BBC Chinese: Greece to Participate in China’s New Maritime Silk Road
China’s Coal Industry Is Facing a Tough Time
China Economy reported that 2014 was a bad year for China’s coal companies. China’s Coal Industry Association issued a release stating that, in the first 11 months of 2014, profits fell by 44.4 percent and losses increased by 61.6 percent when compared to same period in 2013; 70 percent of coal companies were in the red. China completed 3.52 billion tons of coal production, which was a 2.1 percent reduction from a year ago. It was the first decline since the year 2000. On the one hand, coal consumption continues to decline. On the other, the companies have excess capacity and operational difficulties. According to China Economy, this will be the new norm for the future of the coal industry.
Shenzhen Becomes World’s First Friendship City with Berne of Switzerland
Qiushi: The Dividends of Hegemony: America’s Source for Reaping without Sowing
Qiushi recently republished a Red Flag Manuscript article with the title, “The Dividends of Hegemony: America’s Source for Reaping without Sowing.” Two researchers, Yang Duogui and Zhou Zhitian, from the Science and Technology Policy and Management Institute of the Chinese Academy of Sciences were the authors.
Qiushi: State Owned Enterprises Should Return More Profits to the State
Qiushi published an article advocating that State-owned enterprises should provide “social dividends” by returning more profits to the State and by increasing the amount of funds used for public benefits.
Eight Diseases in China’s Judicial System
According to Song Hansong, Director of the Office of Crime Prevention, China’s Supreme People’s Procuratorate, there are eight “chronic diseases” in the judicial system in China.
Xinhua: U.S. NSA Installs Spyware on Hard Disks So They Can Eavesdrop on Most Computers Worldwide
Xinhua recently reported, in its International Section’s headline news, that the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) has made a technological breakthrough. It is installing spyware that will be hidden in Western Digital, Seagate, and Toshiba Corp.’s hard disks enabling them to eavesdrop on most computers in the world. The report indicated that multiple Internet researchers and former agents have acknowledged this.