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  • Iraq: Businessman Ali al-Zaidi nominated to become new prime minister

    Iraq: Businessman Ali al-Zaidi nominated to become new prime minister

    Five months after Iraq held its national parliamentary elections, the largest legislative bloc, the Shia-led Coordination Framework, has tapped Ali al-Zaidi, a little-known low-profile businessman with no prior elected office experience, to step into the role of prime minister-designate and lead efforts to form a new national government. Following the bloc’s formal selection, Iraq’s presidential office issued an official statement confirming that President Nizar Amede had officially assigned Zaidi the mandate to assemble a new cabinet, giving him a 30-day window to complete the negotiations and finalize his government.

    A native of southern Iraq’s Dhi Qar province, Zaidi brings a deep private sector background to the political role. Until 2019, he served as chairman of Al-Janoob Islamic Bank, one of Iraq’s largest private financial institutions; he currently leads Al-Watania Holding Group, a sprawling multinational conglomerate with diverse business interests across the region. Notably, in 2024, the United States imposed sanctions on Al-Janoob Islamic Bank over allegations of money laundering, financial fraud, and unauthorized use of U.S. currency, and Iraq’s own Central Bank subsequently moved to ban the institution’s operations.

    Zaidi’s nomination marks an unexpected outcome that sidelines two high-profile Shia political figures who were widely tipped as the Coordination Framework’s leading candidates: incumbent Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani and former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. In a public statement, the coalition praised both Sudani and Maliki for what it called their “historic and responsible stance” in stepping aside to clear the way for Zaidi’s selection.

    Maliki’s withdrawal from contention came against clear external pressure: in January, former U.S. President Donald Trump threatened that Washington would “no longer help” Iraq if Maliki secured the nomination. Once counted as a close U.S. ally, Maliki has shifted sharply toward alignment with Iran in recent years, and has faced longstanding criticism over his tenure, including accusations of stoking deadly sectarian tensions across Iraq and presiding over systemic government corruption that contributed to the collapse of the Iraqi military and the loss of large swathes of Iraqi territory to the Islamic State group in 2014.

    The nomination process unfolds against a backdrop of heightened regional tensions that have repeatedly threatened to drag Iraq into open conflict. In recent weeks, a fragile ceasefire has held between the United States and Iran, with intermittent diplomatic talks underway to de-escalate a two-month cross-regional conflict that began amid the Israel-Gaza war. Since the outbreak of hostilities in Gaza in 2023, Iran-aligned armed groups operating in Iraq have launched frequent sporadic attacks on U.S., Israeli, and Gulf state interests within Iraqi territory. The United States has long demanded that these armed groups be disarmed, while Iraqi political factions aligned with Iran have pushed for the full withdrawal of all remaining U.S. military forces from Iraqi territory.

    International reaction to Zaidi’s nomination has been measured so far. The United Kingdom’s ambassador to Iraq, Irfan Siddiq, issued a public post on X welcoming the development. “The United Kingdom welcomes the nomination of a new Prime Minister in Iraq,” Siddiq wrote. “We wish Mr. Ali al-Zaydi success in swiftly forming a new government and look forward to working with the new government on the urgent challenges facing Iraq – particularly on security and the economy.”

  • Former Guangxi political adviser indicted on bribery charges

    Former Guangxi political adviser indicted on bribery charges

    In an official announcement released Tuesday, China’s Supreme People’s Procuratorate (SPP) confirmed that Peng Xiaochun, a former senior political advisor in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, has formally been indicted on criminal charges of bribery.

    The 64-year-old, who previously served as vice-chairman of the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Regional Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, was first taken into custody on bribery suspicion following a full investigation conducted by the National Commission of Supervision. After the investigation concluded, the case was transferred to prosecutorial authorities for formal review and prosecution proceedings. Per an official arrangement from the SPP, the Foshan People’s Procuratorate of Guangdong Province has been assigned to lead prosecution, and the case has already been officially filed with the Foshan Intermediate People’s Court.

    Prosecutorial officials noted that throughout the review and prosecution phase, Peng was fully notified of all his legal rights, underwent formal questioning, and all legal arguments submitted by his defense counsel were properly reviewed and considered as part of the process.

    Court documents outline that Peng abused authority across multiple senior leadership positions he held over his decades-long career to secure illegal benefits for third parties. These positions included deputy Party chief of Liuzhou, deputy secretary-general and director of the General Office of the Communist Party of China Guangxi Regional Committee, Party chief of both Hezhou and Baise, and ultimately his role as vice-chairman of the regional CPPCC. In exchange for these favors, Peng unlawfully accepted an especially large sum of money and high-value valuables, prosecutors say, which meets the threshold for criminal liability on bribery charges.

    A native of Guangxi, Peng launched his formal professional career in 1989, after joining the Communist Party of China in April 1985. His entire decades-long public service career was spent within Guangxi, where he rose through the ranks to hold key leadership roles at both municipal and regional levels. He assumed the position of vice-chairman of the Guangxi regional CPPCC in 2018 and held the role until he retired from public office in 2023.

    The corruption investigation into Peng was first opened in June 2025, and by December of that same year, he was expelled from the Communist Party of China and stripped of all his former public offices and associated benefits.

  • Thousands of female runners gather for Nike event in Shanghai

    Thousands of female runners gather for Nike event in Shanghai

    On a mild Saturday night on April 25, more than 3,800 female runners from across the country and beyond converged on Shanghai’s bustling Nanjing East Road Pedestrian Street to kick off a one-of-a-kind 10-kilometer night running event hosted by sportswear giant Nike.

    The race marked the Shanghai stop of Nike’s 2026 After Dark Tour (ADT), and more notably, served as the opening leg of the brand’s annual global women’s running series for this year. Unlike previous installments, the 2026 Shanghai event rolled out two user-centric upgrades tailored to female running enthusiasts: a brand-new dual-partner “Sister Team” registration channel that lets runners sign up with a running companion, and the event’s first-ever first-person live broadcast option that allowed audiences around the world to follow the race through the runners’ own perspectives.

    The course was designed to showcase Shanghai’s most iconic waterfront and skyline landmarks, leading runners past the historic Bund, the scenic Huangpu River green corridor, and the structural marvel of Nanpu Bridge, giving participants a unique night-time view of one of Asia’s most dynamic metropolises.

    Two of China’s top elite female athletes, retired tennis legend Li Na and professional long-distance runner Zhang Deshun, joined the crowd of everyday recreational runners on the course, cheering on participants and sharing their own experiences of building confidence through sport.

    Adam Antoniewicz, vice-president and general manager of Nike’s running business in Greater China, praised the one-of-a-kind Shanghai setting in an on-site interview. “The route is unbelievable. It’s something I’ve never seen before and that’s the unique advantage of Shanghai,” he said, noting that the city’s mix of iconic urban scenery and vibrant running culture made it an ideal host for the opening of the global series.

    Antoniewicz added that the After Dark Tour is far more than a running race: it is a global women’s running platform that has already been hosted in major cities including Sydney, Los Angeles, and London, with a core mission to bring female runners of all skill levels together, celebrate the power of female companionship, and help more women build self-confidence through consistent movement.

  • May Day travel surge expected, says NIA

    May Day travel surge expected, says NIA

    As China prepares to welcome its five-day May Day holiday starting this Friday, the National Immigration Administration (NIA) has released projections of a significant surge in cross-border passenger travel, laying out comprehensive operational plans to keep border clearance efficient and safe for travelers.

    In an announcement made Tuesday, the NIA forecasts an average of 2.25 million inbound and outbound passenger trips will pass through China’s border checkpoints each day throughout the holiday period, with daily volumes peaking above 2.4 million trips on the busiest days. The expected boom is concentrated across two key categories of ports: major international aviation hubs and land border crossings connecting the Chinese mainland with Hong Kong and Macao special administrative regions.

    Leading the country’s international airports in projected cross-border volume is Shanghai Pudong International Airport, which is set to handle an average of 102,000 inbound and outbound trips daily. It is followed by Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport with 55,000 daily trips, Beijing Capital International Airport with 49,000, and both Chengdu Tianfu International Airport and Shenzhen Bao’an International Airport projected to average 20,000 daily cross-border trips each.

    Land ports serving cross-border travel between the mainland and Hong Kong and Macao are projected to remain at high capacity throughout the break. In the southern Guangdong province city of Shenzhen, which borders Hong Kong, the Luohu Port is expected to average 230,000 daily trips, with the Futian Port close behind at 210,000. The Shenzhen Bay Port will see an average 180,000 daily trips, the West Kowloon Station of the Guangzhou-Shenzhen-Hong Kong Express Rail Link is projected to hit 120,000 daily trips, and the Liantang Port will average 100,000 trips per day.

    Across the Pearl River Delta in Zhuhai, which borders Macao, the Gongbei Port — one of the busiest land crossings for Macao-bound travel — is forecast to handle an average of 396,000 passenger trips per day, the highest volume of any individual port on the Chinese mainland during the holiday. The Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge crossing is projected to see 129,000 daily trips, the Qingmao Port will average 121,000, and the Hengqin Port, which serves travel to Macao’s Cotai district, will see 116,000 average daily trips.

    To accommodate the unexpected travel boom, the NIA has rolled out targeted holiday arrangements for border inspection agencies across the country. All local authorities have been instructed to maintain real-time monitoring of passenger flow dynamics and port operational conditions, and release up-to-date travel information to the public to help trip planning.

    A key requirement mandates that agencies open enough inspection lanes to ensure waiting times for Chinese citizens clearing customs do not exceed 30 minutes, cutting down on holiday travel delays. The NIA also called for strengthened inter-agency coordination between border inspection units, other port regulatory authorities and transport departments, to manage peak-hour crowds, upgrade transport support, and guarantee that border clearance remains safe, efficient and smooth throughout the five-day holiday period.

  • Israeli PM’s rivals join forces for elections

    Israeli PM’s rivals join forces for elections

    JERUSALEM – In a high-stakes political shift reshaping Israel’s electoral landscape ahead of the country’s scheduled October general election, opposition leader Yair Lapid and former prime minister Naftali Bennett announced a formal political merger on Sunday, a move explicitly designed to unseat incumbent prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The new unified bloc will carry the name “Together”, with Bennett set to serve as its head, according to a statement from Bennett’s office. As part of the push to build a broad anti-Netanyahu coalition, Bennett also extended an invitation Sunday to Gadi Eisenkot, leader of the centrist Yashar party, to join the joint electoral list.\n\nLapid, who leads the centrist Yesh Atid party, framed the merger as a critical step to eliminate fragmentation within Israel’s anti-Netanyahu voting bloc. In an official statement, he emphasized that the alliance’s core goal is to “unite the bloc, put an end to internal divisions and focus all efforts on winning the critical upcoming elections.”\n\nThis is not the first collaboration between the two politicians. Lapid and Bennett previously joined forces to form a unity coalition government in June 2021, an administration that ended Netanyahu’s 12-year consecutive tenure in office and made history by including Ra’am, an independent Arab Israeli party, as the first Arab faction to formally join an Israeli governing coalition. That government collapsed in June 2022 when Bennett announced the coalition was no longer politically viable, leading to a short caretaker prime ministership for Lapid and snap elections that brought Netanyahu back to power at the end of 2022. Since the 2022 election, Lapid has served as leader of the parliamentary opposition, while Bennett stepped back from active political life – until this latest announcement.\n\nRecent public opinion polls have identified Bennett as the most electable challenger to Netanyahu in the upcoming October vote, a key factor behind the strategic merger. A onetime senior policy advisor to Netanyahu early in his political career, Bennett has over the years evolved into a fierce critic of his former mentor’s leadership and policy agenda. A right-wing politician known for his longstanding support of Israeli settlement expansion in the occupied West Bank, Bennett’s profile is expected to help the unified bloc draw votes from centrist and right-leaning voters dissatisfied with Netanyahu’s tenure.\n\nNetanyahu, 76, the leader of the right-wing Likud party who has already served more cumulative years as prime minister than any other leader in Israeli history – topping 18 years across multiple stints – has confirmed he will lead the Likud party’s electoral list in the upcoming vote, which is required to be held no later than the end of October.\n\nSeparately, alongside the major political announcement, the Israel Defense Forces confirmed Sunday that one Israeli soldier was killed and six additional service members sustained injuries in a drone attack carried out by the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah in southern Lebanon. This latest fatality pushes the total number of Israeli soldiers killed in ongoing cross-border violence between Israel and Hezbollah to 16. The current escalation of hostilities between the two sides began in early March, amid the broader regional war with Iran.

  • China’s job market stable in Q1, 2.99 million urban jobs added

    China’s job market stable in Q1, 2.99 million urban jobs added

    China’s national labor market maintained broad stability through the first three months of 2026, official data released by the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security shows. The country created 2.99 million new urban employment opportunities over the quarter, with the average surveyed urban unemployment rate landing at 5.2 percent, according to ministry spokesperson Cui Pengcheng.

    Speaking at a Tuesday press briefing, Cui outlined that policymakers prioritized targeted employment support for high-need groups, particularly recent college graduates and younger job seekers. The first quarter marks a critical window for new graduates entering the workforce, so officials moved quickly to roll out accelerated support measures designed to help this cohort secure employment as early as possible.

    For the full 2026 calendar year, China has set clear national employment targets: an average surveyed urban unemployment rate capped at approximately 5.5 percent, and the creation of more than 12 million new urban jobs nationwide. To help meet these goals, officials have rolled out a suite of targeted policy interventions focused on expanding access to large-scale vocational skills training. A core focus of this training push is strengthening the supply of high-quality development resources for fast-growing, high-demand sectors including artificial intelligence, the low-altitude economy, new energy vehicles, and elderly care services – fields that are projected to generate sustained job growth in coming years.

    In collaboration with other national and local government departments, the ministry has already organized roughly 59,000 targeted job fairs across the country, connecting job seekers with more than 36 million open employment positions. For migrant workers returning to or seeking new urban employment, authorities have also arranged nearly 1 million “point-to-point” direct transportation trips to remove barriers to labor mobility, Cui added.

  • In pics: blooming water lilies in China

    In pics: blooming water lilies in China

    This document outlines core legal and operational information for the digital platform operated by China Daily Information Co (CDIC).

    First established in 1994, CDIC holds full copyright over all content distributed across its online platform, including every form of media from written text and still photography to interactive multimedia resources. Per the company’s official terms, no part of this copyrighted content may be reproduced, repurposed, or redistributed in any format without explicit written permission granted in advance by CDIC’s authorized representatives.

    Alongside copyright regulations, the platform also provides a technical recommendation for end users: to ensure optimal browsing functionality and display quality, visitors are advised to use a web browser configured with a screen resolution of 1024*768 or higher.

    For official regulatory context, the platform holds an online multimedia publishing license with the identifier 0108263, and its official business registration number is recorded as 130349.

    To improve user accessibility and engagement, the platform also lists key navigation sections for visitors, including an informational page about China Daily, opportunities for advertising partnerships, contact information for the organizational team, open vacancy listings for general employment, and dedicated resources for expatriate job seekers, alongside calls to action for users to follow the organization’s social media channels.

  • Intl influencers embark on a cultural journey in Nishan

    Intl influencers embark on a cultural journey in Nishan

    Nestled in Qufu, Jining, Shandong Province—the birthplace of Confucius and the cradle of Confucian civilization—Nishan has opened its doors to global visitors eager to dive into thousands of years of Chinese traditional culture, seek unique travel experiences, and discover fresh cultural insights. From April 24 to 26, a curated cohort of international content creators and digital influencers gathered in this historic site, launching a immersive three-day journey to unpack the depth of local cultural landscapes and connect with centuries-old Confucian heritage on a personal level. Unlike traditional academic study tours, the trip invited participants to engage with cultural heritage through hands-on interactive activities, blending age-old traditions with contemporary perspectives to bring thousands of years of history to vivid life. During their stay, influencers got the chance to wander through the sacred landscapes closely tied to Confucius, interact with local cultural inheritors, and experience core Confucian values through immersive, modern-designed experiences that bridge ancient wisdom and 21st-century expression. For many participants, the trip offered a rare, unfiltered look at how traditional Chinese culture continues to evolve in the modern era, turning abstract cultural heritage into a tangible, personal experience. This initiative is part of broader efforts to showcase Chinese cultural heritage to a global audience, leveraging the reach and authentic voices of international influencers to share the nuanced, living tradition of Confucian culture with communities around the world. In Nishan, ancient tradition meets modern creativity, turning static historical legacy into a dynamic, accessible experience that resonates with visitors from across the globe.

  • China expects cross-border travel surge during May Day holiday

    China expects cross-border travel surge during May Day holiday

    Just days ahead of China’s annual five-day May Day holiday, national immigration authorities have projected a significant uptick in cross-border passenger movement, as robust demand for international tourism and family reunification drives one of the country’s busiest travel windows of the year.

    In an official statement released Tuesday, the National Immigration Administration outlined projections that average daily inbound and outbound traveler volumes will hit 2.25 million across the holiday period, which kicks off on May 1. The daily peak is expected to surpass 2.4 million single-day crossings, marking a notable jump from off-peak travel periods and aligning with broader trends of growing post-pandemic cross-border mobility in China.

    The May Day holiday has long stood as one of China’s peak domestic and international travel seasons, alongside the October National Day holiday and the Lunar New Year. This year, the combination of an extended five-day break and rising consumer willingness to travel abroad has created conditions for a surge in cross-border activity, with many holidaymakers planning international trips to visit relatives, explore new destinations, or take advantage of the extended break for longer overseas getaways.

    Industry analysts note that this projected growth in cross-border travel also reflects improving connectivity between China and global destinations, alongside sustained recovery in the international tourism sector that has gained momentum in recent years. The expected surge is also poised to deliver a boost to regional tourism economies across border regions and major international gateway cities in China, as well as tourism markets in popular destination countries.

  • Tradition on the terraces

    Tradition on the terraces

    Nestled among the rolling green terraces of Congjiang county in Southwest China’s Guizhou province, hundreds of villagers clad in vibrant traditional ethnic attire gathered on Sunday to celebrate the annual Kaiyang Festival, the traditional ceremonial kickoff to the annual rice-planting season that has sustained communities in the region for generations.

    As one of the most enduring cultural rituals of southern China’s rice-growing regions, the Kaiyang Festival carries centuries of history, woven into the agricultural cycles that have shaped local life. This year’s main celebration unfolded in Jiabang, home to the region’s spectacular layered terraced fields that draw both cultural preservationists and tourists each year.

    Local Miao ethnic community members led the day’s proceedings: groups of villagers carried hand-woven ceremonial flags down into the flooded terraces, while respected village elders presided over traditional blessing rites. The elders laid out offerings of locally brewed rice wine, cured pork, and incense, before leading the assembled community in collective prayers for favorable seasonal weather, strong crop growth, and a plentiful harvest at the end of the growing cycle. The day also featured cultural competitions, including a popular race up the steep slopes of Jiabang’s terraces, drawing participants from nearby Miao villages and visitors from across the country.

    Rooted in the region’s agrarian heritage, the Kaiyang Festival serves not only as a practical marker for the start of planting season but also as a vital gathering that strengthens intergenerational community bonds and preserves centuries-old ethnic cultural traditions for younger generations.