• Neither British nor Chinese officials have disclosed the name of the hotel or the time when the body was discovered.

    WSJ: Fearful Final Hours for Briton Who Died in China

  • On Monday, Mr. Browne highlighted the ties between the U.K. and China following meetings between some British and Chinese officials.

    WSJ: U.K. Raises Brit's Death in China Talks

  • For CMR, we interviewed potential clients and found that French, British and Chinese companies were the ones most likely to increase their spending, along with companies that targeted Chinese consumers.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Alexa Chung, a British model with Chinese ancestory, is on the cover of its first April issue, which is already available on Shanghai newsstands.

    FORBES: Ad Rise At China's Caijing Magazine Helps To Boost SEEC Media's Results

  • In mid-February, a senior British diplomat met Chinese counterparts, Hague said.

    CNN: STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • He commended the high educational achievements of Chinese British pupils, however highlighted his worries with the "persistent" under achievements of black Caribbean and black African pupils.

    BBC: Education questions

  • The loosening of restrictions on trading yuan started in Hong Kong, a former British colony under Chinese sovereignty but with its own legal and financial systems.

    WSJ: New Move to Make Yuan a Global Currency

  • The permanent collection, which will be exhibited whole again in 2003, includes British portraiture from the 15th to 18th centuries, Neapolitan art from the late Renaissance, Chinese bronzes and British folk art.

    BBC: Stone exhibit on a roll

  • American oil companies do have important contracts in Iraq, but so do British, Russian and Chinese companies.

    BBC: John Simpson: 'The Iraq memories I can't rid myself of'

  • On one recent outing, to a funfair, he enjoyed a ride with a young British diplomat and the Chinese ambassador.

    ECONOMIST: North Korea

  • The idea of a professional civil service, based on written examinations, was not invented by the British but by the Chinese.

    CNN: Building On A Golden Age

  • The foreign secretary said he was informed of the claims the next day and immediately instructed British officials to ask the Chinese authorities to investigate.

    CNN: STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • "This was a massive coup for the UK capital, showing not only the high esteem in which Chinese businesses hold British skills, but also the big retail opportunity that the UK represents, " he wrote.

    BBC: Vince Cable: UK borders must be open to genuine investors

  • The transaction will only turn out to be important if it is the priming of a financial pump that then gushes a flow of Chinese money into British roads, rail, hospitals and the other things that our indebted government is struggling to afford.

    BBC: Why the chancellor wants China's cash

  • The project was conceived, designed, constructed, and opened in four years, whereas the Heathrow terminal, from conception to completion, took twenty years. (That building, by Richard Rogers, is a somewhat compromised version of his original design far better than the rest of Heathrow, but much less interesting than Rogers meant it to be.) These widely divergent timetables are not a matter of Chinese efficiency versus British dallying: the British, like the Americans, pay the price of democracy.

    NEWYORKER: Situation Terminal

  • British conglomerate Unilever just moved its Chinese production operations to Hefei from Shanghai.

    NPR: China Seeks Cheaper Labor Within Its Borders

  • But this place truly is the sort of spot where the island's many identities - Malay, Chinese, Indian, British colonial, modern tourist - thread together into a beautiful knot.

    BBC: Penang: Malaysia in miniature

  • McMillan says his lines have been copied by Chinese, Indian and British companies, but nonetheless the company won an order equal to 10% of last year's revenue from Sinopec, the state-owned Chinese oil company.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Following the release of the IAEA report and ahead of the UN General Assembly's opening meeting later this month, this week US, German, British, French, Russian and Chinese diplomats met in Germany to discuss the possibility of ratcheting up Security Council sanctions against Iran.

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Time's up on Iran

  • So a golden rule of survival in this settlement is that every building must have its front door unlocked - and that includes those of the hosts, the Norwegian Polar Institute, and of the French and Germans, the British, the Indians, the Chinese and many others.

    BBC: So remote, it could pass for Mars

  • The United States is also unique in the scale on which it attracts human capital: of the 314 laureates who won their Nobel prize while working in the U.S., 102 (or 32%) were foreign born, including 15 Germans, 12 Canadians, 10 British, six Russians and six Chinese (twice as many as have received the award while working in China).

    FORBES: American Leadership in Science, Measured in Nobel Prizes [Infographic]

  • Moulding the Chinese consumer into one with British tastes is an ambitious strategy.

    CNN: SHARE THIS

  • Almost 40% of British consumers are less likely to buy Chinese-made toys because of Mattel's recall crisis, according to a YouGov survey commissioned by Marketing Week, a trade publication.

    ECONOMIST: Chinese manufacturing

  • Arthur Waley, a British scholar also known for his translations of Chinese literature, published his version from 1925 to 1933.

    ECONOMIST: Millennium issue: The tale of Murasaki Shikibu | The

  • But Li didn't hit the big time until 1979, when he became the first Chinese to buy one of the British hongs (trading companies) that dominated the local economy.

    CNN: Up, Up And Away

  • The Shenzhou themselves are based on Russia's Soyuz craft but, according to Phillip Clark, a British-based consultant and expert on the Chinese space programme, they are not a straight knock-off.

    ECONOMIST: China in space

  • Within a system robust enough to tolerate creative destruction, British ingenuity (not so different from French or Chinese inventiveness) was free to flourish.

    ECONOMIST: Creating economic wealth

  • So the British have launched a campaign to triple the number of Chinese visitors by 2015.

    ECONOMIST: China��s new middle class goes farther for its holidays

  • But like most Chinese classics it is now almost unknown to European audiences: Chinese plays have been all but absent from British theatres since the fading of the fashion for "Chinoiserie" in the 19th Century.

    BBC: The Orphan of Zhao comes to RSC

  • The British have suggested that, to help win Russian and Chinese agreement for tougher measures, another package of proposals might have to be put to Iran (it turned the Europeans' last lot down flat without even reading them).

    ECONOMIST: Too slow for comfort

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