News digest

Chen Ailian, a 75-year-old dancer, leads a crowd of more than 100 middle-aged people in the Sanlitun area of Beijing on Sept 22 with her professional moves. Dai Bing / for China Daily |
PLA vows to root out abuse of power
The People's Liberation Army has geared up its fight against corruption and abuse of power, requesting that officers hand in any houses or cars they are using in violation of regulations.
A leading group responsible for tackling graft and misconduct in the Chinese military has recently exposed a host of irregular occupancies or use of PLA-owned houses and vehicles by officers, and overemployment in large units, PLA Daily reported on Sept 24, citing an instruction issued by the group.
The exposure of the irregularities was intended for military personnel rather than the public, with the aim of warning officers that the anti-graft campaign would not cease until all corruption was rooted out and eliminated, an insider close to the matter said.
Guideline will help battle against terrorism
Legal experts have said a new guideline issued to better define what constitutes terrorist activity, should help Chinese authorities combat terrorism.
Setting up terrorist training camps, establishing terrorist cells, using religious extremism to instigate terrorist attacks, carrying out violent or deadly attacks with explosives, as well as designing and distributing terrorist slogans or logos will be treated as criminal acts of organizing or participating in terrorist activities, officials said.
The guideline was published by the Supreme People's Court, the Supreme People's Procuratorate and the Ministry of Public Security.
Air force holds largest aerial combat drill
The Chinese air force has revealed details of what it called the largest aerial combat drill in its history, which involved 170 elite aviators from 19 air brigades and regiments over an unidentified desert in the north west of the country.
The drill, the fourth to be staged, featured the highest level of Chinese fighter jet pilots, the air force said.
Pilots were faced with one-on-one free combat and dual confrontation exercises, with competitors in each session drawn randomly.
"Compared with previous drills, more than half of the participants this year were new to the event and the first exercise they faced was dual confrontation," said Senior Colonel Yu Hejie, deputy head of the PLA air force's training department.
PLA air force seeks collaboration
The Chinese air force plans to strengthen its communication and cooperation with foreign counterparts, "so we can all stand together to face various challenges and crises, and to contribute more to world peace and common development", its spokesman Colonel Shen Jinke has told PLA Daily.
Shen said air force leaders have reached a consensus with their foreign counterparts that, given the increasingly grim security situation around the globe, challenges and crises must be handled through continuous, effective international cooperation, because no single country is able to deal with the situation alone.
Shen cited the Peace Mission 2014 drill and the Aviadarts-2014 air force competition as examples, adding Chinese pilots honed their skills and enhanced ties with aviators from Russia, Kazakhstan and many other nations through these events.
Li seeks to smooth green card application
A plan to make it easier for foreigners to obtain a Chinese green card is to be considered by the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone as part of trailblazing reform efforts to further open up and attract global talent.
Premier Li Keqiang has asked the zone to come up with a plan to simplify procedures for applications and the issuance of Chinese permanent residency permits for foreigners in the zone.
The zone covers about 28 sq km in suburban Shanghai and acts as a test site for what are considered China's boldest reform measures in decades.
"Complicated procedures for green card applications have impeded the FTZ in attracting global talent. The zone can submit a reform plan to the central government with improvement suggestions for the convenient entry and stay of foreign talent, especially those with outstanding competitiveness," Li told a meeting of corporate leaders in the zone, half of whom were foreigners.
China began issuing permanent residency permits, or green cards, to foreigners in 2003.
China Daily
(China Daily Africa Weekly 09/26/2014 page3)
Today's Top News
- Unified national market a new growth launchpad
- US deal a structural challenge for Japan
- Industrial prowess of China a subject of serious study
- US new tariffs 'unfair': Experts
- NDRC recalibrating steps to drive growth, boost demand
- Wartime hero's legacy fortifies Sino-UK bond