
Liyan Qi
Reporter at The Wall Street Journal
Private Equity Analyst at BlackRock
journalist @WSJ 塞翁本翁 no war
Articles
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4 days ago |
caixinglobal.com | Shen Lu |Liyan Qi |Ming Li
Subscribe to a bundle to unlock all coverage by Caixin Global and the WSJ. By Shen Lu, Liyan Qi and Ming Li (The Wall Street Journal) — A Trump administration announcement Wednesday that it would “aggressively” begin revoking visas for Chinese students confronts universities across the U.S. with the prospect of a hit to their finances and talent pool.
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1 week ago |
livemint.com | Shen Lu |Liyan Qi |Ming Li
Summary A big decline in Chinese student enrolment could hurt the finances of many universities and damage US competitiveness, experts say. This is a Mint Premium article gifted to you. Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. A Trump administration announcement Wednesday that it would “aggressively" begin revoking visas for Chinese students confronts universities across the U.S. with the prospect of a hit to their finances and talent pool.
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1 week ago |
wsj.com | Shen Lu |Liyan Qi |Ming Li
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3 weeks ago |
wsj.com | Liyan Qi
Ah Sahm Dawson came to New York in 1995 from Myanmar, then called Burma, and applied for political asylum from its military regime. After a hearing the following year, his application was denied. He lost an appeal in 1997 but wasn’t deported while he pursued ways to stay. Until now. Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
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3 weeks ago |
wsj.com | Liyan Qi
China said it has suspended some nontariff measures taken against U.S. entities imposed in April, another move to de-escalate tensions and implement the trade agreement the two governments reached in Geneva. Starting Wednesday, export controls against 28 U.S. entities imposed in April, which prohibit the export from China of items that can have military applications, have been suspended for 90 days, the Ministry of Commerce said in a statement.
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