Archive for May, 2009

Railway to “roof of the world”: wealth, worries

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Zhaxi Wangzhag prostrated himself on a month-long pilgrimage from his remote village at Nagqu County in northern Tibet to Lhasa, crawling on hands and knees and refusing to walk upright.

He was fulfilling a dream and honoring a commitment to his father, a devout Buddhist who insisted every man in the family should perform the ritual.

The pilgrim says his knees were swollen and his back ached at the end of the 400-kilometer trek. But he was content even as trains rumbled past several times a day, with passengers smiling and waving through the windows.

The Lhasa tour did not just take Zhaxi Wangzhag to the famous monasteries, but also to herbal markets where he was convinced the wild caterpillar fungus from his hometown promised another fortune this year.

The lucrative Tibetan medicinal cure-all doubled his family income last year.

As Tibetan medicine gains popularity, nearly 1,300 tons of caterpillar fungus and other Tibetan herbs were sold to the other parts of China last year, up 7 percent year-on-year, the regional government says.

It attributes the growth, in part, to the Qinghai-Tibet Railway, which has carried 44,000 tons of Tibetan products to the rest of China in its first year of operation since July 1, 2006. These include organic farm produce, adornments, herbs, incense, dried yak meat, barley beer and even mineral water from an altitude of 5,100 meters.

Meanwhile, the 1,956-kilometer railway has boosted Tibetan markets by bringing in 620,000 tons of supplies, says Qiangba Puncog, chairman of the regional government.

Changing lives

“Unprecedented economic growth, rising living standards, and job creation.. are transforming life, work and attitudes, especially of the young, in sparsely populated Tibet. And the railway is making a big difference,” wrote journalist N. Ram in the Indian newspaper, The Hindu.

More than a half century ago, Liu Guangfan trekked three months on camelback from Golmud City of Qinghai Province to Lhasa in order to build the first ever highway on the “roof of the world”.

With the railway, the same 1,142-kilometer journey is covered in just 12 hours. Even Beijing is only 48 hours away from Lhasa.

“It’s brought in tourists and a better life,” says Losang Cering, a taxi driver in his 40s, who earns more than 2,000 yuan (270 U.S. dollars) a month, three or four times the amount he could make as a peasant before.

The railway has created jobs for many peasants in his village close to the Lhasa railway station. “Our village-run taxi fleet has expanded to 70 cars from the previous 10, and the more enterprising young men have contracted civil construction projects, and opened souvenir stores and hostels.”

The tourism boom has boosted Tibet’s retail market, enabling many peasants and herders to profit from sales of homemade yogurt, dried yak meat and souvenirs at their doorstep.

Qamba, who runs a dairy in Nagqu, plans to buy more cattle and double the plant’s current output of 1,500 kilograms a year. “Traditional Tibetan dairy foods are very popular with the tourists. Many buy huge packages to take home,” he says.

The immense business opportunities posed by the railway have brought in staggering investment from home and abroad — 4 billion yuan (530 million U.S. dollars) last year, close to the total of the previous five years, says He Benyun, vice-director of Tibet’s regional development and reform commission.

This has saved many ailing Tibetan businesses from bankruptcy, he says.

Investors from east China’s Zhejiang Province have revived a former brick kiln on the suburbs of Lhasa. Today the Qingda Building Material Supplies Co. employs 40 locals and sells flooring and tiles to China’s inland provinces as well as to Nepaland India.

It has given 22-year-old Lhazhoin a job — three years after she graduated from a local secondary school. She’s making 1,500 yuan (200 U.S. dollars) a month as a cashier.

Culture on the Move

Gama Chilai has taken his extended family of 12, including his grandmother, 73, and his son, 3, by train to Lhasa this summer.

“For many Tibetans, a pilgrimage to Lhasa’s monasteries is a lifelong dream,” says the young man from Yushu, a Tibetan community in adjacent Qinghai Province.

Yushu is about 2,000 kilometers from Lhasa. Before the Qinghai-Tibet Railway opened to traffic, local Tibetans could only take buses to Lhasa. The journey over the zigzagging mountain road was tiring, dangerous and by no means cheap, says Gama Chilai.

The railway has carried trainloads of pilgrims like him into Tibet over the past year.

Last year, 328,000 pilgrims visited the Potala Palace, Norbuglinkha and Johkang Monastery, the top three religious sites in Lhasa, an increase of 62,000 from the previous year, Tibet’s regional government says.

During this year’s weeklong May Day holiday, more than 73,000 people visited Norbuglinkha, the summer resort of all the Dalai Lamas. At least 40,000 were pilgrims.

Many travel by train. Pilgrims wearing Tibetan costume and bringing articles of tribute and lamas in crimson cassocks make the train journey to Tibet unique.

In the meantime, many Tibetans have taken the train on pilgrimages elsewhere, to the Ta’er Monastery in Qinghai and the Lama Temple in Beijing.

The railway has also promoted Tibetan culture and arts in the rest of China. Tibetan theme bars, restaurants and souvenir stores are found in many big cities.

“Tibetan adornments have become fashionable almost overnight. They’re beautiful,” says Wang Yanwen, whose store on Zhangye Road in downtown Lanzhou, capital city of northwestern Gansu Province, sells everything to do with Tibetan Buddhism, ranging from beads and prayer wheels to necklaces and bracelets ingrained with totems.

A Tibetan tap dance has gained nationwide popularity after a group of 70 farmer-performers staged it for the lunar New Year’s Eve gala on China Central Television in February.

“I hope people from outside Tibet will also learn about traditional art forms,” says Zhaxi Puncog, a villager in Lhaze County of Xigaze, home to the centuries-old dance.

Man and Nature

A Tibetan antelope runs briskly after a four-wheel drive vehicle toward the three sheds that serve as a wildlife preservation center in the Hoh Xil Natural Reserve 4,600 meters above sea level.

It apparently recognizes the car and its driver Gama — many Tibetans have no surnames — a worker at the center.

Gama became the animal’s means of survival in June 2006, when it was found alone in the wild, barely a week old and with an injured leg. He took it to the center, tended its wounds and kept it at a 300-hectare nature reserve alongside other Tibetan antelopes, stocky wild horses and donkeys.

He named it Nima, which means “the sun” in Tibetan.

Gama and his colleagues work to protect wild species in the HohXil, a 45,000-square kilometer area that is an ideal habitat for wild animals.

“Nima was obviously scared when the first train leaving Lhasa passed the Hoh Xil,” says Gama. “She was barely a month old and had never seen or heard a train. So she ran.”

Today, a daily average of six trains pass their home, but Nima and the other animals are no longer afraid. “They simply stop grazing and look.”

Doubts and criticisms are part of the history of the “heavenly railway” even when it was still on the drawing board. The possible extinction of the critically endangered Tibetan antelopes has been frequently cited by some environmentalists in arguments against the railway.

At the wildlife preservation center, visitors have poured in. “Many chipped in preservation funds. Some offered to work as volunteers,” says Gama.

Tibet used to have several million Tibetan antelopes, but excessive poaching and human encroachment on their habitats caused the population to shrink sharply in the past decades.

Until the mid 1990s, up to 4,000 antelopes in Tibet were killed by poachers each year. Tibet has tightened supervision and patrols in the antelopes’ habitats since 1998, and established three nature reserves to protect the creatures, covering more than 600,000 square kilometers, an area 40 times the size of Beijing.

The government made wildlife preservation a priority in its construction of the railway to Tibet. Thirty-three special passageways were built along the line, enabling animals to follow their normal migratory routes unhindered.

Last year, a Chinese forestry administration report put the population of Tibetan antelopes in Tibet at 150,000, doubling the number of the late 1980s. The Hoh Xil alone has 50,000 antelopes.

“Next year, when we mark the second year of the railway, we’ll set Nima free far from our preservation center. It’ll be time for her to return to the wild,” says Gama.

“Very likely train passengers next year will see flocks of pregnant antelopes migrating to their breeding sites. Nima could be one of them.”

Boon or Bane

Yet a year after its opening, debate continues over whether the world’s highest railway, built at the cost of 33 billion yuan (4.4billion U.S. dollars) is a boon or bane.

On the one hand, it drove up Tibet’s GDP by 13.4 percent last year to a record 29 billion yuan (3.87 billion U.S. dollars), withper-capita GDP topping 1,000 U.S. dollars. In 2006, Tibetan farmers and herders reported a per-capita net income of 2,435 yuan (325 U.S. dollars), up 17.2 percent year-on-year.

The railway has linked the southwestern China region, once so exotic even to the Chinese, ever so closely with the rest of the country. It has carried 1.5 million passengers into Tibet, nearly half of the total tourist arrivals over the past year.

Yet the railway has prompted worries from environmental groups including WWF (World Wildlife Fund) over the fragile ecosystems on the plateau.

“Once damaged, it is extremely difficult to reverse. Integrating the needs of local development with conserving Tibet’s biodiversity is in need of urgent attention,” says Dawa Tsering, head of WWF China’s Program Office in Lhasa.

Though an assessment by environmental scientists in June indicated no apparent damage to the environment along the route, an official with China’s top environmental protection agency recently frowned upon tins and plastic bags littered at several railway stations.

In 2010, about 6 million tourists are expected to flood into Lhasa, a city with 400,000 permanent residents. “Tourism will create mountains of garbage and sewage, far beyond the city’s waste treatment capacities.”

Lhasa allows its sewage water to flood into the Lhasa River. Its only sewage treatment plant became operational in January 2007to treat sewage water discharged from the railway station and the trains.

“The real test has only started,” says Zhu Xingxiang, an official in charge of environment evaluation at the State Environmental Protection Administration.

Designers prepare op art feast with gold

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

The World Gold Council heralded in its 2004 “Sweet Hereafter” motif with a fashion show in Beijing last week.

The World Gold Council is a non-profit association of the world’s leading gold producers, established to promote the use of gold. With headquarters in Geneva, the Council is represented by a network of offices in the major centers of gold demand around the world and its promotional activities cover markets representing some three quarters of the world’s annual consumption of gold.

At the show, sponsored by the China division of the World Gold Council, pretty Chinese models displayed state-of-the-art Italian gold craftsmanship and 18-karat (18k) gold designs, including European trendsetting chokers, bracelets, mesh neckties with fringe ends and necklaces worked in plaited chains.

The collections wowed audiences with their exquisite shapes, forms and creative designs in a wide variety of colors.

The show aimed to serve as an eye-opener for the new trends and fashions in gold products and to woo potential Chinese consumers in an attempt to further tap the Chinese market. China already ranks third in gold consumption in the world.

Setting trends

The jewellery design this year projects an aura of gaiety, happiness and colour, like sweet melodious tunes that send joyful blessings to the future of mankind.

In 2003, people around the world were inundated daily by political dramas, tragedies of war and dark sentiments of insecurity threatening the lives and well-being of their loved ones.

Stepping into 2004, designers have attempted to bring into their work sentiments of joy and optimism.

Vibrant colors, vivid imagination, vigorous energy, light-hearted playfulness and the sweet celebration of the bliss of life portend a more lively fashion scene.

Meanwhile, designers are becoming even more experimental in juxtaposing gold of different colors with innovative materials of all kinds including semi-precious stones, glazes, beads, shells and even crocodile leather in a rainbow of color schemes.

“The warmth of gold and the dreamlike beauty of rainbow- colored decorative materials make each piece of modern jewellery a ‘must-have’ treasure for woman, in a year when the scent of romance is lingering in the air,” explained Mandy Yiu, representative of the World Gold Council from Hong Kong.

Under the motif “Sweet Hereafter,” 2004’s trend features three themes: “Princess in Wonderland,” “Dancing & Swinging” and “Op Art Feast.”

The theme “Princess in Wonderland” recaptures the mood of childhood innocence. This theme celebrates jewellery designs that are pure, innocent and child-like in appeal.

The collections make people feel like Alice in Wonderland, stepping into the forest and looking at eveything they see and touch through a child’s eyes.

The hottest figures include the butterfly, ribbon, heart, button, a flower shape executed in a childish way, magical animals from fairy tales and cartoons.

A festive mood prevails for the theme of “Dancing & Swinging.” The jewellery pieces are inspired by the elegant yet sexy party girls of 1920s New York.

A lot of elements in the fashion design of that era influence jewellery today, creating the trend for “chandelier” earrings, necklace and bracelet designs.

The essence of jewellery designs under this theme is the celebration of the vitality of life.

Recall the jewellery sported by Catherine Zeta Jones and Renee Zelwegger in the hit Broadway-themed movie “Chicago.” See the golden spotlight, tap to the music and feel the beat of all that jazz.

The designers get into the mood and make sure that the ingenious designs are swinging with graceful movements and bubbling with dynamic energy.

The third theme is “Op Art Feast.” Geometric motifs have always featured in every season’s design trend. 2004 is witnessing the revival of the “Op Art” of the 1960s combined with the dramatic fashion expression of the 1980s.

Designs still revolve around multi-faceted shapes and forms, mostly of circles and squares, but the key inspiration is 3-dimensional designs. These collections are full of volume in visual appeal and immensely rich in contrast, whatever the colour, shape or texture.

Speak Gold

The event is part of the World Gold Council’s “Speak Gold” advertising campaign, which started in the autumn of 2003 in the United States, Italian and Indian markets.

For over 5,000 years, gold has been sought after for its beauty, radiance and intrinsic worth, capturing the imagination of entire civilizations.

However, its role in contemporary lives goes much deeper. Gold, the subject of endless myths and fables, has woven itself into different languages and touched people’s emotions.

The “Speak Gold” campaign is based on the idea of the language of gold, capturing the universal significance of gold as a means of expression.

“Gold speaks in a language more powerful than words,” said Yiu. “When fashioned into elegant jewellery, gold speaks to our hearts evoking joy, generating passion, demonstrating love, celebrating friendship and connecting us to the people, the moments and the events that enrich our lives.”

In old China, people gave gold locks as a gift to their newborn baby to symbolize their wish for lifelong happiness. And gold jewellery has been considered an indispensable adornment for the bride and the most felicitous wedding gift,” Wang Lixin, China Manager of the World Gold Council, said.

“Gold says something about us and the ones we love. This unique symbolic quality is what gives gold its relevance to our lives,” Wang said.

K-gold

Last September, “Speak Gold” campaign was extended to Shanghai, alongside the introduction of fashionable K-gold or 18k gold jewellery.

And now, the World Gold Council has brought the fashion of K-gold, the most expressive gold, to Beijing, in conjunction with the leading Italian, Taiwan and Hong Kong gold jewellers. They include JustGold, Chow Sang Sang, Chow Tai Fook, Auritalia and Silmar.

In China, pure gold (24 karats) dominates the jewellery market and consumers traditionally treat gold jewellery more as an investment than as a fashion object.

“Gold jewellery is only worn by my mum and aunties, not by young people like me!”

That is a typical response by young urban women in China when asked about wearing gold jewellery.

Why? Because gold has been pushed aside as other consumer choices have proliferated, from the latest mobile phones, a great hair-do, cosmetics and perfume, holidays, spa treatments, restaurant meals to many other consumer goods and services.

However, now the expressive and flexible K-gold offers a totally new choice of lifestyle: People can use gold to express their personality, their individuality, their style, or their feelings of love, affection, appreciation for a friend, lover or relative.

Its key message is that the wearing of K-gold jewellery makes you stand out as a contemporary and stylish trendsetter, eliciting envy and admiration among your peers.

In addition to the traditional yellow gold designs, the K-gold features bi-color or tri-color designs combining karat yellow gold, white gold and rose gold, enriching the colors and versatility of the trendy collection.

With a strong resurgence of yellow gold in almost every market segment of the fashion world, a niche market has emerged with consumers on the constant lookout for branded, trendsetting jewellery products.

“K-gold has become synonymous with style, quality and Italian chic in China ever since we launched the campaign in Shanghai last September,” Vincent Chow, CEO of Chow Sang Sang Group said. “China’s gold consumption ranks third in the world and demand for gold jewellery counts for the bulk of the total demand,” Chow said.

“As an integral part of the gold marketing strategy led by the World Gold Council, we are sure that K-gold jewellery will inject fresh vitality into the lives of young Chinese women and imprint on their mind a new concept of contemporary and fashionable jewellery,” Chow added.

“Featuring the marriage of artistic imagination with supreme craftsmanship, the K-gold collections have enjoyed instant sales success in Shanghai and have won the hearts of discerning, stylish Chinese consumers,” according to Albert Cheng, Far East Managing Director of the World Gold Council.

Cheng said that such sales-driven yellow gold promotional campaigns also help create more opportunities for European manufacturers to introduce new design and technology into China’s market.

“Inter-national gold enterprises are gearing up to enter China to tap its grand potential, making China a shining star in the global gold arena,” Cheng said.

Taiwan tourist dies after falling from cliff in Guilin

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

A senior female tourist from Taiwan died Wednesday after falling from a cliff in a scenic spot in southwest China, the local police said on Thursday.

Following a Taiwan-based travel agency, the 69-year-old tourist was visiting the Guihai Stelae Forest, a famous tourist resort in Guilin, capital of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, but she did not return to the team on schedule after 30 minutes of free sightseeing.

The woman was later found lying on the flat roof of a building with feeble breath. Her head was bleeding and her jade bracelets have broken into pieces, according to a local travel agency.

Doctors and police immediately arrived at the spot and conducted first-aid treatment. However, the tourist stopped breathing after half an hour.

The senior tourist had possibly fallen by accident from the cliff about 10 meters high above because she got some contusions, and her body and legs have stains of lichen and leaves, a witness said.

The valuables of the tourist were intact, according to the witness.

Investigation into the accident is underway.

Elderly in Genoa to get protection bracelet

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

Rome, September 7 - A group of old people in the Italian city of Genoa will soon be testing a high-tech electronic bracelet designed to comfort and protect them at all times.

The bracelet, produced by a local company, has a built-in smoke alarm and burglar detector. At the touch of a finger, the wearer will also be able to activate the ‘telecomfort’ function.

This involves video and audio contact with a central control station where volunteers will be able to offer practical and moral support throughout the day. At night the bracelet will provide wearers with a hot-line to the local police station.

The device, which makes use of high-speed internet and webcams, can also be used to chat with family members.

The 50 elderly Genoa residents who are about to try out the bracelets for three months are currently being selected with the help of local volunteer support groups.

Genoa Mayor Marta Vincenzi said the initiative showed how security was not something to be faced with dramatic, sporadic action but by supplying simple services.

“It’s important to see the issue of security as a service rather than an emergency. In this case, technology is providing the service,” she said.

Hollywood socialite Hilton ordered back to jail

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

Hollywood socialite Paris Hilton was ordered back to jail by a Los Angeles judge Friday to serve out the remainder of her sentence for violating probation in a reckless driving case.

The ruling at Los Angeles Superior Court was made just one day after the 26-year-old hotel chain heiress’ release from the jail sparked a public outcry and accusations of preferential treatment by the jail authorities.

The judge’s decision reportedly brought a flood of tears from the celebrity, who cried throughout Friday’s hearing and repeatedly wiped her nose with a tissue.

Hilton had served just more than 72 hours in the jail when she was released Thursday morning and placed on home arrest with an electronic monitoring bracelet. Her original sentence was 45 days in jail for violating her probation in an alcohol-related reckless driving case.

Under California state sentencing guidelines, Hilton was only expected to serve 23 days for the sentence, meaning she should have remained behind bars until June 26 since she checked in Sunday night.

In a statement released after the judge’s ruling, Los Angeles City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo said Friday’s decision sent the message that no individual, no matter how wealthy or powerful, is above the law.

When Hilton was originally sentenced last month, the judge specifically ordered that she not be allowed any work release, furloughs, access to an alternative jail or electronic monitoring in lieu of jail.

But the “Simple Life” reality television show Hilton was released and ordered to remain inside her Hollywood Hills home and wear an electronic monitoring bracelet.

Her release sparked a public outcry, with hundreds of people telephoning, e-mailing and faxing county officials and city prosecutors, calling her three-week-early departure from jail a case of preferential treatment for a Hollywood celebrity.

Lohan: “I am innocent … did not do drugs”

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Lindsay Lohan, in an e-mail Tuesday night to “Access Hollywood” host Billy Rush, claimed she is innocent of felony cocaine possession.

Lohan, 21, was arrested early Tuesday in Santa Monica and released on bail for investigation of misdemeanor driving under the influence and with a suspended license, and felony cocaine possession.

“I am innocent… did not do drugs they’re not mine. I was almost hit by my assistant Tarin’s mom I appreciate everyone giving me my privacy,” Lohan wrote, the show reported on its website Tuesday night.

Police found cocaine in one of the actress’pockets during a pre-booking search, Sgt. Shane Talbot said. Police initially said Lohan was also being booked for investigation of transporting a narcotic but later said she was not.

Police received a 911 call from the mother of Lohan’s former personal assistant, saying that Lohan was chasing her in an SUV, said Lt. Alex Padilla. The assistant had quit hours before, he said.

Authorities found Lohan and the woman in a “heated debate” in the parking lot of Santa Monica’s Civic Auditorium at about 1:30 a.m.

Lohan’s arrest comes as she still faces DUI allegations connected to a Memorial Day weekend hit-and-run crash in Beverly Hills. The actress completed more than six weeks in rehab less than two weeks ago, and had checked into a recovery clinic in January.

Lohan had worn an alcohol-monitoring ankle bracelet since her July 13 release from rehab and was tested daily to support her sobriety, her attorney Blair Berk said. She said Lohan had relapsed and was receiving medical care at an undisclosed location. Her publicist, Leslie Sloane Zelnik, had no comment.

Chinese president encourages country’s Paralympians

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Chinese President Hu Jintao on Wednesday paid a morale-boosting visit to the country’s Paralympic athletes, urging them to “strive to become strong and fight for the best.”

With 16 days to go until the opening ceremony in Beijing, Hu, accompanied by Vice President Xi Jinping, went to the training center for Paralympic athletes in a northeastern suburb of the capital in the morning.

Chinese President Hu Jintao shakes hands with an athlete at the training center for Paralympic athletes in Beijing, China, Aug. 20, 2008. (Xinhua Photo)
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More than 300 Chinese athletes competing in the Sept. 6-17 Games were busy training at the center, the country’s first national-level training facility for disabled athletes.

The 547-member China delegation, the largest in history, will participate in all 20 events during the upcoming Paralympics.

Hu watched the training of the athletes in track and field, football, swimming and wheelchair basketball.

He cheered on Li Duan who had lost his sight 12 years ago in an accident, as he practiced long jump under the guidance of his coach. Li won two gold medals at the 2004 Athens Paralympics.

Chinese President Hu Jintao cheers on swimmers at the training center for Paralympic athletes in Beijing, China, Aug. 20, 2008. (Xinhua Photo)
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“I heard you used to play basketball and switched to long jump after an accident. It must have not been easy for you.” Hu said while holding the blind man’s hands.

“A soldier could be injured, but he remained a soldier. An armyman could fall down, but his will was unbeatable,” Li, a soldier in service, responded in high spirit. He said he would fight for better performances at the Beijing Games.

Hu also shook hands with other track and field athletes, and looked over the artificial limbs and racing wheelchairs they used.

“I was here to cheer for you before the opening of the Games, and I was moved to see all of you striving to become stronger and training very hard.” He wished them all good luck during the Games.

Chinese President Hu Jintao holds a football after writing “striving to become strong and fighting for the best” on it at the training center for Paralympic athletes in Beijing, China, Aug. 20, 2008. (Xinhua Photo)
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Hu also watched football players afflicted with cerebral palsy in training. They were the first-such group from China to represent the country in the Paralympics.

He wrote on a football “striving to become strong and fighting for the best,” after the 12 athletes gave the president a football with their own signatures.

He said he hoped they would not only fight in the upcoming competition, but also in their daily lives.

At the swimming stadium, Hu said he believed the athletes would fully demonstrate their abilities and bring some glory for the country. Chinese swimmers had performed well in previous events.

Chinese President Hu Jintao shakes hands with wheelchair basketball players at the training center for Paralympic athletes in Beijing, China, Aug. 20, 2008. (Xinhua Photo)
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Hu opened a game for wheelchair basketball players, and applauded the frequent baskets by the athletes. He urged players to put participation before winning and enjoy the fun of the Games.

Hu also visited a downtown community home for the disabled after he left the training center to find out about the community services provided for the ordinary handicapped population in the capital.

Chinese President Hu Jintao shakes hands with a disabled man who is playing chess in Shichahai community home for the disabled in Beijing, China, Aug. 20, 2008. (Xinhua Photo)
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At the special home set in a courtyard, he chatted with the disabled who were painting, writing, surfing on the Internet, playing Chinese chess or receiving recovery exercises.

He also joined some mentally-challenged people who were learning to make pizzas and dumplings, and another 20 handicapped making handicrafts such as bracelets and cloth paintings.

“The country will take more measures and make more efforts to improve the living conditions to let all the handicapped have a happy life in their mother country,” Hu pledged.

IFAW lauds eBay plan on ivory ban

Monday, May 18th, 2009

The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) on Tuesday lauded eBay’s plan to institute a global ban on the sale of elephant ivory products by Jan. 1, 2009, calling on all other Internet traders to follow their example.

IFAW said in a statement issued in Nairobi that the decision came just hours before the release of the organization’s latest investigative report, showing Internet trade in wildlife poses a significant and immediate threat to the survival of elephants and many other endangered species.

The IFAW report, which followed a six-week investigation that tracked more than 7,000 wildlife product listings on 183 websites in 11 countries, singled out eBay as the largest contributor to the problem, responsible for almost two-thirds of the online trade in wildlife products worldwide

IFAW’s report, Killing with Keystrokes: An Investigation of the Illegal Wildlife Trade on the World Wide Web, will be released Wednesday and shows that more than 70 percent of all endangered species’ products listed for sale on the Internet occur in the United States.

Elephant ivory dominated the investigation, comprising 73 percent of all product listings tracked. Exotic birds were second, accounting for nearly 20 percent of the listings tracked, but primates, big cats and other animals are also falling victim to the e-trade in live animals and wildlife products, according to the report.

“IFAW congratulates eBay on this very important step to protect elephants. With these findings and eBay’s leadership, there is no doubt left that all Internet dealers need to take responsibility for their impact on endangered species by enacting and enforcing a ban on all online wildlife trade. eBay has set the standard for protecting elephants, now governments and other online dealers need to follow their example,” said Barbara Cartwright, IFAW Campaigns Manager.

Over 4,000 elephant ivory listings were uncovered during the investigation, with most of the sales taking place on eBay’s U.S. site. In one instance, a user purchased a pair of elephant tusks off eBay for more than 21,000 dollars.

“With a few limited exceptions, selling ivory has been illegal since 1989,” said Jeff Flocken, Director of IFAW’s Washington office. “However, Web sites are still teeming with ivory trinkets, bracelets, and even whole tusks for sale.”

“Internet dealers profit off of every piece of elephant ivory sold on their Web sites, and every piece of that ivory came from a dead elephant.”

International trade in wildlife is estimated to reach well into the billions of U.S. dollars annually — a black market rivaling the size of the international trade in illegal drugs and weapons.

Every year, more than 20,000 elephants are illegally slaughtered in Africa and Asia to meet demand for ivory products. African and Asian elephants are protected under the U.S. Endangered Species Act and the international Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).

Off-duty policeman dies fighting robbers

Monday, May 18th, 2009

A traffic policeman in southwestern Yunnan Province died Monday after fighting with two robbers on street and being stabbed by one of them.

Li Hongzhuan, 30, on his way back home after work stopped a man who was robbing a woman of her gold bracelet and tried to control the robber, while another man with a knife stabbed Li in his left chest, said Zhao Xiangrong, deputy director of the Mengzi County public security bureau, where Li had worked.

Li was sent to hospital but died twenty minutes later.

“Li died of huge blood loss as he was stabbed in the heart,” said a doctor surnamed Zhang.

Li had been newly married for one year, and his father, who had heart problems, was emotionally unstable after getting the news, Zhao Xiangrong said.

The two suspects, both young men, ran away amid chaos, Zhao said.

“We have been working with public security bureaus in nearby counties to get the suspects and we’ll try to solve the case as soon as possible,” he said.

PSA re-enacts details from alleged Rihanna beating

Monday, May 18th, 2009

The alleged beating of Rihanna has inspired an online public service announcement about dating violence.

A new video by the teen organization DoSomething.org features actors recreating the pop star’s grim, highly publicized confrontation with her boyfriend, singer Chris Brown.

A young man and woman re-enact details from a Los Angeles police affidavit alleging that on Feb. 8, Brown punched, bit and choked Rihanna until she nearly lost consciousness.

A narrator describes the scene in a deadpan voice.

“We didn’t want to be overdramatic,” said Nancy Lublin, chief executive officer of DoSomething.org. “Our goal was not to shoot a Lifetime TV movie. … There was no need to sensationalize things. It was bad enough.”

The brief clip can be viewed on YouTube. It closes with the statistic that one in three teenagers is abused in a relationship, and promotes free bracelets — one blue, two black — that spread awareness about dating abuse.

Lublin said the goal is to make people think and change their behavior. The organization used white actors on purpose to shift the conversation away from the celebrity singers.

“The public is very focused right now on Chris and Rihanna,” she said. “I think people need to realize that this is an issue that goes beyond those particular people, and it affects everybody of every race. And so we wanted this to not be an exact re-enactment. We wanted instead to say: Could this be you?”