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China strives to advance ecological civilization with world

China strives to advance ecological civilization with world By Yan Huan (People s Daily)    09:15, December 17, 2020 A squirrel rests on a silver birch in Kanas scenic area in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region. (People’s Daily Online/Wang Youbo) Protecting endangered animal and plant resources and keeping ecological balance concerns the existence and development of mankind, and is also an important indicator that measures the civilization progress of countries and nations. The development of an ecological civilization is attached with high importance in China, and is used to guide the country’s development. China is making coordinated efforts to advance biodiversity governance and actively promoting international cooperation on wildlife protection, so as to jointly build a shared future for all life on Earth and chart the course for global ecological civilization.

In Germany, a new museum stirs up a colonial controversy

In Germany, a new museum stirs up a colonial controversy Jacob Kushner © Photograph by Sean Gallup, Getty Restorer Roxane Julie von der Beek repairs a drum from Mali at the Ethnological Museum in Berlin, one of several German museums moving their collections to the new Humboldt Forum. For years, the head of a queen sat in storage in a building in Berlin. Her face is smooth, but her head is intricately engraved and topped with a crown befitting a lyoba a matriarch figure from the Kingdom of Benin, in present day Nigeria. Carved in the early 16 th century, it is one of more than a thousand metal sculptures looted by British soldiers as they plundered Benin City in 1897. In the century since, the so-called Benin Bronzes have been bought and sold by museums and private collectors across Europe and North America, and today they are among the most coveted African artifacts in the world.

How butterflies are saving East Africa s largest coastal forest

THE STANDARD By Caroline Chebet | December 14th 2020 at 00:15:49 GMT +0300 Log in or Register to continue reading this article When you register with us, you help us improve our news experience for you and others. Also, ensure your Javascript is activated for this website.

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