China in Focus Full Broadcast (Aug. 16)

Tiffany Meier
By Tiffany Meier
August 16, 2024China in Focus
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A Chinese company is suing the Pentagon to get off its blacklist after the Department of Defense reportedly considered removing a different Chinese firm from the list after a lawsuit.

TikTok is fighting back against a looming divestment deadline this January. The Chinese-owned platform is now taking its case to a federal appeals court, claiming the Justice Department got it wrong.

A group of U.S. state attorneys general are probing Temu over its ties with the Chinese Communist Party. They allege the online retailer has harvested U.S. user data and sold products made by forced labor in China.

Ahead of the Democratic National Convention next week, a lawsuit against police bodycams that contain Chinese microchips is getting fast-tracked. A law enforcement tech competitor warns it’s about more than just business.

  1. Chinese Firm Sues the Pentagon to Get Off Blacklist
  2. TikTok Disputes App’s Ties to China in Appeal
  3. Attorneys General Probe Temu: Forced Labor, Data Theft
  4. Candidates’ Approaches to US-China Relations
  5. Lawsuit Targets Bodycams With Chinese Microchips
  6. US Navy’s Newest Missile and Its Advantages
  7. Australia, US Look to Co-Produce Hypersonic Missiles
  8. Taiwan Struck by 6.3 Magnitude Earthquake
  9. China Holds Drills for ‘Unknown Pneumonia’
  10. China Pressures Palau Over Taiwan Diplomacy
  11. China Manufacturing, Home Prices Fail to Impress Beijing
  12. China, Saudi Arabia Now Top Buyers of Some Russian Fuel