Thursday, April 30, 2009

China focus: Chinese city gets back on its bike

By Xinhua writers Sun Jinxia and Wu Qi


HANGZHOU, May 1 (Xinhua) - In China's bustling metropolises, rush hours are nightmares for office workers each morning and evening. East China's Hangzhou, known for its charming scenic spot West Lake, is no exception.

Every day, about 460,000 motor vehicles, including 360,000 private cars, are running in an endless stream along downtown streets of Hangzhou, the capital city of Zhejiang Province. About 50,000 vehicles are poured in to add up urban freight flows each year. Car drivers have doubled the average driving time from residential quarters in the western part of the city to downtown offices, from about 15 minutes two years ago to the present 30 minutes. During rush hours, it will take about 10 minutes to crawl over the 100-meter-long bridge approach to access the city's overpass lanes leading to downtown areas.

Li Meng, a section manager of a foreign-funded company in downtown Hangzhou, could no longer tolerate the jams, and bid adieu to her favorite red roadster early this year, after stinging criticism from her boss for being late.

At 7.30 one morning in January, Li drove her roadster away from her home in the Cuiyuan Residential Quarter in western Hangzhou and joined the stream of cars heading downtown. In half an hour, Li finally hit the Zhonghe Overpass Road that ran from the north to the south of Hangzhou. To her bewilderment, the vehicle flow remained locked solid for 10 minutes. She looked at her watch, and there was only 15 minutes left for her to chair a meeting in the office. Fidgeting about in her car, Li was vexed at not being able to leave her car and run to the office.

Feeling wronged by the stricture of her boss for the late, Li, in her 30s, tried another way of getting to work - a bicycle. She had a shot at it at the beginning, but later found she started to love bicycling.

Months of riding a bicycle, for half an hour amid fresh air across lanes and along the lake, Li found herself refreshed in the office.

"Going ahead at a full gallop on my bicycle while observing so many cars jammed on the Western Ring Road and Stadium Road, I am so excited and very often would simply want to whistle," said Li.



To make Li even happier, she did not buy the bicycle herself. The bicycle, orange red and fine looking, comes from a public bicycle service company funded by the local government. Li could use it for free as her use of the bicycle was far shorter than the one-hour preferential time limit.

On May 1, 2008, the Hangzhou Municipal Government began the public bicycle service program, with 2,800 bicycles at 61 service outlets across downtown areas. Since then, new bicycles and outlets have grown in number.

Li could easily find a bicycle at a public bicycle service outlet at her residential quarter. She takes a bicycle by brushing her Hangzhou citizen card at a Point of Sells (POS) machine at the outlet. She returns the bicycle at another outlet near her office.

China used to be a kingdom of bicycles. Today it sees far fewer bicycles in metropolises, as affluent Chinese city dwellers have become fond of buying and driving cars to offices. With a 1.3 billion population, China had about 650 million bicycles, including 80 million electric-driven bicycles, while it had 65 million motor vehicles at the end of 2008, according to China Bicycle Association.

In addition to convenience, cars are taken by many as a symbol of wealth. In some cities, bicycle lanes are simply abolished in many quarters, leaving rooms for cars.

But over the past year, public bicycles have become the most convenient traffic tools for many Hangzhou residents like Li. Public bicycles are also loved by tourists for short-distance trips.


THE SCHEME

As the first of its kind in the country, the public bicycle leasing service program was introduced to Hangzhou a year ago to make bicycles a component of the city's public traffic mix. As a means to solve the "final-kilometer puzzle" (you get on or off public transport close to your destination but have not yet completed the journey), public bicycles help realize a "seamless connection of bicycle-based slow-speed traffic with metro and bus-based public traffic facilities", said Huang Zhiyao, general manager of Hangzhou Public Transport Corporation (HPTC).

"As well, bicycles will aid green transport and reduce environment pollution in our city," said Huang.

Under the scheme, residents, from 16 to 70 years old, may hire and return public bicycles with their Hangzhou public transport IC cards or Hangzhou citizen cards at all service outlets.

Tourists from other areas may apply for service cards at service outlets with their identity cards and 300 yuan (44 U.S. dollars) deposit.

Under the provisions, public bicycles are used for free in the first hour, a period long enough to ride a bicycle around the West Lake. Users are charged one yuan from the second hour to the third hour, two yuan from the third hour to the fourth hour, and three yuan from the fourth hour to the 24th hour.

Tourists from other areas are the first group of people to benefit from the scheme, as bicycles offer them an exciting and convenient means to tour the West Lake and other areas.

"I have traveled to Hangzhou with my family several times before. It was really a headache to find a seat in parking lots in scenic areas. But renting a bicycle has no such problems. We can go wherever we want," said Liu Zhuo, a traveler from Shanghai.

Cao Jing, a woman in her 20s from Beijing, who has been to Paris and Prague, said "I love Hangzhou, it felt like meeting an old friend on my first visit here. The city has the quietness and elegance of European cities. Riding a bicycle along willow-lined lakes enables me to enjoy the charms of the city.

"The West Lake area has wonderful roads. It reserves a lane for bicycles. It sets barrier-free channels in every place, *** it a pleasant experience to tour the lake with a bicycle."

Chinese consumers voice mixed feelings toward pork as swine flu spreads

By Xinhua writers Li Jianmin and Gui Tao

BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- To eat pork or not to eat pork, that's the question for many Chinese consumers as swine flu, or the H1N1 influenza epidemic, spreads globally.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has raised its level of pandemic alert from phase 4 to 5, indicating that a pandemic is "imminent." The virus is suspected of killing more than 150 people in North America.

Although the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) and the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), as well as Chinese health officials, have said there is no proof the flu virus is found in pigs or can be contracted through eating pig meat or other pork products, the disease has nevertheless cast shadows over China's pork market.


MIXED FEELINGS

In central Henan Province, one of the country's leading swine exporters, vendors have felt the chill.

"Normally, I sell about 130 kg pork everyday at this time of year," said Feng Jianwei, in Zhengzhou, capital of Henan. "But business has slumped."

Feng's daily sales average 100 kg pork. "I believe it was affected by the swine flu," he said.

The H1N1 influenza epidemic also threatens the economy of the southwestern Sichuan Province, which is recovering from the devastating earthquake in May last year.

When survivor Wang Jiawen borrowed money from his neighbors to buy two piglets to raise in May, the farmer never expected flu could dash his hopes of a new beginning.

"Now I just hope that I can break even," Wang said.

"The pork price has fallen amid the global financial crisis and pig raisers in Sichuan cannot afford another hit," said Lan Jianming, vice head of the Sichuan Provincial Animal Husbandry and Food Administration.

"With the possible further development of the H1N1 influenza epidemic, the fortunes of Sichuan's pig industry may worsen," he said.

A similar situation could be seen in the market of Nanchang, capital of the eastern Jiangxi Province.

Pork prices have dropped by about 10 percent at the city's Bayiqiao market, but that still failed to lure cautious consumers, vendor Deng Shen said.

However, fish and chicken are gaining popularity at the market.

"I won't consider buying pork in the near future, though no swine flu cases have been reported in our country," shopper Wu Qinghua told Xinhua.

"After all, it won't affect my health even if I don't eat pork. I can choose chicken or fish," he said.

But not all consumers are pessimistic.

At the Yongchang market in Changchun, capital of northeastern Jilin Province, residents were seen thronging the pork stands Thursday afternoon.

"It sells very well today, better than normal," vendor Jiang Lihui told Xinhua. "I think it's because the May Day holiday is coming and people need more pork for celebrations."

Shopper Guan Shaoshan said he had no special feeling about swine flu.

"Of course I will cook the pork before eating it in case of infection. On the other hand, I know the government is taking preventive measures," he said.

Nationwide, the swine flu outbreak has not affected pork markets significantly, according to a Xinhua-operated monitoring system on prices of the country's farm and sideline products.

The supply and sale of pork were normal, and pork prices showed no big fluctuations despite a slight fall Thursday.

The sales volume in some provinces dropped to different extents, but the upcoming May Day holiday again spurred pork sales, the monitoring system shows.

In Guangzhou, capital of southern Guangdong Province, most consumers interviewed by Xinhua expressed optimism and confidence.

"Pork is a daily necessity for my family. We won't eat less pork just because of the swine flu outbreak in other countries," resident Guan Jian said.

"But for the sake of safety, I only go to supermarkets to buy pork now instead of crowded outdoor markets," he said.


GOV'T MOVE

Although China has no reported human-infected H1N1 cases, Health Minister Chen Zhu told reporters Thursday that the possibility of the virus entering the country could not be ruled out.

He said China had developed an effective method for the instant diagnosis of possible H1N1 infection, and the new detection method would be available at disease control and prevention offices across the country.

The Health Ministry has issued and distributed a guideline for diagnosis for H1N1 and its variants to health departments nationwide, mandating local authorities to train medical personnel as soon as possible.

It has also published a self-protection manual on its website for the public, who are expected to participate in group activities in the upcoming May Day holiday.

The manual, in Chinese, details the basic preparations people must take before joining tours and urges them to maintain good personal hygiene.

The State Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine also asked all local health authorities to involve traditional Chinese medicine experts in the health emergency responding teams in order to take full advantage of traditional remedies.

Customs posts across the country have been told to conduct strict checks of imported pigs and pork products, especially those from countries and regions affected by swine flu, the General Administration of Customs (GAC) announced Thursday.

Products without valid quality certification will be banned from coming into China. At the same time, the GAC urged customs at all levels to crack down on the smuggling of pork products.

Meanwhile, the State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC) has ordered greater market supervision of domestic pork markets.

Also Thursday, the Ministry of Agriculture issued an emergency response act against the swine flu, urging local veterinary administrations across the country to report within two hours any finding of flu symptoms among pig herds.

Jackie Chan, Yao Ming appointed ambassadors for 2010 Shanghai World Expo








Hong Kong film star Jackie
Chanwas appointed promotion ambassadors for the 2010 Shanghai World
Expo, April 30, 2009.(Photo: expo2010.cn)
Photo Gallery


SHANGHAI, April 30 (Xinhua) -- Hong Kong film star
Jackie Chan and NBA star Yao Ming were appointed promotion ambassadors for the
2010 Shanghai World Expo on Thursday.

"I will spare no efforts to pay close attention to
the Expo and help promote it throughout the world," said Jackie Chan at a
performance for residents relocated from the Expo site.

"Like every Chinese citizen, I am looking forward to
the event," he said.

Yao Ming was quoted by the website as saying that as
a native of Shanghai, he has always hoped that he could contribute to the event.

"I want to tell everyone: welcome to my hometown,
Shanghai, and welcome to the 2010 Shanghai World Expo," he said.

Also appointed was Chinese pianist Lang Lang.

The Expo ambassadors already include Japanese table
tennis star Ai Fukuhara, Japanese image designer Junko Koshino and British
singer Sarah Brightman.

The Expo is expected to attracted 70 million
visitors, 5 percent of them from abroad.

National book trading expo opens

BEIJING,April 30-- The eastern
coastal city of Qingdao is hosting an auxiliary event to the 19th National Book
Trading Expo in Jinan. Available at the book carnival are some 160 thousand
titles from more than four hundred domestic publishers.


The Book Expo's Qingdao branch is the largest ever
show of its kind in the port city. The development of China's publishing
industry is presented through print publications, animation and video games,
copyrights, and periodicals.

On display are results of heavyweight projects like
"The Complete Canon of Chinese Literature" and "Commentaries on Chinese
Thinkers." Also available are more accessible and affordable titles. Even better
are the discounts.

Book buyer Zhong Wei said, "I haven't added them up
yet. These books cost about three thousand yuan. I believe. All of them are at
discounted prices, mostly thirty to fifty percent. I never had such bargains at
bookstores. I love classical literature, so I bought all these books."

Many of the books deal with social sciences,
literature and arts, and the 60-year history of the People's Republic of China.

Most evident is the increasing integration of
traditional publishing operation with the new media.

Industry insiders say Internet literature is emerging
as a staple of contemporary fictional readings in China. Publishers are turning
their eyes to popular novels and stories carried on the Internet, which has
proved a bonanza for future bestsellers.

Government figure show China's publishing sector has
seen an impressive growth rate of more than 20-percent over last year. Efforts
are underway to build a number of multimedia publishing conglomerates by 2015.

(Source: CCTV.com)

Shanghai marks "Butterfly Lovers" 50th anniversary

BEIJING,April 29-- Shanghai's International Music Festival has opened with the violin concerto of the Chinese classic "Butterfly Lovers." The story is often compared to Romeo and Juliet.

The Shanghai Symphony Orchestra performed the piece, which turns 50 this year.

Japanese violinist Akiko Suwanai performs the traditional Chinese masterpiece.

The masterpiece was composed by He Zhanhao and Chen Gang in 1959.

(Source: CCTV.com)

Chinese vice premier calls for fire prevention measures

BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Hui Liangyu has urged
local authorities to keep alert to any fire outbreak and step up efforts to
prevent fire.

Hui made the request Tuesday in response to forest fires in the
northeastern Heilongjiang Province and the southwestern Sichuan Province.

Hui said high temperatures and dry weather in some regions made forests
more vulnerable to fire risks.

In the 24 hours till 8 a.m. Wednesday, four forest fires were reported,
according to the fire prevention office under the State Forestry Administration.
As of 9 p.m. Wednesday, three were still burning. One was in Heilongjiang and
the other two in Sichuan. No other information was provided.

Hui also called for efforts to eliminate possible risks over the May Day
holiday.

Mainland offers to aid Kuomintang in celebrating Sun Yat-sen's anniversary in Nanjing


BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese mainland
would assist Taiwan's Kuomintang (KMT) if they are to celebrate the 80th
anniversary of Dr. Sun Yat-sen's funeral at his mausoleum in Nanjing on June 1,
said the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council.

Li Weiyi, spokesman for the office,
said Wednesday, "Dr. Sun Yat-sen is a great vanguard of the democratic
revolution and a great patriot."

Dr. Sun Yat-sen founded the Kuomintang in 1919. He
died in 1925 at the age of 59. He was dubbed "father" of the nation and held the
first presidency of the Republic of China earlier last century.

On June 1, 1929, his coffin was transferred to a
mausoleum in Nanjing, capital of east China's Jiangsu Province, which was built
for him and named after him.

Chinese mainland "optimistic" about Taiwan attending WHA

BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Chinese mainland is "optimistic" about Taiwan attending the World Health Assembly (WHA), said the State Council Taiwan Affairs Office spokesman Li Weiyi here Wednesday at a regular press conference.

Slush funds target of huge crackdown

BEIJING,April29-- The Ministry of Finance has launched a massive seven-month crackdown aimed at drying up slush funds that illegally use billions of yuan each year of government money.

The slush funds, which are known as "small treasuries", are understood to be widespread within the State sector.

The practice was described as "the root of collective corruption" by Liu Xirong, vice-chairman of the National People's Congress Law Committee, who called for it to be listed as a crime under China's criminal law.

The crackdown will encompass all party organs and public institutions - especially those that are state-funded.

Informants who help investigators may be eligible to receive up to 100,000 yuan (14,645 U.S. dollars), according to a notice released by the ministry on its website (www.mof.gov.cn) yesterday.

The slush funds are essentially secret accounts set up by Party organs and public institutions to collect extra revenue from collective moonlighting activities. The accounts are used to pay additional funds to managers and workers.

"After the economic reform, workers and staff became increasingly dependent upon extra income distributed openly or secretly by their work units," said a recent joint study by researchers Xie Yu and Wu Xiaogang.

These earnings "accounted for about one-third to 40 percent of workers' total income in the 1980s, and overtook normal salaries in the mid-1990s," said the scholars.

Auditors found 13 billion yuan (1.9 billion U.S. dollars) of illegal "small treasuries" in the first half of 2006, according to earlier reports. An additional 140.6 billion yuan (20.6 billion U.S. dollars) was identified between 1998 and 2006.

The National Audit Office believes central government departments misused or mismanaged more than 46 billion yuan (6.73 billion U.S. dollars) in 2007.

The Communist Party of China's (CPC) discipline watchdog last week said some 881,000 Party officials involved in 852,000 cases were punished for misconduct in the past five years.

President Hu Jintao in January urged the anti-corruption body to "firmly correct official wrongdoing". The crackdown is a joint effort of the CPC Central Committee for Discipline Inspection, the Ministry of Supervision, the Ministry of Finance and the National Audit Office and is headed by Finance Minister Xie Xuren.

(Source: China Daily)

Taiwan chief negotiator Chiang Pin-kung meets Shanghai mayor Han Zheng

SHANGHAI, April 28 (Xinhua) -- Chiang Pin-kung, chairman of the Taiwan-based Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF), arrived in Shanghai Tuesday afternoon after a four-day visit in eastern China's Jiangsu Province, and met here with Shanghai mayor Han Zheng.

During the meeting, Han Zheng said the three agreements on opening regular flights, boosting financial and judiciary cooperation signed between Chiang and mainland's chief negotiator Chen Yunlin, and the consensus on allowing mainland companies to invest in Taiwan, were a major push to the development of cross-Strait ties.

According to Han, Shanghai enjoyed close exchanges with the global economies, and was actively taking measures to recover from the global financial crisis.

Though still facing many obstacles, the city's economic operation in the first quarter this year was better than previously expected, especially in the service industry, Han said.

There was much room for cooperation between Shanghai and Taiwan, Han said, adding that the Taiwan compatriots were welcome to the 2010 Shanghai Expo.

Chiang Pin-kung expressed his gratitude for the support of Shanghai municipal government toward Taiwan business people in the city.

He hoped that an air route between the Taipei Songshan Airport and the Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport could be opened in2010 to further promote exchange and cooperation between the two sides.

Chiang Pin-kung also met with representatives of Taiwan business people in Shanghai after his meeting with Han Zheng.

The SEF delegation led by Chiang will return to Taiwan on Wednesday afternoon.

FM press conference on April 30






China again urges concerned parties to maintain six-party
talks


BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- China on Thursday once
again urged all six parties of the Korean peninsula nuclear talks to safeguard
the negotiating mechanism.


"We hope all the parties to proceed from the overall
situation, properly resolve relevant issues and make concerted effort to
maintain the six-party talks," Foreign Ministry spokeswomen Jiang Yu told a
regular press conference. Full story







Chinese Vice Premier to attend Sino-EU dialogue, visit
Britain


BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Wang
Qishan will attend the second Sino-European Union (EU) high-level trade and
economic dialogue in Brussels on May 7 and 8 and pay an official visit to
Britain from May 8 to 12. Full story







China says visa restrictions groundless


BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- China denied Thursday visa restrictions on foreigners as part of the security campaign for the 60th founding anniversary of the People's Republic. Full story

Press conference on prevention of possible H1N1 influenza epidemic

Special Report:
World Tackles Swine
Flu








Photo taken on April 30, 2009 shows the
scene of a press conference held by the State Council Information Office
of China in Beijing, China. The State Council on Tuesday announced the
establishment of a "direct reporting system" of swine flu and pledged that
the government would "report to the public the latest news on swine flu
promptly." (Xinhua/Chen Shugen)
Photo
Gallery







President Hu convenes top-level meeting
on possible H1N1 influenza epidemic


BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu Jintao
Thursday morning presided over a top-level meeting discussing how to deal with
any possible H1N1 influenza epidemic, Health Minister Chen Zhu said at a news
briefing.


Hu, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China
Central Committee, called together other members of the Standing Committee of
the CPC Central Committee Political Bureau to discuss the specific issue, which
was triggered by the spread of a new strain of H1N1 virus in North America and
other regions. Full story







China "confident" of preventing H1N1
influenza epidemic spread: Health
Minister


BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Health Minister Chen
Zhu said on Thursday that the country is "confident" and "capable" of preventing
and containing the H1N1 influenza epidemic, which is believed to have claimed
160 lives globally.


"After the test of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
(SARS) and based on the effective working experience to combat bird flu in the
past few years, we are confident and capable of preventing and containing H1N1
influenza epidemic." he told a press conference. Full story






China develops instant diagnostic method
for possible H1N1 virus


BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- China has developed an
effective method for the instant diagnosis of possible H1N1 influenza epidemic
(swine flu), said Health Minister Chen Zhu at a news conference Thursday
afternoon.

The new detection method will be installed at the
country's center for disease control and prevention offices at all levels, Chen
said. Full story







China conducts health checks on flights
from Mexico, U.S. against swine flu


BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- China has launched health
checks on flights from Mexico and the United States, the country's top quality
supervisor said at a conference on prevention of swine flu here Thursday.


Medical workers must collect information about the health
of passengers on planes arriving from Mexico and the United States, said the
General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine
(GAQSIQ). Full story

China again urges concerned parties to maintain six-party talks

BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- China on Thursday once again urged all six
parties of the Korean peninsula nuclear talks to safeguard the negotiating
mechanism.

"We hope all the parties to proceed from the overall situation, properly
resolve relevant issues and make concerted effort to maintain the six-party
talks," Foreign Ministry spokeswomen Jiang Yu told a regular press conference.

She reaffirmed that China would continue to play a constructive role in
realizing the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula and ensuring peace and
stability of northeast Asia.

The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) said on Wednesday that it
might conduct nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missile tests in
self-defense if the UN Security Council did not apologize for "infringing" on
the country's sovereignty."

The DPRK's Foreign Ministry also said the country planned to build a light
water reactor as its first step to build a nuclear power
plant.

Chinese Vice Premier to attend Sino-EU dialogue, visit Britain

BEIJING, April 30 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan will attend
the second Sino-European Union (EU) high-level trade and economic dialogue in
Brussels on May 7 and 8 and pay an official visit to Britain from May 8 to 12.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu made the announcement at a regular
press conference here Thursday.

Wang would co-chair the dialogue with Catherine Ashton, EU Trade
Commissioner and personal representative of the European Commission President
Jose Manuel Barroso, Jiang said.

They would discuss economic and trade cooperation, focusing on promoting
business opportunities and economic stimulation by opening trade and investment,
she said.

"We hope the dialogue will send a signal to the world that China and the EU
will work together to continue opening up and build confidence in advancing the
healthy growth of economic ties and all-round strategic partnership," Jiang
said.

During Wang's visit to Britain as guest of British Chancellor of the
Exchequer Alistair Darling, Wang and Darling will co-chair the second of
Sino-British financial and economic dialogue, said Jiang.

The two sides would focus on increasing cooperation and supporting
sustainable growth, discuss issues concerning economic growth, social welfare,
financial stability, capital market, energy and environmental cooperation, trade
and investment.

"We will work with Britain to promote the dialogue to achieve mutually
beneficial results," Jiang said.

2 detained in NW China over suspected food poisoning

LANZHOU, April 30 (Xinhua) -- Police in northwest China's Gansu Province on
Thursday detained two people in connection with a food poisoning case that left
131 people ill.

Police in Yuzhong County said snack vendors Li Jianlin, 37, and Tie
Jianzhong, 34, were detained on Thursday morning. The two, both native to Cuiyao
Village, Tianshui City, were suspected of selling problematic niangpi, a wheat
snack popular in the region, which led to the poisoning.

They were selling the snack without licenses, police said.

But Li and Yu said they bought the niangpi from another vendor in Lanzhou,
capital of Gansu, and they only made the seasoning.

Police are still investigating.

At least 131 people in Yuzhong were reported to have developed symptoms of
nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, according to the county's health bureau.

An initial investigation showed that most of the patients, aged from 3 to
71, became ill after eating niangpi sold by Li and Tie.

Police said a specific laboratory report on the food would be released
soon.

China steps up efforts to contain raging forest fire

YICHUN, Heilongjiang, April 30 (Xinhua) -- Chinese
authorities have deployed reinforcement fire-fighters to keep wind-whipped fire
away from a virgin forest in the northeastern province of Heilongjiang.

The fire started in Yinanhe Forest Farm on Monday afternoon and quickly spread northeast to Yichun City. It has killed one firefighter and injured four others.








Fire fighters try to put out forest fire in Xunke County's Dapingtai township, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, April 30, 2009. About 1,000 forest police were airlifted to the fire front in Heilongjiang, increasing the total number of firefighters to around 7,530. Twelve planes have been sent to help fight the fire Thursday.(Xinhua/Wang Jianwei)Photo Gallery




Xu Zhaojun, secretary of Yichun city committee of the
Communist Party of China, said 1,000 forest police were airlifted to the fire
front Thursday, increasing the total number of firefighters to around 7,530.
Twelve planes have been sent to help fight the fire.

The fire crews would work Thursday night to bring the
fire in Yichun under control, Xu said. But he admitted that wind gusts of around
40 km per hour and dry weather have hindered efforts.

Yichun is home to more than 30 percent of the world's
total Korean pine virgin forests and also a renowned granite stone-forest
national park.

Local authorities banned felling of Korean pine in
2004 after its acreage fell sharply to 50,000 hectares from 1.2 million hectares
56 years ago.

"The Korean pine forest is a treasure to both our
timber workers and the country. We will keep the fire away from it," said Liu
Shucong, 21, a firefighter.

The fire has affected more than 20,000 local
residents and ravaged 20,000 hectares of woods by Thursday, according to the
fire-fighting headquarters.

People living up to 35 km from the fire front were
being evacuated, although the exact number being forced to move was not
immediately known.

The cause of the fire remains unknown.








Fire fighters try to put out forest fire in Xunke County's Dapingtai township, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, April 30, 2009. About 1,000 forest police were airlifted to the fire front in Heilongjiang, increasing the total number of firefighters to around 7,530. Twelve planes have been sent to help fight the fire Thursday.(Xinhua/Wang Jianwei)
Photo Gallery


Weather forecasters said later Thursday that there
would be wind gusts of up to 61 km per hour and no rainfall the following day.

The fire prompted the provincial authorities to issue
Thursday a "red alert", the highest-level warning, for forest fire risks in
northern Yichun and neighboring Heihe and an orange alert for Mudanjiang, Jixi
and Qitaihe.

Chinese Vice Premier Hui Liangyu on Tuesday urged
local authorities to keep alert to any fire outbreak and step up prevention
efforts, as high temperatures and dry weather in some regions had made forests
more vulnerable to fire risks.

Meanwhile, forest fire that began Wednesday afternoon
at a forest farm in Greater Hinggan Mountain of northern China's Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region was put out Thursday morning with no casualties reported.

About 2,000 people are fighting a forest fire at
Zhaijiazhuang Village in Jiaocheng County, northern China's Shanxi Province. The
fire was reported Tuesday afternoon.

Local government officials said neither the
temperatures and nor the wind speeds at the site were high, and the fire danger
had moderated.

4 Chinese farmers jailed for killing rare white swans

TAIYUAN, April 30 (Xinhua) -- Four Chinese farmers have been sentenced to
jail terms of up to 15 years after being convicted of poisoning and killing 68
endangered white swans under state-level protection.

The sentence was handed down at the People's Court of Pinglu County in
Yuncheng City, north China's Shanxi Province, on Tuesday.

Li Xuejia, Tan Haijun, Ding Hongqi and Meng Zhanfeng, all from the Puzhou
Township in Yongji City, Shanxi, were also ordered to each pay a fine of 20,000
to 50,000 yuan (2,941 to 7,353 U.S. dollars).

The court sentenced two principals, Li and Tan, to 15 years in jail, Ding
13 years and Meng 12 years.

Another farmer, Tan Zhongyi, also from Puzhou, is also alleged to have
illegally hunted the endangered swan with the four farmers, but he has yet to be
arrested, the court heard.

The court heard that the five men used poison to kill white swans on the
Yellow River in Pinglu on Jan. 5, and the four were apprehended by police on
Jan. 7 when they returned to the river to collect the dead birds.

The five were accused of poisoning and killing a total of 121 swans, the
court heard. Li, Ding, Meng and Tan Haijun killed 68 and Tan Zhongyi allegedly
killed 43 swans.

Veterinary doctors saved another 10 poisoned swans and returned them to the
wild.

Police name Koreans killed, injured in E China traffic accident

FUQING, Fujian, April 30 (Xinhua) -- Chinese police have named four male
nationals of the Republic of Korea killed or injured in a traffic accident in
Fuqing City, in east China's Fujian Province, on Wednesday.

The two dead were Baek Seung Ho and Kim Young Soo, while the two injured
were Park Byoung Jun and Lim Jong Dae, according to police in Fuqing City.

Four people died in the traffic accident Wednesday. Besides the two
Koreans, the other two dead came from China's Jilin and Fujian provinces.

A minibus, with six people aboard, collided with a passenger bus at about
9:15 a.m. at a section of the No. 305 road in Fuqing City.

Four people aboard the minibus, including two Koreans, a driver and a man
from Jilin, were killed at the scene and two other Koreans were injured, said
the publicity department of the municipal government of Fuzhou, the provincial
capital.

The injured have been sent to a nearby hospital.

No one on the passenger bus was injured and the driver has been detained by
police for questioning.

Police, work safety supervision and health authorities have setup a team to
investigate into the accident.

More than 6,000 fighting forest fire in Heilongjiang

HARBIN, April 30 (Xinhua) -- About 6,750 people are fighting a forest fire in northeastern China's Heilongjiang Province that has killed one person and ravaged about 600 square kilometers of grassland and wooded area, the firefighting headquarters formed by the provincial government said Thursday afternoon.

More than 1,200 forest police are included in the total, the rest being professional firefighters. Five large helicopters have been sent to help fight the fire.

A group of 12 forest fire specialists, headed by Sun Zhali, deputy director of the State Forestry Administration, have arrived at the firefighting headquarters.

The fire in Yinanhe Forest Farm, under the Zhanhe Forestry Bureau, was reported on Monday afternoon and has since killed one person and injured four others. It has also affected more than 20,000 local residents and ravaged 600 sq km of land, including 200 sq km of wooded area, according to the firefighting headquarters.

The cause of the fire remains unknown.

People living as far as 35 km from the fire site were being evacuated, although the exact number being forced to move was not immediately known.

The fire had spread to the Yichun Youhao Forest Farm and Shangganlin Forest Farm in Yichun City, Wang Aiwen, vice mayor of Yichun, said earlier.

Five forestry bureaus in Yichun and Heihe cities are threatened.

Wang said earlier that high temperatures and strong winds were *** firefighting more difficult.

In related developments:

-- A forest fire that occurred Wednesday afternoon at a forest farm in Greater Hinggan Mountain of northern China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region was put out Thursday morning with no casualties reported.

-- About 2,000 people are fighting a forest fire at Zhaijiazhuang Village in Jiocheng County, northern China's Shanxi Province. The fire was reported Tuesday afternoon. Local government officials said neither the temperatures and nor the wind speeds at the site were high, and the fire danger had moderated.

S China police rescue three kidnapped children

GUANGZHOU, April 30 (Xinhua) -- A three-month investigation and DNA technology helped police rescue three kidnapped children and apprehend four suspects in their abductions, the Dongguan Public Security Bureau said Thursday.

All three children, two boys and a girl, are from rural Dongguan, south China's Guangdong Province. They were found separately on April 15 and April 26 and Sunday in Guandong and Hunan, police said.

"All the children were sent back to their parents, after DNA verification," said a policeman who didn't give his name.

The three were among several children aged six months to three years who have been kidnapped in broad daylight from rural Dongguan. Police said they don't know exactly how many children have been kidnapped.

Police made their first arrest on April 15, when they apprehended a 28-year-old male suspect surnamed Lu. They caught three other suspects between April 15 and April 27.

The police told Xinhua that there have been six reported kidnapping cases in 2009. So far, four children have been recovered.

Police in central China's Anhui province are aggressively searching for the kidnapped children, with the help of DNA labs in the province.

China's Ministry of Public Security on Wednesday set up a national DNA databank to track children who are the victims of kidnapping.

Early this month, the ministry launched its sixth nationwide campaign to deal with human trafficking.

About 3,000 kidnapping cases of children and women have been officially reported and investigated by Chinese authorities annually, but some experts estimate that 10,000 to 20,000 Chinese women or children have been kidnapped.

One year on, earthquake orphans and carers still struggle

CHENGDU, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Four-year-old Ma Ke is too young to understand what happened to his mother and father, despite the fact that the memory of their deaths often reduces his grandfather to tears.

Ma Ke's parents, Ma Qiang and Liu Chunli, were killed in last year's devastating earthquake on May 12.

Ma Qiang, the father, had run an iron plant in Yinxing village, Wenchuan County, the quake epicenter, and the family had been well off.

Ma Ke and his 12-year-old brother Ma Ziheng were left with their grandparents, who are in their 60s with very little income. The couple not only lost their only son, but almost all their property in the earthquake.

Farmers their age in China usually rely on their offspring for a living as the country's social security network has yet to cover its huge rural population of about 900 million.

The Ministry of Civil Affairs worked out a plan in June 2008 to provide all possible support for the orphans, and promised to guarantee their schooling, housing, and employment.

Chen Kefu, vice director of the civil affairs bureau of Sichuan Province, told the public earlier this week that apart from 12 orphans who had been adopted, 638 children who lost their parents in the quake were staying in orphanages and the rest with relatives.

"They are in a fairly good situation," said Chen.

Ma Ke and his brother have struggled to begin a new life in strange environments. The little boy was taken to his aunt's temporary home in Dujiangyan, about 40 minutes drive from the provincial capital of Chengdu.

He often asks his grandmother whether his father and mother know he has moved to this new place.

He is attending a kindergarten in Dujiangyan.

"He is always ready to help, such as arranging desks and chairs," says Yang Jing, Ma Ke's teacher.

But he refused to touch the crayons when the class were asked to draw pictures of their mothers on Women's Day.

Ma Ke will quietly stay in a corner, staring at parents picking up their children, with both sadness and envy.

"It just hurts me so much," says Yang, "My colleagues and I try very cautiously to treat Ma Ke the same as we do other kids. He is sensitive. Special care would make him feel less comfortable."

Compared to his brother, Ma Ke is lucky staying with his grandparents. Ma Ziheng was sent to a welfare organization in the coastal city of Rizhao, in east China's Shandong Province, with 337 other teenage orphans September and enrolled at a middle school there.

"Ziheng never shows his grief in front of us," says Ma Yuanda, the grandfather. "He also cries when he misses his father and mother, but he always tries not to let us know. He has been very much concerned about his younger brother and us, never spending a penny on unnecessary things."

The grandfather gave Ziheng 100 yuan (15 U.S. dollars) as pin money before he left for Shandong. "But he hasn't finished it even today."

The grandparents have been worried about Ziheng being so far from home. They felt helpless when the welfare organization staff said Ziheng had performed poorly in school due to possible mental stress.

"What can we do for the boy as we are so far apart?" asks Ma Yuanda.

The local government has noticed the problems faced by the grandparents and their grandchildren.

"It is true that the carers feel it is difficult to support the orphans on their own," says Xiong Xiaohong, an official in charge of orphan affairs with Wenchuan County. "The county government has been helping them find work as well as paying a monthly allowance of 600 yuan (90 U.S. dollars) for each orphan plus donations."

Ma Ke and his grandparents need at least 1,000 yuan (150 U.S. dollars) each month to cover basic living costs. The grandparents can hardly make ends meet on the 600-yuan allowance.

Thanks to the efforts of the local civil affairs department, Dong Suyun, the grandmother, has work as a day carer at a kindergarten, which enables her to bring home 500 yuan (75 U.S. dollars) every month.

And it means a long expected family reunion as Ziheng will return to Sichuan for schooling in September.

"I'm overwhelmed at the prospect of taking care of my grandsons and helping them live positive lives," says Dong. "We are getting older by the day. I do hope in the future people still remember my kids and give them a hand."

Tibet starts building 5th civil airport

XIGAZE, Tibet, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Tibet Wednesday
started construction on its fifth civil airport in the southwest China's
autonomous region, according to local authorities.

The government would invest a total 480 million yuan
(70 million U.S. dollars) in the airport in Xigaze, the second-biggest city in
Tibet, said Xu Bo, head of the Civil Aviation Administration's Tibet Branch.








The inauguration ceremony on construction work of the Peace Airport, Xigaze Prefecture,southwestern Tibet, is held on April 29, 2009. (Xinhua/ Chogo)
Photo
Gallery


Construction work on the Peace Airport, at an
altitude of 3,782meters, would be finished in two years, Xu told Xinhua.

Yan Ping, cheif commander of the construction work,
said the airport was designed to handle 230,000 passengers and 1,150 tonnes of
cargo and mail a year by 2020.

Xu Xueguang, secretary of Xigaze prefectural Party committee, said: "The civil airport will be an air corridor linking Xigaze with the outside world and inject new vigor into local social and economic development."








Photo shows a blueprint of the Peace Airport, Xigaze Prefecture, southwestern Tibet. (Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery





Hao Peng, vice chairman of the Tibet regional government, said the airport would allow more people in other parts of the country to take flights to the autonomous region.

The airport, together with more railways and
highways, would help to boost investment and tourism in Xigaze, Hao added.

It would the fifth civil airpot to be operational in
Tibet, after Lhasa, Qamdo, Nyingchi and Ngari, according to Xu.

It also is among the 180 key projects in which the central government invested more than 70 billion yuan (10.3 billion U.S. dollars) in the five years through 2010.








People celebrate theinauguration of construction work of the Peace Airport on opening ceremony, April 29, 2009. (Xinhua/ Chogo)
Photo Gallery




The Bangda Airport of Qamdo is 4,334 meters above sea
level, *** it the highest airport in the world.

China is also building a 254-km railway linking
Xigaze with the regional capital Lhasa. Construction on the 11-billion-yuan
Qinghai-Tibet railway's extension line started in 2008 and was expected to be
completed in 2010.

The Qinghai-Tibet Railway, running 1,956 kilometers
from Xining city in Qinghai province to Lhasa in Tibet, was officially put into
operation in July 2006. It is the highest railway in the world and ended Tibet's
history without railway.

Xigaze, in southern Tibet, has an population of
680,000 and is home to such renowned tourist sites as Sagya and Baiqoi
monastories.



China to build regional airport in
largest desert


URUMQI, April
18 (Xinhua) -- An airport for regional flight services will be built in 2015 in
the hinterland of China's largest desert, Taklimakan, in the northwestern
autonomous region of Xinjiang, a source with Xinjiang Airport (Group) Co., LLC,
confirmed Saturday.


The project will cost 290 million yuan (42.46 million U.S.
dollars), Duan Zixin, general manager of the company, said. Full story

Sanjiangyuan Airport to adopt RNP
technology for navigation



BEIJING, April 27 (Xin***) -- The nearly completed Sanjiangyuan Airport,
Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Northwest China's Qinghai Province, will
adopt the technology of required navigation performance (RNP) for airport ground
movement guidance and control.

The RNP technology, most advanced in China, with a Global
Positioning System (GPS) and aviation computers, can ensure accurate flights
according to the preset course, effectively improving flight safety. Full story

Shangri-la Airport to open in May
after extension



BEIJING, April 3 (Xin***) -- The
Shangri-la Airport in Diqing Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, southwest China's
Yunnan Province, is expected to open next month.

The extended airport will have an annual handling capacity
of 1.2 million person-time passengers and 9,600 tons of cargo, according to the
airport General Manager's Office Thursday. Full story

Chinese police chief stresses narcotics control

BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- China's Minister of Public Security Meng Jianzhu Wednesday called for an intensified battle against narcotics crimes to ensure social stability and harmony in the country.

Prevention work lies in the core of narcotics control, Meng, also head of the National Narcotics Control Commission (NNCC), said during a NNCC meeting.

The police chief hailed the anti-narcotics achievement China made in 2008.

The country's police busted 62,000 drug-related criminal cases involving 74,000 suspects in 2008.

A total of 4.4 tonnes of ***, 6.2 tonnes of crystal methamphetamine (or "ice"), 2.2 tonnes of marijuana, 1.4 tonnes of opium and 0.8 tonnes of ***e were seized by the police during the period.

Meng urged continuing to strengthen anti-narcotics education among the public in the country.

Six pandas arrive in Beijing to celebrate China's 60th anniversary

BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Six pandas from China's quake-ravaged Sichuan Province arrived in Beijing Wednesday to start their year-long display to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China in October.

Hua Ao, Jin Yi, Wen Yu, Xiang Ge, Shui Ling and Qing Feng were transported from the China Giant Panda research Center in Ya'an City and arrived at the Beijing Zoo after a flight of two and a half hours.

They arrived at their enclosure at Beijing Zoo at 7 p.m.. Some of them staggered out of the transportation cage and went slowly into the pen and others were dragged out.

"They are in good shape both physically and psychologically," said Zhang Jinguo, vice head of the zoo.

He said the six 2-year-old pandas were carefully selected because they are "lovely, highly adaptable and good looking."

Zhang said the zoo would ensure the pandas had sufficient food of 150 kg fresh bamboos and 12 kg bamboo shoots every day, along with apples, milk powder and carrots.

"They will make their first public debut on May 1," he added.

It is not the first time that pandas from Sichuan have been airlifted to Beijing.

Eight pandas were flown to Beijing last May to add cheer to the Olympics. They returned to Sichuan in March.

Macao to finance another 23 reconstruction projects in quake-hit Sichuan

Special Report:Reconstruction After Earthquake


MACAO, April 29 (Xinhua) -- After signing an agreement to fund 36
reconstruction projects in Chinese mainland's quake-hit Sichuan province, the
government of the Macao Special Administrative Region (SAR) Wednesday announced
that it will continue to finance another 23 projects there.

The 23 new projects, including 16 education ones, and four health and three
sports facilities, will cost the SAR government 1.13 billion yuan (166 million
U.S. dollars) and were scheduled to be completed between 2009 and 2011,
according to a press release from the SAR government.

Previously, the SAR government has signed agreements with the Sichuan
provincial government, under which the SAR will pay 2.09 billion yuan (307
million dollars) to fund the 36 reconstruction projects in Sichuan. So far, the
SAR government has announced the funding of some 59 reconstruction projects in
Sichuan, the cost of which amounts to 3.22 billion yuan (474 million dollars).

The magnitude-8.0 quake that occurred in Sichuan last year left more than
69,000 people dead and damaged numerous buildings. The SAR government and the
government-run Macao Foundation have respectively promised to pay five billion
yuan and 500 million yuan in financial assistance to the southwestern Chinese
province.

As for the rest of the promised funds, the Sichuan provincial government is
drawing up the third batch of reconstruction projects and will soon propose them
to the SAR government for financing, according to the press release.


Convicted police killer executed in Beijing

BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- A man convicted of the killing of a Beijing
police in 2006 officer was executed by gunshot Wednesday, according to the
Beijing No.1 Intermediate People's Court.

Zhang Xinlei, 24, was sentenced to death in November last year for killing
39-year-old Tang Chengwen, a police officer in the suburban Mentougou district
on Oct. 22, 2006.

Zhang, along with his cousin, Zhang Xinliang, and a third man, Lu Haihong,
accelerated their van laden with stolen cables through a road checkpoint set up
by the police, the court had heard. Tang chased and managed to stop the van, but
was beaten to death by the cousins.

The court meted out death sentences to both the cousins, but gave Zhang
Xinliang a two-year reprieve. The cousins were also found guilty of sabotaging
public telecommunications facilities and theft.

Lu was sentenced to five years in jail.

The three stole 197 meters of telecommunications cables on the night of the
murder. Phone services to 106 households were cut off.

Another four people were given jail terms from 18 to 30 months for
harboring the men, the court said.

The cousins, both from central China's Henan Province, were arrested within
four days of the murder in their hometown.

Zhang Xinlei was sentenced to 10 months imprisonment for theft by a court
in 2005.

Death toll rises to 20 in SW China landslide

KUNMING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- The death toll from a landslide in southwest
China's Yunnan Province rose to 20 Wednesday as the last five bodies were
recovered, local government sources said.

Two people earlier believed missing have been found as they were not at the
scene when the landslide occurred at 12:40 p.m. Sunday at Xiaoba Village, Weixin
County of Zhaotong, after almost four days of torrential rain.

The landslide destroyed two buildings of the Huajiaba Coal Mine at the
site. Two injured people were in stable condition in hospital.

The four-day search concluded in the late afternoon, Tang Guoqian, head of
the county publicity department, told reporters.

Each family of the victims would get 250,000 yuan (36,500 U.S. dollars) in
compensation, Tang added. The victims were coal mine managers and miners from
Zhaotong, which administers Weixin, and from Sichuan Province and Chongqing
Municipality.

Local government officials said the landslide was the result ofunsafe
quarry production.

Another landslide occurred an hour earlier in Linfeng Township, Weixin
County, killing four passers-by.

One dead, 4 injured in NE China forest fire

HARBIN, April 29 (Xinhua) -- More than 3,000 people are battling a forest
fire that has killed one person and injured four others in northeast China's
Heilongjiang Province, a spokesman for the provincial government said Wednesday.

The spokesman did not say whether they were professional firefighters or
local people fighting the blaze.

The emergency office of the provincial government said earlier that 3,347
people, including 1,245 forest policemen, were working to control the fire which
was reported on Monday.

The fire engulfed several forest farms in Yichun and Heihe cities.

More than 6,000 hectares of land have been razed in Yichun, said Xu
Zhaojun, the city's Communist Party chief.

The burnt area in Heihe is still being assessed.

At least 30 homes in Shangganling Forest Farm in Yichun have been destroyed
and more than 1,800 residents have been evacuated.

Wang Aiwen, vice mayor of Yichun, said that high temperatures and strong
winds in the next two days in the region are expected to make the fire fighting
more difficult.

Nation mourns quake dead, looks to the future

Special Report:Reconstruction After Earthquake


BEIJING/MIANYANG, April 29 (Xinhua) - An online plea for the public to
mourn the 80,000 people dead or missing in last year's devastating earthquake is
being spread rapidly among Internet users, less than two weeks before the first
anniversary of the disaster.

"Make sure you plant chrysanthemums in your garden on May 9," reads the
message, posted at kaixin001.com, a Facebook-style social networking website
based in Beijing where office workers enjoy buying virtual property ranging from
slaves to luxury cars and houses, and planting trees and flowers in their
gardens.

"The flower takes 68 hours to bloom, so on May 12, we'll be mourning those
who died in the quake," it says.

It also advised everyone not to steal others' chrysanthemums, as most
members of the free access website enjoy harvesting and selling others' plants
to make virtual money.

The message, which first appeared at kaixin001.com at 9:20 a.m. Wednesday,
had been forwarded to 221,810 people and received 611,600 clicks by 3 p.m.

The nation's memory of the 8.0-magnitude earthquake is still fresh and
overshadows the forthcoming three-day Labor Day holiday starting Friday.

Large crowds of reporters, social workers and volunteers have poured into
the quake zones in the western provinces of Sichuan, Gansu and Shaanxi, hoping
to share local people's woes and give a helping hand, in one way or another.

GUITAR BAND IN WHEELCHAIRS

Every day at 6:30 p.m., Yan Peng and his eight schoolmates begin their
daily guitar course in a makeshift classroom of Changhong Training Center on the
suburbs of Sichuan's Mianyang City, the temporary campus of Beichuan High School
that toppled in the quake.

"I've always loved the guitar, though I never learned to play before the
quake," said Yan, a quiet, bespectacled 17-year-old.

Yan was among the first to flee the ramshackle school building, but soon
returned to save his classmates, and ended up in the ruins himself. He lost his
right leg. The school suffered nearly 1,000 dead.

Four months after the quake, the school received a special gift from
Beijing-based Capital Normal University: 15 guitars and some volunteer teachers
-- all music majors of the university who take turns teaching in Mianyang.

"This is the best we could do to help these students," said Sheng Xue, a
junior student whose volunteer service began two weeks ago.

Yan is among the nine most avid learners who have persisted. All of them
bear injuries. Some are permanently confined to a wheelchair.

Besides music, Liu Min said she also loved volleyball, though she could
only play on wheelchair these days. The 17-year-old recalls with affection a
meeting with Premier Wen Jiabao last November, when she led the band to sing
"You and Me", the theme song of the Beijing Olympics.

"I used to be healthy and sportive," said Liu, who had wanted to be a
police officer but now plans to major in law.

NEW HOMES BUILT ON HORSEBACK


Wei Songping and his horse left at daybreak to carry cement for the
villagers: a fleet of seven horses was all the 17 families in the mountainous
Liangjiashan Village rely on to transport building materials for their new
homes.

"It's not because we don't have manpower or vehicles," said Wei. "But no
vehicle can make it along the only path down the mountain, which is merely a
meter wide."

Liangjiashan was a mountain-top village separated from the county seat of
Wenxian in Gansu Province only by a river. Almost every home was destroyed in
the quake and the whole village had to be relocated to a hillside township
closer to the county seat.

"I can't stand overburdening my mule," said villager Li Zhanlin. "The
animals take turns taking a day off every three days."

In nine months, Li's mule carried 40,000 bricks, 12 tonnes of cement and 20
cubic meters of sand that have now become his family's five new houses.

His neighbor Liang Baocheng, however, lags far behind. "I have to finish
building the new home by the end of June. My son is about to get married this
year." In rural China, parents traditionally hold themselves liable for building
new homes for their adult sons.

"Local authorities held geological surveys and confirmed the new site was
safe from quakes," said Liang, who said the government was doing a "great job".
"They could do better, though, by paving the road. If only the path was two
meters wide, we could have moved into new homes earlier."

In Wenxian, one of the hardest-hit areas in Gansu Province, about 35,000
families are rebuilding homes in the mountains. At least half of them rely only
on horses, according to the county government.

"The horses have to toil for as long as the rebuilding may take," said
Liang. "Our homes are built on horseback."

LOOKING TO THE FUTURE

Flowers are constantly seen these days in the ruins of Beichuan, the
Sichuan county that perished in the quake. The scarlet corn poppies and yellow
and white chrysanthemums seem to be mourning for the dead and welcoming a safer
new Beichuan.

People in Sichuan, young and old, are taking their time to shake off their
nightmarish past.

In Anxian County, Lin Xingcong and his bride are giving finishing touches
to their new home. "We'll plant orchids here," Lin said as he pointed to the
clearing between two houses, "with seeds from my old home."

Nine-year-old Xiao Daipeng, a primary school pupil in Shifang City, forced
a smile as he subconsciously touched the stump of his right leg. "I wish I could
score better in science class," he said when Xinhua reporters asked what was in
his dreams.

"In the future? I wish I could find a good job," said Xiao.


Hong Kong Customs seizes 10 kg of drugs

HONG KONG, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Hong Kong Customs announced Wednesday that
they seized about 10 kg of met amphetamine in an anti-drug trafficking operation
on Tuesday.

On April 28, customs officers intercepted an incoming private vehicle at
Lok Ma Chau Control Point for clearance and uncovered the drug in the baggage of
the three passengers in the vehicle.

Three of the arrested, two Malaysian men and one Malaysian woman, aged
between 27 and 36, will be charged with trafficking a dangerous drug. The male
driver, a 41-year-old local resident, has been released on police bail pending
investigations.

Under the Dangerous Drugs Ordinance, drug trafficking is a serious offense.
The maximum penalty is life imprisonment and a fine of 5 million HK
dollars.

Chlorine gas leak leaves 23 ill in NW China

XINING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Twenty-three workers are ill after a chlorine gas leak at a chemical plant in Qinghai Province on Tuesday, an official with the factory said Wednesday.

The gas leaked for five minutes at about 8 p.m. from a crack in a chlorine pipeline in Tiantai Sodium Manufacturing Co. Ltd. in Huangzhong County, said Jing Yichen, Communist Party of China chief at the company.

The gas spread to a neighboring plant where more than 100 employees were working or having dinner.

Nineteen workers who showed symptoms of headaches, nausea, coughing, and eye irritation were taken to hospital Tuesday. Four more workers were hospitalized Wednesday morning.

All are migrant workers from Sichuan Province in southwest China.

Yue Yongping, one of those affected, said he smelt a strong odor at the time and felt pain in his eyes and throat. He also had difficulty breathing.

Zhang Fu, a doctor with the No.1 People's Hospital of the county that treated the poisoned workers, said they were stable and recovering.

Jing said his workers immediately closed the leaking pipeline for repair and the company would pay the medical costs for all the sick workers.

Documentary on Shanghai World Expo presented to BIE

PARIS, April 28 (Xinhua) -- Representatives of the Shanghai TV Station on
Tuesday presented a DVD of a documentary on the Shanghai World Expo 2010 to
international exposition officials.

The documentary, "World Expo Dream Over a Century," was jointly produced by
the Bureau of Shanghai World Expo Coordination and the Shanghai Media Group.

The documentary explores the relationship between the exposition to be held
in Shanghai next year and the civilization of mankind, especially the link
between China's hosting of the event and the country's overall development.

The documentary was presented to V.G. Loscertales, secretary general of the
Bureau of International Expositions, the organization that sanctions world's
fairs.

Loscertales expressed thanks for the DVD and praised the documentary. He
said it was particularly significant in summarizing the history of the World
Expo.

Exhibition opens in PLA Navy's birthplace to mark anniversay

Special
Report:
China Marks 60th
Anniversary of Navy


TAIZHOU, Jiangsu, April 29 (Xinhua) -- An exhibition on the history of the
Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) Navy opened in east China's Taizhou City
Wednesday, where the CPC-led force announced the establishment of its own naval
force on April 23, 1949.

Liu Xiaojiang, political commissar of the PLA Navy, and Jiangsu provincial
Communist Party of China chief Liang Baohua and Governor Luo Zhijun attended the
opening ceremony on Wednesday.

A large photo showing President Hu Jintao, general secretary of the
Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, state president and chairman
of the Central Military Commission, at an international fleet review at Qingdao
Port, Shandong Province, on April 23 is on display.

Over the past 60 years, the PLA Navy has fought more than 1,200battles,
sunk, damaged or captured over 400 enemy warships, and downed or damaged more
than 500 enemy planes, said Lu Jialing, hall curator.

The PLA Navy was based on a surrendered fleet of the Kuomintang (KMT)
warships in Taizhou 60 years ago.

Taizhou has named local schools and public sites after the PLA Navy, and in
2002, the PLA Navy named one of its missile destroyers after the city.

The venue of the exhibition is Taizhou's PLA Navy memorial hall, which was
built by the city government in 1996, with an investment of 11.5 million yuan
(1.7 million U.S. dollars).


5 killed in coal mine flooding in central China

CHANGSHA, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Five miners were killed in a colliery
flooding in central China's Hunan Province, a local official said Wednesday.

A shaft of Pijing Coal Mine in Anhua County flooded at about 11a.m. Monday
when 10 miners were working underground, said Zou Xiongbin, deputy magistrate of
the county.

Four workers escaped, but six were trapped.

Rescuers had been removing water using eight pumps.

Xiang Fuquan was rescued Tuesday night after being trapped for 36 hours.
His was conscious and in a stable condition under medical observation.

Three bodies were recovered early Wednesday and the last two were found at
about 6 p.m..

An initial investigation showed that workers dug through a discarded shaft
by accident, where the water flooded in, said Zou.

Death toll rises to 17 in SW China landslide

KUNMING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- The death toll from a landslide in southwest China's Yunnan Province rose to 17 Wednesday as two more bodies were recovered, local government sources said.

Rescuers are still searching for the five people believed missing more than three days after the disaster. The landslide occurred at 12:40 p.m. Sunday at Xiaoba Village, Weixin County of Zhaotong, after almost four days of torrential rain.

The excavation work was more risky due to more possible landslides, county officials said, adding they were still verifying the list of the missing as there were few survivors.

Tang Guoqian, head of the county publicity department, had earlier said there was little hope of finding the missing alive.

The victims and the missing people were coal mine managers and miners from Zhaotong, which administers Weixin, and from Sichuan Province and Chongqing Municipality.

The landslide destroyed two buildings of the Huajiaba Coal Mine at the site. Two injured people were in stable condition in hospital.

Local government officials said the landslide was the result of unsafe quarry production.

Another landslide occurred an hour earlier in Linfeng Township, Weixin County, killing four passers-by.

Mainland official: Taiwanese donate 672 mln yuan to aid quake reconstruction by 2008

Special Report:Reconstruction After Earthquake

BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- People in Taiwan have donated more than
672.21 million yuan (98.5 million U.S. dollars) to aid the reconstruction of the
magnitude-8.0 earthquake-hit zones by the end of 2008, said a Chinese official
here Wednesday.

Li Weiyi, spokesman for the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council,
said at a press conference that the donations, which were made by the people in
Taiwan via the Office and the mainland-based Association for Relations Across
the Taiwan Straits, had all been forwarded to places hit hardest by the quake,
which included Chongqing Municipality and provinces of Sichuan, Shaanxi and
Gansu.

About 77 percent of the donations, or more than 517.66 million yuan, would
be used to help with the reconstruction of 92 projects in Sichuan ,where the
epicenter was, he said.

Quake-hit regions have taken measures to ensure rational use of the
donations in reconstruction projects, he added.

The donations have fully displayed the spirit of when disaster struck, help
came from all sides of people across the Taiwan Straits, he said.

A magnitude-8.0 earthquake hit Wenchuan County in southwestern Sichuan
Province on May 12. The quake, the most destructive natural disaster in China
for decades, left more than 87,000 people dead or missing and millions
homeless.


22 people recover in suspected food poisoning case in NW China

LANZHOU, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Local health authorities said 22 people have
been discharged from hospital by Wednesday after they recovered from suspected
food poisoning in northwest China's Gansu Province.

A total of 94 people in four villages have developed symptoms such as
nausea, vomiting and diarrhea as of 11 a.m. Wednesday, according to the health
bureau of Yuzhong County, the worst-hit in the incident.

An initial investigation showed that most of the patients, aged between 3
and 71, became ill after eating a local wheat snack sold by a street vendor.

So far, 28 villagers are in hospital and 44 under medical observation, said
doctors with the Yuzhong County Hospital, which was designated to treat most of
the sick.

Lu Binzhong, who was receiving an intravenous drip in the hospital, said he
began to suffer from diarrhea Monday after eating "niangpi" sold by a motorcycle
vendor on the streets Sunday.

Other patients said they all ate niangpi from the same peddler, who carried
about 100 kg of the food in two boxes on the motorcycle, and then felt sick.

The county's food safety supervision bureau began to conduct tests on
samples of niangpi early Wednesday morning and the result is expected to be
announced Friday.

The police were looking for the vendor.

Niangpi is popular in the northwest, including Gansu and Qinghai
provinces.

China public sector urban employees' average pay growth slows in Q1

Special Report:Global Financial Crisis


BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- China reported a slowdown in the growth of
average wages for urban employees in the public sector to 13.4 percent
year-on-year growth in the first quarter, said the National Bureau of Statistics
on Wednesday.

The growth was 4.9 percentage points lower than the same period of last
year.

In the January-March period, urban employees' pay averaged 7,399 yuan
(about 1,057 U.S. dollars), 875 yuan more than the same period last year.

The average pay in the finance sector topped the list with 16,048 yuan. The
information technology sector came second with 13,972 yuan and scientific
research, technology service and geological survey sectors ranked third with
11,604 yuan.

The construction industry was at the bottom of the list with 5,109 yuan on
average.

Compared with the first quarter of 2008, pay growth in all sectors dropped.
For instance, the growth rate in the finance sector was 19.9 percent in the
first quarter of 2009, down 10.4 percentage points from a year earlier.

The NBS said urban employees in the statistics did not include workers in
private companies and self-employed businessmen. The average salaries were
calculated before taxes and included pension funds, medical insurance and legal
reserves of housing acquisition.


4 killed in road accident in E China, including 2 nationals of ROK

FUQING, Fujian, April 29 (Xinhua) -- At least four
people, including two nationals of the Republic of Korea, were killed in a road
accident in Fujian Province Wednesday, the local publicity authority said.

A minibus collided with a passenger bus at about 9:15
a.m. at a section of the No. 305 road in Fuqing City.

Four passengers aboard the minibus, including two
Koreans, were killed at the scene and two other Koreans were injured, according
to the publicity department of the municipal government of Fuzhou, the
provincial capital.

The injured have been sent to hospital. No more
information was available so far.

The driver of the passenger bus has been detained by
police for questioning.

The local police, work safety supervision and health
authorities have set up a team to investigate into the
accident.

9 dead, 17 injured in N China bus-truck crash

HOHHOT, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Nine people were killed and 17 injured when a bus and truck collided Wednesday in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, according to local work safety administration.

The crash occurred at around 10 a.m. on a highway near Qinjiayao Village of Xinghe County, Ulanqab City, when a bus from neighboring Hebei Province and an Inner Mongolia-registered heavy truck loaded with coal collided. Xinghe is 280 km northwest of Beijing.

On the bus were 26 passengers, eight of whom died at the scene and one died later in hospital. The dead were six men and three women. Further information on their identities was not immediately available.

The 17 injured, including one in serious condition, are receiving emergency treatment at two local hospitals.

Police are investigating the cause of the accident.

Police: man sets himself on fire in downtown Chongqing

CHONGQING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- A man set himself on fire Wednesday over a
lawsuit in southwest China's Chongqing Municipality, according to the local
publicity authority.

The incident occurred shortly after noon when the man doused himself with
flammable liquid and set himself on fire near the Jiefangbei, a landmark statue.

The fire was later extinguished by police and the man was rushed to
hospital with serious burns.

The 41-year-old man, whose name was not given, is in a stable condition
after emergency treatment, according to the publicity department of the Yuzhong
District, where the incident occurred.

An initial investigation showed he took the action because he was
dissatisfied with the law enforcement process of an economic lawsuit ordered by
Jiangjin District People's Court.

No more information about the incident or the lawsuit is
available.

China issues regulation punishing statistical fouls

BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- China has issued a regulation to punish officials who forge or cover up data in statistical work.

The regulation, jointly published by the Ministry of Supervision, Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security and National Bureau of Statistics on the government website on Tuesday, will take effect on May 1.

It is the first such regulation in China, according to a media statement.

"Statistics reflect the trend of the country's social and economic development but there are acts violating law and discipline in statistical work in some regional governments and departments," the statement said.

These acts affected the quality of data, undermined information backup for the country's macro-control and damaged the image of the Communist Party and the government, it said.

The regulation with 15 stipulations sets out punishment measures, especially for officials who fake statistics or publish data against the country's rules and procedures.

Serious penalties including dismissal, demotion, or unspecified "criminal punishment", would be imposed on people who unlawfully change statistics or ask others to do so and those who take revenge on people who refuse to fabricate data or blow the whistle on illegal acts.

People who leak data concerning state secrets, personal or family information and business secrets, as well as delaying reporting of statistics, would also face similar penalties.

It asks local supervisory bodies and the government to fully perform roles in cracking down on statistical corruption so as to safeguard the authenticity of statistical work.

Statistical corruption has been found in China for years to exaggerate local economic growth, which is often related to officials' promotion.

Earlier this month, southeastern Fujian Province said last year it handled 754 cases concerning forging statistics and imposed fines up to about 1.38 million yuan (203,000 U.S. dollars).

Fertility services ignites hope for bereaved parents in quake-hit area

Special Report:Reconstruction After Earthquake

CHENGDU, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Li Yurong found herself much more clumsy in
her fifth month of pregnancy, a drastic contrast with ten years ago, when she
was expecting her first baby.

"I almost vomit every day, and have no strength to move," said the
37-year-old Li, while lightly rubbing her big tummy. Li, a farmer in the Hanwang
town, Mianzhu city, in China's southwest Sichuan Province, lost her only
daughter in the May 12 earthquake last year.

The death of her daughter Yang Danni drove the family into despair.

Li and her husband decided to have a child to give their old parents
consolation as well as an encouragement for the couple.

"It's all like a dream for me," said Li, whose is still coming to terms
with the loss of her first daughter. She was considered to be "high risk" in
pregnancy.

Li's family was one of more than 8,000 Sichuan families who lost their only
child in the earthquake, which left more than 80,000 dead or missing.

Last May, the earthquake relief headquarters of the State Council, or the
Chinese Cabinet, asked the quake-hit local government to give preferential
consideration to families who lost their only children in the quake.

Sichuan legislators in July exempted families who lost their children in
the earthquake from the country's one-child laws.

The rule, adopted by the standing committee of the provincial legislature,
allowed a family who lost an only child, or in which the child was disabled, or
a family with two children who were both disabled in the disaster, to have
another child.

Since the quake, about 5,000 Sichuan couples had received free fertility
treatment, said Wang Zaiyin, director of the provincial Population and Family
Planning Commission.

In devastated Deyang City, 74 percent of parents of child-bearing age who
lost their children considered having a child, according to the city's family
planning authorities.

In Mianzhu City, about 872 bereaved families wished to have a child, while
most of the couples are around 40 years old, said Kong Xiangqing, a doctor sent
by Jiangsu Province to provide a free fertility service in Sichuan.

"Fertility treatment has become the most urgent need for women who lost
their children in the quake, and want to have a baby," said Kong, adding that
they have started to train doctors in the quake-hit areas on artificial
fertility technology.

Sichuan Province has planned to spend 1.3 billion yuan (about 191 million
U.S. dollars) on fertility service for couples in quake-hit areas.

Li Yurong said that the local government gave her free medical check-ups
and folic acid pills. Five women in her village became pregnant, said Li.

"My dearest wish is that the baby will be healthy," said Li.

The magnitude-8.0 quake that hit southwest China last May 12 killed more
than 69,000 people. It also left nearly 18,000 missing, more than 374,000
injured and millions homeless.


More people sent to fight forest fire in NE China

HARBIN, April 29 (Xinhua) -- The number of people fighting a forest fire in northeastern China's Heilongjiang Province has risen to 3,347, including 1,245 forest policemen, the emergency office of the provincial government said on Wednesday.


Fire in Yinanhe Forest Farm, under the Zhanhe Forestry Bureau, has continued into the third day, with fine weather and strong winds at the site.

No village is under the threat of the forest fire.

Two helicopters have been sent to transport forest policemen and firefighters to the site.

The fire has spread to the Yichun Youhao Forest Farm and Shangganling Forest Farm in Yichun City, said Wang Aiwen, vice mayor of Yichun.

Wang said Tuesday high temperatures and strong winds in the next two days were expected to make fire-fighting more difficult.

The fire was reported on Monday and the burnt area and cause of the fire are still unknown.

Almost 90 ill in suspected food poisoning case in NW China's Gansu

LANZHOU, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Local health authorities said 87 people from three villages in northwestern China's Gansu Province were evaluated for food poisoning early Wednesday.


The authorities in Yuzhong County, which administers the villages, said 28 of those people were hospitalized and 59 more were under observation. No deaths have been reported so far.

The problems su***ced on Tuesday at noon at Xuanmatan, Xiaoshuizi and Xieluwa villages. The victims developed symptoms such as nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.

The county launched an emergency plan for food-safety incidents, and 42 doctors and nurses were dispatched to provide emergency services.

Local police are investigating vendors who sold niangpi, a traditional steamed snack made from wheat. These items are believed to be behind the food poisoning cases. Niangpi is popular in the northwest, including Gansu and Qinghai.

Beijing to build, expand 13 water plants by 2014: city official

BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Beijing plans to build and expand 13 facilities by 2014 to process water from the Yangtze River, with combined capacity of about 1 billion cubic meters annually, an official with the city government said Wednesday.


The municipal government will spend 26 billion yuan (about 3.8 billion U.S. dollars) on the plants, according to He Fengci, vice director of the municipal south-to-north water diversion office.

"By 2020, Beijing will receive about 1.4 billion cubic meters of water diverted from the Yangtze River annually," said the official.

Beijing has had water shortages partly because of its geography, and it has experienced a drought since 1999. It received only 75 percent of its expected precipitation since that year, said He.

Shortages are set to reach a crisis next year, when the population is expected to top 17 million, or 3 million more than its water resources can support.

The south-to-north diversion program, aiming to provide sufficient water for China's northern regions that have experienced multi-year droughts, will connect the Yangtze, Huaihe, Yellow and Haihe rivers.

It includes three water-diversion channels -- eastern, middle and western -- and will take 40 to 50 years to complete.

The central route will traverse the provinces of Hubei, Henan and Hebei and the municipalities of Tianjin and Beijing. About 402,000 people will be relocated to make way for it.

The middle route is scheduled for completion in 2013 and operation in 2014. It would be able to divert 9.5 billion cubic meters of water on average a year for more than 30 million people.

China will invest 21.3 billion yuan in the south-to-north water diversion program this year.

Total spending will include 6.5 billion yuan from the central government, 2 billion yuan from the south-to-north water diversion program fund and 12.8 billion yuan in bank loans.

S China province cracks down on telephone scam

BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Police in south China's Guangdong province yesterday claimed to have solved nearly 500 cases of "telephone fraud", involving a whopping 11.85 million yuan (1.75 million U.S. dollars), this year.


The public security department of the province was quoted by Wednesday's China Daily as saying cops started cracking down on the frauds at the beginning of this year.

The police have "uncovered and broken" 46 criminal gangs, which were involved in 486 cases of telephone fraud, involving 2.45 million yuan in cash and 9.4 million yuan in bank deposits, the department disclosed. The police have seized 323 people, suspected of either committing the crimes or being involved with the gangs, and confiscated 678 phones, 735 SIM cards and more than 2,800 credit or debit cards.

"There are at least three kinds of telephone frauds rampant in Guangdong at present," the department said.

The first one is arguably the oldest trick in the book, where scammers send out text messages to a large number of cell phone users, telling them they have won a lottery, but to collect the huge sum of money they would have to first deposit a "transfer commission charge" to a particular bank account.

In the second trick, scammers call up people saying their relatives were involved in a major traffic accident and urging them to transfer some money for an emergency operation.

In another trick that has recently come to light in many provinces across China, con artists use computer software to change their caller ID and make their victims believe they are calling from authorized organizations, such as the telecommunication department, banks or government offices.

The victims are then told they have been fined for deferring payments for their telephone bills or credit cards and must transfer money to a particular account to avoid legal hassles.

Most of the victims, the department said, were women older than40 years of age, some of whom have been duped of "millions of yuan".

Some victims said they received phone calls from people who claimed to be customer service officials of their respective banks, asking for their credit card information for "internal review".

The cheats then call the bank back on the phone, saying they have lost their credit cards - they give out the information acquired from the original owner - and ask for the bank to issue anew card.

Classic tale: Peddler joins PhD program

BEIJING,April 29-- It could be the plot of a Hollywood movie: A laid-off factory worker's life turned upside-down after he is accepted into a PhD program at a prestigious university.


For Cai Wei it is a dream come true.

Despite failing his college entrance exam years ago, the 38-year-old street peddler and part-time bicycle taxi driver from Jinzhou, Liaoning province, followed his love and continued to study classic Chinese literature on his own.

He learned so much about the field he attracted the attention of a prominent scholar, who even made changes to his own work based on Cai's suggestions.

"Many experts cannot compete with him at classical literature," said Qiu Xigui, a professor at Shanghai's Fudan University and one of the experts who backed Cai's PhD application.

Cai's love of classical Chinese literature began in primary school, and he has been reading book after book ever since.

"My wife always complained it was no use studying such ancient literature, but I really love it."

After leaving high school, he worked in a rubber factory for several years before being laid off. He then became a roadside peddler, and began moonlighting as a tricycle delivery driver when his wife fell ill in 2007.

"It was a really difficult time, but my interest in literature didn't stop," he said. "I studied ancient documents and published articles in online forums."

He then came to the attention of Qiu, who learned of Cai's circumstances and invited him to join a research project on ancient texts at the university.

"I had never dreamed of becoming a university student, not to mention a PhD student," said Cai. "I so much cherished the chance to sit down with these professors to study."

He will soon begin his studies for a doctorate in ancient Chinese language at Fudan University with Qiu as his supervisor.

In consideration for his academic background, Cai will not be asked to study English, according to the university's administration department.

"The voting rights for academic talent, especially in the doctoral phase, should be given back to the professors rather than the departments, because they are most qualified to judge who the most suitable candidates are," Xiong Bingqi, an expert on higher education, told China Daily yesterday.

"Although exams are relatively fair tools to select talent, some people with special gifts may be ignored," he said.

This year, Fudan University announced changes to its admissions policy to give professors more leeway in picking their own PhD candidates. Previously, only those who had obtained a master's degree could apply. In Cai's case, he was recommended by three professors, including Qiu, and was admitted without a qualifying exam.

Many netizens argue that selecting candidates by professors' recommendation may lead to placements under the table.

"I think such a problem can be avoided if there is a stringent supervision system. The responsibility (to supervise) should be given to the administration departments," said Gu Yunshen, vice-president of Fudan University's graduate school.

"Meanwhile, we should fully trust those professors, who value their reputation."

(Source: China Daily)

Seven still missing, 15 dead in southwest China landslide

KUNMING, April 28 (Xinhua) -- Rescuers were still looking for seven missing people two days after a landslide in southwest China's Yunnan Province as death toll rose to 15 on Tuesday, a local government official said.

Three more bodies were retrieved from the site late Tuesday, said He Gang, vice mayor of Zhaotong City.

The landslide occurred at 12:40 p.m. Sunday at Xiaoba Village, Weixin County of Zhaotong after almost four days of torrential rain.

Tang Guoqian, head of the public affairs department of the government of Weixin, had earlier said there was little hope of finding the missing alive.

Four excavators were clearing the rubble at the site in the day and the rescue work stopped at night because it was too dangerous, He said.

He promised that the search would continue on Wednesday.

The victims and the missing people were coal mine managers and miners from Zhaotong, which administers Weixin, and from Sichuan Province and Chongqing Municipality.

The landslide destroyed two buildings of the Huajiaba Coal Mineat the site.

Two people were injured and were described as stable in hospital.

Local government officials said the landslide was the result of unsafe quarry production.

Another landslide, the result of unsafe quarry production, occurred an hour earlier in Linfeng Township, Weixin County, killing four passers-by.

One killed, six injured in smelter blast in SW China

NANNING, April 28 (Xinhua) -- One worker was killed and six were injured after a blast ripped through a smelting factory in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region Tuesday, the local work safety watchdog said.

A furnace at a lead and antimony plant in Hechi city exploded at about 7:40 a.m., when seven workers were clearing dregs from the furnace, said Huang Aichang, an official with the municipal work safety supervision administration.

One person died at the scene and one of the six injured was in a serious condition.

An initial investigation showed the workers detected a problem in the furnace and sprayed it with cold water to cool it down for maintenance, which triggered the explosion.

The plant belongs to the Nanfang Nonferrous Metals Refining Co. Ltd., a private company set up in 1995. It produces about 60,000 tonnes of lead and antimony, 50,000 tonnes of sulfuric acid, and other metal and chemical products a year.

Officials with the administration are investigating the accident.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Quake of 5.0 hits China's Xinjiang, no casualties reported

URUMQI, April 22 (Xinhua) -- An earthquake measuring 5.0 on the Richter scale rocked the region around Artux City in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region Wednesday, but no casualties have been reported, local authorities said.

Artux is the capital of the Kirgiz Autonomous Prefecture of Kizilsu.

The quake struck at 5:26 p.m. and the epicenter was located at 40.1 degrees north latitude and 77.4 degrees east longitude, the Xinjiang Seismological Network reported.

"We haven't received reports of casualties," said a spokesman from the government of Halajun Township, the nearest town to the epicenter. Halajun is administered by Artux City and is about 80 km from the city.

"Most local houses are designed to withstand earthquakes and sustained almost no damage. Only some adobe houses showed cracks on their walls," he said.

The Artux municipal government is taking stock of losses and damage.

On Sunday, a 5.5-magnitude quake jolted Akqi County, also in the prefecture, which affected 15,000 residents and damaged thousands of houses. No casualties were reported in that quake.

China launches national campaign against illegal, obscene publications

BEIJING, April 22 (Xinhua) -- Chinese authorities launched a nationwide
crackdown Wednesday on illegal and pornographic publications, destroying 46.85
million items.

The crackdown covered the country's 31 provinces, cities and autonomous
regions, according to the National Anti-Pornography and Anti-Illegal
Publications Office.

There were 17 provinces, cities and autonomous regions destroying up to 1
million illegal items, including Shanghai, Jiangsu and Beijing.

Guangdong Province had the largest number at 10 million, the office said.

On April 12, the office began a national crackdown on obscene audio-visual
products, confiscating nearly 3 million discs during a 10-day period.

Jiang Jianguo, a senior official from the office, said the government
wanted to purify the social environment and fulfill its commitment against
pirated content to the world community.

"This has become a world issue that requires more international
cooperation," Jiang added.