congress [1]
New US Congress faces key decisions
28 Dec 2006 04:46 GMT | einsnews.com
... on the cards US congressional interest in Taiwan is likely to manifest itself early after ... research service's chief expert on Taiwanese and Chinese political issues, states that "Congressional sentiment, long ... also be drawn to the "rise of China and its increasing influence in the region ...
The Biggest Rubber Stamp - The National People?s Congress of China
Mon, 05 Mar 2007 01:11:11 +0000 | China View
Leader, The Guardian, March 3, 2007- The largest parliament in the world opens in Beijing on Monday. The National People’s Congress has 3,000 delegates, but lasts for only 10 days a year and has never rejected a government budget or bill. A true reflection of Chinese-style “democracy”, the congress is huge, showy and toothless. The real [...]
Wed, 07 Mar 2007 01:39:49 +0800 | Letters from China
National People's Congress, Beijing, 2007 (via Wang Xiaofeng) Link:The banned photographs from the Liaoning People's Congress...
China's congress follows the script, literally
| Findory News China
Christian Science Monitor: The largely symbolic role of the National People's Congress is on full display at its annual meeting.
Gere urges Congress to act over Tibet
| Findory News China
Financial Times: Richard Gere, Hollywood star and social activist, urged Congress to put pressure on China to reach a negotiated agreement that would give genuine autonomy to Tibet and allow its spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, to return to his homeland
China warns against graft ahead of key congress (Reuters)
Tue, 15 May 2007 05:37:17 GMT | Yahoo! News
Reuters - China's Communist Party will take new steps to root out corrupt officials ahead of a key congress later this year and ensure that tainted members cannot rise any further, the official Xinhua news agency said on Tuesday.
Stiglitz tells Congress to lay off China
| Findory News China
Marketwatch: WASHINGTON -- Congress should resist the urge to slap protectionist measures on China because it will only make life more difficult for the domestic economy, Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz of Columbia University said Tuesday.
