Though the pandemic has strangled growth worldwide, multinational corporations have largely remained committed to China, citing the swift restoration of order and the vast market potential, along with supportive government measures designed to help them weather the storm.
Thousands of delegates hailed general secretary's broad, ambitious and hopeful agenda for China. Below are highlights of the report.
Tian Maoxi, a member of the group He was leading that day, has produced a written statement of his experience of the tragedy, which has been signed by fellow tourists. He said he had hoped to submit the statement to Thai police, but they did not accept it. Instead, he gave it to the victim's wife.
Through its support, Zimbabwe's tobacco output has rebounded and reached 217 million kilograms in 2014, which had plummeted to a low of 48 million kilograms in 2008.
Tim Cook, CEO of Apple Inc, said on Saturday that openness is essential in forming partnerships, and thanked China for opening its domestic market to his company.
Throughout the capital, most polling places had sparse lines.
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Tian said the company is working on five more designs for public bike storage facilities, which are still at the conceptual stages.
Though a global leader in glass production the company is, it changed tack in early February to churn out medical masks to help in virus fight. Now the company has a daily production capacity of disposable medical masks of 2 million.
Tian Yanan, vice CEO of CEUIM, spoke about the angel board service at the Shenzhen Culture Assets and Equity Exchange, which focuses on financial assistance to innovative and entrepreneurial-oriented companies. Zhang Kaiyi, CEO of Beita Technology and Ge Wenjun, founder of Tangsu Technology, displayed their innovative products at the forum. Their companies were among the first to be listed on that exchange.
Tianjin has set up 3,532 reading rooms in suburban areas, 2,000 rooms at local factories and companies, 200 city reading bars, 100 public libraries and six subway trains with books on their seats. All provide free services, with the majority having reopened since June.