Much has been said and written about the handshake between President Xi Jinping and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Economic Leaders' Meeting in Beijing.
IN AN ARTICLE, "A RESPONSE TO PRESIDENT XI JINPING", our fellow journalists at The New York Times have again expressed frustration at having "a hard time obtaining permission to work in China".
The United States has prided itself on freedom of expression (or freedom of the press), but several signs show that the American administration and the corporate-owned US media have compromised this freedom.
China will soon put its first domestically developed electric aircraft into mass production, and designers expect a huge market at home and abroad.
Traffic, police and labor departments in Shaoguan, Guangdong province, are busy mediating in a strike by taxi drivers objecting to a proposed increase in their monthly contract fees.
Infrared cameras at a nature reserve in Heilong jiang province have captured photographs of a Siberian tiger.
Three senior police officers in Qingdao, Shandong province, are being investigated on bribery charges that are believed to be linked to a major gang case in 2010.
Liu Jinming had a tough time handling the high-tech equipment and coping with the complex information on the computer screens in front of him.
2012: 23 million metric tons, accounting for 25.4 percent of energy consumption.
After eight months, the first troops of the People's Liberation Army taking part in the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali returned to China in September.
In the UN peacekeeping mission in Mali, the People's Liberation Army deployed a medical contingent including 70 members, of whom 12 were women.
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