Friday, August 17, 2007

NY Times Editorial: More Fears About China

Beijing urgently needs to grasp that when it comes to public safety, secrecy is never the right policy and there is no benefit in trying to go it alone.

Iran Arrests 2 Chinese on Charges of Spying

A judiciary spokesman said the two were detained while photographing a military complex in Arak, a city where Iran is building a nuclear reactor.

Tibetans Turn Festival Into Mute Protest Against China

Tibetan festival season in China has acquired a political subtext: the continuing struggle of the Tibetan minority community for cultural identity and religious freedom.

China Cracks Down on News Media as Party Congress Nears

Beijing officials are discouraging the country’s news media from being too aggressive, two months before the Chinese Communist Party Congress.

Toy Makers Brace for a Chill in Sales

Analysts are beginning to worry that a recent series of recalls of Chinese-made toys could hurt holiday season sales.

Virus Spreading Alarm and Pig Disease in China

Virus experts say Chinese authorities are playing down the impact of the highly infectious virus — believed to be an unusually deadly form of an infection known as blue-ear pig disease.

China Plans Greater Scrutiny of Food Exports

Chinese authorities said Wednesday that starting in September, all food shipments to the U.S. and other countries would be checked in the chain of production.

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Chinese copycat "spiderman" detained after climbing tallest building in China

A Chinese man was detained by Shanghai police in the early hours of Wednesday after he climbed the tallest building in China, just two months after a French "spiderman" pulled the same stunt.

China "prudent" in using death penalty to punish economic crimes, says official

China is very prudent in its use of the death penalty to punish economic criminals, the Communist Party of China's disciplinary watchdog said on Thursday.

Irritated US State Department delaying advanced arms sale to Taiwan: report

A month after the Legislative Yuan broke a four-year deadlock over the purchase of a package of advanced US weapons, the US State Department is actively blocking the sale from going through to warn President Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁) against holding a referendum on Taiwan's entry into the UN.

`Normal country' draft unveiled

The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) unveiled its draft "normal country resolution" yesterday, in which it highlights the need for the nation to change its name to "Taiwan" to differentiate it from China.

Beijing displays `peace' troops on 80th anniversary

China called its growing military strength a force for peace and Communist Party rule on the 80th anniversary of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) yesterday as a senior commander warned Taiwan against risking war.

1,790 corrupt officials surrender before deadline

1,790 corrupted officials have turned themselves in during the Party's 30-day grace period and their cases involved a total graft of 77.89 million yuan (US$10.3 million).

Third movie about Nanjing massacre starts shooting

"Con Air" director Simon West has started shooting a movie about the World War II-era massacre of thousands of Chinese by Japanese troops, the third feature film to coincide with the event's 70th anniversary.

Lead Paint Prompts Mattel to Recall 967,000 Toys

The maker of Barbie dolls and Hot Wheels cars is recalling the toys because of lead paint.