Monday, 6th May 2024
To guardian.ng
Search

U.S. allows ZTE to temporarily resume some business activity

By Bloomberg
04 July 2018   |   5:21 am
The Trump administration is letting ZTE Corp. resume some business activities, according to a document obtained by Bloomberg. Separately, U.S. lawmakers plan to pressure the administration to closely scrutinize T-Mobile’s planned purchase of Sprint.

In this article

0 Comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related

2 days ago
Viral videos on social media claim to show US President Joe Biden either "shaking hands with a ghost" or with "thin air". Sources also report that former president Donald Trump has been flatulent and sleepy in the courtroom during his New York trial. We review these viral claims in this edition of Truth or Fake.
3 days ago
The devaluation of the naira against the dollar has plunged Nigerians into a deep socio-economic depression. The price of basic foodstuffs can double or even triple in the same day.
4 days ago
The number of foreign direct investment projects in Europe fell 4 percent in 2023 compared to the previous year, the first decline since the pandemic.
4 days ago
China's minister of commerce is in Europe for a week-long trip, with a focus on pushing back against accusations of unfair state subsidies in the Chinese electric vehicle sector.
7 hours ago
Georgia has erupted in protest once again, as the ruling Georgian Dream party pursues a "foreign agents" bill in parliament – something that has left a question mark hanging over the country’s European ambitions. The EU granted the ex-Soviet nation candidate status to join the bloc last December. We speak to Georgia's President Salomé Zourabichvili, who plans to veto the final draft of the law, but admits that parliament can still override her veto. That makes the October 26 election even more crucial for re-asserting the country’s European path, she says.
11 hours ago
Cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin promise quick profits – an attraction that aids scammers fleecing investors of their funds.