International news agency
International News Services archives articles supplied to clients one year or more after initial publication. These articles are protected by a password and not made available to readers without permission from clients. They are used as a background resource by agency journalists. Upon client requests, International News Services will remove such articles from the archive or not upload them in the first place. They are included to demonstrate the breadth of topics undertaken by the agency and also to help promote clients’ coverage.

Search Results for: China

10 results out of 3991 results found for 'China'.

LEAF DIRECTOR



BY ALAN OSBORN
CIGARETTES have changed a great deal in recent years though not all smokers may realise by just how much. Once it was commonplace to roll your own, using local tobaccos. Today the market is dominated by filters and international brands, many of them ranking among the world’s best-known consumer products.…

Read more

ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS



Keith Nuthall
A EUROPOL-led crackdown on illegal immigration through international airports in Europe has netted 410 migrants trying to illegally enter the EU. Those arrested in the one-day swoop were mainly from China, South America and Africa. More than a quarter were detected at Paris airports; other important entry points were airports in Madrid and Dublin.…

Read more

MACAO



BY SWINEETHA DIAS WICKRAMANAYAKA
MACAO International Airport cargo volumes increased 40

percent year-on-year to 22,171 tons in the first quarter of 2002, while passenger numbers rose more than 15 percent to 953,097. Macao has been benefiting from its key position as a hub for traffic between mainland China and Taiwan, the Shipping & Trade News has reported.…

Read more

CHINA ATC



Keith Nuthall
CHINA has sought to bury grumbling amongst its fellow World Trade Organisation member countries that it has been slow to implement promises made on joining the institution to liberalise its imports, by fulfilling a promise to publish quotas under its Agreement on Textiles and Clothing commitments.…

Read more

CHINA COKE



BY KEITH NUTHALL
ANTI-DUMPING duties erected against Chinese imports of coke, (with a diameter of 80 millimetres or more), under the authority of the European Coal and Steel Community, are to be preserved once this EU institution disappears on July 24.…

Read more

JAPAN SILK



Keith Nuthall
THE JAPANESE government has promised to annually increase import quotas for silk from China until 2005, when, under the terms of the World Trade Organisation’s Agreement on Textiles and clothing, they will be scrapped altogether. Until then, Japan has promised to widen quotas following consultations with the Chinese government.…

Read more

BAT HISTORY



BY ALAN OSBORN
1902-1912

British American Tobacco was created on September 29th 1902 as a joint venture between Imperial Tobacco Company of the UK and the American Tobacco Company of the US following a fierce trade war. The parent companies agreed not to trade in each other’s domestic territory and to assign trademarks, export businesses and overseas subsidiaries to the joint venture.…

Read more

JEWELL INTERVIEW



BY KEITH NUTHALL
EVERY minute of every day a million smokers light up a cigarette made by BAT and the company’s goal is that every one of them is perfect. How does BAT manage this, and at the same time meet its production, technical and environmental challenges when operations are on such a colossal scale ?…

Read more

CHINA BAN



BY ALAN OSBORN
THE EUROPEAN Union has lifted a ban on the imports of certain fish, (including farmed fish), and fish products from China following the presentation of new information by the Chinese authorities and the favourable results of tests carried out by the EU Food and Veterinary Office.…

Read more

GM CHINA



BY MARK ROWE
THE CHAIRMAN of General Motors China has warned that neighbouring south-east Asia’s home grown car industry will in future find itself squeezed by stiff competition from the emerging giant next door. China’s expanding middle class, robust economic growth and low rates of vehicle ownership means that car makers in south-east Asian countries such as Thailand will be hard pressed to compete in the growing Chinese market, according to Phil Murtaugh, chairman of General Motors China.…

Read more