While developed countries are busy shutting down incinerators, Chinese governors seem to see burning rubbish as the last resort in a losing battle.
Cheung Kong (Holdings) Ltd Chairman Li Ka-shing is buying more shares in the property developer, the worst-performing stock this year among Hong Kong's five biggest real-estate companies.
The supply and demand principles of economics tell us prices that go up will one day come down.
Two men involved in a black-money scam were captured on Nov 7 in a police set-up, Beijing authorities said yesterday.
An illegal taxi driver, recently fined 4,000 yuan by the Haidian district urban administration, or chengguan, is fighting his case claiming he was a victim of entrapment.
An antiques dealer detained by officers after selling a mirror with erotic images on it has appealed to a higher court yesterday after she lost a civil case against police at Xuanwu district court.
These days, movie stars are creating a ripple, not on silver screens, but on the Chinese stock markets.
While it is no surprise that many Beijingers have taken to coffee since foreign companies arrived on the scene nearly 10 years ago, customers are hanging out at cafes not for the coffee - but the environment.
While developed countries are busy shutting down incinerators, Chinese governors seem to see burning rubbish as the last resort in a losing battle.
Early this year, famed comedian Zhao Benshan spent 550,000 yuan on the an 18-day China Enterprise CEO course at the Beijing's Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business, arousing great public interest about wealthy people's lives and spending.
| Name | Value | Change | Time |
| Shanghai | +0.06% | Mon | 3,109.57 |
| Shenzhen | -0.22% | Mon | 12,815.26 |
| HSI | +1.71% | Mon | 22,589.73 |
| NIKKEI | +0.77% | Mon | 10,362.62 |
| Dow | -0.18% | Fri | 9,972.18 |
| Nasdaq | -0.50% | Fri | 2,157.47 |