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  • Trump threatens to pull out of planned Xi meeting

    Trump threatens to pull out of planned Xi meeting

    President Donald Trump has threatened to pull out of an expected meeting with President Xi Jinping of China after Beijing tightened its rules for exports of rare earths.

    In a post on social media, Trump said he now saw “no reason” to meet with President Xi later this month, accusing China of “becoming very hostile” and trying to hold the world “captive”.

    He also threatened a “massive” increase in tariffs on Chinese goods, raising fears about further escalation of trade tensions between the two economic giants.

    Financial markets dropped in the wake of the remarks, with the S&P 500 down 1.8% in mid-afternoon trade in New York.

    The last time Beijing tightened export controls – after Trump raised tariffs on Chinese goods early this year – there was an outcry from many US firms reliant on the materials . Carmaker Ford even had to temporarily pause production.

    In addition to tightening rules for rare earth exports, China has opened a monopoly investigation into the US tech firm Qualcomm that could stall its acquisition of another chipmaker.

    Although Qualcomm is based in the US, a significant portion of its business is concentrated in China.

    Beijing has also said it will charge new port fees to ships with ties to the US, including those owned or operated by US firms.

    “Some very strange things are happening in China!” Trump wrote in a post on social media on Friday. “They are becoming very hostile.”

    The US and China have been in a fragile trade détente since May, when the two sides agreed to drop triple-digit tariffs on each others’ goods that had nearly stopped trade between the two countries.

    Officials have held a series of talks since then on matters including TikTok, agricultural purchases, and the trade of advanced technology like semiconductors and rare earths supplied by China, which are key components in cars, smartphones and many other items.

    The two sides were expected to meet again this month at a summit in South Korea.

    China expert Jonathan Czin, a fellow at the Brookings Institution, said Xi’s recent actions were a bid to shape the upcoming talks, noting that the recent rare earths directive does not go into effect immediately.

    “He’s looking for ways to seize the initiative,” he said. “The Trump administration is having to play a game of whack-a-mole and deal with these issues as they come up.”

    He added that he did not think China was worried about US retaliation in response.

    “What China took away from the Liberation Day tariffs and the cycle of escalation followed by de-escalation is that the Chinese side had a higher pain threshold,” he said. “From their perspective, the Trump administration blinked.”

    In prior rounds of trade talks, China has pushed for looser US restrictions on semiconductors. It is also interested in securing more stable tariff policies that would make it easier for its businesses to sell into the US.

    Xi has previously used as leverage his country’s dominance of production of rare earths, critical minerals and other materials.

    But the export rules unveiled this week target overseas defence manufacturers, making them particularly serious, said Gracelin Baskaran, director of the critical minerals security program at Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.

    “Nothing makes America move like targeting our defence industry,” she said. “The US is going to have to negotiate because we have limited options, and in an era of rising geopolitical tension and potential conflict, we need to build our industrial defence base.”

    While a Trump-Xi meeting now looks unlikely, she said it was not necessarily completely off the table. Ms Baskaran said there’s still time and room for talks. China’s new rules don’t take effect until December.

    “Negotiations are likely imminent,” she said. “Who does them and where they happen will be determined with time.”

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  • ‘We were the original punks’: the rebel women revitalising local music scenes | Punk

    ‘We were the original punks’: the rebel women revitalising local music scenes | Punk

    Ask Cathy Loughead the most punk thing she’s ever done, and she doesn’t miss a beat: “I went on stage with my neck broken in two places. I couldn’t bounce around, so I blinged the brace up instead. That was a great gig.”

    Loughead is part…

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  • RCC Monthly Rewind: Key News and Expert Insights You May Have Missed in September 2025

    RCC Monthly Rewind: Key News and Expert Insights You May Have Missed in September 2025

    September delivered several developments in renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Highlights included real-world findings on belzutifan (Welireg)–related adverse effects across tumor types, insights from the phase 1 STELLAR-002 trial (NCT05176483)…

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  • Quadri Aruna explains his decision to withdraw from 2025 African Table Tennis Championships

    Quadri Aruna explains his decision to withdraw from 2025 African Table Tennis Championships

    Aruna, the first African ever to reach the quarter-finals of the Olympic Games in table tennis, is also the second most decorated player in the history of the ITTF-Africa Championships—behind Egypt’s Omar Assar, who will be chasing his fifth…

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  • Netflix Launches Party Games for TVs

    Netflix Launches Party Games for TVs

    Netflix is expanding its video game offerings from mobile into TV by launching party games that its subscribers can play on smart TVs.

    While Netflix has been offering games for a while, those games were only available on mobile.

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  • Apple is bringing live NBA games to the Vision Pro in 2026

    Apple is bringing live NBA games to the Vision Pro in 2026

    Apple is partnering with Spectrum SportsNet to stream select Los Angeles Lakers games directly to the Apple Vision Pro during the 2025-2026 basketball season. The games will be filmed in the Apple Immersive video format, the same VR-friendly…

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  • Gonzalo stars in Spain U21s’ emphatic victory over Norway

    Gonzalo stars in Spain U21s’ emphatic victory over Norway

    Spain U21s beat Norway U21s 4-1 in a friendly match at the Pedro Escartín Stadium in Guadalajara.

    Gonzalo put in an outstanding performance. He started the game and played 45 minutes. Simo put Spain ahead in the 16th minute after a headed assist…

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  • Study: Light-driven reaction leads to advanced hybrid nanomaterial

    Study: Light-driven reaction leads to advanced hybrid nanomaterial

    Scientists are exploring many ways to use light rather than heat to drive chemical reactions more efficiently, which could significantly reduce waste, energy consumption, and reliance on non-renewable resources.

    A…

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  • Major US online retailers remove listings for millions of prohibited Chinese electronics

    Major US online retailers remove listings for millions of prohibited Chinese electronics

    • FCC says millions of listings for Chinese electronics on U.S. online retailer websites have been removed
    • U.S. telecom regulator has taken series of steps to crack down on Chinese telecoms
    • Latest action comes amid rising tension between Washington and Beijing on numerous fronts

    WASHINGTON, Oct 10 (Reuters) – The chair of the Federal Communications Commission said on Friday that major U.S. online retail websites have removed millions of listings for prohibited Chinese electronics as part of a crackdown by the agency.

    FCC Chair Brendan Carr said in an interview that the items removed are either on a U.S. list of barred equipment or were not authorized by the agency, including items like security cameras and phones from companies like Huawei and ZTE (000063.SZ), opens new tab. He said companies are putting new processes in place to prevent future prohibited items as a result of FCC oversight.

    Sign up here.

    “We’re going to keep our efforts up,” Carr said.

    U.S. agencies in recent years have taken a series of actions against Chinese tech companies, including telecom, semiconductors, vehicles and others raising national security concerns. This is the latest push to prevent unapproved Chinese electronics from getting to the U.S. market.

    Earlier this week, the FCC said it plans to vote this month to tighten restrictions on telecommunications equipment made by Chinese companies deemed national security risks, the latest in a series of U.S. actions targeting Beijing.

    The U.S. telecom regulator previously named companies including Huawei Technologies, ZTE (000063.SZ), opens new tab, Hangzhou Hikvision (002415.SZ), opens new tab, China Mobile (600941.SS), opens new tab and China Telecom (601728.SS), opens new tab to the so-called “Covered List,” which bars the FCC from authorizing the import or sale of new equipment from those companies.

    The agency will vote on October 28 to prohibit authorization of devices containing component parts that are on the Covered List and authorize the agency to prohibit the sale of previously authorized Covered List equipment in specific cases.

    In March, the FCC said it was investigating nine Chinese companies on the Covered List including Huawei, ZTE as well as Hytera Communications (002583.SZ), opens new tab, Dahua Technology Company (002236.SZ), opens new tab, Pacifica Networks/ComNet and China Unicom (Americas) (0762.HK), opens new tab.

    The Chinese embassy in Washington did not immediately comment.

    The FCC previously barred some Chinese companies from providing telecommunications services in the United States, citing national security concerns.

    Last month, the FCC began proceedings to withdraw recognition from seven test labs owned or controlled by the Chinese government, citing U.S. national security concerns.

    Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Mark Porter and Diane Craft

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

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  • National Wushu Championships scheduled in Gujrat and Risalpur this month

    National Wushu Championships scheduled in Gujrat and Risalpur this month

    The 15th National Women’s Wushu Championship is set to take place from October 17 to 19 in Gujrat, while the 25th  National Men’s Wushu Championship will be held from October 21 to 26 in Risalpur, 24NewsHD TV reported on Friday. 

    The…

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