US President Donald Trump's first state visit to China is expected to improve Sino-US relations, but we should not have very high expectations from the visit.
Editor's note: China has made remarkable progress in protecting intellectual property rights, which helps its economic transformation to innovation-driven growth. This will benefit the country and the rest of the world, which should be appreciated by other countries, including the United States. Three experts share their views with China Daily's Wu Zheyu. Excerpts follow:
For too long, the relationship between prosperity and environment has been seen as a trade-off. Tackling pollution was considered an unwelcome cost on industry and a handicap to economic growth.
The China-Belgium Technology Center, a future hi-tech business center launched in Louvain-la-Neuve in June last year, is the result of a partnership between the Hubei provincial government and the Walloon government in Belgium. And the China Culture Centre in Brussels, in which the Shanghai municipal government is a major player, is strengthening cultural ties between China and the European Union through its activities and programs.
In a move to implement the country's pledge to expand economic opening-up to benefit the global trade system, the first China International Import Expo is to be held in Shanghai in November next year.
During his first visit to Asia since becoming US president, Donald Trump will seek to realize the United States' interests as much as possible.
FOR THE FIRST TIME, China's expenditure on education exceeded 3 trillion yuan ($460 billion) last year, accounting for 4.22 percent of GDP, according to a joint statement by the Ministry of Education, the National Bureau of Statistics and the Ministry of Finance. Southern Metropolis Daily commented on Friday:
OVER THE PAST FIVE YEARS, the national anti-graft campaign launched after the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China in October 2012, has reportedly brought home some 3,317 corrupt fugitives from overseas to face justice and retrieved assets of more than 10 billion yuan ($1.5 billion). The Mirror commented on Saturday:
LIBRARIES IN universities and scientific research institutes should be accessible to the public, according to a new law on public libraries adopted by the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, China's top legislature, on Wednesday. Beijing Youth Daily commented on Saturday:
In his report to the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, General Secretary Xi Jinping said the country has entered a "New Era", and it should continue advancing its economic transformation and upgrading in the new era.
Ahead of the UN climate change conference in Bonn from Nov 6 to 17, global attention was focused on the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, where General Secretary Xi Jinping laid out China's blueprint for "green development", which devoted long chapters to the "environment", "ecology" and "green".
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