INTERNACIONAL
Taiwán levantó las restricciones a la importación de alimentos de Fukushima y amplía su cooperación con Japón ante las amenazas de China

El gobierno de Taiwán anunció la eliminación de las restricciones que, desde 2011, pesaban sobre las importaciones de alimentos procedentes de la región japonesa de Fukushima. A partir de ahora, los controles dejarán de requerir doble certificación y exámenes punto por punto, como confirmaron este viernes las autoridades isleñas.
Según el Ministerio de Salud taiwanés, se adoptará en adelante un esquema de supervisión basado en una clasificación de riesgos, con inspecciones tanto en origen como en el ingreso a la isla, siguiendo criterios similares a los de otras economías desarrolladas.
El comunicado oficial destacó que los análisis científicos realizados no muestran riesgos significativos de exposición adicional a radiación por el consumo de productos originarios de Japón.
China y Rusia mantienen actualmente restricciones específicas para productos alimentarios japoneses. En respuesta al desastre nuclear de Fukushima en marzo de 2011, Taiwán prohibió durante una década el ingreso de alimentos de cinco prefecturas japonesas. La normativa comenzó a flexibilizarse en 2022, autorizando la entrada de artículos con certificación doble y sometidos a pruebas fronterizas rigurosas.
La decisión se conoció luego de que el gobernador de la provincia japonesa de Niigata, Hideyo Hanazumi, diera luz verde este viernes a la reactivación de la central nuclear más grande del mundo, la planta de Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, paralizada como los demás reactores de este país asiático después de que un terremoto y un tsunami posterior provocaran un desastre en la central de Fukushima Daiichi en 2011.
La decisión de eliminar completamente las restricciones coincide con una etapa de fricciones diplomáticas cada vez más evidentes entre Beijing y Tokio, especialmente luego de que la primera ministra japonesa, Sanae Takaichi, insinuara la posibilidad de una mayor implicación militar nipona en una posible guerra en el Estrecho de Taiwán entre la Taipéi y Beijing.
China reaccionó con dureza, alegando que Japón incumplió con los estándares técnicos requeridos para exportar pescado y mariscos a su mercado y advirtiendo, como respuesta a la tensión, que los consumidores chinos no accederán a productos nipones.
A modo de respaldo público, el presidente taiwanés Lai Ching-te difundió en redes una foto en la que aparece degustando sushi preparado con ingredientes provenientes de distintas zonas de Japón. A su vez, el canciller Lin Chia-lung animó a los ciudadanos taiwaneses a visitar Japón y consumir alimentos japoneses como forma de apoyo explícito.
Si bien Tokio mantiene lazos diplomáticos solo con la República Popular China desde 1972, las relaciones económicas y sociales entre la isla y el archipiélago cobraron impulso en los últimos años, potenciadas por intereses compartidos y la evolución del panorama geopolítico del noreste asiático.
El Ministerio de Exteriores de China amenazó este sábado a Japón por su postura “militarista y anquilosada”. la cual representa una “amenaza” para el orden internacional y contradice los compromisos asumidos durante la posguerra para un desarrollo pacífico.
La portavoz de la Cancillería china, Mao Ning, afirmó —según declaraciones recogidas por Xinhua— que si Japón opta por “retomar el viejo camino del militarismo, abandonar su compromiso con el desarrollo pacífico y socavar el orden internacional de la posguerra, tanto el pueblo chino como la comunidad internacional no lo permitirán, y terminará en un fracaso”.
Mao aseguró que Japón, “como país vencido” tras la Segunda Guerra Mundial, asumió obligaciones internacionales definidas —citando las declaraciones de El Cairo y Potsdam y el Instrumento de Rendición de Japón— como el desarme y la prohibición de industrias orientadas al rearme. Advirtió que cualquier alejamiento de estos compromisos fundamentales sería motivo de preocupación regional y global.
(Con información de AFP y EFE)
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Mundial XXL, vuelo a la Luna y elecciones cruciales: qué nos espera este 2026

Entre febrero y abril: ¿la humanidad vuelve a la Luna?
8 de febrero: Bad Bunny, pop latino en la Super Bowl
12 de febrero y 5 de marzo: la Generación Z en las urnas en Asia
En abril: Orban se juega su futuro en las elecciones legislativas de Hungría
11-12 de mayo: Cumbre África-Francia en Nairobi
12 de junio: entrada en vigor del Pacto de Asilo y Migración en la UE
Del 11 de junio al 19 de julio: El Mundial adquiere una nueva dimensión
4 de octubre: se espera un duelo en las elecciones generales de Brasil
27 de octubre a más tardar: Benjamin Netanyahu se enfrenta a las urnas
31 de octubre-13 de noviembre: África acoge los Juegos Olímpicos de la Juventud
3 de noviembre: elecciones de mitad de mandato ajustadas en Estados Unidos
9 al 20 de noviembre: una COP31 de dos frentes en Antalya, Turquía
14 y 15 de diciembre: Cumbre del G20 bajo tensiones diplomáticas
Todo el año y hasta diciembre: Nuevo acto en la telenovela judicial Dieselgate
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Mamdani announces new Office of Mass Engagement, says he needed a ‘clean slate’ to govern New York City

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New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani said Friday his first executive order as mayor was meant to draw a line after former Mayor Eric Adams was indicted while also launching a new City Hall office aimed at changing how the public is involved in decision-making.
«In the first executive order, you, as the new mayor of a city, have to sign a continuation of all prior executive orders or a revocation or an amendment of all of them,» Mamdani said during a question-and-answer session focused on what he called the city’s revived Office of Mass Engagement.
Mamdani said his administration chose to continue the executive orders that came before Adams’ 2024 indictment on federal corruption charges, which were later dropped by the Justice Department and dismissed by a federal judge in April.
«And, so, what we did was to sign an executive order that continued every executive order that predated the moment when our former mayor was indicted,» Mamdani said, calling it «a moment when many New Yorkers lost even more faith in New York City politics and the ability of city government to actually prioritize the needs of the public, as opposed to the needs of the person.»
MAMDANI PICKS EDUCATOR WHO WORKED TO DISMANTLE GIFTED & TALENTED PROGRAM AS NYC SCHOOLS CHANCELLOR
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani signs executive orders with campaign volunteers during an appearance at Grand Army Plaza in Brooklyn, Friday, in New York City. The newly inaugurated mayor has revoked a number of executive orders issued by former NYC Mayor Eric Adams, including some related to Israel. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
«And what we will now do is showcase that new era to protect each and every New Yorker and to deliver for those same New Yorkers in a manner that they have not seen under prior administrations,» he added.
The executive order revoked or required reissuance of mayoral directives issued after Sept. 26, 2024, giving the Mamdani administration control over which policies would carry forward.
Mamdani made the remarks as he described the purpose of a new Office of Mass Engagement, which he said is intended to bring together civic outreach work already happening across city government.
BISHOP ROBERT BARRON SLAMS ZOHRAN MAMDANI’S ‘WARMTH OF COLLECTIVISM’ LINE: ‘FOR GOD’S SAKE’

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani signs executive orders with campaign volunteers during an appearance at Grand Army Plaza in Brooklyn, N.Y. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Mamdani said the new Office of Mass Engagement will be led by Tascha Van Auken, an organizer whose background includes national Democratic campaigns and New York City’s Democratic Socialists of America (DSA).
«Since President Obama’s first campaign in 2008 to her leadership in New York City DSA, Tascha has spent more than a decade organizing at scale,» Mamdani said.
Mamdani credited Van Auken with building the volunteer operation behind his mayoral campaign, saying she mobilized more than 100,000 volunteers who knocked on more than 3 million doors across the city.
«The work of civic engagement has existed before today. It has been a part of city government,» Mamdani said. «However, it has often been siloed in different parts of city government infrastructure, sometimes under different offices, sometimes through different initiatives.
«Part of the intent of this executive order is not just to create a new Office of Mass Engagement, but also to cohere all of the work that is already being done into one place so that we can ensure that it’s not duplicative, and it’s actually fulfilling its intent.»
MAMDANI DISPUTES ANTISEMITISM DEFINITION AMID BLOWBACK FROM JEWISH COMMUNITY ABOUT DAY 1 EXECUTIVE ORDERS

NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani addresses the crowd during his inauguration outside of City Hall on Thursday. (Jason Alpert-Wisnia/Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images)
Mamdani said he wants the new office to change when public engagement happens in the policy process.
«Oftentimes, the outreach and engagement of city government is done with an intention to justify a decision that’s already been taken,» he said. «The point of this office is, however, to make decisions with a large part being what the public actually thinks about those decisions.»
Asked about budget and staffing, Mamdani said the office will initially draw from existing city employees.
«There are a number of employees within this office that are already working for the city, within previously existing offices. And then the specifics of how it will expand beyond that is something that we will be sharing later,» he said.
Mamdani rejected the idea that the office was built around re-election politics, saying it is aimed at «delivering for New Yorkers today, delivering for New Yorkers every single day. … We have an opportunity in this moment where New Yorkers are allowing themselves to believe in the possibility of city government once again. That is not a belief that will sustain itself in the absence of action,» Mamdani said.
Mamdani also pointed to another appointment announcement, saying the engagement office aligns with his decision to name Ali Najimy to lead recruitment and outreach for the Mayor’s Advisory Committee on the Judiciary.
«Too often, the ability for a New Yorker to become a judge has been determined by who they know, as opposed to the work that they do,» Mamdani said, adding that the goal is to ensure the judicial system reflects the city and «a commitment to excellence and an application of the law in a universal manner.»
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Najimy said the position would expand recruitment citywide and shape criminal and family court appointments, saying that candidates should be evaluated «on the merits of their experience, their qualifications, their commitment to public service.»
Mamdani said he does not want the new office judged by activity alone.
«We should not be measured on the number of meetings we hold or the number of surveys that are filled out,» he said. «We should, in fact, be measured by the way in which we incorporate that feedback into the decisions that we make.
Mamdani’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for additional comment.
zohran mamdani,ericadams,new york city,socialism
INTERNACIONAL
Ukraine tricks Russia into paying $500K bounty for fake hit on Putin opponent: report

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Ukraine orchestrated a fake hit on one of Russia’s enemies who has fought alongside Ukrainian forces, tricking the Kremlin into paying out a $500,000 bounty Kyiv used to fund its war effort.
The subject of the supposed Dec. 27 assassination was Denis Kapustin, also known as «White Rex,» the leader of the right-wing Russian Volunteer Corps, a group fighting for the overthrow of Vladimir Putin, Metro UK reported.
However, Kapustin is alive despite claims from the Ukrainian Armed Forces last week that he was killed by an FPV drone in the southern Zaporizhzhia region.
CHECHEN LEADER THREATENS ZELENSKYY AMID DRONE STRIKE, ECHOES ALLEGED ASSASSINATION PLOT
Denis Kapustin, also known by his pseudonym, «White Rex,» the leader of the right-wing Russian Volunteer Corps, was initially reported to have been killed by a drone strike. (East2West)
«We will definitely avenge you, Denis. Your legacy lives on,» the RVC group wrote on Telegram last week.
On Thursday, the Defence Intelligence of Ukraine (GUR) confirmed this was part of a special operation to save Kapustin’s life and, in the process, earn $500,000.
RUSSIAN CRUISE MISSILES HIT US COMPANY IN MASSIVE UKRAINE STRIKE AMID TRUMP’S PEACE PUSH

Denis Kapustin, also known by his pseudonym «White Rex,» appeared in a video announcing he was alive after Ukraine reportedly orchestrated a ruse to fool Russia. (East2West)
«Welcome back to life,» HUR General Kyrylo Budanov, who heads Ukraine’s military intelligence agency, said while congratulating Kapustin and his team on a successful intelligence operation, News.com.au, an Australian news website, reported.
After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Kapustin founded the RVC to fight alongside the Ukrainian army.

A drone headed toward a vehicle as part of a ruse to fool Russia into thinking Denis Kapustin was killed. (East2West)
The group, which was banned in Russia as a terrorist organization, was known for staging cross-border attacks in Russia’s Belgorod and Kursk regions. He had twice been sentenced in absentia to life imprisonment by kangaroo courts in Russia, The Sun reported.

A still image from a reported drone blast that killed one of Russia’s biggest enemies. (East2West)
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In March 2024, the RVC stormed into Russia and clashed with security forces before capturing Russian soldiers.
Ukraine and Russia are in the middle of peace talks mediated by President Donald Trump. The deal is close, but Ukrainian leaders have said the sticking point remains the issue of disputed territories.
ukraine,russia,wars
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