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The Economic Observer

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may be reformed. Authorities revoked the press pass of the reporter who wrote the story. The article claimed that the ministry may lose control of investment, construction and railway operations. It said the ministry would establish and inject assets into three new companies, which would be overseen
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On 7 December 2009, The Economic Observer was one of only two Chinese newspapers to publish a common editorial with 55 other newspaper around the world calling for action from the world leaders gathering in Copenhagen for the UN's climate change summit. The idea for a common editorial was hatched by
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The Economic Observer Online was relaunched in March 2007 and offers subscribers access to all the newspaper's content. However, most of the articles from each week's newspaper also appear on the website at no charge, along with web-only content, which includes commentary and op-ed pieces from guest
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Founded in August 2000, the Economic Observer began as a small news publication dedicated to supporting China's market liberalization and reporting on socioeconomic and political events with a stated commitment to journalistic integrity. The first issue was published in April 2001 and was 24 pages.
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near Wenzhou, the newspaper ignored a government censorship directive to publish an eight-page feature on the crash. The front-page story was presented as a letter to 2-year old survivor Xiang Weiyi, whose parents were killed. It described two images of China, “one blossoming in the midst of the
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In March 2010, The Economic Observer published an editorial calling on representatives of China's legislature to adopt reforms to the country's household registration system. In an unprecedented move, the editorial was also simultaneously published by 13 other Chinese newspapers.
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said that one of the editors involved, Deputy Editor of the Economic Observer Online Zhang Hong, was removed from his position as punishment for his role in the publishing the editorial.
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since April 2001. The newspaper is considered one of the top three economic-focused newspapers in China and is well regarded for its in-depth special features and commentary.
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The newspaper's English-language website, features select translations from the weekly newspaper and the website; it also publishes original reporting and interviews.
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The Economic Observer features seven regular sections: News, Nation, Market, Corporation, Automobile/Property, Observer, Lifestyle/Business Review.
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In May 2010, Xinhua Sports and Entertainment Limited sold the advertising rights and the distribution rights of the paper to private buyer
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The original investment for the newspaper came from the Sanlian Group, a diversified state-invested company based in Shandong province.
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https://blogs.wsj.com/chinarealtime/2011/07/31/a-letter-to-yiyi-chinese-newspapers-defiant-commentary-on-train-collision/
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The paper is distributed on Saturday mornings but the official publication date is printed as the following Monday.
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The newspaper also has a reputation for being "pro-business" and in favor of the continuation of market reforms.
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The Economic Observer is considered to take a noticeably independent approach to reporting the news in China.
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The newspaper was fined and issued a warning over an inaccurate report published in June 2012 that said the
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people, the other hidden in officialdom,” and pledged “to advocate and act” for the people's rights.
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Request for Representatives at the Two Meetings to Hasten Reform of the Household Registration System
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Each issue is 56 pages and sells for 5 Chinese yuan or 10 Hong Kong dollars.
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/greenslade/2011/aug/02/press-freedom-china
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By December 2006, the newspaper had expanded to the current 56 pages.
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by the State-Owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission.
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Lu Zhiqiang currently has full control of the Economic Observer.
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The newspaper's slogan is "rationality and constructiveness" (
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On 30 July 2011, a week after 40 people were killed in a
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According to an article on the Wall Street Journal's
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List of newspapers in the People's Republic of China
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Index

an advertisement
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promotional content
external links
neutral point of view
Learn how and when to remove this message
newspaper
www.eeo.com.cn
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simplified Chinese
traditional Chinese
pinyin
People's Republic of China
Financial Times
Chinese
pinyin
high speed train collision
Ministry of Railways
Lu Zhiqiang
List of newspapers in the People's Republic of China
Media of the People's Republic of China


"The Economic Observer"
"The Next Empire"
The Atlantic
"Billionaire Who Bribed Rio Executive Unlikely to be Charged"
The Age
"The papers that will carry the Copenhagen editorial"
The Guardian

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