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Whatever you might think of the politics, the performance was nothing short of perfect.

Tens of thousands of service personnel in lines so straight they could almost have been animated.

Every flex of the foot, every turn of the head, every cry of allegiance exactly in sync.

And the noise, you could feel every bit as much as you could hear.

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Highlights from China’s military parade

The stamp of boots, the rumble of the tanks and the roar of the jet engines literally reverberated through the stand where we were sitting.

“We serve the people” came the cries when called on; the passion, of course, had been practised, but it felt authentic too.

China, in all its prowess, was on show. Pic: Reuters
Image:
China, in all its prowess, was on show. Pic: Reuters

Xi Jinping delivers a speech. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Xi Jinping delivers a speech. Pic: Reuters

Pic: Reuters
Image:
Pic: Reuters

The security to get here spoke volumes about just how tightly controlled this whole event has been.

Our meet time, dictated by the Chinese government, was over seven hours before the start of the parade itself, bussed in at the dead of night, no fewer than three separate rigorous security scans.

But once onto Beijing’s historic Tiananmen Square, we were free to film in places that are normally strictly off limits.

And that is because today, nothing less than China itself, in all its prowess, is on show.

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Xi: ‘We can avoid repetition of tragedy’

A projection of power

While this parade is officially to mark 80 years since the official surrender of Japan in the Second World War, it is about so much more than that.

It is about the projection of power, both internally and around the world, too.

To the domestic audience, it is about showing just how far China has come since the war.

From a country invaded and ‘humiliated’ by Japan, to a global superpower, all thanks, they say, to the Chinese Communist Party and the vision of President Xi.

It is notable that even in official communications to the foreign media, the objective of “demonstrating loyalty to the party” was listed as a more important motivation than “commemorating” victory in the war and the sacrifices of the Chinese people.

But be in no doubt, they know the world is watching too, and this was also about projecting power internationally.

Balloons are released to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Balloons are released to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War. Pic: Reuters

Military precision from naval forces, marching exactly in sync. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Military precision from naval forces, marching exactly in sync. Pic: Reuters

Tanks are among the hardware on display. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Tanks are among the hardware on display. Pic: Reuters

Close company

That is largely about the military might, of course, the huge array of Chinese-produced, cutting-edge new weaponry was notable. So is the fact that Xi’s reorganisation and modernisation of the military has been a key theme.

But the messaging was also about the power of China’s allegiances and its political heft too.

Indeed, today was especially notable not just for what was on show, but also for who was here.

No accident at all that Xi Jinping was continually staged with Russia’s Vladimir Putin on his right and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un to his left.

Xi Jinping was flanked by Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong Un. Pic: Reuters
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Xi Jinping was flanked by Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong Un. Pic: Reuters

Pic: Reuters
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Pic: Reuters

There has been speculation that the recent blossoming alliance between Putin and Kim has irked China somewhat. No sign of that today, the signals were all that this is a trio in lockstep.

Indeed, Kim rarely leaves his hermit kingdom, and he has never been to a multilateral event as big as this. His presence speaks volumes about his confidence in this company.

All of this comes after four days of intense diplomacy here, where China has hosted leaders from across the world in an attempt to cast itself as a great convener of nations and a preserver of a peaceful global order.

Read more analysis on China:
China, Russia, and India push for new world order
Summit called ‘axis of upheaval’ – that feels right when you look at guest list
Economic summit is a show designed to rattle the West

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It’s a message perhaps a little undermined when stood before such a show of military might, with one leader wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and another sanctioned by much of the world for its accumulation of nuclear weapons.

But perhaps to many, disillusioned with America, this simply doesn’t matter, and that is the gap Xi is successfully exploiting.

Not everyone will be buying in, but this was in some ways a vision for a future Xi would like to see, and it is a vision that’s centred on Chinese power.

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China’s Xi believes in destiny – and it’s bad news for the West

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China's Xi believes in destiny - and it's bad news for the West

China put on a show of military strength and diplomatic pulling power in Beijing this week that should worry us all.

At the heart of it was one all-powerful man.

Xi Jinping is emerging as the emperor of a rising China bent on reshaping the world in its image.

He wears the garb of his communist forebears, but he is much more than just another heir to Chairman Mao.

Xi increasingly has more in common with China’s imperial past.

He has disposed of rivals and term-limit rules, making him potentially ruler for life.

Xi believes it is China’s destiny to return to its rightful place as the centre of the world. A new world order dominated by China is approaching he believes, hastened by the Trump administration’s willingness to dismantle the current Pax Americana and western disarray over Ukraine.

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The Chinese weapons that will worry America

China has a right to assert itself more robustly on the world stage, of course, but it’s the manner of that assertion and the risks of collision with the West that should give cause for concern.

Xi has ruthlessly crushed dissent at home with quasi genocidal repression in Xinjiang, a cultural holocaust in Tibet and brutal suppression of human rights in Hong Kong.

Next in his sights is Taiwan. It is claimed by the Chinese communists as part of their One China project.

That opens up one fault line between Xi’s rising China and Western nations.

China’s more and more open support of Putin’s war in Ukraine is of course another.

Western impotence and failure to bring enough pressure on Russia to end the conflict has allowed it to metastasize into a much bigger one.

Read more from Sky News:
Xi presents his vision of the future
Who is Kim Jong Un’s sister Kim Yo Jong

The three autocrat amigos in Beijing on Wednesday. Pic: Reuters
Image:
The three autocrat amigos in Beijing on Wednesday. Pic: Reuters

On one side in the East, authoritarian governments lining up to support Russia. And on the other, democratic countries supporting Ukraine.

This week’s jamboree of autocrats in Beijing seems to have tipped things more in their favour. Good news for regimes using Orwellian surveillance, censorship, and repression to control their people and keep a grip on power.

Bad news for the rest of us who prefer a future organised around democracy, freedom, and the rule of law.

Dictators rejoice. Democrats beware.

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‘At night we don’t sleep’: How a West Bank family are facing harassment by young Israeli settlers

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'At night we don't sleep': How a West Bank family are facing harassment by young Israeli settlers

The further we go, the rougher the terrain becomes, jolting the car as we drive along a mountain track strewn with rocks.

And then we round a corner and there is a sleeping dog, a circle of chairs and two women smiling and beckoning us to follow them.

This is Fatima and her mother-in-law, Fadda. They live in a makeshift camp perched on a rocky ledge.

Fatima (left) and Fadda say they are afraid their homes could be set alight
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Fatima (left) and Fadda say they are afraid their homes could be set alight

Behind their tent is a cave, in which there are chickens and a bed. In front of it is the path where we now stand, and then a precipice that looks down upon a ravine.

They invite us into a tent to talk. Sweet tea is brought out, and so is the story of how their home was demolished, their car stolen, their peace destroyed and why they now have to hide their flock of sheep.

But before all that, Fatima takes us out and points at a ridge behind their camp.

We can see a small black structure, just visible against the dark rock. “That is where they are,” she says. “The settlers come down from there.”

The family say settlers are constantly coming to their camp home to harass them
Image:
The family say settlers are constantly coming to their camp home to harass them

Every day, people come down to her home. Unwelcome visitors.

“We’d be baking bread, and they would come, lay out their mattresses and just sit there. When we told them to leave, they’d return with more settlers and an armed soldier.”

And the soldier, always, would be on the side of the settlers.

“At night we don’t sleep,” says Fadda, smiling through the pain.

“We stay awake waiting for the settlers. Four or five of them come in their cars each night, sometimes on motorcycles, right up to our doorstep to terrify the children.

“We sit through the night, afraid they’ll set fire to our homes and belongings, trying to force us to flee with our kids.”

We see videos, shared widely on social media, of Fadda confronting a young settler who has come to menace the family.

Fadda confronted a young settler in a video shared on social media
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Fadda confronted a young settler in a video shared on social media

He stands right in front of her, staring her straight in the eyes, trying to push her forward. Fadda responds by standing her ground, smiling gently at him.

“This happens every single day,” says Fatima. “If we didn’t stand up for ourselves, we would have left long ago. The problem is, they’re children.

“They send the kids down on purpose to provoke us, to push us off our land. That’s why we’ve had to build this resilience.”

Fadda says the settlers come 'right up to our doorstep to terrify the children'
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Fadda says the settlers come ‘right up to our doorstep to terrify the children’

Their tale of suffering is desperate. They tell me the family used to live in a house, which was demolished by the Israel military.

An hour later we drive past its remains – a huge pile of twisted metal and rubble. Their car has been taken so they have to walk to distant shops under the baking sun.

Mobile phones have been stolen along with computers and animals. Their flock of sheep is now kept in another place, hidden from sight.

‘This is our land’

“The situation has become really bad,” says Fatima. “Not just for us, but for the whole West Bank.”

And yet the family is determined to stay. “This is our land,” say both women, almost in unison. The brutal truth is also that they have nowhere else to go.

The West Bank is dotted with Israeli settlements, from top to bottom, some large and long-established, with thousands of residents and a sprawling infrastructure; some small and very new, with just a few caravans parked on a hilltop.

All of them are based on the idea of extending the reach of the Israeli state by placing its people all over the West Bank, or at least turning a blind eye to them moving there.

The fact that these settlements are, by widespread consent, illegal under international law has not stopped them from proliferating. Quite the opposite.

Not only are they growing in number and size, but the Israeli government is lending them ever more support and legitimacy.

Read more:
Inside the conflict forcing Palestinians from their homes
West Bank: The city locked down by armed troops

Bezalel Smotrich wants Israel to annex more than 82% of the West Bank. Pic: Reuters
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Bezalel Smotrich wants Israel to annex more than 82% of the West Bank. Pic: Reuters

Now, the far-right finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, has declared that it’s time for Israel to annex more than 82% of the West Bank.

His logic can be summed up like this: we’re not safe with neighbours like this, and according to the Bible, it should be our land anyway.

Not everyone will agree, and perhaps most outside Israel will strongly disagree, but Smotrich is, as always, unapologetic and unabashed.

“Beyond our Biblical, historical and moral right to the entire land of Israel, the political and security role of sovereignty is to ensure that a Palestinian Arab terror state is never established in our land,” he said.

“Enemies should be fought, not provided with comfortable lives.”

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The West Bank has, for decades, been a crucible for ever-growing mistrust and dislike. It has seen waves of terrible violence and chronic divisions.

There is no sign of things improving, but plenty of suggestions that they are getting worse.

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‘Miss Palestine’ Nadeen Ayoub to compete in global pageant to show ‘we are human beings’

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'Miss Palestine' Nadeen Ayoub to compete in global pageant to show 'we are human beings'

A woman who will appear as Miss Palestine in a global beauty pageant has said she wants to represent her culture and “show the world that we are human beings”.

Nadeen Ayoub told Sky News she wants to “speak up about Palestine and to carry the voices of those that are unheard”.

Speaking on The World With Yalda Hakim, she said she became Miss Palestine in 2022 and will now head to Thailand in November to compete against dozens of others at Miss Universe.

“I don’t want people to be thinking when they hear the word Palestine, to just be thinking of suffering and pain,” said Ms Ayoub.

“So just like we hear the word ‘Italy’ and we think of beautiful things, like the Amalfi Coast and pizza and pasta.

“When we think of other nations, we think of their heritage and their culture and their identity, and we see them as human beings.

“I want the same thing for Palestine to show the world that we are human beings, and that is simply my message.”

Ms Ayoub was partly raised in the US and Canada and now reportedly splits her time between Dubai, Ramallah, and Amman.

She was supposed to compete in Miss Universe following success as Miss Palestine at another pageant in 2022.

However, she told Sky News she delayed her entry until now after the Hamas attack on Israel sparked the Gaza war.

The 27-year-old has been criticised by some for calling the dire situation there a “genocide” during an interview last month. Israel denies all accusations of genocide.

Among her critics is the runner-up in the Miss Israel contest, who questioned Ms Ayoub’s inclusion in November’s pageant and urged her to speak out against Hamas.

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Read more from Sky News:
At least 15 killed after Lisbon’s funicular derails

Mic catches Putin and Xi discussing organ transplants

“Miss Universe stands for unity, peace and co-existence – and if she stands for all of those things then let’s have it,” Adela Cojab Moadeb told the NY Post.

“I would welcome an advocate who stands against extremism and stands for the right of all people to exist.”

Ms Ayoub declined to comment in her Sky News interview, stressing her message is to “show the world that we Palestinians have an identity of creativity, of talents, of heritage, of culture”.

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