm a firm no on eliminating it.â
Debate has swirled around the legislative filibuster for years. Many Democrats pushed to eliminate it when they had full power in Washington, as the Republicans do now, four years ago. But ultimately, enough Democratic senators opposed the move, predicting such an action would come back to haunt them. Little progress on shutdown
Trumpâs demand comes as he has declined to engage with Democratic leaders on ways to end the shutdown, on track to become the longest in history.
He said in his post that he gave a âgreat dealâ of thought to his choice on his flight home from Asia and that one question that kept coming up during his trip was why âpowerful Republicans allowâ the Democrats to shut down parts of the government.
But later Friday, he did not mention the filibuster again as he spoke to reporters departing Washington and arriving in Florida for a weekend at his Mar-a-Lago home.
While quiet talks are underway, particularly among bipartisan senators, Trump has not been seriously involved. Democrats refuse to vote to reopen the government until Republicans negotiate an extension to the health care subsidies. The Republicans say they wonât negotiate until the government is reopened.
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said on CNN that Trump needs to start negotiating with Democrats, arguing the president has spent more time with global leaders than dealing with the shutdown back home.
From coast to coast, fallout from the dysfunction of the shuttered federal government is hitting home. SNAP food aid is scheduled to shut off. Flights are being delayed. Workers are going without paychecks.
And Americans are getting a first glimpse of the skyrocketing health care insurance costs that are at the center of the stalemate.
âPeople are stressing,â said Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, as food options in her state grow scarce.
âWe are well past time to have this behind us.â Money for military, but not food aid
The White House has moved money around to ensure the military is paid, but refuses to tap funds for food aid. In fact, Trumpâs âbig, beautiful billâ signed into law this summer, delivered the most substantial cut ever to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, known as SNAP, projected to result in some 2.4 million people off the program.
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said Friday the agency cannot release contingency funds to keep SNAP running, but two judges ruled nearly simultaneously Friday that the administration must continue to fund the food aid program. How quickly that might happen remains to be seen, as further consultation with the courts is expected on Monday.
Trump, in a social media post, said administration lawyers will be asking the courts âto clarify how we can legally fund SNAP as soon as possible.â
âIf we are given the appropriate legal direction by the Court, it will BE MY HONOR to provide the funding,â Trump said.
âWe are holding food over the heads of poor people so that we can take away their health care,â said Rev. Ryan Stoess during a prayer with religious leaders earlier this week at the US Capitol.
âGod help us,â he said, âwhen the cruelty is the point.â Deadlines shift to next week
The House remains closed under Johnson with no plans to resume the session, and senators left for the weekend and are due back Monday.
The next inflection point comes after Tuesdayâs off-year elections â the New York City mayorâs race, as well as elections in Virginia and New Jersey that will determine those statesâ governors. Many expect that once those winners and losers are declared, and the Democrats and Republicans assess their political standing with the voters, they might be ready to hunker down for a deal.
If the shutdown continues into next week, it could surpass the 35-day lapse that ended in 2019, during Trumpâs first term, over his demands to build the US-Mexico border wall.