Citations:Fangchenggang

English citations of Fangchenggang

2003 2008 2011 2013
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  • [2002 [2000 November], Shaping Shao, “The Theory and Practice of the Implementation of International Law in China”, in 邵沙平, 余敏友, editors, 国际法问题专论 [The Contemporary International Legal Issues] (研究生专题教学用书)‎[1], Wuhan: 武汉大学出版社, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 446:
    In July 2000 the Intermediate People's Court of Fang Cheng Gang City tried an international case of piracy, and the Higher People's Court of the National Autonomous Region of Guangxi tried the case at second instance. This case involved fourteen foreigners. Because the defendants did not entrust defenders, thirty-three Chinese lawyers voluntarily provided the legal aid in court. Nineteen Chinese lawyers from the Legal Aid Center of Fang Cheng Gang City worked as the lawyers at the court of first instance.]
  • 2003, David Aikman, “Persecution”, in Jesus in Beijing: How Christianity is Transforming China and Changing the Global Balance of Power[2], Regnery Publishing, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 230:
    The men who had kidnapped them demanded a ransom of $10 million and stole their passports and money. They were then left tied up at a Buddhist temple in Fangchenggang, a city in the region of Guangxi in China’s southwest. There the Chinese police, conveniently, found them.
  • [2006, ASEAN Economic Bulletin[3], volume 23, ASEAN, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 261, column 2:
    IV.4 Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region
    Guangxi is the only area in western China that has direct access to the sea and has several large deep seaports, such as those at Fangchengkang, Qinzhou, and Beihai. As a consequence, Guangxi has the potential to be the transportation and []
    (Note: Fangchengkang is the Wade–Giles-derived name for Fangchenggang.)]
  • 2008 September 3, “China launches 30 mln-tn steel project in Guangxi”, in Reuters[4], archived from the original on 01 May 2022, Industry, Materials and Utilities‎[5]:
    The capacity of the plant, in the southeast coastal city of Fangchenggang, is set to expand to 30 million tonnes after the third phrase of construction, although the companies have given no time frame for its completion.
  • 2011, Larry Bond, Jim DeFelice, Shock of War (Red Dragon Rising)‎[6] (Fiction), New York: Tom Doherty Associates, →ISBN, →OCLC, →OL, page 129:
    They were definitely somewhere between Fangchenggang and the Vietnamese border, much closer to the border he thought than the city, but given the fact that they’d fallen asleep and drifted for hours, who really could tell?
  • 2011, John D. Kuhns, “Chinese Handcuffs”, in China Fortunes: A Tale of Business in the New World[7], John Wiley & Sons, Inc., →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 477:
    Arriving at the Nanning airport, Mr. Qi picked them up and they drove two hours southeast through the limestone hills of central Guangxi province to Fangchenggang.
  • 2013 July 24, Louise Watt, “Official: Man fatally stabs 2 gov’t staff in China”, in AP News[8], archived from the original on 19 June 2022[9]:
    According to the official Xinhua News Agency, staff in the Dongxing City Family Planning Bureau — which comes under Fangchenggang city — refused Monday to register the man’s fourth child for a hukou, or resident’s certificate, because he hadn’t paid a social compensation fee.