A GANG OF grave robbers were recently convicted at Chaoyang Intermediate People's Court in Northeast China's Liaoning province.
NEARLY TWO-THIRDS OF last year's 34 disciplinary sanctions concerning officials at the ministerial level or above were for corruption involving their families, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection of the Communist Party of China, the nation's top anti-corruption superviser, said in a statement on Tuesday.
NEW GRADUATES will enter the job market soon, and some will bring with them faked or fraudulent curriculum vitae in a bid to improve their job prospects. This reflects the distorted view of employers which harms justice and fairness, says The Beijing Times on Thursday:
The Democratic People's Republic of Korea announced on Wednesday that it had successfully tested its first hydrogen bomb. China Daily's Zhang Zhouxiang interviewed three experts to bring readers their views:
It's a question I'm often asked: What drives President Xi Jinping's robust foreign policy? The assumption is that Xi has upped China's global game, making the country's international relations more proactive and engaging, some say more muscular and aggressive.
China is likely to face complicated challenges in foreign trade during the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20) period. Internationally, the unbalanced recovery situation and low-speed economic growth will continue, and the global foreign trade pattern will undergo great changes intensifying competition.
If you listened to the comments of some government officials, lawmakers, pundits and commentators, it is not hard to realize that there are people in the United States who wish China ill.
The claim by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea on Wednesday that it had successfully tested a miniaturized hydrogen bomb has sent shock waves across the world.
There can be no excuse for such an inhumane act targeted at innocent people.
THE GOVERNMENT of East China's Shandong province recently issued a regulation that will more heavily reward or punish city governments in the province according to their performance in curbing air pollution. Those cities whose PM2.5 levels exceed the set limit will be fined 400,000 yuan ($61,000), while those with PM2.5 levels below the limit receive a similar amount as reward. Will that help curb air pollution, asks Beijing Times:
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