# Xinhua
Latest news and articles about Xinhua
Total: 22 articles found

Loud Explosion Rattles Tel Aviv as Flames Reported Over City Skyline
A large explosion and visible fires were reported in Tel Aviv on the evening of February 28, with state media publishing images but few details. The cause remains unclear, making official verification and follow-up statements critical for understanding whether this is an isolated incident or a potential trigger for wider escalation.

When New Recruits Meet Old Hands: A Moment That Sells Continuity in China’s Military
A Xinhua photo of a new recruit meeting a veteran has been framed as a symbol of continuity in the People’s Liberation Army, conveying both political messaging and practical concerns about recruitment, professionalization and veteran reintegration. The image underscores Beijing’s effort to present the military as modern yet rooted in tradition, even as the PLA confronts evolving personnel and welfare challenges.

Beirut Florists Brace for Valentine's Day as Small Businesses Seek Normalcy
Photographs from Beirut show florists preparing for Valentine's Day, a small but telling sign of economic and social life continuing amid Lebanon's prolonged crises. Holiday sales provide vital income for small retailers and offer a lens on consumer confidence and supply-chain conditions in the capital.

China’s Armed Police Send Lunar New Year Greetings — A Reminder of Duty Behind the Festivities
Xinhua published a short piece showing the People’s Armed Police offering Lunar New Year greetings, a mix of public-relations and reassurance during the high-travel chunyun period. The dispatch underscores the dual role of China’s paramilitary forces as both community-facing and continuously on duty.

Fatal Collapse in Tripoli Exposes Lebanon’s Crumbling Housing Stock
A residential building in Tripoli, northern Lebanon, collapsed on 8 February, killing five people and leaving at least eight rescued from the rubble. The disaster highlights the vulnerability of Lebanon’s ageing housing stock amid prolonged economic decline and weak regulatory capacity.

UN Chief Welcomes Resumption of Iran–US Talks, Offering a Sliver of Diplomatic Momentum
The UN Secretary‑General welcomed the resumption of talks between Iran and the United States, a move that opens a modest diplomatic window. While symbolic and potentially stabilising for the region, meaningful progress will face significant political and technical hurdles and is likely to be slow and incremental.

Becoming an Icon: Beijing Posthumously Honors Dong Yijun as a 'Model of the Era'
China’s Central Propaganda Department has posthumously named Dong Yijun a “Model of the Era,” an honorific designed to elevate exemplary behavior and further official ideological education. The move underscores Beijing’s continued reliance on symbolic figures to shape social norms and reinforce Party authority through state media and institutional channels.

Guarding the State’s Voice: Life at Xinhua’s No. 3 Sentinel
A human-interest profile of an armed policeman’s long watch at Xinhua’s No. 3 sentinel post illuminates how routine guard duty doubles as both practical security and symbolic protection of the state’s information apparatus. Small details—seasonal ginkgo leaves, a stray cat, and the proximity to national parades—show how personal sacrifice is woven into China’s public rituals.

Small Thai Military Plane Crashes in Chiang Mai Forest, Two Killed
A small Thai military aircraft crashed and caught fire in a forest in Chom Thong district, Chiang Mai province on 29 January, killing two people. Thai authorities have launched an investigation amid questions about maintenance, training and the broader state of the military’s aviation safety.

When the Canteen Is Hit: A Chinese Correspondent’s Close Encounter with Kabul’s Violence
A blast outside a Chinese-run restaurant in Kabul killed at least one local employee and injured others, bringing the everyday risks of exile life into sharp relief for the small Chinese community in Afghanistan. The attack highlights the vulnerability of China’s expanding non-military presence in Kabul and raises questions about how Beijing will protect its citizens while maintaining engagement in a fragile, impoverished country.