
Lu Siwei and Ren Quanniu have been notified that they will lose their licenses owing to 'inappropriate comments' made online.
Lu Siwei and Ren Quanniu have been notified that they will lose their licenses owing to 'inappropriate comments' made online.
Doctors at Wuhan Central Hospital pressured into silence, as former ER director Ai Fen takes on powerful vested interests.
Supervisor Gordon Mar calls on the city authorities to rethink their relationship with the Hunan provincial capital over human rights abuses.
Chow and fellow democracy activist Joshua Wong are being classed as Category A prisoners alongside drug-traffickers and murderers.
Wei Yani was likely getting ready to flee China when she was held incommunicado by Guangzhou state security police.
Lai's supporters gather outside the court as he is escorted back to jail until Feb. 1.
US officials are 'stunned' by what analysts say is a massive political victory for Beijing ahead of the new Biden administration.
Zhang told the court that her trial was 'a judicial game' and asked the judge if his conscience was troubled.
The authorities drop charges against two detainees under 18, who remain in Hong Kong police custody.
Sentencing will likely take place on Wednesday, amid warnings that televised "confessions" from the detainees could soon appear on state TV.
The Inner Mongolia government also orders schools to phase out Mongolian-medium teaching by the third grade.
A concerned group says families weren't given enough notice to attend the trial, owing to quarantine requirements.
Central government investigators have set up shop at Alibaba, Ant Group and other major tech companies in recent weeks.
The ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) fears deteriorating ties with Washington could spark spiraling social unrest at home.
The university dismisses as 'rumors' fears that the center's restructuring is linked to an ongoing crackdown on political dissent.
The 12 detainees will likely stand trial on charges linked to "illegally crossing a border" in early 2021, according to defense attorney Lu Siwei.
Xu Kun stands accused of "insulting Chinese leaders" and slandering the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
The pro-democracy founder of Next Digital is awaiting trial on charges of 'colluding with foreign powers' under Beijing's national security law.
Business analysts in Taiwan say the problem can't be solved simply by throwing money at it, however.
The move comes after flight data exposed its involvement in the seizure of a speedboat carrying protesters fleeing to Taiwan.
Cached versions of the tech giant's cloud computing division API guide reveal references to ethnic minority identity detection.
President Rodrigo Duterte in September backed a 2016 international court ruling in favor of the Philippines, calling his country's claims in the disputed waterway 'beyond compromise.'
The dispute comes after Apple places Taiwan-invested Pegatron on probation over a work experience program.
Residents say water, internet, and mobile phone services are also being affected by the outages.
In a secretive deal with China's ministry of public security, Beijing's agents are allowed to interview Chinese nationals with no interpreter present, and are unsupervised during two-week trips to Europe.
The move comes as three former opposition lawmakers are charged with public order offenses for protesting China's draconian national security.
Keyword searches on emigration and offshore bank accounts have spiked in recent months, suggesting many are thinking of leaving the city.
Veteran political journalist Ching Cheong says a new political party in Hong Kong is part of Beijing's hidden United Front policy.
Ou Biaofeng's friends say he hasn't been released after a 15-day administrative sentence and fear police will keep him in detention pending criminal charges.