Ceremony volunteers for Youth Olympics make public appearance
A glimpse of female crew of Liaoning aircraft carrier
Stills from "Dad, where are we going?"
Legless man's happy life
Top ten most beautiful islands in China
Aerial view of Hong Kong
Happy life in Xinjiang
2014 China Hainan Int'l Automotive Exhibition kicks off
Collection of 'China Dream' public-spirited ads
The silent holy stones
BEIJING, July 17 -- China's commerce minister Gao Hucheng on Thursday reiterated the country's stance on trade disputes with the U.S., urging the latter to "timely and comprehensively" correct its abuse of trade remedy measures.
In a statement on the ministry website, Gao said excessive use of trade remedy measures by the U.S. side has seriously harmed the legitimate rights of Chinese enterprises, and the government will not turn a blind eye to them.
The comments came after the World Trade Organization (WTO) appellate body issued two reports on U.S. measures against Chinese products, which conclude that the countervailing and anti-dumping measures of the United States on more than 20 kinds of Chinese products between 2006 and 2012 were against WTO rules.
Gao urged the U.S. to respect the rulings and correct the malpractices.
"At a time when the world economy is slowly recovering, the U.S. should stand up to its responsibility to maintain the trade rules and prevent protectionism," Gao stressed.
Moms on their kid’s coming out
Chinese fighters through lens
Children attend gymnastics training in summer
Beautiful sceneries along the special travel route in Xinjiang
Beauty SWAT member in Xinjiang sparks online frenzy
Germany beat Argentina 1-0 to win World Cup
National fitness team members integrate traditional and modern beauty
Collection of 'China Dream' public-spirited ads
How Chinese men kill the time when their wives practice square dancing?
Top 10 most beautiful islands in China
Zhou Xun announces engagement to Archie Gao
Photos of the Week
(July 6 - July 12)
'Super moon' seen in Beijing
One-legged women with high heel goes viral on Internet
China's largest 3D printer builds 2-meter-long boat
Day|Week|Month