The US envoy for DPRK policy visited the Republic of Korea to discuss the Democratic People's Republic of Korea's nuclear program and other related issues, Seoul's foreign ministry said on Friday.
Civil rights leaders decried the grand jury decision not to charge a white New York City police officer in the chokehold death of a black man as thousands of people united in anger and disbelief took to the streets for a second night.
A police officer in Phoenix, Arizona, shot to death an unarmed black man during a struggle and authorities said the officer believed the individual had a gun, in the latest fatal incident amid national turmoil over the policing of black communities.
Cyberattacks and commercial drones pose a growing threat to commercial aircraft, according to a major insurer.
South Africans on Friday marked the first anniversary of the death of Nelson Mandela with services, blasting vuvuzelas and a cricket match to honor his enormous legacy as an anti-apartheid icon and global beacon of hope.
The government will encourage private-sector investment in liquefied natural gas terminals and oil and gas storage and distribution facilities, a senior official at the National Energy Administration said on Thursday.
China may merge its two biggest nuclear power companies as it bids to compete for contracts in overseas markets, three industry officials familiar with the situation said on Thursday.
Analysts say that a Chinese-led consortium is still a strong contender to win a landmark contract to build Mexico's first high-speed railway, in a bidding process being rearranged for next year after the country decided to withdraw an earlier offer to the group.
Xiabuxiabu Catering Management Co, the iconic hotpot restaurant chain on the Chinese mainland, is seeking to raise about HK$1 billion ($129 million) on the Hong Kong stock exchange by offering 227.1 million shares for sale to the public at between HK$4.4 to HK$5 apiece.
The Chinese mainland is accelerating the opening of its financial service industry, by offering favorable land and tax policies to attract more Hong Kong-based companies to invest and operate in a business zone in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.
Skyscrapers and imposing buildings are a common sight in most first- and second-tier Chinese cities. But with growth mushrooming and urbanization going into overdrive, demand for big buildings and high-speed elevators is also spiraling in China, says Tony Black, president of Otis Elevator (China) Investment Co Ltd.
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