Emily Feng
Stories
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Once-In-A-Thousand-Year Floods In China Have Left Over One Million People Displaced
Flooding continues to devastate the city of Zhengzhou in the central Chinese province of Henan, where thousands remain stranded without power or food.
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Chinese Tourists Throng 'Red Tourism' Sites To Mark Communist Party Centennial
The officially designated Communist Party historical sites venerate Mao Zedong and, increasingly, the country's current leader, Xi Jinping. Tourists sometimes do manual labor and dress up as soldiers.
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The White House Blamed China For Hacking Microsoft. China Is Pointing Fingers Back
One day after the Biden administration accused China of a massive hack of Microsoft's email server software, Beijing said the U.S. has been mounting cyberattacks for the past 11 years.
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China Denies Cyberattack Accusations, And Says It Too Is A Victim Of Hacking
The U.S. and other Western powers accused China of widespread cyberattacks. Now China is accusing the U.S. of the same offense.
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A Look At China's 'Red Tourism' Industry As The Communist Party Turns 100
China is promoting "red tourism" — visiting Communist Party historical sites that venerate Chairman Mao Zedong, and increasingly, the country's current leader Xi Jinping.
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How Did China Become The World's Dominant Polysilicon Producer?
China is a leader in the manufacture of polysilicon — the basic material that goes into making solar panels. China has cracked the code for how to make high quality, cheap polysilicon.
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Hong Kong Man Recounts His Desperate Bids For Freedom After Beijing Passed Tough Law
Last July, five men escaped from Hong Kong by speedboat as Beijing mounted a crackdown. On the 24th anniversary of Hong Kong's handover to Chinese rule, one of these men recounts his story.
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China's Tough Hong Kong Law Turns 1 Year Old — And It's Already Grown Teeth
Apple Daily was closed, universities were muzzled and prominent activists were either jailed or exiled. The national security law has surely made an impact in Hong Kong in its first year in force.
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Hong Kong's 'Apple Daily' Shut Down, Leadership Arrested
Hong Kong's most prominent pro-democracy paper, Apple Daily, says it is shutting down. Its accounts have been frozen and much of its top leadership has been arrested.
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Hong Kong's Apple Daily To Shut Down This Weekend After Having Its Assets Frozen
The pro-democracy newspaper will run its last edition on Saturday — signaling the end to Hong Kong's once freewheeling and muckraking reporting environment as well.