Pakistan has taken its first ever anti-dumping action by imposing punitive taxes on tin imports from South Africa.
A section of the Great Wall of China that was lost beneath encroaching sands for centuries has been uncovered again, state media said on Wednesday.
Ten days after the end of recovery operations at the site of the World Trade Center, construction workers are still finding the remains of September 11 victims in buildings adjacent to Ground Zero.
Fighting impeachment attempts, Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo has admitted that he ordered 2001 military operations in which hundreds of civilians were killed, but insisted he had acted to ”save lives and property.”
Dogburgers will be on the menu for fans during the World Cup in South Korea.
A northeastern China coal mine where a gas explosion killed 115 workers last month had been instructed to shut down at least seven times before the fatal accident.
China’s fortnight-long block on the Google.com search engine has ended, Internet users said on Friday, adding to a chain of events which has mystified — and angered — many of the country’s web users.
The Dalai Lama may give him a run for his money, but few people are as officially despised by the Chinese government as Chen Shui-bian — president of Taiwan, accused ”splittist” and the figure Beijing considers most worthy of the formidable brunt of state-sponsored derision.
US Internet giant Yahoo! is ”complicit” in rights abuses by the Chinese government after agreeing to a Beijing-backed self-censorship pledge for web pages, a human rights group has charged.
A group of 28 factory workers in east China tried to commit mass suicide by jumping off a building in protest against poor retirement benefits, a rights group said on Tuesday.