Chinese Daily Photos, 2011 to 2019!

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bd popeye

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Very sad indeed...My condolences to her family.

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In this file photo from July 2, 2010, Katie Cramer, who was adopted from China, rests in her bed at the Kaiser Permanente Roseville Medical Center where she suffers from acute myeloid leukemia in Roseville, Calif., the US. (AP Photo/Robert Durell)

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – A leukemia-stricken California teenager whose adoptive mother traveled to China to search for a bone marrow donor after being unable to find a match in the U.S. has died.

The Sacramento Bee reports that 16-year-old Katie Cramer died Thursday at home.

Katie was diagnosed with the deadly blood disease four years ago and struggled to find a bone marrow donor so she could undergo a transplant. She was adopted from China at 14 months old and had no known blood relatives who could donate.

The case highlighted the difficulties that ethnic minorities face in finding bone marrow matches. According to the Asian American Donor Program, they have only a 50-percent chance of finding a match from the U.S. donor registry, compared with 80 percent for whites.

Her mother, Sherrie Cramer, made an unsuccessful trip to China in July in search of a donor. A few samples were found after help from the local Red Cross but none proved to be the perfect match Katie needed.

After the China trip, Katie's health worsened as she struggled with damage to her heart and a weakened immune system caused by her cancer treatments.

On New Year's Day, Katie's doctor told the family she would not get better, and only had a few days left to live.

Katie spent her last days at home surrounded by friends, family and her beloved dog.

Sherrie and her husband were at Katie's side when the girl stopped breathing.

"It was very beautiful and peaceful," she told the Bee. "We know all of the things she fought. It's a relief that she's not in pain and not sick."

A public memorial is scheduled for Jan. 22 in Sacramento.
 

bd popeye

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A woman shows a replica of the British royal engagement ring at a jewellery factory in Yiwu, Zhejiang province January 12, 2011. Chinese manufacturers are cashing in on the British royal wedding craze as they churn out tens of thousands of replica royal engagement rings for the world. [Photo/Agencies]

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A BMW made of bricks, the same shape and size of a real BMW, is an artwork by Dai Yun, a sculptor in Shenzhen, Guangdong province. The cost of the car is 600,000 yuan ($90,641).

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DOHA, QATAR - JANUARY 12: Sebastian Suria of Qatar and Du Wei of China P.R challenge eachother for the ball during the AFC Asian Cup Group A match between China P.R and Qatar at Khalifa Stadium on January 12, 2011 in Doha, Qatar.

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DOHA, QATAR - JANUARY 12: Chinese fans cheer prior to the AFC Asian Cup Group A match between China P.R and Qatar at Khalifa Stadium on January 12, 2011 in Doha, Qatar.

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Attendants (R) serve passengers on the newly-launched bullet train bound for Beijing from southwest China's Chongqing municipality on January 11, 2011, as China unveiled several other high-speed railway routes linking Chongqing to Shanghai, Chengdu to Beijing and Chengdu to Shanghai on the same day. China is rapidly expanding and upgrading its railway network amid increased pressures on its transportation system, with plans to have 120,000 kilometres of track by 2020.

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A Chinese opera performer plays a hand-held video game before his performance, part of a Taoist ritual at Ho Chung village in the rural New Territories January 12, 2011. A four-day long Taoist ritual, involving the burning of the 'King of the Ghosts', is practised once every 10 years to ward off spirits and maintain peace in the villages.

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This picture taken in suburban Shanghai on January 11, 2011 shows Chinese artist Ai Weiwei holding a piece of debris of his newly built Shanghai studio after it was demolished. The 53-year-old Ai, one of China's most famous and controversial artists, said the demolition which began before dawn without any prior notification was linked to his political activism.

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Two hostesses dressed in trditional Chinese dress serve cups of Tpresso from a tea machine, at a product presentation in Beijing on January 12, 2011. The inventor of Nespresso Eric Favre launched its tea capsules in China, which go againt the Chinese tea tradition, using a partnership with a high end local distributor, Teafinder.

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Employees work at a Chinese new year merchandising factory in Yiwu, Zhejiang province January 11, 2011. The Chinese New Year will begin on February 3, 2011, and according to the Lunar calendar, is the Year of the Rabbit. The Chinese character next to the worker (L) reads "Happiness".

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Cathay Pacific employees from the flight attendants union (FAU) protest amid a pay dispute with their employer at the international airport in Hong Kong on January 11, 2011. The FAU has voted for to enforce a 'work to rule' policy which could disrupt Chinese New Year flights, amid wage negotiations with the carrier.
 

ToxSic

New Member
Re: Chinese Daily Life in Videos, Photos & News!

Very nice Brick BMW. Very bad gas mileage though!

Chinese soccer... I am going to guess they lost... :/

I also read the Ai Weiwei building. It was supposed to be demolished after Chinese/Lunar New Years; guess someone lied.




EDIT: just checked score... YEEEEPPPPP
lost
 

bd popeye

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Very nice Brick BMW. Very bad gas mileage though!

Chinese soccer... I am going to guess they lost... :/

EDIT: just checked score... YEEEEPPPPP
lost

Yes China lost 2 nill.... here's an account of the game.

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DOHA, Qatar — Yousef Ahmed scored in the 27th minute and added a goal in first-half injury time, giving Qatar a 2-0 win over China on Wednesday night that boosted the host's chances of advancing to the second round of the Asian Cup.

In the other Group A game, Uzbekistan defeated Kuwait 2-1 on Masim Shatskikh's goal on a free kick in the 41st minute and Server Djeparov's go-ahead goal in the 64th. Bader al-Mutwa had tied the score with a penalty kick in the 48th after Walied Ali was brought down.

Uzbekistan (2-0) leads the group with six points, followed by China and Qatar (both 1-1). Kuwait (0-2 is last.

In the final first-round games of the group on Sunday, Qatar plays Kuwait, and China faces Uzbekistan.

The Associated Press
 

bd popeye

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US Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke delivers a policy speech on the US commercial relationship with China on January 13, 2011 in Washington, DC. Secretary Locke on Thursday warned China against repeating the protectionist 'folly' Western countries pursued in the wake of World War II, as he urged Beijing to make meaningful trade reforms. Speaking a week ahead of President Hu Jintao's visit to Washington, Locke called on Beijing to back up 'statements of principle' that favor reform with 'concrete results.'

Locke was born on January 21, 1950 in Seattle, Washington. A third-generation American with paternal ancestry from Taishan, Guangdong in China, Locke is the second of five children of James and Julie Locke from Hong Kong, which at that time was a dependent territory of the United Kingdom. His parents gave him the Chinese name of 駱家輝 (pronounced Lok Gaa-Fai in Cantonese). He did not learn to speak English until he was five years old

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A woman walks past a complex of high rise residential buildings in Shanghai on January 13, 2011. While property prices continue to climb out of the reach of many ordinary Chinese people, China government has recently given the green light to Shanghai and the southwestern mega-city of Chongqing to levy a property tax in their red-hot residential markets as early as the first quarter.

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In this Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2011 photo, Chinese paramilitary policemen stands guard in front of a sculpture of the ancient philosopher Confucius on displayed in near the Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China's capital. The mammoth sculpture of Confucius was unveiled this week off one side of the giant plaza, the political heart of China. It's a curious juxtaposition for a site that's heavy with Communist history _ Mao's body is interred in the middle of it and his giant portrait hangs at one end.

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Dressed with booties on its feet and a hooded sweatshirt for warmth, a poodle is carried across a road in Beijing by its owner on January 13, 2011. Banned in 1949 when China's new ruling Communist party deemed dog ownership a 'symbol of decadence and a criminal extravagance at a time of food shortages', linking it with bourgeois decadence, but after Mao died in 1976 dog ownership was tolerated, with wealthy Chinese since keen to own dogs as a status symbol.

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SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - JANUARY 13: Na Li of China plays a backhand in her match against Bojana Jovanovski of Serbia during day five of the 2011 Medibank International at Sydney Olympic Park Tennis Centre on January 13, 2011 in Sydney, Australia.

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Passengers queue to buy tickets at a temporary square for tickets sale at Fuzhou Railway Station in Fuzhou City, southeast China's Fujian Province, on Jan. 13, 2011. (Xinhua/Zhang Guojun)

BEIJING, Jan. 13 (Xinhua) -- Chinese railway police have arrested 1,067 people for scalping train tickets in a crackdown some three weeks before the Spring Festival, or the Chinese New Year, the public security bureau of the Ministry of Railways said Thursday.

The railway public security bureau launched the crackdown on Dec. 25, nearly one month ahead of the 40-day rush period - running from Jan. 19 to Feb. 27 - when hundreds of millions of Chinese hit the road for family reunions throughout the festive season.

As of Jan. 10, police have raided two locations producing false train tickets and 385 sites where tickets were scalped, the bureau said in a statement.

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A police officer shows passengers how to tell a real railway ticket from a counterfeit one at the train station in Huaibei city, Anhui province, on Wednesday.
[Photo/for China Daily]

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Migrant worker Li Jing from southwest China's Sichuan Province shows her railway ticket in Fuzhou Railway Station in Fuzhou, southeast China's Fujian Province, Jan. 13, 2011. A total of 1,936 migrant workers began their journey home on Temporary Train L390, the first special train for migrant workers in Fuzhou Railway Station during the Spring Festival travel of 2011. (Xinhua/Zhang Guojun)

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Migrant workers are seen boarding in Fuzhou Railway Station in Fuzhou, southeast China's Fujian Province, Jan. 13, 2011. A total of 1,936 migrant workers began their journey home on Temporary Train L390, Jan. 13, 2011, the first special train for migrant workers in Fuzhou Railway Station during the Spring Festival travel of 2011.

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Women wearing rabbit costumes receive guests to a company's New Year celebration party in Wuhan, Central China's Hubei province, Jan 5, 2010. The year 2011 is the "Year of the Rabbit" under the 12-year Chinese lunar calendar in which each year is named after one of the twelve Chinese zodiac animals in turn. [Photo/CFP]
 

ToxSic

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Re: Chinese Daily Life in Videos, Photos & News!

Any other news on the 'industrial espionage' news between France (and Renault) and China?
 

bd popeye

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Zhang Xinli (right) cries on Thursday beside Liu Shehui as they stand trial in Haidian district people's court in Beijing for allegedly forcing disabled people to beg. (Photo/for China Daily)

BEIJING, Jan. 14 (Xinhuanet) -- Two couples stood trial in the capital city on Thursday for forcing blind people to beg.

The four reportedly became the city's first to be prosecuted for organizing disabled people to beg since the crime was included in the country's Criminal Law in 2006.

The Haidian district people's court heard that the couples, both from Shangcai county in Central China's Henan province, allegedly organized at least four blind men to beg for money in Beijing from early 2009 to April 30, 2010, when they were rescued by local police.

According to the prosecutor, one of the accused, Liu Shehui, came to Beijing with his wife Zhang Xinli in early 2009, joining his older brother Liu Jianshe, who had allegedly forced blind people to beg for years in the city.

In September that year, Liu Shehui's younger brother Liu Huimin and his wife Wang Li came to Beijing, bringing other blind people into the beggars' group.

On April 30, 2010, Liu Zhimin, one of the blind men allegedly forced to solicit money from passers-by while playing the erhu, a traditional musical instrument, was rescued by a police officer while he was begging in front of Peking University Third Hospital.

However, Wang Li nearly stopped the police from taking away the blind man by claiming to be his relative.

They were later taken to a nearby police station for questioning.

The police then suspected Wang of forcing disabled people to beg for money and later detained the other three after Wang confessed, the prosecutor said.

Police launched an investigation into the gang and found the couples had kept at least four blind men in a shabby house in suburban Beijing and beat them if they refused to beg or asked to go home to Henan province.

Wang Li admitted in court that she had abused the blind men but the others denied the accusation.

"I don't want to play the erhu to beg for more than 10 hours every day. But whenever I wanted to go back home, the couples kicked me in the back," testified 40-year-old Sheng Gaizheng, who was allegedly lured to Beijing by the accused's promise of earning big money.

Each of the blind men earned about 80 yuan ($12) every day and had to hand all the money to the accused, the prosecutor said.

"We got their consent before taking them to Beijing. We are hometown fellows and we never hit the blind men because we are also living a hard life," said Liu Shehui.

"I never thought we committed a crime," he said in court.

The couples may face a jail term of up to three years as well as fines, according to Lin Jie, prosecutor with Haidian district people's procuratorate.

The blind men have been sent back to their homes in Henan, the prosecutor said

The court has yet to deliver a verdict.
 

bd popeye

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SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - JANUARY 14: Na Li of China holds the trophy after winning the womens final against Kim Clijsters of Belgium during day six of the 2011 Medibank International at Sydney Olympic Park Tennis Centre on January 14, 2011 in Sydney, Australia.

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A group of attendants prepare to board a newly-launched bullet train bound for Beijing, at the railway staion in southwest China's Chongqing municipality on January 11, 2011 as China unveiled several other high-speed railway routes linking Chongqing to Shanghai, Chengdu to Beijing and Chengdu to Shanghai on the same day. China is rapidly expanding and upgrading its railway network amid increased pressures on its transportation system, with plans to have 120,000 kilometres of track by 2020.

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Chinese tourists pose in front of a bronze Confucius statue after the 7.9-metre-tall statue was unveiled in front of the renovated National Museum of China at Tiananmen Square in Beijing on January 11, 2011. There has been an officially sanctioned revival of Confucius in recent years, as authorities have turned to his teachings to reach out to the international community to strengthen China's 'soft power' and counter an invasion of Western culture.

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Workers assemble cars at the Shenlong Auto plant in Wuhan, central China's Hubei province on January 12, 2011. Carmakers, having conquered China's coasts, have now set their sights on the country's vast interior as they bid to extend their phenomenal growth in the world's largest auto market, analysts say.

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An elderly woman sits on her wheelchair on a street in Beijing December 21, 2010. Businesses are just starting to tap the rapidly expanding senior citizens' market in China -- the new silver industry. The country had 169 million people over 60 by the end of 2009, or 12 percent of the population, and that figure will jump to 250 million people by 2025. Picture taken December 21, 2010.

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Shoppers in a Beijing mall are seen behind an image of a rabbit decorating a glass door on January 14, 2011 ahead of the coming lunar new year of the rabbit, the fourth sign in the Chinese zodiac, which begins on February 3.

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Police officers walk past an altar set up for mourning leading pro-democracy activist Szeto Wah outside the Legislative Council in Hong Kong January 14, 2011. Ambrose Lee, Hong Kong's Secretary for Security, on Friday refused to give clear answer on whether the government would allow mainland Chinese dissidents entry to attend Wah's funeral.
 

Spartan95

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This seems to be a growing social trend in quite a few Asian countries, including PRC:

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Hate mobs thrive in Asia's booming social media
Posted: 14 January 2011 1240 hrs

BANGKOK: A teenager involved in a car crash that killed nine people in Thailand deserves "no happiness forever", according to just one of more than 300,000 Facebook users who support a page set up to condemn her.

"Only your death is worthwhile for what you have done," said an angry post on the site. "Are you still a human?" asked another. One of the members of the cyber hate campaign threatened to rape the youngster if he saw her.

The 16-year-old girl, from a wealthy Thai family, faces charges of reckless driving resulting in death and driving without a licence, after her car crashed with a public minibus on a Bangkok tollway last month.

Soon afterwards a photo emerged that appeared to show the girl leaning on a roadside barrier, calmly using a BlackBerry smartphone, having escaped serious injury.

She was quickly accused in Internet forums of idly chatting to friends as victims lay dying nearby, which her family denied.

Her photos and contact details were posted online and she reportedly received death threats.

While the exact circumstances of the crash are unclear, the outrage unleashed on Facebook, Twitter and other websites has highlighted the murky phenomenon of cyber "hate mobs" on popular social networking sites.

Behind this trend is what is known as "Internet disinhibition", said Adrian Skinner, a clinical psychologist in Britain who has researched behavioural differences on the web.

"It's now well established that some people can behave in a much less inhibited way on the Internet, and the primary reason is that they feel there's no return, no comeback," he told AFP.

He explained this "lowered sense of responsibility" was coupled with the fact that writing online involved much less effort than taking to the streets in a revenge-seeking crowd -- a more likely option in the pre-Internet age.

"A mob can form much more easily because of electronic communication," he said. "It's much easier for this phenomenon of an 'e-mob' to grow."

Membership of Facebook in Thailand more than doubled last year and now stands at about 7.4 million - 11 per cent of the population - according to Socialbakers, which compiles data about the site.

The boom was fuelled by fierce debate over the kingdom's political crisis, which triggered deadly opposition protests in Bangkok in April and May last year.

"These tools allow us to express our feelings, ideas and thoughts easily," said Supinya Klangnarong, coordinator of the cyber campaign group Thai Netizen network, who thinks evolution of Internet usage is happening "too quickly".

"Expressing ourselves is good but we need to know the boundary of expression and how to use social media positively," she said. "We need a standard to control what is creative expression and what is intimidation."

The issue is not unique to Thailand, however, with numerous examples of Internet hate campaigns emerging across Asia, which was named by Facebook in September as the fastest-growing region for new subscribers to the site.

In China, where traditional media is heavily censored, the web has become a key way for people to air their views and vent their anger, with many using Facebook and Twitter through proxy servers because they are officially blocked.

There are scores of cases of people -- celebrities, officials or ordinary citizens -- who have been at the receiving end of disapproval or anger on the Internet, particularly where corruption or abuse of power are concerned.

In one of the most famous recent examples, Zhang Ziyi, a Chinese movie star, received a barrage of online criticism after it was revealed she had only given part of a promised donation to victims of the huge 2008 Sichuan earthquake.

The incident took a toll on the actress, known for her roles in "Memoirs of a Geisha" and "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon", and she apologised in a teary interview. The entire one million yuan ($152,000) was eventually paid.

The Internet has now become such a medium for people's wrath in China that it has triggered the so-called "human flesh search" phenomenon, where netizens hunt down and reveal the identities of perceived offenders.

Their targets have included young women who crushed rabbits to death in graphic videos posted on the web.

In South Korea, netizens have come up against the law for what Korean President Lee Myung-Bak has described as "improper Internet witch-hunting".

His comments were sparked by the case of popular hip-hop singer Tablo, who faced a fierce web campaign from November 2009 when bloggers cast doubt about his educational background.

Police launched a criminal probe, concluding that Tablo's academic credentials were authentic, and referred 14 bloggers to prosecutors on libel charges.

The case highlighted "the tyranny of the cyber mob that gets a high from spreading ungrounded rumours," a major South Korean newspaper, the JoongAng Daily, said in an editorial in October.

"The situation shows a dark shadow that arches over the Internet age."

- AFP/fa

1 of the more recent incidents relating to celebrities in PRC is the singer Na Ying, who was criticised for expecting police to serve her own interests.
 

bd popeye

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People walk through the entrance of the decorated Bank of China building in Hong Kong on on January 15, 2011. China maintains a tight grip on the yuan exchange rate, despite pledging last June to let the currency trade more freely against the US dollar.

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LONDON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 15: Ding Junhui of China poses for a photo after his victory against Jamie Cope of England in their semi final match at The Ladbrokesmobile Masters on Day 7 at Wembley Arena on January 15, 2011 in London, England

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In this photo released by Qian family Saturday, Jan. 15, 2011, village leader Qian Yunhui holds a copy of award certificate presented by his villagers at the Zhaiqiao village, near Yueqing city, China's Zhejiang province. A new account of the gruesome death of Qian fighting for better compensation for seized land is renewing suspicions of police involvement and adding to a growing credibility issue for China's government.

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A clothes vendor (L) gestures as she talks to customers at an open-air market on the outskirts of Rizhao, Shandong province January 15, 2011.

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The YM Bamboo, a container ship operated by the China Ocean Shipping Company (COSCO) is docked at the Port of Oakland in Oakland, California January 14, 2011. Chinese President Hu Jintao will bring new business deals and possible commitments to buy U.S. beef and software when he visits Washington next week, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce said on Friday

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Shop vendors hang red lanterns for sale ahead of the Chinese Lunar New Year festivities on January 15, 2011 in Beijing. The Year of the Rabbit, the fourth sign in the Chinese zodiac, begins on February 3.

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Security personnel watches over Ferrari sport cars displayed during a special exhibition in the financial district of Shanghai on January 14, 2011. The Italian car manufacturer celebrated its 999th car sold in China.

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A fueling vessel sails past a cargo ship anchored in Hong Kong on on January 15, 2011. The US slapped sanctions on 24 shipping companies, twenty of those firms were listed in Hong Kong, saying the firms were affiliated with the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL), under international sanctions for its role in Iran's weapons programme. AFP PHOTO / LAURENT FIEVET (Photo credit should read LAURENT FIEVET/AFP/Getty Images)

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BEIJING, CHINA - JANUARY 12:Hong Kong actress Cecilia Cheung poses during the COSMO Female Fashion Show at Park Hyatt on January 12, 2011 in Beijing, China. (Photo by ChinaFotoPress/Getty Images)

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HONG KONG, CHINA - JANUARY 12: Hong Kong artist Andy Lau performs 'Unforgettable' Live at Hong Kong Coliseum on January 12, 2011 in Hong Kong, China. (Photo by ChinaFotoPress/Getty Images)

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Gao Chuliang, an 84-year-old relocated from a shantytown to a subsidized-housing complex, performs morning excercises at the new compound on Tuesday in Wuhan, capital of Central China's Hubei province. Hubei plans to provide affordable housing to about 300,000 low-income households this year. [Photo/Xinhua]
 
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