Hawking particles emitted by a black hole are usually found to have thermal
spectra, if not exactly, then by a very good approximation. Here, we argue
differently. Locally, Hawking particles are thermal, but globally not: the
Hawking particles emerging from one hemisphere of a black hole are 100 %
entangled with the Hawking particles emerging from the other hemisphere.
Consequently, their thermal fluctuations are identical, so if a rare event
takes place on one hemisphere, the same event will be seen at the antipodal
point on the other hemisphere. We explain why such bizarre behaviour is
demanded by the requirement that black hole evaporation is described by a
unitary scattering matrix. Region I and the diametrically opposite region II of
the Penrose diagram represent antipodal points in a CPT relation, as was
suggested before. On the horizon itself, antipodal points are identified, as
long as there is no matter falling in. A candidate instanton is proposed to
describe the formation and evaporation of virtual black holes of the type
described here.