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China Daily Europe | Updated: 2014-08-29 09:49
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Ambassadors and officials from 20 countries and regions attend a hearing on Aug 27 at the Supreme People's Court in Beijing on an intellectual property dispute between a German sanitary appliance firm and a Chinese company. Wang Jing / China Daily

China, US hold talks on military security

China and the United States met recently to discuss a military security code of conduct covering international waters and airspace, the Ministry of National Defense told China Daily.

Further concerns have been raised over frequent spying by the US along China's coastline after a "close encounter" between a Chinese navy fighter jet and a US Navy reconnaissance plane, some 200 km from the Chinese coast.

Observers said a code of conduct is needed to avoid friction between the two countries, but no major progress will be made until Washington stops conducting airspace espionage near Chinese territory.

The ministry said that under the consensus reached between China and the US in July, Beijing sent a delegation to the US on Aug 25 to attend a five-day working group meeting on the code of conduct.

"This is part of the annual plan for China-US military exchanges, aimed at implementing the consensus reached by the leaders of the two countries and boosting the establishment of a China-US military security code of conduct regarding international waters and airspace," the ministry said.

President Xi Jinping and his US counterpart Barack Obama met on the sidelines of the 3rd Nuclear Security Summit in March and agreed on the early formulation of the code of conduct.

Billionaire politician apologizes for TV tirade

Australian mining magnate and politician Clive Palmer has apologized to China's ambassador to Australia for a tirade in which he referred to the Chinese government as "bastards", setting off a firestorm in Canberra and Beijing.

The apology, in the form of a letter to Ambassador Ma Zhaoxu, came after Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott and China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned the remarks, first aired on television on Aug 18.

"I regret any hurt or anguish such comments may have caused any party and I look forward to greater understanding for peace and cooperation in the future," Palmer wrote in the letter.

The politician, whose Palmer United Party holds the balance of power in Parliament's upper house, released the letter, dated Aug 25, to the public on Aug 16.

China is Australia's biggest trading partner with two-way trade approaching $150 billion, representing more than 20 percent of Australia's total trade.

Chinese visitors to Singapore drop

A dramatic drop in the number of Chinese visitors to Singapore have seriously dented the Southeast Asian nation's first-half tourist figures, following the implementation of new measures in China last October, aimed at improving the country's travel industry.

Singapore Tourism Board said the number of Chinese visitors to the state in the first half of the year fell by 30 percent. Its international visitor arrivals in the first half of this year fell by 2.8 percent year-on-year. Excluding those, the country's arrivals grew by 2.3 percent year-on-year.

Lawmakers to counter espionage threat

Chinese lawmakers are considering renaming the National Security Law, which may be amended with more provisions to combat espionage.

A bill submitted for a first reading at the bi-monthly session of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress suggests changing the name to the Counterespionage Law.

Geng Huichang, Minister of National Security, said that China's counterespionage agencies face new circumstances and challenges and need stronger support from legislation.

The current law mainly regulates the work of the country's national security agencies, whose major duty is counterespionage work.

China Daily

(China Daily European Weekly 08/29/2014 page3)

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