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E-commerce brews Salvadoran coffee Share CLOSE Hebert Vasquez from El Salvador makes coffee at his cafe in Qionghai, Hainan province. Salvadoran gourmet coffee producers seek to attract Chinese consumers via e-commerce. [Photo/Xinhua]
SAN SALVADOR-At Christmas time, coffee pickers at El Salvador s mountaintop coffee plantations were busy filling baskets with the bright red berries used to produce the Central American country s famed gourmet brew.
Hugo Hernandez, coffee consultant and businessman, said the December s harvest is of particular significance, for it could prompt the first online sales of gourmet coffee to Chinese consumers, as part of an e-commerce strategy he promoted throughout the year.
Frederic J. Brown/AFP/Getty Images
A Muslim woman using her mobile phone on July 16, 2009 in Urumqi in Northwest China’s Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, during a time of heavy military, paramilitary, and riot police presence following ethnic violence in the city.
Welcome to Uighur Web Now Watch What You Say
April 23, 2014
China’s Internet is vast, with millions of sites and more than 618 million users. But nested within that universe is a tiny virtual community comprising just a few thousand websites where China’s Uighur, the country’s fifth-largest ethnic minority with a population of approximately 11 million, gather online to communicate in their own language and script.
Source: Xinhua|
Editor: huaxia
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BEIJING, Dec. 31 (Xinhua) Zhang Shuo, a 27-year-old nurse in north China s Tianjin Municipality, believes that 2020 was when she finally stepped up as an adult.
On Jan. 26, Zhang volunteered to go to Wuhan, capital of central China s Hubei Province, to help local colleagues control the COVID-19 outbreak.
For the next 52 days, she would be shuffling through isolation wards fitted head-to-toe with a hazmat suit, an N-95 mask, gloves, goggles and even a diaper, as using the toilet was a luxury.
When eight of her patients recovered and were discharged from the hospital in the second week, Zhang was overwhelmed by a sense of achievement, feeling like a warrior in the fight against the epidemic.
2020-12-31 13:36:01 GMT2020-12-31 21:36:01(Beijing Time) Xinhua English
BEIJING, Dec. 31 (Xinhua) Zhang Shuo, a 27-year-old nurse in north China s Tianjin Municipality, believes that 2020 was when she finally stepped up as an adult.
On Jan. 26, Zhang volunteered to go to Wuhan, capital of central China s Hubei Province, to help local colleagues control the COVID-19 outbreak.
For the next 52 days, she would be shuffling through isolation wards fitted head-to-toe with a hazmat suit, an N-95 mask, gloves, goggles and even a diaper, as using the toilet was a luxury.
When eight of her patients recovered and were discharged from the hospital in the second week, Zhang was overwhelmed by a sense of achievement, feeling like a warrior in the fight against the epidemic.