Ahmat Gopur lost his legs in a car accident in 2012.
Liu Dawei never expected that one day he would become a master rememberer.
A 94-year-old woman in North China's Shanxi province has been praised for her virtue after caring for her partially paralyzed daughter-in-law for almost three decades.
Dec 2, 2016, is an important day for a person named Nie Shubin, or rather his family. Twenty-one years after Nie was sentenced to death and executed for rape and murder, he was found innocent by the Second Circuit Court of the Supreme People's Court.
Too much money can be trouble. Luo Er from Shenzhen, South China's Guangdong province, has realized this over the past few days.
The Brexit vote in Britain, Donald Trump's victory in the United States and the likelihood of further electoral upsets in other countries in the coming year reflect widespread discontent in the West over the benefits of free trade and globalization being unevenly distributed.
On the campaign trail President-elect Donald Trump swore that he would drain the swamp in Washington if elected. Reflecting the American public's great distaste for Washington, his words were hailed by fervently cheering crowds.
Overseas media are mistaken in saying the Chinese economy has "suddenly gone on a tear."
Speaking at Wednesday's opening ceremony for the 10th congress of the China Federation of Literary and Art Circles and the ninth congress of the Chinese Writers' Association, President Xi Jinping called on Chinese artists and writers to step outside their own space and let their hearts beat in time to the rhythm of the people's.
LUO ER, A WRITER IN SHENZHEN in South China's Guangdong province, recently published an article via the domestic social media platform WeChat seeking help for his 6-year-old daughter who suffers from leukemia. His post was reposted more than 100,000 times and Luo received over 2 million yuan ($290,066) in donations. However, reports say he cooperated with a commercial company to speculate on his daughter's illness. Beijing News comments:
THURSDAY WAS THE 29TH WORLD AIDS DAY. Long feared and stigmatized, the disease is less likely to cause as much panic and confusion among people as it used to. However, there is still a long way to go in the fight against the disease. Beijing News commented on Thursday:
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