'Ignorant' to call Taiwan a country, China says responding to Taipei's foreign ministerNew Foto - 'Ignorant' to call Taiwan a country, China says responding to Taipei's foreign minister

By Laurie Chen BEIJING (Reuters) -It is "arrogant and ignorant" to call Taiwan a country and its future can only be decided by China's 1.4 billion people, the Chinese foreign ministry said on Thursday in a rebuff to the democratically-governed island's foreign minister. China views Taiwan as its own territory and says the island is one of its provinces with no right to be called a state. It has stepped up military and political pressure to assert those claims, including increasing the intensity of war games. Taiwan's Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lung said on Wednesday that China had no authority to decide whether Taiwan was a country because the island chooses its own government. He added that he would be happy to shake the hand of his Chinese opposite number, Wang Yi, in friendship. Speaking to reporters in Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said Taiwan had never been a country. "The relevant remarks only reveal that certain somebody's arrogance and ignorance, and they are naked provocations for Taiwan independence," she said. "The future of Taiwan can only be decided by the more than 1.4 billion Chinese people, including our Taiwan compatriots, and China will and must be reunified eventually, which is a historical trend that no force can stop." Taiwan's formal name is the Republic of China, the name of the government which in 1949 fled to the island after losing a bloody civil war with Mao Zedong's communists, who established the People's Republic of China. Taipei says Beijing has no right to speak for the island nor claim it as its own. In a video released on Thursday by his office, Taiwan President Lai Ching-te told military officers that "precious" freedom and democracy must be guarded by strength and constant vigilance. "Freedom and democracy are not gifts that fall from the sky; they are the fruits of the perseverance and sacrifice of generations of courageous people," he said, in footage filmed on Friday when Lai was visiting the armed forces in southern Taiwan. Lai, who China describes as a "separatist", is this week marking one year since he took office. China has rebuffed repeated offers from him for talks. (Reporting by Laurie Chen; Writing and additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in Taipei; Editing by Kate Mayberry)

'Ignorant' to call Taiwan a country, China says responding to Taipei's foreign minister

'Ignorant' to call Taiwan a country, China says responding to Taipei's foreign minister By Laurie Chen BEIJING (Reuters) -It is...
US tariff hikes, Myanmar war and sea disputes will top ASEAN summit agendaNew Foto - US tariff hikes, Myanmar war and sea disputes will top ASEAN summit agenda

PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia (AP) — Thecivil war in Myanmar,maritimedisputes in the South China SeaandU.S. tariff hikeswill top the agenda of a two-day Southeast Asian summit next week, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said. The meeting in Malaysia, the current chair of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations, on Monday will be followed by a summit on Tuesday with Chinese Premier Li Qiang and leaders from the Gulf Cooperation Council comprising Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. The GCC already has strong links with the U.S. and "wants to be close to China too," Anwar said. "We want to have that synergy to enhance trade investments, more effective collaboration," Anwar said in a media briefing late Wednesday. ASEAN countries have been hit byU.S. tariffs ranging from 10% to 49%.U.S. PresidentDonald Trumplast month announced a 90-day pause on the tariffs, prompting countries including Malaysia and Singapore to swiftly begin trade negotiations with Washington. Anwar said the U.S. has promised to review Malaysia's case "sympathetically." He said ASEAN is also working together to see how it can negotiate with the U.S. as a bloc. At the same time, he said that ASEAN must build its economic resilience by deepening links with other partners such as China, India and the European Union. Anwar said the U.S.-China rivalry would not split the bloc as the region continues to engage both superpowers. He also downplayed territorial disputes between ASEAN members and China in the South China Sea, which Beijing claims virtually in its entirety, and Myanmar's conflict since the 2021 military takeover. Anwar met last month with Myanmar military chief Gen. Ming Aung Hlaing in Bangkok and held virtual talks with the opposition National Unity Government. Even though the talks were currently focused on humanitarian aid, Anwar said he hopes they could eventually push a peace process forward. Min Aung Hlaing has been barred from attending ASEAN meetings after the military refused to comply with ASEAN's peace plan, which includes delivery of humanitarian aid and negotiations. Opponents and critics of the military government say aid is not freely allowed into areas not under the army's control, and accuse the army of violating its self-declared ceasefire with dozens of airstrikes.

US tariff hikes, Myanmar war and sea disputes will top ASEAN summit agenda

US tariff hikes, Myanmar war and sea disputes will top ASEAN summit agenda PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia (AP) — Thecivil war in Myanmar,maritimedisput...
Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1433 on Thursday, May 22, 2025New Foto - Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1433 on Thursday, May 22, 2025

If you're stuck on today's Wordle answer, we're here to help—but beware of spoilers for Wordle 1433 ahead.Let's start with a few hints. There are three vowels out of the five letters in the word today. Today's Wordle begins with a consonant. Yes, there are double letters in today's Wordle. Marching band members know these music sheet holders well. They're great for holding any kind of paper, though. OK, that's it for hints—I don't want to totally give it away before revealing the answer!Related:16 Games Like Wordle To Give You Your Word Game Fix More Than Once Every 24 HoursWe'll have the answer below this friendly reminder ofhow to play the game.SPOILERS BELOW—do not scroll any further if you don't want the answer revealed. Today's Wordle answer on Thursday, May 22, 2025, is FOLIO.How'd you do?Up Next:-Catch Up on Other Wordle Answers From This Week-Hints, Clues and Answers to the NYT's 'Mini Crossword' Puzzle

Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1433 on Thursday, May 22, 2025

Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1433 on Thursday, May 22, 2025 If you're stuck on today's Wordle answer, we're here to help...
Before the word 'transgender' existed, there was Bambi, the dazzling Parisian iconNew Foto - Before the word 'transgender' existed, there was Bambi, the dazzling Parisian icon

PARIS (AP) — The moment that changed queer history occurred on a sweltering summer day in early 1950s Algeria. An effeminate teenage boy named Jean-Pierre Pruvot stood mesmerized as traffic halted and crowds swarmed around a scandalous spectacle unfolding in the conservative Algiers streets. All had stopped to look at Coccinelle, the flamboyant "transvestite" star of Paris' legendary cabaret, the Carrousel de Paris, who strutted defiantly down the boulevard, impeccably dressed as a woman, sparking awe and outrage and literally stopping traffic. What Pruvot — who would become famous under the female stage name "Bambi" — witnessed was more than mere performance. It was an act of resistance from the ashes of the Nazipersecution of the LGBTQ+ communityin World War II. "I didn't even know that (identity) existed," Bambi told The Associated Press in a rare interview. "I said to myself, 'I'm going to do the same.'" Decades before transgender became a household word and "RuPaul's Drag Race" became aworldwide hit— before visibility brought rights and recognition — the Carrousel troupe in the late 1940s emerged as a glamorous, audacious resistance. Bambi soon joined Coccinelle, April Ashley, and Capucine to revive queer visibility in Europe for the first time since the Nazis had violently destroyed Berlin's thriving queer scene of the 1930s. The Nazis branded gay men with pink triangles, deported and murdered thousands, erasing queer culture overnight. Just a few years after the war, Carrousel performers strode onto the global stage, a glittering frontline against lingering prejudice. Remarkably, audiences at the Carrousel knew exactly who these performers were — women who, as Bambi puts it, "would bare all." Elvis Presley, Ava Gardner, Édith Piaf, Maria Callas and Marlene Dietrich all flocked to the cabaret, drawn to the allure of performers labeled "travestis." The stars sought out the Carrousel to flirt with postwar Paris's wild side. It was an intoxicating contradiction: cross-dressing was criminalized, yet the venue was packed with celebrities. The history of queer liberation shifted in this cabaret, one sequin at a time. The contrast was chilling: as Bambi arrived in Paris and found fame dancing naked for film stars, across the English Channel in early 1950s Britain the code-breaking geniusAlan Turingwas chemically castrated for being gay, leading to his suicide. Evenings spent with legends Today, nearing 90, Marie-Pierre Pruvot — as she has been known for decades by some — lives alone in an unassuming apartment in northeastern Paris. Her bookshelves spill over with volumes of literature and philosophy. A black feather boa, a lone whisper from her glamorous past, hangs loosely over a chair. Yet Bambi wasn't just part of the show; she was the show — with expressive almond-shaped eyes, pear-shaped face, and beauty indistinguishable from any desired Parisienne. Yet one key difference set her apart — a difference criminalized by French law. The depth of her history only becomes apparent as she points to striking and glamorous photographs and recounts evenings spent with legends. Such was their then-fame that the name of Bambi's housemate, Coccinelle, became slang for "trans" in Israel — often cruelly. Once Dietrich, the starry queer icon, arrived at the tiny Madame Arthur cabaret alongside Jean Marais, the actor and Jean Cocteau's gay lover. "It was packed," Bambi recalled. "Jean Marais instantly said, 'Sit (me and Marlene) on stage' And so they were seated onstage, legs crossed, champagne by their side, watching us perform." Another day, Dietrich swept in to a hair salon. "Marlene always had this distant, untouchable air — except when late for the hairdresser," Bambi says, smiling. "She rushed in, kissed the hairdresser, settled beneath the dryer, stretched her long legs imperiously onto a stool, and lit a cigarette. Her gaunt pout as she smoked — I'll never forget it," she says, her impression exaggerated as she sucked in her cheeks. Perhaps Dietrich wasn't her favorite star. Then there was Piaf, who, one evening, teasingly joked about her protégé, the French singing legendCharles Aznavour, performing nearby. "She asked, 'What time does Aznavour start?'" Bambi recalled. "Someone said, 'Midnight.' So she joked, 'Then it'll be finished by five past midnight.'" Reassignment surgery Behind the glamour lay constant danger. Living openly as a woman was illegal. "There was a police decree," Bambi recalls. "It was a criminal offense for a man to dress as a woman. But if you wore pants and flat shoes, you weren't considered dressed as a woman." The injustice was global. Homosexuality remained criminalized for decades: in Britain until 1967, in parts of the U.S. until 2003. Progress came slowly. In 1950s Paris, though, Bambi bought hormones casually over-the-counter, "like salt and pepper at the grocery." "It was much freer then," but stakes were high, she said. Sisters were jailed, raped, driven into sex work. One comrade died after botched gender reassignment surgery in Casablanca. "There was only Casablanca," she emphasized, with one doctor performing the high-risk surgeries. Bambi waited cautiously until her best friends, Coccinelle and April Ashley, had safely undergone procedures from the late 50s before doing the same herself. Each night required extraordinary courage. Post-war Paris was scarred, haunted. The Carrousel wasn't mere entertainment — but a fingers' up to the past in heels and eyeliner. "There was this after-the-war feeling — people wanted to have fun," Bambi recalled. With no television, the cabarets were packed every night. "You could feel it — people demanded to laugh, to enjoy themselves, to be happy. They wanted to live again … to forget the miseries of the war." In 1974, sensing a shift, Bambi quietly stepped away from celebrity, unwilling to become "an aging showgirl." Swiftly obtaining legal female identity in Algeria, she became a respected teacher and Sorbonne scholar, hiding her dazzling past beneath Marcel Proust and careful anonymity for decades. 'I never wore a mask' Given what she's witnessed, or because of it, she's remarkably serene about recent controversies around gender. This transgender pioneer feels wokeism has moved too quickly, fueling a backlash. She sees U.S. PresidentDonald Trumpas part of "aglobal reactionagainst wokeism… families aren't ready… we need to pause and breathe a little before moving forward again." Inclusive pronouns and language "complicate the language," she insists. Asked about Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling's anti-transstance, her response is calmly dismissive: "Her opinion counts no more than a baker's or a cleaning lady's." Bambi has outlived her Carrousel sisters — April Ashley, Capucine, and Coccinelle. Still elegant, she stands quietly proud. When she first stepped onstage, the world lacked the language to describe her. She danced anyway. Now, words exist. Rights exist. Movements exist. And Bambi, still standing serenely, quietly reaffirms her truth: "I never wore a mask," she says softly, but firmly. "Except when I was a boy."

Before the word ‘transgender’ existed, there was Bambi, the dazzling Parisian icon

Before the word 'transgender' existed, there was Bambi, the dazzling Parisian icon PARIS (AP) — The moment that changed queer histor...
AP PHOTOS: 2 staff members of Israeli embassy killed in shooting near Jewish museum in DCNew Foto - AP PHOTOS: 2 staff members of Israeli embassy killed in shooting near Jewish museum in DC

WASHINGTON (AP) — Two staff members of the Israeli embassy in Washington were shot and killed Wednesday evening while leaving an event at a Jewish museum, and the suspect yelled, "Free, free Palestine" after he was arrested, police said. The two victims, a man and a woman, were leaving an event at the Capital Jewish Museum when the suspect approached a group of four people and opened fire, Metropolitan Police Chief Pamela Smith said at a news conference. The suspect, identified as Elias Rodriguez, 30, of Chicago, was observed pacing outside the museum before the shooting, walked into the museum after the shooting and was detained by event security, Smith said. —— This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

AP PHOTOS: 2 staff members of Israeli embassy killed in shooting near Jewish museum in DC

AP PHOTOS: 2 staff members of Israeli embassy killed in shooting near Jewish museum in DC WASHINGTON (AP) — Two staff members of the Israeli...

 

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