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The Western media also had a racist-driven media frenzy during the rise of Japan. The West cannot deny that they fear the rise of a non-white country. Their antipathy toward China is also driven by racist paranoia.

Key issue.
But their current decline and our rise is set in stone in effect due to metaphysical reasons.
Once, the English Bobbie needed only a baton to keep law and order. Now, hah!
So meh. Suck it up suckers.

Wonder when our time comes, will there be enough wisdom to preserve ourselves so that the inevitable pause will not translate into a great decline like it will be for them.
 
China ranks 4th in scientific R&D spending: NBS_Sci&Tech--China Economic Net

China ranks 4th in scientific R&D spending: NBS
Last Updated(Beijing Time):2010-12-02 07:22

China's scientific research and development (R&D) spending was 580.21 billion yuan (87.25 billion US dollars) in 2009, fourth in the world after the United States, Japan and Germany, officials at the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) of China told Xinhua.

The statistics came from the latest national R&D resources survey, the second ever conducted in the country.

About 3.18 million people were involved in China's R&D activities in 2009, the largest number in the world, said Cha Zhimin, deputy-director of the society and science department under the NBS.

Of the total spending, the government invested 135.83 billion yuan on R&D in 2009, about 4.5 times that in 2000 or an annual increase of 18.3 percent, indicating the government was more willing to boost innovation, Cha said.

However, the ratio of R&D investment against GDP stood at 1.7 percent in China, far behind 3 percent in leading countries across the world, Cha said, adding that China still remained far below many developed countries in original innovations.

Source:Xinhuanet
 
HIV-positive still face job discrimination_Top Stories--China Economic Net

HIV-positive still face job discrimination
Last Updated(Beijing Time):2010-12-02 07:59

Students of Chongqing Creation Vocational College draw a poster for HIV/AIDS prevention on Wednesday, World AIDS Day. [Photo/for China Daily]

"Deal with AIDS, not people living with it", letter to ministry says

Amid severe HIV/AIDS-related employment discrimination in China, legal and health experts have called for stronger protection of the rights of infected people.

"In China 89.47 percent of HIV-infected people have lost their jobs because of their health condition," said Liu Kangmai, deputy Party chief of the National Center for AIDS/STD Control and Prevention.

Liu was speaking on Tuesday at a meeting in Beijing held jointly by the International Labour Organization (ILO), the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) and Marie Stopes International.

On the same day, 81 HIV carriers sent a letter to the Ministry of Health, calling for the amendment to the current health examination standard for civil service recruitment.

"Our society should deal with AIDS, but not the people living with it," the letter said.

"I have to close my hair salon due to discrimination," said one of the participants, Ma Guihong from Hebei province. "I hope that our employment rights could be protected by law in the near future."

According to a report on workplace discrimination toward people with HIV in China, released on Tuesday by the ILO Beijing Office and the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, progress has been made to reduce employment discrimination in the country.

For example, the 2006 Regulation on the Prevention and Treatment of HIV/AIDS and the 2007 Employment Promotion Law both guarantee working rights for HIV-positive people.

However, securing the right to work for people with HIV in China remains a challenge. The report noted that HIV-positive people are prohibited from working in the civil service and in hotels, cafes, bars, and beauty and hairdressing salons.

According to a survey conducted in 2007 by Liu Yang, a professor at the China University of Political Science and Law, only 47.7 percent of people among 1,000 respondents agreed that people with HIV should have equal working rights.

In a 2009 report released by the UN, more than 40 percent of people with HIV in China had faced discrimination, and nearly one in six had been refused employment because of their HIV status.

Examples of discrimination against people with HIV in workplaces across the country include mandatory testing of workers, denial of job opportunities, forced resignations and restricted access to health insurance.

On Monday, the plaintiff in China's first case of alleged HIV-related employment discrimination, surnamed Wu, lodged an appeal against a district court ruling that found a local education bureau in Anhui province had not unlawfully discriminated against him when deciding not to employ him after learning of his HIV-positive status.

"Nobody can live without work and being denied employment rights is even worse than suffering from HIV," Wu said.

"People with HIV should have the same rights to employment as people who do not have HIV," said Mark Stirling, country coordinator of UNAIDS.

He also emphasized the importance of legal support from the government, the strong supervision and implementation of relevant regulations and the understanding and knowledge of the public.

"More work needs to be done to improve laws and regulations on health discrimination," said Liu of the National Center for AIDS/STD Control and Prevention. "However, we should admit that it might be a long process."
Source:China Daily
 
Regulating property market challenging: official_Property--China Economic Net

Regulating property market challenging: official
Last Updated(Beijing Time):2010-11-27 10:13
A senior Chinese official of housing said on Friday that it remained difficult to regulate China's real estate market as local governments were too reliant on revenue from land sales.

Qiu Baoxing, vice minister of Housing and Urban-Rural Development, said a rising housing demand due to urbanization, limited investment channels at home and inflows of international speculative capital also made cooling the property market difficult.

Housing prices rising too fast could lead to an asset bubble, affecting financial stability, economic development and social stability, Qiu noted.

Qiu added that tempering the real estate market required a "policy toolkit", which should not only include policies in land managing, taxation and financial areas, but also include an increase in affordable housing supplies.

The Chinese government has introduced a series of measures this year to crack down on property speculation and rein in house prices. These measures include suspending mortgage loans for third home purchasers and raising down-payments.

Property prices in 70 major Chinese cities rose 8.6 percent year-on-year in October, the lowest year-on-year increase in 2010. However, on a month-on-month basis, housing prices rose 0.2 percent from September.
Source:Xinhuanet
 
Sichuan Divorces Soar > ISSUES > MARRIAGE/FAMILIES

Sichuan Divorces Soar
November 16,2010 Editor: Sun Xi

Around 1.31 million couples throughout China registered divorces this year, according to the latest quarterly statistics from the Ministry of Civil Affairs. Among them, 102,596 live in Sichuan. The divorces in this southwestern province are thus the highest in the country.

Data shows that 7,791,911 couples registered their marriages during the last three quarters, and that 1,310,377 couples registered for divorce. This works out at 4,800 couples a day.

A total 383,129 couples registered for marriage in Sichuan and 102,596 for divorce, the highest among China's provinces. In 2009, the Sichuan divorce rate ranked no. 7.

Officials from the Sichuan Provincial Civil Affair Office reportedly attribute these figures to Sichuan's large population base. They argue that the high number of divorces in the province does not necessarily signify a high divorce rate among Sichuan natives.

106 Divorces a Day

Be that as it may, 130,084 couples in the provincial capital of Chengdu registered marriages in 2009 and 39,020 divorces, according to data from the Chengdu Bureau of Civil Affairs. This signifies a 3.3:1 marriage/divorce ratio, or daily divorces of 106.

Four Main Reasons

Simplified Procedure

The reversed State Council Regulations on Marriage Registration, which came into effect on October 1, simplified the divorce procedure. This could explain the rise in divorce.

Living Apart

A Sichuan Provincial Civil Affairs Office expert blames growing social mobility on the soaring divorce rate. Tens of millions of men work away from their home province, leaving their spouses at home to take care of children and elderly parents. Extended periods of estrangement are thus also a contributing factor to the soaring rate of divorce, the official believes.

Great Expectations

Marriage counselor Ms. Xu points out that material improvements in municipality quality of life have brought higher expectations of marriage quality and emotional fulfillment. Marriages that were less than perfect but tolerable in the past, therefore, are no longer acceptable. This, Ms Xu says, is also a reason for the high divorce rate in China's bigger cities.

Post-Quake Pursuit of Happiness

One sociologist attributes rising divorce in Sichuan Province to the Wenchuan earthquake. This traumatic event made people reflect deeply and place greater emphasis on the quality of life. Many are unwilling to settle for less than marital perfection, and are quick to divorce if the quality of their married life begins to pall.

(Source: nf.nfdaily.cn/Translated and edited by womenofchina.cn)
 
Schools 'need safety lessons to avoid stampedes' - People's Daily OnlineDecember 02, 2010

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A student receives treatment at a hospital in Aksu, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, on Nov 29 after he was injured in a stampede at a local primary school. (Xinhua Photo)

Lack of awareness, overcrowding and unwatched stairs pose risk to students, experts say. Shao Wei in Aksu and Hu Yinan, Cao Li in Beijing report.

Mahmut Memet has only a vague memory of the stampede in which he and other students were injured on Monday.

The last thing he remembers is running down the stairs at Aksu No 5 Primary School and seeing classmates ahead of him tumbling on top of each other. Then everything went dark.

"It's frightening," he said. "The students from higher grades are all taller and stronger. I don't know how many times they trampled on me."

The 10-year-old, who escaped with minor chest and stomach injuries, was among the 123 children rushed to hospital that afternoon in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region. The children have since been discharged or are in stable condition following treatment, according to city health authorities.

However, safety experts say the accident could have been far worse, and warn that overcrowding and poor safety standards in schools are putting lives at risk.

"There are hazards everywhere" in our nation's schools, said Zhang Yutang, 61, a retired professor at Sichuan Normal University, although "staircases are probably the most lethal".

Zhang has looked into the causes of 28 school stampedes in the last decade and said he believes the majority could have been avoided.

"If teachers were posted on stairwells to keep order, if schools had more and wider staircases and if students were educated in what to do in an emergency, these accidents simply wouldn't happen," he said.

An investigation team of education and health officials headed by Jin Nuo, vice-chairman of Xinjiang's government, is now looking into Monday's incident in Aksu, which occurred as students headed to the playground for exercises.

Initial eyewitness reports suggest the stampede started when several children lost their footing on the 1.5-meter-wide steps.

Safety awareness

China has at least 210 million primary and secondary school students, with another 22 million enrolled at kindergartens, show official figures.

According to a 2007 joint study by the ministries of education and public security, roughly 16,000 children die in accidents and "abnormal circumstances" every year. The final report states about 80 percent of these deaths are "preventable".

This year has been a particularly bad one for education authorities. In spring, officials were forced to beef up security at schools nationwide following a string of random attacks that left 18 children and two adults dead and another 80 people injured.

Armed guards were placed at school gates in densely populated metropolises like Beijing to remote desert towns like Kangbashi in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region.

Yet, the efforts to prevent further violence may have overshadowed the existing loopholes in safety inspections, especially in impoverished areas, such as Aksu, an agricultural city 1,050 km southwest of the regional capital, Urumqi.

Another study by the Ministry of Education in 2005 found that 60 percent of teachers received less than 10 hours of safety training per semester. Officials were unable to provide an updated figure when contacted by China Daily.

This lack of awareness, coupled with inadequate safety measures, is a key factor in school stampedes, said Zhang Wen, deputy director of legal affairs for the ministry's policies and regulations office.

Following a stampede at a high school in Hunan province that killed eight and injured 26 others in December 2009, the Ministry of Education ordered all schools to check the quality of stairs, handrails and stairwell lighting, as well as to replace any damaged or badly installed equipment.

The ministry released a similar statement on Tuesday, when they encouraged "better management of daily student assemblies" and "swift organization of all-out safety checks".

"These incidents are avoidable if people stick to our documents and requirements," an unidentified ministry spokesman was quoted as saying by the People's Daily. "There isn't any room for bureaucracy and formality when it comes to school safety."

Education bureaus in several cities have urged schools to assign teachers to lead groups of students up and down stairs before and after classes and during scheduled breaks.

The majority of schools in Zhengzhou, capital of China's most populous province, Henan, now has teachers managing the traffic flow on every floor.

In Yantai, a coastal city in Shandong province, authorities have ordered all districts and counties to carry out immediate safety checks and to refine evacuation plans.

However, security experts with companies drafted in to protect children following the attacks in spring say that most of schools still need to invest in better overall safety training for teachers and students.

"I have talked to teachers and students and asked them how they should leave the site when an accident happens. They all give me different answers and none of them are correct," said Hao Peng, general manager of CCG Security's branch in Xi'an, capital of Shaanxi province.

"Schools are more aware of safety after (a tragedy)," said Hao, whose firm has contracts with 56 city schools across central and western parts of China.

Cheng Guanyao at CCG Security's Shanghai office added that many schools have already canceled contracts "as they think it's a waste of money now it's not dangerous any more".

Slipping up

Guidance issued to schools by the central government states class sizes should be limited to fewer than 45 children. However, media reports suggest that in some areas, particularly those with large concentrations of migrant workers, teachers are taking classes of up to 60.

Although the number of students has grown, the standard of facilities often lags behind.

Investment in rural and remote schools "is still the big problem", complained Zhang Jing, deputy principal in charge of student safety at Zhufang village middle school in Jiangxi province.

He said his school has a population of 1,600, yet the size of the canteen is less than 30 square meters, "barely enough for a kitchen", he added.

Zhang Liugang, a teacher at Shangyi Primary School in Zhengzhou, agreed and added: "Some schools are overloaded. When you have that many students in a confined space, you need someone to control traffic (on the stairs)."

Based on countless on-site inspections he carried out, retired professor Zhang Yutang said many schools' stairways are too narrow and are not fitted with anti-slip flooring.

Slipping and tripping are major contributing factors to stampedes, he said, explaining that the risk also increases depending on the number of floors.

"Most (of these accidents) happen when all students are going downstairs for exercises or at the end of the school day," said Zhang. "A real danger spot is the second floor, which where the greatest volume of traffic is.

"The greater the number of floors, the greater the threat to children's safety," he warned, before suggesting the reason school accidents are more common in winter months is because children wear bulkier clothing "and are more clumsy".

At Aksu's No 5 Primary School, which is a four-story building, the stampede started in the corner of a stairwell connecting the second and first floors.

Classes at the school resumed on Tuesday, the same day Huang Sanping, Party secretary of Aksu prefecture, told a press conference that the government will pay the medical expenses for all affected families.

"Your children are our children," said Xinjiang vice-chairman Jin Nuo during a meeting with parents at Aksu's No 1 People's Hospital. "We will do everything to help your injured children."

The pledge was welcome news for the seven children who suffered severe injuries in the stampede.

Among the worst injured was Mailinar, 8, who on Wednesday was still receiving treatment for head and chest trauma in the hospital's intensive care unit.

"The girl is in a stable condition. She is able to speak now," said Jing Haitao, deputy director of Xinjiang People's Hospital emergency center in Urumqi. He was among two batches of head injury specialists sent to Aksu to help the stampede victims.

The other six students - two boys and four girls aged 7 to 10 - were also in stable conditions, said medics.
 
Most deaths in SW China's mob fight bear gun wounds: police - People's Daily OnlineDecember 04, 2010

The bodies of most fatalities in last month's mob fight in southwest China's Yunnan Province were found to suffer from gun wounds, while four dozen others were wounded by shrapnel from bombs, local police said Friday.

A dispute over mining rights turned into a mob fight on Nov. 18 in Yunnan's Luxi County. About 120 people, wielding steel pipes and knives, were ambushed near Xiaosongdi coal mine as their opponents set off explosives and opened fire with guns. Nine people were killed and 48 injured.

Wang Jianfu, the owner of the coal mine, was said to have engineered the ambush while Wang Feiyun, an electricity technician and Wang's other subordinates carried out the attack, a police investigation found.

Initial findings reveal seven bodies bear gun wounds, police said, adding that they have detained six suspects -- including the Wangs -- and confiscated one hunting rifle and a pistol from the scene.

China bans private ownership of guns. Police in Yunnan said they were probing the source of the fire arms involved in the mob fight.

Zheng Chunyun, whose alleged hired thugs were ambushed by Wang's men, is the owner of a nearby coal mine and had been fighting for the right to exploit Xiaosongdi mine.

Source: Xinhua
 
Official driving drunk kills five teens in central China - People's Daily Online December 07, 2010

Five teenagers were killed after being struck by a car driven by a drunken official in central China's Henan Province Sunday night, the latest in a series of traffic accidents in the country that stirred public outrage over law-breaking officials.

The latest fatal accident occurred in Luoning County, Luoyang City, at 11:30 p.m.

The youngest of the teenagers who died was thirteen, police added.

Police investigators said Gu parked the car some 280 meters from the spot where he hit the first teenager. Gu has been detained for questioning as the probe continues.

The accident occurred less than two months after a local official in neighboring Hebei Province was brought into the national spotlight after his son, who was also drunk, killed a college girl in a hit-and-run case.

Li Qiming, 22, was alleged to have said "Sue me if you dare. My father is Li Gang" when stopped by the crowd. Li's father is a deputy district police chief in Baoding City. Internet users slammed the abuse of power by officials in a flurry of sarcastic jokes mocking the Li family.

Source:Xinhua
 
Student detained for swindling women for sex and cellphones - People's Daily Online December 07, 2010

A college student in Jinan, Shandong Province, who was detained by the police for allegedly ripping off five female college students and having sex with two of them, confessed that all of his scams were learned from an online novel. The name and author of the novel were not released.

The 21-year-old suspect, whose surname is Zhang, claimed in his blog at qzone.com that he was the son of a high-ranking official and he wanted to find some college girls as lovers and would financially reward them, according to Shandong Business News.

At least five female college students responded and dated Zhang and two of them had sex with him in hotels, said the report. Prior to an assignation at a hotel on November 25, Zhang asked one to buy an iPhone 4 for him and promised to pay for the phone during the date. After having sex with her, Zhang said that he was going back to his car to get money for the phone and to get a "lover contract" for them to sign.

Zhang never returned after leaving the hotel, and besides the iPhone, he also allegedly stole the woman's cellphone. She informed the police after she found her phone missing. A hotel surveillance camera recorded Zhang, which made him easily identifiable to police.

After receiving the victim's report, a policewoman who pretended to be a college student contacted Zhang, and told him that she wanted to become his lover.

Zhang was detained on the evening of November 29, when he went to a hotel to meet her. After being caught by the police, Zhang told them he had read an online novel about "how to become a bad guy," and that he used methods learned from it .

By An Baijie Source: Global Times

Now, things started to get out of hand when even a cheap criminal was using tricks like being "son of some high official", it really show how common manipulation of power in China these day
 
Public irate about villa subsidies for rich

Public irate about villa subsidies for rich
By Li Xinzhu (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-12-09 08:16

SHANGHAI - A new policy in Hangzhou, East China's Zhejiang province, that gives housing allowances to the rich and famous to attract and retain "talent" has come under fire.

Their rents will be waived for the first five years, and the leasing periods range from 10 to 20 years.

Such celebrities as TV hostess Yang Lan, writer Yu Hua, Taiwan drama director Stan Lai and cartoonist Zhu Deyong were among the Xixi villa tenants, the report said.

The city also subsidizes housing for professionals who "have made prominent contributions to the city's development" and turned out to be corporate leaders, by selling them houses at half the market price.

What most angered the public is the claim that the land is earmarked for the local government's affordable housing program intended to benefit low-income residents.

Xixi wetland's managing committee said the report was inaccurate.

"The 59 houses in the park are State-owned assets, rather than indemnificatory houses or houses for low- and medium-income earners," the committee said in a written response on Wednesday.

Yang Lan, co-owner of Sun Television Cybernetworks, also denied on her blog on Wednesday that she had ever rented a villa for residence on the wetland.

She instead claimed she had signed a contract with the Hangzhou government solely on behalf of her creative studio, a Sun Television Cybernetworks unit, which will be based in the city to boost its creative industry.

The Hangzhou city government refused to comment on Wednesday.

The plan has created a public sensation since media exposed it, generating heated discussion among locals and Web users.

"It is a universal truth that the government subsidized housing system is designed to offer low-rent houses to low-income families," netizen Yishaoyehaoshuai posted on sina.com.cn.

"But what is the purpose of subsidized housing if villas are given to the rich?"

About 85 percent of Chinese households who plan to buy new apartments cannot afford one, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said on Tuesday in its annual Blue Book of China's Economy.
 
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