Politics
Ten years after the South China Sea ruling: Is China’s position better or worse?
The reality of the South China Sea is increasingly being shaped by Chinese power. This is the outcome that could matter more than 2016’s arbitral ruling and the countries rallying around it, says commentator Deng Yuwen.
Deng Yuwen
Economy
Is China shaping Indonesia’s emerging Rebana Metropolitan Area?
While much attention has focused on Nusantara, Indonesia’s new capital, Rebana Metropolitan Area in West Java province presents a lesser-known economic opportunity that China has seized. Researcher Michael Hutahaean and academic Chen Xiangming explain.
Michael Hutahaean, Chen Xiangming

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Politics
Technology
[Big read] One Taiwan, two speeds: The winners and losers of the AI boom
Taiwan’s AI boom is driving record growth and stock market highs, but beneath the prosperity, widening inequality and geopolitical risks threaten its long-term advantage. Lianhe Zaobao Taipei correspondent Lai Oi Lai speaks with experts and people on the ground to find out.
Lai Oi Lai
Economy
Can Singapore’s renovation firms weather the Chinese influx?
As Chinese renovation firms expand into Singapore amid a domestic property downturn, local companies face intensifying competition on price and scale while banking on quality, compliance and local expertise to stay ahead. Lianhe Zaobao journalist Ulrica Lin speaks to industry practitioners to find out more.
Ulrica Lin
Society
[Video] ‘Bullying our ancestors’: Why Chinese netizens are boycotting LV
A seemingly ordinary trademark dispute between Louis Vuitton and Chinese milk tea chain Molly Tea has escalated into a wider debate over intellectual property and cultural ownership. As backlash builds, with many even calling for LV’s trademark to be revoked, the case has become a broader reckoning on how cultural motifs should be protected in a modern commercial world.
Yi Jina
Technology
One size fits none: Why China’s top-down disaster response must evolve
From tornadoes in Hubei to flooding in Guangxi and Typhoon Bavi threatening Zhejiang, China is confronting increasingly diverse climate risks. The challenge is no longer just rapid mobilisation, but adapting disaster response to vastly different regional realities. EAI deputy director Chen Gang analyses the issue.
Chen Gang
Politics
A decade on, 14 nations reaffirm a South China Sea ruling China rejects
A 14-nation statement reaffirming the 2016 South China Sea arbitration ruling has drawn a sharp rebuke from Beijing, underscoring how the decade-old award remains a focal point of strategic rivalry even as a new dispute over the Batanes Islands emerges. Lianhe Zaobao correspondent Liu Liu speaks to academics for an analysis.
Liu Liu
Society
Too fast to censor: How online rage is turning on China’s elites
From singer Han Hong to China’s ambassador to India, recent online backlashes reveal how China’s attention economy can turn public frustration into viral outrage before regulators are able to respond. Lianhe Zaobao associate editor Han Yong Hong tells us more.
Han Yong Hong
Economy
Who governs food security now? Why Beijing’s answer matters most
Global food governance is increasingly dispersed across overlapping institutions and frameworks. Few countries are better positioned than China to bridge them, but whether Beijing chooses to do so remains the defining question, says researcher Genevieve Donnellon-May.
Genevieve Donnellon-May
Society
Human stories without humans: Has AI degraded China’s micro-dramas?
As AI slashes the cost and time needed to produce micro-dramas, China’s hottest entertainment trend is raising difficult questions about creativity, labour and who really profits. Lianhe Zaobao correspondent Lim Zhan Ting speaks to industry insiders.
Lim Zhan Ting
Technology
US’s biotech scrutiny tests China’s drugmakers abroad
A proposed US bill to tighten scrutiny of biotech investment in China is casting a shadow over cross-border drug licensing, threatening a fast-growing partnership model that has fuelled innovation and global drug development.
Caixin Global
Politics
What China’s submarine missile test reveals about its nuclear strategy
China’s submarine launch shows that Beijing intends to remove strategic vulnerability before accepting strategic constraint. But showing its ability for a second-strike capability does not guarantee stability in Asia, says academic Hao Nan.
Hao Nan
Politics
Purged generals, flying missiles: China’s military paradox
As sweeping anti-corruption investigations continue to shake the People’s Liberation Army, Beijing has responded not with words but with high-profile missile tests, seeking to demonstrate that its strategic nuclear deterrent remains intact despite the ongoing purge. Lianhe Zaobao associate China news editor Sim Tze Wei explains.
Sim Tze Wei
Technology
Cheap, fast and everywhere: Why China leads AI adoption
The tech race is not just about building the smartest AI — it is about who uses it first. China’s mature ecosystems and practical demands are driving hyper-rapid adoption, beating the US and other markets, says academic Huijuan Peng.
Huijuan Peng
Society
Million-dollar overseas degrees, entry-level Chinese salaries
For decades, studying abroad was seen as a ticket to opportunity. Now, more Chinese graduates are returning home — only to find that foreign credentials carry less weight than before. Lianhe Zaobao correspondent Liu Liu examines the issue.
Liu Liu