Southwest China's Yunnan province is considering providing free treatment to some foreign residents with HIV/AIDS, a top Chinese epidemiologist said.
When staff members at the Nanfeng Drug Rehabilitation Center hold a birthday party for a HIV-positive drug addict, they don't just shake their hand, they hug them.
A hospital in southern China has teamed up with healthcare providers in countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative to train doctors how to treat snakebites using traditional Chinese medicine.
In the 40 years since China adopted the reform and opening-up policy, the country has moved to gradually limit the use of the death penalty, a punishment that was once seen as a cornerstone in the fight to deter offenders and maintain public order.
The key to gradually re-ordering the current global disorder is a collective capacity to make sure that the rational efforts of constructive politics prevail
Editor's note: At a recent forum on financial holding firms organized by China Everbright Group and Guanghua School of Management, Peking University, to mark the 40th anniversary of reform and opening-up, some officials and scholars shared their views on the role of finance in boosting the real economy and helping the private sector. Following are excerpts from the speeches delivered by three of them:
Hundreds of people from around the country visit Jinggangshan, in eastern China's Jiangxi province, each day to retrace the revolutionary generation's footsteps.
Li Minghua and his wife, Xu Houmei, are kept busy at home every day, preparing ingredients for visitors to Bashang village who want to cook a meal like the Red Army used to eat when it was based in the area in the 1920s.
Since He Tao was 8 years old, he dreamed of owning a restaurant. Today, He is the owner of a chain of luosifen restaurants. Aimin, named for his aunt, has 140 outlets across the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region.
A young man in northern China's Hebei province has taken his mother - who was abducted from her home in Sichuan province three decades ago - back to her birthplace to find long-lost relatives.
Japanese military police chief Captain Hatoyama, the main villain in the modern Peking Opera The Legend of the Red Lantern, is a notoriously brutal character.
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