Rachel Cheung
The World Keeps Getting the Hong Kong Flag and Anthem Wrong
A video by Ukraine’s defense ministry is the latest in a series of blunders where Hong Kong’s protest symbols were displayed instead of official ones.
China’s Protests Spill Into the US. FBI Arrests a Chinese Student For Stalking.
“Post more, I will chop your bastard hand off,” the student wrote in a group, after spotting a flier in Boston in support of democracy in China.
Chinese Police Bust Massive $1.7 billion Crypto Money Laundering Ring
Photos from the raid show a mountain of cash, along with several suitcases packed with Chinese yuan.
For the First Time, Chinese Protesters Are Standing With Uyghurs. Will it Last?
It took a deadly fire linked to China’s COVID curbs to draw national attention towards Uyghurs, but their larger struggle remains invisible.
Is Zero-COVID Coming to an End in China?
With officials hinting at change, experts have warned the country is ill-prepared for the potential surge in cases that may come with eased restrictions.
Jiang Zemin, China’s Most Meme-Worthy Ex-Leader, Has Died
Nicknamed “toad,” the former leader was known for crooning Elvis Presley at a regional summit and being photographed going for a dip in the Dead Sea.
In China, the Protests Are Dying Down and the Arrests Are Starting
“We are all desperately deleting our chat history,” a Beijing resident says.
Why China’s COVID Protests Aren’t Like Anything Before Them
“Just having a normal life feels like a distant hope,” a protester says.
China and the US Are Racing to Go Nuclear in Space
China is planning to use nuclear energy to power its moon base by 2028.
Hundreds of Cops Caught Snooping on Woman After She Was Filmed Having Sex on Balcony
Some officers even took photos and shared them in WhatsApp groups.
Why Chinese Critics Are Worried About Twitter Under Elon Musk
Chinese state-backed actors are exploiting the chaos at the company to attack critics.
Trafficking Victims Are Finally Being Freed From Cambodia—But the Scam Industry Is Far From Over
Criminal syndicates are relocating to evade arrests in Cambodia and casting a wider net across the world to recruit their next victims.