China's new defense strategy white paper is the country's latest effort to improve its military transparency, and demonstrates its sincerity in sharing its new perceptions on security, national defense and military strategy with the rest of the world.
In a recent plan for China's manufacturing, the Chinese government has mapped out a series of measures to boost the sector's development up to 2025, including efforts to promote integration of informationalization and industrialization, advance intelligent manufacturing and create an "Internet plus" environment.
The China National Tourism Administration recently published a list of "tourist sites with trustable prices" on its website. The list, which contains all 1,801 applicant tourist sites, has been widely criticized for lack of transparency as well as being contrary to the general feeling of tourists. Comments:
Song Jianguo, the former traffic police chief of Beijing, went on trial on Monday for suspected corruption. Among other charges, he is accused of accepting bribes for providing "Jing A" plates for automobiles, which receive privileges as they are mostly used by government agencies. Comments:
After claiming in a micro blog that his colleague He Jiong, a famous television host, was on the payroll of Beijing Foreign Studies University but not teaching a lesson, Qiao Mu, an associate professor at the university has been verbally abused and harassed by netizens who claim to be "fans" of the TV host.
China issued China's Military Strategy, a defense white paper, on Wednesday.
A series of recent remarks and actions by the United States has again pushed the South China Sea issue into the international spotlight.
This is admission season for Chinese schools. But in big cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, migrant workers without hukou (household registration) face huge problems in getting their children admitted to schools.
During my recent trip to Minsk, Belarus, I met with Jaroslav Romanchuk, economist and a presidential candidate in 2010. Since he lost the election to President Alexander Lukashenko, I wanted to talk with him to know what a politician not in power thinks about China.
All 70 legislators in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region have been invited to exchange views on the proposed constitutional reform package on May 31 with Wang Guangya, director of the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office, Li Fei, chairman of the Basic Law Committee of the National People's Congress Standing Committee, and Zhang Xiaoming, director of the Central People's Government's Liaison Office in the HKSAR.
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