'Confident' China touts poverty alleviation efforts amid trade war with the U.S.New Foto - 'Confident' China touts poverty alleviation efforts amid trade war with the U.S.

MALIPO, China — The rural villages of Malipo are a world away from gleaming Chinese cities like Beijing and Shanghai, reached by narrow roads that sometimes skirt dangerously close to deep ravines. Schoolchildren eat simple breakfasts while squatting on sidewalks, and even a local official complained that the remote mountain villages lacked access to the latest 5G internet connection. But Chinese officials point to overall progress in this thickly forested, highly mountainous border region in southwestChinaas a reason for their "confidence" in the country's development model, and in its ability to weather any trade war with the United States. "We have full confidence and the capability to overcome all difficulties," Vice Foreign Minister Hua Chunying said last week during a government-sponsored trip to the rural county of Malipo in Yunnan province, on the border withVietnam. "As for what the United States is doing, we really don't want any kind of war, but if we have to face up to reality, then we have no fear at all," she told reporters at a middle school. "The ordinary people already feel the suffering from the tariff war, so I really hope the [U.S.] administration will come back to normal." Hua was speaking before theU.S. and China agreed to slash tariffs on each other's importsin what Beijing said showed the effectiveness ofits resistanceagainstPresident Donald Trump'stariff "bullying." She and other officials said Malipo, where 233,000 people are spread among several towns and hundreds of "village groups," is a model for China's poverty alleviation efforts in recent decades. Per capita disposable income in Malipo was $2,300 a year last year, compared with about $69 a year in 1992. But Beijing's professed confidence belies real concern about the work that remains to be done as well as the potential impact of U.S. tariffs as China struggles withstructural imbalances and slowing economic growth. The situation spans China's urban-rural divide and is obvious even to residents of Malipo. "The economy is not that good," said Liu Huixin, a vendor selling processed fruits and other products from Vietnam and Thailand at a market. "Look at many shops around, people are not buying," he said. Ending "absolute poverty" — a goal that Chinese PresidentXi Jinpingsaid was officially achieved at the end of 2020 — is considered essential for reducing income inequality in the world's second-biggest economy as it strives to catch up with the United States. More than 450 million of China's 1.4 billion people live in rural areas, and getting them to spend more on consumer products is crucial as China tries to reduce its economic dependence on exports threatened by tariffs. China has also touted its "poverty alleviation" program as a model for developing countries in the Global South that face similar challenges. "The experience of Malipo in poverty alleviation has global significance," said Liu Guiqing, 40, a senior Chinese diplomat who is also county vice mayor of Malipo under a program that partners central government ministries and wealthy provinces and institutions with impoverished areas. Hua said the strength of China's system is its ability to "concentrate resources" on people's urgent needs. Beijing is thought to have spent hundreds of billions of dollars on poverty alleviation since 2015. China's approach to reducing inequality combines "coercive top-down control" with high social spending in an effort to "highlight the perceived failures of liberal free-market capitalism," Rana Mitter, a historian and political scientist at the Harvard Kennedy School, wrote in anew Foreign Affairs article. Programs such as the one in Malipo are "an increasingly important part of China's messaging, that it has development solutions for rural as well as urban areas," Mitter told NBC News. "This is likely to be particularly attractive in the many Global South countries that still have large agricultural sectors and may look to Chinese examples to find ways to modernize their own rural area," he said. Companies investing in Malipo are still motivated by the "invisible hand of the market forces," said Jason Choi, director of the Sunwah Group, a Hong Kong-based conglomerate. He said the improved infrastructure and government support were important factors in the decision by his family's company to invest about $7 million in a modern tea factory in Malipo, as well as the branding potential associated with Malipo's ancient tea trees. "We have created employment directly for more than a hundred people, and for some 10,000 people downstream and upstream," said Choi, 25. In nearby Jinping, another county targeted for poverty alleviation, Colorful Group, a company based in the Chinese technology hub of Shenzhen that specializes in graphics cards used in video games, has invested some $15 million in a smart agriculture company and other ventures, creating production jobs for more than 200 people, and for many more engaged in contract farming. Its corn products are sold in China at Walmart's Sam's Club, 7-Eleven shops and on the e-commerce platform JD.com, in addition to being exported to Southeast Asia and elsewhere. Asked about the impact of the U.S.-China trade war, Malipo Mayor Xiao Changju pointed to the rapid development prospects of border trade with Vietnam and other Southeast Asian nations. He also echoed a line frequently used by Chinese officials, saying: "We don't like to fight a trade war, but we are not afraid of one."

'Confident' China touts poverty alleviation efforts amid trade war with the U.S.

'Confident' China touts poverty alleviation efforts amid trade war with the U.S. MALIPO, China — The rural villages of Malipo are a ...
Ocean patrols and narcotics playbooks: How a Florida city is tackling human smugglingNew Foto - Ocean patrols and narcotics playbooks: How a Florida city is tackling human smuggling

A human smuggler tells a potential customer in an audio message in Mandarin that there are now two potential sea routes for illegally entering the U.S. One is to depart by boat near the U.S.-Mexico border and then come ashore near Los Angeles. The second departs Nassau in the Bahamas by boat for the Miami area. The smuggler says in the audio, obtained by NBC News from a potential smuggling customer, that enforcement off the coast of Florida has increased, but quickly reassures the potential customer, "You won't get caught." Not so, authorities say. Out on a labyrinth of canals in Coral Gables, Florida, police are on the lookout for fishermen who might be spotters or boats carrying more weight than normal. Officials have been on heightened alert because the city's mangrove-shrouded waterways have become a landing destination for groups of Chinese migrants seeking illegal entry into the United States. With the southern border a less viable option, these migrants have found Florida via the Bahamas to be a workaround. But authorities have been cracking down and are seeing a decrease in smuggling attempts over the last few months. The number of Chinese nationals apprehended by Florida-based Customs and Border Patrol officers has climbed and dipped in recent years — 406 in 2020, 616 the year after, then 483 in 2024. But there have been no known smuggling attempts in the Coral Gables area since late January of this year. Local law enforcement officials admit they aren't sure if that's due to increased enforcement, Trump's policies that have had a similar impact on border crossings — or if smugglers have simply gotten more sophisticated. "We believe we have kind of a handle on our side," said Coral Gables Police Chief Edward J. Hudak. "[But] where is it going to go next? [Smuggling] is like water. Water is going to go wherever it can go." The drop comes aftertwo high-profile human smuggling incidentsin the affluent city and another just off shore since the start of the year have resulted in the apprehension of nearly 50 Chinese migrants. Another incident appears to have occured on Dec. 19, 2024, almost a full month before Coral Gables police made their first human smuggling stop. Surveillance footage obtained by NBC News from a neighbor's door camera shows a group of 18 Asian migrants walking into a waiting U-Haul van parked next to a waterway, as dozens of vehicles drive by. No police are seen, and there's no record of the apparent migrants or alleged smuggler ever being apprehended. Overall, encounters at the southwest border are down 93% compared to this time last year, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and smugglers have pivoted to sea routes off the coasts of California and Florida, experts tell NBC News. More than35,000 Chinese migrants crossed the southern border in 2023, but crossings have dropped due to stricter enforcement. Last year, apprehensions of Chinese nationals at the border reached arecord high. The Bahamas has quickly become a strategic departure point for many of these migrants coming ashore in Florida due to that country's lifting of visa restrictions for Chinese citizens. "These human smugglers are being more creative," said Leland Lazarus, the associate director of national security at Florida International University's Jack D. Gordon Institute for Public Policy. "They see one route dropping off in the southwest border, and they're trying maritime routes more frequently." Police say it's a challenge to patrol the intricate waterways that snake through Coral Gables as well as the yawning stretch of ocean just outside, but they do have a past playbook. The area has been a smuggling hot spot for decades, first for drugs and now, it appears, for humans. "We've just dusted off our playbook from the 1980s and 1990s, when the smugglers were bringing in narco narcotics," said Hudak. "But this is human cargo now, so that's really changed the game for us." Hudak says the sea-lanes used by human smugglers now are the same ones used for drugs previously. And the smugglers' knack for evolving and evading authorities also appears unchanged. "There are ingenious ways to get narcotics into this country, and there are ingenious ways to get human beings into this country," said Hudak. Further communication between the smuggler and his potential customer offers a glimpse at how some criminals may be managing to stay one step ahead of authorities. Rather than using the traditional panga boats or speedboats to ferry migrants across seas, the smuggler says he's now using yachts. "Small boats will get in trouble," he writes to the potential customer in Mandarin. "The big boat won't draw as much attention." Included in his message was a four-second clip of a docked yacht. The price for the journey, including use of the luxury vessel, was $35,000. Law enforcement and some residents tell NBC News the human smuggling busts in Coral Gables weren't isolated incidents, and they believe many more migrants have been smuggled into the area without detection. "This was not a first time on either one of these," Hudak said, referring to the two smuggling operations. "People have seen things in the past and didn't say anything."

Ocean patrols and narcotics playbooks: How a Florida city is tackling human smuggling

Ocean patrols and narcotics playbooks: How a Florida city is tackling human smuggling A human smuggler tells a potential customer in an audi...
Cassie's graphic testimony of 'freak offs' may set the stage for what's to come in Diddy's trialNew Foto - Cassie's graphic testimony of 'freak offs' may set the stage for what's to come in Diddy's trial

On red carpets from Los Angeles to the French Riviera,Sean "Diddy" Combsand theR&B singer Cassieintertwined arms, radiating an attractive and carefree façade for the cameras. But behind closed doors, she said, she "felt trapped." In the first week of testimony in Combs'federal sex trafficking trialin New York, Cassie, whose real name is Casandra Ventura, described over four days on the witness stand a tumultuous relationship with the music impresario that began in her early 20s and lasted on and off for over a decade. As the government's star witness, her responses gave a window into a world centered around paid sexual encounters lasting days and sometimes occurring weekly — known as "freak offs" — that she said she was forced to endure under the threat of physical and psychological abuse. Sign up for the "Diddy on Trial" newsletter for key developments and analysis The "freak offs" were so regular, she said, they "became a job." Much of what Ventura, 38, testified to was graphic, from the sex acts with male escorts to the violence, including the fights with Combs that left her covered in bruises, she said, if she attempted to rebuff a "freak off." A visibly pregnant Ventura also recounted how,she said, Combs rapedher on her living room floor in 2018, which he has denied. But as explicit as the line of questioning was from the prosecution, it was necessary, some legal experts say, because it helped to lay a foundation for the federal government's case in the weeks to come. Ultimately,12 jurors must decidewhether Combs, 55, violated federal laws against racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has vehemently denied all five counts against him, but if found guilty of even one, he couldface a lengthy prison sentence. Rachel Maimin, a former federal prosecutor for the Southern District of New York, said a crucial piece of evidence —security videofrom a 2016 assault in a Los Angeles hotel hallway in which Combs, wearing only a white towel, could be seen beating and dragging Ventura — is going to stick in jurors' minds. On the stand, Ventura explained the incident was the result of her trying to leave a "freak off," which sometimes occurred in hotel suites around the world. Ventura "really was able to tell a story from start to finish," Maimin said. "She was able to get into some of the more upsetting and disturbing pieces of the case, including the video of when Combs is beating her. It sets the stage for the rest of the case, where the prosecution is going to have to back up her testimony with all of their evidence." Ventura said it was under the direction of Combs that she would use drugs and have sex with male escorts, some found on Craigslist and paid upward of $6,000. Meanwhile, she said, Combs' security was around constantly to provide supplies, including the drugs, condoms and baby oil. Hanging over their relationship, she said, was the fear that Combs might blackmail her with recorded videos of the sex acts. She panicked, she said, when she was hosting an event in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in 2014 and "someone I was working with said they saw a sexually explicit video of me." She quickly texted Combs, and told jurors that any leaked footage "would put my career in jeopardy" and "could ruin everything I worked for." A year earlier, Ventura said, she was mortified when she saw Combs watching sexually explicit videos of her while they flew home on a commercial flight after having attended the Cannes Film Festival in France. "He pulled up 'freak off' videos on his laptop that I thought were deleted," Ventura testified. "He was showing them with other people around. I said, 'You are embarrassing me.' I was scared. I felt trapped. How do you get out of this situation?" But to stave off his rage, she said, she then arranged a "freak off" within hours of them landing, otherwise, "he said the videos would be released." Mitchell Epner, a former federal prosecutor for the District of New Jersey who nowpractices criminal defensein New York, said Ventura's testimony has been key, because if jurors find her to be credible, she helps the prosecution's case that alleges sex trafficking did occur by means of "force, fraud or coercion." "If she was coerced by violence or threats of violence or blackmail materials into participating in the 'freak offs' over her objections, then the trial is over," Epner said. "Everything else, which will go on for weeks, will not matter if the jury accepts that she was a credible witness, and they believe beyond a reasonable doubt that she was telling the truth when she said I didn't want to do these things, he knew I didn't want to do these things, and the only reason I did them was that I was afraid that he would beat me or that he would release the videos." He added that the way Combs' defense team painted him in their opening statements as a "very flawed individual," prone to violence and jealousy in his relationships, was striking. "It's one of the strangest trials that we've seen because the prosecution and defense agree about so many of the facts," Epner said. During cross-examination, defense lawyer Anna Estevao got Ventura to speak about her love for Combs. Text messages were shown that suggest she knew she had the agency to walk away from him after they fought. Other messages also showed her appearing to be a willing participant in the sexual encounters: "I'm always ready to freak off," she wrote in 2009. "For the defense in the case, the key to the castle is persuading the jury that everything done here was consensual," said Mark Zauderer, a veteran trial and appellate lawyer in New York. Ventura also told Estevao that shesettled her 2023 lawsuitin which she accused Combs of rape and abuse for $20 million, and initially her lawyer asked for $30 million as she had planned to write a book about her relationship with Combs. (Combs did not admit to  wrongdoing in settling the suit.) Zauderer said jurors may see that sum as either Ventura having "vindicated herself" after what she endured or "the defense is trying to cast it as that she was just looking for money." Maimin, the former federal prosecutor, said she still wants to see how prosecutors will further Ventura's testimony to show how Combs allegedly wielded his power andbusiness pursuits— built around Bad Boy Records, which he founded in 1993 — as a "criminal enterprise." In their indictment, prosecutors say Combs "relied on the employees, resources and influence of the multi-faceted business empire that he led and controlled — creating a criminal enterprise whose members and associates engaged in, and attempted to engage in, among other crimes, sex trafficking, forced labor, kidnapping, arson, bribery, and obstruction of justice." "I don't know that she got them all the way there," Maimin said of Ventura's testimony. "As a matter of law, it is enough just to have the testimony of one witness," Maimin said, "but given the complexity of the charges against him, including the racketeering conspiracy part, it would be very difficult to say you've proven your case beyond a reasonable doubt without corroborating evidence." Neither the prosecution nor the defense has released full witness lists for the trial, which is expected to last at least eight weeks. Dawn Richard, a former member of the girl group Danity Kane, founded by Combs, took the stand briefly late Friday as the prosecution's next witness and is expected to continue testifying Monday. Richardfiled a lawsuit last yearagainst Combs, alleging he groped, assaulted and imprisoned her, and that she also saw him beating Ventura. A lawyer for Combs called the allegations "manufactured" and said Richard was seeking "a pay day." Other witnesses for the prosecution in the coming days may include Ventura's mother and a personal assistant of Combs. If you or someone you know is facing domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence hotline for help at (800) 799-SAFE (7233), or go towww.thehotline.orgfor more. States often have domestic violence hotlines as well.

Cassie's graphic testimony of 'freak offs' may set the stage for what's to come in Diddy's trial

Cassie's graphic testimony of 'freak offs' may set the stage for what's to come in Diddy's trial On red carpets from Los...
Musician charged with Chris Brown in alleged London nightclub assaultNew Foto - Musician charged with Chris Brown in alleged London nightclub assault

LONDON (AP) — A fellow musician and friend ofChris Brownhas been charged alongside the Grammy-winning singer onallegations they beat and seriously injureda music producer at a London nightclub in 2023, police said Saturday. Omolulu Akinlolu, 38, who performs under the name "Hoody Baby," was due to appear in Manchester Magistrates' Court on a charge of causing grievous bodily harm with intent. Brown, 36, was jailed without bail on the same charge Friday, throwing his upcoming tour into question. He is scheduled to appear at Southwark Crown Court in London on June 13, which is the third day of his world tour. Akinlolu is a rapper from Dallas, Texas, who has collaborated with Brown and Lil Wayne. He also goes by the names "Fat Leopard" and "Super Hood." Police gave no details on what role Akinlolu played in the alleged assault but said he was charged in connection with the same incident as Brown. Brown was on tour in the U.K. in February 2023 when he launched an unprovoked attack on producer Abe Diaw, striking him several times with a bottle at the Tape nightclub in the swanky Mayfair neighborhood in London, prosecutor Hannah Nicholls said in court Friday. Brown then chased Diaw and punched and kicked him in an attack caught on surveillance camera in front of a club full of people, she said. Brown did not enter a plea and only spoke to confirm his name, birth date and gave his address as the Lowry Hotel, where he was arrested in Manchester early Thursday and taken into custody. Brown's representative has not responded to multiple requests for comment from The Associated Press. Brown, often called by his nickname Breezy, burst onto the music scene as a teen in 2005 and has become a major hitmaker over the years with notable songs such as "Run It," "Kiss Kiss" and "Without You." He won his first Grammy for best R&B album in 2011 for "F.A.M.E." and then earned his second gold trophy in the same category for "11:11 (Deluxe)" earlier this year. He is scheduled to launch an international tour next month with artists Jhene Aiko, Summer Walker and Bryson Tiller, opening with a European leg on June 8 in Amsterdam before starting North America shows in July. ___ Jonathan Landrum Jr. contributed to this report from Los Angeles.

Musician charged with Chris Brown in alleged London nightclub assault

Musician charged with Chris Brown in alleged London nightclub assault LONDON (AP) — A fellow musician and friend ofChris Brownhas been charg...
Angelina Jolie Dazzles Cannes and Champions Global Cinema at the Chopard Gala: 'Anything to Make It More Accessible Is Necessary and Welcome'New Foto - Angelina Jolie Dazzles Cannes and Champions Global Cinema at the Chopard Gala: 'Anything to Make It More Accessible Is Necessary and Welcome'

Oscar winner Angelina Jolie made a special appearance at the Cannes Film Festival on Friday night to present the Trophée Chopard to rising stars Marie Colomb and Finn Bennett. During the glamorous dinner ceremony, Jolie reflected on the power of international cinema to make an impact in times of global turmoil. "I love international cinema," Jolie told the star-studded assembly of guests, which included Cannes jury president Juliette Binoche and her fellow jurors, including Halle Berry, Jeremy Strong, Leïla Slimani and Alba Rohrwacher, as well as Quentin Tarantino and Carla Bruni. "We are brought to other lands, into private moments, even on the battlefield, we connect and we empathize. I think of films like 'My Father Shadow' [set during the during the 1993 Nigerian election crisis], which is premiering here at Cannes. Anything that is possible to make international cinema more accessible is necessary and welcome." More from Variety Lloyd Lee Choi Explores Working Class Struggles in 'Lucky Lu' Nigeria's BRS Studios Follows Netflix Chart-Topper 'Tokunbo' With Three-Pic Slate (EXCLUSIVE) Nile Entertainment Takes African Rights to Action-Thriller 'Son of the Soil,' From U.K. Genre Label Action Xtreme (EXCLUSIVE) "And none of us are naive," Jolie, whose contributions as a humanitarian are as vaunted as her acting career, continued. "We know that many artists around the world lack the freedom and security to tell their stories, and many have lost their lives like Fatima Hassouna, killed in Gaza, Shaden Gardood killed in Sudan, and Victoria Amelina killed in Ukraine, and so many other extraordinary artists who should be with us now. We owe all of those risking their lives and sharing their stories and experiences a debt of gratitude, because they have helped us to learn and to evolve." The presentation of the 25th edition of the Trophée Chopard took place during a dinner on Carlton Beach co-hosted by Cannes Film Festival president Iris Knobloch, general delegate Thierry Frémaux and Chopard co-president and artistic director Caroline Scheufele. Created in 2001, the Trophée Chopard celebrates emerging international cinema talent, each year honoring one actress and one actor with promising careers. Colomb and Bennett follow last year's honorees Sophie Wilde and Mike Faist. Other recipients for the award, which often heralds more laurels to come, include Marion Cotillard, Diane Kruger, Léa Seydoux, Florence Pugh, Jessie Buckley, Niels Schneider, Jeremy Irvine and Joe Alwyn. So, what is it like to have Jolie as your fairy godmother? "She really cares about fostering young actors. I feel really honored, really lucky to be here," Bennett toldVarietyat the dinner about meeting Jolie. "I just wanted to ask how she does it all. Like, as you can see, this is crazy. And she deals with it so well, completely calmly. And I think that's amazing." Colomb, too, was struck by Jolie's down-to-earth nature as they ascended the famed red steps at the Grand Lumiere before the Chopard event. "She's gorgeous, she's super beautiful. I was looking at her and I was like, 'Wow! It's incredible, it's unreal.' And at the same time it's funny because when I met her, I met a normal, nice human being," Colomb said. "Then when you see the photos or videos afterwards, all my friends write to me like, 'What is that?' So, it's pretty crazy but cool at the same time." Jolie shared similar praise for the young talents. "I think they're very brave in their work. They make very brave choices, and they're very committed and emotional and open, so they are very promising creatives, and I think they're gonna give a lot," Jolie toldVariety. "They seem like very gracious, grateful young people, who are very professional." Jolie also shared the best advicehergodmother, Jacqueline Bissett, gave her about navigating the business: "Learn French and do French films." Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Emmy Predictions: Talk/Scripted Variety Series - The Variety Categories Are Still a Mess; Netflix, Dropout, and 'Hot Ones' Stir Up Buzz Oscars Predictions 2026: 'Sinners' Becomes Early Contender Ahead of Cannes Film Festival Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Angelina Jolie Dazzles Cannes and Champions Global Cinema at the Chopard Gala: ‘Anything to Make It More Accessible Is Necessary and Welcome’

Angelina Jolie Dazzles Cannes and Champions Global Cinema at the Chopard Gala: 'Anything to Make It More Accessible Is Necessary and Wel...

 

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