Water burst out of Qingshuigou Reservoir, a water source for 45,000 residents in Zizhou county, on Wednesday, disrupting supplies, according to the flood headquarters.
Wang: Nations that have faced similar woes can be of great help to each other
Wang: It is a systematic project to march into an overseas market. It means far more than just throwing bikes into foreign cities. Mobike, for instance, registered a company in Singapore as early as August, 2016, but we did not offer services there until March. It takes time for us to partner with local banks, transportation partners and authorities to offer a highly localized solution. Singaporeans, for instance, don't use WeChat and Alipay that much. They need a more local way to pay for the bike-sharing service. We now have dozens of Singapore-based employees. It is important to offer truly localized products.
Wanxiang Group
We reached out to Amazon for comment on the Whole Foods-Instacart partnership and will update this story when we hear back.
Wang's remarks came amid the country's ongoing campaign to rein in financial risks and de-leverage as a firming economy provides more leeway to such measures, which partly aim to cushion the impacts from the US rate hikes.
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Wang stressed that the Constitution has the supreme legal authority across the country, including the Hong Kong SAR. It's the origin of the "one country, two systems" principle and the SAR's institutions, he said.
Wang: We made a decision two years ago: As the company is growing, we definitely need a chance to interact with more people. Certainly the U.S. is an obvious choice. We decided to pay regular visits to the U.S. to get to know more people. We had the first event in Silicon Valley last October.
Waste-to-energy plants have increasingly been viewed as a solid choice to address the country's rapidly growing generation of waste.
Warner said "it's still being worked out" whether some of his committee's more high-profile witnesses, including Trump Jr. and Manafort, should testify publicly or privately. The Senate and House intelligence panels conduct most of their interviews in private, but occasionally hold open hearings.