Chinese Daily Photos, 2011 to 2019!

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Jeff Head

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Amid the horror of the ongoing disaster...there is hope:

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Firefighter Close Calls said:
Friday, August 14, 2015 A firefighter trapped for more than 31 hours was rescued from the blast site in the Chinese port city of Tianjin, according to a city official and state media.At least 56 people — including 21 firefighters — were killed when two explosions erupted at around 11:30 p.m. Wednesday local time. Several firefighters are reportedly missing.

The survivor was a 19-year-old firefighter named Zhou Ti, according to state media. China's state broadcaster CCTV said he received treatment for burns, smoke inhalation and an injured leg.

More pictures of him after being found. I pray God spares this young man and returns him to his loved ones.

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Equation

Lieutenant General
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This pic makes for a great shampoo commercial.:p:D
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
This is horrible. The PRC government needs to account for the missing persons from this explosion in Tianjin..

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Furious, frustrated and fearful, relatives of the missing in giant explosions in Tianjin besieged officials Saturday demanding answers on their loved ones’ fates – only for security to intervene instead.

"We tried to call him as soon as we saw the explosions on television, but it's been impossible to reach him," said the man in his fifties, surnamed Liu, his voice trembling with emotion.

Even so he was certain his 22-year-old son -- a new recruit to the Tianjin fire service -- must have been among the more than 1,000 firefighters deployed to the scene of the disaster.

"The authorities have not contacted us," he said in flat tones, wearing a blue worker's cap typical of the Maoist era.

At least 85 people were killed by the blasts at a hazardous goods storage facility -- with 21 of them firefighters.

The man was among a dozen relatives of the missing who were barred from a press conference authorities gave at a hotel on Saturday.

As unperturbed local officials gave their presentation, their cries and shouts penetrated the doors that had been locked by security staff to keep them out.

"Nobody has told us anything, we're in the dark, there is no news at all," one middle-aged woman screamed tearfully, as she was dragged away by security personnel.

A young man being pulled into a stairwell shouted: "We are the families of the victims! What right do you have to treat us this way?"

- 'Wait and wait' -

When disaster strikes in China authorities regularly seek to muzzle victims' families and ensure that domestic media focus on positive aspects: rescuers' heroism or miracle rescue.

Pictures of Zhou Ti, a 19-year-old fireman rescued from the rubble on Friday, have been given heavy coverage in Chinese media, along with his first words when he recovered consciousness, according to authorities: "Have the flames been put out?"

But many social media posters have lamented the heavy price paid by the firefighters, most of them young and with limited experience. Questions have been raised about whether they could have contributed to the blast by hosing reactive substances with water.

One mother at the hotel, who gave her name as Long, was desperately awaiting news of the fate of her son Zhiqiao, a member of a brigade sent to the Tianjin port before the blasts.

"There are 25 people in a brigade," she said. "A death in my son's was confirmed on Friday night. They haven't said anything about any of the others, they just make us just wait and wait."

Several police are also missing. But according to a police officer quoted in Chinese media the force's losses have not yet been included in any tolls so far released.

Yang Jie's firefighter son was also among the early arrivals at the blast site, and has not answered his phone since.

"I do not know if he is alive," Yang said of the 24-year-old.

But he still clung to a sliver of hope.

"The media have been reporting that hospitals have not been able to find the family of one of the injured, who seems to look like my son," he said. "I will go check."
 

ahojunk

Senior Member
Dragon boat race held in central China's Hubei

Competitors prepare and compete in a dragon boat race in Xuan'en County of Enshi Tujia and Miao Autonomous Prefecture in central China's Hubei Province, Aug. 14, 2015. Over 500 competitors of 36 teams participated in the race held on Friday.

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ahojunk

Senior Member
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More than 200,000 Buddhists and other believers on Friday thronged Lhasa, capital of the Tibet Autonomous Region, for the start of the traditional Shoton Festival.

It kicked off at Drepung Monastery, the largest monastery of Tibetan Buddhism's Gelug Sect, where a 40-meter-long thangka painting of the Buddha was exhibited.

Buddhists from around Tibet started to gather in Lhasa from the small hours of Friday. Migmar, a young Tibetan, arrived at 2 a.m. with some family members and neighbors.

"Exhibition of the Buddha painting is a very important occasion, on a par with New Year," he said.

After breakfast at a nearby restaurant, Migmar walked to Drepung and waited for the thangka to be unveiled by monks.

At around 7 a.m., lamas started to carry it to the monastery main hall. Believers hurled ceremonial white scarves on it and prayed. People recorded the rite with their mobile phones.

"This is the first time I've come to see the exhibition of the Buddha, who I pray to for health, happiness and a good harvest," Yangdron said.

The Shoton Festival, also known as the Yogurt Banquet Festival, is a week-long gala held since the 11th century.

It was originally a religious occasion during which locals would offer yogurt to monks who had finished meditation retreats. This year's festival will be held from Aug. 14 to 20.

Local authorities used 150 buses to ferry believers around and introduced traffic controls for the busy period around the start of the festival. Free bottled water was offered, and doctors were on standby for emergency situations.

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ahojunk

Senior Member
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Aerial photo taken on Aug. 14, 2015 shows a high-speed train running out of a mountain tunnel as it runs on the Yichang-Wanzhou High-speed Railroad, which is built on a viaduct, in Enshi, central China's Hubei Province. The 377-kilometer-long Yichang-Wanzhou Railroad, which is regarded as the most difficult railroad ever built in China, winds through mountainous areas from its eastern station Yichang in Hubei Province to western station Wanzhou in southwest China's Chongqing. (Xinhua)

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ahojunk

Senior Member
Picturesque 'sky road' - Zhangbei Grassland Highway

Zhangbei Grassland Highway, also known as China's 66th Highway, is located in Zhangjiakou city, north China's Hebei province. People are fascinated by the intoxicating scenery especially when driving on the highway.

Zhangbei Grassland Highway in Zhangjiakou city, Hebei Province.
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