The government should guide the classification of books sold in the market in different grades for readers of different age groups in order to keep adolescents away from literary works meant for the consumption of only adults, says an article on pinglun.youth.cn. Excerpts:
President Xi Jinping underlined the importance of China's neighborhood diplomacy at the Central Conference on Work Relating to Foreign Affairs held in Beijing on Friday and Saturday.
Before he officially took office, the European Commission's new President Jean-Claude Juncker announced his intention to create jobs and inject new life into the stagnant European economy by injecting an additional 300 billion euros ($374.25 billion) over three years, beginning 2015.
FACING HEIGHTENED PRESSURE TO END THEIR disruptive occupation actions, leaders of the Hong Kong Federation of Students (HKFS) and Scholarism - two student groups in the frontline of steering the illegal "Occupy Central" campaign - have been busy playing various political stunts over the past few weeks.
By attempting to charge against the Hong Kong Special Administration Region government venue despite a court prohibition, even using the Internet to openly incite students and citizens to assemble, the protesters have upgraded their challenge to the rule of law.
Hong Kong students are becoming a paw of the "Occupy Central" forces that want to stall China's progress without realizing it. But in the end, it will be the students who may have to pay a high price if anything goes wrong. The protesting students believe they are fighting for a "just" cause. And who in this world can say fighting for "democracy" is not a just cause?
At no time has a global deal on climate change looked more likely than it does today. In October, European Union leaders agreed ambitious climate and energy targets for 2030, including a binding domestic greenhouse gas emissions reduction target of at least 40 percent.
The Democratic People's Republic of Korea has denounced a UN resolution, drafted by the European Union and Japan, as a "US-led farce", and organized a demonstration of about 100,000 people in Pyongyang in protest against it. The resolution is expected to be submitted to the UN Security Council in December.
Historic is a word that most of us use too freely, but the announcement of an agreement on climate change between the United States and China is deserving of the term.
Fifty years ago, New China's first premier Zhou Enlai visited Ethiopia during his maiden trip to Africa.
Economic interests have outweighed, if not eliminated, old grudges in East Asia. China, Japan and South Korea negotiated again in Tokyo last week for a trilateral free trade agreement. There were no concrete results this round, but Sun Yuanjiang, chief negotiator from China's Ministry of Commerce, said the negotiations are almost at the final stage.
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