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This is a list of newspapers in China.The number of newspapers in mainland China has increased from 42—virtually all Communist Party papers—in 1968 to 382 in 1980 and more than 2,200 today.
Shenzhen Daily is an English-language newspaper published in Shenzhen. Established on July 1, 1997, Shenzhen Daily is the first local English-language daily on the southern Chinese mainland. Established on July 1, 1997, Shenzhen Daily is the first local English-language daily on the southern Chinese mainland.
Shenzhen Special Zone Daily was inaugurated on May 24, 1982, [9] and it is the first special zone newspaper in China. [10]On March 26, 1992, Shenzhen Special Zone Daily first published [11] a long-form newsletter entitled "The East Wind Brings Spring all Around : An On-the-Spot Report on Comrade Deng Xiaoping in Shenzhen" [12] (东方风来满眼春——邓小平同志在深圳纪实).
Despite this, the life expectancy in Shenzhen is 81.25 in 2018, ranking among the top twenty cities in China. [6] The male to female ratio in Shenzhen is 130 to 100, making the city having the highest sex disparity in comparison to other cities in Guangdong . [ 2 ]
Foreign advisor and naturalized Chinese citizen Israel Epstein was editor-in-chief of China Today from 1948, and later returned to China at the request of Soong Ching-ling. The magazine was renamed China Today in 1990. [4] China Today is usually published the first week of the month. The editors usually showcase what they characterize as the ...
A leading Chinese state-run newspaper has urged the British Museum to return its "stolen" artifacts in an editorial on the eve of a rare visit by the UK foreign secretary.
The Shenzhen Economic Daily [1] (abbreviated as SED; [2] Chinese: 深圳商报), alternatively translated as Shenzhen Business Post, [3] Shenzhen Commercial Daily, [4] Shenzhen Business News, [5] is a large comprehensive daily newspaper with economic reporting as its main focus, and is the party newspaper directly under the Shenzhen Municipal Committee of the Chinese Communist Party. [6]
In the first six months of 2022, searches for "digital nomad"on Xiaohongshu, China's Instagram-like platform, surged by 650%, with posts on how to become one viewed more than 22 million times.