Wednesday, May 25, 2011

China working toward fewer executions

China orders suspension of death sentences


Convict sentencing, Wenzhou, April 2004
China has apparently introduced new standards to reduce the number of criminals it executes.
The Supreme People's Court - the highest in China - has told lower courts to suspend death sentences for two years.
But this should only happen in cases where there is no need for "immediate execution", the court said.
China has introduced a number of measures over recent years to cut down the number of executions.
This latest development appeared in the annual report of the supreme court.
"Suspend the death sentence for two years for all cases that don't require immediate execution," read the report.
The court does not say why some cases might need to be carried out immediately, although in the past the government has instructed judges to be more severe in cases that involved crimes it was targeting.
Those benefiting from the changes will probably never be executed.
Criminals given a suspended death penalty usually have their sentences commuted to life imprisonment.
China does not reveal the number of executions it carries out each year, but it is thought to kill more people than any other country.
Four years ago the Supreme People's Court took back the right to review every death sentence handed out by lower courts.
The result has been fewer executions.
Earlier this year China reduced the number of crimes that carry the death penalty by 13 to 55.
"Strictly control and unify standards relating to the death penalty, and ensure that it only applies to a very small minority of criminals committing extremely serious crimes," read one section of the supreme court's report.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Asian Nuclear Pact

Japan nuclear: Kan, Lee and Wen agree early warning

Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan, centre, at trilateral talks. 22 May





Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan (centre) is hosting the talks in Tokyo
The leaders of Japan, China and South Korea have agreed to set up an early warning system to alert each other of emergencies at nuclear facilities.
Japan's Prime Minister Naoto Kan agreed to the measure after a meeting in Tokyo with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and South Korean President Lee Myung-bak.
The leaders said nuclear experts would also share more data in future.
Japan was hit by an earthquake and tsunami on 11 March, which wrecked the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
Workers at Fukushima are still battling to control the stricken facility, which is leaking radioactive material.
China and South Korea have been critical of Japan's handling of the crisis in recent weeks.
But the BBC's Roland Buerk in Tokyo says the meeting was designed to show solidarity after the earthquake and tsunami.
In a joint statement the three leaders promised they would work more closely on nuclear issues.
"We decided to strengthen co-operation in information sharing. In addition, we also decided to start discussion on establishing early notification framework in case of emergency and exchanging experts," the statement said.
The BBC's Roland Buerk in Tokyo says that Japanese want to see greater collaboration
The three leaders also said that the international community needed to learn the lessons of the Fukushima crisis.
South Korea and China had previously expressed concern that the nuclear leak was having an impact on food safety across the region.
But Mr Kan has been keen to highlight that food from his country is not contaminated.
During a photo opportunity on Saturday, Mr Wen and Mr Lee both ate food in the Fukushima prefecture.
Mr Wen and Mr Lee are the first foreign leaders to visit Fukushima - about 220km (136 miles) north-east of Tokyo - since the disaster.
Mr Lee said South Korea would do all it could to help reconstruction work in Japan.
The leaders of the three countries have met on an informal basis for a decade. Since 2008, they have held an annual meeting.
The massive earthquake tsunami left more than 24,000 people dead or missing

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Eating safely in China

She immediately stepped in. "I choose the apples that are pock-marked and are slightly bitten up by bugs," she told me while replacing the apples in my basket. "I figure if the fruit is good enough for the insect, it's good enough for me."
In China, she told me, the most perfectly formed, most appetizing piece of fruit is the scariest of them all.
With so many food safety scandals in China, everyone seems to have a philosophy on how best to eat. Avoid seafood. Never eat meat from the local market. Don't eat Chinese branded dairy products including cakes.
Probably the best and most consistent piece of advice I have gotten is to diversify your diet. "Rotate your poisons," a food safety expert advised me. It's enough to make you paranoid about eating anything at all.
Fear over additives, antibiotics, fake foods, and dodgy practices has grabbed hold of consumers here, some of whom are taking matters into the own hands by forming organic food buying clubs.
The government has recently ramped up efforts to tighten regulations and root out food safety violators in a state-backed media campaign.
The latest food safety report? Watermelons so juiced up with growth-enhancing chemicals that the fruit bursts open in the field. The CCTV report noted that few fruit markets are willing to buy the melons because they could erupt in transit -- oh, and irritate the digestive system if you eat them.
According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Chinese agricultural exports have grown significantly in the past decade with Japan, South East Asia, North America and the European Union all major customers. In February, the USDA said China's continued growth depended on three factors -- one of them being food safety conditions.
The World Health Organization's food safety official, Peter K. Ben Embarek, told me food safety is improving in China but more needs to be done.
"It's clear that the credibility of the system will suffer. The consumer will continue to lose confidence in Chinese products and consumers abroad will equally lose confidence in Chinese products," he said.
"And that will be unfair for all the producers and all the systems in place that are producing safe food in China."

Good news for China- HIV deaths fall

HIV-related deaths fall in China

HIV activists in China China has come a long way in tackling HIV/Aids
Efforts to improve access to HIV drugs in China have cut deaths by more than 60% in seven years, researchers say. China introduced free anti-retroviral drugs in 2003, reaching more than 60% of patients by 2009.But experts say more needs to be done to speed up diagnosis and improve access to treatment in certain groups.

They include men, the elderly, migrants and ethnic minority groups, injecting drug users and people who have caught HIV through sexual contact.The findings are published online in the Lancet Infectious Diseases journal.
Lead author Professor Fujie Zhang, from the National Centre for Aids/STD Control and Prevention, in Beijing, said: "Given the size of the country, and the geographical spread of individuals with HIV... China's treatment coverage is remarkable... but it is far from the goal of complete coverage of people who meet the treatment criteria."
Commenting on the study, Terrence Higgins Trust clinical director Jason Warriner said: "We know that access to testing and treatment, in the form of anti-retrovirals, is vital both in preventing deaths from HIV and stopping more people becoming infected.
"The earlier people are diagnosed with HIV the greater chance they have of being able to lead a long and healthier life.
"But there also needs to be ongoing education and awareness of HIV to help prevent more people becoming infected in the future."

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

China power cuts set to increase on rising coal costs

China has started rationing electricity to try and stave off an energy shortage that government officials say could be the worst since 2004.
State-owned power generating companies are dealing with high global energy prices that have cut their profits.
China has also banned the export of diesel, to try to meet domestic demand.
Power cuts occur every summer, but this year rising coal costs and a drop in hydropower output mean they could be much more severe.
The China Electricity Council (CEC) said on Tuesday that China's five biggest power producers reported losses of 10.57bn yuan ($1.62bn; £995m) in their thermal power plants in the first four months of the year, according to the Xinhua news agency.
The figure was about 7.29bn yuan more than in the same period last year, said the CEC in a statement, which blamed soaring coal prices.
The CEC is warning that this poses "great risks" to ensuring power supplies during the peak season this summer, said Xinhua.
The five main power producers supply about half of the country's power, according to the CEC.
Analysts say China has not raised electricity tariffs significantly because of rising inflation worries.
China's price-setting agency was reported to have increased electricity tariffs in some parts of the country in April.
However, observers say the rise was too small to restore profitability for many coal-fired power generators.
Instead, manufacturers in some provinces say they are already being ordered by local authorities to limit electricity usage, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Some provinces have reportedly started rationing electricity earlier this year including Hunan, Zhejiang and Anhui as well as Shanghai and Chongqing.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Does China need more emporers?

China's Forbidden City admits plans for 'rich club'


doorway to the Palace Museum inside the Forbidden City, Beijing May 11, 2011 The Forbidden City authorities now say there were plans for a private club inside the palace
have admitted that there were plans to open an exclusive private club inside the palace.
They had initially denied the historic site was being used for private profit.
Potential club members were apparently invited to a lavish opening ceremony inside the Forbidden City.
Media reports say they were being charged $150,000 (£92,600) each to join the club.
Photographs of the opening ceremony have been posted online.
They show attendants dressed as ancient warriors, as they might have done when emperors strolled the palace corridors.
Valuable museum pieces were said to be on display for the special guests, who dined on delicacies such as double-boiled superior fungus with Chinese herbs.
Another picture shows a welcome note prepared by the organisers. It says the club is intended as a meeting place for the "wise elites" in society.
The Forbidden City authorities say the club was being organised without their knowledge by the Beijing Palace Museum Royal Court Cultural Development Company, a firm linked to the museum.
"It made its own decision without approval from us to expand customer services and release membership invitation forms," the Forbidden City said in a statement.
Plans to go ahead and recruit members have now been scrapped.
The private club was being organised in the Jianfu Palace, a section of the Forbidden City that was built by the Emperor Qianlong in the 18th Century.
It burnt down in 1923 and was restored after several years of painstaking work in 2005, with money donated by a Hong Kong businessman.
The Forbidden City, in the heart of Beijing, was home to China's emperors in the Ming and Qing dynasties.

Monday, May 16, 2011

Love this idea and it could work for China too

The virutous cycle comes to urban agriculture in this talk and I think it could feed a lot of people.

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Sunday, May 15, 2011

Bob Dylan denies Chinese censored his songs

Bob Dylan denies China censored his choice of songs

Bob Dylan on stage in Beijing, April 2011 Dylan's set lists change from one show to the next
Singer Bob Dylan has hit back at suggestions that he gave in to censorship during a recent series of concerts in China.
The folk-rock legend, 69, agreed to give authorities set lists before performances in Shanghai and Beijing.
He was criticised in print and online for ignoring 1960s-era protest songs.
Writing on his website, Dylan has now insisted he knew nothing of any censorship and says he and his band played all the songs they intended to.
Bob Dylan shot to fame in the 1960s as an icon of the anti-war movement in the era of the Vietnam War.
Songs such as The Times They Are a-Changin' and Like a Rolling Stone became synonymous with the counterculture of the 1960s, and Dylan became a poster-boy for a disenchanted generation.
Dylan's vast back catalogue spans 34 studio albums and hundreds of individual songs, many recorded since the 1960s and spanning a wide range of musical styles.
He is known for embarking on lengthy concert tours - known as the Never-Ending Tour - sometimes playing 100 times each year.
Set lists change regularly, and the famously stubborn singer-songwriter often confounds fans who turn up wanting to hear specific numbers from his 1960s heyday.
'New kind of sellout'
Defending his choice of songs for the China leg of his current tour, Dylan wrote: "As far as censorship goes, the Chinese government had asked for the names of the songs that I would be playing.
Bob Dylan on the front of a Chinese magazine Bob Dylan's arrival in China was big news in the country
"There's no logical answer to that, so we sent them the set lists from the previous three months. If there were any songs, verses or lines censored, nobody ever told me about it and we played all the songs that we intended to play."
He had faced explicit criticism after the China shows, including from New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd.
"The idea that the raspy troubadour of '60s freedom anthems would go to a dictatorship and not sing those anthems is a whole new kind of sellout," she wrote.
Ms Dowd criticised Dylan for not mentioning artist Ai Wei Wei, who was detained by Chinese authorities in the days running up to his first show in China.
"He sang his censored set, took his pile of Communist cash and left," she wrote.
Bob Dylan has often shied away from the label pinned on him in the 1960s.
"The Chinese press did tout me as a sixties icon, however, and posted my picture all over the place with Joan Baez, Che Guevara, Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg," he wrote on his website.
"The concert attendees probably wouldn't have known about any of those people.
"Regardless, they responded enthusiastically to the songs on my last 4 or 5 records. Ask anyone who was there. They were young and my feeling was that they wouldn't have known my early songs anyway."

Friday, May 13, 2011

The future of silk

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Thursday, May 12, 2011

Is this really what China will be about?

Somehow this is not what I hope for or envison for China. As a Canadian I have hoped that ancient and venerable China will be smarter. less self absorbed and more willing to say NO to the excesses and self centeredness that western societies have so admired and bowed down to.

No rules for the rich: How China spends its new wealth


Girl running past Gucci ad China is expected to import one-third of the world's luxury goods by 2015
 
Here's a story an upmarket wine merchant told me about a particularly memorable - and potentially instructive - evening.
A group of Chinese businessmen arranged to meet up one evening for a drink. They were asked to bring their best bottle of wine.
Here was a selection of some of the best-known fine wines in the world. Chateau Lafite 1962, Chateau Latour 1970 - bottles that cost in the region of $1,600 (£1,000) each.
On arrival, the host said: "Gentlemen, show your wines," and the guests presented their bottles for each other's approval.
The host then called: "Gentlemen, uncork your bottle," which they did.
He then indicated a vast silver punchbowl and ordered: "Gentlemen, pour your wine," which they did - into the punchbowl.
The mingled contents of some of the most distinctive clarets in the world were then ladled out between them.
It is a memorable anecdote. But it is also instructive, because it illustrates the way China's new rich approach established luxury goods.
Rich keep spending
As the country sucks up more and more of the world's luxury goods production, producers are growing in their understanding of Chinese tastes.
Lafitte label Would you like a mixer with that, sir?
Unlike China's middle class, which is suffering from high inflation, the rich feel no such drag upon their lifestyle.
BMW, which also owns the Rolls-Royce brand, almost quadrupled its first-quarter profits thanks in part to increased demand from China.
It joins a long list of leading luxury brands whose profits have been spurred by demand there.
According to Barclays Capital, the country now buys 12% of the world's luxury goods.
A research report from Barclays says this is set to grow by 20-30% a year. It means in five years' time China could be buying a third of the global luxury goods ouput.
That is a staggering growth rate, but if you look at the increase in the number of millionaires it is not hard to see how it could rise so fast.
There are around half a million Chinese millionaires, 31% more than in 2008, according to the most recent Merrill Lynch Cap Gemini World Wealth Report.
Donald Holdsworth, director of MatchPower in Australia, has been fascinated by China's growing love affair with luxury since the 1990s.
Little emperors
Why does he think the desire for luxury goods has seized the Chinese mind so firmly?
"In a conformist society where there's no freedom of speech, once a chance appears for you to express yourself without danger you are going to take it”
Donald Holdsworth Kinectic Associates
The answer, he thinks, is rooted in demographics: "The average age of a Chinese millionaire is 39 - that's 15 years younger than in the developed world.
"It happens to coincide with the start of the one-child-per-person policy - the year of the Little Emperors. These children were given the very best by their parents."
So the Little Emperors grew up with as many resources as could be mustered by their parents - at the same time as the economy shifted from communism to capitalism.
That, says Donald Holdsworth, sheds further light on Chinese tastes: "If you've grown up in a conformist society where there's no freedom of speech, once a chance appears for you to express yourself without danger you are going to take it.
"It's like unscrewing the top from a bottle of fizzy water."
That desire is just as well for the largely European producers of luxury goods.
LVMH - Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton - is the world's biggest luxury brand company with more than 50 of the best-known in its stable.
Overall, LVMH already makes about 40% of its profits from the country.
China girl and limo The taste for all-out show is likely to wane as fortunes - and their owners - mature
Others with growing profits in the region include Burberry and German carmaker Audi, whose latest sharp rise in profits were thanks in part to a strong growth in sales of luxury cars in China.
Prada is also exploring other ways of accessing China's wealth. Like other firms it is considering raising money by issuing shares via the Hong Kong stock exchange.
And then there is Gucci, which has pushed hard in China and has some 40 outlets across a string of Chinese cities.
Easy on the ear
The recent growth in the market is pointed up in sharp detail by Berry Bros and Rudd, the upmarket wine merchants.
Wine buying director Alun Griffiths says the Chinese wine market has been growing by 15-20% a year and his firm now does 25% of its business in Hong Kong.
Five years ago that figure was barely 6%.
Chinese tastes are certainly high-end; Bordeaux, which makes some of the most expensive fine wines in the world, is a favourite. But only a few chateaux seem to interest them.
Mr Griffiths says the wine is not necessarily bought for its taste, as the opening paragraph of this piece fully illustrates, but the name is important, too.
"Chateau Lafite sounds well to the Chinese ear, in a way that other Bordeaux wines don't. That may change, but it is the label they are choosing for the moment."
Showing off
Big names are key to wealthy Chinese buyers, in part because the market is new.
"As a wine lover it's a horror story, but you've got to let people do what they want”
Alun Griffiths Berry Bros and Rudd
Chinese tastes are likely to evolve, as has happened elsewhere.
Donald Holdsworth says if one looks at the UK market of the 1980s, Rolls-Royce cars were the favourite of the rich, giving way to the slightly more restrained Bentley, and these days to the less showy Audis and Mercedes.
"That will probably eventually happen in China, as it has in Japan, where they still love their luxury brands but in a less obvious display of wealth.
"Until then it will be a market that wants to show off."
Meantime, tales of fine wines in a punchbowl - or mixed with 7-Up or Coca-Cola - will doubtless continue to circulate.
But, as Alun Griffiths puts it: "As a wine lover it's a horror story, but you've got to let people do what they want with what they buy.
"After all, there are no rules for being rich."

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

The future with silk

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Tuesday, May 10, 2011

April trade Surplus in China

China's trade surplus beats forecasts, as yuan in focus

Chinese coins and notes China's currency, the renminbi, has been a point of dispute between China and other countries.

Related Stories

China's trade surplus in April was nearly four times bigger than expected, with exports far exceeding imports.
The trade surplus was $11.4bn (£6.9bn), according to the customs agency, whereas analysts had expected a figure of about $3bn.
In March, China reported an unexpected trade surplus of $140m.
The news comes during US-China talks on trade relations and will put the issue of the Chinese currency in the spotlight.
Many in the US, especially exporters, argue that China's currency is undervalued, making Chinese goods highly competitive in world markets.
China's exports grew 29.9% in April from a year earlier, while import growth slowed to 21.8% year on year.
"Today's trade data shows that Chinese exporters continue to benefit from a supportive exchange rate," said Brian Jackson from Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong.
"This number will likely add to the pressure from Washington for Beijing to allow faster currency appreciation, but more importantly should persuade Chinese policy-makers that a stronger yuan can be tolerated by the economy and is warranted as part of their efforts to curb price pressures."
On Monday, US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said China was making progress "towards a more flexible exchange rate".
Rebalancing trade?
China reported a trade deficit of $1.02bn for the first three months of the year.
Some analysts say that government efforts to rebalance the economy by boosting domestic demand could cut down the full-year surplus.
"I think the trade surplus will continue to shrink as a share of the country's [gross domestic product], and China is seeing a more balanced trade structure," said Du Zhengzheng from Bohai securities in Beijing.

Monday, May 9, 2011

Is this the real China?

China's thirst for luxury is a boom for yacht builders


Gordon Hui, centre left China's newly rich are discovering the pleasures of owning a super-yacht.
Sat on a sun-dappled deck of a 60-foot yacht sipping an iced-coffee and smoking a cigarette, Gordon Hui looks pleased with himself.
He has good reason.
Mr Hui, the boss of the Asia operations of UK yacht-builder Sunseeker, is poised to seal a massive deal worth potentially up to 20m pounds ($33m) to sell five yachts - two over a 100 feet (30m) - to a mainland Chinese customer.
"They've done their research. They are just coming to talk delivery times," he says in between meeting prospective customers at the Hong Kong Gold Coast Boat Show.
Mr Hui says the market in China for the deep-hulled, handcrafted luxury yachts that Sunseeker produces in Poole, Dorset has ballooned from "nothing" two years ago.
Since then Sunseeker, which makes 230 boats a year, has sold around 25 yachts to Chinese customers.
Taste for luxury
China's seemingly insatiable appetite for luxury is a boon for yacht-builders, and other makers of luxury goods, at a time when traditional markets in Europe and the US are struggling.
Accelera Chinese made yachts From a distance, Chinese-made yachts look like their European rivals
"They get the watch, they get the flashy car and then they get a yacht," says Silva Yim, the Hong Kong-based dealer for Princess Yachts, a UK company based in Plymouth.
But it is not all smooth sailing in China for the predominantly European makers of these rich man's toys.
No-one doubts that China's billionaires have deep enough pockets and a taste for ostentation that a super-yacht amply satisfies.
But high taxes, onerous regulation and a lack of suitable marinas and berths may limit the industry's expansion.
Yacht builders also face emerging competition from local upstarts keen to get a slice of this lucrative market.
Nestled among the Italian and UK-made yachts at the Hong Kong boat show were several Chinese-made vessels.
Karaoke dens
Yacht builders are keen to cater to the different tastes of their Chinese clients.
Samuel Wong Samuel Wong is a launching a Chinese brand of super-yachts.
Mr Yim, of Princess Yachts which is now owned by LVMH Moet Hennessey Louis Vuitton, says that the Chinese like to use their yachts for relatively short periods at the weekend with the family or to entertain clients.
He adds that open deck areas are smaller as Chinese are not usually devotees of sun-bathing and water sports.
Instead they prefer more inside space to host their guests.
One recent client asked for the master bedroom to be turned into a karaoke parlour, notes Mr Yim.
Not quite Monte Carlo
Despite an 18,000km coastline, extended trips around the Chinese coast are difficult because there are strict rules on where private boats can sail.

Start Quote

My boss is flying to Europe next week to inquire about buying a private jet.”
End Quote Frankie Chan Chinese luxury rental company
Boat owners require special permits to travel on their yachts from province-to-province and large yachts are treated as commercial ships.
There is also a lack of marinas and the ones that do exist are hardly Monte Carlo standard.
"Once China opens up its coastline, it will become like a new French Riviera," says Albert Wu, general manager of the Gold Coast yacht club.
Demand for yachts is also growing despite a 43% tax on boats imported into China - although many buy and keep their vessels in Hong Kong to avoid paying the duty.
Made in China
From a distance, the 86-feet Accelera looks like the other Italian, US and British made yachts on display at the boat show, with its sleek hull and sharp lines.
Enjoying champagne at Hong Kong Gold Coast Boat Show Chinese like to use their yachts to entertain guests and business clients
But made at a shipyard in Zhuhai, a mainland Chinese city about two hours from Hong Kong, it costs HK$6.8m (£0.5m; $0.9m) - less than a third of the price of its international rivals.
Samuel Wong, executive director of the company that built the boat, says he chose Accelera as the company's brand name because "it sounded Italian".
His father's shipyard used to build fishing and houseboats but Mr Wong believes his new approach will pay off as the existing international super-yacht brands are not yet well established in China.
"The engine and electronics are the same as the international brands - it's our labour costs that are cheap," he says.
Inside the yacht, which boasts a karaoke lounge complete with a disco glitter ball, it smells synthetic and compares poorly to the glossy interiors of its European rivals.
But Mr Wong and the half a dozen other Chinese yacht builders that have sprung up are a tangible example of China's move away from mass production into higher value goods.
Bumper purchase
The buyer of Mr Hui's five Sunseeker yachts, Frankie Chan, is matter-of-fact about their bumper purchase when I contact him by phone.
Mr Chan is the vice president of Oursjia, a members-only luxury rental company based in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou.
The company looked into to buying the yachts just three months ago in response to demands from some of their 500,000 clients.
They pay a membership fee of 20,000 yuan (£1,900; $3000), which gives them access to rent a car from the company's fleet of 3,000 luxury vehicles and or items from a range of designer furniture.
It estimates that 50,000 of its clients are potential users of the yachts, which come with their own captain and crew provided by Sunseeker.
And, it appears super-yachts are not the only items on their clients' wish lists.
"My boss is flying to Europe next week to inquire about buying a private jet," Mr Chan says.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

China and the internet

China tightens internet censorship controls


A Chinese man plays online games at an internet cafe in Beijing (file photo) In China some Western news sites and social-networking sites like Facebook are blocked

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China has set up a new government body to control information on the internet.
The State Internet Information Office will take over responsibility from a number of lower-ranking directorates.
The new set-up will enable the government to keep a tighter grip on the content available to Chinese internet-users inside the country.
Beijing operates vast internet censorship, dubbed the "great firewall of China". Websites deemed sensitive by the government are routinely blocked.
The Chinese government has put a lot of resources into controlling and censoring the internet content available to its citizens.
Until now, the responsibility fell to the country's Information Office and quite a few other agencies across various government ministries.
There was often in-fighting as each tried to wield power over what was allowed on the internet, from online games to politically sensitive content.
The newly-created State Internet Information Office brings technical and political control over the internet under one body, with Information Minister Wang Chen in charge.
This in effect gives his ministry more power than the other agencies involved.
This indicates that online news and information, new media business and internet access will most likely come under tighter control, as the government clamps down on dissent following the Jasmine Revolution in the Middle East and north Africa.
At the same time, the government hopes to use the internet to promote itself both at home and abroad.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Diseases prominent in Asia

Three-quarters of the world's liver cancer cases in males and two-thirds in females occur in Asia.
With a fatality rate of 93%, it is a particularly Asian disease that has a high human and economic cost.
Deadly disease
According to the World Health Organization, liver cancer kills 700,000 people every year, which makes it the third most common cause of death from cancer worldwide.
A breast cancer patient receives a chemotherapy drip at Cape Fear Valley Medical Centre in the US. Liver cancer does not respond well to chemotherapy
China alone has more than half of newly diagnosed liver cancer cases in the world, while fewer than 4% occur in the US.
The main causes are alcoholism and infection with the hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV).
These viruses are spread from person to person through sexual contact, blood transfusions, re-use of contaminated needles and childbirth.
Worryingly, fewer than 20% of patients who are diagnosed with liver cancer can opt for surgery, according to Professor London Ooi of the National Cancer Centre in Singapore.
And even if they undergo an operation, four out of five patients will see a recurrence within five years after surgery.
Lucrative market
In the past, the pharmaceutical industry focused on designing medicines for more lucrative markets in the West. As a result, there was only a limited amount of liver cancer treatments.
But as Asian patients have become wealthier, with their purchasing power boosted by economic development in countries such as China and Singapore, drug makers are paying more attention to their needs.

Diseases more common in Asia

  • Head and neck cancer
  • Stomach cancer
  • Liver cancer
  • Hepatitis B
  • Tuberculosis
  • Dengue fever
Asia's pharmaceutical industry is estimated to be worth $168bn (£101bn) at the end of 2010, according to market research and information analysis company RNCOS.
And while that is much smaller than the West, the speed at which it expands is expected to be much quicker in coming years.
The pharmaceutical industry is expected to grow by about 9.5% this year, while the sectors in the US and Europe are forecast to grow by 3.2% and 4.5% respectively, RNCOS estimates.
As a result, companies such as Pfizer, the world's biggest drug producer, are now developing treatments for diseases which are more prevalent in Asia.
"The diseases that are more common here include head, neck, stomach and liver cancers, as well as infectious diseases like hepatitis B, tuberculosis and dengue fever," says Dr Chong Chew Lan, medical director at Pfizer's clinical research unit in Singapore.
"We are at the early stage of developing medicines for these diseases and we will definitely see an increasing trend of companies focusing their research on Asia," she says.
"This is because there is a large population in Asia and there is a growing middle class who can afford these medications."
Traditional medicine
But while the companies are hoping to tap into rising demand, they will face competition from less modern medical miracles.
For thousands of years across Asia, people in the region have been relying on traditional Chinese medicine.
Liver cancer survivor Woo Kum Tin says he would have gone to his Chinese doctor and asked for herbal medicine, had he been given more than three days to decide over his surgery.
Workers at a traditional chinese medicine store prepare various dried items at a shop in Hong Kong Many Asian patients still rely on traditional Chinese medicine
So is Western medicine well accepted in Asia?
"I remember the days when my grandparents would prefer to use traditional Chinese medicine," says Pfizer's Dr Chong.
"But with my own parents, I have seen that change," she adds.
"Now, they are more likely to use a combination of both. They go for Western medicine for a quick relief, while they use traditional Chinese medicine for an improvement of general health."
One company in Singapore, Eu Yan Sang, has been offering traditional products and services since 1879.
Dr Caryn Peh, senior general manager of the company's Clinic Services, says traditional medicine plays a complementary role.
"In Singapore, more than 80% of patients who are diagnosed by Western doctors also seek traditional Chinese medicine," she says.
"In developing nations, they might be more traditionalists in their ways of thinking," she added.
Different responses
They may have a point, especially as some experts believe that Asian patients also react differently to Western medicine.
Dr Chong of Pfizer Clinical Research Unit says there is a need to understand the effects of drugs on Asian patients.
"The advantage of having a research facility in Singapore is the multi-ethnic population of Chinese, Malays and Indians that we have," she says.
"What we noticed is that Asians tend to be more sensitive to any central nervous system responses caused by drugs," Dr Chong explains.
"So for example, if the drug causes drowsiness, we notice it more quickly in our Asian patients."
While reactions may differ, there is very little disagreement over the need for better and more effective medicines in Asia.
And now that the region's growing wealth offers greater opportunities for pharmaceutical firms, there is every chance that Asia's patients will also get to live longer and more prosperous lives.

The world's factory with aspirations

In the past three decades, China has copied technology developed in other countries.
That has allowed the country to become the world's factory, producing cheap exports that have driven its remarkable economic growth.
But now the government not only wants to make products, it wants China to design them as well.
"Until now we've focused on manufacturing," says Gao Xudong, a professor of management at Tsinghua University in Beijing.
"But for the next step, we need to spend more money on science, creating more knowledge, and contributing more to the world," he said.
At a solar panel factory on the outskirts of Beijing you can see how innovation is being encouraged.
There is a research and development laboratory where the panels are tested to make them more efficient. But ultimately the research team wants to create its own product.
The authorities here want to increase the number of patents registered by Chinese companies and individuals.
A robotic sketch at Wu Lulu's factory, China, January 2011 Critics say the atmosphere in China does not encourage creativity
The factory's manager, Tian Jiang, says that the company is receiving tax breaks to pursue its research. He believes that the only way to remain competitive is to keep developing.
Thinking differently
But critics say that innovation needs more than just government and tax breaks.
It also requires an atmosphere in which creativity is encouraged.
China is an authoritarian state. And much of the teaching in the country is by rote-learning.
"One of the phrases that's often used in China is the nail that sticks up gets hammered down or the bird that flies first gets shot down," says Patrick Chovanec, an American economist based in Beijing.
"This is not an attitude that's going to get people to think differently. You have a society that's geared towards conformity, stability and predictably."
Back at Mr Wu's workshop, he is hard at work.
He says his dream is to build a robot that can do all the housework.
It may seem like an impossible task but the authorities here want people to think big.

China boosts marine surveillance over island tensions

One of the disputed islands, in an image released by the Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force on 15 September 2010 China has been taking an increasingly tough line on its maritime territorial claims in recent months
China is to expand its ocean monitoring agency to protect its maritime interests, a senior official has said.
China Marine Surveillance's Sun Shuxian said 1,000 new personnel would be added as well as new equipment.
Sea patrols would be carried out more frequently "to strengthen law enforcement in Chinese-related waters", the China Daily quoted him as saying.
In recent months tension has risen between China and regional neighbours over overlapping maritime claims.
Many of the disputed islands lie in rich fishing grounds or close to areas with oil or gas reserves.
A bitter diplomatic row erupted between China and Japan last year over disputed islands in the East China Sea called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China.
In the South China Sea, meanwhile, multiple countries including China claim sovereignty over the Spratly and Paracel groupings.
Mr Sun, the agency's deputy director, said that as well as increasing staff, another 36 inspection ships would be added over the next five years.
"New equipment will be installed on part of the inspection fleet to improve law enforcement capacity," the newspaper quoted him as saying.
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Sunday, May 1, 2011

China bans smoking in public places

China ban on smoking in public places comes into force


A man lights up in Beijing. China has more smokers than any other country
A ban on smoking in public places has come into force in China - home to a third of the world's smokers.
The move is aimed at curbing the number of deaths from smoking-related diseases, running at a million a year.
But the new rules have been criticised because they do not include punishments for those who choose to ignore them.
Business owners often resent efforts to force them to ban smoking on their premises, because many customers do not like the rules and complain.
The new rules prohibit smoking in places like restaurants, hotels, railway stations or theatres, but not at the office.
Employers will be obliged to warn staff of the dangers of smoking but not to forbid them from lighting up at their desks.
Resistance
Shanghai imposed similar rules a year ago, but people do not seem to take much notice of them.
Often you find people smoking at the next table while you are eating your meal or having a drink in a bar.
The problem is the regulations do not specify punishments for businesses or individuals who flout them.
It appears that many Chinese people are unaware of the dangers of smoking. Research suggests only one in four knows the harm cigarettes or second-hand smoke can cause.
Officials say they have to try to persuade people not to smoke to try to reduce the numbers dying from smoking related diseases.
At the same time though the government makes a lot of money from the sales of cigarettes by the state-owned firm that makes and sells all tobacco products throughout the country.

Minimum wage in Hong Kong for the first time.

Hong Kong workers to enjoy minimum wage for first time

 Critics say the minimum wage is a departure from Hong Kong's free-market roots
Hong Kong has introduced a minimum wage that is expected to benefit 270,000 low-paid workers, or around 10% of the working population.
Workers will now earn a minimum of HK$28 ($3.60; £2.18) per hour.
The legislation was passed in response to public pressure to narrow the territory's wealth gap.
But the minimum wage has been resisted by the business community, who say it is too costly.
Business leaders say small businesses will be forced to lay off staff.
 
Critics also say the legislation is a departure from Hong Kong's free-market roots.
With the exception of Singapore, most Asian countries now have a minimum wage or are considering one.
The move is expected to boost the pay of Hong Kong's legions of street sweepers, security guards and restaurant workers.
"The employers now cannot squeeze the lowest paid sectors of society," said Lee Cheuk-yan, general secretary of the Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions and a legislator.
Unions had campaigned for a minimum wage of HK$33 an hour and many workers say the wage increase will not cover rising living costs.
The government said it was forced to introduce the legislation after a voluntary minimum wage scheme in 2006 met with a tepid response from businesses.
Even before its implementation, the legislation has led to disputes between workers and employers.
Some employers have re-hired workers on new contracts with unpaid meal breaks and rest days to avoid paying a higher wage bill.
The legislation does not cover the territory's almost 300,000 domestic helpers, who mainly come from the Philippines and Indonesia.