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  • In Algeria, Pope to pay homage to forgotten home of Christian icon St Augustine

    In Algeria, Pope to pay homage to forgotten home of Christian icon St Augustine

    In a groundbreaking moment for the global Catholic Church, Pope Leo XIV will make the first official papal visit to Algeria this April, kicking off a multi-nation African tour that will also take him to Cameroon, Angola and Equatorial Guinea from April 13 to 15. The visit carries deep personal and historical meaning, tied closely to the pontiff’s lifelong connection to Saint Augustine, the iconic fourth-century theologian whose origins are deeply rooted in what is now northeastern Algeria.

    Pope Leo, born Robert Francis Prevost in the United States, has identified himself as a devoted Augustinian from his earliest days in the Church. He joined the Augustinian Order at age 22 after studying mathematics and philosophy in Philadelphia, and eventually rose to lead the order as its prior general. His connection to Algeria stretches back more than two decades: in 2001, he first visited the North African country to attend an international symposium on Saint Augustine hosted by the University of Annaba. As Cardinal Jean-Paul Vesco, Archbishop of Algiers, revealed, he encouraged the newly elected pope to prioritize an Algerian visit within the first months of his pontificate.

    Saint Augustine, one of the most influential thinkers in Christian history, was born in 354 CE in Thagaste, a Amazigh-Roman settlement that is today the Algerian city of Souk Ahras. He later served as bishop of Hippo Regius, the ancient name for Annaba, the second stop on Pope Leo’s upcoming itinerary. In his first public address after his election in Rome’s St. Peter’s Square last May, the pope highlighted his Augustinian identity, quoting the theologian’s famous words: “With you I am a Christian, and for you I am a bishop.” The remark resonated strongly in Algerian media, which has emphasized the new pope’s deep reverence for the North African-born scholar.

    For Algerian historian Abdenasser Smail, author of the recently published *Saint-Augustin, un Nord-Africain universel*, the visit is as much an act of historical reckoning as it is a religious pilgrimage. “Augustine is a figure rooted in North African geography and culture. Yet, this essential dimension has long been obscured, both in Western representations and in contemporary Algerian national narratives,” Smail explained. He argues that the pope’s tribute to Saint Augustine corrects this historical erasure, noting that even in majority-Muslim Algeria, citizens can take pride in the thinker as a native son. “Being proud of one’s history doesn’t mean adopting another faith. It means recognising that this land has produced multiple great figures. To deny this is not to defend Islam. It is to impoverish our own memory,” Smail added.

    Pope Leo’s itinerary reflects the dual religious and historical significance of the trip. After arriving in the capital Algiers, he will deliver a public address at the Martyrs’ Monument, a memorial to those who died in Algeria’s war of independence from French rule, followed by a meeting with the country’s top government leaders at the Great Mosque’s conference center. In Algiers, he will also pray at the chapel dedicated to the 19 Christian religious figures killed during Algeria’s brutal 1992–2002 civil war, a period known locally as the “Black Decade.” These victims, which included Bishop Pierre Claverie of Oran and the seven monks of Tibhirine, were declared martyrs by former Pope Francis and beatified in 2018 in the first such ceremony ever held in a Muslim-majority nation. The trip will conclude with a visit to Annaba’s Saint Augustine Basilica, which is currently undergoing maintenance in preparation for the pontiff’s arrival.

    Algerian authorities have placed exceptional importance on the historic visit, with President Abdelmadjid Tebboune personally overseeing all preparations. Annaba has undergone extensive public works, including road resurfacing, street cleaning and infrastructure upgrades along the route to the basilica, to welcome the pope.

    Beyond honoring Saint Augustine, the visit also offers a gesture of support to Algeria’s small but deeply rooted Catholic community. Out of Algeria’s total population of 46 million, just around 4,200 Catholics live across the country’s four dioceses, a sharp decline from the colonial era when thousands of European Catholics resided in the territory. Most current faithful are foreign migrants from sub-Saharan Africa, with only a few hundred native Algerian Catholics remaining. The community traces its modern evolution to the work of Cardinal Leon-Etienne Duval, who served as Archbishop of Algiers from 1954 to 1988. Duval famously condemned French colonial torture and massacres just one year after the outbreak of Algeria’s independence war, supported Algerian self-determination, and transformed the Catholic Church in the country from a colonial institution into a locally rooted, state-recognized organization that retained its social service missions after independence in 1962.

    Today, the small Catholic community coexists peacefully with Algeria’s majority-Muslim population, and its status as an officially recognized religious body allows it to operate openly, even running schools and medical clinics that serve all Algerians. “I live my faith discreetly, as required by the fact that I live in a Muslim society, but I have never received a single derogatory remark,” said Simon, an Ivorian student studying in Algiers who attends weekly mass and participates in the community’s charitable outreach for disadvantaged Algerian children. For Algeria’s Catholic faithful, the pope’s visit is a momentous occasion. “It’s a gift, a grace, for our little flock here in Algeria,” Simon added.

    However, the visit also brings forward unresolved issues around religious freedom and human rights that have drawn international attention. While the Catholic Church enjoys official recognition, other Christian groups face severe restrictions. A 2006 Algerian decree requires all religious communities practicing faiths other than Islam to obtain state authorization for their activities and places of worship. The Protestant Church of Algeria, despite official recognition in 2011, has seen all its public places of worship closed by authorities, who accuse evangelical Protestants of proselytizing and unlawful conversions – activities banned under Algerian law. Multiple pastors face legal prosecution, and many minority religious adherents decline to speak publicly for fear of government reprisal. The restrictions also extend to other minority groups, including the Ahmadiyya community, whose members are labeled heretics by the Sunni majority.

    In advance of the visit, three major international human rights NGOs – EuroMed Rights, Human Rights Watch and the MENA Rights Group – issued an open letter urging Pope Leo to raise these concerns, as well as the issue of widespread arbitrary detention, during his meetings with Algerian leaders. “Hundreds of protesters, activists, journalists and human rights defenders have been arbitrarily detained, unjustly prosecuted and sentenced to prison terms for exercising their rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly,” the groups wrote, calling on the pontiff to press Algerian authorities to end religious discrimination and release unjustly detained individuals.

  • China to launch Chang’e 7 lunar probe in second half of 2026

    China to launch Chang’e 7 lunar probe in second half of 2026

    China’s ambitious lunar exploration program has marked a key milestone, with the China Manned Space Agency confirming on Friday that the Chang’e 7 lunar probe is on track for launch in the second half of 2026. The mission’s spacecraft has already completed its journey to the Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Site, located on China’s southern tropical island province of Hainan, where pre-launch integration and testing procedures will proceed according to the pre-approved timeline.

    As one of the most anticipated missions in China’s expanding deep space exploration roadmap, Chang’e 7 carries forward the legacy of China’s earlier Chang’e program missions, which have already achieved landmark feats including the first soft landing on the far side of the moon and the first Chinese sample return from lunar surface. The upcoming mission is expected to advance global scientific understanding of the moon’s polar regions, an area that remains poorly mapped and studied by previous exploration efforts.

    The Wenchang site, China’s newest coastal launch facility, was selected for the mission due to its unique geographic advantages, including lower latitude positioning that improves launch vehicle efficiency and capacity for large payloads. It has served as the launch site for many of China’s recent high-profile deep space and space station missions, making it the logical hub for this next step in lunar research.

  • First comprehensive survey in 40 years maps Cangshan wildlife in Yunnan

    First comprehensive survey in 40 years maps Cangshan wildlife in Yunnan

    After more than four decades since the last major international joint expedition to the region, a landmark three-year scientific effort has produced the first comprehensive map of wildlife populations and ecosystem health across Cangshan Mountain in southwest China’s Yunnan province, solidifying the site’s reputation as one of the world’s critical biodiversity hotspots. The large-scale collaborative project, which wrapped up its field and analytical work ahead of the April 2026 announcement, spanned nearly 1,000 square kilometers of the mountain range located within Dali Bai Autonomous Prefecture, bringing together experts and resources from multiple leading Chinese research institutions. Zhong Mingchuan, core team member and director of the Yunnan Academy of Forestry and Grassland, noted that this new study marks the most rigorous, systematic assessment of the mountain’s full ecological profile since international researchers conducted joint surveys of the area in the 1980s. Prior to this initiative, much of the existing data on Cangshan’s diverse flora and fauna was fragmented, outdated, or limited to specific taxonomic groups, leaving major gaps in scientific understanding of how the region’s ecosystems have shifted amid global climate change and local human activity over the past generation. The comprehensive mapping effort deployed a mix of traditional field observation, camera trapping, genetic sampling, and habitat assessment techniques to document every documented and newly discovered species across the mountain’s varied elevation zones, from subtropical lowland valleys to alpine tundra at the highest peaks. Researchers involved in the project emphasized that the data collected will serve as a critical baseline for future long-term ecological monitoring, as well as inform evidence-based conservation policies and sustainable land management practices for the protected area. The findings are also expected to support broader global research into patterns of biodiversity in the Hengduan Mountains region, a global priority area for conservation due to its exceptionally high concentration of endemic species found nowhere else on Earth.

  • Macao’s annual tourism expo opens, drawing global industry representatives

    Macao’s annual tourism expo opens, drawing global industry representatives

    One of Asia’s most anticipated annual tourism industry gatherings, the 14th Macao International Travel (Industry) Expo (MITE), officially opened its doors at the Cotai Expo venue in the Macao Special Administrative Region (SAR) on Friday, launching a three-day event packed with global destination showcases, cross-sector industry forums, and professional development workshops.

    Hosted by the Macao Government Tourism Office (MGTO), the 2026 expo carries the forward-looking theme “Global Convergence, Future Horizons,” and has drawn a record-level group of participants: more than 700 tourism-focused businesses and government agencies spanning 59 countries and regions, alongside over 600 pre-vetted hosted buyers ready to forge new commercial partnerships.

    Speaking at the expo’s opening ceremony, Tai Kin Ip, Secretary for Economy and Finance of the Macao SAR Government, framed the event as a cornerstone of Macao’s international tourism outreach. He noted that MITE has grown into one of the city’s largest and most widely respected international tourism trade exhibitions, creating a shared space where global industry leaders can connect, exchange insights, and advance collaborative initiatives that benefit the worldwide tourism sector.

    Tai also shared an encouraging update on Macao’s 2026 tourism recovery: the city has sustained steady growth in visitor arrivals through the first quarter of the year, with total incoming visitors surpassing the 10 million mark. Of that total, international visitor volumes are estimated to exceed 750,000, signaling a strong rebound in cross-border tourism to the region.

    As part of this year’s expanded global engagement effort, MITE organizers extended a special invitation to tourism representatives from five Central Asian nations — Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan — to join a tailored familiarization tour of Macao. The initiative is designed to strengthen people-to-people and industry ties between Macao and Central Asia, while boosting Macao’s profile and visibility as a premier travel destination across Central Asia and the broader global tourism landscape.

    In a post-opening interview, Maria Helena de Senna Fernandes, Director of the MGTO, highlighted growing collaborative momentum across the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area (GBA). She explained that GBA cities are actively deepening cross-regional coordination to develop more integrated multi-destination travel itineraries for international visitors. Building on the strong foundation of existing partnership work across the region, Fernandes noted that collective strengths can be further leveraged to position the GBA as a must-visit global travel hub, drawing more international tourists to the entire area.

    The 14th MITE will remain open to participants and visitors through Sunday, with scheduled B2B matching sessions, cultural showcase events, and policy roundtables planned across the remaining days of the expo.

  • Guangzhou airport unveils replica of China’s first airplane

    Guangzhou airport unveils replica of China’s first airplane

    On Friday, Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport, one of China’s busiest aviation hubs, held an unveiling ceremony for a full-scale replica of China’s first domestically built airplane at its Terminal 2. Named the “Wing Can”, this new installation honors the groundbreaking legacy of Feng Ru, a pioneering aviation engineer from Guangdong Province who designed and constructed the original aircraft in 1909.

    Feng Ru, who is widely recognized as the father of Chinese aviation, achieved the historic feat of building and flying China’s first powered airplane more than a century ago, laying the early ideological and technical groundwork for the country’s modern aviation industry. Born in 1884, Feng Ru passed away at a young age in 1912, but his contributions to Chinese aerospace innovation have never been forgotten.

    In an official statement released following the unveiling, airport officials framed the new replica as more than a historical monument. The installation is described as a lasting symbol of exploratory ambition, cross-continental connection, and forward momentum, carrying the auspicious cultural connotation of a nation reaching new heights and rising with opportunity. The statement added that the exhibit underscores the unwavering lofty aspirations and pioneering spirit of China’s broader aviation sector, which continues to pursue groundbreaking technological breakthroughs and chart new courses for global connectivity in the modern era. For passengers passing through one of China’s most central travel hubs, the replica offers a tangible connection to the 100-plus-year history of Chinese aviation innovation.

  • Advection fog cloaks towering Ferris wheel in Chongqing

    Advection fog cloaks towering Ferris wheel in Chongqing

    One recent early morning in southwest China’s Chongqing, a thick blanket of advection fog settled across the rolling hills of Fuling District, turning a well-known local landmark into a surreal, sky-floating spectacle that has captured public attention. The region’s signature 110-meter tall Ferris wheel, perched atop a nearly 700-meter-high mountain in Fuling’s popular Meixin Wine Town scenic area, emerged half-hidden through the swirling mist. Only its upper rim and structural beams pierced the dense fog, giving the towering structure the uncanny appearance of an otherworldly machine drifting against the pale sky.

    Advection fog, the natural phenomenon behind this magical landscape, forms when warm, moisture-saturated air travels across cooler land or water surfaces, causing the air temperature to drop and water vapor to condense into a thick, low-hanging mist. For Chongqing, a city defined by its rugged landscape of crisscrossing mountains and winding rivers, this type of fog is a recurring seasonal event, especially during transitional spring weather.

    As the tallest manmade structure in the area, the Ferris wheel is already a major draw for visitors to Meixin Wine Town. On clear days, riders stepping into its gondolas are rewarded with unobstructed, sweeping views of the surrounding rolling ranges, blanketed in dense, vibrant green forest. On this foggy morning, however, the landmark took on an entirely new character. The mist erased the lower slopes of the mountain from view, separating the Ferris wheel from its terrestrial base and creating a dreamlike, ethereal scene that local photographers and residents were quick to capture and share across social media.

    The rare visual effect has drawn widespread admiration online, with many commenters noting that the fog transformed a familiar local landmark into something magical that highlights Chongqing’s unique natural and manmade landscape.

  • Beidou-guided seeders boost cotton sowing in Xinjiang’s Artux

    Beidou-guided seeders boost cotton sowing in Xinjiang’s Artux

    As the 2026 spring sowing season kicks off across northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, the cotton fields of Artux have come alive with the deep roar of agricultural machinery and the lively chatter of local farmers gearing up for a new growing cycle. At the region’s flagship high-standard cotton cultivation base, a quiet technological revolution is playing out across the expansive farmland: modern seeding machinery fitted with China’s domestically developed Beidou Navigation Satellite System is reshaping the traditional cotton planting process, delivering unmatched levels of accuracy and productivity that were out of reach for previous generations of growers.

    Unlike manual seeding or older mechanized methods that relied on rough visual alignment, Beidou-guided seeders traverse the sprawling fields with consistent, centimeter-level precision, laying each row of cotton seeds at a uniform depth and spacing. As the machines complete their passes, neatly stretched lines of plastic mulch – used to retain soil moisture and suppress weed growth in Xinjiang’s arid climate – stretch toward the horizon in perfectly straight rows, a visible marker of the navigation system’s reliability.

    This integration of domestic satellite navigation technology with modern agricultural equipment has cut down on unnecessary fuel use, reduced seed waste, and cut the total time required to complete sowing, streamlining the entire early stage of cotton production for local farming operations. As global demand for cotton remains steady and China continues to push for modernization of its agricultural sector, the adoption of Beidou-powered smart farming tools in major cotton-producing regions like Xinjiang marks a key step forward in boosting domestic output and strengthening the resilience of the global cotton supply chain.

  • China Europe International Business School launches plan to better connect China and the world

    China Europe International Business School launches plan to better connect China and the world

    On April 9, 2026, the China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) launched an ambitious five-year strategic blueprint on its Shanghai campus, designed to deepen cross-continental connections between China, Europe, and the broader global community through innovative, globally focused management education.

    Founded as a collaborative venture between the Chinese government and the European Union in 1994, CEIBS has built its global reputation on its distinctive core positioning: “China Depth, Global Breadth”. Unlike many standalone business schools, it operates a multi-campus global footprint that extends beyond major Chinese hubs including Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen to international locations in Zurich, Switzerland, and Accra, Ghana, giving it an unmatched on-the-ground presence across two continents and emerging markets.

    Over the past five years, CEIBS has cemented its status as a world-leading business education institution, with a track record of consistent top-tier rankings. The Financial Times has ranked its Global Executive Master of Business Administration (Global EMBA) program among the top two programs globally for six consecutive years, while its full-time MBA program has held the number one ranking in Asia for a full decade. Beyond rankings, CEIBS’ business case studies have been accessed more than two million times by over 1,100 academic institutions across more than 80 countries. Its global alumni network now counts more than 34,000 members across over 90 countries and regions, with 85 percent of graduates holding senior leadership positions. Notably, 480 alumni serve as chairmen, presidents or chief executive officers at 437 listed companies in China, CEIBS President Wang Hong confirmed.

    Looking ahead to the 2026–2030 strategic period, Wang outlined eight core pillars that will guide the school’s growth: reinforcing its position as a global top-tier business school, embedding meaningful social responsibility into all its programs, expanding its tenured world-class faculty body, developing targeted signature research themes aligned with global business needs, optimizing its academic program portfolio, deepening institutional and people-to-people engagement between China and Europe, accelerating full-scale artificial intelligence (AI) integration across all operations, and expanding support for its global alumni network.

    As China enters its own 15th Five-Year Plan period (2026–2030), the country’s economic and industrial landscape demands a new generation of business leadership, Wang explained. “What the country needs most is no longer simply experts in a single field, but rather versatile management professionals capable of bridging science and technology, industry, capital, organizations, and global norms. Our mission is exactly to cultivate such talents who understand both China and the world, technology and business, as well as who drive growth while taking on responsibility,” Wang said.

    Frank Bournois, CEIBS’ European Co-President, emphasized that amid growing global geopolitical complexity and widespread economic uncertainty, CEIBS’ decades-long role as a pioneering bridge between China and Europe remains one of its most enduring and valuable competitive advantages. To adapt to shifting global business needs, the school will update its program portfolio to integrate emerging critical topics such as AI, deepen industry collaboration through dedicated engagement platforms, and increase the share of international students in both its MBA and Global EMBA programs to more than 30 percent per cohort.

    Bournois noted that CEIBS’ cross-continental bridging role is both long-term and continuously evolving to match a changing world. “While external conditions may fluctuate, the demand for globally minded leaders with cross-cultural capabilities will only grow, reinforcing the school’s mission to connect Europe, China, and the wider world through management education,” he added.

    A key innovation of the new strategic plan is the rollout of a groundbreaking “AI + HI (human intelligence)” dual-driven educational model, which is set to reshape the future of global business education. The model will drive a full-scale upgrade of the school’s teaching methods, research output, and campus operations, with the end goal of building a new smart, personalized, and high-quality ecosystem for global business education that leverages the strengths of both artificial and human insight.

  • ‘Sky Ladder’ via ferrata in Zhangjiajie draws global thrill-seekers

    ‘Sky Ladder’ via ferrata in Zhangjiajie draws global thrill-seekers

    Nestled among the dramatic karst landscapes of Zhangjiajie, Central China’s Hunan province, a heart-pounding new adventure attraction has quickly become a global sensation, drawing daredevils and outdoor lovers from every corner of the world. The 168-meter fixed-climbing route, carved into the side of a near-vertical sheer cliff, has earned the nickname ‘Sky Ladder’ — and the reputation as China’s highest via ferrata.

    In recent weeks, first-person perspective clips of climbers navigating the narrow, exposed route have spread rapidly across social media platforms, sparking widespread interest among global thrill-seeking communities. What makes this attraction particularly striking is its combination of extreme adventure and unmatched natural scenery.

    The Sky Ladder route is situated on Qixing Mountain, a karst tableland formation roughly 13 kilometers from Zhangjiajie’s city center. Standing at an average elevation of 1,328 meters, the mountain is defined by plunging sheer cliffs, deep winding gorges, rolling seas of mist and cloud, and thundering cascading waterfalls. For decades, this region has drawn hikers and outdoor explorers for its otherworldly landscapes, and the new via ferrata adds a high-adrenaline dimension to the area’s already robust tourism offerings.

    Unlike traditional rock climbing that requires advanced technical skill and heavy gear, via ferrata — a system that uses permanently anchored iron rungs, cables and safety rails along the route — allows even casual adventure lovers to experience the thrill of scaling a massive cliff with proper safety equipment. This accessibility has helped the Sky Ladder attract a wide range of visitors, from experienced mountaineers looking for a new challenge to first-time cliff climbers eager to check a once-in-a-lifetime experience off their bucket lists.

    As visitor numbers continue to climb, the Sky Ladder has solidified Zhangjiajie’s position as a top global destination for both natural scenery and outdoor adventure tourism.

  • Invisible power protects Dunhuang’s iconic desert oasis

    Invisible power protects Dunhuang’s iconic desert oasis

    As spring unfolds across northwest China’s Gansu province, the legendary desert oasis of Dunhuang is coming alive with color. Some 1,500 hectares of fragrant Li Guang apricot blossoms are blanketing the slopes below Mingsha Mountain (the Singing Sand Dunes) in soft layers of blush pink and creamy white, drawing growing crowds of domestic and international travelers to the region’s popular Mingsha Mountain and Crescent Spring Scenic Area for the start of the peak tourism season. What many visitors never notice, however, is the quiet, unobtrusive system keeping the destination running smoothly: an innovative ‘invisible power protection’ model that balances reliable energy access with preservation of Dunhuang’s one-of-a-kind natural and cultural landscape. Developed and implemented by State Grid Jiuquan Power Supply Company, this approach prioritizes minimizing visual disruption to the desert oasis environment. At the core of the strategy is the full underground burial of all low-voltage power cables, moving all critical energy infrastructure entirely out of sight to eliminate the visual clutter that above-ground utility poles and lines would create in the scenic area. To maintain safe, consistent power delivery without disturbing the natural scenery or disrupting visitors’ experiences, the company has also implemented a routine maintenance regime that includes regular insulation testing and round-the-clock remote monitoring. This proactive system allows technicians to identify and resolve potential equipment risks long before they cause outages, all without requiring obtrusive above-ground construction work that would alter the desert landscape. For a destination that draws millions of visitors annually to experience its dramatic desert dunes, historic cultural sites, and rare oasis ecosystem, the invisible power model delivers a dual win: it ensures a reliable, uninterrupted power supply to support tourism operations and local livelihoods, while keeping Dunhuang’s iconic natural vista unspoiled for generations of future visitors.