London will not try to match Beijing Olympics
Jul 29th
London will not make any attempt to match the splendour of the 2008 Beijing Olympics when it hosts the event in 2012, chairman of the organising committee Sebastian Coe said on Thursday.
Instead, London would cull the best of all past Olympics and put up a game which is unique, Coe said.
China, Argentina sign 18 trade, economic deals
Jul 14th
China and Argentina signed 18 agreements covering infrastructure, energy and railway projects on Tuesday as Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner held talks with her Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao.
Following a welcome ceremony at More >
Beijing Panda Crushes Cub to Death
Jul 7th
A panda cub was accidentally crushed to death by his mother in a Beijing zoo on July 3.
The mother panda, named ‘Ying Hua,’ gave birth to twin female pandas just 20 hours earlier.
Undercover fashions
Jun 30th
Summer has arrived and with it the plum rains or meiyu. Getting caught in the rain is an all too often occurrence and the chances of catching a cab are remote. And as rain hits the streets umbrella sellers materialize to hawk their wares to desperate passersby.
While the need to carry these accessories More >
China hopeless campaign to clean up prostitution
Jun 23rd
The world’s second oldest profession is, it seems, trying to suppress prostitution. The Chinese have been practising it for some time, with the predictable degree of success. Now we hear that the Hilton hotel chain has got into some embarrassment because police in More >
Ignore North Korea, offer Beijing a choice
Jun 16th
For too long, Beijing has coddled, excused, shielded, subsidized, and appeased the indefensible — Kim Jong-Il’s nightmarish regime in North Korea.
China is the key to solving the Korean quandary. The Middle Kingdom is North Korea’s largest trade partner, most generous aid donor, and only real friend. Without help from China, North Korea is not viable — if such an impoverished and benighted nation can be said to be so. In what should be an embarrassment to modern business and political leaders in Beijing, relations between China and North Korea are still conducted by their recondite and fossilized Communist Parties.
Protests pose challenge for Beijing
Jun 9th
Labour protests that have forced shutdowns at overseas-owned factories in China have spread beyond the southern industrial heartland, posing a dangerous challenge for Beijing.
Workers at a Taiwanese factory outside Shanghai clashed with police on Tuesday, leaving about 50 protesters injured. The confrontation represents an escalation of recent industrial action, which until this week had been largely peaceful and concentrated in southern Guangdong province.
Ferrari 599 GTO previewed ahead of Beijing debut
Apr 9th
Ferrari will give the 599 GTO its public debut at this month’s Beijing Motor Show, but has released pics and details of what is the company’s fastest ever road car. Limited to only 599 examples, Maranello describes this as the road going version of the extreme 599XX track car.

China Journalist Group Hit With Cyberattack
Apr 2nd
An international journalists association in Beijing said Friday that its Web site was the target of cyberattacks, the latest in a string of incidents that have affected foreign journalists in China.
The Foreign Correspondents Club of China said in a statement that it disabled its Web site temporarily to deal with the problem after it experienced persistent attacks over two days involving a flood of traffic that overwhelmed its servers. Such attacks, while making a site inaccessible to regular visitors, are different from those that seek to gain unauthorized access to a Web site’s administration.
Beijing Conjures Up A Trade Deficit
Mar 26th
This week Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao announced his country would run a trade deficit of more than $8 billion this month. And he could not have been more pleased. “To be honest, I was happy when I learned of the situation,” he said.
The Chinese take great pride in their nation being a trade powerhouse, running up gargantuan surpluses year in and year out. So why is Mr. Wen glad that, during his watch, China will go into the red? The deficit will be the first monthly one since April 2004.




