In the Internet Era, China Is Enhancing its People-oriented Principle
The Internet has increased people’s ability to make their voices heard in China
The Internet has increased people’s ability to make their voices heard in China
“Warm and Cold, We Share Together.” The pandemic has profoundly enlightened the public: in the era of globalization, the members of the global village are intertwined and share a common destiny.
Now, in order to avoid losing his reelection bid, blaming China has somehow become President Donald Trump and his administration’s preferred strategy. This greatly undermines the U.S. image and its international standing.
International law is the basis for the survival of the international community. If some countries are allowed to trample on it, the world would inevitably regress to an era when the law of the jungle prevailed, without peace and development.
Australia’s policy shift toward China indicates that it will continue to support and coordinate with the U.S. strategic deployment in the Indo-Pacific region.
In the time that remains, it is of paramount importance to find a way for the two nations to resume communication, not only at the highest level but also people-to-people exchanges. The task is arduous but can be done with sincerity and patience.
The failure to enact this article over the past two decades has created a loophole in Hong Kong’s legal system. It is both necessary and imperative that efforts be made at the State level to establish and improve the legal system and enforcement mechanisms for the HKSAR to safeguard national security.
Until the COVID-19 outbreak, the Belt and Road initiative had emerged as the most successful integration platform for years on the world stage, guaranteeing common prosperity and win-win results.
Hong Kong’s progress since its return shows that “one country” is the foundation of “two systems” as well as a precondition for the region’s prosperity. Attempts to shake this foundation would only leave Hong Kong in chaos.
By working closely with India, the EU and others, China can and must play a leadership role in reforms that strengthen international organizations and multilateralism.
China’s approach to address problems including those triggered by the novel coronavirus pandemic is people-oriented, a philosophy that is deeply rooted in its culture
Although the continent accounts for only a small proportion of confirmed cases in the world so far, the pandemic has dealt a heavy blow to the African economy