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Across China: Yunnan truffle becomes globally-prized “Chinese specialty”

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KUNMING, Dec. 19 (Xinhua/APP): Ms. Sun, who runs a Western restaurant in Shanghai, recently placed an order for a batch of fresh Yunnan truffles, planning to launch seasonal limited dishes. In Guangzhou, Mr. Chen repurchased five cans of truffle sauce during the e-commerce promotion and left a comment: “Absolutely delicious!”

These orders, traveling thousands of miles, are all from Yongren County, Chuxiong Yi Autonomous Prefecture, southwest China’s Yunnan Province.

Truffles were once synonymous with “imported European luxury,” an extravagant treat enjoyed only by a few. Today, the story has changed. Truffles cultivated in Yunnan now supply the mainstream Chinese market and are shipped overseas by air, completing their journey from exotic imports to homegrown Chinese treasures.

As truffles grow in popularity among Chinese consumers and spawn a range of derivative products, Yunnan is actively building an integrated industrial chain spanning picking, processing, sales, and product innovation.

At 7 a.m., villager Li Yongxiu has already started her work with a bamboo basket and a small rake to harvest black truffles deep in the forest. “We didn’t realize the value of truffles until recently,” Li said, noting that mature truffles emit a special scent that often lures animals to dig them out.

With over 2,800 hours of annual sunshine and nearly 75 percent forest coverage, Yongren County provides ideal growing conditions for truffles. The county produces about 50 tonnes of truffles annually, accounting for a significant share of China’s total output.

Premium truffles from Yongren now fetch up to 850 yuan (about 120 U.S. dollars) per kilogram, and picking truffles has become a key source of additional income for local farmers. Li can earn more than 4,000 yuan during each harvesting season, while skilled pickers can make an extra 10,000 yuan or more.

To protect this unique resource, Yongren County has designated over 50,000 mu (about 3,333 hectares) of wild mushroom conservation and propagation bases, and bans truffle picking from March 1 to Oct. 31 every year to ensure better protection and good quality, said Wang Jianbiao, deputy chief of the county’s forestry and grassland administration.

In major producing areas, more than two training sessions are held annually to teach farmers how to identify mature truffles and adopt proper picking methods.

To extend the industrial chain and increase added value, local businesses have developed innovative products such as canned truffles, truffle mooncakes and truffle chocolate.

“Processing turns truffles into affordable delicacies for ordinary families,” said Lei Jinyu, manager of the technique center of Yongren Yesenda Mushroom Co., Ltd.

Established in 2014, the company has developed a series of truffle products, boosting its output value to over 40 million yuan in 2024, doubling the figure from the days when it sold only raw materials.

A breakthrough in preservation technology has extended the shelf life of fresh truffles from 20 to 45 days, enabling overseas sales. Lei added that the company’s products have been exported to France, Germany, the United Arab Emirates, and other countries.

Statistics show that China’s truffle exports registered a marked growth to approximately 45.4 tonnes in 2024. And in 2023, China’s export volume had already accounted for nearly one-third of global trade.

With improved ecological conditions, truffle-producing areas in China are expanding. Zhao Yongchang, a researcher at the Yunnan Academy of Agricultural Sciences, noted that, in addition to traditional production areas like Yunnan and Sichuan, truffle is now also produced in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, Inner Mongolia, and northeast China, further boosting the country’s truffle output.

Zhao acknowledged that due to species differences and insufficient brand accumulation, domestic truffles still have a price gap compared with European truffles. However, with technological progress and brand building, Chinese truffles are expected to shine brighter in the global market.

Third installment of “Avatar” hits Chinese screens

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BEIJING, Dec. 19 (Xinhua/APP): While “Zootopia 2” continues to shatter box-office records across China, James Cameron’s epic sci-fi film “Avatar: Fire and Ash” opened Friday in the Chinese mainland alongside its North American release.

Following “Avatar” (2009) and “Avatar: The Way of Water” (2022), the third installment in one of the most lucrative film franchises globally now joins a year-end release slate largely led by domestic titles in the world’s second-largest film market.

Despite strong anticipation, few would expect the new Avatar film to match the record-setting performance of “Avatar” in China. Released in 2010 in the mainland, it became China’s top-grossing title with 1.34 billion yuan (about 189.94 million U.S. dollars) in ticket sales.

The 2022 sequel earned 1.7 billion yuan in China but fell short of replicating that earlier success. By then, China’s top box-office benchmark had been raised to 5.77 billion yuan by the 2021 domestic blockbuster “The Battle at Lake Changjin.”

As of noon on its first screening day, “Avatar: Fire and Ash” garnered 69.65 million yuan in ticket sales, including preview screenings.

By late Thursday, China’s year-end box office revenue had already topped 4 billion yuan. This year’s year-end movie season runs from Nov. 28 to Dec. 31.

Kazakhstan surpasses 2025 housing goals as construction surges 15%

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ASTANA, Dec 19 (Kazinform/APP) : Deputy Minister of Industry and Construction Kuandyk Kazhkenov announced that Kazakhstan commissioned 16.9 million square meters of residential space between January and November 2025, Qazinform News Agency reports. It was noted that this represents modern housing for 154,300 families.
According to the deputy minister, the achieved indicators exceed the targets set in the President’s election program, which envisioned the commissioning of 15.9 million square meters of housing in 2025.
Kazhkenov also highlighted the steady growth of the construction sector. He said that the construction volume increased by 14.7% year-over-year, reaching 8.1 trillion tenge over the reporting period. As Qazinform reported earlier, Kazakhstan’s housing sector is poised for significant growth.

Feature: Vietnam’s capital residents struggle as severe air pollution persists

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HANOI, Dec. 19 (Xinhua/APP): A thick blanket of smog has settled over Vietnam’s capital Hanoi in recent days, blurring high-rise buildings and casting a gray haze across streets as fine particulate matter continues to rise to unhealthy levels.

According to the global air-quality monitoring platform IQAir, the city recorded several consecutive days with fine particulate matter, known as PM2.5, reaching the “unhealthy” range over the past month.

The peak occurred on Dec. 12, when PM2.5 concentrations reached nearly 197 micrograms per cubic meter, about 13 times higher than the World Health Organization’s recommended 24-hour limit.

Nguyen Thu Ha, a furniture shop owner in downtown Hanoi, removed her mask and told Xinhua, “I felt tired, and my throat was harder to breathe through. Overall, I felt exhausted.”

Her shop sits along a busy road where dust particles blow inside throughout the day, forcing her to clean the products constantly.

“It needs to be cleaned every 15 minutes,” she said, noting that she sometimes wears two masks or uses an N95 mask – a medical-grade respirator widely used in Vietnamese healthcare facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic.

While many residents struggle, others are seeing their businesses surge.

The persistent pollution, with elevated fine particulate matter levels, has driven up demand for health-protection products such as masks, air purifiers and other protective items.

Nguyen Thi Ngan, a pharmacist in Hanoi, said the number of masks ordered during this period has doubled compared to earlier this year.

Her pharmacy, even just by selling a few types of face masks, has already generated significant revenue, she said.

Since the beginning of December, Hanoi has experienced 14 days with air pollution at “unhealthy” levels or higher, and on the night of Dec. 7, IQAir ranked Hanoi the most polluted city in the world at that moment.

Speaking to Xinhua, Dr. Tran Van Mieu, vice chairman of the Vietnam Association for Conservation of Nature and Environment, cited several main causes behind the severe air pollution in Hanoi.

“Hanoi has too many motorbikes and cars — about 8 million motorcycles and 1.5 million cars for a population of 8.5 million,” he said.

He pointed out that most vehicles use fossil fuels, and “fossil fuels typically also cause emissions.”

He also noted that pollution stems from poorly managed construction planning and inadequate covering of construction sites.

“Pollution in Hanoi also comes from open burning in suburban areas, including burning straw after harvests and burning household waste,” he said.

The capital’s authorities have stepped up efforts to address these problems.

In April 2025, the Hanoi People’s Council approved a resolution that doubled fines for several environmental violations.

In late November this year, the city passed another resolution to implement a low-emission zone, launching a pilot program to ban gasoline-powered motorbikes during certain hours or in specific areas within Ring Road 1 starting July 1, 2026.

Vietnam kicks off, inaugurates 234 major projects nationwide

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HANOI, Dec. 19 (Xinhua/APP): Ceremonies were held across Vietnam on Friday for the ground-breaking, inauguration, and technical traffic opening of 234 major projects and key works, the Vietnam News Agency reported.

The move is part of activities marking the upcoming 11th National Emulation Congress and the 14th National Congress of the Communist Party of Vietnam.

According to the Ministry of Construction, the projects have a total investment of over 3.4 quadrillion Vietnamese dong (about 135 billion U.S. dollars).

Several large projects were launched, including the Hanoi Olympic Sports Urban Area, the Red River Landscape Boulevard, a section of the Lao Cai-Hanoi-Hai Phong railway in northern Vietnam, and key expressways such as the Tan Phu-Bao Loc route in the central region.

Meanwhile, key works completed or opened to technical traffic include sections of the North-South Expressway from southern Vietnam’s provinces of Can Tho to Ca Mau, and the Long Thanh International Airport’s Phase 1 in the southern province of Dong Nai.

At UN, Pakistan calls for counter-terrorism action to address West Africa’s deteriorating situation

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UNITED NATIONS, Dec 19 (APP):With recent political upheavals in Benin and Guinea-Bissau exposing ongoing vulnerability in a region already plagued by violent extremism, Pakistan has urged increased collaboration with and between regional organizations to address these challenges facing West Africa and Sahel regions.
“Strengthening mutual trust among Member States of the region remains critical for coordinated counter-terrorism action,” Pakistani delegate Asif Khan told the Security Council on Thursday.
Participating in a discussion on the United Nations Office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS), Khan, who is a minister at the Pakistan Mission to the UN,
voiced extreme concern over the intensified terrorist activity by groups such as Jama’a Nusrat ul-Islam wa al-Muslimin (JNIM), Islamic State Sahel Province (ISSP), Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) and Boko Haram.
“Terrorist entities continue to exploit porous borders, illicit trafficking routes, online radicalization tools and criminal networks,” the Pakistani delegate said, adding that the deteriorating security situation demands a collective response.
Frameworks such as ECOWAS, the Accra Initiative, and the Multinational Joint Task Force must be strengthened and adequately resourced and reinforced, Asif Khan said.
In this regard, he said Pakistan supports UNOWAS efforts to facilitate constructive engagement and help maintain channels of dialogue.
“We stand in full solidarity with the governments and peoples of West Africa and the Sahel as they continue to confront the scourge of terrorism and violent extremism,” the Pakistani delegate said,  as he spoke of Pakistan’s deep-rooted partnership with Africa.
Pakistani peacekeepers, he added,  have served with distinction across the continent. “We stand ready to share our counter-terrorism experience, including expertise in intelligence coordination, border management, and de-radicalization efforts.”
Also, the Pakistani delegate advocated a multidimensional approach to addresses not only kinetic threats but also the political, economic, climatic, and social drivers of instability.
He urged the international community to step in to address the urgent humanitarian needs of more than 6.9 million people across the central Sahel.
Opening the debate, Barrie Freeman, Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General for West Africa and the Sahel. highlighted key developments that “illustrate both the region’s fragility and its resilience”:
On 7 December, Benin’s national security forces, with support from ECOWAS and partners, thwarted an attempted coup d’état by military officers citing grievances over deteriorating security, management of the Armed Forces and restrictions on political activity.  On 26 November, in Guinea-Bissau, the military took control of the country, disrupting presidential election results.
“Since then, arrests, divisive rhetoric and online hate speech are a growing cause of concern,” she stated.
Meanwhile, in the Lake Chad Basin, Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province have intensified their attacks, while the Lakurawa group in north-western Nigeria further tests the Nigerian Armed Forces’ capacity to secure the territory.
With the link between terrorism and organized crime accelerating, Ms. Freeman called for prioritizing measures to address shared threats.

Foreign exchange rates

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KARACHI, Dec 19 (APP):The Exchange Rates Committee of Financial Markets Association of Pakistan issued the following Exchange rates bulletin, here on Friday.
CONVERSION RATES FOR DECEMBER 19, 2025 FOR FOREIGN CURRENCY FOR FORWARD COVER FOR DEPOSITS (EXCLUDING FE-25 DEPOSITS)
SBP SETTLEMENT VALUE DATE DECEMBER 23, 2025
     USD      280.2275
     GBP      374.6641
     EUR      328.8189
     JPY        1.7979

Leyla Aliyeva meets with Special Representative of WHO Regional Office for Europe

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BAKU, Dec 19 (AZERTAC/APP) : Leyla Aliyeva, Vice-President of the Heydar Aliyev Foundation, founder and head of the IDEA Public Union, met with Robb Butler, Special Representative on Climate and Health of the World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Office for Europe.
At the meeting, Leyla Aliyeva was presented with a special award of the World Health Organization in recognition of her effective services in the field of climate and health, her active participation and awareness-raising activities within the framework of COP29, as well as her support for the activities of the WHO Pan-European Commission on Climate and Health.
During the meeting, detailed information was provided on the projects implemented by the IDEA Public Union aimed at mitigating the negative impacts of climate change. They discussed possible cooperation opportunities between WHO and Azerbaijan in this area.
The parties exchanged views on the potential environmental and human health impacts of the decline in the Caspian Sea level, and discussed opportunities for joint initiatives and strengthening international calls in this direction, including the prospects for Azerbaijan’s accession to the WHO Healthy Cities Network.
Additionally, discussions focused on the impact of clean air on human health, the mitigation of air pollution, and the strengthening of awareness-raising activities in this field.

UNGA adopts Pakistani resolution reaffirming self-determination right of peoples under occupation

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UNITED NATIONS, Dec 19 (APP): The UN General Assembly Thursday, stamped its approval on a Pakistan-sponsored resolution that reaffirms the right to self-determination for peoples still subjected to colonial, foreign, and alien occupation.

The text, which was adopted by consensus, was recommended last month by the 193-member Assembly’s Third Committee, which deals with Social, humanitarian, and cultural issues.

Pakistan has been tabling this resolution since 1981 in an effort to focus the world’s attention on the peoples still struggling for their inalienable right to self-determination, including those in Indian Occupied Kashmir and Palestine.

By reaffirming the right to self-determination, the General Assembly has once again emphasized its applicability in situations where peoples remain deprived of this right and uphold the principles enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations and relevant UN resolutions.

The resolution serves as an important expression of international solidarity with peoples striving to exercise their legitimate right to self-determination, diplomats said. For the people of Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir, it reinforces international attention to their just cause and their aspirations for freedom and dignity, it was pointed out.

Co-sponsored by 65 countries representing all regions, the text calls on countries to immediately cease their foreign military intervention in and occupation of foreign countries and territories, as well as acts of repression, discrimination, and maltreatment.

Under its terms, the resolution also declared the General Assembly’s firm opposition to acts of foreign military intervention, aggression, and occupation, since these have resulted in the suppression of the right of peoples to self-determination and other human rights in certain parts of the world.

The Assembly also deplored the plight of millions of refugees and displaced persons who have been uprooted as a result of these acts and reaffirms their right to return to their homes voluntarily in safety and honour.

It urges the Human Rights Council to give special attention to the violation of human rights, especially the right to self-determination, resulting from foreign military intervention, aggression, or occupation.

Kyrgyzstan, Türkiye to expand cooperation in air transportation

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ASTANA, Dec 19 (Kazinform/APP) : Manasbek Samidinov, Chairman of the Board of Kyrgyzstan Airports, and Bilal Ekşi, Chairman of the Board of Turkish Airlines, held a working meeting in Istanbul, Qazinform News Agency cites Kabar.
The meeting was held with the support of the Consulate General of the Kyrgyz Republic in Istanbul, led by Consul General Chyngyz Toktobekov.
During the talks, the Turkish side expressed its readiness to cooperate with Kyrgyzstan’s state-owned Asman Airlines and confirmed plans to increase both cargo and passenger flights. The parties also discussed the possibility of operating flights with technical stops at Manas International Airport.
Ekşi emphasized the importance of strengthening ties with Kyrgyzstan and expressed his commitment to further developing the partnership.
During the meeting, Samidinov invited Bilal Ekşi to attend the opening of the renovated airport complex at Manas International Airport next summer.
Notably, Ankara becomes the Tourism Capital of Turkic World for 2026.