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I would love to live in Beijing (China) - Indian FM

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I would love to live in Beijing (China) - Indian FM

External Affairs minister Salman Khurshid said he had a "very very friendly, open and productive meeting" with Chinese premier Li Keqiang, who is scheduled to visit India later this month in his first official overseas trip. During the visit, the two countries will make a joint statement that is meant to send a "strong message to our people, to Asia and the rest of the world", Khurshid said.

"Both sides felt a measure of satisfaction that the existing mechanisms had worked" in resolving the border intrusion at Daulat Beg Oldie that lasted nearly three weeks. Khurshid told the Chinese that both sides should work out through their respective systems why such a thing happened and that in future should such incidents happen, they should "be addressed with a greater sense of urgency and with less passage of time".

Khurshid, who waxed eloquent about the flowers in Tiananmen Square, the warmth of the people on the streets of Beijing and Chinese blossoms in spring, said if asked whether he would like to live in China, the answer would be yes. "But not while I'm foreign minister," he clarified.


I would love to live in Beijing, Salman Khurshid says - The Times of India

Would love to live in China but not when foreign minister: Salman Khurshid - The Economic Times

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The pollution there is making lives of the citizens a hell. I wonder what he liked there :lol:

Beijing Residents May Not Be Able to Escape China's Bad Air - Philip Bump - The Atlantic Wire

China's wildly fluctuating (and increasing) urban air pollution is prompting some residents of Beijing to seek homes elsewhere. A look at recent air pollution data, though, suggests that most of the country's cities suffer similar problems.

Both the Wall Street Journal and The New York Times have written recently about Chinese workers and families who want to leave the country's cities in search of breathable air. The Times quotes a doctor:

“I’ve been here for six years and I’ve never seen anxiety levels the way they are now,” said Dr. Richard Saint Cyr, a new father and a family health doctor at Beijing United Family Hospital, whose patients are half Chinese and half foreigners. “Even for me, I’ve never been as anxious as I am now. It has been extraordinarily bad.”

He added: “Many mothers, especially, have been second-guessing their living in Beijing. I think many mothers are fed up with keeping their children inside.”
But it isn't just Beijing. Ever since the U.S. Embassy in the capital installed an air quality monitor and started tweeting hourly readings (see: @BeijingAir), U.S. facilities in other cities, like Shanghai (@ShanghaiAir), have followed suit. The newly public data also both inspired the Chinese government to recognize the problem and encouraged others to develop tools to track it. A group calling itself aqicn.org (Air Quality Index China) offers a real-time map.
 
The pollution there is making lives of the citizens a hell. I wonder what he liked there :lol:

Beijing Residents May Not Be Able to Escape China's Bad Air - Philip Bump - The Atlantic Wire

China's wildly fluctuating (and increasing) urban air pollution is prompting some residents of Beijing to seek homes elsewhere. A look at recent air pollution data, though, suggests that most of the country's cities suffer similar problems.

Both the Wall Street Journal and The New York Times have written recently about Chinese workers and families who want to leave the country's cities in search of breathable air. The Times quotes a doctor:

“I’ve been here for six years and I’ve never seen anxiety levels the way they are now,” said Dr. Richard Saint Cyr, a new father and a family health doctor at Beijing United Family Hospital, whose patients are half Chinese and half foreigners. “Even for me, I’ve never been as anxious as I am now. It has been extraordinarily bad.”

He added: “Many mothers, especially, have been second-guessing their living in Beijing. I think many mothers are fed up with keeping their children inside
But it isn't just Beijing. Ever since the U.S. Embassy in the capital installed an air quality monitor and started tweeting hourly readings (see: @BeijingAir), U.S. facilities in other cities, like Shanghai (@ShanghaiAir), have followed suit. The newly public data also both inspired the Chinese government to recognize the problem and encouraged others to develop tools to track it. A group calling itself aqicn.org (Air Quality Index China) offers a real-time map.

LOL!

You Think the Air in Beijing Is Bad? Try New Delhi
January 31, 2013, 3:05 am


NEW DELHI—Beijing’s air pollution has reached such toxic levels recently that the Chinese government is finally acknowledging the problem – and acting on it.

But in New Delhi on Thursday, air pollution levels far exceeded those in Beijing, only without any government acknowledgement or action. :taz: It is not the first time pollution in India’s capital has outpaced that in China.

The level of tiny particulates known as PM 2.5, which lodge deep in the lungs and can enter the bloodstream, was over 400 micrograms per cubic meter in various neighborhoods in and around Delhi Thursday, according to a real-time air quality monitor. That compared to Beijing’s most-recent air quality reading of 172 micrograms per cubic meter. (The “Air Quality online” link to the left of the Delhi website gives you real-time monitoring of Delhi’s pollution levels.)

At the University of Delhi’s northern campus at 12:30 p.m., the reading for PM 2.5 was 402 micrograms per cubic meter; in the eastern suburb of Noida it was 411; at the Indira Gandhi International airport it was 421.

Beijing’s government on Wednesday introduced emergency measures to curb pollution, ordering cars off the roads and factories to shut down, and warning citizens to avoid activity outside. The measures came after two straight days that the readings were higher than 300, a level the United States Environmental Protection Agency considers “hazardous.”

The forecast for Delhi’s air pollution Friday is “critical,” according to the Ministry of Earth Sciences. So far, though, Delhi’s government has made no announcements about the city’s air pollution, nor introduced any emergency measures, a spokesman for chief minister’s office said. Sheila Dikshit, the chief minister, said in an interview in December that the city could not keep up with the factors that cause air pollution.

Beijing’s air quality is so bad that living there is like living in a smoking lounge, Bloomberg reported Wednesday. The levels of air pollution Bloomberg cited as Beijing’s average were half that of New Delhi early Thursday afternoon.

Air Pollution in New Delhi Was Much Worse Than Beijing Thursday, But Indian Government Is Not Acting - NYTimes.com

Your democracy kills you quietly...
 
Not surprised, many Indians already live in China. They come to China to start a business and live a good life. China is a better place to live than India. Go to Shanghai and you will see what I'm talking about. Sure we have some problems like pollution, but that's being addressed. This foreign minister probably wants to escape the stench of the human faeces in Indian streets due to the well publicised defecation problem.
 
Indian FM: "I would love to live in Beijing."

Translation: My country sucks, I want to live in China instead.
 
ah i see that is why you are living USA.... because your country is sucks and lot terrorists camp, etc...

ok i got it ...

I've been living in US way before terrorism began in Pakistan, you fail.
 

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