From January to May this year, the actual use of foreign direct investment (FDI) in the high-tech industries reached 109.04 billion yuan (about 15.17 billion U.S. dollars), according to data from Chinese Ministry of Commerce on Friday.
Specifically, the FDI in the e-commerce services sector, the aerospace equipment manufacturing sector, the chemical pharmaceutical manufacturing sector, and the medical instrument and equipment manufacturing sector rose 146 percent, 74.9 percent, 59.2 percent and 20 percent, respectively.
Since the beginning of this year, foreign-funded enterprises have focused on modern service industries and advanced manufacturing, continuously expanding and deepening their investment in China. The huge potential Chinese market has also opened up new development space for foreign investment.
At the two-day sixth Qingdao Multinationals Summit, which concluded on Friday in east China's Shandong Province, multinational enterprises are optimistic about China's technological development and rich application scenarios, and continuously strengthen investment and cooperation in high-tech fields with China.
Starting from last year, China has supported foreign-funded enterprises to participate in large-scale equipment renewal and trade-ins for consumer goods, which has also presented many multinational companies with opportunities in the trillion-dollar market expansion.
In the past year, the number of foreign-funded research and development centers in Beijing has increased by more than 100, achieving a doubling growth.
As of May 2025, the cumulative number of foreign-funded research and development centers in Shanghai has exceeded 600. Through localized innovation and the synergy of production and supply chain, foreign capital is achieving mutual empowerment and win-win cooperation with the Chinese market.
China's paid-in FDI in high-tech industries tops 109 billion yuan in Jan-May
China's paid-in FDI in high-tech industries tops 109 billion yuan in Jan-May
Nicaraguan officials said the United States has never stopped its aggression and interference in Latin American countries' internal affairs, slamming its hegemonic acts in the region.
As the U.S. ramps up its military presence in the Caribbean, critics across Latin America are drawing renewed attention to a long and painful history of U.S. intervention in the region.
Nicaragua was among he earliest and most persistent targets of U.S. political, economic, and military hegemony. From repeated military interventions in the early 20th century to covert operations in the 1980s, the Central American nation has repeatedly found itself in U.S. crosshairs.
In 1984, the Nicaraguan government sued the U.S. government in the International Court of Justice, demanding compensation for damages caused by years of interference in internal affairs.
In 1986, the International Court of Justice issued the judgment that the United States had violated the United Nations Convention and ordered it to pay Nicaragua billions of dollars in compensation.
However, during multiple votes at the UN Security Council, the United States repeatedly exercised its veto power, resulting in the compensation not being paid.
"We took it to the International Court of Justice in the Hague, where the ICJ ruled that the U.S. was guilty and ordered it to compensate Nicaragua for the damages, setting the original compensation at 15 billion U.S. dollars, equivalent to more than 50 billion U.S. dollars in today's currency. This debt remains outstanding and legally enforceable. The people of Nicaragua have never relinquished their right to seek this compensation," said Nicaraguan Congressman Wilfredo Navarro in a recent interview with China Media Group.
Navarro, who has authored a detailed chronicle of U.S. aggression against his country, emphasized that U.S. interference has continued to this day.
He pointed to the 2018 anti-government unrest in Nicaragua, during which the U.S.-funded National Endowment for Democracy (NED) poured tens of millions of dollars into local non-governmental organizations and far-right media outlets in an effort to topple the government.
"We have long been at the top of U.S. sanctions lists, and the United States has even enacted specific laws targeting and pressuring Nicaragua. Following the U.S.-backed anti-government unrest, we endured a blockade that lasted nearly eight years. During this period, the Nicaraguan government faced a range of military and economic aggression from the United States, including port blockades, mining of harbors, and aerial bombardments," said Navarro.
Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Denis Moncada echoed these concerns, describing U.S. policy in the region as a modern extension of the 19th-century Monroe Doctrine, an imperialist framework that declared Latin America as Washington's exclusive sphere of influence.
He warned that recent U.S. actions, such as escalating pressure on Venezuela and meddling in Honduras' elections, revealed a familiar playbook rooted in deception.
"The U.S. development and economic achievements have come at the expense of countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as numerous countries in Africa and Asia. Its very essence has rooted in conquest and control. Today, the United States is repeating its long-standing familiar tactics: using falsehoods, distorting facts, and fabricating allegations and hypothetical scenarios to mislead the international community and drum up support through disinformation, just as it is currently doing regarding Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in the Venezuela issue," said Moncada.
Moncada noted that the U.S. has intensified efforts to intervene in Latin American countries' internal affairs, reflecting its growing panic over its own decline.
"The United States is attempting to prevent the inevitable decline of U.S. imperial hegemony and that of certain European powers, including Britain. Having realized their own waning influence, they are now desperately seeking ways to halt this decline. As a result, their actions resemble those of a cornered beast: fueling death and conflict around the world, launching aggression on a global scale, striving to slow the erosion of their imperial power while containing the rise of a new international order," said Moncada.
More than 160 years ago, Nicaraguan national hero Andres Castro hurled a stone to kill an invading U.S. soldier during the 1856 Battle of San Jacinto. Today, that heroic act resonated more powerfully than ever.
As the renowned Nicaraguan poet Fernando Gordillo wrote in his poem, "Throw the stone, Andres. Throw it! A century apart, the enemy, it is the same."
Nicaraguan officials urge U.S. to pay ‘historical debt,’ slam hegemony in Latin America