Chinese Daily Photos, 2011 to 2019!

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bd popeye

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A child plays with a bubble gun on a subway train in Shanghai on International Children's Day June 1, 2011.

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Children of migrant workers sleep on a desk in a classroom at a primary school in Hefei, Anhui province June 1, 2011. The education of the children of migrant workers, who number 240 million in China, is one of the top concerns of the Chinese State Council, Premier Wen Jiabao said during an online chat with Internet users in February. The council also said that preschools are currently the "weakest" part of the education system.

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A child of a migrant worker eats her lunch in a classroom at a primary school in Hefei, Anhui province June 1, 2011

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A man drinks red wine from Argentina's Alfredo Roca vineyard during the he 6th Shanghai International Wine Trade Fair June 1, 2011. While China has a growing domestic wine market, industry experts say it is more fashionable to drink wine made abroad and predict consumption will double within the next five years. Wine aficionados say that wine consumption in the mainland has grown in double digit figures over the last 10 years, triggering strong incentives for winemakers and companies to target the lucrative Chinese market, set to strongly outpace Western demand in the coming years.

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Chinese workers take part in the construction of the main pool at the Shanghai Oriental Sports Center, the venue of the forthcoming FINA World Championships, in Shanghai on May 30, 2011. The swimming world championships will be held in Shanghai from July 24 to 31, 2011.

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Hong Kong actress-singer Sammi Cheng attends a promotional event for a watch brand in Hong Kong Wednesday, June 1, 2011. Cheng is starring on her new movie "High Altitude Romance II" recently.

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A train runs on a grand bridge of the newly opened "KuiBei Railway", connecting Kuitun to Beitun in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, June 1, 2011. The 468.5-kilometer's "Kui Bei Railway" has a total of 22 stations, linking some of the major cities in Xinjiang such as Altay, Tacheng and Karamay. (Xinhua/Zhang Wencheng)

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Rescuers set up a pipe to pump out a flooded coal mine where eight workers are trapped at the border of Dushan county in Guizhou province and Nandan county in Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region Wednesday. The flooding occurred at about 9 pm Tuesday at the coal mine which is said to be operating illegally. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Nine-year-old Wang Ke practices cross-county motorcycle racing skills at an open field in Huaibei city, East China's Anhui province, May 31, 2011. The young motor-racing enthusiast received professional training for a few years before he became a motorcycle racer and took part in eight stops in the sport's national tournament. The 9-year-old, currently 11th in a national annual ranking for the children's 110cc group, took to the extreme sport at the age of 4 with a small borrowed motorcycle. [Photo/Asianewsphoto]

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Airbus delivers 50th China-assembled A320
Airbus executives and engineers pose for group photo during the delivery of an Airbus A320 series plane in Tianjin, north China, June 1, 2011. The 50th Airbus A320 series plane that rolls off Tianjian assembly line was delivered to Juneyao Airlines here Wednesday. The Airbus 320 assembly line in Tianjin, the first for Airbus outside Europe, is a joint venture between Airbus, the Aviation Industry Corp. of China (AVIC), and Tianjin Bonded Zone Investment Co., and went into production in September 2008.[Photo/Xinhua]

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A shelter for abandoned infants, the first of its kind in China, was set up in Shijiazhuang, Hebei province, on June 1, 2011. Called “Infants safe island” and equipped with an incubator and alarm, the shelter is open every day and staffed by workers who check it every two hours throughout the night to ensure the safety of abandoned infants. [Photo/Xinhua]
 

bd popeye

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Re: Chinese Daily Photos, Videos & News!!

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Italia's Francesca Schiavone (L) and China's Li Na pose with the flag of their country during a photocall on the eve of their Women's final match in the French Open tennis championship at the Roland Garros stadium, on June 3, 2011 in Paris.

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Chinese bridal couples pose in front of the south Bavarian castle, Neuschwanstein in Schwangau near Fuessen June 3, 2011. 31 Chinese couples who already got married in China, travelled to Germany to repeat their promise of marriage at Neuschwanstein Castle, one of the most popular destinations in Europe.

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A security officer (L) stands next to a sign of an entrance to a security check channel as a paramilitary policeman stands guard under an umbrella at Tiananmen Square, in central Beijing, June 3, 2011.

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A researcher inserts a sample into a receptacle inside the "DNA Lab" at the Beijing Genomics Institute in Shenzhen, southern China March 3, 2010. For three long weeks Europe was gripped with fear battling a mysterious E. coli epidemic, and it wasn't until late this week that China's genomics institute nearly 7,000 km away finally put its finger on the culprit. Chinese scientists at the Beijing Genomics Institute, the world's largest DNA sequencing centre, announced late on June 2, 2011 that the E. coli spreading through Europe was "a new strain of bacteria that is highly infectious and toxic". Picture taken March 3, 2010.

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Chinese authorities seize bags of rice dumplings which were made from contaminated rice with sodium cyclamate, an illegal artificial sweetener, at an unlicensed workshop in Beijing. Tainted pork, toxic milk, dyed buns, melons laden with chemicals and other dodgy foods have surfaced in recent weeks, making consumers ill and highlighting the government's apparent inability to oversee China's huge and under-regulated food industry.

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A woman grieves after her son was killed when a car crashed into a group of students along a street killing three and injuring 21 others in Beijing on June 2, 2011. China's roads are among the world's most dangerous, with traffic laws and safety widely flouted, as almost 70,000 people died in road accidents in 2009, or around 190 fatalities a day, according to police statistics.

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This photo taken on June 2, 2011 shows an injured student receiving treatment at a hospital in Beijing, after a car crashed into a group of students along a street killing three and injuring 21 others.

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Pansy Ho (L) , chairwoman and executive director of MGM China Holdings Limited speaks to the press at the stock exchange in Hong Kong on June 3, 2011. Shares in Macau casino MGM China Holdings opened 5.6 percent above their IPO price on their Hong Kong debut Friday, in a $1.5 billion flotation that showed strong investor appetite for the gaming hub.

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Han Qunfeng, sits in a court in Dongguan, Guangdong province, on Thursday. She is charged with murdering her twin sons on Nov 20. [Provided to China Daily]

DONGGUAN, Guangdong - Han Qunfeng, who killed her twin sons suffering from cerebral palsy, said she was filled with remorse, during a public hearing on Thursday.

Han pleaded guilty to the charge of murder at a public trial in Dongguan No 1 People's Court on Thursday morning.

"If I had the chance to choose once more, I would not do it," she said.

"I would ask society for help, instead of going to extremes."

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Students prepare for the national college entrance examination in Tancheng of east China's Shandong Province, June 3, 2011. About 9.33 million of senior high school graduates nationwide will participated in the college entrance examination held this month. (Xinhua/Zhang Chunlei)

BEIJING, June 3 (Xinhua) -- China's education authority on Friday vowed an "iron hand and zero tolerance" on cheating as about 9.33 million students will sit national college entrance exams next week.

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Robots controlled by students from Taiwan University of Science and Technology took part in a robot contest in Taipei, southeast China's Taiwan, May 31, 2011. The robots, designed by the students from the Department of Mechanical Engineering of the university, have accomplished tasks such as bowing and single-plank bridge before winning the competition.
 

Spartan95

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Re: Chinese Daily Photos, Videos & News!!

RoC drink makers are recalling their products due to the discovery of illegal additives used:

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Taiwan drink ban hits mainland restaurants
09:45, June 03, 2011

Shelves sit empty at a supermarket in Taipei on Tuesday after Taiwan authorities asked for food and drink contaminated with an illegal additive to be recalled. Liu Zonglong / for China Daily

The Chinese mainland has banned its restaurants from selling or using beverages, food products and food additives from 10 producers in Taiwan that are suspected to have been tainted with a cancer-causing plastic additive.

The State Food and Drug Administration issued an urgent notice on Thursday, ordering all restaurants not to purchase or use food and food additives containing plasticizers.

A food processing company in Guangdong province was found on Tuesday to have imported ingredients from Taiwan that included the illegal additive DEHP, according to the Guangdong food safety authority.

The authority announced on Wednesday that Yuyan Food Company in Dongguan had brought the illegal items into the country before reselling some to businesses in other cities in the province, including Guangzhou and Jiangmen.

Officers have detained suspects from the company and are trying to track down consignments of illegal additives that have been resold, so they can be recalled.

The investigation into the use of illegal additives, which was initiated by the provincial government, was started in the aftermath of a high-profile scandal involving Taiwan drinks that contain DEHP, a type of plasticizer. The additive is used to make plastic soft and pliable and can affect hormone balances in young people. It is illegal to put DEHP in any food product.

Guangdong residents are being encouraged to report to the authorities any illegal products still being sold.

Instant noodles sold in Guangzhou have also been found to contain DEHP and DBP - another type of plasticizer - according to the research of Liu Chunhong, a food expert at South China Agricultural University. The chemicals had contaminated the noodles from the plastic packages that contained the instant noodles.

The Food Safety Commission of the State Council has also required other places nationwide to carry out similar inspections to ensure food safety.

Blacklisted beverages produced by problematic Taiwan enterprises were found in supermarkets in Shanghai and Nanjing, the capital of Jiangsu province. Local food safety authorities have ordered them to be pulled from the shelves.

In reaction to public concern, the Ministry of Health issued an emergency notice on Wednesday, adding DEHP to the list of inedible materials that are likely to be illegally added to food. A hotline was also set up so that consumers can call 12320 to ask about the dangers posed by DEHP.

On Tuesday, the top quality watchdog issued a temporary ban on importing food and drink from Taiwan enterprises that have been identified as producing food contaminated by DEHP.

The ban listed 10 enterprises as problematic, and sports drinks, juices, tea drinks, fruit jams, syrups, tablets, powders and food additives produced by these 10 enterprises will be banned from entering the mainland market.

On May 23, Taiwan's health authorities announced that DEHP had been found in some bottled beverages and dairy products, and with an investigation ongoing, they found that more than 200 enterprises had been implicated and 500 kinds of products contaminated.

On Thursday Taiwan authorities approved a draft bill that will lead to a 33-fold increase in the maximum fine for lacing food items with banned chemicals as the island battles its worst food scare in decades.

The change to the food sanitation law, which now awaits the legislature's final approval, also makes it possible to sentence violators to up to five years in jail, compared with three years now.

It allows a fine of up to NT$10 million ($345,000) for violators, up from NT$300,000 before, Taiwan's "cabinet" said in a statement.

The bill is expected to be submitted to the island's legislature and approved before it adjourns on June 14.

Source:China Daily

And the news about a PRC teen who sold his kidney in order to buy an iPad2 has gone viral:

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Chinese teen sells kidney to buy iPad 2

By Indo Asian News Service | IANS – Fri, Jun 3, 2011

Beijing, June 3 (IANS/RIA Novosti) A teenager in China's Anhui province has sold his right kidney to buy an iPad 2. His mother, who knew nothing of his plans, now hopes to hunt down the criminals who disabled him, a media report said.

Seventeen-year-old Xiao Zheng had been dreaming of a new iPad 2 for a while, but the price was beyond his means.

Zheng found an agent ready to buy his kidney and travelled to Hunan province in central China to undergo surgery in a local hospital. With the 22,000 yen ($3,900) he was paid, Zheng bought a new iPad 2 and iPhone and then returned home, according to a report on the Dongfang TV channel Thursday.

'Xiao Zheng returned home with a computer and a new Apple phone. We do not have the money for such expensive gadgets. At first, he did not want to tell me where he got that much money from. Later he confessed he had sold his right kidney to buy these things,' his mother told the channel.

After she learned the truth, Zheng's mother travelled with her son back to the hospital, only to discover that the operating theater had been rented out for commercial use to a businessman from Fujian province. Several attempts to reach the agents failed, as their phones were switched off.

Zheng's health is deteriorating day by day, and his mother said she hopes she will be able to find the criminals who disabled her son.

--IANS/RIA Novosti
 

siegecrossbow

General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Re: Chinese Daily Photos, Videos & News!!

This is not good. They found contaminated milk in South Korea as well. Food contamination is becoming a major issue in East Asia. We need our version of "The Jungle" to wake everyone up.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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Li Na of China wins the French Open!!!

Li Na of the Peoples Republic of China has won the women's title at the French Open in Paris FR. The French Open is a tennis Grand Slam event.

Awesome! My hearty congratulations go out to her!

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China's Li Na holds the trophy after winning over Italy's Francesca Schiavone during the victory ceremony at the end of their Women's final in the French Open tennis championship at the Roland Garros stadium, on June 4, 2011, in Paris.

Li Na wins French Open, 1st major for Chinese

By CHRIS LEHOURITES, AP Sports Writer

PARIS (AP)—China’s long wait for a Grand Slam champion ended Saturday when Li Na beat Francesca Schiavone 6-4, 7-6 (0) in the French Open final.

The Australian Open runner-up fell flat on her back in the red clay after Schiavone hit a backhand long on match point.

“I was nervous but I didn’t want to show to my opponent,” said Li, who appeared to be letting the match slip away after being up a break in the second set. “I was a little bit shaking.”

The crowd at Roland Garros was dotted with red Chinese flags and a small vocal group supporting Schiavone. They watched as Li dropped her serve for the only time late in the second set, but then won the final nine points of the match to earn her first major title.

“I couldn’t really push forward from the baseline,” Schiavone said. “She deserved to win. One has to lose, one has to win. She deserves everything.”

On Sunday, five-time champion Rafael Nadal will face Roger Federer in the men’s final.

The title was only Li’s fifth in her career, and first on clay.

She was broken only once by the defending champion, while she converted two of her eight break points—one in each set. She finished with 31 winners, while Schiavone had only 12.

Li took a 3-2 lead in the first when Schiavone sent a forehand wide. She held at love in the next two games, and then won the set when Schiavone sent a forehand long.

The Chinese player opened the second set with her second break of the match, and then saved Schiavone’s first break point in the next game with an ace. But Schiavone broke back in the eighth game to even the score at 4-4.

Both players held the rest of the way, but Schiavone came within two points of winning the set on five occasions, three times at 5-4 and twice more at 6-5.

The point that first put Schiavone that close was a bit awkward. Schiavone sent a backhand return straight at Li, but the ball skidded off the white baseline and under Li’s racket, causing her to take a big swing at nothing.

Schiavone raised her hand to apologize, and then lost the next point when she stretched for a forehand and sent it wide.

Although Li has said she is not a big fan of playing on clay, her power and precision worked well against Schiavone, who last year became the first Italian woman to win a Grand Slam singles title.

For Li, the year started well but soon took a dip.

After losing to Kim Clijsters in the Australian Open final, the 29-year-old Li lost her next four matches. But she recovered her form shortly before the French Open, reaching the semifinals in Madrid.

By winning Saturday, Li is expected to jump to No. 4 in the women’s rankings, equaling the record for the highest ranking by a woman from Asia. Japanese player Kimiko Date-Krumm has also been ranked No. 4.

Both Li and Schiavone came into the final with plenty of experience. Combined, they were the oldest pair in a women’s Grand Slam final since Wimbledon in 1998, when Jana Novotna, 29, beat Nathalie Tauziat, 30
 

bd popeye

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Re: Li Na of China wins the French Open!!!

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China's Li Na reacts after winning over Italy's Francesca Schiavone during their Women's final in the French Open tennis championship at the Roland Garros stadium, on June 4, 2011, in Paris.

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China's Li Na is congratulated by Italy's Francesca Schiavone (R) after winning their Women's final in the French Open tennis championship at the Roland Garros stadium, on June 4, 2011, in Paris.

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PARIS, FRANCE - JUNE 04: Na Li of China lifts the trophy following her victory during the women's singles final match between Francesca Schiavone of Italy and Na Li of China on day fourteen of the French Open at Roland Garros on June 4, 2011 in Paris, France.

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PARIS, FRANCE - JUNE 04: Na Li of China kisses the trophy following her victory during the women's singles final match between Francesca Schiavone of Italy and Na Li of China on day fourteen of the French Open at Roland Garros on June 4, 2011 in Paris, France.
 

bd popeye

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Re: Li Na of China wins the French Open!!!

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China's Li Na competes against Italia's Francesca Schiavone during their Women's final in the French Open tennis championship at the Roland Garros stadium, on June 4, 2011, in Paris.
 

Mr T

Senior Member
Re: Li Na of China wins the French Open!!!

Well done to Li Na, but it was a disappointing game for tennis fans. Schiavone's game was much too poor for that level (zero points in a tie-break = choke).
 

bd popeye

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Re: Li Na of China wins the French Open!!!

Well done to Li Na, but it was a disappointing game for tennis fans. Schiavone's game was much too poor for that level (zero points in a tie-break = choke).

I agree Mr T ...Schiavone's game was way off the mark today. But no excuses. You have to bring your best game to a championship match in any sport. . I'm happy Li Na won the match.
 
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