China's aging population has given rise to some difficult problems especially in rural areas. The high suicide rate among senior citizens is one of them, which has revealed a slew of problems that the government and society as a whole should attend to.
Once again the United States has been fanning the flame of the South China Sea disputes. While calling on China to show restraint to calm tensions on Monday, Daniel Russel, the top US diplomat for East Asia, said China's oil rig had left a legacy of anger and strained relations with Vietnam. The US has proposed "freezing actions that change the status quo". What a farce.
The Central Committee of the Communist Party of China has placed the country's former security chief Zhou Yongkang under investigation for suspected "serious disciplinary violations". Zhou is the most powerful official to be investigated for "discipline violation".
In the face of the continuous provocations from some of its neighbors, China's diplomacy has become more active. This has been especially obvious in China's foreign policy toward Japan.
It spread across the country in a farcical manner three years ago and has now come to a disturbing end.
IT WAS ONLY A MATTER OF TIME BEFORE there was an accident such as the deadly explosion in a factory in Kunshan on Saturday that killed 75 workers and seriously injured another 185.
Of all the accidents of this kind, the explosion in Kunshan, Jiangsu province, especially hurts, and is worth thinking about, because it happened in one of China's most developed regions. We need to think again over the accident, not only because of the loss of life, but also because what Kunshan neglected, namely the safety of workers, is being neglected by other regions that hope to copy its economic success.
The Communist Party of China has placed former public security chief Zhou Yongkang under investigation for suspected "serious disciplinary violation", a term that usually refers to corruption. But what does Zhou's fall mean?
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