
翻译:
王毅在金砖国家外长会关于“改革国际机构,实现更加包容和可持续的治理”议题的发言
为改革完善全球治理作出金砖贡献
Read more印巴交火中方是否计划介入调解?外交部回应
中新网北京4月29日电 (记者 张素)中国外交部发言人郭嘉昆29日主持例行记者会。会上,有记者就印度和巴基斯坦昨晚再度交火一事,询问中方是否计划介入调解。
Read more王毅在金砖国家外长会关于“金砖国家在应对国际和地区危机以及推进和平与安全中的作用”议题的发言
携手做世界和平与发展事业的中流砥柱
Read more美财长声称应由中方缓和关税战 中国外交部驳斥
中新网北京4月29日电 (记者 张素)中国外交部发言人郭嘉昆29日主持例行记者会。会上,有记者就美国财长贝森特声称应由中方来缓和关税战一事提问。
Read more中方:清除日遗化武毒害是日方不容推卸的历史、政治和法律责任
中新网北京4月29日电 (记者 张素 谢雁冰)中国外交部发言人郭嘉昆29日主持例行记者会。
Read more普京宣布卫国战争胜利80周年庆典期间停火 中方回应
中新网北京4月29日电 (记者 张素)中国外交部发言人郭嘉昆29日主持例行记者会。会上,有俄媒记者就俄罗斯总统普京宣布卫国战争胜利80周年庆典期间停火一事提问。
Read more习近平在上海考察时强调 加快建成具有全球影响力的科技创新高地
原标题:习近平在上海考察时强调
Read more中方:愿在相互尊重、平等互利的基础上发展中加关系
中新网北京4月29日电 (记者 张素)中国外交部发言人郭嘉昆29日主持例行记者会。会上,有记者就初步结果显示加拿大自由党赢得大选一事询问中方有何评论。
Read more台青在江西:“这是一片创新创业的热土”
中新网吉安4月29日电 题:台青在江西:“这是一片创新创业的热土”
Read more中国驻马来西亚大使馆发布“五一”假期安全提醒
中新网4月29日电 据中国驻马来西亚大使馆微信公众号消息,马来西亚拥有丰富多彩的多元文化和美丽的自然风光,是受游客欢迎的旅游目的地。“五一”假期将至,为了保障您来马旅行平安、健康、愉快,中国驻马来西亚大使馆温馨提醒如下:
Read more台商二代江西再创业 盼两岸青年常来常往
中新社江西吉安4月29日电 题:台商二代江西再创业 盼两岸青年常来常往
Read more看见奋斗的你
“无数平凡英雄拼搏奋斗,汇聚成新时代中国昂扬奋进的洪流。”
Read more如何用耐心换效益?——九三三城发展座谈会“解题”产教融合
“高校与企业的运行模式、发展定位不同,如何让二者的‘创新齿轮’相互啮合,一直是我们思考的问题。”4月26日,谈及北京市昌平区未来科学城的发展方向,九三学社昌平区工委主任杨为民向记者表示。
Read more学习卡丨“不认命、不服输、敢于战天斗地”
愚公移山志,十年修一渠。
Read more听习近平讲作风故事丨半条被子
当前,全党上下正在开展深入贯彻中央八项规定精神学习教育,纵深推进作风建设。关于作风建设,习近平总书记常用讲故事的方式,传达深意、感染他人,给人以思想启迪。南方网、粤学习客户端推出“听习近平讲作风故事”系列报道,与您一起感悟这些故事蕴含的深刻道理。
Read more学习新语|总书记重要讲话汇聚磅礴力量
Read more
三部门:5月1日至9月16日开展海洋伏季休渔专项执法行动
中新网4月29日电 据农业农村部网站消息,农业农村部、公安部、中国海警局近日印发关于开展2025年海洋伏季休渔专项执法行动的通知。通知明确,为保护海洋渔业资源和生态环境,维护海洋伏季休渔秩序,农业农村部、公安部、中国海警局决定自2025年5月1日至9月16日开展海洋伏季休渔专项执法行动(以下简称“专项行动”)。
Read more自然资源部:一季度海洋经济呈现向新向好发展态势
中新网4月29日电 据自然资源部微信公众号消息,一季度,沿海地方和涉海部门深入贯彻落实党中央、国务院决策部署,坚持稳中求进工作总基调,完整准确全面贯彻新发展理念,加快构建新发展格局,扎实推动海洋经济高质量发展,海洋资源保供水平持续增强,新质生产力加快形成,海洋对外贸易总体平稳。初步核算,一季度海洋生产总值2.5万亿元,同比增长5.7%,高于国内生产总值增速0.3个百分点。
Read more北京将实施“科教共融”等五大行动计划 助力怀柔科学城建设
中新网北京4月29日电 (记者 陈杭)北京市发布《百年聚智 百校同行 教育助力怀柔科学城(怀柔综合性国家科学中心)建设工作方案》,将启动实施科教共融、人才共育、平台共筑、智力共享、产业共生“五大行动”,集成市教育两委和在京高校资源,全面助力怀柔科学城高质量运行发展,打造教育科技人才一体发展的创新高地。
Read more王毅会见埃塞俄比亚外长格迪翁
中新社里约热内卢4月28日电 (记者 林春茵)当地时间4月28日,中共中央政治局委员、外交部长王毅在巴西里约热内卢会见埃塞俄比亚外长格迪翁。
Read more‘Source of data’: are electric cars vulnerable to cyber spies and hackers?
British defence firms have reportedly warned staff not to connect their phones to Chinese-made EVs
Mobile phones and desktop computers are longstanding targets for cyber spies – but how vulnerable are electric cars?
On Monday the i newspaper claimed that British defence firms working for the UK government have warned staff against connecting or pairing their phones with Chinese-made electric cars, due to fears that Beijing could extract sensitive data from the devices.
Continue reading...Read more王毅会见泰国外长玛里
中新社里约热内卢4月28日电 (记者 林春茵)当地时间4月28日,中共中央政治局委员、外交部长王毅在巴西里约热内卢会见泰国外长玛里。
Read more五位一线劳动者讲述拼搏故事
五位一线劳动者讲述拼搏故事
Read more何以中国丨《印象大红袍》,为什么能“火”15年
“乡亲们,你们说,今年的茶好吗?”
Read more王毅出席金砖国家外长会晤
中新社里约热内卢4月28日电 (记者 林春茵)当地时间4月28日,中共中央政治局委员、外交部长王毅在巴西里约热内卢出席金砖国家外长会晤第一阶段会议。巴西外长维埃拉主持,各方围绕金砖国家在推进和平与安全中的作用进行了讨论。
Read moreAlibaba co-founder Jack Ma implicated in intimidation campaign by Chinese regime
Billionaire appears to have been asked to pressure friend to return to China to help pursue out-of-favour official
The Chinese regime enlisted Jack Ma, the billionaire co-founder of Alibaba, in an intimidation campaign to press a businessman to help in the purge of a top official, documents seen by the Guardian suggest.
The businessman, who can be named only as “H” for fear of reprisals against his family still in China, faced a series of threats from the Chinese state, in an attempt to get him to return home from France, where he was living. They included a barrage of phone calls, the arrest of his sister, and the issuing of a red notice, an international alert, through Interpol.
Continue reading...Read more“00后”台青入职厦门银行 从“金融小白”到业务能手
中新社漳州4月29日电 题:“00后”台青入职厦门银行 从“金融小白”到业务能手
Read moreHong Kong frees four pro-democracy lawmakers who completed jail terms
They were part of the Hong Kong 47 who tried to run an unofficial election primary.
Read more“00后”台青初入大陆职场 从“金融小白”到业务能手
中新网漳州4月29日电 (廖珍妹)“我感觉很充实和温暖,也做出点小成绩,对未来更有信心。”近日,“00后”台湾青年陈佳轩正在厦门银行漳州分行处理客户的授信合同事宜。入职近一年的他,已从青涩的“金融小白”逐渐蜕变为业务能手和同事的“好帮手”,在福建漳州漳浦县施展才华和抱负。
Read more中国成功发射卫星互联网低轨03组卫星
中新社北京4月29日电 (记者 马帅莎)据中国航天科技集团消息,北京时间4月29日4时10分,中国在文昌航天发射场使用长征五号乙运载火箭/远征二号上面级,成功将卫星互联网低轨03组卫星发射升空,卫星顺利进入预定轨道。
Read more‘The eighth wonder of the world’: China’s terracotta warriors to march on Australia for blockbuster show
Perth will host huge exhibition of ancient treasures from first emperor’s tomb in June, with 40% of the artefacts leaving China for the first time ever
Two thousand years ago, in a bid to conquer death itself, China’s first emperor Qin Shi Huang commissioned a city of the dead: a 49 sq km mausoleum guarded by an army of clay warriors, built to defend his tomb for eternity.
When farmers near Xi’an unearthed the first clay head in 1974, they cracked open one of humanity’s greatest archaeological mysteries, with more than 8,000 Terracotta Warriors discovered over the last 50 years. Now, fragments of that dream of immortality rise again – this time in Perth, where the largest exhibition of the Terracotta Warriors ever staged in Australia will head later this year
Continue reading...Read more民进北京市委会召开宣传工作委员会成立大会暨“2024年度好新闻”表彰大会
4月27日,民进北京市委会召开宣传工作委员会成立大会暨“2024年度好新闻”表彰大会。民进北京市委会副主委廖奕、民进北京市委会秘书长苍玉清出席。
Read more广西桂林开展旅游市场秩序整治 清除顽瘴痼疾
中新网桂林4月29日电 广西桂林市阳朔县 28日发布通告,2025年“五一”假日期间,当地将免费对外开放全县各行政事业单位停车场。
Read more最新健康研究:气候变化或加重抗微生物药物耐药性全球负担
中新网北京4月29日电 (记者 孙自法)施普林格·自然旗下专业学术期刊《自然-医学》北京时间4月28日夜间上线一篇中国学者的健康研究论文认为,世界当前的气候变化路径以及未能实现可持续发展战略,可能会导致到2050年抗微生物药物耐药性(AMR)的全球负担加重。
Read moreTrump signs orders stepping up immigration crackdown and ‘unleashing America’s law enforcement’ – as it happened
This blog has now closed. You can read more of our US politics coverage here
Here is an extract from The Atlantic’s piece on Trump’s first 100 days – in an interview secured after initially being canceled by the president over previous reporting from the journalists, who then reached the president on his cellphone – detailing some of the key development’s of his second term so far.
The president seemed exhilarated by everything he had managed to do in the first two months of his second term: He had begun a purge of diversity efforts from the federal government; granted clemency to nearly 1,600 supporters who had participated in the invasion of the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, including those caught beating police officers on camera; and signed 98 executive orders and counting (26 of them on his first day in office). He had fired independent regulators; gutted entire agencies; laid off great swaths of the federal workforce; and invoked 18th-century wartime powers to use against a criminal gang from Venezuela. He had adjusted tariffs like a DJ spinning knobs in the booth, upsetting the rhythms of global trade and inducing vertigo in the financial markets. He had raged at the leader of Ukraine, a democratic ally repelling an imperialist invasion, for not being “thankful”— and praised the leader of the invading country, Russia, as “very smart,” reversing in an instant 80 years of US foreign-policy doctrine, and prompting the countries of Nato to prepare for their own defense, without the protective umbrella of American power, for the first time since 1945.
He had empowered one of his top political donors, Elon Musk, the richest man in the world, to slice away at the federal government and take control of its operating systems. He had disemboweled ethics and anti-corruption architecture installed after Watergate, and had declared that he, not the attorney general, was the nation’s chief law-enforcement officer. He had revoked Secret Service protection and security clearances from political opponents, including some facing Iranian death threats for carrying out actions Trump himself had ordered in his first term. He had announced plans to pave over part of the Rose Garden, and he had redecorated the Oval Office — gold trim and gold trophies and gold frames to go with an array of past presidential portraits, making the room look like a Palm Beach approximation of an 18th-century royal court.
Continue reading...Read moreFour pro-democracy lawmakers from ‘Hong Kong 47’ group freed after four years in jail
Claudia Mo, Kwok Ka-ki, Jeremy Tam and Gary Fan among those released on Tuesday after prosecution criticised as politically motivated
Four members of the “Hong Kong 47” group of pro-democracy campaigners and activists jailed on contentious national security convictions have been freed.
Claudia Mo, Kwok Ka-ki, Jeremy Tam and Gary Fan are the first of the group to be released from jail, after serving sentences of more than four years. The group - tried together in Hong Kong’s largest ever national security trial - were sentenced in November. However most of them, including the four released on Tuesday, had already spent several years detained after courts denied bail.
Continue reading...Read moreThe missing lynx: how the rise of border walls has split up wildlife populations
In an age of growing hostility to migrants, there are 10 times more barriers on borders than when the Berlin Wall fell. But as well as the human cost, animals are unintended victims
The lynxes of the Białowieża forest once freely prowled through 1,420 sq km (548 sq miles) of ancient woodland. Then, in 2022, the habitat was abruptly sliced in two. Poland built a 115-mile (186km) wall across its border with Belarus to stop refugees and migrants entering the EU. About 15 lynxes were left stranded on the Polish side of the forest, forced into a genetic bottleneck.
The 5.5-metre high barrier, which is topped with wire and cameras, also dissects the forest’s population of bison, wolves and elk. Researchers monitored 10 sites along the border, walking along sections and counting signs of humans and wildlife.
Continue reading...Read moreStudent rescued from Mount Fuji twice in one week
Chinese national, 27, reportedly returned to Japan’s highest mountain days after first rescue to retrieve his phone
A university student has been rescued from the slopes of Mount Fuji twice in the space of a week – the second time during an attempt to retrieve his mobile phone.
The hapless climber, a 27-year-old Chinese national who has not been named, was airlifted from Japan’s highest mountain last week, only to be the subject of a second search four days later.
Continue reading...Read moreMet police ‘maintain concerns’ about China super-embassy plan
Exclusive: Force, which had dropped objection to plan, says protests of more than 500 people would impede traffic and require extra resources
China’s proposed “super-embassy” in London would require additional police officers to deal with any large protests involving thousands of people, the Metropolitan police have said before a decision by ministers.
Despite having dropped its official objection to the proposals, the Met “maintains concerns” that large protests of more than 500 people outside the embassy would impede traffic and “require additional police resource”, said the deputy assistant commissioner Jon Savell
Continue reading...Read moreBoonie Bears: Future Reborn review – kiddie Chinese eco-fable is like Mad Max on mushrooms
The ursine protagonists are largely relegated to fart-gag sidekicks in this phoned-in attempt at a dystopian sci-fi
When George Michael recorded Careless Whisper, there can be no doubt his ultimate ambition for it would have been to soundtrack a garish animated sequence in which two anthropomorphic bears gambol through a prairie of giant fungus experiencing ecstatic visions as hallucinogenic spores rain down on them. Such is the frantic way of this Chinese cartoon franchise, as relentless and exhausting as ever in its 11th feature-film instalment. Five minutes in, before the credits, it has crammed in a post-apocalyptic prologue, oodles of eco-babble, a time-travelling tyke and an avalanche.
This latest one jumps on the fungal-panic bandwagon: Saylor (voiced by Nicola Vincent in the English-language version) has nipped back 100 years to locate the original spores at the root of a pestilence that has eradicated most of life on Earth. It turns out that hapless nature guide Vick (Chris Boike), seen polluting the forest with his tourists, was responsible for spreading them After Saylor fails to kill the mushroom in the cradle, the pair – along with Vick’s forest buddies, the bears Bramble (Joseph S Lambert) and Briar (Patrick Freeman) – are whisked back to the future. They discover a fungus-carpeted nightmare of a planet, overshadowed by a giant skyscraping toadstool.
Continue reading...Read moreChina and Philippines display competing flags on disputed South China Sea sandbank
Beijing and Manila accuse each other of illegal activities around Sandy Cay near the Spratly Isles, as joint US-Filipino military drills get under way in region
China and the Philippines have displayed their national flags in competing photo opportunities on a disputed sandbank in the South China sea, ratcheting up longstanding regional tensions between the two countries.
The dispute played out at Sandy Cay, which is part of the disputed Spratly Islands, and comes days after the US and the Philippines launched their annual joint military drills called “Balikatan”, or “shoulder to shoulder”, which this year will include an integrated air and missile defence simulation for the first time.
Continue reading...Read moreUK banks brace for first-quarter reports after Trump tariff turmoil
Lenders expected to split into two camps: those focused on domestic customers and those with large operations in the US, China and the EU
UK banks’ earnings reports will be studied this week for signs of turmoil linked to Donald Trump’s tariff drama, with uncertainty over global growth likely to weigh on lenders with heavy exposure to China, including HSBC.
First-quarter profits only reflect the January-to-March period that preceded the US president’s “liberation day” tariff announcements on 2 April. But investors will be concerned about any hints of caution around earnings forecasts, as well as an uptick in money put aside for defaults by tariff-hit borrowers.
Continue reading...Read moreRevealed: online campaign urged far right to attack China’s opponents in UK
Social media incitement following last summer’s riots appears to be new tactic against Hong Kong exiles
One morning last August, a troubling message appeared in a social media group for Hongkongers in the UK. It was already a tense time to be an immigrant. Rioters, propelled by false claims online that the man who had murdered children in Southport was an asylum seeker, were descending on hotels housing refugees, trying to burn them alive.
The message alerted the Hongkongers to posts on far-right channels suggesting some new targets. “They all help refugees who come to the UK to take resources,” one of them read.
Continue reading...Read moreBeijing seizes tiny sandbank in South China Sea
The Philippines, which disputes China's claim to the sandbank, responds by releasing a photo of its own forces on another.
Read moreUS treasury secretary says ‘there is a path’ with China over tariff negotiations
‘The Chinese will see this high tariff level is unsustainable for their business,’ says Scott Bessent
The US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, said “there is a path” to an agreement with China over tariffs after he had interactions with his Chinese counterparts last week in Washington.
“I had interaction with my Chinese counterparts, but it was more on the traditional things like financial stability, global economic early warnings,” Bessent told ABC News’s This Week on Sunday, explaining that he had spoken to the Chinese during International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington. “I don’t know if President Trump has spoken with President Xi,” he added.
Continue reading...Read moreChongqing, the world’s largest city – in pictures
The largest city in the world is as big as Austria, but few people have ever heard of it. The megacity of 34 million people in central of China is the emblem of the fastest urban revolution on the planet. The Communist party decided 30 years ago to unify and populate vast rural areas, an experiment that has become a symbol of the Chinese ability to reshape the world
Continue reading...Read moreTaiwan cracks down on holders of Chinese ID amid fears over propaganda and espionage
Expulsion of people holding a Chinese passport or ID card prompts debate over identity, loyalty and freedom
Taiwan has launched a crackdown on holders of illegal Chinese identity documents, revoking the Taiwanese status of more than 20 people and putting tens of thousands of Chinese-born residents under scrutiny.
Under Taiwan law it is illegal for Taiwanese people to hold Chinese identity documents. In the past decade, hundreds of people have had their Taiwanese papers or passports cancelled for also holding Chinese ID, effectively revoking their citizenship.
Continue reading...Read moreDetained Chinese immigrants carved their anguish into a wall a century ago. Those words inspired a ballet
Oakland Ballet Company takes on a harrowing chapter of US-Chinese history with a piece about Angel Island, ‘the Ellis Island of the west’
One sunny March day on Angel Island, a hilly landmass in the middle of the San Francisco Bay, a dancer with a 40-ft braid attached to her head glided across a narrow concrete walkway. The audience sat on chairs in front of a long wooden building: a former detention center where – from 1910 to 1940 – half a million people, the majority Chinese, were held for months, even years, in prison-like conditions.
Sometimes called “the Ellis Island of the west”, Angel Island’s immigration station is the unlikely setting, and inspiration, for an ambitious new work by the Oakland Ballet Company. It’s based on the people from 80 countries who were confined to the the island’s detention center, which was the result of the Chinese Exclusion Act and other racist laws designed to keep Asian people out of the United States. In response, the detainees carved over 200 poems onto the walls expressing their anguish and rage.
Continue reading...Read moreUS revokes policy restricting subpoenas of reporters’ phone records – as it happened
Pam Bondi, US attorney general, says conduct of federal employees who leak information to media is ‘treasonous’. This blog is now closed.
Apple is reportedly planning to switch assembly of all iPhones for the US market to India as the company seeks to reduce its reliance on a Chinese manufacturing base amid Donald Trump’s trade war.
The $3tn (£2.3tn) technology company aims to make the shift as soon as next year, the Financial Times reported.
Continue reading...Read moreTrump administration investigating California university over foreign gifts
DoE investigation revives reports that UC Berkeley failed to disclose Chinese funding for a now severed partnership
The Trump administration launched an investigation into the University of California, Berkeley, on Friday centered on foreign funding, making it the latest university to be targeted by the federal government.
The investigation revives criticism from several years ago about the university’s partnership with China’s Tsinghua University. It comes after Donald Trump earlier this week signed a series of executive orders focused on universities that he views as liberal adversaries to his political agenda.
Continue reading...Read moreEthical alternatives to American goods | Brief letters
Trumping consumption | Greenland and Crimea | Running robots | Coffee, beer and newsprint | Extra time in exams
Pleased to see I’m far from alone in trying to avoid American products (This un-American life: can you really divest yourself of everything from the US?, 19 April). Mostly there are alternatives. There is no need to make your own cleaning products – for example, there are Bio-D and Faith in Nature. I have a Kobo e-reader and a Doro phone. A good source of alternatives is Ethical Consumer magazine.
Ruth Clancy
Whaley Bridge, Derbyshire
• For someone who sees nothing wrong in saying the US wants Greenland, no wonder Donald Trump thinks it is alright for Russia to have Crimea (Report, 24 April).
Helen Evans
Ruthin, Denbighshire
Xi announces plan for Chinese economy to counter impact of US trade war
Beijing will ‘strengthen bottom-line thinking’ as reports say it could drop tariffs on some US products
Xi Jinping has announced a plan to counter China’s continuing economic problems and the impact of the US trade war, as reports swirl that it could drop tariffs on some US products, including semiconductors.
Friday’s meeting of the politburo was convened to discuss China’s economy, which since the pandemic has faced difficulties fuelled by a housing sector crisis, youth unemployment and Donald Trump’s tariffs on all Chinese imports to the US.
Continue reading...Read moreChina has halted rare earth exports, can Australia step up?
Australia has proposed to create a strategic reserve of critical minerals.
Read moreWho will win the race to develop a humanoid robot?
Humanoid robots are attracting a lot of investment but will China dominate the industry?
Read moreFive cards China holds in a trade war with the US
From rare earths to billions in US debt, here's what China has in its arsenal - and how strong they are.
Read more'I've had 100 operations and will never stop' - inside China's cosmetic surgery boom
Face-scanning apps, social media influencers and toxic beauty standards are fuelling China's cosmetic surgery boom.
Read moreChina executes man who stabbed Japanese school boy
Zhong Changchun was sentenced to death in January for attacking the boy who later died of his injuries.
Read moreDesigned in US, made in China: Why Apple is stuck
China sits at the heart of Apple's supply chain - and has benefited hugely from it. Can they break up?
Read moreTrump's tariffs leave China's neighbours with an impossible choice
Ambitious economies like Vietnam and Indonesia are stuck between China and the US as the trade war escalates.
Read moreShein and Temu warn tariffs will raise prices in US
The firms said operating expenses have risen "due to recent changes in global trade rules and tariffs".
Read moreAboard the 'silver trains', China's retirees do their bit to offset Trump's tariffs
A new initiative aims to boost the local economy by attracting elderly travellers to remote parts of the country.
Read moreViral videos claim luxury bags are made in China, is it true?
BBC Verify's Jake Horton looks into the truth behind the claims, and what we know about how luxury goods are made.
Read moreTrump's chips strategy: The US will struggle to take on Asia
America is trying to create a chip industry through isolation and protectionism, when what allowed it to emerge in Asia is the opposite: collaboration.
Read moreCivil reading event held in Yinchuan, China's Ningxia
Citizens buy books during a civil reading event in Yinchuan, northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, April 20, 2025. The event was held here on Sunday to raise awareness of reading among the public.
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