AmemorialwillbeheldonSaturdayfortheworld'soldestcaptivepandaBasiwhodiedattheageof37inthesoutherncityFuzhouonWednesdaymorning.Whenshediedatanoldagethatamountedto
Theworld'soldestcaptivepandaBasipassedawayonWednesdayinFuzhou,aged37,theequivalentofmorethan100humanyears.Basihasbeensufferingfromhepatocirrhosis,renalfailurean
Avirtualrealityclassroom,arealtimephysicalexaminationdevice,andothersmartgadgetsattractedhugeattentionatthe19thCross-StraitsFairforEconomyandTrade.Inits19thyear
The 1st Maritime-Continental Silk Road Cities Forum hosted by Fuzhou on 18 May is very timely, said Ralf Bredel, the Representative of the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) and Head of UNIDO’s Regional Office for China, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and Mongolia.
Fuzhou is an important cradle of the ancient maritime Silk Road. Early in Han Dynasty, Fuzhou set up Donye Port to facilitate overseas trade. During the Five Dynasties Period at the end of Tang Dynasty, Wang Shenzhi, Monarch of the Min Kingdom, opened up Gantang Port, also known as the “Great Oriental Port”, for trade with Southeast Asian and Arabian countries, creating favorable conditions for the overall rise of overseas trade.
In order to better serve the national “One Belt, One Road” initiative, Fuzhou has been striving to build itself into a hub city for the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road strategy linking ASEAN and Taiwan and radiates inland China.
A man acquitted after spending eight years in prison in east China's Fujian Province has received 1.14 million yuan (186,000 U.S. dollars) of compensation from the state.