Brace yourselves. There is a new wave of terrorism, as the Friday night tragedy in Paris, coming to some G20 countries. It will have many roots, but a principal one, regardless of the ideological cause, will be the cynicism of the great powers toward the civil war in Syria.
The theme of the 2015 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in Manila next week will be "Building Inclusive Economies, Building a Better World", which not only reflects the realities of the region but is also in accordance with the common wishes of Asia-Pacific economies. "Inclusiveness" is a prerequisite to cooperation and common development, as well as a guarantee for equal partnership, and all three are needed to build "a better world".
Given on Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's remarks on South China Sea disputes during the gathering of G20 leaders in Turkey, he is highly likely to raise the issue again at the forthcoming APEC meeting and East Asia summit, emphasizing freedom of navigation and indirectly targeting China's reclamation projects. But as an outsider to the disputes in the South China Sea, Japan will only expose the absurdity of its stance if Abe raises the issue.
At the Bo'ao Forum for Asia in March, former Japanese prime minister Yasuo Fukuda met with former Chinese vice-premier Zeng Peiyan and proposed initiating a dialogue between the two countries' business elites.
The fatal terrorist attacks in Paris on Friday night bespeak the hard truth that terrorist groups such as the Islamic State have gained greater capability to mastermind assaults against societies. Stronger political will and closer international cooperation are badly needed to cope with the increasing threat of global terrorism.
The concentrated supply of heating, the relatively heavy humidity in the air and unfavorable conditions for air circulation have combined to worsen the smog that has suffocated a vast swathe of China's northern and northeastern regions over the past week.
THE TERRORIST ATTACKS IN PARIS ON FRIDAY, in which at least 129 people were killed and another 352 injured, has shocked the whole world. What lessons can we draw from the tragedy? Chu Yin, an associate professor from University of International Relations, asked in a column for ifeng.com:
THE CHINA FOOD AND DRUG Administration recently announced its decision to reject eight drug enterprises' applications for the registration of 11 new drugs, saying their clinical test data was either false or incomplete. The hospitals that provided the data are being investigated. A Beijing News editorial calls for strict enforcement of the law because such drugs are related to people's health and even lives.
HAN MIAO, a prosecutor from Qing'an in Heilongjiang province, Northeast China, reportedly spent a night in the same hotel room with a woman who was not his wife. His superiors responded that the two did not have sex and just slept with their clothes on. A third-party investigation is needed to make the investigation convincing, says a Beijing Times comment: