Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region in Northwest China continued to be the country's largest cotton production base in 2019, despite a year-on-year output reduction of 2.1 percent.
Xu Jinghe, deputy director of the administration, said as the COVID-19 pandemic spreads rapidly abroad, there has been a surge in the demand of epidemic prevention and control equipment and many Chinese products have been exported to aid the global fight against the outbreak.
Xiong Xuanguo, vice justice minister, said at a meeting that the move is aimed at safeguarding the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese institutions and nationals abroad.
Xiantao also has made great efforts to promote a healthy and low-carbon emission style of living among its citizens, such as building Eco Sports City, buying 120 new energy buses and establishing a citywide public bicycle system, according to Hu.
Xie Yaxuan, chief economist with China Merchants Securities, said the recent mild fluctuation in the data shows that the central bank has not intervened much to support the yuan's exchange rate as the yuan became steadier in recent months.
Xinhua and AP contributed to this story.
广东seo优化
Xu currently holds 10.16 billion shares or 77.87 percent of the company's shares, according to publicized data.
Xie made the remarks on Monday at a State Council Information Office news conference on an annual report of China's policies and action in addressing climate change.
Xiao Yao, partner at Ries China, said "mind resources" are cognitive resources accumulated over a long period of time, and in the process of building a global brand, enterprises often pay more attention to tangible assets, such as capital, teams and technology, while ignoring intangible assets such as brand recognition.
Xinjiang is located in the northwest of China. For historical and a range of natural reasons, it has long lagged behind other parts of the country in development, and there is a large impoverished population. The four prefectures in southern Xinjiang, namely, Hotan, Kashgar, Aksu and Kizilsu Kirgiz, in particular have a poor eco-environment, weak economic foundations, and a serious shortfall in employment carrying capacity. They are identified as areas of extreme poverty. In addition, terrorists, separatists and religious extremists have long preached that "the afterlife is fated" and that "religious teachings are superior to state laws", inciting the public to resist learning the standard spoken and written Chinese language, reject modern science, and refuse to improve their vocational skills, economic conditions, and the ability to better their own lives. As a result, some local people have outdated ideas; they suffer from poor education and employability, low employment rates and incomes, and have fallen into long-term poverty.