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China warns of retaliation if hit by Russia sanctions fallout

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China warns of retaliation if hit by Russia sanctions fallout

China is anxious it might be hit by western sanctions imposed on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine and can retaliate if mandatory, the Chinese language international minister has stated.

“China is just not a celebration to the disaster, nor does it need sanctions to have an effect on China,” Wang Yi instructed his Spanish counterpart, José Manuel Albares, in remarks printed by the Chinese language international ministry on Tuesday.

“China has a proper to safeguard its legit rights and pursuits,” he added.

The feedback come a day after Jake Sullivan, US nationwide safety adviser, met with Yang Jiechi, China’s prime international coverage official, in Rome for what one US official described as an “intense” seven-hour change that included dialogue of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

In the course of the assembly on Monday, the US state division stated the US would have “nice concern” if China supplied any help to Russia to assist maintain the invasion of Ukraine.

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“We now have communicated very clearly to Beijing that . . . we won’t enable any nation to compensate Russia for its losses,” stated Ned Worth, state division spokesperson.

Western sanctions on Russia have hit fairness markets around the globe and despatched the price of some commodities, comparable to oil and wheat, hovering. China is a giant importer of Russian power and agricultural commodities.

The current spate of Covid-19 lockdowns has hit Chinese language equities significantly onerous, with Chinese language shares on Tuesday posting their second day of sharp declines. The Hold Seng China Enterprises index of enormous liquid Chinese language shares on Tuesday dropped to its lowest stage because the world monetary disaster in 2008. The CSI 300 index of Shanghai and Shenzhen-listed shares fell 4.6 per cent, hitting its lowest stage since 2020.

Hong Kong’s benchmark Hold Seng index dropped 5.7 per cent to its lowest stage since 2012.

The sell-off has gathered tempo following a report within the Monetary Occasions that the US believes China responded positively to Russian requests for weapons. Beijing has hit again at what it stated had been US efforts to unfold disinformation and “distort and smear” its place on the Ukraine conflict.

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On Tuesday, Nato secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg known as on China to “clearly condemn” Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and never prolong any type of help to Moscow. “China ought to be a part of the remainder of the world in condemning, strongly, the brutal invasion of Ukraine by Russia,” he stated.

“China has an obligation as a member of the UN Safety Council to really help and uphold worldwide regulation, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine is a blatant violation of worldwide regulation,” Stoltenberg added.

President Xi Jinping and different senior Chinese language officers have insisted that Beijing is a impartial celebration, however they and state media proceed to repeat and bolster Russian justifications for its invasion.

In an extra reflection of the Chinese language authorities’s de facto help for President Vladimir Putin, who met Xi in Beijing a number of weeks earlier than the invasion, a US organisation that printed a Chinese language scholar’s criticism of the conflict stated on Tuesday that considered one of its web sites had been blocked in China.

The article by Hu Wei, a Shanghai-based political scientist affiliated with the State Council’s analysis workplace in Beijing, was first printed on March 12 by the Carter Heart in Atlanta.

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“Russia’s ‘particular navy operation’ in opposition to Ukraine has precipitated nice controversy in China, with its supporters and opponents being divided into two implacably opposing sides,” Hu wrote, whereas additionally urging China to disassociate itself from Putin’s “irreversible mistake”.

“The underside line is to stop the US and the west from imposing joint sanctions on China,” he stated.

The Carter Heart’s China programme stated its Chinese language-language web sites had been blocked however that it did not regret publishing the article.

Further reporting by Kate Duguid

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Vladimir Putin is ready for summit with Donald Trump, says Kremlin

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Vladimir Putin is ready for summit with Donald Trump, says Kremlin

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Russia’s president Vladimir Putin is ready to meet Donald Trump but has yet to agree a date, the Kremlin said on Friday, after the US president-elect said the two sides were preparing a possible summit.

The comments by Dmitry Peskov, Kremlin spokesperson, came after Trump answered questions about a possible meeting with Putin by saying “we’re setting it up”, while adding he would prefer to wait until after his inauguration on January 20.

“President Putin has repeatedly declared his openness to contacts with international partners, including the US president and Donald Trump”, Peskov told the press, according to the Interfax news agency.

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He added: “It looks like some progress will be made after Mr Trump takes the Oval Office.”

Outgoing US President Joe Biden cut off direct communication with Putin following the start of the Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Asked about a possible summit at his Mar-a-Lago Florida resort or elsewhere, Trump said after a meeting with Republican governors on Thursday: “President Putin wants to meet — he’s said that even publicly — and we have to get that [Ukraine] war over, that’s a bloody mess.”

The president-elect described the death toll as “staggering” and added: “It’s a war that I’m going to try really to stop as quickly as I can.”

Pushing back his campaign pledge to end the war in “24 hours”, Trump suggested this week that six months was a more realistic target to bring hostilities to an end.

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European leaders and officials have been making the case to the president-elect and his team that continued US military aid is needed to put Kyiv in a stronger position for peace talks and help bring Moscow to the negotiating table.

According to a former senior Kremlin official and another person who has discussed the issue with the Russian president, Putin’s main goal in any talks is new security agreements to ensure Ukraine never joins Nato and that the US-led military alliance pulls back from some eastern deployments.

“He wants to change the rules of the international order so there are no threats to Russia. He is very worried about how the world will look after the war,” the former Kremlin official said. “Trump wants to roll back Nato anyway. The world is changing, anything can happen.”

Western officials including Nato secretary-general Mark Rutte have sought to stress the importance of Trump ensuring “peace through strength” in Ukraine, and avoiding a defeat for Kyiv that would embolden Putin and his allies in China, Iran and North Korea.

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Trump set for sentencing in his New York felony conviction

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Trump set for sentencing in his New York felony conviction

President-elect Donald Trump looks on during Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest at the Phoenix Convention Center in December 2024 in Phoenix, Ariz.

Rebecca Noble/Getty Images


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Rebecca Noble/Getty Images

After months of legal twists and turns, Donald Trump’s most active criminal case is finally reaching a conclusion.

The former and future president is scheduled to appear in a Manhattan courtroom on Friday for his sentencing on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to conceal a payment to an adult film star.

Trump on Thursday exhausted his last legal maneuver to stop the sentencing, after a narrow majority of Supreme Court justices declined to intervene.

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The hearing comes just 10 days before Trump is expected to be sworn in as the 47th president of the United States. He had argued the sentencing would interfere with his ability to govern.

In light of that, New York state Judge Juan Merchan has indicated he does not plan on sentencing Trump to prison or even probation, and is instead likely to offer an “unconditional discharge,” meaning the president-elect must do nothing, but the conviction will remain on his record.

Prosecutors have signaled the hearing could be short — less than an hour — and that Trump is expected to attend the hearing virtually.

“There’s nothing else that the defendant has to do, and therefore it’s the least restrictive in terms of how it could impede in any way on the president-elect as he takes office,” Anna Cominsky, director of the criminal defense clinic at New York Law School, said about the expected sentence of an unconditional discharge.

“It certainly makes sense that there be some finality to this case because as a nation, we should want to move on, in particular as he assumes the role of president, and be able to look forward to the next four years without this sentence pending,” Cominsky said. “There has to be an end.”

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Of course, Trump’s legal team is likely to appeal the conviction and sentence again — as they have done throughout the legal proceeding. Appeals could stretch on for years.

Since Trump’s conviction in May, Merchan has postponed the sentencing several times, including to avoid any perception of political bias ahead of Election Day, and then to allow Trump to argue he had immunity in the case, based on a Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity.

Merchan ultimately denied the immunity claims, and the dismissal, paving the way for the hearing on Friday.

Fundraising haul

In May, Trump became the first former or sitting U.S. president to be tried on criminal charges and be convicted.

The jury in Manhattan state court heard from 22 witnesses during about a month of testimony in Manhattan’s criminal court. Jurors also weighed other evidence — mostly documents like phone records, invoices and checks to Michael Cohen, Trump’s once loyal “fixer,” who paid adult-film star Stormy Daniels to keep quiet about her story of an alleged affair with the former president.

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After about a day-and-a-half of deliberations, the 12 jurors said they unanimously agreed that Trump falsified business records to conceal a $130,000 hush money payment to Daniels in order to influence the 2016 presidential election.

But the conviction appeared to have little impact on Trump’s popularity — and ultimate electoral victory during the 2024 presidential election. He has used the legal drama to mobilize donations for his campaign and mounting legal fees.

Within 24 hours of the guilty verdict, Trump’s campaign boasted of raising millions of dollars.

And 49% of the nation’s voters in November’s election ultimately chose to bring Trump back to the White House.

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Mapping the Damage From the Palisades Fire

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Mapping the Damage From the Palisades Fire

More than 5,000 structures have been destroyed by the Palisades fire, California officials said on Thursday. An analysis of satellite images by Microsoft offered a glimpse of the devastation in one section of Pacific Palisades, a wealthy neighborhood between Malibu and Santa Monica.

Source: Microsoft AI For Good Lab analysis of satellite imagery from Planet Labs using building footprints from Overture Maps Foundation and Microsoft

Note: Fire perimeter as of Jan. 8 at 1:17 p.m. Pacific time. Satellite imagery taken Jan. 8 at 2:21 p.m. Pacific time.

By The New York Times

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In this one area alone, there appeared to be more than 2,000 buildings that were damaged or destroyed, according to the analysis.

The results of the analysis are estimates, and they are limited by the presence of wildfire smoke partially obscuring satellites.

As firefighters continued on Thursday to battle the Palisades and major wildfires burning across the Los Angeles area, the full scope of the damage remained unclear. But officials said the Palisades and the Eaton fire, burning to the east near Pasadena, were likely among the most devastating fires in the state’s recorded history. Officials suggested that 5,000 buildings may have also burned because of the Eaton fire.

The Palisades fire began on Tuesday and quickly grew. By Thursday, it had charred more than 20,000 acres, and remained out of control.

Source: Cal Fire By The New York Times

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Aerial photographs of Pacific Palisades showed that the fire leveled whole swaths of the neighborhood near the Palisades Village shopping mall, north of Sunset Boulevard.

Source: photograph by Mark J. Terrill/Associated Press

By The New York Times

Widespread damage was also visible in this section of the Pacific Palisades south of Sunset Boulevard, bordered by the Pacific Coast Highway to the south. Only a few houses appeared to be standing amid the destruction.

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Source: photograph by Mark J. Terrill/Associated Press

By The New York Times

Across the city, the Eaton fire continued to burn uncontrollably as well. It encompassed more than 13,000 acres by Thursday evening, forcing nearby residents to evacuate.

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