
-
Man Utd agree deal to sign Brentford winger Mbeumo: reports
-
New clashes rock Syria's Druze heartland as tribal fighters reinforce Bedouin
-
Germany presses ahead with deportations to Afghanistan
-
Crews rescue 18 miners trapped in Colombia
-
McIlroy five back as Harman leads British Open
-
Lyles the showman ready to deliver 100m entertainment
-
EU targets Russian oil in tough new Ukraine war sanctions
-
Liverpool line up swoop for Frankfurt striker Ekitike: reports
-
Stocks up, dollar down tracking Trump moves and earnings
-
Three Sri Lankan elephants killed in blow to conservation efforts
-
Indie game studios battle for piece of Switch 2 success
-
Former Liverpool and Man Utd star Ince banned for drink-driving
-
Spain taming fire that belched smoke cloud over Madrid
-
Top Holy Land clerics visit Gaza after deadly church strike
-
Scotland end tour with seven-try thrashing of Samoa
-
Sharaa's pullout from Syria Druze heartland exposes shaky leadership
-
Trump team to seek release of Epstein documents
-
Wrexham chief wants playoff push after promotion to Championship
-
Snoop Dogg becomes co-owner of Championship club Swansea
-
Pakistan bans new hotel construction around tourist lakes
-
Trump's budget hacksaw leaves public broadcasting on precipice
-
New deep sea mining rules lack consensus despite US pressure
-
Stocks head for positive end to week, Tokyo struggles ahead of vote
-
North Korea bars foreign tourists from new seaside resort
-
Lions ignoring the noise ahead of Wallabies Test
-
CBS says Stephen Colbert's 'The Late Show' to end in May 2026
-
Lions block Wallabies flanker Samu from Pasifika team
-
Indian state blames cricket team for deadly stampede
-
Trump threatens to sue WSJ, Murdoch over story on alleged 2003 letter to Epstein
-
Serbian youth pumps up protest at last EXIT festival
-
US Congress approves $9 bn in Trump cuts to foreign aid, public media
-
Misbehaving monks: Sex scandal shakes Thai Buddhist faithful
-
Injury rules All Blacks wing Ioane out of third France Test
-
China mulls economy-boosting measures to counter 'severe situation'
-
Wallabies skipper Wilson concedes losing Valetini a massive blow
-
Asian markets on course to end week on a positive note
-
UK 'princes in the tower' murder probe clears Richard III
-
From Antarctica to Brussels, hunting climate clues in old ice
-
Springboks pick dynamic half-backs for final Championship warm-up
-
Jorge Martin returns to MotoGP racing at revamped Brno
-
Olympic champion Lyles to make 100m season debut at London Diamond League
-
Japan's SMEs ready to adapt to Trump tariffs
-
South Korea to end private adoptions after landmark probe
-
California to sue Trump govt over axed high-speed rail funds
-
Brazil's Lula calls Trump's tariff threat 'unacceptable blackmail'
-
In rural Canadian town, new risk of measles deepens vaccine tensions
-
What to know about Trump's effort to oust Fed Chair Powell
-
Trump threatens to sue WSJ over story on alleged 2003 letter to Epstein
-
Gulf Air orders 12 Boeing 787 Dreamliners
-
Japan rice prices double, raising pressure on PM

Top EU official bemoans 'unpredictablity' of Chinese law on Beijing trip
The European Commission's digital chief said Tuesday that murky Chinese laws were fuelling concerns among foreign firms in the country, following discussions with Beijing officials about critical areas such as AI and data governance.
Vera Jourova, who is also the commission's vice president, made the comments after talks on Monday with Chinese counterparts including Vice Premier Zhang Guoqing in the second "High-level Digital Dialogue" between the two sides.
Among the concerns Jourova said she had heard about from European businesses in China was the "unpredictability of the decisions and interpretation of the laws by the regulators".
Beijing has implemented expansive new regulations recently, covering cybersecurity, counterespionage and data management, citing the need to shore up national security measures.
But the new regulations have worried some foreign firms, unsure of how their enforcement will affect their business operations in the world's second-largest economy.
"First thing is the not very clear wording of the laws, especially missing definitions of, for instance, what is 'important data', and what... the companies could be confronted with when transferring the data outside," Jourova told reporters.
Jourova also criticised the "lengthy procedures" foreign firms must undergo to conduct business in the country.
"I think it's 45 days for one process -- it lasts very often a much longer time," she said.
"Nobody is criticising the Chinese laws, we just want them to be clear and relatively easy to comply with."
The EU official and Czech politician's visit to Beijing comes just days after Brussels announced a probe into Chinese subsidies for electric vehicles, which it said had resulted in unfair competition.
China warned that the investigation would have a negative impact on its trade relations with the bloc, accusing it of "naked protectionism".
P.Silva--AMWN