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Xiaotian Liu’s case illustrates a much broader situation affecting thousands of international students across the country.
If you’ve purchased something from Chinese e-commerce giants Shein, Temu or Alibaba, then you may have benefited from a trade loophole called the de minimis exemption.
Shou Zi wore a suit from Singapore-based business Tailored Fashions when he was first grilled by the US Congress in March ...
In her eyes, the character "ren", meaning "person", resembles the muzzle of a cat, "ceng", meaning "once", looks like an ...
A GROUP of Chinese fans in the United States decided that China's biggest movie should make a big splash overseas – literally ...
SHENZHEN, CHINA - AW2025 HOULE SHOWROOM opened from April 16 to 19, spotlighting 41 independent designer brands that blend Eastern aesthetics, minimalist philosophy, avant-garde innovation, and ...
Malaysia and China should capitalise on the growing influencer economy to deepen bilateral trade and cultural ties, said an ...
Chinese courts take a different approach to the issue of AI generating copyright protected images, the DLA Piper team reports ...
A man reads at Waterstones' flagship Piccadilly bookshop in London, Britain, April 17, 2025. (Xinhua/Li Ying) If you put ...
Chinese sellers of items from lunch boxes to appliances have taken to social media platform Rednote to generate sympathy purchases, telling ...
These videos are mostly filmed at Chinese factories purporting to supply top US brands from Lululemon Athletica to Nike.