Chinese Daily Photos, 2011 to 2019!

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Spartan95

Junior Member
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Photos & News!

My condolences to those famlies that lost loved ones in this horrific accident.

Thanks guys.. the article mentioned that the vehicle the children were riding in was a modified tricycle. Can someone please explain? Thanks!

Did it look like this?? Or similar?

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I have not seen a 3-wheeled vehicle capable of carrying so many people (more than 20 kids during the accident) in China before.

If I have to guess, I think it was a 3-wheeled mini-van. The front would look something like what you posted, except that it would have a windshield and be broader. I have seen such vehicles in Thailand. Can't say much for their stability, but they can travel on lousy dirt tracks fairly well.

The pic of the train in Hainan you posted is amazing! I was there only a year back and the track was still being constructed. Now, it is up and running!
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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Re: Chinese Daily Life in Photos & News!

Thank you spartan95!

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A couple walk in the chilly wind along a street in downtown Beijing on December 29, 2010. Authorities in Beijing have hiked the minimum wage in the capital by about 20 percent for the second time in six months amid soaring food costs, rising property prices and China's widening wealth gap.

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A woman poses for a photo near a paramilitary policeman in front of Tiananmen Gate in Beijing, December 29, 2010. China's Communist Party will not cede control of efforts to fight graft, the government said on Wednesday, effectively ruling out independent courts tackling a problem it has said is so severe it could threaten party rule. The Chinese characters read "Long Live the Republic".

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Vehicles drive on flyovers during the evening rush hour in central Shanghai December 29, 2010. China's auto stocks, which were bruised last week by Beijing's policy to limit new car registrations in the capital, were largely calm on Wednesday, shrugging off government confirmation of an end to tax incentives for small cars.

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A waitress walks past a New Year billboard at a restaurant in Beijing on December 29, 2010.

A girl sticks out her tongue in a pose, as she and other children wait for their parents after school ended at Tenglong kindergarten, a school for children of migrant workers on the outskirts of Beijing December 27, 2010. Preschools are the "weakest" part of China's education system, according to the Chinese government, which says it will generally improve the country's kindergartens to ensure a quality start for children, Xinhua News Agency reported.

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A Boeing 747-400 cargo plane parked at Yantai Airport, east China's Shandong Province, Dec. 29, 2010. The cargo air route between Yantai and Chicago operated by Jade Cargo International Airline was opened on Wednesday. Regular cargo flights will fly between the two cities every Wednesday.

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People line to wait for buses in snow in Dalian, northeast China's Liaoning Province, Dec. 29, 2010. The heaviest snowfall this year hit Dalian, the coastal city in Liaoning on Wednesday. (Xinhua/Lv Wenzheng)

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Firefighters work at the burnt Huasheng plastic plant in Jiaxing, east China's Zhejiang Province, Dec. 29, 2010. Fire broke out in the plastic plant at about 1:00 pm on Wednesday. The fire has been put out, no casualties were reported.

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The main actress Fan Bingbing and the main actor Jacky Chan (from right to left) attend a promotion campaign for the movie Shaolin in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 28, 2010. The movie Shaolin, named after a famous Buddhist monastery in central China's Henan Province, will make its national debut on Jan. 19, 2011. (Xinhua/Jin Liangkuai)

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A model promotes a Porsche at the 8th China Guangzhou International Automobile Exhibition in Guangzhou, capital of south China's Guangdong Province, Dec. 27, 2010. The 7-day event with 87 automobile manufacturers concluded on Monday. (Xinhua/Huang Guobao)

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A model promotes a Porsche at the 8th China Guangzhou International Automobile Exhibition in Guangzhou, capital of south China's Guangdong Province, Dec. 27, 2010.

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A model promotes a sports car at the 8th China Guangzhou International Automobile Exhibition in Guangzhou, capital of south China's Guangdong Province, Dec. 27, 2010.

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A car model promotes an electric automobile at an auto show in Taipei, southeast China's Taiwan, Dec. 24, 2010. The four-day auto show kicked off here on Friday. (Xinhua/Song Lidong
 

Spartan95

Junior Member
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Photos & News!

Did a quick Google search on the net for the 3-wheeled vehicle. In Thailand, they are known as "Tuk Tuk". Here's a link to what a larger Tuk Tuk looks like (the smaller ones are typically 4-seaters):

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And this is what is known as a stretch Tuk Tuk:

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The 3-wheeled vehicle carrying the school children that got into an accident may look like the stretch tuk tuk.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Photos & News!

Thanks.. There's s similar vehicle in the Philippines.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Photos & News!

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Chinese President Hu Jintao greets residents in Chaoyang District, Beijing, Dec 29, 2010. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Students show their paper-cutting works during a traditional Chinese paper cutting activity for the upcoming new year in Lianyungang, East China’s Jiangsu province, Dec 29, 2010. Cut outs are usually used to decorate doors and windows. [Photo/Xinhua]

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A deaf-mute student shows his paper-cutting works during a traditional Chinese paper cutting activity for the upcoming new year in Haozhou, Central China’s Anhui province, Dec 29, 2010. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Wearing Peking opera costumes, a student from Togo (L) takes pictures with his friend at the party for Christmas and New Year at Inner Mongolia University of Technology in Hohhot, capital city of North China’s Inner Mongolia autonomous region on Dec 23, 2010. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Newly released coins are shown at Caibai Mall in Beijing, Dec 28, 2010. The new gift money has two coins, one golden and one silver, which are imprinted with characters from two traditional Chinese stories. Every year since 2008, the art department center of the National Museum of China has been supervising the release of the traditional gift money. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Yiwu wholesale market welcomes the sales peak of various gifts for New Year's Day, Yiwu, East China's Zhejiang province, Dec 29, 2010. [Photo/Xinhua]

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The students show their handiworks make up of waste materials to greet the upcoming new year 2011 in Xiangyang, Central China's Hubei province, Dec 28,2010. [Photo/Asianewsphoto]
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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Re: Chinese Daily Life in Photos & News!

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KUNMING - Five people were killed and eight others injured Thursday when a pharmaceutical workshop in southwest China's Yunnan Province exploded, local authorities said. The injured are being treated at a local hospital. Five of them were severely burned.

The blast happened at around 10 a.m. in the Guandu District of Kunming, the provincial capital.

The workshop belonged to Quanxin Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd.

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Firefighters carry the body of a victim killed in the explosion at a pharmaceutical workshop in Kunming, Yunnan province December 30, 2010. Five people were killed and eight others injured Thursday when a pharmaceutical workshop in southwest China's Yunnan Province exploded, the cause of the accident is under investigation, Xinhua News Agency reported.

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Deng Weixing, a meat retailer who runs a "home for left-behind students," helps them study at the home in Shitai township of Yingde city, South China's Guangdong province, Sept 19, 2010. Deng and his wife have been looking after children since 1981, caring for 859 children over 29 years, in this township, the smallest in Yingde city, also one of the most remote and poverty-stricken towns. All the children, left behind by their migrant worker parents, regard him as "dad" as he offers them food and shelter, and helps them finish primary school and high school. [Photo/CFP]

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Xiong Tinghe, wife of Deng Weixing, distributes food for children living at the "home for left-behind students" in Shitai township of Yingde city, South China's Guangdong province, Sept 19, 2010. [Photo/CFP]

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A man smokes while using a computer at an Internet cafe in Taiyuan, Shanxi province December 30, 2010. China shut down more than 60,000 pornographic websites this year, netting almost 5,000 suspects in the process, a government spokesman said on Thursday, vowing no let-up in its campaign against material deemed obscene.

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A driver operates a metro car running through the newly-opened subway line in Beijing on December 30, 2010. Beijing opens five new subway lines to reach the total length of tracks in the city's subway rail at 336 kilometers, which aims at boosting the business growth and social development in the Chinese capital.

[video=youtube;WVVd-H1wZfg]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVVd-H1wZfg[/video]
 
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ahho

Junior Member
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Photos & News!

My condolences to those famlies that lost loved ones in this horrific accident.

Thanks guys.. the article mentioned that the vehicle the children were riding in was a modified tricycle. Can someone please explain? Thanks!

Did it look like this?? Or similar?


1-123.jpg

I highly doubt this is the model. The one would be a basic trike model and they added a cover at the back. Try searching tricycle in alibaba.com and you are filled with different model. I would say it would look like the one below with windshield and plastic cover for roof like tuk tuk
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Also some Chinese news agency would think that the tricycle is modified even though it came out from the factory like that. Really surprise that they did not see different models before.
 

Spartan95

Junior Member
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Photos & News!

Micro-blogging is now the "in" thing in PRC:

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Micro-blogging increasing rapidly in China Source: Global Times
[19:11 December 29 2010]
By Pang Qi

The number of micro-blog users in China has increased to over 120 million, according to the 2010 China Micro-blog Annual Report released by Shanghai Jiao Tong University (SJTU) Tuesday. The report also predicts that there will be another wave of micro-blog users in 2012 and 2013, when the market will become mature.

The report identified 2010 as the year that micro-blogging started to develop in China, and said that the number of micro-blog users in China reached 125.217 million in October, with 65 million of them regularly using micro-blogs.

Xie Gengyun, a writer of the report and also deputy dean at the Arts & Humanities Research Institute at SJTU, said that the report analyzed the phenomenon of micro-blogging from many aspects, including its influence, spreading of rumors, and its relation to traditional media and opinion leaders.

According to the report, micro-blogging has become the most popular way in which netizens disclose information. In 2010, 11 significant events – such as a home demolition in Jiangxi which led to a resident's death after he set himself on fire, and the "Li Gang is my father" event – were originally reported on micro-blogs, accounting for 22 percent of the top 50 significant events in China this year.

Xie was quoted by Chinese media as saying that micro-blogging would gradually replace online forums and blogs as it develops very fast and has a huge impact.

"Radio took 38 years to increase its audience to 50 million, television took 13 years, and the internet four years, while it took micro-blog merely 14 months to reach such a number," Xie told reporters at a press conference, according to the People's Daily.

Micro-blogging gives people the ability to disseminate messages and information, and it also creates opinion leaders, as like-minded people from all walks of life spread their views.

The report warns that micro-blogs can also generate and spread false rumors, such as the "Shanxi earthquake" and "Louis Cha's death".

Statistics cited in the report show that people in China mainly use micro-blogs to comment on various topics. A lower number of people use such services to send messages or to inform others of a particular event.

Xie told Chinese media that micro-bloggers are currently the more educated people in the country but that this will change and include those at the grassroots level, and its function will change from watching celebrities to online socializing.

He also suggested that the government should focus on developing its information channels by using micro-blogs to prevent negative effects of false rumors, and that netizens should adapt to the new pattern of communication and the "fragmental" life style brought by the micro-blogging era.

Liu Kang, dean of the Arts & Humanities Research Institute at SJTU, told the Global Times that though the opinion leaders are easily created as micro-blogs gather followers in a very short time, both the leaders and the viewers vanish quickly when the issue discussed is no longer current.

Liu said that the development of micro-blogging will enhance the diversity of public opinion, but it also causes huge pressure on governments. "Some official reaction to micro-blogs are just temporary and passive", he said. "But the real effect will be tested in the future."

One Chinese micro-blogger, Meng Na, told the Global Times that she uses micro-blogs for various reasons such as getting news on celebrities, and connecting to people who are not easy to reach by phone.

But Meng said that micro-blogs are sometimes a waste of time. "Some messages on it are no more than rubbish, and sometimes you get nothing after flipping over five pages," she said.

This will be an interesting phenomenon to watch. News that is not carried on state media for whatever reasons will be spread via micro-blog, although I'm sure some form of censorship will be put in place.

There is also the risk of the micro-blog being used to spread false rumors, although these can be debunked given sufficient time.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Photos & News!

Heavy snow in China..

[video=youtube;mQv2THAv_r4]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQv2THAv_r4[/video]
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Photos & News!

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Unbelievable that the driver had 20 little kids stuffed in that thing!^^^ Ridiclous!
Officials from the public security bureau of Hengnan county, Hunan province, inspect on Tuesday the three-wheeled vehicle that plunged into a creek while taking 20 children to school on Monday morning. The accident killed 14 children and injured six. [Photo/Xinhua]

BEIJING - Police on Thursday arrested Chen Ningxi, driver of a three-wheeled vehicle in which 14 children died and six were injured in an accident on Tuesday in central China's Hunan province.

The vehicle was taking 20 children to a primary school when it plunged into a creek at 7:30 am on Monday in Songjiang township, Hengnan county, in Hengyang city, leaving 14 dead and six injured.

The local government promised 180,000 yuan ($27,300) in compensation to every family of the dead on Thursday. The six injured are in stable condition in a local hospital.

The children were from Dongtang village and were traveling to school in neighboring Yinguo village when the vehicle ran off the road.

"Because the primary school in Dongtang had been ordered to close, we parents had to send our children to the school in Yinguo," Li Yuying, the mother of one of the dead students, was quoted as saying by Xinhua News Agency.

"We hired a driver to pick them up and take them to school."

The local police said the three-wheeled vehicle is registered for carrying cargo.

"The driver admitted the accident's main cause was that the vehicle was overloaded with students," Yang Xiaozhong, a local traffic police official, was quoted by the Beijing Times on Thursday as saying.

"It was foggy when the accident happened," he said. "The vehicle was going too fast and spun out at a turn."

Wang Fangming, a Chinese-language teacher at the victims' school, said the school did not have the money to buy and operate buses for the more than 150 students, who come from six villages.

"We suggested parents stop hiring that three-wheeled vehicle because of safety concerns, and we forbid it from entering campus," Wang said.

popeye's thought >>> No school busses available? Does not the school or school system provide bus service for those that need it? If not why don't the parents shuttle the kids to and from school if need be?

"The headmaster even had an argument with one of the victim's parents over that a few days ago."

Beijing Times quoted the former director of the county's education bureau Wang Li as saying, "Most of the 249 rural schools in our county have no vehicle for schoolchildren."

He was one of six education and traffic officials sacked on Tuesday over the accident.

Also fired were Yang Shixin, a township government official in charge of traffic; Luo Shengli, an official of the county's transport bureau; Zhou Pin, a local traffic police officer; Chen Xin, head of Yinguo Primary School; and Chen Shaohua, head of the Songjiang Township Center School.

The local traffic department's record shows the county has 68 registered school vehicles.

"Without funds, what we are able to do is to educate parents to improve safety awareness and try to build more boarding schools, which takes time," Wang said.

The number of students in the county has decreased from 170,000 at its peak to 120,000, due to family-planning policies and urbanization, he said.

Consequently, many village-based schools are closed, and students must go to school far from home, he said.

Education experts warned growing numbers of rural students nationwide are facing dangers as they take illegal vehicles to get to school.

"Traffic accidents have become dire killers of the country's rural students, who rush between home and school every day," Xiong Bingqi, deputy director of the Beijing-based 21st Century Education Research Institute, told China Daily on Thursday.

"The root problem is the tight education budgets rather than the safety awareness of victim's parents," he said.

He said government investment in campus security is far from enough, and school vehicles should be included in the budgets of local governments' compulsory education funds.

The Ministry of Public Security on Thursday began a one-month inspection of school bus security in cooperation with the Ministry of Education and other relevant government departments.
 
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