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This includes modern Chinese and foreign nationals of Chinese descent who have acquired the nationality of their home country. In layman's terms: Chinese = 1.3 billion mainland population + 23 million Taiwan compatriots + 7 million Hong Kong compatriots + more than 500,000 Macao compatriots + 50 million overseas Chinese.
Generally speaking, people with Han Chinese ancestry are Chinese, and most of the Hui, Miao, Yao, Tujia, Manchu, Zhuang and other ethnic groups similar to the Han are also called Chinese, while overseas Tibetans and Uygurs and other ethnic groups with relatively shallow historical ties with the Han nationality, as well as Mongolians and Koreans with their own national states, may not be called Chinese in some languages.
Overseas Chinese: refers to Chinese citizens residing abroad. "Settled" means that a Chinese citizen has obtained the right of long-term or permanent residence in the country of residence, and has resided in the country of residence for two consecutive years, with a cumulative residence of not less than 18 months within two years; Chinese citizens who have not obtained the right of long-term or permanent residence in the country of residence, but have obtained the legal residence qualification in the country of residence for more than 5 consecutive years (including 5 years), and have resided in the country of residence for a total of not less than 30 months within 5 years, are regarded as overseas Chinese; Chinese citizens are not considered overseas Chinese during the period of study abroad (including official assignment and self-financed) or the period of working abroad for official business (including expatriate workers).
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Chinese have foreign nationality, overseas Chinese do not.
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What is the difference between Chinese, Chinese and Chinese?
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1. Different nationalities: Chinese do not have the nationality of the People's Republic of China, but have obtained the nationality of the country where they live. Overseas Chinese are Chinese living abroad with the nationality of the People's Republic of China.
2. Different laws to be observed: Overseas Chinese are Chinese living abroad who are bound by Chinese laws and governed by the management chain, and must respect Chinese laws regardless of whether they live in China or not. Chinese are not subject to the laws and jurisdiction of China. It is subject only to the laws of the country in which it is located.
3. Overseas Chinese refer to natural persons with Chinese nationality who have settled abroad. Overseas Chinese are citizens of the People's Republic of China and enjoy the rights due to Chinese citizens in accordance with the law, and perform the corresponding obligations. China's constitution clearly stipulates that it is China's duty to protect the legitimate rights and interests of overseas Chinese abroad.
4. Overseas Chinese do not include those who travel and visit abroad, workers and technicians sent to other countries to assist in construction, as well as public servants sent by the state to foreign countries and students studying abroad. For those who have Chinese ancestry, but have joined or obtained foreign nationality, they cannot be regarded as overseas Chinese.
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The differences between Chinese and overseas Chinese are: different nationalities, different laws to abide by, and different times to obtain foreign nationality.
1. Different nationalities: Chinese do not have the nationality of the People's Republic of China, but have obtained the nationality of the country where they are located. Overseas Chinese are Chinese living abroad with the nationality of the People's Republic of China.
2. Different laws to be observed: Overseas Chinese are noisy Chinese living abroad who are bound and governed by Chinese law, and must respect Chinese law regardless of whether they live in China or not, while Chinese are not bound and governed by Chinese law. It is only subject to the jurisdiction and jurisdiction of the laws of the country in which it is located.
3. The time to obtain a high nationality abroad is different: overseas Chinese do not have foreign nationality, while Chinese live abroad for a period of time and join the nationality of the country where they live, so the time to obtain foreign nationality is after their birth.
1 The annotation of "Overseas Chinese Cihai" reads: "Persons with Chinese nationality living abroad. It does not include those who travel abroad, the workers and technicians who are sent to other countries to assist in construction, the public servants sent by the state to foreign countries, and the students who study abroad. >>>More
At the same time, Chinese, overseas Chinese, and returned overseas Chinese are all members of the Chinese nation. >>>More
1. Returned overseas Chinese refer to overseas Chinese who have returned to China to settle down. "Returning to China for settlement" refers to overseas Chinese giving up their long-term, permanent or legal right of residence in their original country of residence and going through the formalities of returning to China to settle down in accordance with the law; Foreign Chinese who have been approved to restore or obtain Chinese nationality and have gone through the formalities for settling in China in accordance with the law shall be regarded as returned overseas Chinese. >>>More
ƍ 887;348;- The power of love is so great that it can make you forget to cut, but it is so small that even a grain of jealous sand and gravel can accommodate it.
I think if they are overseas Chinese and international students, and they have taxes or medical insurance in China, we should still accept them, because they are also Chinese.