Nearly 500 people in Sichuan province have been imprisoned or given administrative penalties for electoral fraud in 2011.
China aims to build a long-term mechanism that could spur innovation and drive economic growth.
A number of officials have been disciplined for using work time for online activities that were unrelated to their jobs. They were caught by the anti-graft department in Beijing's Pinggu district through an electronic monitoring system installed last year.
Miao Guirong, 61, former chief engineer in the communications department of the People's Armed Police, is being prosecuted for suspected graft, according to the discipline inspection commission of the corps.
Two lovers who carved their names on a 300-year-old bronze vat at the Palace Museum have sparked a heated debate online and Beijing police suggested on Tuesday that the couple turn themselves in.
Ticket prices for tourist attractions in Beijing will remain stable despite an expected glut of visitors during the upcoming Mid-Autumn Festival and National Day holiday, according to an official at Beijing's tourism authority.
Beijing will levy a new tax on the discharge of volatile organic compounds from five major industries to further control air pollution by increasing its cost.
On Feb 29, 2008, a convoy of long-distance trucks crossed into China from Myanmar. The drivers lined up at the customs house in Jiegao, a border town in southwestern Yunnan province, for a regular HIV/AIDS test, and each was asked to provide 2 to 3 milliliters of blood.
Human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV, belongs to a family of organisms known as retroviruses, which insert their own genetic code into cells for the purpose of replication. When a person contracts the virus, it enters the host's cells, especially CD4 T-cells, which help to fight disease and whose presence can signal the development of HIV/AIDS in the patient.
You Zhong entered the room where five teenagers were eating watermelon as a part of their rehabilitation courses. Then he greeted his son.
More than 40 officials in the State-run China National Offshore Oil Corp have quit their jobs in the last decade and used their connections to improve the profitability of their own firms, according to the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.
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