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The Great Game Changer: Belt and Road Intiative (BRI; OBOR)

Recognized Guerrillas

Ito pa so Again we pathetic please you had an Independent Country who fought each other and we were American Commonwealth with a small Army to defend ourselves with some American Units in the Philippines and we did very well compare to the chinese who was out fought by the Japanese we help delay them for the Allies to regroup and win in the end but the cost was great but again why should i be angry because your Idiots told me so? unlike you the Japanese as been repaying us we have some issues but still they have done great wonders (Airport, Sea ports, Schools, business etc) here that help a lot unlike china supporting Commie rebels and other Rebels groups and corrupt officials that helps them stealing resources (besides the disputed islands) not paying taxes illegal goods smuggled by illegal chinese business and more trash from china. In tondo Chinatown we have a term for them Chinaboys who can't speak Filipino or English trashing the place up with stupid goods and causing road side accidence yearly because they can't drive or follow the rules of the road. So tell me compare to that why should i hate the Japanese who are great help compare to trash who just makes worse? please do tell.
 
Recognized Guerrillas

Ito pa so Again we pathetic please you had an Independent Country who fought each other and we were American Commonwealth with a small Army to defend ourselves with some American Units in the Philippines and we did very well compare to the chinese who was out fought by the Japanese we help delay them for the Allies to regroup and win in the end but the cost was great but again why should i be angry because your Idiots told me so? unlike you the Japanese as been repaying us we have some issues but still they have done great wonders (Airport, Sea ports, Schools, business etc) here that help a lot unlike china supporting Commie rebels and other Rebels groups and corrupt officials that helps them stealing resources (besides the disputed islands) not paying taxes illegal goods smuggled by illegal chinese business and more trash from china. In tondo Chinatown we have a term for them Chinaboys who can't speak Filipino or English trashing the place up with stupid goods and causing road side accidence yearly because they can't drive or follow the rules of the road. So tell me compare to that why should i hate the Japanese who are great help compare to trash who just makes worse? please do tell.

Chinese had been frighting with Japanese for 8 years, while you were crashed in a second.
Chinese defend their resources and land otherwise the Japanese will take the resources of China to expanding their invasion to the world. Based on your logic Chinese are the real one who save the world, not you tiny maid.
Yup yup yup saying this and that are trash illegal business not paying taxes stealing resources blah blah blah, while you people still open your arms and welcome more contribution. What? you people like to be screwed? Don't you insult your own people with your jokes.
 
Chinese had been frighting with Japanese for 8 years, while you were crashed in a second.
Chinese defend their resources and land otherwise the Japanese will take the resources of China to expanding their invasion to the world. Based on your logic Chinese are the real one who save the world, not you tiny maid.
Yup yup yup saying this and that are trash illegal business not paying taxes stealing resources blah blah blah, while you people still open your arms and welcome more contribution. What? you people like to be screwed? Don't you insult your own people with your jokes.

in this maid's logic, when the U.S or european masters 'r@ped' their land or resources he says they are 'legitimate' business, and when Chinese come with fair money and respect and he says we are 'steeling' ```you know his slave mentality is hard to change
 
in this maid's logic, when the U.S or european masters 'r@ped' their land or resources he says they are 'legitimate' business, and when Chinese come with fair money and respect and he says we are 'steeling' ```you know his slave mentality is hard to change

In your Imperialistic Mind your the masters of the Universe and am Flash Gordan!
 
ive heard scenarios playd out where u.s. may eventually have to draw down its presence in east asia pacific consderably when resorces are muhc less. will be very grave for japan as russiya and china both have own designs for the islands. two three decades down line willbe very intresting scenario to shape up.
 
The South Korean government has asked Russia and China to help restrain North Korea from making military provocations as tensions increase on the Korean Peninsula over an expected intermediate-range missile launch by Pyongyang, its foreign minister said on Wednesday.

"Through close coordination with China and Russia, the Korean government has been continuing to make efforts to persuade North Korea to change its attitude," Yonhap news agency quoted South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se as saying at a parliamentary committee meeting.

Yun confirmed Pyongyang has moved an intermediate-range Musudan ballistic missile to its east coast and is prepared to launch the missile "at any time from now."

"According to intelligence obtained by our side and the US, the possibility of a missile launch by North Korea is very high," Yun said. The missile, which has a range of 3,500 kilometers (2,200 miles), could hit the US territory of Guam, Yun said.

A "high-level coordination channel with the US is now fully operational" to cope with any provocations from North Korea, Yun said. US Secretary of State John Kerry is expected to arrive in South Korea on Friday for talks with the South Korean foreign minister.

US officials said on Monday they have asked Russia and China for help in getting Pyongyang to back off from its increasingly threatening rhetoric and inflammatory actions which have alarmed its neighbors and prompted the Pentagon to heighten its military readiness.

“We have asked China and Russia to use their influence with North Korea to get them to cease this provocative behavior,” White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said in a press briefing on Monday.

Russian President Vladimir Putin appealed for calm on the Korean Peninsula on Monday at a joint news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Hanover, Germany. “I would like to call on everybody to calm down and to sit down at the negotiating table and calmly resolve the issues that have been accumulating there for many years,” Putin said.

Putin warned the escalating tensions in the region could lead to a nuclear disaster far worse than the Chernobyl accident in 1986, the world's worst nuclear accident. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Tuesday Moscow will push to normalize the situation on the Korean Peninsula.

North Korea announced on Monday it was suspending operations at the Kaesong industrial complex that it runs jointly with South Korea, and employees more than 53,000 North Korean workers.

Pyongyang advised foreign embassies to consider pulling staff out of Pyongyang by Wednesday, after which it said it cannot guarantee the safety of diplomats in the capital.

The US announced over the weekend it had delayed an intercontinental ballistic missile test in order to avoid further escalation of the conflict, a move that won praise from Putin on Monday.

Tensions have been rising since December, when international sanctions against North Korea were imposed in response to a long-range rocket launch which it claimed was a satellite launch and the UN said was a trial of ballistic missile technology. Pyongyang responded with a nuclear test in February, which was met by more sanctions approved by the United Nations Security Council.

North Korea has threatened pre-emptive nuclear strikes against the US mainland and US military bases in the region. Many analysts think Pyongyang's actions are more related to new leader Kim Jong-un's need to prove his credentials with his own military hardliners and extract concessions from the international community rather than any real desire for a conflict with foreign powers.

South Korea Asks Russia, China to Rein in North Korea > Strategic-Culture.org - Strategic Culture Foundation
 
Again, North Korea is no threat...

I would disagree, North Korea is Unstable and dangerous, they have shelled South Korean positions, sank South Korean naval vessels, sent commandos into South Korea which resulted in many innocent deaths, ect.

The current fat fvck at the helm seems even more unstable then the previous leaders and it doesn't help that he's a 29 year old puke with delusions of Grandeur. The North Koreans behavior is beyond childish and certainly a threat.
 
Perhaps...and perhaps not. But the Koreans know that they have many enemies. I think Jong-un just wants to protect his borders. You know, it's such a shame, honestly...all the Asian nations have been broken and divided.

And for what? Our beliefs. Religion and politics and ideology. Is it worth it, though, in the end...?
 
China passes to Russia H7N9 virus strain




China has passed to Russia the H7N9 virus strain, head of the Russian Federal Consumer Rights Protection and Human Health Control Service (Rospotrebnadzor) Gennady Onishchenko said at a press conference at Itar-Tass on Wednesday.

“So far the situation with the virus is under control. China has provided us the strain, and we plan to study it from a genetic point of view, to try its immunogenicity and consider it as a candidate strain for a possible vaccine, if this situation develops in the next season,” Onishchenko said, adding that “so far the World expert community that deals with influenza does not give such data.”

There have been 130 infected with the virus in China; according to recent reports, 36 diseased people have died. “The Chinese authorities are raising alarm, saying that the country’s economy has already lost 20 million US dollars,” Onishchenko said. “It was a blow to white meat. Poultry trade has been banned in Beijing and Shanghai. It has caused an economic slump,” he said.

According to him, Rospotrebnadzor has been monitoring the situation. Onishchenko said that “Russia has tourist itineraries with China’s bordering areas, and the agency has warned Russians about the situation.” “Tourists have heard our calls. We have noticed a major decrease in the number of tourists in this area during the May holidays,” he said. “We will continue to conduct the monitoring. But at the moment we can say that its results are negative,” he concluded.


China passes to Russia H7N9 virus strain | Russia & India Report
 
What were the Russkies doing with the chickens in China?

You are supposed to do the Chinese chicks, not chickens.
After a few Stoli, they will doing anything, moving or not.
 
The U.S. has accused China and Russia of failing to meet minimum standards in fighting human trafficking, ranking them on par with North Korea and Syria. Rights activists welcomed the move, but it could further strain Washington’s touchy relations with the two world powers.

The State Department downgraded China and Russia in rankings on how 188 governments around the world have performed in fighting the flesh trade and other forms of exploitative labour.

The U.S. also downgraded Uzbekistan over its state-sanctioned use of forced labour in the annual cotton harvest.

The rankings are in the department’s annual report released on Wednesday.

President Barack Obama now has 90 days to determine whether to apply sanctions against China, Russia, Uzbekistan and 18 other governments given a ‘tier three’ ranking the lowest the department gives.

The President can block various types of aid, such as arms financing, grants for cultural and educational exchange programs and could withdraw U.S. support for loans from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.

That appears unlikely in the cases of China, Russia and Uzbekistan, which have strategic importance for Washington.

President Obama is looking to cooperate more closely with emerging Asian superpower China after meeting its leader Xi Jinping last week; he already faces growing friction with Russia over its support for the Assad regime in war-wrecked Syria; and the Central Asian nation of Uzbekistan is important as a transit point as the U.S. pulls out its military from Afghanistan.

Because of a legislative requirement that came into force this year, the Obama administration had to make a judgment whether to downgrade or upgrade the three nations from a ‘watch list’ they were on for several years.

Three others in the same position — Azerbaijan, Congo and Iraq — were promoted to “tier two” for progress made in the past year.

“Modern-day slavery affects every country in the world, including the United States and every government is responsible for dealing with it and no government is yet doing enough”, Secretary of State John Kerry said at the launch of the report, which he conceded “pulls no punches”.

“This report is tough because this is a tough issue and it demands serious attention and that’s precisely what we intend to provide.”

Activists commended Mr. Kerry for being willing to downgrade powerful nations.

“Frankly, we expected a number of these countries to be upgraded for geopolitical reasons”, said David Abramowitz, director of the U.S.-based Alliance to End Slavery and Trafficking. “The Trafficking in Persons report is only effective when it’s honest.”

John Sifton of Human Rights Watch said it remains to be seen whether the White House will execute sanctions. He urged the administration to do so unless the governments in question commit to fight trafficking.

China responded that it has made “unremitting efforts” that have seen a decrease in human trafficking in the country, and in April, its governing State Council issued an plan in accordance with international conventions and Chinese laws, aiming for a long-term solution to the problem.

Geng Shuang, the Chinese Embassy spokesman in Washington, said the U.S. report “disregards our efforts in combating human trafficking and makes irresponsible judgment on other countries’ internal policy and practice”. He called for the U.S. to foster “a more favourable environment” for international anti-trafficking efforts.

The Russian Embassy did not respond to an email seeking comment.

The State Department also put Malaysia and Thailand, a U.S. treaty ally, on notice that they would be downgraded next year to tier three unless they improve anti-trafficking efforts. Mr. Abramowitz said it showed that those Southeast Asian nations can’t count on their political relationship with the U.S. to avoid censure.

Luis CdeBaca, U.S. Ambassador-at-large for human trafficking issues, voiced concern over Thai authorities’ treatment of Myanmar migrants, including minority Muslims fleeing a wave of sectarian violence at home. He also referred to “very grave” problems with Malaysia’s treatment of trafficking victims, who are held in prison-camp type conditions before deportation.

The Trafficking in Persons report is one of several annual assessments issued by the State Department on human rights-related topics, but it’s unusual in that it ranks nations, which can ruffle diplomatic feathers. It is based on the actions governments take, rather than the scale of the problem in their country.

The United States is also scrutinised in the report. It is among 30 countries on “tier one” judged to meet minimum standards of combating human trafficking.

According to Mr. CdeBaca, the report is intended to prod governments to act and strengthen the hand of civil society organizations in fighting trafficking and forced labour. He said the U.S. seeks to help nations improve their ranking through technical assistance and law enforcement cooperation.

The report criticized China’s government for perpetuating trafficking through its use of forced labour in more than 300 state-run prison camps, and its forcible deportation of North Korean trafficking victims, who may face the death penalty on their return home. Girls from Tibet are reportedly trafficked to other parts of China for domestic servitude and forced marriage, it said.

Republican Representative Chris Smith, an arch critic of Beijing and an author of anti-trafficking legislation, welcomed China’s downgrade as recognition that it “has become the sex and labour trafficking capital of the world”.

Mr. CdeBaca was more conciliatory. He acknowledged China’s recent national action plan to combat trafficking, and noted reports China plans to end the practice of re-education through labour. He indicated that if those plans lead to results, it would count in China’s favour in next year’s report.

On Russia, he said the main concern was authorities’ failure to provide care for victims of human trafficking.

An estimated one million people in the country are exposed to “exploitative” labour conditions, including migrants from Europe, Central Asia, and Asia, according to the report. Among them are between 10,000 and 15,000 North Korean workers employed at logging camps in Russia’s far-east, under an arrangement between the two governments. The workers reportedly have only two days of rest per year and face punishments if they fail to meet production targets.

There are now 25 nations sitting on the department’s watch list that could be downgraded to tier three next year. That relegation can be waived for two years, if governments demonstrate they have a plan to address human trafficking and commit resources to implement it.

Of the 25, six countries Thailand, Malaysia, Afghanistan, Barbados, Chad and the Maldives are entering their second year of being waived. Each faces an automatic downgrade in 2014 unless they demonstrate progress.

:ashamed::ashamed:
 

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