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China's athletes feel push for gold in Beijing Games -
Summary from United States, from articles in English
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As in much of Africa, Ncube said, China's reach into Zimbabwe's economy is equally pervasive: The roads are filled with Chinese buses, the markets with Chinese goods, and Chinese-made planes are in the skies. (article 1)
Such unease appears to be rising across Africa as Chinese become powerful players and, in some places, the dominant ones in economies across the continent. (article 1)
When Chinese President Hu Jintao toured Africa in April, he implicitly responded to concerns about his country's growing role on the continent. (article 1)
In the summer, six people died and at least 80 fell ill after receiving an antibiotic injection manufactured by a subsidiary. (article 3)
That attitude was put to a test last week when, for the first time, a big drop in the Chinese markets helped spark a global stock sell-off. (article 3)
As the Chinese government takes steps to clean up market practices and allow more foreign investments, the rest of the world's markets are likely to continue to feel its growing pains. (article 3)
A market-based economy in China, with sustainable economic growth and full participation in rules-based international trade, is in our best interest and in the interest of the Chinese people. (article 2)
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Other stories about China, Chinese and Communist:
Event tracking:
Story keywords
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China, Chinese, Communist, Hu, Olympics |
Source articles
- In Africa, China Trade Brings Growth, Unease (Washington Post, 07/12/2008, 567 words)
- A Broad Dialogue With China (Washington Post, 07/11/2008, 793 words)
- China's Quirky Stock Market Finally Matters (Washington Post, 07/12/2008, 677 words)
- China's athletes feel push for gold in Beijing Games - (baltimoresun.com, 07/13/2008, 1030 words)
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blaster@cs.columbia.edu
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