Tit for tat: Beijing builds legal arsenal against Western sanctions and jurisdiction
US warning to Chinese banks over Iran-linked transactions triggered a swift response from Beijing, which rolled out new regulations to counter sanctions and extraterritorial legal pressure. Lianhe Zaobao associate China news editor Sim Tze Wei examines this tit-for-tat escalation now extending into the legal sphere.
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ByteDance’s billion-RMB bet on China’s first AI-native hospital
Backed by the deep pockets of ByteDance, a private hospital in Beijing is attempting an ambitious architectural experiment: building a medical centre where AI is not just an assistant, but the “native” brain of the entire institution — though the path from “digital employee” to medical reality faces steep technical and financial hurdles.
[Photos] Cheng Li-wun’s bid to reclaim the Kuomintang’s lost identity in cross-strait politics
Kuomintang (KMT) chair Cheng Li-wun’s visit to mainland China marks a bold attempt to reshape the Kuomintang’s ideological direction, reviving contested historical narratives in a bid to reclaim the party’s lost identity and redefine its role in cross-strait politics amid rising tensions. Historical photo collector Hsu Chung-mao shares his personal observations.
From exception to rule: Top scientists reshape China’s party leadership
Academicians from China’s top scientific bodies, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and the Chinese Academy of Engineering (CAE), are increasingly entering the CCP’s leadership, reshaping elite governance and driving the country’s rapid, innovation-led technological rise, observe academic Li Cheng and pre-doctoral fellow Zhao Xiuye of the Centre on Contemporary China and the World in Hong Kong.
Britain can no longer treat China as optional
As US instability grows, Britain must rethink its China posture. Neither ally nor adversary, Beijing demands engagement with clarity, pragmatism and a strategy that reflects shifting global power, says UK academic Kerry Brown.
Europe copies China’s industrial playbook: A protectionist turn?
Europe’s new industrial policy mirrors aspects of China’s state-led model, from local content rules to investment screening. But is this a shift toward protectionism — or a path to deeper EU-China industrial cooperation? Researcher Patrick Schröder analyses the situation.
ASEAN’s energy crisis — and Japan’s opening in the Middle East oil shock
The Middle East oil shock exposes ASEAN’s fragmented energy security, while creating an opening for Japan to deepen cooperation through stockpiles, swaps and regional resilience mechanisms. Japanese academic Sukegawa Seiya outlines a potential way forward.
What if the Taiwan Strait were blockaded?
Chinese netizens joke about “dual toll booths” in the Strait of Hormuz, but the deeper question is what such blockade logic would mean if applied to the Taiwan Strait. Lianhe Zaobao associate China news editor Sim Tze Wei examines the scenario.
Xi-Cheng meeting and the limits of peace in the Taiwan Strait
For the Taiwanese people, the question has never been whether Beijing would talk about peace, but whether its governance record is strong enough to convince people that such promises would be honoured institutionally. Taiwan-based Malaysian columnist Ngo Jian Nam assesses what would make for a successful cross-strait peace agreement.
China leads Northeast Asia’s nuclear buildout
Is Northeast Asia’s nuclear revival a response to the Iran war crisis, or the result of deeper forces already reshaping the region’s energy future? Australian researcher Genevieve Donnellon-May ponders the question.
Evergrande’s Hui Ka Yan: From rags to empire to prison
The collapse of Evergrande and its chairman Hui Ka Yan, marks the end of the man-made property boom in China. Lianhe Zaobao’s China news editor Yang Danxu traces the rise and fall of China’s former richest man.
Before Trump arrives, Beijing’s room to manoeuvre is expanding
With recent developments in the Middle East helping China to access separate sources of leverage at the same time, the delay in Trump’s visit to China has actually given Beijing more room to shape the atmosphere before Trump arrives, contends academic Hao Nan.
Capital realism: A divided world, more connected than ever
Global trade is not fragmenting into isolation but entrenching new forms of interdependence. As rules diverge, connections multiply, deepen, and become harder to unwind, argues the Milken Institute’s Robin Hu.
[Big read] China’s young workers pay the price of AI before reaping the gains
Jobs are not only being replaced by artificial intelligence, those seemingly secure will be restructured, with different tasks or a cut in pay. Lianhe Zaobao correspondent Li Kang speaks with Chinese employees who are feeling the impact to find out what they are doing to secure their future.
Who steers AI: China’s industrial state vs America’s frontier builders?
As AI ultimately is controlled by people, capital and intentions, understanding the US and China’s different approaches to AI will help to unlock the trajectory of Al development of the future, beyond the rhetoric of an AI “war” or counting who’s winning, says Danish academic Erik Baark.
Xi’s message on Taiwan: Confidence on a different level
China’s announcement of establishing and promoting cross-strait communications and exchanges following the meeting with the Kuomintang leader portrays China as pursuing peace. Lianhe Zaobao journalist Chuang Hui Liang notes aside from promoting cross-strait peace, China’s move could give it more leverage against the US.
Cheng Li-wun’s politics of quoting Xi Jinping
KMT chair Cheng Li-wun held a press conference where she recounted some of what transpired during her closed-door meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping. Lianhe Zaobao associate China news editor Sim Tze Wei gives her impressions of the session.
The tyranny of too much democracy: Confucius’s answer
Democracy today has lost some of its shine, with issues such as the rise of right-wing populist parties worrying some. But part of the problem lies in the conflation of two distinct ideas — liberalism and democracy. If the balance between liberalism and democracy needs to be restored, might a Confucian mixed regime be a possible alternative? Chinese academic Tongdong Bai contemplates the question.
Why China’s firepower fails to translate into sales
Is China poised to capture a greater share of the rapidly expanding global arms market? Academic Ghulam Ali looks into China’s arms export policy, the quantity and quality of its previously exported arms, and the challenges associated with expanding arms trade to evaluate this.