Home Business China International Culture��Edu Sci��Tech Sports Life Travel P
hotos
��Search
China Observer
�� Inflation not a big concer
Home Business China International Culture��Edu Sci��Tech Sports Life Travel P
hotos
��Search
China Observer
�� Report predicts nation's development prospects
�� How to rescue China's underperforming stock market
�� Ma Kai: China's economy and macro-control policy
Photos
�� "Goubuli" to be auctioned on Feb 28
�� Chinese film won "Silver Bear Award" at the Berlin Film Festival
�� Zhengzhou: Lanterns for Lantern Festival appeared
��Home>>Photos
China introduced 70,000 cows from Australia in 2004
www.chinanews.cn 2005-02-21 16:14:10
The milk cows introduced from Australia last year are plump and sturdy in
the cow cultivation base of the Shandong Fengxiang (Group) Corp. In 2004,
the agricultural product trade between China and Australia experienced
rapid growth. China imported 70,000 milk cows from Australia last year.
E-mail: zhangqinghua@chinanews.com.cn Tel: 8610-88387443 Fax:
8610-68327649
Copyright� 2004 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
Disclaimer: viewpoints in the website do not represent China News Service
Learn Chinese, Chinese School
n for China this year
�� Report predicts nation's development prospects
�� How to rescue China's underperforming stock market
Photos
�� Largest simplified-Chinese bookstore in Taiwan
�� HK Great Group promotes special delicacies
�� Andy Lau to be honoured in Hong Kong Int'l Film Festival
��Home>>International
Saddam's half brother captured in Iraq
www.chinanews.cn 2005-02-27 19:21:34
��Agencies��
Sabawi Ibrahim Hasan, a half brother of former Iraqi dictator Saddam
Hussein, shown in this Department of Defense playing card, has been
captured in Iraq, Feb. 27, 2005. Hasan is No. 36 on the U.S. list of 55
most-wanted Iraqis. (AP Photo)
Feb. 27 - Iraqi security forces captured Sabawi Ibrahim al-Hassan, Saddam
Hussein's half brother and former adviser who was suspected of financing
insurgents after U.S. troops ousted the former dictator, the government
said Sunday.
Al-Hassan is No. 36 on the list of 55 most-wanted Iraqis released by U.S.
authorities after troops invaded Iraq in March 2003, and one of only 12
remaining at large. He is also suspected of financing insurgents in the
post-Saddam era, and Washington had put a million bounty on his head.
The government statement said al-Hassan had "killed and tortured Iraqi
people." It also said he had "participated effectively in planning,
supervising, and carrying out many terrorist acts in Iraq."
Two other half-brothers of Saddam, Barzan and Watban, have already been
detained at a US army-run jail near Baghdad and will be tried in the
coming months.
E-mail: zhangqinghua@chinanews.com.cn Tel: 8610-88387443 Fax:
8610-68327649
Copyright� 2004 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
Disclaimer: viewpoints in the website do not represent China News Service
Learn Chinese, Learn Mandarin online
