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Driver arrested in eastern China after bus stop crowd hit during May Day holiday

Driver arrested in eastern China after bus stop crowd hit during May Day holiday

Police in the eastern Chinese province of Shandong have arrested a driver after a car ploughed into a crowd of people at a bus stop on Sunday afternoon.
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Questions remain about the number of casualties and whether it was a deliberate
'lone wolf' attack.
Authorities in the city of Tengzhou confirmed the crash on Monday afternoon, adding that the driver had been detained, according to Jimu News, an online media outlet affiliated with Hubei Daily, an official newspaper in central China.
It was the first Chinese news report of the incident, more than a day after a video of the crash was widely circulated on social media. Local authorities have not issued an official statement and further details have not been released.
Hu Xijin, former editor-in-chief of Global Times, a nationalist tabloid affiliated with Communist Party mouthpiece People's Daily, criticised the Tengzhou authorities on Monday night for 'failing to release any official information on the incident'.
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'I hope all local authorities understand and trust the resilience of our society, and do not set a precedent of not releasing information to the public when such incidents occur,' Hu wrote in a social media post.
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China's gray-zone hybrid threats against Taiwan's Pacific allies
China's gray-zone hybrid threats against Taiwan's Pacific allies

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China's gray-zone hybrid threats against Taiwan's Pacific allies

This article was originally published by Pacific Forum. It is republished with permission. In the Indo-Pacific's intensifying great power competition, Taiwan's Pacific allies – Palau, the Marshall Islands and Tuvalu—are increasingly caught in the crosshairs of China's hybrid warfare. These microstates, long diplomatically aligned with Taipei, are now contending with cyberattacks, disinformation, economic coercion and elite capture that exploit their resource limitations and geopolitical exposure. Events such as the June 2025 Taiwan-Marshall Islands security pact and revelations of Chinese organized crime in Palau underscore a broader pattern: Beijing is deploying gray-zone tactics to undermine sovereignty, fracture alliances and weaken the US-led regional order. Hybrid threats encompass a range of operations that combine cyber intrusions, manipulation of influence, economic pressure and the spread of disinformation. 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The government deported Chinese nationals involved in influence operations in 2024 and requested US missile systems in May 2025. Yet, significant gaps remain in digital resilience and investment transparency. Marshall Islands: strategic tug-of-war The Marshall Islands, tightly linked to the US through its compact of free association, is another prime arena for Beijing's influence efforts. Since 2020, China has poured $50 million into infrastructure projects aimed at cultivating elite support and promoting a diplomatic realignment, such as was seen in Nauru's switch in 2024. In response to mounting pressure, the Marshall Islands signed a security pact with Taiwan in June 2025. The agreement focuses on maritime domain awareness, cybersecurity and counter-disinformation efforts following cyberattacks in 2024 that targeted government systems. A newly established National Security Office now monitors maritime threats. 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