Chinese Daily Photos, 2011 to 2019!

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bd popeye

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BEIJING, CHINA - NOVEMBER 01: Models get ready backstage before MGPIN Make-up Styling 2012 of China Fashion Week Spring/Summer 2012 on November 1, 2011 in Beijing, China.

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SHANGHAI, CHINA - NOVEMBER 01: Francesco Molinari of Italy, Adam Scott of Australia, Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland, Lee Westwood of England and Keegan Bradley of the USA take part in a traditional Chinese Dragon dance at the Peninsula Hotel to herald the start of the WGC-HSBC Champions in Shanghai, China. on November 1, 2011 in Shanghai, China.

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Taiwan's opposition People First Party presidential candidate James Soong, center, is hugged by a supporter, along with running mate Lin Rwei-Shiung, left, after officially announcing his presidential bid in Taipei, Taiwan, Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2011. The announcement by the veteran politician raises the prospects that enough partisans of President Ma Ying-jeou could defect to Soong, pushing China skeptic Tsai Ing-wen over the top in the tightly contested Jan. 14 poll.

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A woman practices Tai Chi in front of the Jinmao Tower in the Pudong financial district in Shanghai on November 1, 2011.

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Miss World contestants Miss China, Liu Chen (L) Miss Japan, Midori Tanaka (2nd L) Miss India, Kanishtha Dhankhar (3rd L) Miss Hong Kong, Hyman Chu (2nd R) and Miss Philippines, Gwendoline Ruais, (R) pose for photographers during a photocall opposite Britain's Houses of Parliament in London, on October 31, 2011. The Finals of Miss World 2011 will be held on November 6, 2011, at London's Earls Court.

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The Chinese research vessel and icebreaker Xue Long, or "Snow Dragon," arrives in the northern port of Tianjin on Oct. 31, 2011. Xue Long will leave the port on Nov. 3 for a six-month Antarctic expedition, the vessel's 28th voyage since 1984. (Xinhua/Zhou Wei)

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Members of the Antarctic research expedition are greeted after their research vessel and icebreaker Xue Long, or "Snow Dragon," arrived in the northern port of Tianjin on Oct. 31, 2011. Xue Long will leave the port on Nov. 3 for a six-month Antarctic expedition, the vessel's 28th voyage since 1984. (Xinhua/Zhou Wei)

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10 year old Le Le, weighing 155 kilograms, receives a body check at Beijing Huakang Hospital on Oct 18. [Photo by Zhang Wei/China Daily]

BEIJING - Le Le stumbled into the second-floor treatment room and immediately slumped into the nearest chair. His forehead was dripping with sweat after climbing the short flight of stairs.

"Fine, fine," he gulped between breaths, as doctors and nurses asked him how he was feeling.

However, as a 10-year-old boy weighing 155 kilograms, the boy is far from fine. But he's trying. After less than a month of treatment at Beijing Huakang Hospital, he has already shed 10 kg and medics say they have seen a marked change in his mood.

"He's a lot more open and willing to talk to us," said Niu Guichen, a doctor in traditional Chinese medicine who began treating Le Le on Oct 3.

"He used to just lie in the chair and make no effort to communicate. Now he brings us candies and plants."

As well as putting him on a strict diet, Niu sees his patient five times a week for acupuncture and light stretching exercises. Like most 10-year-olds, Le Le at first pulled every trick in the book to get out of the treatments - crying, screaming for his mother or fidgeting so much that the nurses had to give up. But the youngster has become increasingly calm during his visits.

His change in attitude has been especially encouraging for his parents, who were becoming increasingly concerned about their son's health: He has already developed a fatty liver and doctors say he runs a high risk of heart disease and high blood pressure.

"He's a lot more active and looks happier. Losing that 10 kg has really boosted his confidence," said his mother.

She said that her son started gaining weight when he was one year old.

"Everything we did to try and help him lose weight either had no effect, or was too expensive to keep up or the boy refused to do it," she added.

Not only has Le Le's childhood obesity seriously harmed his health, it has also caused problems in and out of the classroom.

For school bullies, the child is an obvious target: He is 1.6 meters tall, weighs almost four times more than other boys his age, and he has been forced to wear the same stained and faded trousers for years because his mother struggles to find him clothes that fit.

"One mother I confronted about her child's behavior (after an attack on Le Le) insisted her son had been acting in self-defense. I couldn't believe it," she said, the anger obvious in her voice.

"I wish parents would educate their children better. His classmates should be helping him, not bullying him. It's not his fault he's like this."

Wang Chunrong, a hospital psychologist, agreed that the boy's treatment by other children may have worsened or even caused Le Le's obsessive-compulsive disorder.

"He has a compulsive eating disorder and, since primary school, has developed a habit of constantly washing his hands," he said, explaining that both are symptoms of the strain Le Le is under.

"He eats to relieve the emotional pressure, which means he ends up in a vicious cycle. The hand-washing may be from the fact he is being touched all the time by people he doesn't like."

For the medics at Beijing Huakang Hospital, the goal now is to help him lose 75 kg in two years. That will put him in line with other adolescents, said doctor Niu, who warned that losing too much too quickly can be just as harmful as being overweight.

"We just hope the treatment will allow our son to have a normal life," added Le Le's mother.
 

Equation

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Good God, it's gonna take that big kid Le Le at least a good 5 - 7 years with daily exercise and a good diet to get back to healthy weight and body fat % for his age.
 

SteelBird

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Wow! Those models look like bamboo trees. I wonder what's the height of their heels.
 

bd popeye

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Wow! Those models look like bamboo trees. I wonder what's the height of their heels.

I read that those women that skinny will have problems later in life with their brain functions simply because of a lack of nutrution to the brain in their teen and early adulthood years.

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The fire broke out on the freight train (Tianjin to Hankou) in the Xuchang section of the Beijing-Guangzhou railway at 4:23 am Wednesday, causing a two-way stop lasting nearly one hour on the railway. No casualties were reported and railway service resumed at 5:10 am. The cause of the fire is under investigation.

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A police officer stops the minivan Monday, which was used as a school bus. Photo: CFP

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Police stopped an overcrowded kindergarten school bus Monday, in which 31 preschoolers and two adults were squeezed inside a minivan with only seven seats.
After receiving a tip-off about the minivan, which was transporting migrant children to the Mingri Zhixing Kindergarten at Laiguangying township in Chaoyang district, police from Yayuncun traffic squad tracked it down and seized the minivan and the driver.
The children were on their way home Monday afternoon, the Legal Mirror reported Tuesday.
After police pulled the van over, the children shouted out, telling police they could not breathe.
The driver, surnamed Liu, is the kindergarten's head teacher, and police fined him 300 yuan ($47.2) and told him to cease transporting children. However as it was rush hour, the children had to pack back inside the minivan, which was then escorted by police.
Liu used the vehicle to pick up children living in the Wangjing area from this year, said a teacher, surnamed Zhang, from the kindergarten.
Liu told police he is aware of the safety hazards, but still risks the drive for the sake of parents who are migrant workers and cannot afford expensive kindergartens in Wangjing.
Zhang said that most children did not show up Tuesday, and only a few parents sent their children to school by motorcycle or bikes.
"How can migrant workers afford cars to send their children to school since they live so far away?" Zhang said.
The busy parents urged the head teacher to pick up their children, and they paid a fee of 100 yuan per month, according to Zhang.
"Probably the kindergarten will just cancel the bus service, as the kindergarten hasn't been making money for a long time," Zhang said, saying that the kindergartens' three teachers often had to wait for their salaries.
 

bd popeye

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The wrecked car of Ling Huakun, a citizen in Wuchuan city, South China's Guangdong province, who drove his car to chase robbers in May, but accidentally killed one of the two robbers and wounded another. [Photo/Yangcheng Evening News]

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GUANGZHOU - Authorities in Guangdong province are stepping up to help out a self-employed man who found himself in hot water when - trying to catch some robbers - he accidentally killed one man and wounded another.

Five and a half months ago, Ling Huakun saw two men commit a robbery and immediately drove after their motorbike.

The two men fell off after Ling's car hit the motorbike as he attempted to avoid another car. One of them died after he was sent to hospital.

During the chase, Ling's car also bumped into a 60-year-old passer-by and a small van, and he injured his pregnant wife and son sitting next to him.

Ling Huakun, from Wuchuan city, Guangdong province, had to shell out more than 90,000 yuan ($14,200) for the damage.

Now the local government said some 150,000 yuan has been raised in donations from deputies to the local people's congress and members of the local political consultative committee, as well as from companies, to help Ling out.

Also, local traffic police and judicial authorities will help Ling handle the traffic accident compensation and related judicial procedures, sources with the Wuchuan government said.

Ling, who runs a lighting and electronics store, was initially awarded about 50,000 yuan by the provincial and city foundations and other governmental organizations in June, with a certificate for his bravery.

"Actually, I'm not worried about the financial trouble. I'm still young and have time to make money to offset the compensation," Ling told China Daily.

The first batch of donations only partially offset the amount he had to pay for repairs to his own car and the small van, as well as medical expenses for his wife, son and the 60-year-old man, leaving him at least 40,000 yuan in debt.

"I'm really suffering big psychological pressure from what I did five months ago. My family didn't understand why I did that. I'm just thinking about why my act has put me in such a trouble, both financially and psychologically," he said.

The wife of the robber killed in the accident said she would not launch a legal action against Ling.

"I'm only asking for compensation from him," the 18-year-old mother told the Guangzhou-based Yangcheng Evening News, without giving her name. The jobless mother of two lives in a shabby house in neighboring Huazhou city.

Ling's plight has sparked a debate among Chinese people on the issue of helping others, especially after the recent death of toddler Yue Yue, who was ignored by 18 passers-by after being run over twice by vehicles in mid-October in Foshan, Guangdong province.

"If Ling is punished for intervening despite the serious outcome of his act, it will greatly discourage people from helping others," said Liu Xuemei, a teacher with the Guangzhou No 97 Middle School.

Zhu Yongping, a Guangzhou-based lawyer, suggested people in Ling's condition avoid chasing criminals by themselves but call the police.

"The court has the right to reject the lawsuit against Ling. Moreover, the government should set up a special foundation to pay compensation in such cases to encourage people who are willing to help others," he said.

The current regulation to award people for bravery, issued by the Guangdong provincial government in 1998, does not specify who is responsible for compensation if people acting with a just cause unfortunately cause damage to third parities.

"The regulation should be modified. Otherwise, it will trigger many troubles for people who are willing to help others," he said.
 

bd popeye

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Uruguayan Maria Fernanda saves a drowning woman in the West Lake of Hangzhou on Oct 13. [Photo by Wang Ronggui/for China Daily]

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SHANGHAI - Jumping in the water to save a drowning woman in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, seemed the right thing to do for Maria Fernanda.

She was not prepared to become a heroine for her actions that day in West Lake on Oct 13.

"It was a rainy day and we were walking along the lake. Suddenly, I noticed people from outside were watching at some corner of the lake - we didn't think she was in trouble," said the 34-year-old from Uruguay.

"I thought 'OK, she was probably fishing', but when water reached her, I knew somebody had to do something. But I don't know Chinese and I couldn't scream Chinese," explained Fernanda.

"At that moment, the first thing that came to my mind was you had to do it," she said. "I undressed very quickly and jumped into the water to save her."

Wang Ronggui, a shutterbug who happened to be nearby when the incident occurred, said he saw a woman take off her jacket and dive into the water.

"At first I thought her own child fell into the lake, but when she came closer, I figured she was trying to save a Chinese," said Wang in a television interview.

Wang later posted the photos he took of Fernanda and the drowning 30-year-old woman on the Internet.

But that left the whole city of Hangzhou searching for the heroine, as Fernanda left without giving her name.

She and her husband were later tracked down in Shanghai through the Uruguayan embassy.

"As a foreigner who jumped into the water to save people, I understand the whole society has this question of why a foreigner has to do this rather than Chinese," she said. "But I don't think it's the key question."

"The thing is, when I was coming out of the water with the woman, I saw there were at least seven or eight cameras taking photos of us. I was a little angry and sad, I started to yell in English, 'what are you doing? She was dying and you were only thinking about taking pictures? Life is more important!'" said Fernanda.

"I was angry because the crowd was just curious and simply watching us - it's not a fashion show," she added.

Fernanda said she would rather believe the crowd was in shock than indifferent.

"I think it's not a Chinese problem, it's a global problem. Nowadays, we live in a hurry, everybody is always on the way to somewhere, nobody can take time to look at human value - I'm happy to see people start to think about it again, as for me it's very important."
 

bd popeye

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Int'l Industry Fair 2011 kicks off in Shanghai

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Visitors view an electric concept car at the International Industry Fair 2011 in Shanghai, east China, Nov. 1, 2011. The International Industry Fair 2011 kicked off in Shanghai Tuesday, attracting over 1900 exhibitors all over the world. (Xinhua/Pei Xin)

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Photo taken on Nov. 1, 2011 shows the model of engine that would be installed on Chinese developed airplanes at the International Industry Fair 2011 in Shanghai, east China. The International Industry Fair 2011 kicked off in Shanghai Tuesday, attracting over 1900 exhibitors all over the world.(Xinhua/Pei Xin)

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Visitors view a model of Chinese developed C919 airplane at the International Industry Fair 2011 in Shanghai, east China, Nov. 1, 2011. The International Industry Fair 2011 kicked off in Shanghai Tuesday, attracting over 1900 exhibitors all over the world. (Xinhua/Pei Xin)

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Visitors view the robots on auto assembling line at the International Industry Fair 2011 in Shanghai, China, Nov. 1, 2011. The International Industry Fair 2011 kicked off in Shanghai Tuesday, attracting over 1900 exhibitors all over the world. (Xinhua/Pei Xin)
 

ToxSic

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""The thing is, when I was coming out of the water with the woman, I saw there were at least seven or eight cameras taking photos of us. I was a little angry and sad, I started to yell in English, 'what are you doing? She was dying and you were only thinking about taking pictures? Life is more important!'" said Fernanda.

"I was angry because the crowd was just curious and simply watching us - it's not a fashion show," she added.

Fernanda said she would rather believe the crowd was in shock than indifferent.

"I think it's not a Chinese problem, it's a global problem. Nowadays, we live in a hurry, everybody is always on the way to somewhere, nobody can take time to look at human value - I'm happy to see people start to think about it again, as for me it's very important."" - Rescuer didn't save a life for fame - Lifestyle News - SINA English

Reminds me a bit of what was said about Princess Diana's death back years ago.
Ironically:
Uruguayan Maria Fernanda saves a drowning woman in the West Lake of Hangzhou on Oct 13. [Photo by Wang Ronggui/for China Daily]
He was one to contribute to her angriness and sadness comment.
 
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Equation

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This image reminds of Star Wars the Phantom Menace when Anakin Skywalker attached one of these to his "chariots" pod racing.
 

bd popeye

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Chinese President Hu Jintao (R) talks with U.S. President Barack Obama at the Group of 20 (G20) summit in Cannes, France, Nov. 3, 2011. (Xinhua/Lan Hongguang)

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Photos taken on Nov. 3, 2011 shows the china designed "Sevan Brazil" offshore drilling platform in Nantong, east China's Jiangsu Province. (Xinhua/Liu Ying)

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BEIJING, CHINA - NOVEMBER 02: Actress Fan Bingbing attends People of the Year Award 2011 by BAZAAR Men Mercedes-Benz China Fashion Week Celebration Party at D.PARK TankZone on November 2, 2011 in Beijing, China.

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Visitors look at the sand(?) table of CBD in Beijing Chaoyang District during the 7th Beijing International Finance Expo in Beijing, Nov. 3, 2011. The four-day expo kicked off in Beijing Exhibition Center on Thursday. (Xinhua/Chen Xiaogen)

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In this image taken from China's CCTV via APTN, video images show the docking of the Shenzhou 8 craft that was launched Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2011 with the already orbiting Tiangong 1 module in the early morning of Thursday, Nov. 3, 2011. The two unmanned Chinese spacecraft docked successfully and were orbiting the Earth together Thursday in a step that moves China closer to manning its own space station in about a decade.

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In this photo provided by the FBI, Kuei Fuang Tsuei Hu is shown. A federal grand jury returned an indictment earlier this month against Kuei Fuang Tsuei Hu, 62, of Irvine CA, on three counts of wire fraud. The indictment charged Hu with defrauding several victims by falsely claiming that invested funds would be used to sponsor political visits to China and Taiwan by prominent politicians.

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In this photo released by the FBI, Jack Hu is shown. A federal grand jury returned an indictment earlier this month against Jack Hu, 26, of Irvine CA, on three counts of wire fraud. The indictment charged Hu with defrauding several victims by falsely claiming that invested funds would be used to sponsor political visits to China and Taiwan by prominent politicians.

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Santa Jim (L), winner of the 2009 Santa Claus Winter Games, sits beside other guests during the Hong Kong round of the Santa Claus Winter Games at a shopping mall in Hong Kong November 2, 2011. Hong Kong won the championship in 2009 and came in third in 2010 for the international competition held annually in Gaellivare, Sweden.

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A man walks past a Lenovo shop in a computer mall in Beijing on November 3, 2011. The founder of Chinese computer giant Lenovo Group Liu Chuanzhi has stepped down as chairman, the company said as it reported a nearly 88 percent year-on-year surge in third-quarter net profit.
 
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