Threads about China By China

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No reports of foreign casualties



A local resident, surnamed Zhang, on Wednesday goes down on his knees to pray for the victims of Monday's deadly fire,which claimed 53 lives, in Shanghai. [Gao Erqiang/China Daily]
SHANGHAI - Foreign consulates in the city on Wednesday confirmed that they have received no reports of any non-Chinese casualties in the fire that gutted a downtown residential building, killing at least 53 people, on Monday.
"Two French nationals who reside in the building were out at work when the fire started. They're either staying in a friend's apartment or a hotel for the moment. We're trying to help them with insurance as most of their valued properties were lost," said a French deputy consul general in Shanghai, who refused to be named.
In addition, officials with the Japanese consulate in Shanghai dismissed the claim that a Japanese citizen died in the fire.
According to an updated list posted at noon on Wednesday by the Shanghai municipal bureau of civil affairs at the No 2 Amateur Sports School in Jing'an district, which is now being used as a temporary shelter, 43 people are still missing and 70 people injured in the fire remain hospitalized. Among them, 15 are critical.
A construction plan, which had been approved by local urban planning authorities, suggested rigid polyurethane foam, an insulant to improve a building's energy efficiency, was being pasted on the surface of the fire-stricken building and two nearby 28-story residential buildings when the fire struck.
However, the material, though combustible, would not add to the severity of a fire, according to experts.
As of Wednesday night, a row of reception stands, which are supposed to receive and assist the survivors of the fire as well as relatives or friends of those who passed away in the tragedy, have been placed in the dance room of the No 2 Amateur Sports School.
Workers with insurance companies are actively helping people in claiming compensation.
As of 5 pm on Wednesday, a charity fund raised for the victims and those who suffered in the fire had already received 4.47 million yuan ($672,700), according to the statistics of Shanghai Charity Foundation.

Rise of the middle class
--------------------------------
Society will be more stable when one third of the Chinese population has material means to become social backbone
Many scholars and individuals are showing concern about what kind of social structure will bring the best stability.
According to sociological theories, a modern society can be divided into four ranks: the wealthy, the middle class, labor and the disadvantaged. The middle class creates the ladder between the well-to-do and the poverty-stricken, thus easing the antagonism between them, by granting those at the bottom the hope of rising to a higher level.
Generally speaking, in a modern society, the middle class contains 60 to 70 percent of the population, leaving about 15 to 20 percent at either end of the ladder. Such a large middle class ensures stability for a society.
How do we define the middle class? There are three standards: material wealth, job status and self-identity.
Concerning material wealth, a middle income, sufficient to maintain a comfortable but not luxurious lifestyle, is the first pursuit of the middle class. In the present social situations, a typical middle-class family tends to own a car and a house, together with certain financial products.
The xiaokang (literally moderate prosperity) standard introduced by the government is essentially the Chinese version of the middle class. Sufficient wealth accumulation is the first prerequisite to be xiaokang.
Job status is another essential. In this society, a salary is still the most important income source for most individuals; therefore a stable job is the pursuit.
With the rise of knowledge capital, intellectuals and technicians are taking more pride in gaining a position through their knowledge or technical skills.
Self-identity is also indispensable. Being middle class means having access to a decent and relatively comfortable life and having the will to strive forward. This is beneficial to both the people and society.
During the past 30 years, a middle class has come into being in China. According to Professor Lu Xueyi of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, 23 percent of the population belong to the middle class; five years ago it was 18 percent. He estimates that the number will increase by 1 percent every year. If that growth rate can be maintained the middle class could reach 40 percent of the population by 2020.
However, that will not be achieved without problems. Ever since reform and opening-up in late 1970s, our changes in social structure have lagged 15 years behind economic development; that's the origin of many of our social problems.
The middle class, with a strong sense of social responsibility, should be the backbone of society. The awareness of being a responsible citizen offers strong support for society. However, the middle class in China is still immature in this respect and society needs them to meet their social obligations.
Of course, the rise of the middle class in any society is in dire need of rational support from the government. On their road to industrialization and modernization, many developed countries offered support or subsidy to blue-collar workers, helping them to own and accumulate capital. After World War II, many countries also used the policy "houses for residents", which proved very successful.
Owning a house has long been considered a prerequisite of entering the middle class, and when more and more people find it hard to reach this standard, it is impossible for them to remain silent.
The present tendency of economic growth is unfriendly to many people, especially to the supporting pillar of industry - migrant workers, whose number has reached 200 million. We hope the "inclusive growth" in the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015) will solve these problems.
Three decades ago, Deng Xiaoping said: "Let one part of the people get rich first." Today might we make a similar statement for the 12th Five-Year Plan period - let one third of the Chinese people become middle class first.

Society

Chinese city to buy fire truck with powerful hose
XI'AN - A northwest China city will soon purchase a fire truck with a powerful hose from a Finnish company to extinguish fires in high-rise buildings, an official said Wednesday.
The government of Xi'an, capital of Shaanxi Province, made the decision early this year and expects to sign a contract with the company this week, Jia Xihai, an officer with the city's fire-fighting force said.

Related readings:
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8 detained over massive high-rise fire
Shanghai mourns high-rise fire victims
Thorough investigation on cause of Shanghai fire

Jia revealed the plan to buy the fire truck after a deadly fire engulfed a 28-story residential building in Shanghai on Monday. At least 53 people perished in the tragedy. The fire truck will cost about 25 million yuan ($3.76 million). It is able to shoot water up to a height of 101 meters -- the highest for any fire truck in the world.
It will be put into use in Xi'an in April 2011, Jia said.
Fire truck hoses in Xi'an currently shoot water up to a height of 53 meters.
Experts said China's fire-fighting capacity in many cities is inadequate for fires higher than 60 meters above the ground.
The Xi'an municipal government will spend 450 million yuan on a number of fire-control projects. The projects include the purchase of a German-made surveillance vehicle and the construction of seven fire stations.
The surveillance vehicle will cost about 13 million yuan. It is equipped with an unmanned infrared camera that transmits video from the scene back to headquarters.
The Shanghai blaze, which authorities have blamed on unlicensed welders, has exposed safety loopholes in China's fire-control systems, including the use of flammable materials in scaffolding and inadequate fire-fighting facilities. Police have detained eight people in connection to the fire.
 

china

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1# > A < Posted 2010-11-16 13:40 Show All
Highlights of Airshow China 2010 (video)




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The People's Liberation Army (PLA) Air Force, which is set to fly the newly equipped J-10 fighters, has attracted a great deal of media attention.



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J-10 pilots get ready to perform at the airshow.



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Air crews are about to attend the 2010 Zhuhai Airshow.




The nation's most-advanced warplanes and homemade commercial planes are taking center stage among more than 70 aircraft from 35 countries showcased at China's largest-ever aircraft exhibition, which commences Tuesday.


And the C919 jumbo jet is one of the aircraft getting the most attention.


A full-size prototype of China's first homemade large passenger jet will debut during the Zhuhai air show.


Chinese military planes such as KJ-200, J-10 fighters, H-6 and JH-7 bombers and commercial ARJ21 and C919 jets are among highlights of the 8th China International Aviation & Aerospace Exhibition.


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The Pakistani Air Force's Sherdils aerobatic team rehearses in Zhuhai Monday ahead of Tuesday's start of Airshow China.



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Pakistan's K-8 fighter jet



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Pakistan's Xiao long fighter jet


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Pakistan's C-130 transport aircraft


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China's H-6H bomber



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JH-7A Fighter Bomber


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KJ-200

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China's Zhi-8 helicopter

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China's J-6 fighter - the first generation of supersonic fighter in 1950s


The Air Force of the People's Liberation Army, a new sponsor of the event this year, is exhibiting a majority of its aircraft fleet, including the August 1 Aerobatic Team, newly equipped with J-10 fighters, and the parachute jumping team that was displayed at the 60th National Day Parade last year.


The J-10, with its featured pair of canards and delta wing, is the first supersonic third-generation fighter designed and manufactured using Chinese indigenous technologies.


Aiming to compete with Boeing's 737 and Airbus's A320, which are the plane makers' most popular models, the C919 is scheduled to make its maiden fight in 2014 and be delivered in 2016 after becoming air-certified.


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A model of the China-made C919 passenger airliner


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China's independently-developed regional ARJ21-700 jet


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China's AC313 Helicopter


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China's Xiaoying-500


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China's Xinzhou-600




Hundreds of orders of the C919 - a passenger plane that will carry more than 150 passengers or more than 100 tons of cargo - are expected to be announced, according to Zhang Xinguo, vice president of the Aviation Industry Corp of China.


"The C919 is China's first step toward tapping into the commercial airline market. But the country still has a long way to go to catch up with giants Airbus and Boeing," Liu Jiangyu, an airlines analyst with Xiangcai Securities, told the Global Times.


Julius Yeo, a analyst with Frost & Sullivan aerospace, said Airbus and Boeing's market shares will be diluted by the C919 in the long term, and government-backed financing may boost its sales at home and overseas, according to Bloomberg.


Meanwhile, aerobatic teams from both home and abroad will stage maneuvers at the six-day show, which ends Sunday. The August 1 Aerobatic Team will fly six J-10 fighters in formation in the sky over Zhuhai.


The Pakistan Air Force (PAF) sent three JF-17 fighters and the Sherdils aerobatic team, which consists of 10 Chinese Hongdu K-8 trainers, to perform at the air show.


"The K-8 is very easy to handle; the fuel consumption is low; it is a very good trainer aircraft," Anum, a female flying officer of the PAF, told the Global Times Monday.


Airshow China is considered one of the five largest air shows in the world. The biennial event launched in 1996 and aims to be a gateway for technology exchange and cooperation between China's aerospace enterprises and their overseas counterparts. The 2008 show sealed 16 deals, with trade volume reaching about $4 billion.


Liu with Xiangcai Securities predicted that this year's sales will on par compared with the last show, as China's or-ders are mostly from countries such as Pakistan and Venezuela.


Meanwhile, the Farnborough Airshow, which is one of the world's most famous, closed with orders worth $47 billion in 2010.


A source with China's air force, who asked not to be named, told the Global Times Monday that the Zhuhai Air Show is unlikely to catch up with the world's leading air shows in the short term because of frayed military ties between countries and an arms embargo on China.


"Nothing short of the normalization of military ties can help the Zhuhai air show keep up with other international shows," the source said, adding that China is willing to cooperate with other countries for joint development of advanced technologies.


However, Liu said that Airshow China, albeit young, provides an encouraging platform for China to display its most advanced technology and military weapons, adding that China is able to learn high-tech skills from other countries at the same time.


China's new types of bombs and missiles are also shown at the Airshow China 2010.

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F-6 guided bomb

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FT-1 guided bomb

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FT-3 guided bomb

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B-611M missile


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B-611M missile launcher


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BP-12A missile


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SY400 missile


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SY400 launcher


From Global Times

 

china

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10-million-KW wind power farm
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-11-19 06:35

A wind farm is seen in Dabancheng, Xingjiang Uygur autonomous region in this October 19, 2010 file photo. [Photo/Xinhua]​

URUMQI - China will build a 10.8-million-KW wind power farm in Hami in the far western Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region within five years, a local official said Thursday.

As a matter of comparison, the installed wind power capacity in Hami was only 100,000 KW last year, said Guan Baili, deputy secretary general of the Hami Prefecture Committee of the Communist Party of China.

A 200,000-KW wind power project of China Huadian Corporation has just passed the preliminary review by the local environmental protection bureau. This is just part of a 2-million-KW wind power farm to be built by ten power companies in southeast of Hami.

The potential wind power in Hami is estimated at 75 million KW, accounting for approximately 60 percent of Xinjiang's total.

The wind power boom came as the Chinese government seeks to use more clean energy to reduce over-reliance on electricity generated by polluting coal.

China also plans to build another six 10-million-KW wind power farms by 2020. The seven bases, including Hami, will have a combined capacity of 90 million KW by 2020, accounting for 60 percent of the country's total.

Could use it in Canada - enough wind
.

Life jail for former head of China's nuclear giant

November 19, 2010A Chinese court sentenced Kang Rixin, a former head of Chinese nuclear giant China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC), to life imprisonment Friday for corruption and accepting almost one million U.S. dollars in bribes.
Kang Rixin
Kang, CNNC's former general manager, was also deprived of his political rights for life and had his personal assets confiscated, a statement from the Beijing No.1 intermediary court said.
Kang, 57, was convicted of having abused his power to enable others to profit.
He accepted bribes totaling 6.6 million yuan (970,000 U.S. dollars) between 2004 and 2009.
The sentence was lighter because Kang cooperated with investigators and returned all his ill-gotten gains.
Kang became a member of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee in October 2007.
He was stripped of his post in and membership of the CPC for "serious violations of the law and discipline breaches" in December 2009.
 

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China’s ‘hijacking’ of U.S. data flow stokes fear of cyberespionage

CAROLINE ALPHONSO

From Friday's Globe and Mail

At a time when governments worldwide are on alert for cyber-espionage, a Chinese state-owned telecommunications company hijacked Internet traffic from the United States, according to a new report.
A U.S. congressional advisory group has found that China Telecom managed to reroute traffic from major U.S. government and military websites, as well as a few corporate and foreign sites, through its own servers for 18 minutes on April 8.

The U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, which presented a report to Congress on Wednesday, said it had no evidence of anything malicious behind the interception of traffic, or what, if anything, the company did with the data.
But the incident raises concerns about the Internet’s vulnerabilities and how to prevent such occurrences in the future.
“Evidence related to this incident does not clearly indicate whether it was perpetrated intentionally and, if so, to what ends,” the report stated. “However, computer security researchers have noted that the capability could enable severe malicious activities.”
The Chinese company denied that it had hijacked the Internet activity. “The spokesman of China Telecom Corporation Limited denied any hijack of internet traffic,” it said in a statement to Reuters.
The alleged attack took advantage of the way data are sent via numerous servers. Data are supposed to travel along the most efficient route, but this process can be manipulated.
The report said that China Telecom sent an incorrect message to other servers telling them that the fastest route to their desired destinations was through its servers, and over the next 18 minutes, that’s the route they used. Think of it as traffic reporters for radio stations receiving a note telling them that the quickest way through a city was one particular road and broadcasting it to their listeners. It’s unclear how the incident was discovered, but it could be that an Internet service provider spotted the traffic pattern and reported it.
About 15 per cent of Web traffic was rerouted through China’s servers during that time, the report said. It affected traffic to and from U.S. government websites that included the Senate, the Office of the Secretary of Defence and the Department of Commerce. Commercial websites, including Microsoft and Dell, were also affected.
During that time, China Telecom or other government agencies could have spied on all the data passing through their servers. But the commission was cautious about making that assertion.
“Although the commission has no way to determine what, if anything, Chinese telecommunications firms did to the hijacked data, incidents of this nature could have a number of serious implications,” the report stated. “This level of access could enable surveillance of specific users or sites.”
The commission, set up in 2000, advises Congress on national security implications of the economic relationship between the United States and China.
Hasan Cavusoglu, an associate professor of management information systems at the University of British Columbia, said if proper encryption is used, someone monitoring Internet traffic may not be able to make sense of the information. But, he added: “Obviously, the information can be corrupted or delayed to reach its final destination.”
This is not the first time China has come under scrutiny when it comes to the Internet. Canadian researchers last year uncovered a massive online spy ring – dubbed GhostNet – that infected more than 1,000 computers around the world, many of them in foreign ministries and embassies. The vast majority of attacks appeared to originate from China, the researchers found. It prompted an angry denial from Beijing.
 

china

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Man who shot video of suicide criticized online



11:24, November 19, 2010





A young man aged 20 years jumped off the railing of the Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge at around 8:50 p.m. on Nov. 17.


A young man aged 20 years jumped off the railing of the Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge at around 8:50 p.m. on Nov. 17.


A young man aged 20 years jumped off the railing of the Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge at around 8:50 p.m. on Nov. 17.


A young man aged 20 years jumped off the railing of the Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge at around 8:50 p.m. on Nov. 17.


A young man aged 20 years jumped off the railing of the Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge at around 8:50 p.m. on Nov. 17.


A passing fishing boat saved the man.

Around 8:50 p.m. on Nov. 17, a young man aged 20 years jumped off the railing of the Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge and dove into the Yangtze River. No one heard the sound of the man falling into water from a vertical height of 40 meters and only the splash showed the strong force of the flowing water.

A man standing at a distance and holding a digital video camera recorded the scene. This was not the filming of a movie.

Mr. Zhang, the man who filmed the suicide, happened to pass by the site and encountered the suicidal jumper. After the jumper refused the discouragement from onlookers and jumped into the river, he unexpectedly decided to live. A passing fishing boat saved him, but he succumbed to his injuries because of serious internal hemorrhaging.

Zhang uploaded the video on the Internet afterward. To his surprise, the public not only felt sorry for the young man, but also questioned Mr. Zhang over why he had time to shoot the video rather than to rescue the man.

"It is not that I did not want to save him," Zhang said. "Others had already called the police and a fishing boat happened to pass by. The Yangtze River is very deep and I cannot swim. Even if I could swim, could I have saved him by directly diving into the river?"

Zhang said that the publication of the video on the Internet is aimed at reminding would-be suicide victims that they only live once.
 
Last edited:

china

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More Marco Polos needed to know ChinaBy Zhang Xiaoying (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-11-20 07:48
The West and China both seem to be making huge efforts to understand each other better. British Prime Minister David Cameron's visit to China was the latest in a long series of high-level visits by Western leaders. But will such visits lead to greater mutual understanding? My experience of writing an article in The Guardian last month suggests there are still major obstacles to overcome.
Western people want to learn how to embrace a rising China. They seek inspiration from books such as Martin Jacques' When China Rules the World: The End of the Western World and the Birth of a New Global Order or Stefan Halper's The Beijing Consensus: How China's Authoritarian Model Will Dominate the Twenty-First Century.
On the other hand, Chinese people want to learn how to integrate into a diversified world. An example of their quest was the Fourth World Forum on China Studies held in Shanghai on Nov 6. It was themed "Living Together, Growing Together: China Integrating into a Diverse World" and attracted more than 280 scholars from over 20 countries and regions.
The West's interest in China has certainly increased, and vice versa, but have the two sides reached the same communication wavelength? China has seen the West dominating the exchanges because of its economic success and the English language. It has seen the Western media provide selective information on the huge diversity of life in the country, and feels they have stereotyped, even demonized, it in the eyes of Western people and turned them into China-bashers.
The perception of China's negative image may need to be modified. My view is based on the comments posted in reaction to my op-ed article in The Guardian, which was aimed at developing mutual appreciation of fundamental values between the West and China.
In a discussion after the publication of my article, 78 respondents posted 312 comments, and less than 20 could be taken as positive.
Some were sober-minded and took a broader view of China. One respondent said that "like all civilizations and cultures, it (China) has had its mistakes and tragedies; it has many positives, many successes and achievements to be celebrated and learnt from. Its net contribution to world culture is positive". Another said that "criticizing China's shortcoming is one thing, making China a monster when it is not in the interest of anybody, much less the West".
Some seemed passionate about China, with one of them saying: "China's historical record on the world stage really is remarkably peaceful."
But the loudmouths are still ranting about China's "crimes". For example, one respondent said that China is about "totalitarian system, human rights violations, arbitrary arrest and imprisonment, a coercive dictatorship, a controlled press, violent repression of minorities and protesters and the immense, ubiquitous corruption". The majority of the respondents seemed to have been reminded of almost all the negative news in the Western media about China.
One respondent even suspected that the government had paid me to write the article as part of its propaganda. It is assumed in the West that articles about China should not avoid its problems. If they do, it is likely that the government has paid the writers.
But I am not blaming the respondents, for they are probably victims of the Western media. It is hard for a pre-programmed mind to differentiate between truth and falsity.
The West is only gradually coming to realize the need for an in-depth knowledge of China's ancient civilization. Some respondents even called for more effective communication between the West and China.
One such respondent said: "There is a lot to be said about the traditional Chinese mindset yet, and so far so little of it gets beyond its borders ... We need a fresh discourse along these lines if we are to have a viable future either in the West or elsewhere. "
While many people in the West still believe in containing and bashing China either out of pride or prejudice, an increasing number of Westerners today share their wavelength with China.
We will always remember Marco Polo who returned to the West with an intimate and direct experience of China. And we will remember the contemporary Marco Polos who overcome pride and prejudice in their cultural exchanges. We believe the world is full of problems, but we also believe that they can be overcome.

China increases US treasuries holdings

By Gao Yuan (chinadaily.com.cn)


China secured its largest US creditor position by purchasing US treasury bonds in September -- the third consecutive month that China increased its holdings, China Business News reported Wednesday. China's US treasuries holdings increased $15.1 billion to $883.5 billion in September, the report said.
Purchases from June to September reached $39.9 billion, bringing the country's holdings to the highest level since April, according to a report by Tencent Financial.

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Japan, the second largest holder of US government debt, raised its holdings by $28.4 billion to $865 billion, according to figures released by the US Treasury Department on Nov 16. Analysts believe that foreign governments increased their holdings mainly due to liquidity and capital security concerns.
The US Federal Reserve last week announced that bonds purchased by foreign central banks increased $13.6 billion in one week's time to $260.4 trillion.
The earning rate of the US treasuries was going up after the Fed issued the second-round of "quantitative easing" monetary policies. The yield of 10-year treasury bonds has reached 2.93 percent, the highest rate in the past three months, the newspaper reported.


Official executed for stealing cultural relics
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-11-20 08:15

SHIJIAZHUANG - An official of North China's Hebei province was executed Friday for stealing and selling cultural relics, including many on the state protection list, a local court said.
Li Haitao, chief of the cultural relics protection authorities of the imperial garden in Chengde city of Hebei, was executed after China's Supreme People's Court approved the death penalty on a conviction of embezzlement, the Intermediate People's Court of Chengde said.

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By taking advantage of his post between 1993 and 2002, Li was convicted of stealing 259 cultural relics stored in the depository of the Eight Outer Temples, an imperial compound built on hillsides to the north and east of the three-century old Summer Mountain Resort. Li, 50, replaced the relics with copies, inferior or incomplete objects and instigated subordinates to alter their archives.
Among the stolen items, which include a number of gold gilded Buddha statues, five were listed as state relics under first class protection, 56 were in the second grade and 58 in the third.
Li pocketed more than 3.2 million yuan ($482,240) and $72,000 after selling 152 stolen pieces.
Police have seized 202 relics and are still hunting for the other 57 items.
Li's four accomplices -- Wang Xiaoguang, Yan Feng, Zhang Huazhang and Chen Fengwei -- had been given jail terms of up to seven years with fines for buying and selling the relics.
Li's crimes went unnoticed until a Chinese expert found two royal cultural relics belonging to Beijing's Palace Museum at an auction in Hong Kong in 2002.
The expert reported his discovery to the state cultural heritage authorities, which prompted an investigation that found Chengde was the source of the relics.
Covering an area of 5.6 million square meters, the Summer Mountain Resort was Emperor Kangxi's and Emperor Qianlong's temporary imperial palace of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).
The mountain villa, the largest remaining classical imperial garden architecture in China, and the outlying temples were placed on the World Heritage list in 1994.

More Marco Polos needed to know ChinaBy Zhang Xiaoying (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-11-20 07:48
The West and China both seem to be making huge efforts to understand each other better. British Prime Minister David Cameron's visit to China was the latest in a long series of high-level visits by Western leaders. But will such visits lead to greater mutual understanding? My experience of writing an article in The Guardian last month suggests there are still major obstacles to overcome.
Western people want to learn how to embrace a rising China. They seek inspiration from books such as Martin Jacques' When China Rules the World: The End of the Western World and the Birth of a New Global Order or Stefan Halper's The Beijing Consensus: How China's Authoritarian Model Will Dominate the Twenty-First Century.
On the other hand, Chinese people want to learn how to integrate into a diversified world. An example of their quest was the Fourth World Forum on China Studies held in Shanghai on Nov 6. It was themed "Living Together, Growing Together: China Integrating into a Diverse World" and attracted more than 280 scholars from over 20 countries and regions.
The West's interest in China has certainly increased, and vice versa, but have the two sides reached the same communication wavelength? China has seen the West dominating the exchanges because of its economic success and the English language. It has seen the Western media provide selective information on the huge diversity of life in the country, and feels they have stereotyped, even demonized, it in the eyes of Western people and turned them into China-bashers.
The perception of China's negative image may need to be modified. My view is based on the comments posted in reaction to my op-ed article in The Guardian, which was aimed at developing mutual appreciation of fundamental values between the West and China.
In a discussion after the publication of my article, 78 respondents posted 312 comments, and less than 20 could be taken as positive.
Some were sober-minded and took a broader view of China. One respondent said that "like all civilizations and cultures, it (China) has had its mistakes and tragedies; it has many positives, many successes and achievements to be celebrated and learnt from. Its net contribution to world culture is positive". Another said that "criticizing China's shortcoming is one thing, making China a monster when it is not in the interest of anybody, much less the West".
Some seemed passionate about China, with one of them saying: "China's historical record on the world stage really is remarkably peaceful."
But the loudmouths are still ranting about China's "crimes". For example, one respondent said that China is about "totalitarian system, human rights violations, arbitrary arrest and imprisonment, a coercive dictatorship, a controlled press, violent repression of minorities and protesters and the immense, ubiquitous corruption". The majority of the respondents seemed to have been reminded of almost all the negative news in the Western media about China.
One respondent even suspected that the government had paid me to write the article as part of its propaganda. It is assumed in the West that articles about China should not avoid its problems. If they do, it is likely that the government has paid the writers.
But I am not blaming the respondents, for they are probably victims of the Western media. It is hard for a pre-programmed mind to differentiate between truth and falsity.
The West is only gradually coming to realize the need for an in-depth knowledge of China's ancient civilization. Some respondents even called for more effective communication between the West and China.
One such respondent said: "There is a lot to be said about the traditional Chinese mindset yet, and so far so little of it gets beyond its borders ... We need a fresh discourse along these lines if we are to have a viable future either in the West or elsewhere. "
While many people in the West still believe in containing and bashing China either out of pride or prejudice, an increasing number of Westerners today share their wavelength with China.
We will always remember Marco Polo who returned to the West with an intimate and direct experience of China. And we will remember the contemporary Marco Polos who overcome pride and prejudice in their cultural exchanges. We believe the world is full of problems, but we also believe that they can be overcome.

China increases US treasuries holdings

By Gao Yuan (chinadaily.com.cn)


China secured its largest US creditor position by purchasing US treasury bonds in September -- the third consecutive month that China increased its holdings, China Business News reported Wednesday. China's US treasuries holdings increased $15.1 billion to $883.5 billion in September, the report said.
Purchases from June to September reached $39.9 billion, bringing the country's holdings to the highest level since April, according to a report by Tencent Financial.

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Japan, the second largest holder of US government debt, raised its holdings by $28.4 billion to $865 billion, according to figures released by the US Treasury Department on Nov 16. Analysts believe that foreign governments increased their holdings mainly due to liquidity and capital security concerns.
The US Federal Reserve last week announced that bonds purchased by foreign central banks increased $13.6 billion in one week's time to $260.4 trillion.
The earning rate of the US treasuries was going up after the Fed issued the second-round of "quantitative easing" monetary policies. The yield of 10-year treasury bonds has reached 2.93 percent, the highest rate in the past three months, the newspaper reported.


Official executed for stealing cultural relics
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-11-20 08:15

SHIJIAZHUANG - An official of North China's Hebei province was executed Friday for stealing and selling cultural relics, including many on the state protection list, a local court said.
Li Haitao, chief of the cultural relics protection authorities of the imperial garden in Chengde city of Hebei, was executed after China's Supreme People's Court approved the death penalty on a conviction of embezzlement, the Intermediate People's Court of Chengde said.

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By taking advantage of his post between 1993 and 2002, Li was convicted of stealing 259 cultural relics stored in the depository of the Eight Outer Temples, an imperial compound built on hillsides to the north and east of the three-century old Summer Mountain Resort. Li, 50, replaced the relics with copies, inferior or incomplete objects and instigated subordinates to alter their archives.
Among the stolen items, which include a number of gold gilded Buddha statues, five were listed as state relics under first class protection, 56 were in the second grade and 58 in the third.
Li pocketed more than 3.2 million yuan ($482,240) and $72,000 after selling 152 stolen pieces.
Police have seized 202 relics and are still hunting for the other 57 items.
Li's four accomplices -- Wang Xiaoguang, Yan Feng, Zhang Huazhang and Chen Fengwei -- had been given jail terms of up to seven years with fines for buying and selling the relics.
Li's crimes went unnoticed until a Chinese expert found two royal cultural relics belonging to Beijing's Palace Museum at an auction in Hong Kong in 2002.
The expert reported his discovery to the state cultural heritage authorities, which prompted an investigation that found Chengde was the source of the relics.
Covering an area of 5.6 million square meters, the Summer Mountain Resort was Emperor Kangxi's and Emperor Qianlong's temporary imperial palace of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).
The mountain villa, the largest remaining classical imperial garden architecture in China, and the outlying temples were placed on the World Heritage list in 1994.
Decision just and final-china .
 
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Hunt for Roman legion reaches China
(China Daily)
Updated: 2010-11-20 08:31


Hunt for Roman legion reaches China

Comments(14)
LANZHOU - Anthropologists are looking into the possibility that some European-looking Chinese in Northwest China are the descendants of a lost army from the Roman Empire.
Experts at the newly established Italian Studies Center at Lanzhou University in Gansu province will conduct excavations on a section of the Silk Road, a 7,000-kilometer trade route that linked Asia and Europe more than 2,000 years ago, to see if a legion of Roman soldiers settled in China, said Yuan Honggeng, head of the center.

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"We hope to prove the legend by digging and discovering more evidence of China's early contact with the Roman Empire," said Yuan. Before Marco Polo's travels to China in the 13th century, the only known contact between the two empires was a visit by Roman diplomats in 166 AD.
Chinese archeologists were therefore surprised in the 1990s to find the remains of an ancient fortification in Liqian, a remote town in Yongchang county on the edge of a desert area, that was strikingly similar to Roman defense structures.
They were even more astonished to find Western-looking people with green, deep-set eyes, long hooked noses and blond hair.
Though the villagers said they had never traveled outside the county, they worshipped bulls and their favorite game was similar to the ancient Romans' bull-fighting dance.
DNA tests in 2005 confirmed some of the villagers were indeed of Caucasian origin, leading many experts to conclude they are descendants of an ancient Roman army headed by general Marcus Crassus.
In 53 BC, Crassus was defeated and beheaded by the Parthians, a tribe occupying what is now Iran, putting an end to Rome's eastward expansion.
But a 6,000-strong army led by Crassus' eldest son apparently escaped and was never found again.
Though some anthropologists are convinced the Caucasian-looking villagers in Yongchang county are the descendants of the soldiers, others are not so certain.
"The county is on the Silk Road, so there were many chances for trans-national marriages," said Yang Gongle, a professor at Beijing Normal University. "The 'foreign' origin of the Yongchang villagers, as proven by the DNA tests, does not necessarily mean they are of ancient Roman origin."
Xie Xiaodong, a geneticist from Lanzhou University, also sounded a skeptical note.
"Even if they are descendants of Romans, it doesn't mean they are necessarily from that Roman army," Xie said.
Their mysterious identity has brought wealth and fame to some of the villagers.
Cai Junnian has yellow wavy hair, a hooked nose and green eyes. A DNA test in 2005 confirmed he is of 56 percent European origin. It made him famous almost overnight.
Reporters, filmmakers, historians and geneticists from around the world pursued him. He was invited to meetings with the Italian consul in Shanghai and even appeared in a documentary shot by an Italian TV company last year.
His friends all call him Cai Luoma, which means Cai the Roman.
Cai's fellow villager Luo Ying looks even more European. He has been hired by a Shanghai firm as their "image ambassador".
A Beijing film producer will spend millions to turn the villagers' story into a film.
Lanzhou University's new research body, set up this week by Chinese and Italian anthropologists, is a platform for experts to further research the subject but "the research work will certainly be complicated", said Italian Ambassador to China Riccardo Sessa.
The center will also help Chinese learn Italian language and culture, he said. "More exchanges will certainly be helpful in unraveling the mystery."

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Large Medium Small LANZHOU - Anthropologists are looking into the possibility that some European-looking Chinese in Northwest China are the descendants of a lost army from the Roman Empire.
Experts at the newly established Italian Studies Center at Lanzhou University in Gansu province will conduct excavations on a section of the Silk Road, a 7,000-kilometer trade route that linked Asia and Europe more than 2,000 years ago, to see if a legion of Roman soldiers settled in China, said Yuan Honggeng, head of the center.

Related readings:
Unique exhibition of Roman-era painting in Rome
Search for looted antique oversea falls short
Hefty prices turn heads at antique book auctions

"We hope to prove the legend by digging and discovering more evidence of China's early contact with the Roman Empire," said Yuan. Before Marco Polo's travels to China in the 13th century, the only known contact between the two empires was a visit by Roman diplomats in 166 AD.
Chinese archeologists were therefore surprised in the 1990s to find the remains of an ancient fortification in Liqian, a remote town in Yongchang county on the edge of a desert area, that was strikingly similar to Roman defense structures.
They were even more astonished to find Western-looking people with green, deep-set eyes, long hooked noses and blond hair.
Though the villagers said they had never traveled outside the county, they worshipped bulls and their favorite game was similar to the ancient Romans' bull-fighting dance.
DNA tests in 2005 confirmed some of the villagers were indeed of Caucasian origin, leading many experts to conclude they are descendants of an ancient Roman army headed by general Marcus Crassus.
In 53 BC, Crassus was defeated and beheaded by the Parthians, a tribe occupying what is now Iran, putting an end to Rome's eastward expansion.
But a 6,000-strong army led by Crassus' eldest son apparently escaped and was never found again.
Though some anthropologists are convinced the Caucasian-looking villagers in Yongchang county are the descendants of the soldiers, others are not so certain.
"The county is on the Silk Road, so there were many chances for trans-national marriages," said Yang Gongle, a professor at Beijing Normal University. "The 'foreign' origin of the Yongchang villagers, as proven by the DNA tests, does not necessarily mean they are of ancient Roman origin."
Xie Xiaodong, a geneticist from Lanzhou University, also sounded a skeptical note.
"Even if they are descendants of Romans, it doesn't mean they are necessarily from that Roman army," Xie said.
Their mysterious identity has brought wealth and fame to some of the villagers.
Cai Junnian has yellow wavy hair, a hooked nose and green eyes. A DNA test in 2005 confirmed he is of 56 percent European origin. It made him famous almost overnight.
Reporters, filmmakers, historians and geneticists from around the world pursued him. He was invited to meetings with the Italian consul in Shanghai and even appeared in a documentary shot by an Italian TV company last year.
His friends all call him Cai Luoma, which means Cai the Roman.
Cai's fellow villager Luo Ying looks even more European. He has been hired by a Shanghai firm as their "image ambassador".
A Beijing film producer will spend millions to turn the villagers' story into a film.
Lanzhou University's new research body, set up this week by Chinese and Italian anthropologists, is a platform for experts to further research the subject but "the research work will certainly be complicated", said Italian Ambassador to China Riccardo Sessa.
The center will also help Chinese learn Italian language and culture, he said. "More exchanges will certainly be helpful in unraveling the mystery."
Hunt for Roman legion reaches China

HANZHOU - Anthropologists are looking into the possibility that some European-looking Chinese in Northwest China are the descendants of a lost army from the Roman Empire.
Experts at the newly established Italian Studies Center at Lanzhou University in Gansu province will conduct excavations on a section of the Silk Road, a 7,000-kilometer trade route that linked Asia and Europe more than 2,000 years ago, to see if a legion of Roman soldiers settled in China, said Yuan Honggeng, head of the center.

Related readings:
Unique exhibition of Roman-era painting in Rome
Search for looted antique oversea falls short
Hefty prices turn heads at antique book auctions

"We hope to prove the legend by digging and discovering more evidence of China's early contact with the Roman Empire," said Yuan. Before Marco Polo's travels to China in the 13th century, the only known contact between the two empires was a visit by Roman diplomats in 166 AD.
Chinese archeologists were therefore surprised in the 1990s to find the remains of an ancient fortification in Liqian, a remote town in Yongchang county on the edge of a desert area, that was strikingly similar to Roman defense structures.
They were even more astonished to find Western-looking people with green, deep-set eyes, long hooked noses and blond hair.
Though the villagers said they had never traveled outside the county, they worshipped bulls and their favorite game was similar to the ancient Romans' bull-fighting dance.
DNA tests in 2005 confirmed some of the villagers were indeed of Caucasian origin, leading many experts to conclude they are descendants of an ancient Roman army headed by general Marcus Crassus.
In 53 BC, Crassus was defeated and beheaded by the Parthians, a tribe occupying what is now Iran, putting an end to Rome's eastward expansion.
But a 6,000-strong army led by Crassus' eldest son apparently escaped and was never found again.
Though some anthropologists are convinced the Caucasian-looking villagers in Yongchang county are the descendants of the soldiers, others are not so certain.
"The county is on the Silk Road, so there were many chances for trans-national marriages," said Yang Gongle, a professor at Beijing Normal University. "The 'foreign' origin of the Yongchang villagers, as proven by the DNA tests, does not necessarily mean they are of ancient Roman origin."
Xie Xiaodong, a geneticist from Lanzhou University, also sounded a skeptical note.
"Even if they are descendants of Romans, it doesn't mean they are necessarily from that Roman army," Xie said.
Their mysterious identity has brought wealth and fame to some of the villagers.
Cai Junnian has yellow wavy hair, a hooked nose and green eyes. A DNA test in 2005 confirmed he is of 56 percent European origin. It made him famous almost overnight.
Reporters, filmmakers, historians and geneticists from around the world pursued him. He was invited to meetings with the Italian consul in Shanghai and even appeared in a documentary shot by an Italian TV company last year.
His friends all call him Cai Luoma, which means Cai the Roman.
Cai's fellow villager Luo Ying looks even more European. He has been hired by a Shanghai firm as their "image ambassador".
A Beijing film producer will spend millions to turn the villagers' story into a film.
Lanzhou University's new research body, set up this week by Chinese and Italian anthropologists, is a platform for experts to further research the subject but "the research work will certainly be complicated", said Italian Ambassador to China Riccardo Sessa.
The center will also help Chinese learn Italian language and culture, he said. "More exchanges will certainly be helpful in unraveling the mystery."

Comments(14)
 

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China, Russia quit dollar in trade settlement

08:14, November 24, 2010




Premier Wen Jiabao shakes hands with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin on a visit to St. Petersburg on Tuesday.ALEXEY DRUZHININ / AFP
St. Petersburg, Russia - China and Russia have decided to renounce the US dollar and resort to using their own currencies for bilateral trade, Premier Wen Jiabao and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin announced late on Tuesday.

Chinese experts said the move reflected closer relations between Beijing and Moscow and is not aimed at challenging the dollar, but to protect their domestic economies.

"About trade settlement, we have decided to use our own currencies," Putin said at a joint news conference with Wen in St. Petersburg.

The two countries were accustomed to using other currencies, especially the dollar, for bilateral trade. Since the financial crisis, however, high-ranking officials on both sides began to explore other possibilities.

The yuan has now started trading against the Russian rouble in the Chinese interbank market, while the renminbi will soon be allowed to trade against the rouble in Russia, Putin said.

"That has forged an important step in bilateral trade and it is a result of the consolidated financial systems of world countries," he said.

Putin made his remarks after a meeting with Wen. They also officiated at a signing ceremony for 12 documents, including energy cooperation.

The documents covered cooperation on aviation, railroad construction, customs, protecting intellectual property, culture and a joint communiqu. Details of the documents have yet to be released.

Putin said one of the pacts between the two countries is about the purchase of two nuclear reactors from Russia by China's Tianwan nuclear power plant, the most advanced nuclear power complex in China.

Putin has called for boosting sales of natural resources - Russia's main export - to China, but price has proven to be a sticking point.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin, who holds sway over Russia's energy sector, said following a meeting with Chinese representatives that Moscow and Beijing are unlikely to agree on the price of Russian gas supplies to China before the middle of next year.

Russia is looking for China to pay prices similar to those Russian gas giant Gazprom charges its European customers, but Beijing wants a discount. The two sides were about $100 per 1,000 cubic meters apart, according to Chinese officials last week.

Wen's trip follows Russian President Dmitry Medvedev's three-day visit to China in September, during which he and President Hu Jintao launched a cross-border pipeline linking the world's biggest energy producer with the largest energy consumer.

Wen said at the press conference that the partnership between Beijing and Moscow has "reached an unprecedented level" and pledged the two countries will "never become each other's enemy".

Over the past year, "our strategic cooperative partnership endured strenuous tests and reached an unprecedented level," Wen said, adding the two nations are now more confident and determined to defend their mutual interests.

"China will firmly follow the path of peaceful development and support the renaissance of Russia as a great power," he said.

"The modernization of China will not affect other countries' interests, while a solid and strong Sino-Russian relationship is in line with the fundamental interests of both countries."

Wen said Beijing is willing to boost cooperation with Moscow in Northeast Asia, Central Asia and the Asia-Pacific region, as well as in major international organizations and on mechanisms in pursuit of a "fair and reasonable new order" in international politics and the economy.

Sun Zhuangzhi, a senior researcher in Central Asian studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the new mode of trade settlement between China and Russia follows a global trend after the financial crisis exposed the faults of a dollar-dominated world financial system.

Pang Zhongying, who specializes in international politics at Renmin University of China, said the proposal is not challenging the dollar, but aimed at avoiding the risks the dollar represents.

Wen arrived in the northern Russian city on Monday evening for a regular meeting between Chinese and Russian heads of government.

He left St. Petersburg for Moscow late on Tuesday and is set to meet with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Wednesday.

Companies


Volvo drives ahead in China

By Li Fangfang (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-11-24 11:21



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A Chinese construction worker in a Volvo AB front-end loader digs in preparation for the construction of a highway near Khunjerab, Pakistan. Volvo's investments in China will expand its production and technology centers in the country. [Photo / Bloomberg]

Construction equipment firm hopes to tap into emerging Asian economies

SHANGHAI - Swedish construction equipment provider Volvo Group is planning to invest more than $100 million in the expansion of products for emerging markets, most of it going to China, said the company's chief executive.
"Volvo is committed to supporting our capacity and product offering in China and throughout Asia," said Olof Persson, president and chief executive of Volvo Construction Equipment, on Tuesday.
"We will achieve this by a comprehensive program of investments in our Asian industrial operations, a strengthening of our dealer network, and an expansion of our products that are more closely tailored to the specific needs of customers in this region," said Persson at Bauma China, the biennial Asian construction equipment exhibition held in Shanghai.
The company will set up a $30 million Volvo Technology Center in Jinan, Shandong province, and invest $50 million into expanding its joint venture production facilities in Linyi, Shandong province, by the end of 2012.
The spending comes on top of the $30 million in investment made in the Volvo excavator facility in Shanghai since 2003.
"Our business in Asia has doubled this year alone, with China as the pillar contributor," said Persson.
The company's excavator business has increased by 135 percent this year.

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"We must recognize the needs of emerging markets led by China, which requires premium global products offering increased performance and productivity. There is a large proportion of customers who require reliable competitive equipment," he said. The Chinese government announced an investment of 4 trillion yuan ($602 billion) to stimulate the domestic economy in late 2008, with 83 percent of the package going to infrastructure construction.
Booming demand led to a boost in the production of construction equipment in China to more than 234,000 units in 2010, accounting for more than half of the world's total.
Statistics show that public infrastructure spending in China will grow by nearly 160 percent in the next five years, from the current 2.6 trillion yuan a year to 6.7 trillion yuan in 2015.
Persson told China Daily that Volvo Group will continue to support the local premium customer segment with its established Volvo brand.
The company's Shandong Lingong brand, a joint venture in which Volvo holds a 70 percent stake, will serve the larger mass market.
"Volvo is well positioned in China to capitalize on the huge market opportunity and growth potential," said Persson.
"Our dual brand approach offers a unique advantage to meet the needs of a much wider customer base. We will support this approach with products dedicated to this market, using local Chinese knowledge and leveraging an expanded Asian manufacturing footprint," he said.
 

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China will continue to go green
By Chen Weihua (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-11-23 08:06

Just a week before the global climate summit begins in Cancun, Mexico, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and chief climate envoy Huang Huikang have reiterated the country's determination to go green and work toward a new global climate deal.
They have not been deterred by the recent probe initiated by the Office of the US Trade Representative (USTR) into China's clean technology policies, initiated after the United Steelworkers union complained about Chinese government subsidies to the country's clean energy firms.
China has been very active in developing clean energy. Its clean energy investments totaled $34 billion in 2009, dwarfing the $18.6 billion by US companies, according to the Pew Environment Group Climate and Energy Program in Washington.
China has set the ambitious target of producing 20 percent of its electricity from renewable energy resources by 2020. As a result, China's wind and solar power production capacity has grown by leaps and bounds in just a few years.
China's progress is reflected in this year's Ernst & Young Renewable Energy Country Attractiveness Indices, in which China claimed first place. Last year, China tied with the US. Before that, the US always came top.
As the world's largest developing country and one of the biggest carbon emitters - although its per capita emissions are still relatively low - China has an obligation to lead the global fight against climate change. It is a battle in China's interest. Instead of waiting for the developed world to find solutions, China has adopted many proactive measures.
So, why all the fuss and probe? Is it better for China to do nothing and wait for the industrialized world to provide subsidies for it to go green? That seems even less feasible now, given that many of these countries are in serious debt.
China is not the only country whose government subsidizes the clean energy industry. Many governments have been doing so, in a bid to help their economies switch to a low carbon path.
For instance, in the US, a year ago President Barack Obama pledged tens of billions of dollars in taxpayers' money to fund the development of clean technology.
By actively developing clean technology, China may have saved industrialized nations billions of dollars in subsidies to the largest developing country.
The USTR's probe is only going to make people question how genuine the US government is in helping China go green. Shall we let the complaints of a few US companies prevent China from developing clean technologies?
Much of the complaints, as it turns out, are due to these companies' lack of competitiveness compared with their rivals in the European Union, Japan and Australia.
For years the US' will to go green has been seriously compromised by domestic politics. The US Senate has not yet approved the clean energy bill. Given the poor economic situation and the lame duck Congress after the midterm elections, there seems to be little hope that the bill will be passed any time soon.
While China and the US have been making good progress in pushing forward bilateral cooperation in clean technology research and development, it is US domestic politics that have undermined the US' efforts to go green.
Obama must feel embarrassed when he considers playing a leadership role at the upcoming Cancun conference on climate changes.
Please do not let this epidemic spread its impact to China.
The author is deputy editor of China Daily US Edition. He can be reached at chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn.
 

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Chinese passports enter electronic era

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-11-26 16:36


SHANGHAI - Printing of China's first electronic passports began Friday in Shanghai with the production of official passports containing microchipped information.
The adoption of electronic official passports complied with international trends and played an important role in international travel for officials, said Huang Ping, director-general of the Department of Consular Affairs of China's Foreign Ministry, at a launch ceremony.
The ministry issues official passports, including service passports and passports for government officials traveling on state business and those working in state-owned enterprises.
The electronic passport features an electronic data storage chip that contains personal data including given name, family name, personal numeric code, the document's term of validity, the issuing body, and citizenship.
An electronic passport looks almost the same as a non-electronic one, but it has new digital encryption and printing technologies and is designed to foil forgers.
Shanghai Banknote Printing Co, Ltd. and Shanghai Mite Speciality & Precision Printing Co, Ltd. won the contract to print the electronic official passports.
The two companies will also print electronic private passports in the future, but the ministry gave no specific timetable.

10% of death sentences overturned in China: official



18:05, November 26, 2010


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China's top court has overturned 10 percent of all death sentences nationwide since 2007 when it took back the right of final review from lower courts, a senior court official said.

Hu Yunteng, head of the research department under the Supreme People's Court (SPC), said regaining the review "played an obvious role" in reducing the number of executions, according to Friday's China Daily.

"It has ensured that the death penalty can only be applied for the most serious crimes," Hu was quoted as saying but declined to specify the number of death sentences carried out each year.

In 1981, the SPC granted provincial courts the authority to pass death sentences in an effort to tackle rising crimes, which was ended on Jan. 1, 2007 when the SPC took back the power to review and ratify death sentences after the practice was widely criticized following reports of miscarriages of justice.

Hu said death sentences were overturned mostly for lack of evidence, procedural flaws or for an inappropriate penalty.

"We must make sure the use of the death sentence is accurate and free of mistakes to respect and protect the convicts and their rights."

Earlier, Zhang Jun, SPC vice-president, told judicial departments to only impose a death penalty for the most heinous crimes.

The SPC also increased its criminal tribunals from two to five to better examine all death sentences passed, Hu said.

The SPC also ordered that all cases that carried a possible death penalty must be heard at a court session, with the defendant or defendants in attendance.


【1】 【2】
 

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Court upholds death sentence to coal mine bosses
Xinhua)Updated: 2010-12-01 22:41



HENGZHOU - A Chinese court Wednesday upheld the death sentences with two year reprieves given to two mine bosses found responsible for a gas explosion that killed 76 people at a central China coal mine last year.
The sentences were the first time mine bosses in China held responsible for a fatal accident were given the death penalty.

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The provincial high court in Henan Province rejected the appeals of Li Xinjun, former head of the No 4 coal mine in the Xinhua District of Pingdingshan City, and Han Erjun, former deputy head of the mine. The court also rejected appeals filed by three other managers of the mine who were sentenced to 13 years, 15 years and life imprisonment respectively.
The Intermediate Court of Pingdingshan City sentenced the five mine bosses on November 16 for neglecting safety procedures and forcing miners to work underground despite knowing the mine lacked adequate safety measures.
The blast ripped through the No 4 mine in Pingdingshan City on September 8, 2009, as 93 miners worked underground, killing 76 and injuring 15 others.
The mine was under technological renovation at the time of the blast and did not have a safe production license, the court has found.
China's coal mines are notorious for deadly accidents. More than 2,600 miners were killed in mine accidents in China last year, a number significantly less than in previous years
 

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Gold, jewelery popular in China

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-12-04 15:23

SHANGHAI -- Gold jewelry is never just a bond of affection to the Chinese, it is also endowed with the hope of maintaining and increasing the value of assets as a surging investment demand seen around the country.
In the previous 10 months, China's gold, silver and jewelry consumption increased by 35.6 percent year-on-year, the highest rate of increase in all sectors of commodities, said Huang Hai, head of the circulation policy consulting committee of the Ministry of Commerce of the People's Republic of China.
The consumption of gold, silver and jewelry as high-end commodities is a symbolic standard of a country with high consumption ability.
"The speed and quality of China's economic development, as well as people's income standard, all push forward the continuous growth of high-end commodities as a strong trend," Huang said at the 2010 China's Jewelry Forum in Shanghai.
In China, gold and jewelry are traditional gifts in the wedding ceremony as promising a long and happy future together as brides will receive them as part of the rituals.
In fact, even most Chinese women, especially in the cities, own more than one significant piece of gold and other jewelry. Wearing jewelry makes them feel wonderful, many say.
"It is a kind of affection deep in the Chinese mind, that a lady should have at least one loving piece of gold jewelry, no matter she wears them often or not," said Yang Yue, a 29-year old newly married bride working in Beijing.
However, to Yang and other Chinese, gold is no longer just jewelry with best wishes, but a hopeful anti-inflation tool.
China's economy grew 9.6 percent year on year in the third quarter this year, slowing from its 10.3-percent increase in the second quarter of 2010 and 11.9 percent in the first quarter.
The People's Bank of China, the central bank, hiked the benchmark interest rates in October and raised the reserve requirement ratio for banks twice in a month, indicating the government's concern about rising inflation.
Statistics from the World Gold Council (WGC) said that gold investments in China reached 120 tons in the first three quarters of 2010.
Two-thirds of Chinese women regard gold jewelry to be as much an investment as a statement of personal style. Consumers are keenly aware of the value of their gold.
WGC predicted that China's demand for investment in gold was expected to reach 150 tons in 2010.
Demand for investment in gold in China was likely to accelerate as Chinese buyers regard gold as an effective tool for maintaining and increasing the value of assets, said Albert Cheng, managing director for the Far East office of the WGC, during China's Fifth Summit on Gold and Precious Metal.

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In 2009, gold consumption in China reached 462 tons in all sectors. And China's demand for gold increased an average of 13 percent annually over the past five years, making China the world's second largest consumer market for gold after India. "In spite of severe recession of high-end commodities in global terms, China saw a boom in consumption in the sector. Except for traditional gold and silver, diamond investment demand is emerging in China," said Sun Fengmin, deputy director with Gem & Jewelry Trade Association of China.
Even since 2009, some Chinese had placed large diamonds with high quality on their investment lists. "And it is now a continuous trend of diamond investment," said Sun.
The surging demand for diamonds also put China into the second position in the market after the United States. Diamonds are not only a symbol of love but a new tool to maintain and increase the value of assets.
As the strong demand increases from China, India and other new-economies, Rio Tinto has decided to change its drawing-back strategy to increase the annual diamond output to 30 million carats, said Jean-Marc Lieberherr, general manager for sales and marketing of diamonds for mining giant Rio Tinto.
Rio Tinto predicted that, till 2020, China's diamond jewelry consumption would take 26 percent of the global market, which was only 5 percent in 2007.
Luxury jewelry brands such as Cartier, Tiffany and many others are commonly seen in shopping malls in Beijing, Shanghai or even the second-tier cities.
"It is never a luxury dream out of reach, the middle class in China are able to afford diamond jewelry. It is glittering on my finger now, and might looks brighter in the future as an investment," said Y
 

china

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China's high-speed train CRH380A put into service


10:51, December 04, 2010




Passengers are seen on a train of CRH380A of China Railway High-Speed (CRH) at the Guangzhou south railway station in Guangzhou, capital of south China's Guangzhou Province, Dec. 3, 2010. China's high-speed train CRH380A, which has a maximum speed of 380 km/h during regular operations, and can keep a constant speed of 350 km/h, was put into service on the Wuhan-Guangzhou high-speed rail line on Friday. (Xinhua/Chen Yehua)


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china

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I think a fast train would be something that the Canadian gov . should look into implementing such form of transportation in Canada .So what that the airplane flies a little faster if it takes 1 hr . or more to go to the airport ,,? the Chinese trains are getting faster every year.
In 2003 it took me 4 hours to cover the distance between Jinan and Qingdao; this year the same trip
lasted jut about two hours (perhaps because I was going to get my divorce in Jinan)).
Any how the trains are fast and efficient ,in some cases better than the airplane .