µ½°Ù¶ÈÊ×Ò³
°Ù¶ÈÊ×Ò³
²ý¼ªÓÐûÓÐרÃÅ´òµôº¢×ÓµÄÒ½Ôº
²¥±¨ÎÄÕÂ

Ç®½­Íí±¨

·¢²¼Ê±¼ä: 2025-06-02 09:52:04±±¾©ÇàÄ걨Éç¹Ù·½Õ˺Å
¹Ø×¢
¡¡¡¡

²ý¼ªÓÐûÓÐרÃÅ´òµôº¢×ÓµÄÒ½Ôº-¡¾²ý¼ª¼ÑÃÀÉúÖ³Ò½Ôº¡¿£¬²ý¼ª¼ÑÃÀÉúÖ³Ò½Ôº,²ý¼ª´òÌ¥´óÔ¼Òª¶àÉÙÇ®,²ý¼ªÒªÈËÁ÷¶àÉÙÇ®,²ý¼ª²»Òªº¢×ÓÄÄÀïºÃÒ»µã,²ý¼ª»³ÔÐÔÚ¼ÒÔõô²â,Öθ¾¿ÆºÃµÄ²ý¼ªÒ½Ôº,²ý¼ªÔõôÄܸü³Ö¾Ãµã

¡¡¡¡

²ý¼ªÓÐûÓÐרÃÅ´òµôº¢×ÓµÄÒ½Ôº²ý¼ª¿ÉÊÓ΢´´ÎÞÍ´ÈËÁ÷¼Û¸ñ,²ý¼ªÄļäÒ½ÔºÄпƺÃ,²ý¼ª¸î°üƤÊÖÊõͼƬ,²ý¼ª¿ÉÊÓÁ÷²ú,²ý¼ªÅ®×ÓÒ½ÔºÄÄ¼Ò ºÃ,²ý¼ªÄǼÒÒ½ÔºÖÎÁƸ¾¿Æ²¡±È½ÏºÃ,ÈËÁ÷ÔÚ²ý¼ªÄĸöÒ½ÔººÃ

¡¡¡¡²ý¼ªÓÐûÓÐרÃÅ´òµôº¢×ÓµÄÒ½Ôº ¡¡¡¡

The Trump administration announced Thursday it is enacting new sanctions on Russia for its election meddling, a month-and-a-half after missing a congressionally mandated deadline.The Associated Press also reports that the administration has accused Russia of an ongoing, deliberate attempt to penetrate the US energy grid.The new punishments include sanctions on the Internet Research Agency, a Russian troll farm that produced divisive political posts on American social media platforms during the 2016 presidential election. Yevgeniy Viktorovich Prigozhin, a financial backer to the Internet Research Agency with deep ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin, is also included.Known as "Putin's chef," Prigozhin was indicted by special counsel Robert Mueller earlier this year for his involvement with the Russian troll farm.In total, the administration applied new sanctions on five entities and 19 individuals on Thursday, including Russians who posed as Americans and posted content online as part of the IRA's attempts to sow discord ahead of the presidential contest.The sanctions were applied through executive power as well as through the Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act, which Congress initially passed this summer hoping to pressure Trump into punishing Russia for its election interference.Trump signed the bill reluctantly in August, claiming it impinged upon his executive powers and could dampen his attempts to improve ties with Moscow.The measure imposed an October deadline on the administration to produce lists of individuals and entities that could be subject to potential sanctions, and a January deadline to impose them. The law required the administration to identify entities that conduct significant business with the Russian defense and intelligence sectors.The administration missed both by several weeks, claiming necessary work was underway at the State and Treasury Departments to complete the lists.The delay was seen as sign of Trump's unwillingness to punish Russia for its meddling, which he has downplayed in the past. Members of Congress expressed frustration that their law, which passed almost unanimously, wasn't being enacted.On Thursday, administration officials insisted the new measures weren't the end of their efforts to punish Russia."By no means will this constitute the end to our ongoing campaign to instruct Mr. Putin to change his behavior," a senior administration official told reporters.The-CNN-Wire 2485

¡¡¡¡²ý¼ªÓÐûÓÐרÃÅ´òµôº¢×ÓµÄÒ½Ôº ¡¡¡¡

The small town of Palisade, Colorado is home to just over 2,700 people. It is a town filled with family-run farms and fruit orchards, and stores that adorn their fronts with as many signs in English as Spanish.Every spring the town¡¯s population increases by a few hundred people because of migrants who come to work on those farms and orchards on H-2A visas, which allow them legal residence in the United States without becoming a citizen.¡°I love my workers. They know my farmland better than I do,¡± said Bruce Talbott, who owns a farm in town and has been using H-2A workers for decades.Once the pandemic hit in March, however, things began to change. As farmers markets and restaurants that supply Talbott with most of his revenue began to close because of safety measures, the need for his 50 workers started to dwindle.Then, in April, an early-season freeze killed off 85 percent of his peach crop, forcing him to cut his staff from 50 migrant workers to eight.¡°Some guys ended up going back home against their will, others chose to go back home,¡± said Talbott. ¡°[It was hard because] our guys really like working here.¡±Talbott says he was able to shift his workers to a farm in South Carolina looking for help so they did not lose their jobs, but others across the country were not as lucky as migrant workers who rely on their income in the United States to support their families were left without a job.¡°This year will be one the historians love and one we¡¯ll be glad to end,¡± said Talbott.Many farms in Palisade and other parts of the country ended their contracts with the Department of Labor because of the reduced need which cut down on the number of migrants who could come to the United States for work.In other cases, migrant workers who had started work on farms had their hours reduced, forcing them to lean on local organizations for help.¡°I forecast a lot of belt tightening and struggling, honestly, to keep bills paid,¡± said Karalyn Dunn, executive director of Palisade¡¯s Child and Migrant Services.Dunn¡¯s office is small, but it is bustling with migrants in Palisade looking for meals and financial security. Since March, her organization has supplied migrant workers with free meals and hand sanitizer while also pitching in on rent, utilities, and food for groceries.¡°A gentleman just called and told me it looks like his work is over for this season and he¡¯d like to come over and get a meal,¡± she said.The reduction in work does not only affect migrant workers but businesses in the towns, where they reside as they rely on their business to make a living as well.¡°Our local grocery stores made the comment that if we have a peach crop they have a profitable year. If we don¡¯t have a peach crop, they break even,¡± said Talbott. 2762

¡¡¡¡²ý¼ªÓÐûÓÐרÃÅ´òµôº¢×ÓµÄÒ½Ôº ¡¡¡¡

The three-star general is leaving Puerto Rico, ending his mission of providing relief from the devastation of Hurricane Maria.Troops are being pulled out, too, along with helicopters that have flown supplies and equipment to communities cut off by landslides and broken roads.Yet government statistics say power is still not on for more than half of homes and businesses, and water is out for more than 1 in 10.Lieutenant General Jeffrey Buchanan recognizes that Puerto Rico is far from back to normal, but seven weeks after the hurricane hit, he insists the time is right to pass the baton."I think we're in the right place to transition," he tells CNN on the last day of his deployment. 696

¡¡¡¡

The USDA is recalling Jenny Craig Chicken Wrap with Barbecue Sauce frozen meals because the vegetables may be contaminated.SK Food Group, located in Ohio and Nevada, recalled approximately 174,207 pounds of the chicken wrap product because the vegetables in the dish may be contaminated with salmonella and listeria.These meals were shipped to consumers in California, Colorado, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Texas.The frozen meals were produced between October 2017 and October 2018.The following products are subject to recall:? 4.5-oz. plastic packages containing ¡°Jenny Craig Chicken Wrap With BBQ Sauce,¡± with lot codes WO0096753S10, WO0097880S10, WO0098216S10, WO0098565S10, WO0098923S10, WO0100691S10, WO0100692S10, WO0101746S10, WO0101861S10, WO0102176S10, WO0102469S10, WO0102758S10, WO0103920S10, WO0104247S10, WO0104353S10, WO0104615S10, WO0104995S10, WO0106312, WO0106312S10, WO0106945S10, WO0107556S10, WO0108694S10, WO0108695S10, WO0096753S02, WO0097880S02, WO0098216S02, WO00982416S02, WO0098565S02, WO0098923S02, WO0100691S02, WO0100692S02 and WO0101746S02.The frozen meals have establishment numbers "EST. 45367" or "EST. 20552" stamped on the product centerfold.Consuming foods with salmonella can cause diarrhea, cramps and fever. Eating products containing listeria can cause fever, muscle aches, headache, stiff neck, confusion, loss of balance, convulsions and diarrhea.So far no illnesses have been reported.If you have one of these meals, throw it out. 1624

¡¡¡¡

The term "money laundering" was never more appropriate than this week, when Dutch police found around 0,000 stuffed inside the drum of a washing machine.A man present in the house during Monday's raid was arrested on suspicion of -- yes, you've guessed it -- money laundering.Authorities were checking for unregistered residents in western Amsterdam when they found the load."The municipal administration revealed that no one lived at the address," the police told CNN in a statement. "When the police did a search through the house they found €350,000 hidden in the washing machine."The police also confiscated several mobile phones, a firearm and a money-counting machine during the raid. The suspect, who is 24 years old, has not been named.The police news release included a picture of bundles of €20 and €50 bills crammed into the washing machine.They said in a statement that the raid was part of an investigation into "housing fraud, money laundering and other [signs] of crime." 997

¾Ù±¨/·´À¡

·¢±íÆÀÂÛ

·¢±í