China's draft foreign investment law will give foreign investors more confidence and promote the growth of the economy, according to Maurice Greenberg, chairman and CEO of US-based insurer Starr Companies.
One of the real highlights, for me at least, of covering the annual two sessions in Beijing is getting to spend time in the halls and corridors of the Great Hall of the People.
There are few art forms that can give Chinese people such strong cultural confidence as seal engraving, according to Luo Pengpeng, a master of the art.
Approaches might be local, but the significance is global.
Chinese judicial authorities have strived to prevent wrongful convictions and better protect human rights in the past year and will continue to do so this year, according to the work reports of the top court and top procuratorate, which were released on Tuesday.
China has intensified its efforts to protect intellectual property rights over the past year, with more steps planned for this year, such as amending the Patent Law to substantially increase the cost of infringement, authorities said on Tuesday.
The majority of public interest litigation contemplated by procuratorates is resolved during pretrial proceedings, before any court hearing, Zhang Jun, head of the Supreme People's Procuratorate, said on Tuesday.
This is where the buzz keeps going, where sunlight is filtered through fresh windows. For Hong Kong entrepreneur Kwok Wai-keung, 28, who runs a startup in Qianhai, Shenzhen, Guangdong province, the most important thing is the people.
The central government has announced eight policies to move forward the development of the Greater Bay Area.
Positive signs in the Chinese economy have been appearing since the beginning of the year, said a senior official and experts on Tuesday.
More than 3.6 million people who previously owed money have complied with court rulings to repay since China's top court promised to resolve verdict enforcement problems three years ago, the Supreme People's Court said in its annual work report on Tuesday.
Praise is pouring in for Hong Kong businessman and deputy to the National People's Congress Peter Wong Man-kong, who died of illness on Monday at the age of 70.
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