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Pakistan condemns attack on UN peacekeepers in Sudan
ISLAMABAD, Dec 15 (APP): Pakistan on Monday strongly condemned the heinous attack against UN peacekeepers in Kadugli, Sudan, which has resulted in the tragic deaths of six peacekeepers from Bangladesh serving with the United Nations Interim Security Force for Abyei (UNISFA), and injuries to several others.
“Pakistan expresses its deepest condolences to the Government and people of Bangladesh on the loss of these precious lives, and stands in solidarity with the bereaved families in this tragic hour,” Foreign Office spokesperson Tahir Andrabi said in a statement.
He said that the UN peacekeepers remained at the forefront of international efforts to prevent conflict, protect civilians, and support peace under the UN flag.
“We pay homage to the ultimate sacrifice made by these Blue Helmets in the line of duty for peace and stability in the region. Pakistan calls for a swift investigation to identify the perpetrators of this cowardly attack and to hold those responsible accountable,” he added.
The spokesperson reiterated that Pakistan would continue to work closely with members of the UN Security Council and the international community to ensure the safety and security of all UN peacekeepers.
World’s largest ice and snow theme park to open in northeast China
HARBIN, Dec 15 (Xinhua/APP): The world’s largest ice-and-snow theme park, the 27th edition of the Harbin Ice-Snow World, will open to the public on Dec. 17 in China’s “ice city” Harbin, the capital of the northeastern province of Heilongjiang.
The park spans a record 1.2 million square meters and uses 400,000 cubic meters of ice and snow under this year’s theme “Ice and Snow, Fairy Tale World.”
It will feature three main landscape axes, a large-themed parade, an outdoor stage and a newly built 5,000-square-meter air-supported facility. The venue incorporates technological elements like smart lighting and AI interaction.
A series of events, including the opening ceremony of the Harbin International Ice and Snow Festival, international ice sculpture competitions, snow football and ice hockey matches, as well as a New Year’s Eve concert, are scheduled within the park.
Tickets are available for advance purchase through Harbin Ice-Snow World’s official WeChat account and other online channels including Meituan and Alipay. A promotional price of 298 yuan (about 42 U.S. dollars) per adult ticket will run from Dec. 17 to 23, before reverting to the standard price of 328 yuan.
Beyond the Ice-Snow World, Harbin is promoting two other major winter destinations: the 1.5-million-square-meter Sun Island Snow Expo and an Ice and Snow Carnival along the frozen Songhua River, featuring some 260 snow sculptures and 60 ice-and-snow entertainment projects, respectively.
Feature: Vietnamese youth revive traditional arts through modern fusion
HANOI, Dec. 15 (Xinhua/APP): The twangy notes of “xam,” a centuries-old northern Vietnamese folk singing once performed by blind buskers in marketplaces and villages, rarely echo through modern beats of Vietnam. For many young people, “xam” is unfamiliar and overshadowed by contemporary rhythms and digital culture.
However, Vietnamese pop star Soobin Hoang Son gives “xam” a breath of fresh air by fusing modern rap and pop aesthetics and folk iconography in his latest music video “Muc ha vo nhan,” meaning seeing no one below your gaze. It offers a contemporary glimpse into traditional culture, one that even children find catchy.
Le T.T. Huyen, aged 35 from Hanoi, said she was surprised to see her son drawn by the sounds of the song.
“I didn’t expect him to notice any of that,” Huyen said. “He’s usually only into cartoon theme songs, but suddenly he was asking what musical instruments were used in the video, why the costumes looked different, and what the paintings meant.”
The work, garnering 3 million views within three days of its release, takes audiences back to a northern Vietnamese countryside shaped by the spirit of “xam.”
“I love folk songs and traditional musical instruments,” Soobin said at the launch of his video. “I want to bring the elements into my work, making it live on by young people.”
This month, he plans to launch the “Xam to Schools” program, partnering with the Vietnam Center for Promotion and Preservation of Intangible Cultural Heritage, to bring the art form to students across three regions.
The revival extends far beyond “xam” as different kinds of traditional art forms are reimagined in creative ways.
At FPT University, operated under Vietnamese tech giant FPT, a student-led communications campaign called “Neo cheo,” or preserving Vietnamese traditional opera, is renewing cheo, a centuries-old art form that blends folk songs with instrumental music and dance into stories drawn from legends, poetry, history and even daily life.
Tran Duc Anh, a 21-year-old member of the “Neo cheo” team, said the project began with curiosity. “Cheo has its own charm and we kept asking ourselves why something so beautiful seems distant to young audiences.”
The team surveyed young people and discovered that most wanted to encounter the traditional opera through new formats combined with rap, electronic dance music, or acoustic arrangements.
Armed with these insights, the team then produced the animated music video “Duyen phan phai chieu,” which means a fated love one is bound to obey, even as it slips away.
The work has resonated powerfully with young audiences, with comments flooding in expressing delight that centuries-old cheo melodies could feel emotionally relevant. Some described that watching it gave them goosebumps, while an overseas Vietnamese saw it as a way to reconnect with her homeland culture.
“We redesigned characters and costumes in animated forms and refreshed ancient melodies with electronic dance music and hip-hop elements,” said Do Phuong Linh, Anh’s teammate. She voiced the team’s happiness as the animated work has received a warm welcome from the audience.
Pop singer Hoa Minzy also sparked widespread interest with her music video “Bac Bling,” which blends “quan ho,” a UNESCO-listed love duet tradition characterized by poetic call-and-response singing, with pop and rap elements. The song got over 100 million views worldwide within a month, proving that folk motifs could captivate global audiences when presented through a modern lens.
Mai Van Lang, deputy director of the Vietnam Center for Preservation of Traditional Performing Arts, viewed these experiments as aligning with broader national preservation efforts.
He noted that following the 2021 National Cultural Conference, a landmark event reaffirming culture as the nation’s spiritual foundation, traditional culture preservation has become a priority, with both professional and amateur artists encouraged to revive folk heritage.
He particularly expressed his enthusiasm when seeing younger generations’ devotion to renewing traditional culture, calling it “not a short-term trend but a long-term cultural shift.”
Earlier this year, Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh met with outstanding youth and urged them to lead the digitization of cultural data to safeguard traditional heritage like “xam,” “cheo,” and “tuong.”
Traffic disrupted, warning issued after blizzard batters Japan’s Hokkaido
TOKYO, Dec. 15 (Xinhua/APP): A rapidly developing low-pressure system has brought a blizzard to Hokkaido on Monday, with violent winds and heavy snowfall also affecting parts of northeastern Japan, causing disruptions to transportation and prompting warnings of storm surges and flood risks from high tides.
According to the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA), gusts of wind recorded over a three-hour period up to 6 a.m. on Monday reached about 32.9 meters per second in the city of Abashiri and 32.7 meters per second in Kushiro, both in Hokkaido.
Snowfall has intensified across Hokkaido. Snowfall in the six hours through 6 a.m. on Monday reached 49 cm in Engaru Town, and 40 cm in Kitami City. As of 6 a.m., snow depth stood at 172 cm in the Hakkoda mountain range in Aomori Prefecture, and 59 cm at Obihiro Airport.
The JMA forecasted stormy conditions to continue, with very strong winds accompanied by snow or rain across Hokkaido and the Tohoku region. Heavy snowfall is expected mainly in Hokkaido, with up to 40 cm forecast in some areas over the 24 hours through Tuesday morning.
Air and rail services have been affected. All Nippon Airways and Japan Airlines said a total of 29 flights to and from airports in Hokkaido have been canceled on Monday. On Sunday, 160 flights arriving at or departing from New Chitose Airport were canceled.
JR Hokkaido announced the suspension of 77 services, including limited express trains, on Monday, warning that further cancellations may follow depending on weather conditions.
The blizzard also led to power outages for households in certain regions.
The JMA urged people in Hokkaido to take extra caution against blizzards, heavy snow and violent wind, as well as disruptions to transportation systems, warning of avalanches and power outages caused by snow. In the city of Nemuro, Hokkaido, elevated tides have raised the risk of coastal flooding due to storm surges.
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S. Korean president’s approval rating falls to 67.6 pct: poll
SEOUL, Dec. 15 (Xinhua/APP): South Korean President Lee Jae Myung’s approval rating fell 1.8 percentage points from a week earlier to 67.6 percent last week, a weekly poll showed Monday.
The negative assessment on Lee’s conduct of state affairs gained 1.4 percentage points to 30.3 percent, according to computer-assisted telephone interviewing (CATI) by local pollster Flower Research.
The ruling liberal Democratic Party’s support decreased 3.3 percentage points to 54.4 percent, while the conservative opposition People Power Party’s approval score added 1.2 percentage points to 26.7 percent.
Support rate for the minor left-leaning Rebuilding Korea Party and the minor rightist New Reform Party logged 2.5 percent and 3.0 percent each last week.
The pollster’s separate survey of automated response system (ARS) showed that Lee’s approval rating rose 3.0 percentage points to 64.5 percent last week compared to the previous week.
The CATI and the ARS surveyed 1,006 and 1,010 voters each from Friday to Saturday. The polls had plus and minus 3.1 percentage points in margin of error with a confidence level of 95 percent.
PCB to further improve and globalize PSL: Mohsin Naqvi
NEW YORK, Dec 14 (APP): Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chairman Mohsin Naqvi told a historic Pakistan Super League (PSL) roadshow in New York that the league would be further strengthened and also globalized.
The first of its kind event in New York was attended by prominent members of the Pakistani-American community, prospective PSL bidders, investors, key stakeholders, and famed Pakistani cricket stars, including former greats — Wasim Akram and Rameez Raja.
Speaking on the occasion, Naqvi , who is also the interior minister, emphasized that PCB is committed to making PSL one of the world’s best cricket leagues through transparency, innovation, and strong international partnerships.
He announced enhanced financial incentives for franchise owners, stating that the PSL champion will now receive a prize of $500,000, while the runner-up will be awarded $300,000. In addition, $200,000 will be given to the team that invests the most in player development, a move aimed at encouraging long-term growth of the league.
Naqvi informed attendees that the PSL franchise bidding process will be conducted through an open and transparent bidding system. Due to strong interest from investors, the PCB has extended the bid submission deadline from December 15 to December 22, allowing more potential bidders time to complete formalities. He added that the open bidding process is planned for April.
Advising investors, he shared his personal experience from the early days of PSL, noting that missing early opportunities can later be regretted, given the league’s rapid growth and rising franchise valuations. He assured participants that all data and information would be provided to bidders to ensure full transparency.
The PCB Chairman also revealed that preparations for PSL 11 are already underway, with new initiatives planned to further boost the league’s global profile and commercial value. In conclusion, he reiterated PCB’s commitment to merit-based decisions, openness, and international engagement, expressing confidence that PSL’s future will attract major investors from around the world.
Other top cricketers present at the event were: Salman Ali Agha, Abrar Ahmed, Faheem Ashraf, Saim Ayub, Shan Masood and Saud Shakeel participated in the event.
UN forum opens in Riyadh, with UN chief underscoring dialogue in multipolar world
UNITED NATIONS, Dec 14 (APP): The 11th Global Forum of the UN Alliance of Civilizations opened in Riyadh on Sunday with a blunt message for a world riven by distrust: dialogue is not a luxury – it’s a survival strategy.
Over the next two days, participants gathered in the Saudi capital are expected to emphasize that cooperation across cultures, religions, and communities remains the only viable way to navigate an era marked by rising polarization and conflict.
Speaking at the opening session, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres pushed back against the notion that the Alliance’s mission is unrealistic or, as critics suggest, “too soft for our hard world.”
Those who dismiss dialogue as naive, he warned, are mistaken. Diplomacy and cooperation, he said, are not optional, they are essential.
Two decades have passed since then-Secretary-General Kofi Annan launched the initiative in 2005 with support from Spain and Turkiye. The geopolitical landscape has shifted dramatically since, yet the Alliance’s core purpose remains constant: countering extremism and intolerance and helping societies of different cultures and faiths live together in dignity.
The UN chief described the paradox of an age in which humanity is “more connected, yet never more fragmented,” and outlined two divergent futures: one defined by fear, walls, and escalating wars; and another built on bridges between cultures.
Only the second path, he stressed, leads to sustainable peace: “No more 7th of Octobers. No more Gazas destroyed. No more El-Fashers starved. No more communities massacred, expelled, or scapegoated.”
The Secretary-General pointed to three forces capable of driving positive global change: young people, women and girls, and people of faith. He urged delegates to advance the Alliance’s mission “with courage, clarity, and hope.”
Countries participating in the Forum endorsed the Riyadh Communique, which calls for combating all forms of religious intolerance as a global priority. The document underscores the central role of education in fostering dialogue, human rights, and peaceful societies, and reaffirms the Alliance’s founding aim: strengthening cooperation among cultures and religions while promoting respect, mutual understanding, and inclusion.
UNAOC High Representative Miguel Moratinos, who also serves as the UN Special Envoy to Combat Islamophobia, opened the session by stressing that every culture must have an equal voice in shaping the world’s future. No single perspective should dominate, he said; instead, a truly peaceful and inclusive global community must draw on the wisdom and values of all civilizations.
Moratinos warned of “the return of hatred,” urging vigilance against growing discrimination. Quoting a verse from the Qur’an’s Surat Al-Hujurat, he emphasized that human diversity is a source of strength, not division.
He underscored that Islam is a religion of peace and reiterated that Islamophobia must have no place anywhere. At the same time, he insisted that antisemitism must be eradicated, adding: “Legitimate criticism of governments should not be perceived as antisemitic nor as a motive to demonize entire communities.”
Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister, Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud, reaffirmed the Kingdom’s “longstanding commitment to intercultural dialogue.” He said Saudi support for the Alliance reflects a firm belief that engagement among cultures and civilizations is essential to peace, cooperation, and conflict prevention.
He highlighted several Saudi initiatives aimed at promoting dialogue and countering extremism and warned of the increasing spread of religiously and nationally motivated extremist movements, as well as a worrying rise in hate speech and Islamophobia over the past two decades.
Rather than prompting disengagement, he said, these challenges must push nations to reinforce – not abandon – the values of dialogue, communication, and coexistence.
Representatives from Spain and Türkiye, the Alliance’s original co-sponsors, also spoke, reaffirming the enduring importance of inclusion, mutual respect, and sustained dialogue.
The opening day of the Forum also turned its attention to one of the fastest-moving challenges shaping today’s information landscape: AI-driven misinformation.
Speakers warned that deepfakes, algorithm-amplified hate speech, and unregulated systems are already reshaping public debate – and not for the better.
Ismail Serageldin, co-chair of the Nizami Ganjavi International Center and former Vice President of the World Bank Group, said the use of artificial intelligence is now unavoidable.
He urged the public not to fear new technologies, likening the current moment to the invention of the calculator, when many predicted the end of accounting jobs.
“Instead,” he noted, “they adapted,” and he argued society will do the same today. With the right safeguards, he added, AI could even help people achieve a better work-life balance.
Serageldin went on to underscore that AI will not replace humans, but people who understand how to use it will gain a decisive advantage. Smart regulations must protect the public without smothering innovation or creativity, he explained.
Achraf Tasfaout, a data scientist working in the banking sector, warned that AI is accelerating the spread of hate speech and making it harder for people to tell real content from deepfakes.
He called for clear rules that set boundaries for safe use while still enabling new ideas to flourish. Policymakers and journalists, he said, have a crucial role to play in defending society. Moreover, young people, as the most active users of AI, will be central to creating the solutions. He added that AI itself can be harnessed to counter many of the problems it creates.
Atif Rashid, Editor-in-Chief of Analyst News, cautioned that AI systems are being released “too quickly,” often without essential safety measures. He said it can feel as if “humans are guinea pigs” in a global experiment, with regulation arriving only after widespread public exposure.
Rashid pointed to examples where AI has encouraged harmful behavior, which he described as ‘AI psychosis’, and stressed that new systems must be designed to serve all of humanity, grounded firmly in human values.