All Articles

China (English)

SHANGHAI, CHINA - JUNE 06: People take photos during the launching ceremony of China s first domestically-built large cruise ship Adora Magic City at a shipyard of Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding Co., Ltd on June 6, 2023 in Shanghai, China. The cruise ship, measuring 323.6 meters in length and 37.2 meters in width with a gross tonnage of 135,500 tonnes, can accommodate a total of 5,246 passengers. PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxHUNxONLY Copyright: xChinaxNewsxServicex 111439964928

China's first cruise ship set sail

Featuring a luxury hotel and water park, the "Adora Magic City" is designed to captivate Chinese passengers. Europe's industry leaders remain composed. Their expectations from China were already disappointed years ago.

By Jörn Petring

These images show the aftermath of Russian missile attacks on agricultural warehouses and one that took out emergency services equipment, in Ukraines Odesa region on Friday 21July2023. Officials from Odesa City Council said: At night, the enemy attacked Odesa with Kalibr cruise missiles from the Black Sea. Trying to bypass air defense systems, the enemy directed missiles at the minimum height, using the features of the landscape. The attacks are the latest in a spate of Russian attacks on the city and its infrastructure - with a particular focus on agricultural warehouses following the collapse of a deal allowing Ukraine to export grain via the Black Sea. The Odesa officials added: After three consecutive nights of powerful PUBLICATIONxNOTxINxUKxFRA Copyright: xx 52907959

End of grain agreement with negative consequences for China

China was the largest buyer under the agreement to export Ukrainian grain across the Black Sea. Now Russia has terminated the deal – hitting its most important partner above all. China criticized the cutoff of shipments and the bombs on Ukrainian port infrastructure. But it is still unclear how Beijing will now position itself.

By Christiane Kuehl

Andrew Sheng, Xiao Geng

The unstoppable rise of the 'rest'

Even as China and soon India overtake the US in terms of GDP, the West remains “blinded by pre-eminence,” as Hugh Peyman puts it, and unwilling to acknowledge its waning power. But, with 90% of the world's population, non-Western countries will no longer accept being excluded from global decision-making.

By Experts Table.Briefings