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Chinese Government

Latest Chinese Government Items
  • **FILE** President Obama looks on as Chinese President Hu Jintao speaks during a Jan. 19 news conference in the East Room of the White House. (Associated Press)

    VOA radio broadcasts to China signing off, while Beijing boosts propaganda

    The Obama administration will cancel shortwave radio broadcasts by Voice of America into China this year, as Beijing is expanding its propaganda operations in the United States and around the world.


  • In this March 24, 2010 file photo, Edward Roski, right, a board member at the Bowers Museum, looks at a 2,800-year-old infant mummy, Baby Bluebonnet, at the "Secrets of the Silk Road: Mystery Mummies from China," exhibit at the museum in Santa Ana, Calif. A Philadelphia museum says its exhibit on the Silk Road will go on for a limited engagement after a dispute with the Chinese government. The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology said Friday, Feb. 11, 2011, that the exhibit will open with a full complement of mummies and more. Some of the artifacts are more than 3,800 years old. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

    China, Philly museum resolve dispute over exhibit

    A Philadelphia museum said Friday that its exhibit on the Silk Road, including a pair of ancient mummies, will go on after it resolved a dispute with the Chinese government that led to a pared-down event with fake mummies and life-sized photos of the artifacts.


  • ** FILE ** A Chinese flag flutters outside Google's China headquarters in Beijing on Friday, Jan. 22, 2010. Google closed its China-based search engine last year after complaining of cyberattacks from China against its e-mail service. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

    Hackers in China hit oil firms

    Hackers operating from China stole sensitive information from Western oil companies, a U.S. security firm reported Thursday, adding to complaints about pervasive Internet crime traced to the country.


  • Report: Hackers in China hit Western oil companies

    Hackers operating from China stole sensitive information from Western oil companies, a U.S. security firm reported Thursday, adding to complaints about pervasive Internet crime traced to the country.


  • Salesman: Hackers use Chinese company's servers

    A Chinese man cited by a U.S. security firm as being possibly linked to cyberspying on Western oil companies says his company has rented server space to hundreds of hackers.


  • ** FILE ** A Chinese flag flutters outside Google's China headquarters in Beijing on Friday, Jan. 22, 2010. Google closed its China-based search engine last year after complaining of cyberattacks from China against its e-mail service. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

    Report: Hackers in China hit Western oil companies

    Hackers operating from China stole sensitive information from Western oil companies, a U.S. security firm reported Thursday, adding to complaints about pervasive Internet crime traced to the country.


  • A poster of Liu Xiaobo, jailed Chinese activist and 2010 Nobel Peace Prize winner, is displayed as Rep. Christopher H. Smith, New Jersey Republican (left), speaks Tuesday on Capitol Hill about human-rights issues. (Associated Press)

    EDITORIAL: Crucifying China's Christians

    Christianity is growing fast in mainland China; the faithful number as many as hundreds of millions. Christians, however, are a persecuted minority in a country where worship is limited to the state-sanctioned deity Mao Zedong.


  • Zheng Leguo (J.M. Eddins Jr./The Washington Times)

    Chinese dissidents hear Obama's 'silence'

    Leading Chinese Christian dissidents blasted the Obama administration Thursday, saying it had done virtually nothing to advance the cause of religious freedom.


  • Inside the Ring

    Numerous diplomatic cables from Beijing show that Chinese companies are continuing to sell to Iran and other states goods for the production of weapons of mass destruction because the Beijing government has failed to stem the activities.


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