BBC news 新闻稿

合集下载

英语作文新闻报道三篇(最新)

英语作文新闻报道三篇(最新)

BBC News with Marian MarshallEuropean Union transport ministers have agreed to ease some other the restrictions on air travel which were imposed across Europe last week following the spread of volcanic ash from Iceland. After discussions by video conference, the EU Transport Commissioner Siim Kallas announced the decision to reporters in Brussels."New air control measures can come into effect from eight o'clock Tuesday morning. From tomorrow morning on, we should see progressively more planes start to fly and this is good news for Europe's stranded passengers, good news for airline industry and other sectors of this economy hard hit by this crisis."In an effort to ensure safety, the EU wants to create three designated fly zones. One will remain entirely off limits because of the threat of volcanic dust; another will be open to all aircraft, while a third zone will be available for a limited service. In Germany, the two main airlines, Lufthansa and Air Berlin, were granted exemptions from the existing fly ban to allow them to bring home stranded passengers. A Lufthansa spokesman said they were expected to carry a total of about 15,000 people from the Far East, Africa and the Americas. Britain has announced that it's sending warships to help bring home British travelers.The American military in Iraq has confirmed that the two most wanted al-Qaeda leaders in the country have been killed. The Iraqi government named them as Abu Ayyub al-Masri and Abu Omar al-Baghdadi. The Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said their identities had been confirmed by medical tests on the bodies. The two men were reportedly tracked down by an intelligence team west of Baghdad and their hideout destroyed by missiles. The US Vice President Joe Biden said the deaths showed that Iraq was now better able to look after its own security."Their deaths are potentially devastating blows to al-Qaeda Iraq, but equally important, in my view, is this action demonstrates the improved security strength and capacity of Iraqi security forces. In short, the Iraqis have taken the lead in securing Iraq and itscitizens by taking out both of these individuals."Officials in Pakistan say at least 23 people were killed when a suicide bomb exploded in a crowded market in Peshawar. Aleem Maqbool reports from Islamabad.The explosion happened close to a police station, in what's called the Storytellers' Bazaar, an historic market place in the central Peshawar that was packed with shoppers and also a large crowd protesting against the frequent power cuts in the city. One of Peshawar's senior most police officers was among those killed. It is Taliban militants who'd be suspected of carrying out the attack. They've recently come under increasing pressure across Northwest Pakistan, for Pakistani military carries out operations against them.World News from the BBCThe Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak has said Israel must recognize that the world will not accept Israeli rule over Palestinians for decades to come. He also warned of growing alienation between Israel and its long-standing ally, the United States. Mr Barak's warning comes at the time of growing criticism of the right-wing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.Pope Benedict has invited the world's 400,000 Catholic priests to Rome in June to show their support for him over what, the Vatican says, are unjust attacks on his policies concerning pedophilia crimes. The invitation was contained in a letter from Cardinal Claudio Hummes. In the letter, the cardinal says the presence of so many priests in St Peter's Square will be a good way to show that they haven't been intimidated, as he put it, by the crimes committed by a few of their fellow clergy.A team of Sherpas in Nepal have announced that they will go on a clean-up expedition on Mount Everest. It's the first time that Mount Everest is to be cleaned above the altitude of 8,000 metres, an area which is called the "death zone" because of the low level of oxygen and treacherous conditions. Joanna Jolly reports.The team of 20 Sherpa mountaineers will set off on May 1 to establish camp at the point known as Everest's South Col. From here, they plan to start their cleaningoperation, including removing at least two bodies from a narrow trail between the South Col and the summit. The Sherpas, many of whom have climbed Everest several times, say they also plan to remove 3,000 kilogrammes of empty oxygen bottles, old food wrappings, tents and ropes.A folk singing Cuban scientist has won a prestigious environmental prize in the United States for challenging the role of state bureaucrats in Cu。

bbc城市旅游新闻稿 中英文对照

bbc城市旅游新闻稿 中英文对照

bbc城市旅游新闻稿中英文对照全文共6篇示例,供读者参考篇1BBC City Travel News Report (English Version)Hey there, kids! Are you ready for an exciting adventure? Today, we're going to explore the wonders of a bustling city through this news report. Get ready to join me on this thrilling journey!Imagine stepping into a world where towering skyscrapers reach for the sky, and the streets are abuzz with people from all walks of life. The city is a vibrant tapestry woven with diverse cultures, mouthwatering cuisines, and endless opportunities for exploration.As we wander through the busy streets, our senses are immediately awakened by the tantalizing aroma of street food wafting through the air. From savory kebabs to sweet churros, the city's culinary delights are sure to tantalize your taste buds.But the city is more than just food; it's a living canvas of art and creativity. We'll visit awe-inspiring museums that transportus through time and expose us to the masterpieces of renowned artists. Who knows, maybe you'll discover a newfound passion for art!Speaking of discoveries, have you ever wondered what it's like to stand atop a skyscraper and gaze down at the city below? Well, get ready for an experience like no other as we ascend to the top of one of the city's iconic towers. The breathtaking panoramic views will leave you mesmerized, and you'll feel like you're on top of the world!As the sun sets, the city transforms into a dazzling spectacle of lights and energy. We'll explore vibrant night markets, where you can haggle for unique souvenirs and indulge in delicious street snacks. The lively atmosphere and friendly vendors will make you feel right at home.But our adventure doesn't stop there! We'll also dive into the city's rich history by visiting ancient landmarks and learning about the fascinating stories that shaped this incredible metropolis. You'll be amazed at how much there is to discover!Throughout our journey, we'll encounter friendly locals who will share their stories and give us a glimpse into their daily lives. You'll quickly realize that the heart of a city lies within its people, each with their own unique experiences and perspectives.So, pack your sense of wonder and get ready for an unforgettable adventure through the bustling streets, iconic landmarks, and vibrant cultures of this incredible city. Who knows what amazing discoveries await us around the next corner?篇2The Best City for Kids – A Kidventure in London!孩子们最爱的城市- 伦敦的冒险之旅!Have you ever dreamed of visiting a city filled with castles, red buses, and fun around every corner? Well, pack your bags because we're going on a kidventure to the one and only London!你有没有梦想过去一个到处都是城堡、红色双层巴士,每个角落都充满乐趣的城市呢?那就快点收拾行囊,我们要去伦敦这个独一无二的城市展开一场孩子们的冒险之旅了!First stop – Buckingham Palace! This is where the Queen lives in a massive castle with 775 rooms. Can you imagine having that many bedrooms? During the summer, you can watch the Changing of the Guard ceremony where the Queen's soldiersmarch in their big fuzzy hats. Just don't make fun of their goofy outfits – they're not dressed like that for fun!第一站- 白金汉宫!这里就是女王居住的大城堡,里面有775间房间。

bbc新闻报道范文

bbc新闻报道范文

英语新闻稿这个是英国广播公司BBC的新闻稿子原文:Pope Benedict has been celebrating Christmas midnight Mass at Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome. The service was broadcasted to more than forty countries around the world. Although it was conducted in Latin, the worldwide reach of the Roman Catholic Church wasrepresented by readings and prayers in Italian, English, French, German, Spanish, Polish, Portuguese, Arabic and Tagalog spoken in the Philippines. The Cuban authorities are reported to have flown in a leading Spanish surgeon for consultations on the health of President Fidel Castro. A Spanish newspaper reported that the head of the surgery at the Madrid hospital, Hose Luis Garcia Sabrido, had arrived in Havana several days ago. Stephen Gibbs reports from Havana. The Barcelona-based newspaper says the Doctor Garcia flew to Havana last Thursday on a jet chartered by the Cuban government. It says he came to give his professional advice on whether President Castro should undergo further surgery. There has been no confirmation from the Cuban government of any aspect of the report. Doctor Garcia is however understood to have been in Havana just last month, on that occasion to take part in an international conference on surgery. This is BBC world news. Georgia says it has agreed to buy eight hundred million cubic meters of gas from Turkey next year almost half of its needs. The price has not been disclosed, but the announcement follows Georgia agreeing last week to buy slightly larger amount from the Russian state-controlled Gazprom at double its previous price. The Iranian parliament has described the United Nation Security Council decision to impose sanctions on Iran because of its nuclear programme as unjust and illegal. The big majority of Iranian deputies have approved a bill, instructing the government to review cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency. The former Chilean military ruler General Augusto Pinochet who died earlier this month has left a posthumous letter. The letter was published by a group of his supporters who said it had been received in 2004. Simon Watts reports. General Pinochet saw himself asa warrior hero, but he was pursued to the last by investigations into alleged human rights abuses. Trying to salvage his reputation from beyond the grave, the general says he was proud of stopping a Marxist dictatorship. Referring to the estimated three thousand deaths during his rule, he says tough measures were needed but he was more flexible than generally realized. The letter reveals how unappreciated General Pinochet felt in his final days. He says there was a kind of banishment and unimagined loneliness. A contact of a former Russian agent who died in British after contracting radiation poisoning has been arrested in Naples. The man Mario Scaramella met the Russian Alexander Litvenenko on the day he became ill. Mr. Scaramella who has also been affected by radiation was arrested on his return from London. The BBC correspondent in Italy says the arrest is connected with the long-running investigation into arms trafficking and is not related to the death of Mr. Litvenenko. BBC world news.因为不知你要求的具体的范围,我只能提供这一篇咯。

BBC新闻文本

BBC新闻文本

警方击毙法国杀人男子BBC News with Jonathan IzardThe man who said he killed seven people in al-Qaeda-inspired attacks in France has been shot dead by a police marksman. Mohammed Merah was hiding in the bathroom of his apartment in Toulouse when commandos broke in after a 30-hour siege. A French prosecutor said he fired more than 30 bullets at them before being killed. Our correspondent Christian Fraser reports from Toulouse.The final acts of the most dramatic siege that had lasted over 30 hours. It was thought Mohammed Merah had taken his own life in the early hours of this morning. But as elite commandos moved in to clear the apartment, picking their way through each room with fibre-optic cameras, the gunman suddenly appeared at the bathroom door. There was an intense shoot-out. Merah advanced wearing a bullet-proof vest, firing wildly before he jumped out of the window. But outside was a police marksman who shot him dead.国际社会纷纷谴责马里军队President Sarkozy said French Muslims must not be stigmatised because of the gunman's actions.There's been international condemnation of Malian troops who've overthrown the government of President Amadou Toumani Toure. A rebel spokesman said the soldiers would return the country to democracy as soon as national unity and integrity were assured. The United States joined France and the African Union in denouncing the coup. The American position was expressed by the State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland."The United States condemns the military seizure of power in Mali. We echo the statements of the African Union, of Ecowas and of other international partners in denouncing these actions. We've called for calm; we've called for restoration of the civilian government under constitutional rule without delay so that the elections can proceed as scheduled."油轮残骸中发现遇难者遗体Five more bodies have been found inside the wreck of the cruise ship Costa Concordia, which capsized in January off the coast of Italy. A spokeswoman for the Italian Civil Protection Agency said this raised the confirmed number of dead to 30. From Rome, here's Alan Johnston.It's more than two months now since the Costa Concordia sank off the island of Giglio. But still the hunt for the missing goes on. And in the course of the afternoon, those overseeing the search announced that they discovered three bodies. But first, they were said to be in a very inaccessible part of the hull. But later, it emerged that in fact the remains have been found just outside the wreck, trapped between it and the rocks of the seabed. Then, late in the evening, it was announced that a further two bodies had been discovered in the same area.叙利亚政府军被指杀害逃亡难民The United Nations Human Rights Council has passed a resolution calling on Sri Lanka to investigate war crimes allegedly committed during its long conflict with Tamil Tiger rebels. Sri Lanka campaigned hard against the vote, saying it would usurp its sovereignty. But the United States said Sri Lanka was not doing enough to hold those responsible for violations to account.World News from the BBCActivists say government forces in Syria have killed 10 people who were trying to escape to a refugee camp in Turkey. They say the victims, including three children, were travelling on a bus when it came under fire in Idlib province. Violence continued in many parts of Syria despite Wednesday's UN Security Council statement urging the withdrawal of troops from population centres.足球暴力引发巨大冲突Clashes resumed in the Egyptian city of Port Said after the funeral of a teenager who died in football-related violence. The first trouble began on Friday after the Port Said football club al-Masry was suspended for two years over a post-match riot last month in which more than 70 people were killed.The leader of the military coup in Mali has told the BBC he's in complete control of the country. Captain Amadou Sanogo said he had no fear of a counter coup. But a BBC correspondent in the region says it's not clear how much support the captain has among high-ranking commanders. Tuareg rebels have taken advantage of the uncertainty to seize positions in the north. Captain Sanogo said he wanted peace talks with them.土耳其15名女武装分子丧生The Turkish government says 15 Kurdish militants, all of them women, have been killed in fighting with the security forces. The clashes took place in the southeastern province of Bitlis, which is a centre of the banned PKK militants. Jonathan Head is in Istanbul.As many as one third of the PKK's fighting force are women - a legacy of the group's one-time Marxist ideology, which prioritised the raising of women's status in Kurdish society. So women casualties are not unusual, but for 15 women to be killed in a single clash certainly is. The Turkish interior ministry is giving few details of the incident. It occurred in Bitlis, a province known for strong PKK support, during a large-scale military operation against the organisation in the mountains bordering Iraq.北京空气污染清理周期长The authorities in Beijing say it'll be at least two decades before they get the Chinese capital's air pollution under control. Beijing came close to the bottom of a recent listof the world's most polluted cities. Charles Scanlon reports.The city authorities in Beijing have been stunned by a wave of criticism of the accuracy of their pollution figures. They are now trying to convince the sceptical public that they have a credible plan to tackle the problem. The vice-mayor Hong Feng said the best the city could hope for was to have air pollution under control within the next 20 years. He said that would include one of the biggest threats to health - the tiny particles in the air that until a recent controversy were not even measured by the Beijing authorities.失踪渔船神奇再现Charles Scanlon reportingA Japanese fishing boat swept away by last year's earthquake and tsunami has been spotted adrift off the west coast of Canada. No one is believed to be on board the ship, which is still intact but badly rusted. However, the Canadian transport ministry is monitoring it for pollution. The vessel was registered in Hokkaido in Japan.Those are the latest stories from BBC News.美加强对伊朗石油制裁力度The United States is preparing to increase oil sanctions against Iran over its nuclear programme. President Obama has issued a statement saying there was enough oil on the world market to allow a significant reduction in purchases from Iran. Paul Adams reports from Washington.After June, financial institutions that continue to buy oil through Iran's central bank, where almost all such transactions are processed, will face sanctions. White House officials say the president decided to issue his statement after careful consideration of a number of factors, including global economic trends, supply and demand for non-Iranian oil, as well as spare capacity. There are exceptions: the US has already granted waivers to 10 EU countries and Japan because they've taken steps of theirown.安南希叙利亚政府立即停火The international envoy Kofi Annan says he expects the Syrian government to implement an agreed ceasefire immediately. A spokesman for Mr Annan said he wanted the authorities to halt the use of heavy weaponry in towns and withdraw soldiers to barracks because then the opposition would respond. Correspondents say there's no sign yet that the government is in the mood to make gestures to the opposition. There was more heavy bombardment in Homs and other places during the day.The Spanish government has announced spending cuts of more than $36bn to try to reduce its deficit and strengthen the economy. The deputy prime minister called the budget proposal severely austere, but essential. Here's Tom Burridge.海地首都爆发泥石流后果严重Six people have died in Haiti after heavy rains caused a mudslide which destroyed homes in the capital Port-au-Prince. An official with Haiti's civil protection agency said the mudslide occurred in Morne Calvaire - a slum area on a hillside. There have been two weeks of heavy rain in Haiti, triggering repeated flooding and landslides after the rainy season started early.Football's world governing body Fifa has agreed new anti-corruption reforms after independent experts issued a scathing assessment of its investigations into earlier scandals. They called Fifa's handling of bribery claims "unsatisfactory" and "unconvincing". Fifa's reputation was hit by claims of bribery and vote rigging during Mr Blatter's re-election last year and during the contests to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cup finals.The Brazilian police have detained 77 people and confiscated an arsenal of weaponsin a major operation against drugs traffickers. More than 600 police were involved in the operation. Here's Warren Bull.Police in Brazil say this is the largest operation they've ever launched in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul. In a series of raids in the city of Sao Borja, they seized weapons, money, vehicles and quantities of cocaine and marijuana. The police chief heading the operation said up to 13 different drug gangs had been identified in the city, including one with 40 members. Sao Borja is on the main transit route for drugs and contraband between Brazil and the neighbouring countries - Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay.塔利班向阿富汗发动袭击BBC News with Marion MarshallTaliban militants have carried out a series of attacks in the centre of the Afghan capital Kabul. Nato bases, the parliament and Western embassies all came under fire. Afghan security forces are still trying to clear heavily armed insurgents from several areas. The first explosions were in the morning, and exchanges of gunfire continued after nightfall. The Afghan government said a number of gunmen had been killed, but no civilians or members of the security forces. A Taliban spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, explained the motivation behind the attacks.潘基文对叙利亚表示担忧"These attacks were revenge for the brutal actions of foreigners, such as urinating on Taliban dead bodies, Koran burnings at Bagram airbase and killing of innocent civilians in Kandahar. This was one of the biggest attacks in terms of size so far this year, and it is still underway."The United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon says he's concerned about the shelling of the Syrian city of Homs as more fighting was reported involving government forces and rebels. Earlier, a spokesman for the UN envoy Kofi Annan asked all sides to observe a ceasefire which came into force last Thursday. Ahmad Fawzi told the BBC that the truce was precarious and fragile, but it could save Syria from plunging back into the abyss as he put it.联合国对停火协议提出要求"Both parties must be willing to end the violence and come to the negotiating table. We hope both sides will realise that this is a golden opportunity for them to put down their arms and to start talking. Negotiations are the only way out of this bloody crisis that has lasted for one year."Their appeals come as UN ceasefire observers began to arrive in the country.The United Nations has confirmed that at least one person has been killed by a Sudanese bombing raid on South Sudan. The local authorities say nine were killed and 24 wounded in different air attacks, and ground clashes are also reported. James Copnall reports from Khartoum.North Korea Missile Launch Failure: New Threats?The latest on that failed missile test by North Korea and a surprise the government was supposed to make the set back on state TV. ABC's * is tracking from WashingtonMartha, and Pentagon and all of Asia on high alert for this test but it turned out to be another dud.A totally dud. It was all over so quickly, George, that rocket was air-born for 81 seconds. The missile lifted up with no sign of trouble but right after the first stage boosted rocket, which pushes the rocket higher and faster. The missile just broke apart in flight. The debris fell into waters about 100 miles west of Soul, South Korea. It was over.It sure was Martha. And there's a lot of concern now though that to make up for the embarrassment, North Korea is gonna plough and actually try to test a nuclear bomb. That is a concern. It's the first time ever that the North Korea said it acknowledged the failure of the rocket. So that was a big surprise to the administration, but there wre already fears that North Koreans would try to test another nuclear device, this time a uranium device, so everyone is bracing themselves for that development, George. They do not think this is over yet.And the administration was hoping to have a new * in North Korea now that they have a new leader, they were offering food aid if North Korea didn't test this missile now. That's completely odd.Yes. They basically completely reneged on this deal, so this is an embarrassment for the administration as well, but everyone is moving on-ward and looking to that nuclear device test which they think will come in the next few weeks.Ok. Martha . Thanks very much.This post was generated by put listening repetition system, Check the original dictation thread!U.S. Bridges, Roads Being Built by Chinese FirmsAnd as you know, ABC News is always looking for ways to bring American jobs back to America. So, this week, it was shocking to learn so many great infrastructure projects are under way in America, rebuilding bridges and roads in American cities, but they've hired Chinese firms and Chinese workers. Why?20/20" anchor Chris Cuomo is the captain of our bringing America back team and he decided to track down those people who made these decisions.Rebuilding America's crumbling infrastructure is now a priority.Help us rebuild this bridge, help us rebuild America, help us put construction workers back to work.In New York, a $400 million renovation of Alexander Hamilton Bridge;In California, a whopper, a $7.2 billion new bridge to connect San Francisco and Oakland; In Alaska, a proposed $190 million bridge project.Sounds like a great opportunity for government spending to actually lead to real jobs. The problem: Much of the work is going to Chinese government-owned contracting firms.When we're subsidizing jobs in China, we're not creating any wealth in the United States.In Alaska, outraged union workers took to the airwaves with an obvious point : This is not the time to send more jobs to China, our tax dollars provide hundreds of jobs there, not at home.US law actually requires major infrastructure projects to buy America when the cost difference is reasonable. In California, US firms say they would have met those guidelines but state officials decided to turn down federal money for a major part of the bridge, allowing a Chinese company at cost of almost 3,000 American jobs, and potential $1 billion boost to the struggling California economy.It would've had a multiplying effect, because it would have not only given thousands of Californians jobs ,but also the subsequent spending would have been reinvested back in our economy.Is this the best way to bring America back?We went to Californian officials who claimed the Chinese could do the work faster and cheaper.Why can't the Americans do it as quickly as Chinese, what makes them so special? One issue that you will consistently hear, every time you go to a fabrication site this country is that they struggle at this point in time to obtain welders. That is an issue in this country.So can you say that you guys have done everything you can to keep jobs here and building this bridge?Absolutely.But would American companies have done it, Chris, for a little less money and triedto race it along.The US firms say absolutely. They say they could have done this job. And there's a bigger point here. It's not a level playing field, the Chinese firms are state-owned. They don't pay their workers as much. That's why the Buy America laws were passed, if states can get around them, Diane, we never bring America back, you have to enforce the laws to let American companies play.美国参议院共和党参议员几乎集体“否决”了总统奥巴马的“准竞选纲领”的法案——巴菲特规则议案。

BBC新闻带翻译

BBC新闻带翻译

BBC News with Jonathan Izard.The United States says the Congolese war crime suspect Bosco Ntaganda has handed himself in at the US embassy in Rwanda and asked to be transferred to the International Criminal Court, the ICC, in The Hague. Our East Africa correspondent Gabriel Gatehouse reports.Bosco Ntaganda walked into the US embassy in Kigali on Monday morning unsolicited according to an official statement from Washington. Neither the United States nor Rwanda is a signatory to the ICC, but a spokeswoman for the state department said the US supported the work of the court and would aim to facilitate his transferal to The Hague. The charges against Gen Ntaganda, who’s nicknamed The Terminator, include rape, murder and the recruitment of child soldiers. They relate not to the current rebellion in the eastern Congo, but to an earlier conflict in the same region.A legal case has begun in New York that challenges the way the city’s po lice conduct a policy of detaining and sometimes searching those they consider suspicious. Critics say the operations known as “stop and frisk” disproportionately target black and Hispanic men. But the policy’s supporters say it’s contributed to a sharp drop in violent crime. Here’s our North America correspondent Jonny Dymond.More than half a million people were stopped on the streets of New York City last year by police. The policy is legal. But now opponents want the way that it’s put into action exam ined and reformed. More than half of those stopped are black, only a quarter of the city’s residents are. A lawyer for the organisation that started the case, the Center for Constitutional Rights, described the stops as a frightening and degrading experience that were arbitrary, unnecessary and unconstitutional.The jailed Kurdish separatist leader Abdullah Ocalan says he’s to make a historic statement on Thursday, raising hopes that he might call a ceasefire after decades of conflict with the Turkish government. James Reynolds sent this report from Istanbul.A delegation of Kurdish MPs was allowed to go and see Abdullah Ocalan in prison. The politicians took back with them to Istanbul a statement from the PKK’s leader. Abdullah Ocalan said that he would make a call, or announcement, during traditional Kurdish New Year celebrations on Thursday. This call will feature satisfactory information on the political and military aspects of the solution, he wrote. Most here take this to mean that Mr Ocalan will call a ceasefire and may also announce the withdrawal of armed PKK fighters from Turkey to their main base across the border in northern Iraq.Finance ministers from the eurozone have asked Cyprus to protect small investors from a proposed levy on savings. Plans for a one-off tax of nearly seven per cent on savings up to 100,000 euros have outraged Cypriots. Banks in Cyprus are to remain closed until Thursday as efforts to revise an international bailout package continue. A parliamentary vote on the package has been repeatedly postponed. It’s now expected on Tuesday.World News from the BBC.The British Prime Minister David Cameron has presented the plan to regulate the press in the wake of a series of scandals over phone hacking by journalists. Mr Cameron told parliament that the plan agreed overnight by Britain’s main political parties would set up a watchdog that could impose heavy fines on newspapers and force them to publish corrections. The leader of the opposition Labour party Ed Miliband said the agreement satisfied the demands of protection for victims and freedom of the press."I don’t want to live in a country where sections of the press can abuse their power to wreak havoc on the lives of innocent people. And equally I want to live in a country that upholds the right of a fearless, angry, controversial press that holds the powerful to account, including in this House. Today’s agreement protects the victims and upholds a free press.”The Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has made a direct appeal to Pope Francis to intervene on the dispute between her country and Britain over the Falkland Islands. At an audience with the Pope at the Vatican, the Argentine leader said she wanted him to get involved. She accused Britain of militarising the islands. It’s not known how the Pope, who is from Argentina, responded to the appeal. Argentina claims sovereignty over the islands.The Supreme Court in Colombia has revoked a presidential decree which allowed abortions in cases of rape, malformation or risk to the mother’s health. The judge said the decree issued in 2006 was illegal because it meddled in areas for which no law had ever been passed. But a separate constitutional court ruling holds that clinics cannot refuse abortions in such cases.The Bangladesh Cricket Board has banned an international umpire Nadir Shah from the sport for 10 years after finding him guilty of corruption. The board launched an inquiry after a report by an Indian television station alleged that Mr Shah and others were willing to help fix matches in return for bribes. Nadir Shah denies the charges and says he will appeal.BBC News.Jonathan Izard为您报道BBC新闻。

BBC News with Jonathan Izard BBC新闻稿

BBC News with Jonathan Izard BBC新闻稿

BBC News with Jonathan IzardThe main Syrian opposition group says it won’t attend meetings in Washington, Moscow and Rome in protests at what it describes as the international communities’silence over recent missile strikes on Aleppo. Here is Jim Muir.Opposition leaders are clearly worried that the coalition risks being discredited and getting dangerously out of touch with realities on the ground if it gets drawn into a diplomatic process which would involve compromising with the regime which shows no signs of readiness to step down. They are also enraged by the increasing use by the regime of Russian-supplied Scud missiles which have been hitting rebel-held parts of Aleppo recently with devastating results. There’s even a suspicion that Russian technicians may be firing them. Hence their reluctance to treat the Russians as honest brokers in political settlement efforts.Iran has said it’s selected 16 potential sites to build nuclear power plants. The country’s Atomic Energy Association also announced the discovery of significant deposits of raw uranium, tripling known national reserves. Analysts say the announcements could complicate talks about Iran’s controversial nuclear programme due to start in Kazakhstan on Tuesday.President Holland of France has said that French troops leading the fight against Islamist insurgents in Mali are in the final phase of driving them from their mountain hideouts. From Paris, Hugh Schofield reports.President Hollande said that French troops were now engaged in the fighting in the Ifoghas Mountains near the Algerian border. It was here that large numbers of what he called the terrorists had taken refuge. “This really is the last phase” he said "because it’s here that a concentrated the forces over Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, the group which is believed to be holding several French hostages." The president also paid homage to Chadian forces who were engaged in heavy fighting in the same area on Friday as result of which some 65 Islamists and 13 Chadian soldiers were killed.Three pro-Kurdish MPs in Turkey have visited Abdullah Ocalan, the leader of the Kurdish militant organization the PKK in his island jail. On their return, the MPs said Mr. Ocalan has signaled that captivesheld by the PKK could be released as part of a peace process. The PKK and the Turkish government are reportedly close to a deal under which Turkish-Kurds would end their insurgency in exchange for greater minority rights.A German government minister has suggested that food products containing horsemeat but wrongly labeled as beef could still be eaten. The development minister Dirk Niebel said they could be distributed to the poor. He said it would be irresponsible to throw away palatable and safe food. Mr. Niebel was responding to a continuing scandal in Europe with tests in one country after another detecting horsemeat in products labeled as beef.Gun rights activists in the United States are holding what they are calling a day of resistance to protest against President Obama’s planned gun reforms. The Sandy Hook School shooting last year which left twenty children and six teachers dead led to renewed calls for tougher restrictions on gun use.World News from the BBCAs Pope Benedict prepares to step down, the Vatican has criticized what it called news reports aimed at influencing the cardinals who will choose his successor. The Vatican said while superpowers had tried to influence the selection in the past, today there was an attempt to apply the weight of public opinion. David Willey reports from Rome. In past centuries, it was European kings and emperors who were accused of trying to influence papal elections, now it’s the media and particularly the Italian media. That’s the Vatican view,expressed in unusually forceful language. There is anger inside Pope Benedict’s domain about what the official Vatican spokesman called slanderous reports and unverified news stories alleging corruption, intrigue and even blackmail inside the Roman Curia.The Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi has changed the opening date of parliamentary elections just days after he announced it. A statement said the change was in response to Coptic Christians who’d expressed concern that the original date coincided with their Easter holiday. Here is Sebastian Usher.President Morsi’s spokesman said the date was shifted from April 27th to April 22nd to ensure that everyone in Egypt can vote. Leaders ofCoptic Christian minority had warned that starting the election during their Easter holiday could reduce their participation. Many Copts feel increasing pressure within Islamist president and the Muslim Brotherhood for dominant political power. The uncertainty over the election date has already been seen by the wider Egyptian opposition as a new political misstep by Mr. Morsi.There are reports that an artwork by the renowned graffiti artist Banksy due to be auctioned in Miami has been withdrawn from sale after an opening bid. It was removed from a shop wall in London last week and expected to fetch more than half a million dollars. Residents of the area from where the artwork was taken had been trying to block the sale saying it belonged to them. The local authority Haringey council is investigating how it was removed.BBC News。

BBC新闻稿22篇

BBC新闻稿22篇
Standars &Poor's downgraded its assessment of Greek bonds to the so-called junk status because of the growing danger that the bond holders will not be paid back in full. Many big investment funds have rules that forbid them from holding junk bonds,says the move is likely to trigger a further round of selling . Share markets have taken fright,fearing that if Greece does default o its debts ,it would hit many European banks which hold Greek bonds and could trigger a wider financial crisis . Already pressure is mounting on Portugal which has also seen its credit rating downgraded today , although it remains above junk status.
The two former cabinet minister Geoff Hoon and Patricia Hewitt had stunned everyone at westminster with their last-minute efforts to challenge Gordon Brown's leadership. But downing street and labour party officials have moved quickly to quash any revolts . Most importantly,current cabinet minister have come out and backed the prime minister,orbiting some cases with little apparent enthusiasm . So the latest challenge looks likely to be short lift . Although many within the labour party doubt Mr. Brown's leadership qualities ,they also seen to think it would only make things worse to get rid of him before the general election.

bbc英语新闻报道短篇

bbc英语新闻报道短篇

bbc英语新闻报道短篇篇一:英语新闻报道短篇英语新闻报道短篇60词BBC News with Julie Candler.Hillary Clinton is to launch her bid to e the first female President of the United States on Sunday. The former Secretary of State is expected to use a video posted on the Internet to announce that she"s seeking the Democratic Party"s nomination for next year"s election. Nick Bryant reports from Washington.“Ordinarily, presidential candidates launch their campaigns in front of adoring crowds in a blaze of red, white and blue. But Hillary Clinton will offer a less rather montage, a video posted online and promoted on social media. Then it"s believed she"ll head to Iowa and New Hampshire to meet individual voters in fairly intimate settings, rather than the usual rallies. It"s a deliberately low-key, even humble start, choreographed to avoid the sense of e ntitlements that bedaubed her campaign in 2008.”篇二:英语新闻报道短篇求一篇英文报道或短文求一篇英语短文,300词左右,最好粘贴过来因为着急用,英语课要背着给大家讲,新闻报道.等.或者短文比如介绍中国食物啊茶文化啊Chinese TeaOf the three major beverages of the world__ tea,coffee and cocoa__ tea is consumed by the largest number of people.China is the homeland of tea.It is believed that China has tea-shrubs as early as five to six thousand years ago,and human cultivation of teaplants dates back two thousand years.Tea from China,along with her silk and porcelain,began to be known the world over more than a thousand years ago and has since always been an important Chinese export.At present more than forty countries in the world grow tea with Asian countries producing 90% of the world"s total output.All tea trees in other countries have their origin directly or indirectly in China.The word for tea leaves or tea as a drink in many countries are derivatives from the Chinese character "cha." The Russians call it "cha"i",which sounds like "chaye" (tea leaves) as it is pronounced in northern China,and the English word "tea" sounds similar to the pronunciation of its counterpart in Xiamen (Amoy).The Japanese character for tea is written exactly the same as it is in Chinese,though pronounced with a slight difference.The habit of tea drinking spread to Japanin the 6th century,but it was not introduced to Europe and America till the 17th and 18th centuries.Now the number of tea drinkers in the world is legion and is still on the increase.篇三:英语新闻报道短篇30个词的英语新闻短篇【英语新闻报道短篇】Cool down in housing market continues 2014-12-14A fresh batch of mixed economic data ing from the National Bureau of Statistics on Friday.Chinas industrial output rose by a less-than-expected 7.2 percent in November from a year earlier,which means that housing market will continue downward 篇四:英语新闻报道短篇我想要一篇英文的新闻报道帮个忙啊CNS June 25 __ Roundup, Korean Foreign Ministry confirmed on the 25th Macao has received the banks thawing of the Korean capital, and said that these funds will be used for humanitarian purposes. Macao was frozen in the banking industry (BDA) transfer of funds to the North Korea problem has been resolved. Earlier earlier, the Russian Far East mercial banks in its website issued a statement saying, The Bank of Korea the same day in Macao banks of the thawing of the Korean capital into a bank. According to reports, a North Korean foreign ministry spokesmantold reporters accept KCNA said, frozen Department of the Macao banking industry funds have been remitted to North Korea demands North Korea account, the issue was finally resolved. He also disclosed that the funds will be unfrozen plans for the enhancement of the people"s living standards and humanitarian purposes. In addition, North Korea and the United States will in the near future to discuss the highly enriched uranium (HEU) program, initiated bilateral consultations. Both sides have the possibility of resolving the banks use the process of bilateral negotiations in the framework of issues touched upon. In other words, North Korea and the United States may have on the North Korea nuclear issue mainly through direct negotiations. And this will serve the si__party talks, the focus of public attention. It is familiar with the si__party talks one on the 25th source said : "North Korea and the United States may be as BDA negotiations, North Korea and the United States using bilateral channels to discuss issues touched upon. Both sides may normalization of relations between North Korea and the United States in the working group meetings or non-nuclear work Group meeting on "nuclear program list consultations" discussion. "September 2005. U.S. Treasury Department accused the North Korean governmentuse of the banks in Macao accounts to engage in money laundering and counterfeiting U.S. dollars, demanded that the United States stop financial institutions and the firm business dealings. Macao banks to the subsequent freezing of the North Korean government in U.S. dollars, the bank deposits. North Korea denied U.S. allegations. May of this year, the Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that once the funds have been frozen issue is resolved, North Korea under the si__party talks on the agreement to suspend operation of nuclear facilities, invite the International Atomic Energy Agency delegation visits North Korea, and in-depth discussions with the United States to suspend operation of its nuclear facilities after the next phase measures. The Russian Foreign Ministry on June 23 confirmed Macao Department of the Korean banking industry funds have been diverted to North Korea in a Russian banks to open accounts.朝鲜问题资金已冻结【英语新闻报道短篇】篇五:英语新闻报道短篇英语新闻或短文求最近的英语新闻或者精美短小的英语短文大概初中水平就好我刚进高一上课要用求亲们给点·······1.英语新闻:CPC Central Committee to hold 6th plenum in OctoberThe Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee decided Friday that the Sixth Plenary Session of the 17th CPC Central Committee will convene in Beijing in October this year.The decision was made at a Political Bureau meeting,presided by President Hu Jintao,also general secretary of the CPC Central Committee.2.英语新闻:China announces enforcement regulations for amended personal e tax lawThe State Council,or China"s cabinet,on Wednesday announced new regulations designed to facilitate the enforcement of the country"s new individual e tax law,which features an increased monthly tax exemption threshold.Premier Wen Jiabao signed a State Council order to approve the creation of the regulations,which are set to take effect on Sept.1,2011.The National People"s Congress (NPC) Standing Committee,or China"s legislative body,adopted an amendment to the individual e tax law during a bimonthly session lastmonth.The amendment raised the monthly tax exemption threshold from 2,000 yuan (307.7 U.S.dollars) to 3,500 yuan.The new law reduces the previous nine-bracket system to a smaller seven-bracket system,eliminating brackets corresponding to tax rates of 15 and 40 percent.It also reduces the minimum tax rate from 5 percent to 3 percent for people whose monthly es are between 3,500 and 4,500 yuan.选一个吧,长的短的都有,不够再和我说篇六:英语新闻报道短篇求一篇英文的新闻报告最好是最近的新闻字数200左右吧山西襄汾9月12日从山西省襄汾县新塔矿业公司“9·8”特大尾矿库溃坝事故抢险指挥部获悉,截至12日17时,搜救人员累计发现遇难者178名,搜救工作仍在紧张进行.搜救人员对所有重点区域、重点部位全部进行了搜寻,90%的过泥面积已经进行了彻底搜寻,目前2200多名搜救人员和110多台大型机械仍在现场实施搜救.翻译Shanxi Xiangfen September 12 from the Xiangfen County, Shanxi Province tower mining panies, "9 8" large tailings dambreak the accident rescue headquarters was informed that as at 17:00 on the 12th, search and rescue personnel found the victims total 178, search and rescue Is still a tension. Search and rescue staff on all key areas, focusing on all parts of the search conducted, 90 percent of the dump area has conducted a thorough search, more than 2,200 search and rescue personnel and more than 110 Taiwan implementation of large-scale search and rescue machinery is still at the scene.篇七:英语新闻报道短篇求纯正英国新闻报道视频或者报道词本人希望能模仿写一篇英文报道,求纯正英语新闻报道视频或者报道词VOABBC篇八:英语新闻报道短篇求英语的新闻报道,最好大概2分钟的,附上有文字稿的有的发我,给很多赏金At least 119 people were killed on Monday morning in a poultry processing plant fire in Northeast China"s Jilin province,rescue headquarters confirmed.本周一早晨,中国东北吉林省一禽业公司发生火灾,据救援指挥部确认,火灾造成至少119人死亡.The fire broke out at around 6:06 am at a slaughterhouse owned by the Jilin Baoyuanfeng Poultry Company in Mishazi township of Dehui city,according to firefighters.据消防员称,火灾发生于早上6点06分左右,事故地点为一屠宰场,所属于吉林德惠米沙子镇宝源丰禽业公司.Over 300 workers were in the plant when the accident happened,survivors told Xinhua,adding they heard a sudden bang and then witnessed dark smoke at around 6 am.About one hundred workers have managed to escape from the plant whose gate was locked when the fire occurred,said survivors.事发时工厂共有300多名工人,幸存者告诉新华社记者,他们突然听到一声巨响,早上6左右就看到滚滚浓烟.据幸存者透露,火灾发生时大门是锁着的,大约有一百名工人成功逃出工厂.The plicated interior structure of the prefabricated house in which the fire broke out and the narrow exits have added difficulties to the rescue work,sources with rescue forces said.救援队称复杂的室内结构,狭窄的安全出口都给救援增加了困难.As of 12 am on Monday,the fire has not been put out and rescue work is ongoing.The exact number of those trapped in theplant has not yet been confirmed and further investigation into the cause in under way.直到周一中午12点,大火还未被扑灭,救援工作仍在继续.被困于工厂的确切人数仍未能确定,火灾原因也还在进一步调查中.篇九:英语新闻报道短篇求一篇有关环境的英语新闻报道,其中有对话采访!Britain Enters Final Day of Campaigning Before ElectionsBritain"s top party leaders are taking full advantage of their last day of campaigning before Britons go to the polls.Late Wednesday night,Labor leader Gordon Brown visited steel workers on an overnight shift."I don"t need to tell you that this election is about the future," said Brown."It"s about the future of our industry,the future of our jobs,the future of our young people."Mr.Brown is facing a tight election.The Conservative Party,led by David Cameron,has topped the latest opinion polls.And,the Liberal Democrats __ traditionally a marginalized party in what has largely been a two-party system __ are scoring high in opinion polls.Rodney Barker is a political academic and professor at the London School of Economics."The three candidates have been up to making themselves as busy as possible," explained Barker."David Cameron,the Conservative leader,so visible that he"s even worked through the night __ he hasn"t slept."Barker says this last day of campaigning is crucial,because so many Britons still have not made up their mind.A survey published by the research group ComRes Tuesday said 2.5 million people who say they are certain to vote say they are still undecided who to vote for and more than a third of voters said it was "quite possible" they would change their mind on who to vote for by the time the polls open Thursday morning.Rodney Barker says it is all up in the air."The one thing which one can say about this election __ and we haven"t been able to say this for any election within living memory __ is that the only certain thing is that we cannot predict the e,even on the day before the poll," added Barker.The ComRes poll shows the Conservatives winning 37 percent of votes,Labor on 29 percent and the Liberal Democrats on 26 percent.With the votes split this way,no single party would win a majority of seats in parliament.In that case,the shape of Britain"sfuture government will depend on coalitions.The balance is likely to be tipped by the Liberal Democrats,but so far their leader,Nick Clegg,has refused to say whether his party would side with the Conservatives or Labor.Barker says what this means is that it could be weeks before the position of Britain"s future government es clear."Even when we know the result of the election,we may not know what the result is in terms of government __ who will successfully make a deal with who to make what sort of government," noted Barker.If no single party is able to win a majority of parliament seats,current Prime Minister Gordon Brown would have the right to stay in office until a new government can be formed.篇十:英语新闻报道短篇求一则英语短篇新闻(100词内。

BBC news英语新闻文章

BBC  news英语新闻文章

20121201BBCBBC News with Sue Montgomery.Israel has authorized the construction of 3,000 new homes on occupied Palestinian land a day after the United Nations General Assembly voted to revise the status of the Palestinians to that of non-member observer state. US officials have condemned the Israeli move as counterproductive. Kevin Connolly reports.就在联合国大会表决批准巴勒斯坦为非会员观察国后,以色列授权在被占领的巴勒斯坦领土上建设3000处新房屋。

美国官方称以色列的动作将事与愿违。

Kevin Connolly报道。

Israel has been struggling to calibrate its reactions to the Palestinian campaign for upgraded status of the United Nations. But it clearly felt that allowing the development to pass without some form of political response would be seen as a sign of weakness. So it has announced its granting permission for 3,000 new homes in the west bank in eastern Jerusalem and speeding up the processing of a further 1,000 existing planning applications. The Palestinians and the overwhelming majority of the international community see the area in question as land occupied by Israel.以色列一直努力调整自己对巴勒斯坦提升在联合国地位活动的反应,但以色列显然认为,不作出政治回应就让巴勒斯坦得逞可能被视为软弱。

BBC新闻听力100篇

BBC新闻听力100篇
than 500 are unaccounted for in the area around the northern coastal city of Sendai. The 8.9-magnitude
quake, the biggest ever recorded in Japan, sent a wave of water several meters high sweeping far inland.
warplanes continued today, and there’s a big plume of smoke from the oil installation which was hit a
couple of days ago. There’s no sign of either the rebel fi ghters or the local population beginning to fl ee the
receiving a request from Japan. Singapore ish and rescue team. American
forces stationed in Japan have already been involved in rescue operations, and more than 50 territories and
astonishing.
News Item 3
International disaster relief teams have been sent to Japan. The United Nations said a nine strong UN
team of experts would include several Japanese speakers. Britain said it was sending expert assistance after

bbc新闻报道短篇材料

bbc新闻报道短篇材料

bbc新闻报道短篇材料BBC News Report:Title: 'Global Efforts to Combat Climate Change Reach New Heights'In recent years, global efforts to combat climate change have reached unprecedented heights, as countries around the world are coming together to address the urgent need for action. The devastating impacts of climate change, such as rising temperatures, extreme weather events, and the loss of biodiversity, have forced governments, businesses, and individuals to prioritize sustainability and take concrete steps towards a greener future.One of the key milestones in this global effort was the signing of the Paris Agreement in 2015. This historic agreement brought together nearly 200 countries, all committed to limiting global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. Since then, nations have been working tirelessly to implement their climate action plans, relying on renewable energy sources, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and investing in sustainable infrastructure.Among the countries at the forefront of this movement is Germany, which has been a leader in renewable energydevelopment for years. In 2020, Germany announced its plan to phase out coal power plants by 2038, marking a significant step towards a carbon-neutral energy sector. The country has also invested heavily in wind and solar energy, leading to a sharp decline in carbon emissions and a rise in renewable energy generation.China, the world's largest emitter of greenhouse gases, has also made remarkable progress in recent years. The country has set ambitious targets for carbon neutrality, aiming to achieve peak carbon emissions by 2030 and carbon neutrality by 2060. China has been rapidly expanding its renewable energy capacity, investing heavily in wind, solar, and hydropower projects. Additionally, the country has implemented strict policies to reduce air pollution and has become a global leader in electric vehicle adoption.Furthermore, private sector companies are increasingly recognizing the importance of sustainability. Many corporations have pledged to reduce their carbon footprint, adopt renewable energy, and implement circular economy practices. Major technology companies, such as Google and Microsoft, have made commitments to operate on 100% renewable energy, while multinational corporations like Unilever andCoca-Cola have set targets to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.While progress has been made, challenges still remain. The urgency to act on climate change has been highlighted by the increasing frequency of extreme weather events, such as heatwaves, hurricanes, and wildfires. Additionally, the COVID-19 pandemic has further emphasized the need for a resilient and sustainable future.In conclusion, the global efforts to combat climate change have reached new heights as countries, businesses, and individuals recognize the pressing need for action. The signing of the Paris Agreement and the subsequent commitments and actions taken by various nations and corporations demonstrate a collective determination to tackle this global challenge. However, continued collaboration and innovation are essential to accelerate the transition to a sustainable andcarbon-neutral future.。

BBC新闻100篇 BBC News Item 1

BBC新闻100篇 BBC News Item 1

BBC新闻100篇BBC News Item 1[ti:][ar:][al:][by:人人听力网][00:00.00]The BBC has learned that the British Prime Minister Gordon Brown [00:03.44]has decided that the British general election will take place on May 6th. [00:07.56]Mr. Brown will go to Buckingham Palace tomorrow Tuesday[00:11.41]to ask Queen Elizabeth to dissolve parliament,[00:13.53]and then make a formal announcement of the election date.[00:16.34]That will start the official election campaign,[00:18.96]which, a BBC correspondent says,[00:21.32]will be dominated by issues of taxation and spending[00:24.31]in the wake of the global recession.BBC新闻100篇BBC News Item 2[ti:][ar:][al:][by:人人听力网][00:00.00]Less than six months before a general election in Britain,[00:04.71]the governing Labour Party is embroiled again in internal strife.[00:08.20]Two former cabinet ministers have called for secret ballot of members [00:12.11]to decide whether the Prime Minister Gordon Brown[00:14.66]should continue as party leader.[00:16.53]Mr. Brown has called a general election by June this year.[00:19.27]Our political correspondent Rob Watson reports.[00:22.44]The two former cabinet ministers Geoff Hoon and Patricia Hewitt [00:26.98]had stunned everyone at Westminster[00:29.22]with their last-minute efforts to challenge Gordon Brown's leadership. [00:32.64]But Downing Street and Labour Party officials[00:35.81]have moved quickly to quash any revolts.[00:38.18]Most importantly, current cabinet ministers[00:42.03]have come out and backed the prime minister,[00:44.40]orbiting some cases with little apparent enthusiasm.[00:48.19]So the latest challenge looks likely to be short lift.[00:51.86]Although many within the Labour Party doubt[00:54.60]Mr. Brown's leadership qualities,[00:56.28]they also seem to think it would only make things worse[00:59.58]to get rid of him before the general election.[ti:] BBC新闻100篇 BBC News Item 3[ar:][al:][by:人人听力网][00:00.00]The British Prime Minister Gordon Brown[00:03.89]is offering to scale back Britain's nuclear deterrence[00:06.81]if an international agreement is reached[00:09.30]to cut the world's nuclear arsenals.[00:11.35]Mr. Brown is expected to tell a special[00:13.72]session of the United Nations Security Council on Thursday [00:17.14]that he'll be willing to give up one of four royal navy submarines [00:21.24]that carry Trident nuclear missiles.[00:23.23]Officials are insisting that cost isn't a factor here.[00:26.47]Here's our defence correspondent Nick Childs.[00:28.58]Gordon Brown is saying he'll be ready to[00:31.51]throw part of the trident force into the port[00:33.37]in the context of a much bigger global disarmament deal.[00:35.92]He said so in general terms before.[00:38.60]This offer though is more concrete.[00:40.59]There is a growing sense that to avoid what some fear[00:44.07]could be a sudden cascade of new nuclear states,[00:46.50]the established nuclear powers need to do more[00:48.99]in terms of disarmament[00:50.35]to keep the proliferation regime intact.[00:52.34]The Prime Minister will hope his move[00:54.40]will be seen as an important gesture.[00:56.08]But the key to the process will be the actions of the big players, [00:59.44]the United States and Russia.BBC新闻100篇BBC News Item 4[ti:][ar:][al:][by:人人听力网][00:00.00]The British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is expected to confirm [00:04.60]that he is sending hundreds more troops to Afghanistan,[00:07.09]bringing the total number of British troops there to about 9,500.[00:10.76]Britain has the second largest NATO contingent in Afghanistan[00:15.12]after the United States.[00:16.92]Our defense correspondent Caroline Wyatt reports.[00:19.41]In his statement on Afghanistan,[00:21.90]it's believed Mr. Brown will say he's agreed in principle[00:24.26]to send around 500 extra British troops to Helmand.[00:27.74]The military advice says that extra forces are needed[00:30.67]to help maintain progress[00:31.97]and dominate the ground more effectively[00:34.03]to keep the Taliban out of key areas.[00:36.08]However, there will be caveats.[00:38.50]The Prime Minister will want assurances from military chiefs[00:41.37]that the extra troops will be properly equipped.[00:44.10]But he'll also expect Britain's NATO partners to follow suit[00:47.27]by offering more forces themselves.[00:49.33]NATO defense ministers are likely to discuss troop levels[00:52.69]on a meeting formally in Bratislava next week.BBC新闻100篇 BBC News Item 5[ti:][ar:][al:][by:人人听力网][00:00.00]Stock markets in Europe and the United States have fallen sharply [00:04.11]in response to further signs that the debt crisis in Greece is intensifying [00:08.46]and could spread to other countries.[00:10.51]Share prices in New York, London, Frankfurt and Paris[00:13.81]fell by more than 2% after a major international credit rating agency [00:18.41]Standard & Poor's downgraded Greek debt[00:21.40]to a level known informally as junk.[00:23.33]Nils Blythe has more.[00:24.82]Standard & Poor's downgraded its assessment[00:27.56]of Greek bonds to the so-called junk status[00:30.04]because of the growing danger[00:31.97]that the bond holders will not be paid back in full.[00:34.59]Many big investment funds have rules[00:37.45]that forbid them from holding junk bonds,[00:39.13]says the move is likely to trigger a further round of selling.[00:42.17]Share markets have taken fright,[00:44.16]fearing that if Greece does default on its debts,[00:46.78]it would hit many European banks which hold Greek bonds[00:50.01]and could trigger a wider financial crisis.[00:52.75]Already pressure is mounting on Portugal[00:55.86]which has also seen its credit rating downgraded today,[00:58.84]although it remains above junk status.BBC新闻100篇BBC News Item 6[ti:][ar:][al:][by:人人听力网][00:00.00]The International Monetary Fund[00:02.91]has told governments across the world[00:04.46]that further action is needed[00:06.08]to help return the global financial system to stability.[00:08.75]In a fresh estimate of the scale of the problem,[00:11.37]the IMF says global losses on toxic assets[00:14.35]could total four trillion dollars. Andrew Walker reports.[00:18.02]This report does identify[00:20.26]what it calls some early signs of stabilization in financial systems,[00:23.56]but there are not many of them.[00:25.55]And the IMF says further action will be needed[00:27.79]if they're to be sustained.[00:29.41]In two key areas, it says that progress by governments[00:32.45]has been piecemeal and reactive,[00:34.44]dealing with the problem assets held by financial institutions[00:37.43]and how to handle banks that need extra capital.[00:40.67]For that problem the report says[00:42.97]temporary government ownership may sometime be necessary.英语名篇名段背诵精华 07 ShakespeareShakespeare is above all writers, at least above all modern writers, the poet of nature; the poet that holds up to his readers a faithful mirror of manners and of life. His characters are not modified by the customs of particular places, unpractised by the rest of the world; by the peculiarities of studies or professions, which can operate but upon small numbers; or by the accidents of transient fashions or temporary opinions: they are the genuine progeny of common humanity, such as the world will always supply, and observation will always find. His persons act and speak by the influnce of those general passions and principles by which all minds are agitated, and the whole system of life is continued in motion. In the writings of other poets a character is too often an individual; in those of Shakespeare it is commonly a species.Except from The Major Works by Sammuel Johnson参考译文莎士比亚的才华高于一切作家,至少高于当今的所有作家。

bbc

bbc

BBC News Item 5 经济:欧美股市大跌
Stock markets in Europe and the United States have fallen sharply in response to further signs that the debt crisis in Greece is intensifying and could spread to other countries. Share prices in New York, London, Frankfurt and Paris fell by more than 2% after a major international credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s downgraded Greek debt to a level known informally as junk. Nils Blythe has more. Standard & Poor’s downgraded its assessment of Greek bonds to the so-called junk status because of the growing danger that the bond holders will not be paid back in full. Many big investment funds have rules that forbid them from holding junk bonds, says the move is likely to trigger a further round of selling. Share markets have taken fright, fearing that if Greece does default on its debts, it would hit many European banks which hold Greek bonds and could trigger a wider financial crisis. Already pressure is mounting on Portugal which has also seen its credit rating downgraded today, although it remains above junk status.

bbc新闻文本(BBCNewsText)

bbc新闻文本(BBCNewsText)

bbc新闻文本(BBC News Text)BBC UN special envoy for Syria says he can not set date for peace talksOne of the major sticking points in any peace talks is President Assad. Some opposition leaders say he must step down at some point in the political transition. Others insist he must go before talks can even start. But the president's advisor Doctor Bouthaina Shaaban was clear this issue was not on the table. In a rare interview, she emphasized the president's role would be decided by the Syrian people at the ballot box, in elections or in a referendum. Doctor Shaaban was also scathing about the opposition describing rebel groups as creations of powerful backers like Saudi Arabia.Ballot: vote!Scathe: severe criticismThe main crux of all peace talks from President Assad, the opposition said that he must step down at a time of political transition, and other opposition even insists that he should leave in peace talks before the start. But the president's adviser, Dr. Busina Shaaban, made it clear that the departure of the president was not in negotiations. In a rare interview, Dr. Shaaban stressed that the president's fate should be decided by the people of Syria in either an election vote or a referendum. Dr. Shaaban also severely criticized the opposition,Describe rebel groups as a product of powerful supporters suchas Saudi ArabiaBBC UN special envoy for Syria says he can not set date for peace talksBBC, News, with, Julie, CandlerA day of an intense diplomacy has failed to set a date for a long-awaited Peace Conference on Syria after the talks in Geneva involving officials from the US, Russia and other members of the UN Security Council. The international envoy on Syria Lakhdar Brahimi said he'd been hoping to be in a position to announce a date today, but unfortunately was unable to do so. Lyse Doucet reports from Damascus.Julie Candler reports the BBC news for youA day of strained diplomacy failed to set the date for Syria's long-awaited peace talks, after talks between officials from the United States, Russia and other members of the UN Security Council in Geneva. Ambassador Lakhdar Brahimi of Syria said he had hoped to announce the date today, but unfortunately he failed to do so. Les Duce reports from Damascus.BBC Zidane, the statue of Materazzi on top of the head was removedWine, lovers, are, facing, the, of, a, global, shortage, threat, of, the, drink,, according, to, new, research.去年产量下降到40年来的最低水平,根据分析师留下的需求缺口约3亿例。

新闻稿范文300字BBC新闻稿

新闻稿范文300字BBC新闻稿

新闻稿范文300字 BBC新闻稿导读:就爱阅读网友为您分享以下“BBC新闻稿”资讯,希望对您有所帮助,感谢您对的支持!World Bank says Population Growth,Climate Change Demand Better Water Management“As every high school child knows, water runs through absolutely every we do,” says World Bank Water Sector Manager Julia Bucknall. “We can’t grow any food without water. We can’t live without water. We can’t run our cities without managing our water properly.”The floods in Pakistan, she says, show the importance of having a good water management policy in place.“Both from the resource point of view, in the sense of the floods, but also from the basic management of water supply and sanitation. That’s what is going to be killing a lot of people now after the immediate impact of the floods,” she says. Strategy planIn 2003, the World Bank issued a strategic plan for water projects. In a new report, called Sustaining Water for All in a Changing Climate, the bank reviewed that strategy. “The strategy itself,” says Bucknall,” was quite a path-breaking strategy, which really put infrastructure to the front and center of the development agenda and anticipated many of the issues...population growth, climate change and the need to manage water for food.”She says the strategy has resulted in “enormous success.”World Bank“We have been able to triple our lending in the water sector. And we’ve been able to be much more integrated so that we look at building irrigation systems, for example, at the same time as looking at the water resources that those systems depend on,” she says, adding, “We are very pleased with the results.”Making water a priorityAt recent climate change conferences, advocates for water management tried to put the issue high on the agenda but were not always successful.Bucknall says, “Everybody knows it’s a priority in some very generic sense. I think what people don’t always do istake the very hard choices that have to be made in order to manage water properly.”In making those tough choices, the World Bank official says some people will face “disruptions.”“Many governments are just not willing to take that decision now and sort of put it off until it becomes a crisis later. They don’t actively put it off until it becomes a crisis later, but that’s what ends up happening.”What next?The review makes a number of recommendations. “One is to continue efforts to integrate water resources with water services. So, this is something we’ve done quite well over the past five or six years, but we want to do it more and more consiste ntly,” she says. Other recommendations include putting water management higher on the climate change agenda and increase efforts to improve sanitation.“One third of the world’s population does not have access to a toilet, which has huge social and health implications,” she says, “You know more people die of diarrhea than of AIDS, malaria and TB combined.”The review also calls for support for hydro power, calling it “the largest source of renewable and low carbon energy,including high-risk, high-reward infrastructure projects.” But Bucknall admits it’s a complicated issue.Dams, for instance, have been criticized by some as harmful to the environment and the livelihoods of those living near lakes and resources.Bucknall says hydropower could mean building damns but also could mean making better use of existing dams or rehabilitating them.“Sometimes making better use out of them so that you can use them for adaptation to climate change,’ she says, “And also to give more space for the environment. One of the things we’re looking at actively is reengineering existing dams to make them have more multiple uses for people, for energy and for the environment.”Inger Andersen, vice-president for sustainable development at the World Bank, says, “Only 23 percen t of hydropower potential located in developing countries has been exploited. The gains for the poor can be enormous.”BBC News with Jonathan WheatleyThe man who led Britain into war in Afghanistan and Iraq, T ony Blair, has described radical Islam as the greatest threat facing the world. In a BBC World Service interview, theformer British prime minister said radical Islamists - whether in Chechnya, Kashmir, the Palestinian territories, Iraq or Afghanistan - believed that anything done in the name of their cause was justified.“After September 11th, rightly or wrongly, I felt the calculus of risk had changed, and I feel it’s still changed. I still think there is the most enormous threat from the combination of this radical extreme movement and the fact that if they could, they would use nuclear, chemical or biological weapons. I think they would if they could, and I think you can’t take a risk with that happening.”Mr Blair said Iran needs to understand it couldn’t have nuclear weapons; otherwise it would be stopped. Mr Blair denied that his own policies when in power had fuelled support for radical Islamists.Police in Pakistan say a suicide bomb at a Shia Muslim procession in the city of Quetta has killed at least 50 people. The procession is an annual event in support of the Palestinian people, and the bomber struck as he passed through a crowded market area. The Pakistani T aliban said they carried out the bombing.The Brazilian oil company Petrobras has unveiled plans tosell more than $64 billion of new stock in what some analysts are describing as the world’s biggest ever share offering. The money will fund new developments aimed at turning Brazil into a major oil exporter. Here is our economics correspondent Andrew Walker.Petrobras has a very ambitious plan to spend over $200 billion on expanding production from Brazil’s vast deep-sea oil and gas fields over the next four years. The plan to go to the capital market will raise an important part of the funds for that programme. Over $40 billion worth of the new shares will go to the government to pay for the right to exploit Brazil’s offshore reserves. The company is retaining the right to expand further the offer of new shares if there is sufficient demand. The total could end up as high as $75 billion.A court in Portugal has found six people guilty of sexually abusing children in a state-run orphanage in Casa Pia. They have been given prison sentences of between 5 and 18 years. Among these convicted were a prominent television presenter, a former ambassador, a lawyer and a doctor. From Lisbon, here is Alison Roberts.Six of the 32 former Casa Pia pupils whose testimonytriggered the investigation eight years ago were in court to hear the judges hand down custodial sentences to the six men accused of abusing them. Before that, the court heard a lengthy catalogue of hundreds of crimes ranging from attempted abuse to violent rape. Most were found to have been committed by Carlos Silvino, a driver at the institution, not only abusing children but passing them onto other abusers over three years.World News from the BBCThe security forces in Colombia say they have killed at least 11 left-wing rebels in a clash in the northeast of the country, close to the Venezuelan border. The army said troops captured a camp belonging to the ELN - the smaller of Colombia’s two guerrilla groups. The fighting came a day after the authorities confirmed that 14 policemen had been killed by suspected fighters of the larger rebel group, the Farc.Figures for employment in the United States reveal a better-than-expected rise in private sector jobs, but the jobs market overall remains weak. A report for the US Labor Department shows that 67,000 new private sector jobs were created last month. President Obama said the figures werepositive but not good enough. Mark Mardell reports from Washington.With important elections for Congress, the Senate and state governors two months away, the state of America’s economy is deeply political. And President Obama challenged his Republican opponents to support plans for tax cuts and loans for small businesses which they have so far blocked. Speaking outside the White House, he announced there would be more action soon.“The key point I’m making right now is that the economy is moving in a positive direction. Jobs are being created; they are just not being created as fast as they need to, given the big hole that we experienced.”The European Union’s trade commissioner, the Belgian Karel De Gucht, has apologized for remarks in which he spoke of a Jewish lobby in the United States, preventing peace between Israelis and Palestinians. Mr De Gucht said he hadn’t meant to cause offence, and anti-Semitism had no place in today’s world.An earthquake of 7.2 magnitude has struck the South Island of New Zealand. The United States Geological Survey said the quake struck some 30 kilometres from the country’sthird largest city of Christchurch. Initial reports say some roads and buildings there have been damaged.BBC News百度搜索“就爱阅读”,专业资料,生活学习,尽在就爱阅读网,您的在线图书馆。

BBC News 中英对照

BBC News 中英对照

Week 12BBC News with Jonathan Izard. 乔纳森·伊泽德为你播报BBC新闻。

Australia’s Prime Minister Tony Abbott has refused to deny reports that border officials paid people-smugglers to take boats full of asylum-seekers back to Indonesia. 有报道称澳大利亚边境官员向人贩子付款,使其将满载难民的船只返回印尼,对此澳大利亚总理托尼·阿博特拒绝否认。

An Indonesian police chief reportedly said that Austrialian officials paid 30,000 dollars to people-smugglers to abort their journey. John Donnison reports. 据悉印尼一名警察局长称澳大利亚官员向人贩子支付了3万美元,使其放弃其旅程。

约翰·唐尼森报道。

"When asked about the claim, Tony Abbott would neither confirm or deny, but said creative strategies were being used to stop asylum-seekers'boats. “在被问及该传闻时,托尼·阿博特既不承认也不否认,他只是说已经采取创意策略来阻止难民船。

He said Australia has been suceessful at stopping boats by hawk or by crawk, adding that he was proud of the county’s border protection authorities. 他说澳大利亚通过各种手段阻止移民船,且一直很成功,他说他对本国的边境保护当局感到骄傲。

  1. 1、下载文档前请自行甄别文档内容的完整性,平台不提供额外的编辑、内容补充、找答案等附加服务。
  2. 2、"仅部分预览"的文档,不可在线预览部分如存在完整性等问题,可反馈申请退款(可完整预览的文档不适用该条件!)。
  3. 3、如文档侵犯您的权益,请联系客服反馈,我们会尽快为您处理(人工客服工作时间:9:00-18:30)。

BBC news 2014-05-07---------
Police in the Philippines have arrested 58 people involved in an Internet extortion network. They are accused of posting fake profiles to social network sites, luring mostly elderly men into exposing themselves in video chats which then filmed and used to blackmail them for money.
Basically what's been going on here is that criminals have now taken advantage of technology and in particularly, social networking site where they are creating multiple fake profiles to befriend as many people as possible. And the aim was of this is to encourage the person that befriended into having sex over the Internet in front of the webcam and unknown to the person this is filmed and recorded it. And then she used a blackmail further on. Many of these firms are so well-organized like a traditional business with the staff that they have got. So they really are very well-organized. And it enables them to commit crime all over the world rather than traditionally where they may have been confined to their own country.
And these are mostly men, it seems, to think they are striking up kind of interval relationship over the Internet with a woman. It turns out that they are not. What kind of money is extorted from them?
It varies anything from a few hundred pounds through to few thousand dollars. And it's whatever they think that they can afford. It's very similar and very specialized to some of the other form we've seen in particular countries, some countries where teams have got together and they are specialized in skimming cards. Others have specialized in other types of fraud. I guess it's possibly also the fact that Philippines does well in tourist from westernized countries to the Philippines. The US Secretary of States John Kerry says the South Sudan President Salva Kiir has agreed to peace talks aimed at ending the conflict there. Mr. Kerry was speaking after the talks with the president in the capital Juba.
I've told President Kiir that the choices that both he and the opposition face are stark and clear and that the unspeakable human costs that we have seen over the course of last month and which could even grow if they fail to sit down are unacceptable to the global community.。

相关文档
最新文档