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Cultural industries fair concludes in China's Shenzhen

China

China

China

Cultural industries fair concludes in China's Shenzhen

2025-05-26 22:39 Last Updated At:23:07

The 21st China (Shenzhen) International Cultural Industries Fair concluded in Shenzhen City, south China's Guangdong Province, on Monday.

The fair took place both online and offline, with its main venue spanning 160,000 square meters and covering eight pavilions.

More than 6,200 cultural institutions and enterprises participated in the fair with over 120,000 pieces of cultural products, and more than 4,000 cultural industry projects were showcased and traded during the event.

The fair also set up 52 sub-venues across the city, holding nearly 400 exhibitions and trading activities.

The scale of the exhibition, the number of exhibitors, the number of international exhibitors and buyers all set new records.

The international "circle of friends" of the fair also continued to expand this year, with the number of exhibitors from Belt and Road countries and global cooperative institutions, and the variety of their products all reaching record highs.

Cultural industries fair concludes in China's Shenzhen

Cultural industries fair concludes in China's Shenzhen

Returning to a full-scale war would have catastrophic consequences, a UN spokesman said at a press briefing at the UN headquarters in New York on Monday. Recent tensions over the Strait of Hormuz have exposed the deep divisions between the United States and Iran, further heightening uncertainty over their fragile ceasefire.

In response to a media query regarding the claims by U.S. President Donald Trump that the weeks-long ceasefire with Iran is on "massive life support," Farhan Haq, deputy spokesman for the UN Secretary-General, stressed the need for concerted efforts to stay committed to negotiations.

He said that the United Nations will not be swayed by the rhetoric of the parties involved in the U.S.-Iran negotiations, and its core objective is to push all parties to remain committed to negotiations.

"We have tried over the years in all of our diplomatic efforts not to listen too much to the rhetoric by any particular side involved in negotiations. What we want to do is make sure that the parties themselves remain committed to negotiations. Certainly, we appreciate the role that Pakistan has been playing as a mediator, and we want the efforts to continue. A return to full-scale fighting would be, as the Secretary-General has repeatedly said, catastrophic," he said. Both U.S. and Iranian forces have fired shots at each other in the Strait of Hormuz since the ceasefire took effect earlier last month.

Returning to full-scale US-Iran war would be "catastrophic": UN official

Returning to full-scale US-Iran war would be "catastrophic": UN official

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