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Assad’s fall in Syria exposes limits of China’s Middle East diplomacy

BEIJING/HONG KONG – Just over a year ago, China gave Bashar Assad and his wife a warm welcome during their six-day visit to the country, offering the former Syrian leader a rare break from years of international isolation since the start of a civil war in 2011. As the couple attended the Asian Games, Chinese President Xi Jinping vowed to support Assad in “opposing external interference” and in Syria’s rebuilding, while his wife Asma was feted in Chinese media. But the abrupt end to the rule of the authoritarian leader so explicitly backed by Xi only last year has dealt a blow to China’s diplomatic ambitions in the Middle East and exposed the limits of its strategy in the region, analysts say. A coalition of rebels seized Syria’s capital Damascus on Sunday after a lightning offensive that toppled Assad’s regime and ended his family’s 50-year dynasty. Source link

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Nobel Peace Prize winner Nihon Hidankyo calls for a world without nukes

Oslo – Japan’s atomic bomb survivors’ group Nihon Hidankyo accepted its Nobel Peace Prize on Tuesday, urging countries to abolish the weapons resurging as a threat 80 years after the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. One of the three co-chairs of Nihon Hidankyo who accepted the prize, 92-year-old Nagasaki survivor Terumi Tanaka, demanded “action from governments to achieve” a nuclear-free world. The prize was presented at a formal ceremony in Oslo’s City Hall at a time when countries like Russia — which has the world’s largest nuclear arsenal — increasingly brandish the atomic threat. “I am infinitely saddened and angered that the ‘nuclear taboo’ threatens to be broken,” Tanaka told the assembled dignitaries and guests, some clad in traditional Norwegian bunads or Japanese kimonos. Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly made nuclear threats in a bid to deter the West and prevail in the war in Ukraine, and signed a decree in mid-November lowering the threshold for using atomic weapons. In a strike on the Ukrainian city of Dnipro a few days later, the Russian army demonstratively fired a new hypersonic missile capable of carrying a nuclear warhead, although in this instance it fired a regular payload instead. Nihon Hidankyo works tirelessly to rid the planet of the weapons of mass destruction, relying on testimonies from survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, known as hibakusha. The U.S. bombings of the two Japanese cities on August 6 and 9, 1945 killed 214,000 people, leading to Japan’s surrender and the end of World War II. Tanaka was 13 years old when Nagasaki was bombed, the hypocenter just 3 kilometers west of his home. Five members of his family were killed. He was upstairs reading a book when the A-bomb was dropped. “I heard the explosion and all of a sudden saw a bright white light, which surrounded everything and everything became silent,” he recalled. “I was really surprised. I felt my life in danger.” Rushing to the ground floor, he lost consciousness when two glass doors, blown out by the detonation, fell on him, though the glass did not break. Three days later, he and his mother left in search of their relatives. That was when they realized the scope of the disaster. “When we reached a ridge over the hills, we could look down over the city and that was when, for the first time, we saw that there was absolutely nothing left. Everything was black and charred.” He saw gravely wounded people fleeing the city, burnt bodies on both sides of the road. He and his mother cremated his aunt’s body “with our own hands.” “I was numb, not able to feel anything.” Chairman of the Nobel Committee Jorgen Watne Frydnes and representatives of 2024 Nobel Peace Prize winner Nihon Hidankyo, Terumi Tanaka (left), Shigemitsu Tanaka (center) and Toshiyuki Mimaki attend the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo City Hall on Tuesday. | NTB / via REUTERS Nihon Hidankyo’s ranks are dwindling with every passing year. The Japanese government lists around 106,800 hibakusha still alive today. Their average age is 85. For the West, the nuclear threat also comes from North Korea, which has increased its ballistic missile tests, and Iran, which is suspected of developing nuclear weapons though it denies this. Nine countries now have nuclear weapons: Britain, China, France, India, North Korea, Pakistan, Russia, the United States, and, unofficially, Israel. “Our movement has undoubtedly played a major role in creating the ‘nuclear taboo,’” Tanaka said. “However, there still remain 12,000 nuclear warheads on Earth today, 4,000 of which are operationally deployed, ready for immediate launch.” In 2017, 122 governments negotiated and adopted the historic U.N. Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), but the text is considered largely symbolic as no nuclear power has signed it. While all ambassadors stationed in Oslo were invited to Tuesday’s ceremony, the only nuclear powers in attendance were Britain, France, India, Pakistan and the United States. Russia, China, Israel and Iran were not present, the Nobel Institute said. Expressing concern about the world entering “a new, more unstable nuclear age,” Norwegian Nobel Committee chairman Jorgen Watne Frydnes warned that “a nuclear war could destroy our civilization.” “Today’s nuclear weapons … have far greater destructive power than the two bombs used against Japan in 1945. They could kill millions of us in an instant, injure even more, and disrupt the climate catastrophically,” he warned. This year’s Nobel prizes in the other disciplines — medicine, physics, chemistry, literature and economics — will be awarded at a separate ceremony in Stockholm. Source link

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Europe’s big battery ambitions are failing, and China is benefiting

Europe’s bid to build a homegrown battery industry to break China’s dominance in electric vehicles is failing. The most high-profile setback yet came with the Chapter 11 bankruptcy of Northvolt, a Swedish startup whose backers include Volkswagen and BMW. Fallout is spreading across the region as EV demand wanes and local manufacturers struggle to master the technology. Eleven out of 16 planned European-led battery factories have been delayed or canceled, according to a Bloomberg News analysis. Meanwhile, 10 of 13 projects in the region by Asian manufacturers such as China’s Contemporary Amperex Technology and South Korea’s Samsung SDI are on track. That suggests their grip on the sector will only increase, putting Western automakers at a competitive disadvantage when there’s a supply crunch or political conflict. Source link

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Nippon Life in talks to buy Resolution Life in deal worth $8.2 billion

Nippon Life Insurance is in the final stages of buyout talks with U.S. life insurer Resolution Life Group Holdings, Resolution said on Tuesday, in what would reportedly be a $8.2 billion deal that highlights Japanese insurers’ hunt for growth in the world’s biggest economy. The acquisition, which was first reported by the Nikkei business daily, would be worth around $8.2 billion, the newspaper said. If the deal goes ahead, it will be the largest ever foreign acquisition by a Japanese insurer. Nippon Life will purchase the shares it does not already own in Resolution Life from Blackstone and others to make it a wholly owned subsidiary in the second half of 2025 and will pay for the acquisition with cash on hand, the Nikkei said. Source link

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KDDI to build AI data center on Sharp’s LCD plant site

Sharp has announced an agreement with mobile phone carrier KDDI to build an artificial intelligence center on the site of the electronics maker’s halted liquid crystal display panel plant in the city of Sakai, Osaka Prefecture. According to the Monday announcement, KDDI will start construction of the data center within fiscal 2024, which ends next March, after acquiring the land, buildings and electrical facilities for the plant. KDDI aims to fully launch its operations in fiscal 2025. Sharp said in June that it had started talks on building an AI data center with KDDI and Tokyo-based system integrator Datasection. They initially planned to procure equipment including AI servers from California-based Super Micro Computer. Monday’s announcement included the withdrawal of Datasection and Super Micro Computer from the discussions, and KDDI will proceed with the construction of the data center on its own. Still, the four companies will continue to cooperate in the project. Sharp ceased operations at the Sakai plant, which had produced large LCD panels for television sets, in August. It is also in talks with mobile phone carrier SoftBank on building a data center on the site. Source link

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Former chief prosecutor of Osaka to plead not guilty over rape in shift

Kentaro Kitagawa, former head of the Osaka District Public Prosecutors Office, will plead not guilty of raping a female prosecutor while in office in September 2018, his lawyer said Tuesday. During his first trial hearing in October, Kitagawa, 65, said he would not contest the allegation, expressing deep remorse over having caused serious harm on the victim. The about-face came after the woman filed criminal complaints against another team member of Kitagawa’s over the leak of investigative information to his side before arrest, which resulted in the entire prosecutors office coming under public scrutiny, the defense lawyer told a news conference. The former chief Osaka prosecutor will deny criminal intent in future hearings because he believed there was consent, the lawyer said, adding that Kitagawa initially rejected the lawyer’s advice that he plead not guilty in order to avoid causing trouble. According to the indictment, Kitagawa sexually assaulted the drunk subordinate at his then-official residence in the city of Osaka between the night of Sept. 12, 2018, and the early hours of the following day. The woman quit in 2019 for personal reasons and later reported the incident to senior prosecutors, leading to Kitagawa’s arrest in June. “How long do I have to be humiliated and tortured until he is satisfied?” she said in a statement through her lawyer Tuesday. “I demand a long prison term commensurate with the serious crime committed by the head of prosecution as well as with his unrepentant and insensitive words and deeds that hurt the victim.” Source link

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Keidanren urges tax hike for rich with eye on ¥1 quadrillion GDP

Japan’s top business lobby has proposed a policy plan to boost the country’s gross domestic product to ¥1 quadrillion ($6.6 trillion), urging the government to raise taxes on the rich to achieve a “virtuous cycle of growth and distribution.” The Japan Business Federation, or Keidanren, on Monday suggested a series of policy proposals called “Future Design 2040,” aimed at tackling Japan’s declining birth rate and aging population and lack of energy resources. “The ‘Future Design 2040’ demonstrates what our country’s ideal society looks like in 2040, around the time (Japan’s) elderly population is expected to peak, and presents policies to realize it,” Masakazu Tokura, who heads the organization, told reporters. Source link

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South Korea’s opposition seeks to force through budget in power play

South Korean opposition leader Lee Jae-myung sought to force through a highly contested budget Tuesday in a show of political clout as he seeks to build momentum for another impeachment bid against President Yoon Suk Yeol in the coming days. “A swift passage of the budget bill will help ease the current anxiety and overcome the crisis,” Lee said at a meeting with members of his Democratic Party on Tuesday. The main opposition party’s one-sided downsizing of the budget by 4.1 trillion won ($2.9 billion) was among the factors cited by Yoon when he made his shock declaration of martial law last week. The DP’s revamped budget cuts back funding to Yoon’s office, prosecutors and the police earmarked in the ruling party’s earlier proposal. Source link

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Winter chill, hot baths and the risk of heat shock: How to stay safe

Winter is approaching, bringing a frosty chill to Japan and making hot baths especially inviting — but also risky. While Japan doesn’t typically experience deep-freeze conditions, the winter temperature drop increases the risk of bath-related fatalities caused by what is known as “heat shock,” a sudden change of blood pressure that can lead to fainting or strokes. If heat shock happens to someone in a bathtub, they could drown. Source link

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Hidankyo carries on hopes of late hibakusha in Nobel win

Oslo – Nihon Hidankyo, a group of hibakusha atomic bomb survivors, won this year’s Nobel Peace Prize after decades of work by now-deceased hibakusha, who spearheaded antinuclear activities while grappling with severe injuries, illnesses and the loss of their families. Former Hidankyo co-chair Senji Yamaguchi, who died in 2013 at age 82, addressed world leaders at a U.N. General Assembly special session on disarmament in June 1982, pleading, “No more Hiroshima, no more Nagasaki, no more war, no more hibakusha.” Yamaguchi experienced the Aug. 9, 1945, atomic bombing of Nagasaki about 1.1 kilometers from the center of the explosion. He sustained severe burns on his upper body, and keloid remained on his face. Source link

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