INSEAD Day 4 - 728x90

DIB H1 net profit $1bn

Gross revenue increased 10% year on year

SIB H1 profit up 15.3%

Total operating income rises 20.5 percent.

flydubai Aleppo flights resumed

The flights were resumed after nearly 14 years.

Samsung biggest chip investor

The tech giant invested nearly $59.2bn in 2025.

flynas to set up new hub

Five destinations in first phase of operations.

China’s import of oil from Russia jumps 55% in May

China's imports of oil from Russia rose 55 percent in May, customs data showed on Monday. Representative image/AFP
  • The world's second-biggest economy imported around 8.42 million tons of oil from Russia last month
  • The number was also a spike from the 5.44 million tons China imported in May 2021
China’s imports of oil from Russia rose 55 percent in May, customs data showed on Monday, with the West sanctioning fuel imports from Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine.

The world’s second-biggest economy imported around 8.42 million tons of oil from Russia last month, surpassing its shipments from Saudi Arabia, as Beijing refuses to condemn Moscow’s war.

Last week, President Xi Jinping assured Vladimir Putin of China’s support for Russian “sovereignty and security,” and Beijing has also been accused of providing diplomatic cover for Moscow by blasting Western sanctions and arms sales to Kyiv.

The customs data comes four months into the war, with other buyers avoiding Russian energy imports.

The number was also a spike from the 5.44 million tons China imported in May 2021, according to figures from the Customs Administration, and helped Russia overtake Saudi Arabia as China’s main source of oil.

Earlier this month, Chinese state media said Beijing was willing to “intensify strategic coordination between the two countries”.

The Kremlin said the two leaders had agreed to ramp up economic cooperation in the face of “unlawful” Western sanctions.

The West has adopted unprecedented sanctions against Russia in retaliation for its invasion of Ukraine, and Moscow is looking for new markets and suppliers to replace the major foreign firms that left Russia following the invasion.