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The Canada-China Promotion and Reciprocal Protection of Investments Agreement or Canada China FIPA is a bilateral investment treaty between Canada and China which came into force on 1 October 2014. [1] [2] The Foreign Investment Protection Agreement (FIPA) or Foreign Investment Protection and Promotion Agreement (FIPPA) are Canadian names for BITs.
The House of Commons Special Committee on Canada-China Relations (CACN) is a special committee of the House of Commons of Canada. It was established in the 43rd Canadian Parliament in 2019. [ 1 ]
During the annual general meeting with the CCLA, the association will: [1] elect the members of the Executive Committee; receive a summary report of the expenses of the previous fiscal year and a written report of the association’s activities for that year from the Co-Chairs; amend, where necessary and with one week’s notice, the Group statutes by a two-thirds majority vote of the members ...
In 2017, for instance, he accepted a role as vice-president of a £1 billion China-UK investment fund, in a move described by Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee as possibly “in ...
At a plenum in 2013, Beijing launched a policy agenda that included most of the goals listed in Sunday's document, but also ambitions to liberalise financial markets and make domestic consumption ...
The “most profound difference” in U.S.-China relations, Burns said, “is that we believe in human freedom and human rights, and so we are a critic of what’s happening in Xinjiang, in Tibet ...
The House China Task Force is a group in the United States House of Representatives that is focused on China. The House China Task Force is chaired by U.S. Rep. Michael McCaul (TX-10). [1] [2] The pillars of the House China Task Force are: National Security, Technology, Economics and Energy, Competitiveness, and Ideological Competition.
The committee produced a wide-ranging and partly classified report in September 2020. [7] In October 2022, Rep. Mike Gallagher of Wisconsin told reporters that an independent China committee would "go a long way towards coordinating policy across the many committee jurisdictions and thereby create a more coherent approach to our China policy". [5]