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  • 公积金投资新计划八问


    2026年2月12日 20:50 / 联合早报

    中央公积金局将推出新的投资计划,在现有公积金投资计划(CPFIS)之外,为会员提供低成本、简化且多元的自愿长期投资选择。 (白艳琳摄)

    总理兼财政部长黄循财在2026年财政预算案声明中宣布,中央公积金局将推出新的投资计划,在现有公积金投资计划(CPFIS)之外,为会员提供低成本、简化且多元的自愿长期投资选择。《联合早报》整理新计划的关键信息,助你了解未来还可以用什么方式增加退休储蓄。

    这是什么计划?

    这个拟议中的新投资计划,是一个完全自愿的“生命周期投资产品”(Life-cycle investment products),核心理念是通过低廉的费用和简化的选择,帮助公积金会员利用储蓄进行例如20年的长期投资,在风险可控的前提下,争取比无风险的公积金固定利率更高的回报,从而加强人们退休后的财务保障。

    参加计划的会员不必自己做太多的投资决定,只要选择其中一家机构提供的投资产品。至于产品是投资在股票、基金,还是债券等,都由专业的管理者负责调整。

    2016年公积金咨询小组曾提议,设立长期投资退休计划(Lifetime Retirement Investment Scheme,简称LRIS),让会员在公积金利率和公积金投资计划之外,能有一个折中的投资方案。不过这一建议当时没有落实。

    谁适合参加?

    新投资计划主要适合那些愿意承担较高风险来换取更高潜在回报,但缺乏专业知识或不想自己积极管理投资的会员,进行长期投资。

    它特别适合离退休还有较长时间的年轻会员,因为他们能够承受短期市场波动,以换取长期的潜在增长。

    至于偏好零风险的会员,可以继续保留公积金储蓄赚取固定利息。那些有自主投资能力,也愿意承担风险的活跃投资者,则可以继续通过现有的公积金投资计划(CPF Investment Scheme),选择适合他们的个股或基金等投资工具。

    它如何运作?

    这项计划采用生命周期资产配置策略(Guidepath),也就是根据会员的年龄自动调整投资组合的资产配置。加入计划的会员不必采取进一步行动,具体变动由投资产品的管理者负责。

    在会员较年轻时,投资组合会持有较高比率的风险资产如股票,以获得更大的资本增长。随着会员年龄增长,并接近套现日期,组合会自动逐步转向更安全的资产如债券,并在到期前的几年分阶段套现资金。

    这种机制能有效避免会员在临近退休时,因市场突然崩盘而遭受重大损失。

    选择会多、费用会高、风险会大吗?

    与现行的公积金投资计划不同的是,新计划的选择范围,将限定在二到三家信誉良好的可靠业者所提供的少数精选产品。相比起公积金投资计划下超过700种投资产品,新计划的选择会比较少。

    至于投资的费用,新计划将为包含包管费、分销费等的综合收费设定上限,确保投资成本维持在低水平,让公积金会员尽可能从计划的投资回报中获益,成本也低于市面上现有的投资产品。

    所有投资本质上都带有市场风险,回报无法保证,但新投资计划采用的生命周期资产策略,能降低风险和分散投资,会员在长期投资中较不会受到市场波动影响,比自行选股更为稳健。

    计划何时开始?

    公积金局将于今年3月开始与业界接触,并邀请它们提呈意向书。当局预计在2027年上半年公布选定的投资产品供应商。整个计划将在2028年上半年正式推出。

    目前有多少人通过公基金投资计划投资?投资金额有多少?

    根据公积金局提供的资料,截至2025年9月30日,利用公积金普通户头投资的会员约有45万8000人,相等于符合投资资格会员的28.1%,总额达166亿元;利用公积金特别户头投资的会员则有21万7000人,相等于22.1%,总额47亿元。

    政府在计划中扮演什么角色?为什么不直接管理投资?

    政府在新的投资计划中不直接管理资金,而是扮演把关人和监管者的角色。政府认为,市场上已经具备提供这类产品的成熟能力和规模效应,因此决定通过严格筛选供应商,并设定费用上限的方式来运作。这样既能利用私企的投资专长,又能通过政府的议价能力压低成本,从而最大程度地保护会员的利益。

    不愿加入计划的公积金会员有什么选择?

    不想参与新投资计划的公积金会员,可继续在公积金户头中赚取政府提供的固定且无风险的利息,或者通过现有的公积金投资计划投资,自行承担相应的风险。

    公积金投资新计划八问

    2026年2月12日 20:50 / 联合早报

    中央公积金局将推出新的投资计划,在现有公积金投资计划(CPFIS)之外,为会员提供低成本、简化且多元的自愿长期投资选择。 (白艳琳摄)

    总理兼财政部长黄循财在2026年财政预算案声明中宣布,中央公积金局将推出新的投资计划,在现有公积金投资计划(CPFIS)之外,为会员提供低成本、简化且多元的自愿长期投资选择。《联合早报》整理新计划的关键信息,助你了解未来还可以用什么方式增加退休储蓄。

    这是什么计划?

    这个拟议中的新投资计划,是一个完全自愿的“生命周期投资产品”(Life-cycle investment products),核心理念是通过低廉的费用和简化的选择,帮助公积金会员利用储蓄进行例如20年的长期投资,在风险可控的前提下,争取比无风险的公积金固定利率更高的回报,从而加强人们退休后的财务保障。

    参加计划的会员不必自己做太多的投资决定,只要选择其中一家机构提供的投资产品。至于产品是投资在股票、基金,还是债券等,都由专业的管理者负责调整。

    2016年公积金咨询小组曾提议,设立长期投资退休计划(Lifetime Retirement Investment Scheme,简称LRIS),让会员在公积金利率和公积金投资计划之外,能有一个折中的投资方案。不过这一建议当时没有落实。

    谁适合参加?

    新投资计划主要适合那些愿意承担较高风险来换取更高潜在回报,但缺乏专业知识或不想自己积极管理投资的会员,进行长期投资。

    它特别适合离退休还有较长时间的年轻会员,因为他们能够承受短期市场波动,以换取长期的潜在增长。

    至于偏好零风险的会员,可以继续保留公积金储蓄赚取固定利息。那些有自主投资能力,也愿意承担风险的活跃投资者,则可以继续通过现有的公积金投资计划(CPF Investment Scheme),选择适合他们的个股或基金等投资工具。

    它如何运作?

    这项计划采用生命周期资产配置策略(Guidepath),也就是根据会员的年龄自动调整投资组合的资产配置。加入计划的会员不必采取进一步行动,具体变动由投资产品的管理者负责。

    在会员较年轻时,投资组合会持有较高比率的风险资产如股票,以获得更大的资本增长。随着会员年龄增长,并接近套现日期,组合会自动逐步转向更安全的资产如债券,并在到期前的几年分阶段套现资金。

    这种机制能有效避免会员在临近退休时,因市场突然崩盘而遭受重大损失。

    选择会多、费用会高、风险会大吗?

    与现行的公积金投资计划不同的是,新计划的选择范围,将限定在二到三家信誉良好的可靠业者所提供的少数精选产品。相比起公积金投资计划下超过700种投资产品,新计划的选择会比较少。

    至于投资的费用,新计划将为包含包管费、分销费等的综合收费设定上限,确保投资成本维持在低水平,让公积金会员尽可能从计划的投资回报中获益,成本也低于市面上现有的投资产品。

    所有投资本质上都带有市场风险,回报无法保证,但新投资计划采用的生命周期资产策略,能降低风险和分散投资,会员在长期投资中较不会受到市场波动影响,比自行选股更为稳健。

    计划何时开始?

    公积金局将于今年3月开始与业界接触,并邀请它们提呈意向书。当局预计在2027年上半年公布选定的投资产品供应商。整个计划将在2028年上半年正式推出。

    目前有多少人通过公基金投资计划投资?投资金额有多少?

    根据公积金局提供的资料,截至2025年9月30日,利用公积金普通户头投资的会员约有45万8000人,相等于符合投资资格会员的28.1%,总额达166亿元;利用公积金特别户头投资的会员则有21万7000人,相等于22.1%,总额47亿元。

    政府在计划中扮演什么角色?为什么不直接管理投资?

    政府在新的投资计划中不直接管理资金,而是扮演把关人和监管者的角色。政府认为,市场上已经具备提供这类产品的成熟能力和规模效应,因此决定通过严格筛选供应商,并设定费用上限的方式来运作。这样既能利用私企的投资专长,又能通过政府的议价能力压低成本,从而最大程度地保护会员的利益。

    不愿加入计划的公积金会员有什么选择?

    不想参与新投资计划的公积金会员,可继续在公积金户头中赚取政府提供的固定且无风险的利息,或者通过现有的公积金投资计划投资,自行承担相应的风险。

  • 与布法罗超市种族主义枪击案相关的枪支配件公司将支付175万美元赔偿


    更新时间: 2026年2月12日 / 美国东部时间上午6:23 / CBS/AP

    州总检察长莱蒂西亚·詹姆斯周三表示,涉事一家枪支配件公司因2022年布法罗一家超市内造成10名黑人死亡的种族主义枪击事件,将向幸存者和受害者家属支付175万美元,并停止在纽约州销售该设备。

    此次与总部位于佐治亚州的”卑劣武器”(Mean Arms)公司达成的协议,将解决詹姆斯提起的诉讼,并涵盖2022年在托普斯友好市场(Tops Friendly Market)袭击事件中不同受害者家属和幸存者的索赔。原告律师周三宣布,双方还达成协议,解决针对枪手佩顿·根德龙(Peyton Gendron)家人和枪支销售商Vintage Firearms LLC的单独诉讼。

    针对Mean Arms的指控主要集中在一款用于将弹匣锁定在步枪上的配件。该锁本应防止人们更换大容量弹匣——这在纽约州是非法的。

    但詹姆斯表示,根德龙轻松取下了AR-15式步枪上的锁,并加装了大容量弹匣。她还指出,该公司在产品包装背面提供了分步说明,指导如何取下这个锁。

    “我们希望通过追究这家制造商的责任,并禁止其在纽约州销售该设备,能为布法罗民众带来一定程度的慰藉。”民主党人詹姆斯在该市的新闻发布会上说。

    记者已就置评请求联系Mean Arms及其律师,但未获回应。

    部分受害者家属周三与詹姆斯一同出席,并表示和解是向前迈出的一步。

    “任何人都不应能走进商店,在两分钟内对一个社区、一个家庭、一个孩子造成如此巨大的伤害。”帕梅拉·普里切特(Pamela Pritchett)说,她的母亲珀尔·杨(Pearl Young)在袭击中丧生。杨是一名77岁的主日学校教师,还经营着一个食品储藏室。

    协助代表部分幸存者和受害者家属的”全民法律”(Everytown Law)在一份声明中表示,Vintage Firearms已永久关闭,其所有者同意未来不再申请联邦枪支许可证。该组织的埃里克·蒂尔施韦尔(Eric Tirschwell)表示,其客户与根德龙父母的和解协议内容未公开。

    枪手父母的律师和Vintage Firearms拒绝置评。

    詹姆斯在一份声明中说:”布法罗托普斯超市发生的种族主义大规模枪击事件是一场难以承受的悲剧。我们在这起充满暴力和仇恨的可怕事件中失去了10个美好的生命,再多的钱也无法让这些人重归家人怀抱,也无法抹去整个社区被迫承受的创伤。今天,正义意味着责任追究,我们已确保这种设备永远不会再在我们州销售。”

    当局称,白人枪手根德龙以布法罗一个黑人为主的社区内的托普斯超市为袭击目标。受害者年龄从32岁到86岁不等,包括一名保安、一名购物的男子、一名有9个孙辈的祖母,以及布法罗前消防专员的母亲。

    根德龙于2022年11月承认多项州一级谋杀罪等指控,目前被判处终身监禁且不得假释。

    联邦仇恨犯罪和武器指控的审判预计将于今年开始。根德龙已对此表示不认罪。司法部表示将寻求判处其死刑。

    10名受害者年龄从32岁到86岁不等,其中包括8名顾客、商店保安和一名教堂执事——他负责接送购物者及其杂货。

    Gun accessory company tied to racist shooting that killed 10 at Buffalo supermarket to pay $1.75 million

    Updated on: February 12, 2026 / 6:23 AM EST / CBS/AP

    The maker of a gun accessory tied to a racist shooting that killed 10 Black people at a supermarket in Buffalo will pay $1.75 million to survivors and victims’ families and stop selling the device in New York, state Attorney General Letitia James said Wednesday.

    The agreement with Georgia-based Mean Arms settles a lawsuit filed by James and covers claims from various victims’ families and survivors of the 2022 attack at Tops Friendly Market. They also reached agreements to resolve their own separate suits against gunman Payton Gendron’s family and a gun seller, Vintage Firearms LLC, the plaintiffs’ lawyers announced Wednesday.

    The claims against Mean Arms focused on an item that locks a magazine onto a rifle. The lock is supposed to keep people from swapping in high-capacity magazines, which are illegal in New York.

    But according to James, Gendron easily removed the lock from an AR-15-style rifle and was able to add high-capacity magazines. She also said the company provided step-by-step instructions on the back of its product packaging on how to remove the lock.

    “We hope that by holding this manufacturer accountable and banning it from selling this device in New York state, we can offer the people of Buffalo some measure of comfort,” James, a Democrat, said at a news conference in the city.

    Messages seeking comment were left for Mean Arms and its attorney.

    Some victims’ relatives joined James on Wednesday and said the settlement is a step forward.

    No one should be able to come into a store and, in two minutes, inflict so much damage to a community, to a family, to children,” said Pamela Pritchett, whose mother, Pearl Young, was killed. Young was a 77-year-old Sunday school teacher who ran a food pantry.

    Everytown Law, which helped represent some survivors and victims’ relatives, said in a statement that Vintage Firearms has permanently closed and its owner has agreed to refrain from obtaining a federal firearms license in the future. Eric Tirschwell of Everytown Law said its clients’ settlements with Gendron’s parents were confidential.

    Attorneys for the gunman’s parents and Vintage Firearms declined to comment.

    “The racist mass shooting at Tops in Buffalo was an unbearable tragedy,” James said in a statement. “We lost 10 beautiful lives in a horrific act of violence and hate, and no amount of money can ever return those individuals to their families or erase the devastation the community was forced to endure. Today, justice looks like accountability, and we have ensured that this device will never be sold in our state again.”

    Authorities say Gendron, who is white, targeted Tops, a supermarket in a predominantly Black neighborhood, for the attack. The victims ranged in age from 32 to 86 and included a guard, a man shopping for a birthday cake, a grandmother of nine and the mother of a former Buffalo fire commissioner.

    Gendron is serving a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole after pleading guilty in November 2022 to multiple state charges including murder.

    A trial on federal hate crime and weapons counts is expected to begin this year. Gendron has pleaded not guilty. The Justice Department said it would seek the death penalty.

    The 10 victims, who ranged in age from 32 to 86, included eight customers, the store security guard and a church deacon who drove shoppers to and from the store with their groceries.

  • 公司税推动下 我国上财年盈余大增至151亿元


    2026年2月12日 20:58 / 联合早报

    公司税是我国第一大税收来源,在2025财年达到26亿元,比最初预估值大幅高出7.9%,更是比2024财年强劲增长14%。 (王彦燕摄)

    由于经济表现好于预期,公司税收增加,我国2025财政年税收和盈余均大幅增加。总理兼财政部长黄循财指出,我国财政状况稳健,财政收入和支出将继续上升,政府会谨慎管理,在经济周期起伏中保持预算平衡。

    我国2025财年财政盈余达151亿元,占国内生产总值(GDP)的1.9%,远远高于68亿元的预估,也高于2024财年的61亿元。

    2025财年政府总经常收入为1309亿元,同比大增13.3%,预计2026财年将进一步增长3.0%。不过由于新财年的开支料增加,2026财年盈余预计会减少至85亿元,占GDP的1%。

    黄循财星期四(2月12日)下午发表2026财政年预算案声明时说,2025年政府收入增加,主要受到整体经济以及公司税征收额增加推动。我国2025年经济取得远超预期的5%增长。

    公司税是我国第一大税收来源,在2025财年达到26亿元,比最初预估值大幅高出7.9%,更是比2024财年强劲增长14%。在2024财年,公司税相当于GDP的约4%,已比往年高出约1个百分点,2025财年进一步提高到4.4%。

    受私人汽车和房产的强劲需求推动,2025财年资产的相关税收,如拥车证收费和印花税也都有所增加。

    不过,政府收入增长的同时,支出也逐年上升。2026财年政府开支预计同比增加10.3%至1373亿元。

    黄总理说,外交和安全、经济,以及社会需求的开支将继续增加。

    他解释,我国须在外交和安全领域加大投入,拓展海外伙伴关系,提升自身能力以确保国家安全,并做好准备应对新兴威胁。

    贸工部2026财年支出大增68.5%

    经济方面,为了在激烈竞争中保持吸引力,我国必须更新并加强促进投资的工具。这也是贸工部在本次预算案中大幅增加支出,以及未来几年支出可能维持在高位的原因之一。

    贸工部2026财年支出预计同比大增68.5%,国家整体经济发展支出则预计增加18.5%。

    社会需求方面,除医疗保健外,政府也将在加强家庭保障、提高退休保障等方面投入资金,使新加坡人能安心应对人生每个阶段。

    政府也在为长期挑战做准备,并已通过专项基金预留资源,用于满足未来的重大需求,包括能源转型和海岸保护的关键基础设施投资。

    展望2027财年及更远的未来,黄总理说:“我们的公共财政仍然稳健且具韧性。”

    他说,我国将继续实施基于第二代反税基侵蚀和盈利转移(BEPS)第二支柱的补足税(Top-up Tax)。这意味在新加坡运营的大型跨国企业的有效税率将提高至15%,因此2027年起公司税收预计会增加。

    黄总理强调,稳健的公共财政使政府能够果断行动,并将资金投入到最关键的领域。这使新加坡与许多国家不同,不必受债务和赤字压力制约,被迫在削减开支方面,做出艰难的权衡。

    他说:“本届政府以稳健的财政基础开启任期。我们因此能够对惠及所有新加坡人的政策和项目进行有意义且负责任的投资,无论现在还是未来。”

    公司税推动下 我国上财年盈余大增至151亿元

    2026年2月12日 20:58 / 联合早报

    公司税是我国第一大税收来源,在2025财年达到26亿元,比最初预估值大幅高出7.9%,更是比2024财年强劲增长14%。 (王彦燕摄)

    由于经济表现好于预期,公司税收增加,我国2025财政年税收和盈余均大幅增加。总理兼财政部长黄循财指出,我国财政状况稳健,财政收入和支出将继续上升,政府会谨慎管理,在经济周期起伏中保持预算平衡。

    我国2025财年财政盈余达151亿元,占国内生产总值(GDP)的1.9%,远远高于68亿元的预估,也高于2024财年的61亿元。

    2025财年政府总经常收入为1309亿元,同比大增13.3%,预计2026财年将进一步增长3.0%。不过由于新财年的开支料增加,2026财年盈余预计会减少至85亿元,占GDP的1%。

    黄循财星期四(2月12日)下午发表2026财政年预算案声明时说,2025年政府收入增加,主要受到整体经济以及公司税征收额增加推动。我国2025年经济取得远超预期的5%增长。

    公司税是我国第一大税收来源,在2025财年达到26亿元,比最初预估值大幅高出7.9%,更是比2024财年强劲增长14%。在2024财年,公司税相当于GDP的约4%,已比往年高出约1个百分点,2025财年进一步提高到4.4%。

    受私人汽车和房产的强劲需求推动,2025财年资产的相关税收,如拥车证收费和印花税也都有所增加。

    不过,政府收入增长的同时,支出也逐年上升。2026财年政府开支预计同比增加10.3%至1373亿元。

    黄总理说,外交和安全、经济,以及社会需求的开支将继续增加。

    他解释,我国须在外交和安全领域加大投入,拓展海外伙伴关系,提升自身能力以确保国家安全,并做好准备应对新兴威胁。

    贸工部2026财年支出大增68.5%

    经济方面,为了在激烈竞争中保持吸引力,我国必须更新并加强促进投资的工具。这也是贸工部在本次预算案中大幅增加支出,以及未来几年支出可能维持在高位的原因之一。

    贸工部2026财年支出预计同比大增68.5%,国家整体经济发展支出则预计增加18.5%。

    社会需求方面,除医疗保健外,政府也将在加强家庭保障、提高退休保障等方面投入资金,使新加坡人能安心应对人生每个阶段。

    政府也在为长期挑战做准备,并已通过专项基金预留资源,用于满足未来的重大需求,包括能源转型和海岸保护的关键基础设施投资。

    展望2027财年及更远的未来,黄总理说:“我们的公共财政仍然稳健且具韧性。”

    他说,我国将继续实施基于第二代反税基侵蚀和盈利转移(BEPS)第二支柱的补足税(Top-up Tax)。这意味在新加坡运营的大型跨国企业的有效税率将提高至15%,因此2027年起公司税收预计会增加。

    黄总理强调,稳健的公共财政使政府能够果断行动,并将资金投入到最关键的领域。这使新加坡与许多国家不同,不必受债务和赤字压力制约,被迫在削减开支方面,做出艰难的权衡。

    他说:“本届政府以稳健的财政基础开启任期。我们因此能够对惠及所有新加坡人的政策和项目进行有意义且负责任的投资,无论现在还是未来。”

  • 孟加拉国Z世代示威潮后首次大选 投票顺利和平


    2026年2月12日 20:44 / 联合早报

    孟加拉民族主义党总理候选人塔里克·拉赫曼星期四(2月12日)在首都达卡投票。他表明,如若当选,会优先使国家恢复安全和稳定。 (路透社)

    (达卡综合电)南亚国家孟加拉星期四(2月12日)举行大选,这是全球首次由Z世代领导抗议活动促使当政者下台后的选举。据当地媒体报道,尽管发生了一些零星事件,但总体而言,投票顺利、和平举行。

    这次有多达2028名候选人角逐300个国民议会议席中的299个。还有一个议席因一名候选人去世而延迟投票。共有至少50个政党参选,创下全国纪录。

    投票从当地时间早上7时30分(新加坡时间9时30分)开始,持续到下午4时30分,随后立即开始计票。最终计票结果有望在星期五(13日)早晨揭晓。

    若一个政党或联盟获得超过半数议席,即可组建政府并提名总理。

    两名总理候选人分别是民族主义党的塔里克·拉赫曼(Tarique Rahman),以及伊斯兰大会党(Jamaat-e-Islami)的沙菲克·拉赫曼(Shafiqur Rahman)。二者无血缘关系。

    塔里克表明,若当选,会优先恢复安全和稳定。沙菲克则誓言采取一切必要手段,确保选举公正。

    民调结果差异显著,但多数显示民族主义党领先,部分则预测选情胶着。

    竞选期间,孟加拉总体保持和平,但也有零星冲突,造成五人死亡、600多人受伤。

    选举委员会称,投票日当天全国部署约95万8000名警力、军队和准军事部队人员。多数投票站外设有警卫岗哨。

    孟加拉2024年8月爆发大规模示威,时任总理哈西娜在巨大反对声中辞职,随后逃往邻国印度。荷兰海牙国际刑事法院以反人类罪为由,对她发出通缉令。

    孟加拉国Z世代示威潮后首次大选 投票顺利和平

    2026年2月12日 20:44 / 联合早报

    孟加拉民族主义党总理候选人塔里克·拉赫曼星期四(2月12日)在首都达卡投票。他表明,如若当选,会优先使国家恢复安全和稳定。 (路透社)

    (达卡综合电)南亚国家孟加拉星期四(2月12日)举行大选,这是全球首次由Z世代领导抗议活动促使当政者下台后的选举。据当地媒体报道,尽管发生了一些零星事件,但总体而言,投票顺利、和平举行。

    这次有多达2028名候选人角逐300个国民议会议席中的299个。还有一个议席因一名候选人去世而延迟投票。共有至少50个政党参选,创下全国纪录。

    投票从当地时间早上7时30分(新加坡时间9时30分)开始,持续到下午4时30分,随后立即开始计票。最终计票结果有望在星期五(13日)早晨揭晓。

    若一个政党或联盟获得超过半数议席,即可组建政府并提名总理。

    两名总理候选人分别是民族主义党的塔里克·拉赫曼(Tarique Rahman),以及伊斯兰大会党(Jamaat-e-Islami)的沙菲克·拉赫曼(Shafiqur Rahman)。二者无血缘关系。

    塔里克表明,若当选,会优先恢复安全和稳定。沙菲克则誓言采取一切必要手段,确保选举公正。

    民调结果差异显著,但多数显示民族主义党领先,部分则预测选情胶着。

    竞选期间,孟加拉总体保持和平,但也有零星冲突,造成五人死亡、600多人受伤。

    选举委员会称,投票日当天全国部署约95万8000名警力、军队和准军事部队人员。多数投票站外设有警卫岗哨。

    孟加拉2024年8月爆发大规模示威,时任总理哈西娜在巨大反对声中辞职,随后逃往邻国印度。荷兰海牙国际刑事法院以反人类罪为由,对她发出通缉令。

  • 杨百翰大学外接手帕克·金斯顿在犹他州被控一级强奸罪


    2026年2月12日 / 美国东部时间上午7:23 / 美联社

    犹他州检察官周三表示,已对杨百翰大学(BYU)明星外接手帕克·金斯顿提起一级重罪强奸罪指控。

    华盛顿县检察官称,21岁的金斯顿目前被关押在亚利桑那州附近的圣乔治市,保释金为无保释。他的首次法庭听证会定于周五举行。

    杨百翰大学外接手帕克·金斯顿在2025年10月25日爱荷华州埃姆斯举行的NCAA大学橄榄球比赛中战胜爱荷华州立大学后与球迷庆祝。马修·普特尼 / 美联社

    检察官在新闻稿中称,调查始于去年2月。当时一名20岁的女性向圣乔治一家医院的警方报案,称金斯顿于2025年2月23日对其实施了袭击。警方收集了数字和法医证据,并采访了相关当事人及其他证人。

    目前尚不清楚金斯顿是否已聘请律师。他未立即回复寻求置评的信息。给其家人的电话留言也未立即得到回复。

    杨百翰大学在一份声明中表示,对任何指控都非常重视,并将与执法部门合作。由于联邦和大学的隐私法律及学生相关规定,学校无法进一步置评。

    上赛季,金斯顿以67次接球、928码推进和5次达阵接球领先全队。他还冲球25次推进199码并达阵1次,回攻17次弃踢得230码并达阵1次。

    Star BYU receiver Parker Kingston charged with first-degree rape in Utah

    February 12, 2026 / 7:23 AM EST / AP

    Prosecutors in Utah have filed a first-degree felony rape charge against Brigham Young University standout wide receiver Parker Kingston, officials said Wednesday.

    Kingston, 21, is being held without bail in St. George, a city near Arizona, Washington County prosecutors said. His initial appearance in court is scheduled for Friday.

    BYU wide receiver Parker Kingston celebrates with fans after a win over Iowa State in an NCAA college football game on Oct. 25, 2025, in Ames, Iowa. Matthew Putney / AP

    The investigation began last February, prosecutors said in a news release. A woman who was 20 years old at the time told officers at a St. George hospital that Kingston assaulted her on Feb. 23, 2025, prosecutors said. Police gathered digital and forensic evidence and interviewed the parties involved and other witnesses, prosecutors said.

    It wasn’t clear if Kingston had an attorney. He didn’t immediately respond to a message seeking comment. A phone message left for his family wasn’t immediately returned.

    BYU said in a statement that it takes any allegation very seriously and will cooperate with law enforcement. It said it wouldn’t be able to comment further due to federal and university privacy laws and practices for students.

    Kingston had a team-leading 67 receptions and 928 yards with five touchdown catches last season. He also rushed for 199 yards on 25 carries with a score, and returned 17 punts for 230 yards and a touchdown.

  • 部分政府停摆阴云笼罩,移民与海关执法局(ICE)谈判陷入僵局 – 《华盛顿邮报》


    2026年2月12日,美国东部时间凌晨5:30 | 《华盛顿邮报》

    除非国会议员与白宫在最后一刻达成协议为其提供资金,否则国土安全部的大部分部门将于周六停摆。

    节点运行失败

    参议院少数党领袖查尔斯·E·舒默(D-纽约州)(左)和众议院少数党领袖哈基姆·杰弗里斯(D-纽约州)在12月国会山举行的新闻发布会上。(德米特里厄斯·弗里曼/《华盛顿邮报》)

    作者:西奥多里克·迈耶(Theodoric Meyer)和莱利·贝金(Riley Beggin)

    除非国会议员达成最后一刻的协议为国土安全部(DHS)提供资金,否则其大部分部门将于周六停摆,民主党人威胁将反对任何不包含对联邦移民局新限制条款的立法。

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    上月联邦移民局特工在明尼阿波利斯杀死亚历克斯·普雷蒂后,民主党人要求国土安全部进行一系列重大改革,包括对搜查令制定更严格的规定以及禁止特工佩戴口罩。白宫对其中一些要求持开放态度,但在该部门资金即将耗尽的前几天,双方仍未达成协议。

    参议院多数党领袖约翰·图恩(R-南达科他州)表示,他认为有可能达成妥协,并要求民主党人在此期间同意为国土安全部达成一项短期资金协议。

    “我希望我们的民主党朋友能留在谈判桌前,给谈判更多时间成熟。”图恩周三在参议院表示。

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    据一位不愿具名的知情人士透露,白宫周三晚间向民主党人发送了一份详细提案,以讨论正在进行的谈判。但目前尚不清楚双方能否达成协议。

    “如果他们不加入限制移民和海关执法局(ICE)的条款,就不会得到我们的支持。”参议院少数党领袖查尔斯·E·舒默(D-纽约州)在收到提案前对记者表示,他指的是美国移民和海关执法局——民主党人批评最严厉的国土安全部下属机构。“简单来说。”

    众议院也需要通过任何最后一刻为该机构提供资金的协议。共和党在众议院的多数席位极为微弱,众议院少数党领袖哈基姆·杰弗里斯(D-纽约州)表示,民主党不会支持任何没有对该机构进行“重大改革”的国土安全部资金法案。

    资金中断将触发近三个月内第三次全面或部分联邦政府停摆。去年秋天,两党就《平价医疗法案》补贴到期问题陷入僵局,导致政府停摆43天;随后,上周政府大部分部门再次停摆数日。

    此次停摆仅影响国土安全部——但不会导致移民和海关执法局(ICE)或美国海关与边境保护局(CBP)停摆,因为共和党去年向这两个机构追加了数百亿美元资金,足以维持其运作。

    相反,停摆的主要影响将落在运输安全管理局(TSA)、联邦紧急事务管理局(FEMA)、海岸警卫队及国土安全部内的其他机构身上。根据国土安全部和人事管理办公室的数据,这将影响约13%的联邦文职人员,其中大多数人将被迫无薪工作。

    共和党人强调,如果国土安全部资金中断,与政府移民政策无关的机构也将受到潜在影响。

    “运输安全管理局的工作人员将再次在无薪的情况下继续保障我们的航空安全,他们的痛苦将显而易见。”负责国土安全拨款小组委员会的众议员马克·阿莫代伊(R-内华达州)周三表示。“海岸警卫队的工作人员也将面临不确定性——他们别无选择,只能继续工作。……这还将削减灾害救济基金的资金——而就在几周前,大规模冬季风暴已席卷美国大片地区。”

    参议院预计周四就为国土安全部提供至9月30日的资金法案进行投票,但民主党人几乎一致表示,若不包含对移民局新限制条款,他们将反对任何为其提供资金的法案。

    内华达州民主党参议员凯瑟琳·科尔特斯·马斯托(Catherine Cortez Masto)去年停摆期间曾违背党内立场,投票支持共和党提出的资金法案,但她周二表示此次不会再这样做。

    “我们要求我们的同事和白宫与我们合作。”科尔特斯·马斯托对记者表示。“这是常识。请与我们合作。不幸的是,我们没有看到这种合作。”

    民主党人要求的新限制措施包括:要求联邦移民局特工佩戴身份标识和随身摄像头;禁止他们在学校、医疗机构、教堂、投票站、儿童保育机构和法院附近活动;确保州和地方司法机构能够调查和起诉特工可能犯下的罪行及滥用武力行为等其他要求。

    共和党人批评了民主党人的许多要求,认为这些要求会不必要地削弱特工的工作能力。图恩表示,他预计白宫会提出自己的要求,包括为联邦移民局特工提供新的保护措施,以及打击限制与联邦移民当局合作的城市(有时被称为“庇护城市”)的措施。

    “太多地方禁止当地警察与移民执法部门合作,这种政策不仅违背常识,还会让所有人的处境更加危险。”图恩周一在参议院表示。“因此,我希望我的民主党同事准备好讨论这些问题和其他相关议题。”

    艾米丽·戴维斯(Emily Davies)对本文亦有贡献。

    Partial government shutdown looms as ICE negotiations stall – The Washington Post

    February 12, 2026 at 5:30 a.m. EST Today at 5:30 a.m. EST | The Washington Post

    Large swaths of the Department of Homeland Security are set to shut down Saturday unless lawmakers and the White House strike a last-minute deal.

    节点运行失败

    Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-New York), left, and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-New York) during a news conference on Capitol Hill in December. (Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post)

    By Theodoric Meyer

    and

    Riley Beggin

    Large swaths of the Department of Homeland Security are set to shut down Saturday unless lawmakers strike a last-minute deal to fund the agency, with Democrats threatening to oppose any legislation that does not include new restrictions on federal immigration agents.

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    Democrats demanded a long list of changes to DHS after federal immigration agents killed Alex Pretti last month in Minneapolis, including tighter rules on warrants and a ban on agents wearing face masks. The White House is open to some of them, but the two sides have not reached an agreement days before the department is set to run out of money.

    Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-South Dakota) said he thinks a compromise is possible and asked Democrats to agree to a short-term funding deal for DHS in the meantime.

    “I hope our Democrat friends will remain at the table and give talks more time to mature,” Thune said Wednesday on the Senate floor.

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    The White House sent a detailed proposal to Democrats on Wednesday night, according to a person familiar with the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing negotiations. But it remains unclear whether the two sides can reach an agreement.

    “If they don’t add things that will rein in ICE, they are not getting our votes,” Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-New York) told reporters Wednesday before receiving the proposal, referring to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the branch of DHS that Democrats have criticized most. “Plain and simple.”

    The House would also need to pass any last-minute deal to fund the agency. Republicans have a perilously narrow majority in the chamber, and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-New York) has said Democrats will not support any DHS funding bill without “dramatic changes” to the agency.

    A funding lapse would trigger the third full or partial federal government shutdown in barely three months. The government shuttered for 43 days in the fall amid a standoff between the two parties over expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies; that was followed by a shutdown of much of the government for several days that ended last week.

    This shutdown would affect only DHS — but it would not shutter ICE or U.S. Customs and Border Protection, because Republicans sent those agencies tens of billions of dollars in additional funding last year that would allow them to continue to operate.

    Instead, the brunt of a shutdown would fall on the Transportation Security Administration, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Coast Guard and other agencies within DHS. It would affect about 13 percent of the federal civilian workforce, most of whom would be forced to work without pay, according to data from DHS and the Office of Personnel Management.

    Republicans have emphasized the potential impact on agencies unrelated to the administration’s immigration efforts if DHS funding lapses.

    “The pain will be felt by the men and women of TSA, who will once again work to keep our airways safe without a paycheck,” Rep. Mark Amodei (R-Nevada), who chairs the appropriations subcommittee on homeland security, said Wednesday. “There will be uncertainty for our Coast Guard men and women — who have no choice but to show up for work. … It will reduce the amount of funding in the Disaster Relief Fund — just weeks after massive winter storms affected wide swaths of the country.”

    The Senate is expected to vote Thursday on taking up legislation to fund the agency through Sept. 30, but Democrats have said almost unanimously that they will oppose any bill to fund DHS without new restrictions on immigration agents.

    Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nevada), who broke with her party during last year’s shutdown and voted for a Republican funding bill, said Tuesday that she would not do so this time.

    “We are asking our colleagues and the White House to work with us,” Cortez Masto told reporters. “It’s common sense. Work with us. Unfortunately, we are not seeing that.”

    Democrats have demanded new restrictions including requiring federal immigration agents to wear identification and body cameras, and barring them from operating near schools, medical facilities, churches, polling places, child care facilities and courts. They also want to ensure that states and local jurisdictions can investigate and prosecute potential crimes committed by agents and excessive use of force, among other demands.

    Republicans have criticized many of the Democrats’ demands, arguing that they would needlessly hamstring agents. Thune has said he expects the White House to make its own demands, including new protections for federal immigration agents and measures cracking down on cities that limit cooperation with federal immigration authorities, sometimes known as “sanctuary cities.”

    “Too many jurisdictions prohibit local police from cooperating with immigration enforcement, a policy that not only defies common sense, but makes things more dangerous for everyone,” Thune said Monday on the Senate floor. “And so I hope that my Democrat colleagues are prepared to talk about these and other issues.”

    Emily Davies contributed to this report.

  • 新闻


    特朗普政府正准备扩大对拖欠大额子女抚养费父母的护照吊销范围,限制其在欠款解决前的国际旅行能力。

    据美联社报道,美国国务院计划加强对一项已有30年历史的联邦法律的执行力度。该法律允许政府吊销欠有大量未付子女抚养费个人的美国护照。报道援引了三位熟悉此事的美国官员的话。

    目前尚不清楚最终会有多少人受到影响,但官员们表示,这一数字可能会达到数千人。官员们称,由于欠缴子女抚养费的护照持有人数量可能很大,国务院预计将分阶段实施这些变更。

    亨特·拜登被指控对女儿伦登·罗伯茨“失联”并违反子女抚养协议

    美国国务院正计划扩大对拖欠大量子女抚养费父母的护照吊销范围。(Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    据官员向媒体透露,首批被锁定的将是拖欠超过10万美元子女抚养费的护照持有人。一位官员表示,目前符合这一标准的人数不到500人。这些人在收到吊销通知后,如果与卫生与公众服务部(HHS)达成付款计划,可以保留护照。

    该官员补充说,未来降低拖欠金额门槛将显著增加受执行措施影响的父母数量。

    目前尚不清楚任何进一步的变更何时生效,以及可能有多少人因此被吊销护照。

    国务院除世界杯、奥运会外,将主要体育赛事列入特朗普签证禁令豁免名单

    美国国务院计划加强对一项允许联邦政府在子女抚养费付清前吊销美国护照的法律的执行。(Yuri Gripas/CNP/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    根据1996年《个人责任与工作机会协调法案》,拖欠超过2500美元子女抚养费的护照吊销已获允许。然而近年来,国务院通常仅在个人申请护照更新或寻求其他领事服务时采取行动。

    据向美联社透露的官员称,在新的执行方式下,国务院将根据卫生与公众服务部共享的数据开始吊销护照。

    美国国务院在向美联社发表的声明中表示,“正在研究执行长期法律的方案,以防止那些欠下大量子女抚养费的人忽视对其子女的法律和道德义务。”

    “简单来说:赖账父母必须支付拖欠的子女抚养费,”声明补充道。

    点击此处下载福克斯新闻应用

    据卫生与公众服务部儿童抚养执行办公室称,自《个人责任与工作机会协调法案》启动护照拒绝计划以来,已追回近6.21亿美元拖欠的子女抚养费,其中包括9笔超过30万美元的付款。

    美联社对本文报道亦有贡献。

    The Trump administration is preparing to expand passport revocations for parents who owe significant child support, limiting their ability to travel internationally until their arrears are addressed.

    The State Department plans to increase enforcement of a 30-year-old federal law that allows the government to revoke U.S. passports for individuals with substantial unpaid child support, according to The Associated Press, which cited three U.S. officials familiar with the matter.

    It is unclear how many people could ultimately be affected, though officials indicated the number could reach into the thousands. The State Department is expected to implement the changes in phases due to the potentially large number of passport holders who owe back child support, the officials said.

    HUNTER BIDEN ACCUSED OF GHOSTING DAUGHTER WITH LUNDEN ROBERTS AND VIOLATING CHILD SUPPORT AGREEMENT

    The State Department is planning to expand revocations of passports of parents who owe a significant amount of child support.(Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    The first group to be targeted will be passport holders who owe more than $100,000 in past-due child support, the officials told the outlet. One official said fewer than 500 people meet that threshold. Those individuals could retain their passports if they enter into a payment plan with the Department of Health and Human Services after being notified of a pending revocation.

    The official added that lowering the past-due threshold in the future would significantly increase the number of parents subject to enforcement.

    It remains unclear when any further changes would take effect or how many people might have their passports revoked as a result.

    STATE DEPARTMENT LISTS MAJOR SPORTING EVENTS IN ADDITION TO WORLD CUP, OLYMPICS EXEMPT FROM TRUMP’S VISA BAN

    The State Department intends to step up enforcement of a 30-year-old law that allows the federal government to revoke U.S. passports until child support payments are made.(Yuri Gripas/CNP/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    Passport revocations for unpaid child support exceeding $2,500 have been permitted under a 1996 law known as the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act. In recent years, however, the State Department typically acted only when an individual applied to renew a passport or sought other consular services.

    Under the updated approach, the department would begin revoking passports based on data shared by the Department of Health and Human Services, according to the officials who spoke to The Associated Press.

    The State Department said in a statement to The Associated Press that it “is reviewing options to enforce long-standing law to prevent those owing substantial amounts of child support from neglecting their legal and moral obligations to their children.”

    The State Department will soon begin revoking passports based on data shared by HHS.(iStock)

    “It is simple: deadbeat parents need to pay their child support arrears,” the statement added.

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    Since the Passport Denial Program began with the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act, nearly $621 million in past-due child support payments have been made, including nine payments of more than $300,000, according to the Office of Child Support Enforcement at the Department of Health and Human Services.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

  • ULA Vulcan火箭在发射机密太空部队有效载荷时助推器出现问题


    2026年2月12日 / 美国东部时间上午6:59 / CBS新闻

    联合发射联盟(ULA)的Vulcan火箭在周四发射时,其捆绑式固体燃料助推器的喷管处或附近似乎发生了烧穿,但该公司表示,火箭其余部分似乎仍进行了“正常”的太空上升。

    这枚两级Vulcan火箭于美国东部时间凌晨4:22点火升空,在290万磅推力(由双甲烷燃烧的蓝色起源BE-4发动机和四个诺斯罗普·格鲁曼公司的固体燃料助推器提供)的推动下,从卡纳维拉尔角太空部队站的41号发射台壮丽升空。

    联合发射联盟Vulcan火箭在一项主要为机密的太空部队任务中发射,将一颗太空监视卫星送入地球高轨道。该火箭还搭载了一系列较小的有效载荷。联合发射联盟

    飞行的初始阶段似乎进展顺利,但在发射后约20秒,其中一个捆绑式GEM 63XL助推器的喷管处似乎发生了烧穿,一股火焰突然喷出并向一侧射出。

    ULA在X平台(原推特)上发布消息称:“我们在飞行早期观察到四个固体火箭发动机中的一个出现了问题。团队目前正在分析数据。”该公司表示,Vulcan火箭的芯级、上面级和航天器继续“正常”运行。

    在上升过程中,助推器被抛离前不久,跟踪摄像机显示火箭开始绕其纵轴进行相当快速的滚动。

    这种意外运动是由故障喷管的侧向推力还是其他问题引起的目前尚不清楚。但一旦助推器被抛离,这种异常运动就减缓并停止了。

    太空飞行新闻摄影师亚当·伯恩斯坦(Adam Bernstein)拍摄到了Vulcan火箭发射的火焰,显示出固体燃料捆绑式助推器底部(Vulcan火箭第一级底部四个助推器之一)的喷管似乎发生了烧穿。

    无论如何,与以往机密军事任务一样,ULA在第二级发动机点火后不久就结束了发射直播。预计在计划的10小时任务结束后才会有进一步更新。

    这是ULA新型Vulcan火箭的第四次发射,这是一枚采用全美国制造组件的重型运载火箭,旨在取代该公司的Atlas 5(部分使用俄罗斯制造的第一级发动机)和已退役的Delta 4系列发射器。

    2024年进行了两次“认证”飞行,以确保火箭能够携带高价值国家安全有效载荷。第二次认证飞行期间的喷管故障引发了长时间调查和纠正措施。

    2025年Vulcan的第三次飞行成功发射了该火箭的首个太空部队有效载荷。周四的发射是其第二次机密任务,也是第四次整体发射。

    ULA官员在发射前表示,该公司计划今年进行超过20次发射,包括2-4次Atlas 5任务和16-18次Vulcan任务,利用东西海岸的发射台。目前尚不清楚解决明显喷管故障的工作是否会影响这一计划。

    艺术家对两颗GSSAP卫星在赤道上空22,300英里处同步轨道上的印象,它们可以监控其他航天器的移动。美国太空部队

    周四的主要有效载荷是一颗由诺斯罗普·格鲁曼公司建造的地球同步太空态势感知计划(GSSAP)卫星,旨在监控赤道上空22,300英里高轨道上其他卫星的行为和运动。

    在这个高度,卫星与地球自转同步绕地球运行,因此在天空中看起来是静止的。地球同步轨道受到大量民用和军用通信卫星、电子监听航天器等的青睐。

    ULA Atlas和Vulcan项目副总裁加里·文茨(Gary Wentz)表示,GSSAP卫星旨在“提高国家快速探测、识别、表征和归因于地球同步环境中太空系统干扰的能力”。

    在周四的发射之前,ULA已部署了六个GSSAP太空监视站,分别在2014年、2016年和2022年使用两枚Delta 4火箭和一枚Atlas 5火箭成对发射。在发射前的新闻发布会上,ULA管理人员拒绝透露此次Vulcan飞行中可能搭载的GSSAP卫星数量。

    在Vulcan火箭鼻锥下方的GSSAP卫星下方安装了另一颗被称为ESPAStar的航天器,这是一个太阳能可展开平台,“能够容纳最多六个托管有效载荷和12个可分离(即插即用)有效载荷的任意组合”,诺斯罗普·格鲁曼公司表示。周四发射的所有ESPAStar有效载荷均为机密。

    任务管理人员在发射前表示,这次飞行将是ULA火箭迄今为止最长的一次飞行,需要10小时到达近地球同步轨道的多个点。

    文茨表示:“这正是我们设计这枚运载火箭以支持的任务类型。这是将重要有效载荷送入非常复杂的轨道,是多任务的国家安全太空任务,直接进入地球同步轨道。因此,这枚火箭非常适合此类任务。”

    联合发射联盟是波音公司与洛克希德·马丁公司各持股50%的合资企业。

    ULA Vulcan rocket suffers booster problem while launching classified Space Force payloads

    February 12, 2026 / 6:59 AM EST / CBS News

    A United Launch Alliance Vulcan rocket carrying a suite of classified Space Force payloads suffered what appeared to be a burn-through at or near the nozzle of a strap-on solid-fuel booster Thursday but apparently made an otherwise “nominal” ascent to space, the company said.

    The two-stage Vulcan rocket thundered to life at 4:22 a.m. EST and majestically climbed away from pad 41 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station atop 2.9 million pounds of thrust from twin methane-burning Blue Origin BE-4 engines and four Northrop Grumman solid-fuel boosters.

    A United Launch Alliance Vulcan rocket blasts off on a mostly-classified Space Force mission to put a space surveillance satellite in high Earth orbit. It also carried a suite of smaller payloads. United Launch Alliance

    The initial moments of the flight appeared to go smoothly, but about 20 seconds after liftoff, one of the strap-on GEM 63XL boosters suffered what appeared to be a burn-through in its nozzle, with a jet of flame suddenly appearing and shooting out to one side.

    “We had an observation early during flight on one of the four solid rocket motors,” ULA said in a post on X. “The team is currently reviewing the data.” The company said the Vulcan core stage, upper stage and spacecraft continued to perform “nominally.”

    Later in the ascent, shortly before the boosters were jettisoned, tracking cameras showed the rocket began a fairly rapid roll about its long axis.

    Whether that unexpected motion was caused by the sideways thrust from the failed nozzle or by some other problem was not known. But once the boosters were jettisoned, the unusual motion slowed and stopped.

    A Spaceflight Now photographer tracking the Vulcan launch captured the jet of flame from an apparent nozzle burn-through at the base of a solid-fuel strap-on booster, one of four attached to the base of the Vulcan rocket’s first stage. Adam Bernstein / Spaceflight Now

    In any case, as usual with classified military missions, ULA ended its launch broadcast shortly after the second stage engine ignition. No further updates were expected until after the planned 10-hour mission concluded.

    It was the fourth launch of ULA’s new Vulcan, a heavy-lift rocket with all-American components intended to replace the company’s Atlas 5, powered in part by Russian-built first-stage engines, and its already-retired Delta 4 family of launchers.

    Two “certification” flights were launched in 2024 to clear the rocket for use carrying high-value national security payloads. A nozzle failure during the second certification flight triggered a lengthy investigation and corrective action.

    The Vulcan’s third flight in 2025 successfully launched the the rocket’s first Space Force payload. Thursday’s launch was the rocket’s second classified mission and its fourth overall.

    ULA officials said before launch that the company planned to launch more than 20 flights this year, two to four Atlas 5 missions along with 16 to 18 Vulcan flights, utilizing launch pads on both coasts. Whether work to resolve the apparent nozzle failure might cut into that schedule is not yet known.

    An artist’s impression of two GSSAP satellites in geosynchronous orbit 22,300 miles above the equator, where they can monitor the movements of other spacecraft. USSF

    The primary payload Thursday was a Geosynchronous Space Situational Awareness Program (GSSAP) satellite, built by Northrop Grumman and designed to keep tabs on behavior and movement of other satellites in a 22,300-mile high orbit above the equator.

    At that altitude, satellites circle the globe in lockstep with Earth’s rotation and thus appear stationary in the sky. Geosynchronous orbit is favored by scores of civilian and military communications satellites, electronic eavesdropping spacecraft and others.

    The GSSAP satellites are intended “to improve the country’s ability to rapidly detect, learn, characterize and attribute disturbances to space systems in the geosynchronous environment,” said Gary Wentz, ULA vice president of the company’s Atlas and Vulcan programs.

    Going into Thursday’s launch, ULA had put up six GSSAP space surveillance stations, launching them in pairs in 2014, 2016 and 2022 using two Delta 4 rockets and an Atlas 5. During a pre-launch news conference, ULA managers declined to say how many GSSAPs might have been aboard the Vulcan for Thursday’s flight.

    Mounted below the GSSAP in the Vulcan’s nose cone was another spacecraft known as an ESPAStar, a solar-powered deployable platform “capable of accommodating any combination of up to six hosted and 12 separable (fly-away) payloads,” according to Northrop Grumman. All of the ESPAStar payloads launched Thursday were classified.

    Mission managers said before launch the flight would mark the longest yet for a ULA rocket, a 10-hour trip to multiple points in near-geosynchronous orbit.

    “This is the type of mission that the team actually designed this launch vehicle to support,” Wentz said. “It’s significant payloads to very complex orbits, multi-manifested national security space, direct-to-geo. So this is tailor-fit for that mission.”

    The United Launch Alliance is a 50-50 Boeing-Lockheed Martin joint venture.

  • RFK Jr’s vaccine agenda faces Boston judge who has handed Trump setbacks


    February 12, 2026 11:10 AM UTC / Reuters

    Item 1 of 2 U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attends a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., January 29, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo

    [1/2]U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attends a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., January 29, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo [Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab]

    • Summary
    • Judge Murphy has ruled against other Trump initiatives
    • Biden appointee joined federal bench in Boston in 2024
    • Medical groups call vaccine policy changes unlawful

    BOSTON, Feb 12 (Reuters) – Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s sweeping efforts to upend U.S. immunization policies are set to go before a federal judge in Boston who already has drawn President Donald Trump’s ire for impeding his administration’s policies on multiple fronts.

    U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy on Friday is due to hold a hearing in a legal challenge by medical groups that assert that Kennedy and the agencies he oversees are unlawfully reshaping federal policies in ways that will increase barriers to getting vaccinated, fuel distrust in shots and lower immunization rates.

    Jumpstart your morning with the latest legal news delivered straight to your inbox from The Daily Docket newsletter. Sign up here.

    Kennedy, a longtime anti-vaccine activist who has cast doubt on the safety and efficacy of vaccines contrary to scientific evidence, was appointed by the Republican president last year as the U.S. government’s top health official. His critics have said Kennedy’s actions on vaccines and other areas will undermine public health.

    APPOINTED BY BIDEN


    Murphy was appointed by Democratic President Joe Biden, confirmed by the U.S. Senate and joined the federal bench in Massachusetts in December 2024, the month before Trump returned to the presidency.

    Murphy has earned the scorn of Trump’s administration after issuing a series of rulings that blocked core parts of his hardline immigration agenda, prevented it from gutting funding for federal research and halted its efforts to prevent the further development of offshore wind energy.

    The judge is a former public defender who previously ran a small criminal defense law firm based in Worcester, Massachusetts. He told lawyers at an event last week he “had not anticipated some of the more nationwide cases that have been a part of the practice, here in Massachusetts especially.”

    Cases with national significance have been piling up on the dockets of Massachusetts-based judges like Murphy, as Trump opponents strategically funnel litigation into the federal court in Boston now dominated by the judicial appointees of Democratic presidents.

    VACCINE PANEL OVERHAUL


    At Friday’s hearing, the American Academy of Pediatrics and other plaintiffs are expected to ask Murphy to issue a preliminary injunction that would prevent the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from implementing a revised childhood immunization schedule and block Kennedy’s handpicked vaccine advisory panel from holding its February 25-26 meeting.

    They argue the CDC acted unlawfully when on January 5 it reduced the number of routinely recommended childhood vaccinations to 11 and downgraded the immunization recommendations for six diseases, including rotavirus, influenza and hepatitis A.

    They also are challenging Kennedy’s decision last year to remove and replace all 17 independent experts who previously had served on the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, whose recommendations shape U.S. vaccine practices.

    The plaintiffs said that resulted in a panel dominated by vaccine skeptics appointed solely because their views aligned with those of Kennedy.

    Murphy in a ruling last month allowing the case to proceed said those allegations were “sufficient to plausibly suggest the committee is neither fairly balanced nor free of inappropriate influence,” in violation of the requirements for such panels set out in a U.S. law called the Federal Advisory Committee Act.

    Justice Department lawyers argue that the plaintiffs are seeking a court-ordered ban on the Department of Health and Human Services “receiving and giving advice on vaccines.” They say the CDC’s guidance on vaccines is a matter of agency discretion, and that Congress in requiring “balance” for the panel meant employment status and background, making it irrelevant if most of its members now hold anti-vaccine views.

    The reconstituted ACIP panel voted in September in favor of abandoning the U.S. government’s broad recommendation for COVID-19 shots, essentially recommending patients consult their doctors first. It then voted in December to remove the broad recommendation that all newborns receive a hepatitis B vaccine. The plaintiffs want those votes and others voided.

    Global health experts have said vaccines are vital for controlling infectious diseases, preventing millions of deaths annually and lowering healthcare costs. Kennedy has called vaccine safety data flawed and has claimed vaccines are responsible for various health issues.

    The public health groups argued that the newly adopted U.S. changes will depress vaccination rates for shots that have long depended on clear and population-wide guidance, particularly in busy primary-care settings where default recommendations drive uptake.

    ‘OUT OF CONTROL’


    Another major Trump-related case Murphy has handled involved a lawsuit by immigrant rights advocates seeking to prevent the U.S. Department of Homeland Security from rapidly deporting migrants to countries other than their own without letting them raise any concerns about potential persecution or torture.

    Murphy issued and enforced a court order to restrict the administration’s efforts to deport migrants of other nationalities to countries such as South Sudan, Libya and El Salvador.

    Trump derided Murphy as “out of control,” and White House advisor Stephen Miller called the judge a “lunatic.” At the administration’s urging, the Supreme Court intervened twice, lifting Murphy’s injunction and clearing the way for the deportation of several men to South Sudan.

    Murphy has signaled he is open to ruling against this “third country” deportation policy again as the case proceeds, and he has continued to deal the Trump administration other courtroom setbacks.

    In October, Murphy ruled that the Pentagon’s steep cuts to federal research funding for universities were unlawful.

    In January, the judge allowed the Vineyard Wind joint venture to resume its Massachusetts offshore wind project, one of five judicial rulings nationwide that blocked the administration from halting wind projects on national security grounds.

    Days later, Murphy issued an order temporarily blocking the administration from ending temporary deportation protections covering more than 5,000 Ethiopians living in the United States.

    “I’m sure when you imagined your first months on the bench, you expected a quiet start, where you’d learn the ropes,” Democratic U.S. Senator Ed Markey said in video remarks played at Murphy’s formal swearing-in ceremony in September. “But as the saying goes, sometimes the judiciary has plans for you.”

    Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Will Dunham

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

    RFK Jr’s vaccine agenda faces Boston judge who has handed Trump setbacks

    February 12, 2026 11:10 AM UTC / Reuters

    Item 1 of 2 U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attends a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., January 29, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo

    [1/2]U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attends a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., January 29, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo [Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab]

    • Summary
    • Judge Murphy has ruled against other Trump initiatives
    • Biden appointee joined federal bench in Boston in 2024
    • Medical groups call vaccine policy changes unlawful

    BOSTON, Feb 12 (Reuters) – Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s sweeping efforts to upend U.S. immunization policies are set to go before a federal judge in Boston who already has drawn President Donald Trump’s ire for impeding his administration’s policies on multiple fronts.

    U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy on Friday is due to hold a hearing in a legal challenge by medical groups that assert that Kennedy and the agencies he oversees are unlawfully reshaping federal policies in ways that will increase barriers to getting vaccinated, fuel distrust in shots and lower immunization rates.

    Jumpstart your morning with the latest legal news delivered straight to your inbox from The Daily Docket newsletter. Sign up here.

    Kennedy, a longtime anti-vaccine activist who has cast doubt on the safety and efficacy of vaccines contrary to scientific evidence, was appointed by the Republican president last year as the U.S. government’s top health official. His critics have said Kennedy’s actions on vaccines and other areas will undermine public health.

    APPOINTED BY BIDEN


    Murphy was appointed by Democratic President Joe Biden, confirmed by the U.S. Senate and joined the federal bench in Massachusetts in December 2024, the month before Trump returned to the presidency.

    Murphy has earned the scorn of Trump’s administration after issuing a series of rulings that blocked core parts of his hardline immigration agenda, prevented it from gutting funding for federal research and halted its efforts to prevent the further development of offshore wind energy.

    The judge is a former public defender who previously ran a small criminal defense law firm based in Worcester, Massachusetts. He told lawyers at an event last week he “had not anticipated some of the more nationwide cases that have been a part of the practice, here in Massachusetts especially.”

    Cases with national significance have been piling up on the dockets of Massachusetts-based judges like Murphy, as Trump opponents strategically funnel litigation into the federal court in Boston now dominated by the judicial appointees of Democratic presidents.

    VACCINE PANEL OVERHAUL


    At Friday’s hearing, the American Academy of Pediatrics and other plaintiffs are expected to ask Murphy to issue a preliminary injunction that would prevent the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from implementing a revised childhood immunization schedule and block Kennedy’s handpicked vaccine advisory panel from holding its February 25-26 meeting.

    They argue the CDC acted unlawfully when on January 5 it reduced the number of routinely recommended childhood vaccinations to 11 and downgraded the immunization recommendations for six diseases, including rotavirus, influenza and hepatitis A.

    They also are challenging Kennedy’s decision last year to remove and replace all 17 independent experts who previously had served on the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, whose recommendations shape U.S. vaccine practices.

    The plaintiffs said that resulted in a panel dominated by vaccine skeptics appointed solely because their views aligned with those of Kennedy.

    Murphy in a ruling last month allowing the case to proceed said those allegations were “sufficient to plausibly suggest the committee is neither fairly balanced nor free of inappropriate influence,” in violation of the requirements for such panels set out in a U.S. law called the Federal Advisory Committee Act.

    Justice Department lawyers argue that the plaintiffs are seeking a court-ordered ban on the Department of Health and Human Services “receiving and giving advice on vaccines.” They say the CDC’s guidance on vaccines is a matter of agency discretion, and that Congress in requiring “balance” for the panel meant employment status and background, making it irrelevant if most of its members now hold anti-vaccine views.

    The reconstituted ACIP panel voted in September in favor of abandoning the U.S. government’s broad recommendation for COVID-19 shots, essentially recommending patients consult their doctors first. It then voted in December to remove the broad recommendation that all newborns receive a hepatitis B vaccine. The plaintiffs want those votes and others voided.

    Global health experts have said vaccines are vital for controlling infectious diseases, preventing millions of deaths annually and lowering healthcare costs. Kennedy has called vaccine safety data flawed and has claimed vaccines are responsible for various health issues.

    The public health groups argued that the newly adopted U.S. changes will depress vaccination rates for shots that have long depended on clear and population-wide guidance, particularly in busy primary-care settings where default recommendations drive uptake.

    ‘OUT OF CONTROL’


    Another major Trump-related case Murphy has handled involved a lawsuit by immigrant rights advocates seeking to prevent the U.S. Department of Homeland Security from rapidly deporting migrants to countries other than their own without letting them raise any concerns about potential persecution or torture.

    Murphy issued and enforced a court order to restrict the administration’s efforts to deport migrants of other nationalities to countries such as South Sudan, Libya and El Salvador.

    Trump derided Murphy as “out of control,” and White House advisor Stephen Miller called the judge a “lunatic.” At the administration’s urging, the Supreme Court intervened twice, lifting Murphy’s injunction and clearing the way for the deportation of several men to South Sudan.

    Murphy has signaled he is open to ruling against this “third country” deportation policy again as the case proceeds, and he has continued to deal the Trump administration other courtroom setbacks.

    In October, Murphy ruled that the Pentagon’s steep cuts to federal research funding for universities were unlawful.

    In January, the judge allowed the Vineyard Wind joint venture to resume its Massachusetts offshore wind project, one of five judicial rulings nationwide that blocked the administration from halting wind projects on national security grounds.

    Days later, Murphy issued an order temporarily blocking the administration from ending temporary deportation protections covering more than 5,000 Ethiopians living in the United States.

    “I’m sure when you imagined your first months on the bench, you expected a quiet start, where you’d learn the ropes,” Democratic U.S. Senator Ed Markey said in video remarks played at Murphy’s formal swearing-in ceremony in September. “But as the saying goes, sometimes the judiciary has plans for you.”

    Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Will Dunham

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

    节点运行失败

  • 俄罗斯袭击乌克兰城市敖德萨 近30万人断电断水


    2026年2月12日 17:52 / 联合早报

    2月12日,俄罗斯袭击乌克兰敖德萨南部地区,致一人受伤。消防员奋力扑灭袭击引发的大火。 (法新社)

    俄罗斯袭击乌克兰南部城市敖德萨(Odesa),导致近30万人断电断水。

    路透社引述乌克兰副总理库列巴星期四(2月12日)发布的消息说,袭击也致敖德萨近200栋建筑没有暖气,东南部城市第聂伯罗(Dnipro)也有1万户居民没有暖气。

    基辅遭受“大规模袭击”

    乌克兰首都基辅星期四凌晨也遭到俄罗斯导弹“大规模袭击”,多栋建筑物被击中。

    新华社引述基辅市长克利奇科在社交媒体上发布的消息说:“大规模袭击仍在继续。请留在掩体中!”克利奇科称,包括住宅楼在内的多栋建筑物遭袭。

    基辅市军事管理局局长特卡琴科同日在社交媒体上说,基辅当天凌晨遭到俄罗斯导弹袭击,伤亡情况正在核实。

    乌军袭击俄一个军械库

    据《乌克兰真理报》星期四报道,乌克兰军队日前袭击了俄罗斯伏尔加格勒州(Volgograd Region)科特卢班地区的一座俄军军械库并引发爆炸。

    据俄罗斯卫星通讯社消息,俄罗斯伏尔加格勒州州长博恰罗夫在社交媒体上说,位于科特卢班(Kotluban)的俄国防部一处设施遭乌克兰导弹攻击后起火,存在燃爆危险,附近居民已紧急撤离。

    俄罗斯袭击乌克兰城市敖德萨 近30万人断电断水

    2026年2月12日 17:52 / 联合早报

    2月12日,俄罗斯袭击乌克兰敖德萨南部地区,致一人受伤。消防员奋力扑灭袭击引发的大火。 (法新社)

    俄罗斯袭击乌克兰南部城市敖德萨(Odesa),导致近30万人断电断水。

    路透社引述乌克兰副总理库列巴星期四(2月12日)发布的消息说,袭击也致敖德萨近200栋建筑没有暖气,东南部城市第聂伯罗(Dnipro)也有1万户居民没有暖气。

    基辅遭受“大规模袭击”

    乌克兰首都基辅星期四凌晨也遭到俄罗斯导弹“大规模袭击”,多栋建筑物被击中。

    新华社引述基辅市长克利奇科在社交媒体上发布的消息说:“大规模袭击仍在继续。请留在掩体中!”克利奇科称,包括住宅楼在内的多栋建筑物遭袭。

    基辅市军事管理局局长特卡琴科同日在社交媒体上说,基辅当天凌晨遭到俄罗斯导弹袭击,伤亡情况正在核实。

    乌军袭击俄一个军械库

    据《乌克兰真理报》星期四报道,乌克兰军队日前袭击了俄罗斯伏尔加格勒州(Volgograd Region)科特卢班地区的一座俄军军械库并引发爆炸。

    据俄罗斯卫星通讯社消息,俄罗斯伏尔加格勒州州长博恰罗夫在社交媒体上说,位于科特卢班(Kotluban)的俄国防部一处设施遭乌克兰导弹攻击后起火,存在燃爆危险,附近居民已紧急撤离。