Thursday, 25 July 2013

Chinese Hospital Ship PEACE ARK helping Asia

Special: Hospital ship Peace Ark

2013-07-03 08:37

By (chinadaily.com.cn)


Special: Hospital ship Peace Ark
On June 10, Chinese hospital ship Peace Ark embarked on a 118-day voyage to deliver medical assistance to residents of neighboring countries and take part in joint operations and exercises with fellow members of ASEAN. China Daily reporter Peng Yining will provide updates for our readers from onboard the ship.
You can also ask questions by commenting on this page, and Peng will be ready to help whenever Internet access is available. This page will keep updating.
 

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Peace Ark lends a helping hand
Special: Hospital ship Peace Ark
With the permission and cooperation of the Maldivian authorities, the Peace Ark sent out 20 medical teams, totaling 115 staff, to 10 residency islands to provide medical services and training.
Hospital ship stops in Maldives
Special: Hospital ship Peace Ark
The Maldives, a chain of 26 atolls scattered across the Indian Ocean, was the second port of call for the Peace Ark, which is scheduled to visit eight countries during its 118-day voyage, providing free medical treatment.
From China with love and care
Special: Hospital ship Peace Ark
At the sound of a steam whistle, Peace Ark, a 178-meter-long white vessel with red crosses painted on her decks and sides, sailed from the port of Zhoushan,Zhejiang province.
Special: Hospital ship Peace Ark
Brunei was the first stop on the 2013 Peace Ark mission. The hospital ship will visit eight countries across Asia to provide free medical services during the voyage.
Photos
Special: Hospital ship Peace Ark

Du Kan, a Chinese pediatrician, examines a child in Maldives, July 3, 2013. [Photo by Zhang Hao/Asianewsphoto]

Special: Hospital ship Peace Ark
Nurse Zheng Lu communicates with a young patient in Maldives, July 3, 2013. [Photo by Zhang Hao/Asianewsphoto]

Fewer Chinese biting the iApple

Fewer Chinese consumers picking Apple's iPhone

Updated: 2013-07-25 00:36
By SHEN JINGTING ( China Daily)

 

Shoppers shift focus to cheaper smartphones
Chinese consumers may be having second thoughts about buying Apple Inc's iPhone.
The devices are becoming so common in China these days that many people lost their once strong desire to own one. Also, iPhones are considered too expensive, and many consumers are opting for cheaper phones with similar capabilities.
Fewer Chinese consumers picking Apple's iPhone
Apple said on Tuesday that its revenue from China fell 14 percent year-on-year to $4.6 billion in the quarter ended June 29.Provided to China Daily

And the Chinese market's hesitation has showed in Apple's latest quarterly financial report. Even though the California-based company delivered better-than-expected global iPhone shipments of 31.2 million units during the quarter ended June 29, its performance in Greater China, including Hong Kong and Taiwan, was sluggish in the period.
Apple said on Tuesday that its revenue from China fell 14 percent year-on-year to $4.6 billion in the quarter ended June 29. The figure, which represents a 43 percent decline from the previous quarter, marked the first time that revenue decreased in the region.
Overall, Apple's quarterly global revenue remained flat at $35.3 billion.
Apple said its growth in the Chinese market had slowed, particularly due to economic headwinds. China's GDP growth eased to 7.6 percent in the first half, compared with 7.8 percent a year earlier.
Apple's chief executive officer Tim Cook said that he wasn't discouraged by the numbers from just one 90-day period.
"I continue to believe that in the arc of time here, China is a huge opportunity for Apple," Cook said on an earnings call on Tuesday.
However, analysts believe that fiercer competition, together with other factors, played a much bigger role in Apple's lackluster performance in China than the macro-economic effects.
"The iPhone 5 was less popular than its predecessor, the iPhone 4S, in China during the first 100 days after they hit the market," said James Yan, an analyst with research firm IDC. IPhone 5 handsets also saw stronger competition from brands such as Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and HTC Corp, as well as some local brands like Huawei Technologies Co Ltd and Xiaomi Corp, Yan said.
Meanwhile, Chinese telecom operators have cut their subsidies for iPhone 5 devices.
"Consumers and industry partners adopted a wait-and-see attitude toward the iPhone 5," Yan said. On the consumer side, they started to look for other high-quality smartphones with lower prices, or they are planning to buy the upcoming iPhone 5S or the iPhone 6, which seem to be more innovative products, he added.
Kevin Wang, an analyst with IHS iSuppli, said that Apple's pricing strategy also discouraged some first-time smartphone buyers and low-end customers. A 16 GB iPhone 5 costs at least 5,000 yuan ($809.80), more than the average monthly salary of people working in Beijing.
"The situation will only change when Apple introduces a less-expensive version of the iPhone, then we'll see a new sales surge in the country," Wang said.
For instance, Chinese telecom equipment maker Huawei, which in recent years expanded to the smartphone market, launched its P6 model in June, targeting high-end users but selling at a mere 2,688 yuan.
Huawei said on Wednesday that its first-half revenue was 113.8 billion yuan, up 10.8 percent year-on-year.
Meanwhile, the Beijing-based Xiaomi is selling high-quality smartphones at extremely low prices, usually below 2,000 yuan. Xiaomi said it sold more than 7 million smartphones in the first half.
But Apple still has ways to protect its status as a major player in China, said Xiang Ligang, a telecom industry insider.
Xiang said that Apple will likely quicken the pace of its collaboration talks with China Mobile Ltd, the nation's biggest telecom operator, to boost iPhone sales.
China Mobile and Apple have been in talks for years, but the two have yet to reach an agreement. Some industry sources said that the two companies will likely start cooperating soon, since all the preliminary work is done.

China Peacekeepers return from Southern Sudan/China Daily report

Chinese peacekeeping force returns from S Sudan

Updated: 2013-07-25 12:00
( Xinhua)

 

BEIJING - A peacekeeping team returned to China from South Sudan on Thursday after an eight-month UN mission.
The team was made up of military engineers and medical staff from the People's Liberation Army (PLA) Jinan Military Area Command and PLA Logistics Department.
The team successfully completed a number of tasks, including building new roads and buildings, providing medical care and escorting.
Another peacekeeping team from the PLA Jinan Military Area Command arrived in South Sudan on Wednesday to take over where the previous team left off.

Why China might be a better superpower - Opinion - Al Jazeera English

Why China might be a better superpower - Opinion - Al Jazeera English

North Korea Honours War Veterans

North Korea's Kim Jong Un honors country's war veterans


By Ivan Watson and Tim Schwarz, CNN
July 25, 2013 -- Updated 0919 GMT (1719 HKT)

North Koreans honor veterans

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Kim Jong Un opens new war veterans' cemetery in North Korean capital
  • North Koreans set to commemorate 60th anniversary of end of Korean War
  • Pyongyang government has invited a large number of foreign journalists
Pyongyang, North Korea (CNN) -- The new leader of this isolated country has inaugurated a new veterans' cemetery, on the first of what are expected to be several days of elaborate ceremonies celebrating the 60th anniversary of the conclusion of the Korean War.
Several thousand North Koreans, some of them elderly veterans of the Korean conflict, cheered and applauded when Kim Jong Un arrived at the sprawling new cemetery accompanied by uniformed military commanders and civilian officials.
Kim did not speak to the audience. Instead, he cut a ribbon at the entrance to the cemetery compound, which is flanked by enormous monuments and statues depicting fierce North Korean soldiers.
He departed after making a brief tour of some of the gravestones. Then the crowd, which included men in baggy, dark suits and ties and women dressed in bright puffy gowns, walked with reverence past graves decorated with medals of heroism.
Weather hampers U.S. vets' quest
Memories of fighting for North Korea
Chinese vets remember Korean War
A woman named Kim Pu Ok flung herself weeping at the grave of her husband, a man named Chu Yung Hui who passed at the age of 74 in 2011.
Kim said her husband served as a pilot in the Vietnam War. She stood next to her son, who she said was also a pilot.
"There are five pilots in our family," Kim said. "I am very angry at the U.S. imperialist policy against North Korea. That is why all of my family became Korean People's Army pilots -- to conquer the U.S. imperialists."
The North Korean government has invited a large number of foreign journalists to attend the 60th anniversary of the signing of the armistice, which brought an end to the Korean War.
Pyongyang describes the war as a decisive North Korean victory over Washington and its South Korean allies.
Among the foreign visitors invited to attend this week's anniversary celebrations are several Chinese veterans and at least one former Soviet veteran of the conflict. Also present at Wednesday's event was Thomas Hudner, a veteran US air force pilot who has been granted permission to return to North Korea to search for the remains of a fallen comrade.
Hudner's 60-year quest has been postponed, North Korean authorities say, due to torrential rains in the area where the remains are believed to be buried. Hudner has been invited back to resume his search in September.
CNN's Paula Hancocks in Pyongyang contributed to this report.

China CoaL Sink Holes Jining Province/ new fish restaurants

Living a nightmare in China's city of sinkholes


By Meng Meng, for CNN
July 25, 2013 -- Updated 0240 GMT (1040 HKT)

A local farmer turned his house on the edge of a sinkhole into a restaurant that offers fishing and homemade fish dishes.A local farmer turned his house on the edge of a sinkhole into a restaurant that offers fishing and homemade fish dishes.
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Living in China's city of sinkholes
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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • When cracks appeared in Xiao's house he feared the worse
  • Xiao's hometown, Jining, is one of China's massive "coal cities"
  • He watched many of his neighbors' homes sink into the ground
  • Officials: Sinkholes devouring 20 million square meters of land here a year
Jining, China (CNN) -- Four months after he built a new, two-story brick house in his village in northern China's Shandong Province, Xiao Guoqiang was alarmed to find a huge crack on the living room wall.
Having seen homes in neighboring villages sink, Xiao realized his long-held fears were coming true.
"I knew the day was coming, but I didn't expect it to happen so soon," said Xiao, who has been forced to move from the land -- on which four generations of his family have lived -- as a consequence.
Xiao's hometown, Jining, is one of China's "coal cities," whose mineral wealth helps light up the night skies of the world's most energy-hungry country. The land here is honeycombed with coal mines, which can form massive sinkholes that leave thousands of homes uninhabitable every year.
Ten years ago, the area where Xiao lived was a vibrant farming community on the North China Plain. But sinkholes are devouring 20 million square meters of land here a year, according to the Jining Land Resource Bureau, and have displaced an estimated 100,000 people, mostly farmers and their families, over the past decade.
By 2090, the bureau predicts one third of the city -- an area as large as Los Angeles -- will fall into the earth, and an estimated 5 million people will have been forced out of the region by the problem.
Those figures worry government-affiliated sinkhole researcher Gu Mei, who said tensions over migration may lead to social unrest.
"Schools in some districts are overwhelmed with migrant students, while in other districts, classrooms are half empty," she told CNN.
In this low-lying area, most sinkholes quickly fill with water. "I am afraid the city is turning into the Venice of the East," former mayor Li Guangsheng told the Qilu Weekly, a local newspaper, earlier this year.
When coal was discovered in the region in the 1960s, it proved a boon for the local economy. State-run miner YanKaung Group Ltd. grew from a local coal company to a multination-listed energy giant, employing about one of every two workers in town.
Meng Lingjun, a coal company employee, remembers the city as an underdeveloped backwater thirty years ago.
We are nothing without the coal company. All we can do is keep mining and fixing the sinkholes.
Meng Lingjun, mine employee
"When I was young, the town did not have a single factory, shopping mall or train station," he said. "Now we are one of the most affluent regions in North China."
But that prosperity has come at a price. Each day, Meng passes hundreds of sinkholes on his way to work. Like many urban residents, he believes it is too late for the city to withdraw from the lucrative coal business.
"We are nothing without the coal company," he said. "All we can do is keep mining and fixing the sinkholes."
In recent years, local officials tried several creative solutions for the sinkhole crisis, transforming the gaping holes into water theme parks, fishing ponds and lakes. One has been turned into a wetland park, a major spot for bird watching in the northern part of the city; another is now a fish breeding pond powered by solar panels.
But more than 50% of the subsided land remains abandoned, often polluted and emitting a pungent aroma. "The fund from central government for fixing sinkholes can barely cover expenses," government official Han Xizhong told CNN.
While China's Mine Subsidence Compensation Act gives clear guidance for how much a coal company should pay displaced residents for damages, it fails to take into account the problems that follow, Han said.
"The sinkhole issue is more complicated than removing a village and refilling the sinkholes," said another local official, who asked his name not be used because of the sensitive nature of the issue. "Many deep sinkholes have been sinking for over 10 years. You don't know the right time to treat them. Also communities removed from the subsidence area still need government support after moving to a new place."
But government-affiliated researcher Gu Mei claims the government has done a poor job addressing the problem.
"Local government would not consider filling sinkholes," Gu said. "Think about it. If you can easily turn a flooded subsidence into a water theme park, would you take pains to reclaim the land?"
Some farmers have attempted to fill the holes themselves -- only to find the cost is too high.
As I get older, my nostalgic feeling for the old village grows stronger. I try not to think about it, about the fact that it is a lake and the village only lives in my memory.
Xiao Guoqiang, resident
It costs at least US$15 per square meter to drain a hole and put in new soil. But according to Xiao Guoqiang, villagers only get compensated to the tune of US$5 per square meter from the coal company.
The Yankuang Group declined CNN requests for comment, citing the sensitivity of mining-induced farmland losses and migration issues.
For Xiao, the move to his new home has hit the family's dinner table as they can no longer raise their own pigs or grow their own vegetables.
"The pork price is rising and we cannot afford it. Having fresh vegetables and meat had never been a problem before because we grew and bred what we wanted to eat," Xiao said.
Another villager points out the lack of jobs in the new location.
"Our new home is 20 miles (32.1 km) from the nearest town. It is hard for us find a decent job," said Kong Jian, who operates a street noodle stand.
"Young people flock to bigger cities, looking for factory jobs. Those who stayed are doing small businesses like operating noodle restaurants," Xiao said. "But for the next generation, nobody will know how to farm."
The 50-year old gets emotional when talking about his old village.
"As I get older, my nostalgic feeling for the old village grows stronger. I try not to think about it -- about the fact that it is a lake and the village only lives in my memory."

China charges Bo Xilai with corruption - Asia-pacific - Al Jazeera English

China charges Bo Xilai with corruption - Asia-pacific - Al Jazeera English