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    2015-02-13

    This year marks a turning point in cultural exchanges between the United Kingdom and China.

    For the first UK-China Year of Cultural Exchange, China will showcase the very best of its culture in the UK and vice versa.

    The series of events was formally announced when Premier Li Keqiang visited the UK in June 2014. It comprises two seasons of cultural events - a UK season in China from March until July led by the Cultural and Education Section of the British embassy; and a Chinese season in the UK for the second half of the year that is being led by the Chinese Ministry of Culture.

    The exchange events will provide a platform for individuals, organizations and governments to strengthen ties in the arts and creative industries.

    Xi urges quick work on Asian investment bank

    President Xi Jinping wants to accelerate work to establish the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and called for "concrete investment plans" under China's $40 billion (35.3 billion euros) Silk Road Fund.

    At a central government finance meeting on Feb 10, Xi said the bank's main mission will be to provide financial support for infrastructure projects in Asia and along the land-based and maritime Silk Road economic belts.

    He said the bank will supplement fundraising channels for infrastructure projects. He added that the Silk Road Fund should be managed under market-driven principles.

    The bank was created in October when 21 Asian countries agreed to join as founding members. In November, Xi announced the creation of the Silk Road Fund, part of a national strategy to revive the centuries-old trading route connecting Asia and Europe.

    At the Feb 10 meeting, Xi also said China should work more efficiently to establish an oil reserve system and an energy pricing reform that closely follows global market changes.

    Wanda acquires Swiss sports marketer

    Dalian Wanda Group, a property developer and entertainment conglomerate, recently acquired Infront Sports Media, an international sports marketer and football promoter. The acquisition cemented Dalian Wanda's status as a competent player in the global sports market.

    The company announced the deal on Feb 10 to buy out the Swiss-based sports marketing giant from European private equity company Bridgepoint for approximately $1.2 billion (1.05 billion euros).

    Wanda will take a 68.2 percent stake in Infront, which focuses on distributing media rights for broadcasting sporting events, including the FIFA World Cup and several Winter Olympics sports.

    Wanda Group Chairman Wang Jianlin said Infront's expertise allows Wanda to better support the development of football in China.

    Two central govt ministries rebuked

    China's anti-corruption authority reprimanded two central government ministries on Feb 10 for poor management and bad behavior among staff members.

    In a rare move, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection issued statements leveling criticism at two highly placed ministerial-level government bodies: the Ministry of Culture and the Ministry of Environmental Protection.

    The commission said the Ministry of Environmental Protection committed violations of the law, displayed lax supervision and is suspected of corruption.

    Ji Lin, head of the third central disciplinary inspection team, said corruption and a lack of supervision are behind widespread violations of the law and regulations in environmental assessments of development projects.

    Violations include allowing construction to be carried out before an approval is granted and allowing modifications to projects without approval from environmental authorities, Ji said.

    The Ministry of Culture recently appointed a new minister and the Ministry of Environmental Protection may soon change its leader.

    Qualcomm hit with $975m antitrust fine

    China's antitrust regulator has fined Qualcomm Inc, the world's largest chipmaker, 6.08 billion yuan ($975 million; 860 million euros ), the highest penalty since China's antitrust law took effect in 2008.

    The fine amounts to 8 percent of Qualcomm's 2013 revenue in China. The company's shares rose 1.2 percent to close at $67.11 in New York on Feb 9 following the announcement.

    The National Development and Reform Commission said on Feb 10 the key factors that led to the record fine include unfair and excessively high royalty payments Qualcomm collected from Chinese smartphone makers, bundling of products and adding unreasonable conditions to the sale of baseband chips.

    A baseband chip in wireless transmission devices, such as mobile phones, processes signals and implements the device's real-time radio transmission operations.

    Xu Kunlin, head of the anti-monopoly bureau at the commission, told reporters on Feb 10: "Our purpose is to maintain fair competition in the industry. Some practices have hindered the innovation capability of other companies."

    Li promises to ease way for talented foreigners

    Premier Li Keqiang pledged renewed efforts to ensure benefits for talented foreigners and made no secret of China's desire to attract more overseas talent.

    China will lower the threshold for foreigners to come to the country and streamline procedures for them to invest and start businesses here, Li said at a Feb 10 meeting with foreign experts at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

    The country will offer more international products and services for foreigners, he said in the meeting held by the State Administration of Foreign Experts Affairs.

    Li also promised a simpler visa policy and an easier path to a permanent residency permit, or green card, in China.

    Former premier on list of top philanthropists

    Former premier Zhu Rongji was honored as one of the country's most generous donors by the China Philanthropy Research Institute of Beijing Normal University.

    Zhu, 87, donated 15.2 million yuan ($2.43 million; 2.15 million euros) to the Practical Education Foundation in 2014. He also made the list in 2013.

    Zhu, who served as premier from 1998 to 2003, has also written several bestseller books, including Zhu Rongji Meets the Press and Zhu Rongji's Answers to Journalists' Questions. He said he would donate the proceeds from his books to help students in poverty-stricken areas.

    "It's impressive to see a former national leader making such donations that bring him closer to the people," said Tao Chuanjin, director of the Research Center of Philanthropy and Social Enterprise at Beijing Normal University.

    Site alleges corruption in 70 listed firms

    Corruption is rife in at least 70 publicly listed companies, according to an online financial information site.

    According to Hithink Royalflush Information Network, based in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, out of 70 companies plagued with corruption, 18 are in industries such as oil, coal mining and nonferrous metals.

    Six of the 70 are in the real estate sector and another six are financial companies. State-owned and private companies are among those with executives suspected of being corrupt and of having corrupt official ties, Hithink said.

    "Nearly all corrupt officials had ill-gotten incomes from business organizations," according to a recent editorial by Beijing-based Guangming Daily.

    China to deepen ties with AU

    China will further develop mutually beneficial ties with the African Union, a senior Chinese official said in Harare, Zimbabwe on Feb 9.

    After meeting Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, who assumed the AU chairmanship in January, Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi said China was keen to further engage with the AU for greater bilateral socio-economic benefits.

    Expressing optimism about China-Africa relations, Yang described the ties as an exemplar of mutual trust, equality and concerted efforts for win-win cooperation, adding the relationship enjoyed great prospects.

    "China will continue its mutually beneficial cooperation with the AU. We are well connected with the AU and all its members and we believe that there is a lot more that we can discuss in terms of economic and social progress in collaboration with each other," Yang said.

    He said China paid great attention to Africa's development efforts, including its 50-year development strategy dubbed Agenda 2063.

    On China-Zimbabwe relations, Yang hailed the fraternal political and socio-economic ties between the two countries, noting that cooperation still needed to be enhanced in such areas as agriculture, energy, infrastructure, human resources training and tourism sectors, among others.

    China values the backing of Zimbabwe on issues that concern its core interests and also affirmed its support for Zimbabwe's efforts to safeguard its independence, sovereignty and dignity, he said.

    China, Algeria to push for progress

    China and Algeria will work together to achieve further progress in their bilateral ties, officials of the two countries said on Feb 6.

    During a meeting with Algerian Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal, visiting Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi said the purpose of his visit to Algeria is to facilitate the implementation of the consensus reached by the two countries' leaders to strengthen high-level dialogue and to develop cooperation in various fields. This will further enrich the China-Algeria comprehensive strategic partnership.

    Yang, also China's former foreign minister, proposed the two sides enhance high-level contacts and maintain coordination and cooperation on major issues in regard to world peace and development.

    He said efforts should be made to consolidate bilateral cooperation in traditional fields such as construction, telecommunications, oil and gas, and also to promote cooperation in such new fields as space.

    Kenya to send team to championships in China

    Kenyan athletics officials on Feb 10 reaffirmed that the country will present a team at the World Cross Country Championships in Guiyang, China on March 28.

    This is despite efforts by some elite athletes to boycott the country's national trials in Nairobi to select the team for the championships.

    "Kenya will be at the world cross. We are the defending champions and there is no way we will stay away. There are politics over leadership of Athletics Kenya, but that will not be allowed to interfere with the running of the competition program," AK President Isaiah Kiplagat told journalists in Nairobi.

    Kiplagat said calls by the Professional Athletes Association of Kenya for athletes to keep away from the event, which is an IAAF permit meeting, is an exercise in futility.

    The competition, Kiplagat said, stands out as a national event and attempts to disrupt it would derail Kenya's bid to continue its winning tradition.

    Imports and exports plummet in January

    China's foreign trade stumbled 10.8 percent to 2.09 trillion yuan ($341 billion; 296 billion euros) on a year-on-year basis in January.

    The country's exports slid 3.2 percent to 1.23 trillion yuan while imports slumped 19.7 percent to 860 billion yuan, expanding the trade surplus by 87.5 percent to 366.9 billion yuan, according to General Administration of Customs on Feb 8.

    A drop in foreign commodities preceded the sharp decline in imports as coal tumbled by nearly 53.2 percent, refined oil dropped by 37.6 percent and steel slid by 14.7 percent from the same month a year earlier.

    "The weak manufacturing activities and a bearish housing market have caused domestic demand for commodities, including refined oil, industrial metals and plastics, to decline," said Zhao Zhongxiu, a professor at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing.

    Zhao said January's depreciation, trade surplus, combined with a downturn in exports and imports, complicates the government's management of exchange rates.

    Youth winter games boost bid for Olympics

    While a host for the 2022 Winter Olympics has yet to be announced, China is getting more young people involved in winter sports by staging the inaugural national students' winter games soon.

    Beijing is bidding jointly with the ski resort of Zhangjiakou, Hebei province, to host the Winter Olympics. The Games' host will be announced on July 31.

    In an aim to promote winter sports, the 2015 "Future Star" National Sunny Youth Winter Sports Meet, the first of its kind, will open at Jingpo Lake scenic park in Mudanjiang, Heilongjiang province, on Feb 11.

    More than 600 students from 31 provinces and municipalities will take part in the six-day winter sports gala.

    The event is being organized by the General Administration of Sport of China, the Ministry of Education and the Communist Youth League.

    Premier berates officials for neglecting duties

    Premier Li Keqiang has asked local government officials to sign a written pledge to carry out major economic and social policies faithfully, saying that dereliction of duty has set back central government economic growth measures.

    Li said large projects and investment plans backed by the central government - especially in agriculture and water conservation - were not fully implemented by local officials last year.

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