The Paper offers high quality content but it remains to be seen whether it can be a model for traditional media's transformation
US President Barack Obama, who had pledged not to interfere in other countries' affairs, authorized US military on Friday to carry out "targeted air strikes" against extremists in Iraq. His decision can be seen as a response to compelling situations in the Middle East.
A white paper issued on Aug 5 by Japan's Ministry of Defense has again hyped the so-called "China threat" theory as Prime Minster Shinzo Abe's cabinet continues to engage in activities to destabilize the Asia-Pacific region.
China announced on Aug 7 that it would provide humanitarian aid worth 30 million yuan ($4.86 million) to the four Ebola-hit countries in West Africa to help contain the epidemic, which the World Health Organization says has become an international public health emergency.
Food companies should start withdrawing substandard food products that present a serious threat to health as soon as they are discovered, according to a draft document released by China's top food safety watchdog on Wednesday.
Sports diplomacy has become a signature dish on the military-to-military menu of China and the United States.
Britain appointed a China hand as the new ambassador to this country to promote bilateral trade, business and relations, analysts said.
Many universities across China will give more scholarships to students after tuition fees were raised in the upcoming academic year for the first time in more than 10 years.
Since he was an infant, Zhang Yaodong of Gansu province has been dealing with physicians for his eye disease.
Former tycoon amassed great wealth through mafia-like acts
Terrorists arrested for their attack on July 28 in Shache county in southern Xinjiang's Kashgar prefecture, admitted that they killed two township officials because they refused to join the terrorists and reprimanded the attackers, the local information office said.
Editor's note: To offer a clearer picture of history, the State Archives Administration released a large number of files on 45 Japanese war criminals who were tried and convicted in China after World War II. The special military tribunal of the Supreme People's Court held public trials, sentencing the criminals to eight-to-20 years prison term. China Daily is publishing abstracts of the criminals' confessions:
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