Thursday, March 27, 2008

Learn mandarin - Hamas: Truce with Israel at end

WORLD / Middle East

Hamas: Truce with Israel at end

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-24 18:02

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Hamas militants fired a barrage of rockets and
mortar shells toward Israel on Tuesday and said they considered a
five-month truce with Israel to have come to an end.

The U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon shakes hands with Syrian President
Bashar Assad. Ban, who flew into Damascus Tuesday, April 24, 2007. [AP]

Tuesday's attack, which came on Israel's 59th independence day, did not
cause damage or injury. However, it marked the first time Hamas openly
acknowledged firing shells toward Israel since it agreed to a cease-fire
along the Gaza-Israel border in November.

Special coverage:
Middle East Conflict  
Related readings:
Israelis, Palestinians to resume talks
Hamas: New Palestinian gov't won't recognise Israel
Palestinians reach deal on power-sharing

A spokesman for Hamas' armed wing said the group considered the truce to
have come to an end. "The cease-fire has been over for a long time, and
Israel is responsible for that," the spokesman, Abu Obeida, told the
Voice of Palestine radio station.

In recent months, Hamas had largely held back on attacks, particularly
during its negotiations on a power-sharing agreement with the Fatah
movement of moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

Now the Muslim militant group appeared to be spoiling for a fight,
especially in the absence of any progress toward the release of
Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Israeli soldier Cpl. Gilad Shalit.

Shalit was captured by Hamas-allied militants in Gaza last June.

"This is a message to the Zionist enemy that our strikes will continue,"
Abu Obeida said of the rocket fire. "We are ready to kidnap more and
more, and kill more and more of your soldiers."

Shalit's kidnappers demand the release of hundreds of Palestinian
prisoners, including veterans and those involved in killing or wounding
Israelis.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Monday that freeing soldiers was
deeply important to the government, but that it would not repeat
"mistakes made in the past" by releasing violent prisoners who then
carried out more attacks against Israelis. But Olmert said there would be
"no escape in the end from making a difficult decision" on trading
prisoners for the captured Israeli troops.

Hamas militants claimed Tuesday they launched 40 rockets and 70 mortar
shells. However, the Israeli military said it could only confirm five
rockets and eight mortars. One of the rockets fell in Israel, north of
the Gaza Strip, the army said.

The rockets come after nine Palestinians were killed in fighting with
Israel over the weekend. Most of the dead were militants, but
Palestinians said at least two civilians, including a 17-year-old girl,
were killed.

The upswing in violence drew calls from Palestinian moderates for Abbas
to cut off contacts with Olmert. Hamas, the senior partner in a coalition
with Fatah, called for renewed attacks against Israelis.

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Chinese Mandarin - Candlelight vigil for Virginia Tech shooting victims

WORLD / Photo

Candlelight vigil for Virginia Tech shooting victims

(Agencies)
Updated: 2007-04-18 16:11

Virginia Tech President Charles W. Steger (R) grieves at a candlelight
vigil for the victims of the shootings in Blacksburg, Virginia April 17,
2007. Cho Seung-Hui, the gunman who massacred 32 people at Virginia Tech
university, was identified on Tuesday as a student from South Korea and a
troubled loner whose behavior had sometimes alarmed those around him.
[Reuters]

1 2 3 4 5 

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Chinese Online Class - Australia's Howard decries US "gun culture"

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

Australia's Howard decries US "gun culture"

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-04-17 15:41

SYDNEY - Australian Prime Minister John Howard on Tuesday decried the
negative "gun culture" in America after the deadly shooting spree at a US
university, holding up tough gun laws in his own country as the answer.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard answers a question in his Sydney
offices in this April 13, 2006 file photo. [AP]

Howard introduced strict gun ownership laws after the shooting massacre
of 35 people in the southern island state of Tasmania in 1996.

"We had a terrible incident at Port Arthur, but it is the case that 11
years ago we took action to limit the availability of guns," said Howard,
who extended his sympathies to the families of the 32 people killed at
Virginia Tech university on Monday at the hands of what he described as
"a crazed gunman."

"We showed a national resolve that the gun culture that is such a
negative in the United States would never become a negative in our
country."

In 1996 a gunman with a semi-automatic rifle killed 35 people at Port
Arthur in Australia's worst modern-day shooting massacre.

The horror of that massacre prompted Howard to confront Australia's gun
lobby and imposed laws banning almost all types of semi-automatic weapons.

The government spent A$300 million ($250 million) buying more than
600,000 weapons from farmers, hunters and other members of the public
before the new laws took affect.

But Howard told reporters: "You can never guarantee these things won't
happen again in our country."

More than 30,000 people die from gunshot wounds in the United States
every year and there are more guns in private hands than in any other
country. But a powerful gun lobby and support for gun ownership rights
have largely thwarted attempts to tighten controls.

Australia's small Greens party called on Tuesday for a further review of
the nation's gun control laws, saying the latest US shooting involved a
multiple-shot pistol and there were an estimated 250,000 handguns in
Australia.

"We really need to go back and look at the laws in Australia which permit
handguns to be available, and that includes handguns with up to 10
bullets in the magazine," Greens Senator Bob Brown told reporters.

"We Greens are saying let's remove the potential, as far as we can, for a
repeat massacre by somebody wielding a multiple-shot handgun," he said.

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� Yang a popular choice as FM

� Hu, Lien stress cross-Straits peace

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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Learn mandarin - Beckham wins Sport Industry award

Sports / Soccer

Beckham wins Sport Industry award

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-03-30 09:47

Soccer player David Beckham and his wife Victoria arrive for the Sport
Industry Awards 2007 at Old Billingsgate in central London March 29,
2007. The annual industry awards celebrates commercial achievement in
British sport.[Reuters]

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 

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� Yang Jiechi named new FM, replacing Li Zhaoxing

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Learn mandarin - Iran softens stance on British sailors

WORLD / Middle East

Iran softens stance on British sailors

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-27 06:23

TEHRAN, Iran - Iran said Monday it was questioning 15 British sailors and
marines to determine if their alleged entry into Iranian waters was
"intentional or unintentional" before deciding what to do with them - the
first sign it could be seeking a way out of the standoff.

The two countries continued to disagree about where the military
personnel were seized Friday, with Britain insisting they were in Iraqi
waters after searching a civilian cargo vessel and the Tehran regime
saying it had proof they were in Iranian territory.

Britain's Defense Ministry said they were seized in the Shatt al-Arab, a
waterway flowing into the Persian Gulf that marks the border between Iran
and Iraq. But the dividing line in the waterway, known in Iran as the
Arvand river, has long been disputed.

The Iranian emphasis Monday on the detainees' intent was a noticeable
pullback from the certainty expressed Saturday by Iran's military chief,
Gen. Ali Reza Afshar. Afshar said then that the 15 confessed to
"aggression into the Islamic Republic of Iran's waters."

Other Iranian officials suggested afterward that the Britons might be
charged with a crime - presumably espionage or trespassing - for
knowingly entering Iran's territorial waters.

Deputy Foreign Minister Mehzi Mostafavi took a softer line Monday while
saying that the 14 men and one woman were still being interrogated.

"It should become clear whether their entry was intentional or
unintentional. After that is clarified, the necessary decision will be
made," Mostafavi said.

Iran has refused to say where the captured Britons were being held or to
allow British officials to speak with them, but assured the British
ambassador to Tehran, Geoffrey Adams, that they were in good health.

During an official visit to Turkey on Monday, British Foreign Secretary
Margaret Beckett called for Iran to allow access to the captives. "We
will continue to press the Iranian authorities until the incident has
been resolved with the safe return of our personnel and their equipment,"
she said.

In London, Iranian Ambassador Rasoul Movahedian was summoned to the
British Foreign Office for the third time since the standoff began. Lord
Triesman, Foreign Office undersecretary, again demanded the safe return
of the detained personnel, the Foreign Office said.

There were fears in Britain that the fate of the 15 could get caught up
in the political tensions between Tehran and the West, including the
dispute over Iran's nuclear program and accusations of Iranian help to
Shiite militants in Iraq.

In particular, there were worries Iran might seek to use the prisoners as
leverage in trying to get the U.S. to free at least five Iranians
detained in Iraq for allegedly being part of a Revolutionary Guard force
that provides funds, weapons and training to Iraqi Shiite militias.

Mostafavi denied Iran was seeking a trade, but there were calls from
elsewhere within Iran's leadership for the government to hold out for a
swap.

A Web site run by Mohsen Rezaei, secretary of the Expediency Council and
a former Revolutionary Guard commander, quoted an unidentified lawmaker
as saying, "If Iranian diplomats in Iraq have no security, there's no
reason why we should forgive and turn a blind eye to aggressors into
Iranian territories."

Some members of the Iranian public also called for the British sailors
and marines to be held and tried. Hundreds of Iranian students
demonstrated near the coast to urge a tough stand in the confrontation
with the West.

British leaders sought to play down fears the situation could escalate or
become entangled with the other disputes.

"This is a matter that should be dealt with on its own merits ... and
that is how we are approaching it," British Prime Minister Tony Blair's
office said.

Iran's ambassador to Iraq, Hassan Kazemi Qomi, told The Associated Press
in a telephone interview from Baghdad that there was no connection
between the capture of the British sailors and marines and other disputes
between the West and Iran.

"They entered Iranian territorial waters and were arrested," Qomi said.
"It has nothing to do with other issues."

A 1975 treaty between Iran and Iraq set their border as running down the
center of the Shatt al-Arab, but Saddam Hussein canceled the treaty
before invading Iran in 1980 and setting of a devastating war. Iran
claims the border runs along the deepest parts of the river.

At U.N. headquarters in New York, deputy spokeswoman Marie Okabi said the
United Nations had not become involved in the current dispute. "This
matter is between the countries involved," she said.

Calls for the release of the Britons also came from the European Union,
Iraq and the United States, under whose command the military search team
was serving when it was captured.

On Monday, Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari told Iranian Foreign
Minister Manouchehr Mottaki that the personnel were seized in Iraqi
waters and said they should be released.

Meanwhile, Iranian state TV said Iran was open to negotiations over its
nuclear program despite its decision to partially cut cooperation with
the U.N. atomic watchdog agency in response to the U.N. Security
Council's vote Saturday to approve additional sanctions on Tehran.

"Iran looks at negotiations as the only solution to the nuclear case," it
said.

The sanctions are meant to persuade Iran to suspend uranium enrichment as
demanded by the council and underline its growing international
isolation. The United States has warned of even tougher penalties if
Tehran doesn't comply.

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Chinese Online Class - Democrats set Iraq deadline in war bill

WORLD / America

Democrats set Iraq deadline in war bill

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-22 07:15

U.S. soldiers of the 1st Platoon, Alpha Company, 2nd Battalion, 12th
Cavalry Regiment take position as they patrol a street in Baghdad's
north-west Shi'ite neighborhood of Sholla March 20, 2007.[Reuters]

WASHINGTON - US Senate Democrats on Wednesday revived legislation urging
President Bush to bring combat troops home from Iraq in a year, attaching
the plan to a $122 billion measure needed to fund the war.

The move puts Democrats on track for another confrontation with Bush over
the increasingly unpopular war and with Republicans, who are expected to
try to block the measure.

Special coverage:
Violence continues in Iraq 

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US adjusts Iraq tactics after copters downed
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House Democratic leaders are pushing a similar measure that would require
that troops leave by the fall of 2008. Party officials predicted the
House would pass it on Thursday, albeit by a razor-thin margin.

"United States troops should not be policing a civil war, and the current
conflict in Iraq requires principally a political solution," says a draft
Senate bill circulated to lawmakers in anticipation of a committee vote
Thursday.

The measure would provide nearly $97 billion for the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan and billions more in domestic aid and emergency relief
programs. It would require that Bush begin bringing home some troops
within four months of the bill's passage, setting a nonbinding goal of
having all U.S. combat troops out of Iraq by March 31, 2008.

The provision is similar to a resolution the Senate rejected last week.
The vote then was 50-48, 12 shy of the 60 needed to pass, after Bush
pledged to veto the legislation.

Democrats think the spending legislation has a much better chance. Sen.
Ben Nelson, D-Neb., who voted against last week's proposal, has agreed to
support the spending bill because it outlines benchmarks for the Iraqi
government.

Democrats also think Republicans will be reluctant to reject a much
needed spending bill that would fund popular projects in their states in
favor of the war.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., "continues to believe that
despite the high-fives the Republicans had last week, there's serious
heartburn in the caucus over the war," said his spokesman, Jim Manley.

So far, Republican leaders say they will reject the bill.

"We must not risk providing our troops the equipment and supplies they
need to carry out their mission by including this risky Democratic
leadership retreat plan, this poison pill," said Senate Republican leader
Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. "We owe our troops better than that."

Sean Kevelighan, spokesman for the White House budget office, said it is
"unfortunate that the Senate is wanting to delay vital funds for our
troops by producing a bill that mirrors House legislation that will never
become law, attempts to tie the hands of our military commanders and is a
Christmas wish list of nonwar related spending add-ons."

The House was expected to vote Thursday on a similar $124 billion
spending bill that would finance the wars. The bill, which Bush also
threatened to veto, would require that combat troops be out of Iraq
before September 2008, possibly sooner if the Iraqi government does not
meet certain benchmarks.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., pressed Democrats to back the bill,
unsure whether she had enough votes to pass it. In a private meeting,
former President Carter's national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski,
tried to convince party skeptics that the bill was their best chance at
ending the war.

Max Cleland, a Vietnam War veteran and former Democratic senator from
Georgia, also came out in support of the bill. His endorsement could help
to persuade more conservative Democrats who do not want to tie the hands
of military commanders.

Like the House bill, the Senate legislation would allow for an
unspecified number of troops to be left behind in Iraq for anti-terrorism
missions, training Iraqi forces and protecting coalition infrastructure
and personnel. Of the more than 140,000 U.S. troops in Iraq, fewer than
half are combat forces.

The Senate proposal would urge the Iraqi government to meet certain
benchmarks, such as disarming militias and amending the constitution to
protect Sunni minorities.

The inclusion of the benchmarks was enough to persuade Nelson to support
the bill, spokesman David DiMartino said. Nelson opposes arbitrary
deadlines to end the war but wanted legislation that would put pressure
on the Iraqi government to take more responsibility.

The Senate measure would set no consequences if the Iraqis fail to
achieve those goals. Under the House bill, combat troops would have to
begin coming home as early as this fall if the president cannot certify
that the Iraqi government was making progress.

The Senate measure requires the U.S. commander in Iraq to submit regular
reports on progress made by the Iraqi government toward meeting those
goals; the president also would have to report on progress made in
redeploying troops.

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Free Chinese Lesson - Writer offers a lecture to athletes

Sports / China

Writer offers a lecture to athletes

By Jeff Pan (Chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2007-03-15 15:42

Writer Wang Meng challenged world 110-meter hurdles record holder Liu
Xiang -- not on the tracks, but in a much more implicit way behind the
podium of the ongoing CPPCC, Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference.

"'One athlete' said Asians could also run fast after he won a
track-and-field gold medal," said Wang, a member of CPPCC, "this claim is
bound to face lawsuit should it have happened in Europe."

Chinese hurdler Liu Xiang, overwhelmed with the excitement after he won
the first place in men's 110-meter hurdles in 2004 Athens Olympic Games,
said "it's incredible I have crossed the hurdle of 13 seconds, as a
Chinese and an Asian. But I do believe there are more miracles to be made
in the future of my career. I want people to change the stereotype that
Asians cannot excel in sprinting. I have demonstrated to the whole world
with my action: Asia has me. China has me."

It does not take a rocket scientist to conclude that Wang's criticism is
directed to Liu, considering China has won very scarce gold medals in
track and field in world games.

Wang also concluded Liu's after-game address, laded with passions and
emotions, "is not decent and a reflection of lack of confidence. We can't
always talk in a bitter manner like that of a bullied concubine."

Liu is not the only one Wang opened fire to. Wang noted it is normal and
touching for athletes to shed tears of excitement after they make some
outstanding achievements, but they have to contain themselves and keep
good manners.

"However, there was a male athlete, who has come to the proper age and
assumes some sort of a leader position in some organizations, cried after
he won the game. Tears also devoured him when he was awarded the prize.
He could hardly hold himself, and that influences the image of our
athletes," said Wang, "I maintain we can shed some tears, but have to
refrain ourselves, and outline our spiritual outlook of being optimistic,
healthy, and open."

Writer Wang Meng challenged world 110-meter hurdles record holder Liu
Xiang -- not on the tracks, but in a much more implicit way behind the
podium of the ongoing CPPCC, Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference. [Sohu]

Wang offered another example of improper response during the Athens
Olympics. A Chinese player snatched the golden medal largely because of
the misplay of another athlete from a different country. When the player
was asked whether his success holds some random factors, He answered "no,
I deserve the gold medal."

Wang thought his answer was too unrefined and direct, and also offered
his version for obtaining the golden medal, "Yes, he (the other player)
got the skills to win the golden medal. I feel sorry for his misplay. I
hope we have more chances to learn from each other in the future. For the
gold medal, I don't think anyone can win it because of mere luck and
other people's misplays."

"Wouldn't that be better?" Wang asked his fellow CPPCC members.

Han Han, a post-1980 writer does not think Wang's reply is better. "That
is too ridiculous. In the top games on the global level, the athletes are
basically on the same level. A lot of champions win their gold medals
because of their performance, luck, and turnovers of competitors. It's a
great thing that your opponents misplay, because I am chasing right after
you, posing a lot of pressure, and waiting for you to misplay," said Han
on his blog entry about Wang's suggestions to the athletes, "It's weird
for a famous writer to teach the world champions how to be hypocritical
and distort their true thoughts."

A heated debate on Sohu.com shows that a number of netizens also back up
Wang's opinion. "Some athletes did say things that are not appropriate,
and they are just narrow-minded. The underbred claims are definitely not
a good way to express your personality," said a netizen on Sohu.com.

However, more people have voted against Wang, "Sports are about passions
and emotions. Wang is just trying to castrate the individuality of
Chinese athletes," said another netizen from Sohu.com.

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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Tornadoes kill 13 in Alabama; Mo. girl

WORLD / America

Tornadoes kill 13 in Alabama; Mo. girl

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-02 07:11

ENTERPRISE- Apparent tornadoes killed at least 13 people in Alabama on
Thursday, including eight at a high school where students were trapped
under a collapsed roof, state officials said.

State Emergency Management Agency spokeswoman Yasamie Richardson said
eight fatalities "are in relation to the high school but whether they are
all students or some students and teachers we're not sure."

A fallen tree rests atop a crushed pickup truck after an early morning
tornado moved through Caulfield, Mo., Thursday, March 1, 2007.[AP]

House Speaker Seth Hammett, at the statehouse in Montgomery, announced
that five people had died at Miller's Ferry in west Alabama, where
another apparent tornado tore into mobile homes.

Martha Rodriquez, a 15-year-old sophomore, said she had left the school
about five minutes before the storm hit. When she returned, a hall at the
school had collapsed, she said.

"The stadium was destroyed and there were cars tipped over in the parking
lot and trees were ripped out. There were trees and wood everywhere. It
was just horrible," she said.

More than 40 people were brought in to an Enterprise hospital as a
violent storm front crossed the state. The same system was blamed for a
tornado that killed a 7-year-old girl in Missouri.

Several school systems across Alabama closed or dismissed students early
Thursday as the storm front approached from the west, extending the
length of the state.

"The clouds were so dark that all the lights out here came on," said
Walter Thornton, who works at Enterprise Municipal Airport.

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Free Chinese Lesson - Gunman kills 5 in Utah shopping mall

WORLD / America

Gunman kills 5 in Utah shopping mall

(AP)
Updated: 2007-02-13 15:49

ALT LAKE CITY - A man with a shotgun fired randomly in a historic
shopping mall Monday night, killing five people and injuring several
others before he was killed, police said.

People who were inside the Trolley Square Mall when a gunman opened fire
gather outside the mall in Salt Lake City, Monday, Feb. 12, 2007. [AP]

Hours later, police still were searching stores for shocked shoppers and
employees who were hunkered down awaiting a safe escort from the Trolley
Square mall.

"We have six fatalities and multiple victims at hospitals," police
Detective Robin Snyder said. "They were found throughout the mall. I
don't know male or female or ages."

At least four people were hospitalized, three in critical condition and
one in serious condition, hospital spokesmen said. Two of the critically
injured were a 16-year-old man and a 50-year-old man, a spokesman said.

Authorities offered few details about the shootings but said the gunman
entered the mall about 6:45 p.m. MST.

The two-story mall, southeast of downtown, is a refurbished trolley barn
built in 1908, with a series of winding hallways, brick floors,
wrought-iron balconies and about 80 stores, including high-end retailers
such as Williams-Sonoma and restaurants such as the Hard Rock Cafe.

Matt Lund, whose wife manages a clothing store, said he saw a woman's
body face-down at the entrance to Pottery Barn Kids. He locked himself
and four others inside a storage room for about 40 minutes, isolated but
still able to hear the violence.

"We heard them say, 'Police! Drop your weapon!' Then we heard shotgun
fire. Then there was a barrage of gunfire," Lund, 44, said. "It was hard
to believe."

Marie Smith, 23, had the day off from Bath & Body Works but stopped there
during an errand and saw the gunman shoot a woman in front of the store.

"He was ahead of her, standing still. I don't think she saw that he had a
gun," said Smith, who dashed to a bathroom and locked the door.

Outside the mall, streets were blocked as police swarmed the two-block
scene. Dozens of people lingered on the sidewalk, many wrapped in
blankets, as they talked about what they had seen inside.

Antique store owner Barrett Dodds, 29, said he saw a man in a trenchcoat
exchanging gunfire with a police officer outside a card store. The
gunman, he said, was backed into a children's clothing store.

"I saw the cops go in the store. I saw the shooter go down," said Dodds,
who watched from the second floor.

Barb McKeown, 60, of Washington, D.C., was in another antique shop when
two frantic women ran in and reported gunshots.

"Then we heard shot after shot after shot - loud, loud, loud," said
McKeown, saying she heard about 20. She and three other people hid under
a staircase until it was safe to leave.

Many employees and shoppers - "a lot of scared people" - were still
inside the mall hours after the shootings, waiting to leave, Snyder said.

"This is a huge area to cover," she said.

An off-duty officer from Ogden was in the mall and involved in the
shooting, said Ogden police Sgt. Blaine Clifford, who declined to release
the officer's name. The officer was not injured, Clifford said.

Top World News 

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Today's Top News 

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� US dismisses Putin remarks as blunt spy talk

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Learn Mandarin online - British paper reveals video of US "friendly fire"

WORLD / Europe

British paper reveals video of US "friendly fire"

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-02-06 16:53

LONDON - A British newspaper published transcripts on Tuesday of a
cockpit video recording from a US jet at the center of an inquest into
"friendly fire" in Iraq in which a British soldier was killed.

An undated pool photograph released on March 30, 2003 shows the late
Lance Corporal Horse Matty Hull, 25, of The Blues and Royals Household
Cavalry Regiment which is based in Berskshire, Britain. [Reuters]

The Sun, Britain's biggest-selling tabloid, said the video tape revealed
the pilots, realizing they had hit a convoy of British armored vehicles,
saying "God dammit" and "We're in jail, dude."

Lance Corporal Matty Hull was killed near the southern Iraqi city of
Basra in March 2003 when two US A-10 tankbusters twice fired on the
British convoy.

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) said in a statement: "This recording is the
property of the United States government and the MoD does not have the
right to release it without their permission."

It also said a copy of the video was used as evidence by a British
military board of inquiry (BOI) investigation.

"When the BOI findings were released to the family we did inform them
that some classified material had been withheld, but we did not specify
its exact nature. There has never been any intention to deliberately
deceive or mislead LCoH Hull's family."

An inquest into Hull's death was adjourned last week after the coroner
said he had no choice but to delay his verdict until the recording of the
incident was produced by the government.

A BBC radio reporter who has seen the video said it showed the pilots
were "confused" about what they were doing.

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� British paper reveals video of US "friendly fire"

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Chinese School - CAWGOCLearn Chinese - Talks on Iran sanctions delayed

Sports / Host Cities

CAWGOC

(changchun2007.org)
Updated: 2007-01-26 15:05

Mr.Zhu Yejing,major of Changchun,received the OCA flag from the OCA
president at the closing cer

WORLD / Europe

Talks on Iran sanctions delayed

(AP)
Updated: 2006-12-13 11:23

UNITED NATIONS - Negotiations on an Iran sanctions resolution were
unexpectedly postponed Tuesday because of Russia's anger at the United
States for raising the plight of an opposition leader in Belarus in the
UN Security Council.

Russian Atomic Agency Chief Sergei Kiriyenko, left, shakes hands with
Iranian Foreign Minister, Manouchehr Mottaki, during their meeting in
Tehran, Iran, Monday, Dec. 11, 2006. Russia's nuclear chief will arrive
in Tehran Monday for talks on finishing the construction of Iran's first
nuclear power plant, being built by Russians in the south of the country.
[AP]

Belarus, an authoritarian former communist state that has close ties to
Russia, is not on the agenda of the UN's most powerful body. Russia's
Ambassador Vitaly Churkin strongly objected when senior US diplomat
William Brencick brought up the 54-day hunger strike of jailed former
Belarusian opposition presidential candidate, Alexander Kozulin, council
diplomats said.

The five veto-wielding council members - the US, Russia, China, Britain
and France - along with Germany had been scheduled to meet soon after to
discuss Russian amendments to a revised European draft resolution on
Iran. But because of the diplomatic tiff over Belarus, the meeting was
put off.

"It wasn't the best timing by the US," said Britain's UN Ambassador Emyr
Jones Parry.

The Europeans circulated a revised text on Friday in a bid to win backing
from Russia and China, and Churkin said after talks Monday he was pleased
with the direction of the negotiations though specific points still
needed to be worked out.

A US official said Washington felt it was important to raise the issue of
Kozulin in the Security Council because of US concerns for freedom of
political expression and democracy, especially in the heart of Europe.

"We raised this issue and our goal was to highlight the plight of this
individual and what it means for the state of democracy in this country,"
the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the council
meeting was closed.

Kozulin, who ended his hunger strike on Tuesday, has been jailed since
March when he led a protest march following presidential elections in
which he was one of three candidates challenging authoritarian President
Alexander Lukashenko.

Kozulin had been on hunger strike to protest his sentencing in June to
five and a half years in prison for organizing the unsanctioned protest.

Lukashenko has ruled Belarus since 1994, quashing dissent and maintaining
power through elections that have been dismissed by critics abroad and at
home as illegitimate.

Top World News 

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� Iraq suicide bomber kills 63, hurts 200

� Iran president: Israel will be wiped out

� Olmert hints Israel has nuclear arms

� Gore chases possible 2008 bid

Today's Top News 

� Ageing population tests social security

� China rejects US trade complaints

� Ample food reserves to feed market

� Fees waived for 150 million rural kids

� Steady food price rises prompt watch on inflation

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emony of the 5th Asian Winter Games hosted by
Aomori,Japan,on Feb.8th,2003.[File Photo]

Patronized the OCA, Asian Winter Games is the largest winter sports
gathering at the highest level and with the most extensive influence.

As the extension of the Olympic Spirit in Asia, it will serve as a bridge
for the Asian peoples from various countries and regions to promote the
friendship and understanding through sports exchanges.

Asian Winter Games is a quadrennial sporting event. The first 2 editions
were held in Sapporo, Japan, the 3rd in Harbin, China, the 4th in
Kangwon, Korea, and the 5th in Aomori, Japan. On October 3rd, 2002,
Changchun was awarded the right to host the 6th Asian Winter Games in
2007.

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� Chinese Olympic team ties with amateurs

� Short-track skaters to vie against the best

Today's Top News 

� China's GDP grows 10.7% in 2006, fastest in 11 years

� Premier Wen to visit Japan in April

� Divorce rate half of what we thought

� PetroChina branch fined for pollution

� Young officials spotlight in succession

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Monday, March 24, 2008

Learn Chinese - Iran president sends note to Saudi king

WORLD / Middle East

Iran president sends note to Saudi king

Updated: 2007-01-17 10:41

CAIRO, Egypt - Iran's hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said
Tuesday that he sent a message to Saudi King Abdullah proposing that they
cooperate in helping stabilize Iraq.

Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez (R) and his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad meet at Miraflores Palace in Caracas January 13, 2007.
[Reuters]

Ahmadinejad's comments came as Washington is trying to rally its Arab
allies and isolate Iran.

"We, Saudis and other neighboring countries can help the Iraqi people to
take the lead to consolidate their government's capability to stabilize
and maintain security in their country," Ahmadinejad told the Saudi-owned
satellite television channel.

"I sent a message to King Abdullah in this regard and the answer,
generally, was positive," the Iranian president said in the interview
taped Saturday in Venezuela, one of the countries on his Latin American
tour.

Iran's top national security official, Ali Larijani, had delivered a
message to Abdullah, the official Saudi Press Agency reported Sunday, but
did not reveal its contents.

Iran's overture to Saudi Arabia appeared to be an attempt to counter
American efforts to rally its allies in the region and isolate Tehran.

Saudi Arabia has shown increasing alarm over Iran's growing influence in
Iraq and across the Arab world, even as it has grown more worried over
Iraq's chaos.

The US has previously asked Saudi Arabia to use its close ties to Iraq's
Sunni minority to encourage reconciliation with the Shiite-led
government. Saudi Arabia has pressed the US to ensure that Shiite
militias are reined in.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, ahead of her regional tour, rejected
anew proposals for opening a diplomatic dialogue with Iran and Syria as a
way to help stabilize Iraq.

She said Iran would demand US concessions on its nuclear program while
Damascus would ask for an easing of the US opposition to Syrian policies
in Lebanon as a price for cooperation.

Ahmadinejad said the Americans were in "trouble and they are seeking a
way to get out of it while ensuring their economic interests and increase
their hegemony over the region."

Addressing Iran's nuclear program, Ahmadinejad reiterated that "we are
always ready to talk, but if the dialogue is used as a means to impose
something which is illegal then they should realize that it is a dead
end."

Iranian officials have said that efforts to make Iran roll back its
nuclear activities are not legal because it has the right to a peaceful
nuclear program as a signatory to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.

Top World News 

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� US envoy: N. Korea talks slow but progressing

� Iran: US, Britain, Israel 'axis of evil'

Today's Top News 

� Hong Kong curbs entry of pregnant mainlanders

� Veteran revolutionary Bo dies at 99

� Nuke power security a key concern

� Rightist threats raise fears in Japan

� Commerce Minister: Huge trade surplus to be reduced

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Free Chinese Lesson - Saddam execution video draws criticism

WORLD / Middle East

Saddam execution video draws criticism

(AP)
Updated: 2007-01-03 09:48

An Iraqi cries on the grave of the country's former president Saddam
Hussein in Ouja, 115 kilometers (70 miles) north of Baghdad, Iraq,
Tuesday, Jan. 2, 2007. [AP]

Grainy cell phone video of Saddam Hussein's execution triggered
international criticism Tuesday, with Britain's deputy prime minister
calling the leaked images "unacceptable" and the Vatican decrying the
footage as a "spectacle" violating human rights.

Special coverage:
Saddam Hussein Hanged  

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Meanwhile, the Italian government pushed for a UN moratorium on the death
penalty, Cuba called the execution "an illegal act," and Sunnis in Iraq
took to the streets in mainly peaceful demonstrations across the country.

The unofficial video showed a scene that stopped just short of
pandemonium, during which one person is heard shouting "To hell!" at the
deposed president and Saddam is heard exchanging insults with his
executioners. The inflammatory footage also showed Saddam plummeting
through the gallows trapdoor and dangling in death.

The grainy video appeared on the Internet and Al-Jazeera television late
Saturday. On Tuesday, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki ordered an
investigation into the execution to try to uncover who taunted the former
leader, and who leaked the cell phone footage.

At the United Nations, new UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon ran into
trouble on his first day of work over Saddam Hussein's execution when he
failed to state the United Nations' opposition to the death penalty and
said capital punishment should be a decision of individual countries.

The UN has an official stance opposing capital punishment and Ban's
predecessor Kofi Annan reiterated it frequently. The top UN envoy in
Iraq, Ashraf Qazi, restated it again on Saturday after the former Iraqi
dictator was hanged.

Ban, however, took a different approach, never mentioning the UN ban on
the death penalty in all its international tribunals, and the right to
life enshrined in the UN Charter.

"Saddam Hussein was responsible for committing heinous crimes and
unspeakable atrocities against Iraqi people and we should never forget
victims of his crime," Ban said in response to a reporter's question
about Saddam's execution Saturday for crimes against humanity. "The issue
of capital punishment is for each and every member state to decide."

His ambiguous answer put a question mark over the UN's stance on the
death penalty. It also gave the new chief an early taste of how tricky
global issues are, and how every word can make a difference.

Michele Montas, Ban's new spokeswoman, insisted there was no change in UN
policy in what she described as "his own nuance" on the death penalty.

"The UN policy still remains that the organization is not for capital
punishment," she said. "However, the way the law is applied in different
countries, he left it open to those different countries."

The death penalty is legal in Ban's homeland, South Korea as it is in
many other countries including the United States, Russia, China and much
of the Middle East.

Ban, who took over on New Year's Day from Annan, is the first Asian to
serve as secretary-general in 35 years. Tuesday was his first day of work
at UN headquarters.

British Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott said those who leaked the
footage should be condemned.

"I think the manner was quite deplorable really. I don't think one can
endorse in any way that, whatever your views about capital punishment,"
Prescott said in an interview with British Broadcasting Corp radio.

"Frankly, to get the kind of recorded messages coming out is totally
unacceptable and I think whoever is involved and responsible for it
should be ashamed of themselves."

The Holy See's daily, L'Osservatore Romano, lamented that "making a
spectacle" of the execution had turned capital punishment into "an
expression of political hubris."

The execution "represented, for the ways in which it happened and for the
media attention it received, another example of the violation of the most
basic rights of man," L'Osservatore wrote.

The office of Italian Premier Romano Prodi said Italy would seek the
support of other countries that oppose capital punishment to put the
issue of a moratorium to the UN General Assembly. Italy and all other
European Union countries ban capital punishment.

Italy, which is one of the rotating members of the UN Security Council,
has lobbied unsuccessfully for UN action against the death penalty.

On Monday, a crowd of Sunni mourners in Samarra marched to a bomb-damaged
Shiite shrine, the Golden Dome, and were allowed by guards and police to
enter the holy place carrying a mock coffin and photos of the former
dictator.

The shrine was bombed by Sunni extremists 10 months ago, an attack that
triggered the current cycle of retaliatory attacks between Sunnis and
Shiites.

Communist Cuba, which allows capital punishment, called Saddam's
execution "an illegal act in a country that has been driven toward an
internal conflict in which millions of citizens have been exiled or lost
their lives."

The Foreign Ministry statement Monday said the island nation "has a moral
duty to express its point of view about the assassination committed by
the occupying power."

The US military had held Saddam since capturing him in December 2003 but
turned him over to the Iraqi government for his execution.

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Free Chinese Lesson - Top envoys meet in Beijing for Six-Party talks

WORLD / Photo

Top envoys meet in Beijing for Six-Party talks

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-12-18 09:08

Envoys from the six nations attending talks on North Korea's nuclear arms
get ready for a group photo in Beijing December 17, 2006. The United
States and Japan demanded real progress when talks on scrapping North
Korea's nuclear arms resume this week, warning Pyongyang on Sunday that
sanctions and isolation were its only alternative. The envoys are (from
L): Russia's Sergey Ravoz, North Korea's Kim Kye-gwan, South Korea's Chun
Yung-woo, Japan's Kenichiro Sasae, United States' Christopher Hill and
China's Wu Dawei. [Reuters]

1 2 3 4

Top World News 

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Today's Top News 

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� Bookings for hotels to begin in spring

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Sunday, March 23, 2008

Chinese School - Steelmakers seek lower ore price increase

Free Chinese Lesson - Israeli military leave coast, attacks from Gaza continue

WORLD / Middle East

Israeli military leave coast, attacks from Gaza continue

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-26 15:12

JERUSALEM -- A truce meant to end five months of deadly
Israeli-Palestinian clashes took hold in the Gaza Strip early Sunday, but
early violations by Palestinian militants tempered hopes the accord would
help to coax moribund peace talks back to life.

The Israeli military said all troops were withdrawn from Gaza in the
hours before the 6 a.m. cease-fire, announced late Saturday, went into
effect. Dozens of tanks and armored vehicles were parked just over the
border in a military staging ground in southern Israel early Sunday, and
the streets of northern Gaza were empty.

But occasional rocket and mortar fire from Gaza continued to strike
Israel within the truce's first hour.

"Let's hope that's just the problems of the beginning," Israeli
government spokeswoman Miri Eisin said. "But if Israel is attacked, we
will respond. If there are Palestinian factions that are not part of the
cease-fire, it's hard to see how the cease-fire will hold."

All militant factions denied involvement in the attacks.

A spokesman for the Palestinian government, Ghazi Hamad, said all armed
groups have committed to the agreement, and termed any violations rogue
acts.

"There is 100 percent effort to make this work, but there is no guarantee
of 100 percent results," Hamad said.

The truce agreement, if it holds, will be a coup for Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas as he tries to form a more moderate government
than the one currently led by Islamic Hamas radicals, who refuse to
recognize Israel. Abbas, a moderate from the Fatah Party elected
separately last year, hopes a new government lineup will persuade the
West to end crushing economic sanctions imposed after Hamas took power in
March.

The cease-fire was meant to halt both rocket fire and other militant
attacks on Israel from Gaza, and a military offensive Israel launched in
the coastal strip in June, less than a year after ending its 38-year
occupation.

The two sides announced the accord after Abbas telephoned Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert late Saturday to tell him he wrested an agreement
from Palestinian factions to stop rocket fire and all other violence from
Gaza. Olmert reciprocated by pledging to stop all Israeli military
operations in Gaza and withdraw all troops there.

Abbas spokesman Nabil Abu Rdeneh said a truce reached in Egypt in
February 2005 would be revived.

"There is a signed agreement between the president and Prime Minister
(Ismail) Haniyeh and all the Palestinian factions to resort to the
agreement of the factions in Cairo in 2005, including ceasing all the
military activity from Gaza, starting from Sunday morning," Abu Rdeneh
said from Gaza City. "The Israeli prime minister has agreed, and it is
going to start tomorrow morning."

Abbas told Olmert that the factions had agreed to stop all violence from
Gaza, including rocket fire and suicide bombings, starting at 6 a.m.
Sunday, Eisin said.

He "asked that, in response, Israel stop all military operations in the
Gaza Strip and withdraw all her forces," and Olmert responded favorably,
she said.

Israeli forces originally entered Gaza to try to recover a soldier
Hamas-linked militants captured in a June 25 cross-border raid. But they
soon widened their objectives to target militants who had intensified
their rocket attacks on southern Israel after the September 2005 Gaza
pullout.

The violence claimed the lives of more than 300 Palestinians and five
Israelis. Most of the dead Palestinians were militants, but dozens of
civilians died, too, including 19 members of an extended family killed
earlier this month.

Despite international criticism over Palestinian civilian deaths, Olmert
pledged to continue the offensive until Palestinian rocket attacks from
Gaza significantly decreased. Instead, as the fighting swelled, rocket
fire in November more than doubled from October, killing two Israeli
civilians in a single week.

The militants' capture of Cpl. Gilad Shalit, who remains in captivity,
and the subsequent Israeli incursion into Gaza cut short efforts by
Olmert and Abbas to restart peace talks that broke down six years ago. A
truce could help to create the momentum to get talks moving.

"We welcome the announcement and see this as a positive step forward,"
White House spokesman Alex Conant said Saturday evening in Washington.
"We hope it leads to less violence for the Israeli and Palestinian
people."

Although Israel has no ties with the Hamas government, which rejects the
Jewish state's right to exist, it considers the separately elected Abbas
an acceptable negotiating partner. He and Olmert agreed months ago to
meet, but Abbas has balked at setting a date without receiving assurances
the meeting would yield real dividends for him, like a release of
Palestinian prisoners Israel holds.

Olmert has said no prisoners would be released to Hamas before Shalit is
freed.

A cease-fire in Gaza is part of a broad package Abbas is trying to put
together in the hope of restoring hundreds of millions of dollars in
funding Western powers cut off to pressure Hamas to recognize Israel and
renounce violence.

The centerpiece of that package would be the formation of a new
government less inimical to Israel. Another major element is a prisoner
swap.

Hamas' supreme leader, Khaled Mashaal, arrived in Cairo this week to
discuss both issues with Egytian mediators, but there was no word of a
breakthrough.

On Saturday, Mashaal said his group was willing to give peace
negotiations with Israel six months to reach an agreement for a
Palestinian state in Gaza and the West Bank, but threatened a new armed
uprising if the talks failed.

The double-edged comments were his strongest confirmation that the
Islamic militant group would allow Abbas to try to negotiate with Israel.
But it was also the first time he has set a deadline with an explicit
threat of a new uprising.

Israel had no immediate comment on Mashaal's proposal.

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Today's Top News 

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� 53 miners dead in coal mine explosions

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Learn mandarin - On the trail of ancient cures

WORLD / Wall Street Journal Exclusive

On the trail of ancient cures

By NICHOLAS ZAMISKA (WSJ)
Updated: 2006-11-15 12:35

http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB116354914377323235-NnLFTPz5b_zTWYbbn
ant_Wwm788_20061121.html?mod=regionallinks

SHANGHAI -- On an afternoon in Xinjiang province in China's remote and
mountainous west, botanist Shen Jingui was searching for a snow lotus, a
grayish-white flower used for centuries in Chinese medicine to alleviate
the symptoms of premenstrual syndrome. He spotted the plant on a rock
ledge and shimmied across to pick it. He slipped and plunged some 30
yards, slamming into rocks on the way down.

When he regained consciousness, local farmers were putting him on a horse
to take him to the nearest health clinic, several hours away. "I was very
scared," he recalls of the incident, "but I was happy to collect the
material."

Mr. Shen, head botanist for the Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, a
government-funded laboratory, has spent three decades trekking across
China and going to great lengths to ferret out rare plants and herbs
traditionally used in treatments for ailments ranging from aches and
pains to cancer.

His bag of plants has captured the interest of Swiss drug giant Novartis
AG, which since 2000 has invested several million dollars in a venture
with SIMM. Last month, Novartis struck a similar deal with the Kunming
Institute of Botany, an organization that works with traditional remedies
in the country's southwestern Yunnan province. Earlier this month,
Novartis announced it will invest about $100 million in its own
pharmaceutical research-and-development center in Shanghai.

Facing soaring costs in developing new drugs and a limited pipeline of
promising candidates, Novartis hopes that traditional Chinese medicines
will hold the secrets for a new generation of blockbusters to fight
diseases such as Alzheimer's. While Novartis isn't the only multinational
drug company seeking to tap traditional Chinese cures -- French drug
maker Servier also has a collaboration with SIMM -- Rachel Lee, a senior
manager at Boston Consulting Group in Shanghai, says "no other major
pharma has gone further than Novartis" in this area.

The collaboration between East and West on drug development is in many
ways an unlikely one. Chinese and Western specialists approach
pharmacology from very different angles. For centuries, Chinese doctors
have tinkered with different mixtures of medicines, guided in part by
trial and error, to see which ones are most effective. Working with that
body of knowledge, they operate on the assumption that the traditional
remedies work, even if by Western scientific standards it's not
completely clear why. Chinese doctors "know it will cure people, but they
don't know what target it hits," says Shen Jingkang, a professor at SIMM.

In contrast, researchers at Western pharmaceutical companies often begin
the search for a drug by identifying a target, and then look for a
chemical compound that has the desired effect. If they do find a drug
that works, they usually understand the mechanism behind it. That helps
in refining the compound to make it more effective and in convincing
regulatory authorities such as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration that
the medicine is safe and effective.

Novartis hopes to isolate the particular compounds active in the Chinese
traditional medicines by testing the raw extracts from plants collected
by Mr. Shen and fellow botanists.

"There are so many compounds in nature, from the seas to the jungles,
it's very difficult to know where to start," says Paul Herrling, the head
of corporate research at Novartis. "China has thousands of years'
experience of using plants in Chinese traditional medicines. The idea
was, why not use the Chinese experience as a kind of filter?"

Novartis has experienced the potential of Chinese traditional medicines
firsthand. The company's malaria drug Coartem stems from a traditional
Chinese cure for fever. Mention of the plant, Artemisia annua L. or sweet
wormwood, was found in a Chinese medicine book written on silk, unearthed
from a tomb of the West Han Dynasty, which began around 200 B.C. Chinese
military scientists developed the drug from the plant in the 1970s to
treat Chinese soldiers suffering from malaria in Vietnam. In the early
1990s, Novartis struck a deal with the Chinese to purchase the rights to
Coartem, a combination of a derivative of the plant and another
antimalarial treatment, paying a few million dollars up front and
royalties on future sales. Novartis declined to reveal the revenue it
makes on the drug, most of which it sells to developing countries at $1
per treatment.

Since the venture began, Novartis says SIMM has provided around 1,000
natural products to the Swiss drug company's laboratories in Basel. In
return, Novartis has agreed to pay SIMM royalties and fees if certain
plants yield marketable pharmaceuticals.

So far, nine of the compounds have shown particular promise against
specific disease targets, and two have been selected for further study,
according to Dr. Herrling. While those numbers may seem small, the search
for drugs using conventional methods is far less fruitful, he says. The
investment is also small when stacked up against Novartis's typical
research-and-development outlays.

In this particular project, it all goes back to a small group of
botanists led by Mr. Shen -- before any research can begin in the lab,
they must venture out in the field and find the plant.

On a recent afternoon at the laboratory in Shanghai, Mr. Shen dried lily
bulbs and snow pine branches in small, neat piles on the floor of a
sun-soaked hallway. He says he decided on this line of work when, as a
student at a Shanghai university, he saw a film about the life of a
Chinese botanist. The movie had a sad ending: The botanist dies after an
accident collecting plants in a remote area and is carried home on the
back of a horse. Nevertheless, Mr. Shen found the story inspiring.

"I love this career," says Mr. Shen, whose forearms and legs are covered
with scars from his arduous trips to collect rare plants.

One of his most memorable finds was in spring 1999. Shortly after the
snows melted, he set out on a weeklong journey to western China's remote
Qinghai plateau. He was searching for a certain type of Aweto, an
exceedingly rare fungus that Chinese-medicine doctors believe helps
strengthen the immune system and fend off cancers. When dried, it looks
like a small light-brown caterpillar.

Mr. Shen hired a guide and set off on horseback into the mountains, armed
with descriptions from old Chinese texts. Deep in the forest, he spotted
something, and got off his horse for a closer look.

"We won! We finally got it!" he recalls shouting as he jumped up and
down. "I was screaming, 'I found it -- I found it!'" Gathering hundreds
of bunches, he put them in his bag for the journey back to Shanghai.

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Saturday, March 22, 2008

Learn mandarin - N.Korea wants Japan to stay away from six-party talks

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

N.Korea wants Japan to stay away from six-party talks

(AFP)
Updated: 2006-11-04 13:59

Pyongyang on Saturday said Japan should not attend six-party nuclear
disarmament talks after Japanese officials reportedly said Tokyo would
not recognise North Korea as a nuclear-armed state.

Special coverage:
North Korea Nuclear Crisis 
Related readings:
N. Korea wants bank accounts unfrozen
Nuclear-free peninsula remains goal
Six-Party Talks set to resume soon

"It is the view of the DPRK (North Korea) that since the US attends the
six-party talks, there is no need for Japan to participate in them as a
local delegate," a spokesman of its foreign ministry said.

"Because it is no more than a state of the US and it is enough for Tokyo
just to be informed of the results of the talks by Washington," he was
quoted as saying by Pyongyang's official Korean Central News Agency.

North Korea said it had decided to end a year-long boycott and return to
the six-party talks on the premise that the issue of lifting US financial
sanctions against it would be discussed and settled at the six-party
talks.

Japanese leaders behaved "impudently" after Pyongyang's announcement,
asserting that "Japan cannot accept North Korea's return to the six-party
talks as a nuclear-armed state," the spokesman said.

"The Japanese authorities have thus clearly proved themselves that they
are political imbeciles incapable of judging the trend of the situation
and their deplorable position."

"The DPRK (North Korea) has never asked Japan to participate in the
six-party talks. In fact, it was displeased with Japan's participation in
the six-party talks, but has properly treated it, taking the relations
with other participating countries into consideration," the spokesman
said.

The new administration of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe must have a lot of
work to do, he said.

"It had better, therefore, mind its own business instead of poking its
nose into the work of the talks to its inconvenience.

"It would be much better for Japan to refrain from participating in the
six-party talks and less attendants would be not bad for making the talks
fruitful," he added.

The six-party talks, which began in 2003, are aimed at convincing North
Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons programme in exchange for economic
incentives and security guarantees

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Chinese Online Class - Rice: Won't coerce allies on N. Korea

WORLD / United States

Rice: Won't coerce allies on N. Korea

(AP)
Updated: 2006-10-20 09:37

SEOUL, South Korea - US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Thursday
she would not try to dictate how US allies enforce sanctions on North
Korea for its nuclear program, and there were signs South Korea wouldn't
quickly embrace Washington's approach.

"The key is to live up to the obligation that all of us undertook" to bar
North Korea from exporting nuclear technology or receiving overseas help
for its nuclear program, Rice said after meetings with South Korea's
president and top diplomat.

South Korea and China are North Korea's closest neighbors and trading
partners, accounting for two-thirds of its foreign commerce.

Both nations are pledged to carry out UN restrictions approved after
North Korea's Oct. 9 test explosion of a small nuclear device, but they
have hedged on details. Rice visits Chinese leaders Friday in Beijing.

In China, officials with four commercial banks said they have stopped
moving funds in and out of North Korea, The Wall Street Journal Asia
reported on its Web site Thursday, and one of the officials cited a ban
ordered by Chinese regulators.

A senior US official confirmed that the Chinese were taking "unusual
measures" against the North Koreans in their banking system but would not
elaborate. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because Rice had
not yet discussed the issue with her Chinese counterparts.

Rice is on a crisis mission to Asia to reinforce the sanctions and
reassure jittery allies of US support. But she played down differences
over how to confront Pyongyang, and left US expectations vague.

"I did not come to South Korea nor will I go anyplace else to try to
dictate to governments what they ought to do," to enforce the UN mandate,
Rice said at a news conference with South Korean Foreign Minister Ban
Ki-moon.

Ban said Seoul will review the terms of economic projects it has
undertaken with the North "in harmony and in line with the UN Security
Council resolution and international demands," but he made no promises.

The United States is skeptical about a pair of landmark inter-Korean
projects - a tourism venture and joint economic zone in North Korea -
that are symbols of hopes for the peninsula's reunification. US officials
have suggested the tourism project in particular serves to funnel badly
needed hard currency to North Korean.

A senior State Department official traveling with Rice said Seoul is
likely to announce changes to the projects or other means of meeting the
sanctions requirement after Rice has left the region, so as not to appear
to have caved to US demands. The official spoke on condition of anonymity
because Rice's consultations were private.

South Korea has said it would fully comply with the sanctions but has
also indicated it does not plan to halt key economic projects with the
North.

North Korean Gen. Ri Chan Bok told ABC News that his country's nuclear
weapons were "to defend our country and our people" and would not be sold
for profit. He also said President Bush wants Pyongyang to "kneel."

At the White House, spokesman Tony Snow denied that Bush wanted North
Korea to "kneel down," and said the US was seeking a diplomatic accord
with North Korea over its nuclear weapons. Snow said that included a
"better economy, more security, better relations with their neighbors,
integration into the global community, as opposed to isolation."

Meanwhile, a Chinese envoy, State Councilor Tang Jiaxuan, delivered North
Korean leader Kim Jong Il a personal message from China's president on
Thursday in the highest-level Chinese visit to North Korea since the
nuclear test.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said Kim and the diplomat
had "in-depth discussions" about the nuclear dispute.

"This is a very significant visit against the backdrop of major changes
on the Korean Peninsula," Liu said at a news briefing. "We hope China's
diplomatic efforts ... will bear fruit."

In Washington, State Department spokesman Tom Casey said the Chinese
diplomat was "carrying a very strong message from the Chinese government
about the need for the North Koreans not to engage in additional nuclear
tests and to move forward in terms of stopping their negative behavior."

But in a sign of the hurdles Rice faces in Beijing, Liu said that while
China will "implement in earnest" the sanctions, they are "the means to
an end, which is to solve the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula in a
peaceful way."

China signed on to the UN sanctions partly to rebuke North Korea for
ignoring repeated Chinese warnings not to test-fire missiles or conduct a
nuclear test. Beijing has since warned its neighbor against taking any
further steps, such as a second nuclear test, that would heighten
tensions.

Beijing's UN ambassador has indicated that inspectors will not board
ships to search for equipment or material that can be used to make
nuclear, chemical and biological weapons or ballistic missiles. China and
South Korea worry that the North would consider the action provocative.

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Learn mandarin - UN Security Council plans Afghanistan mission

Chinese Mandarin - Bring on theChinese Mandarin - Spain music, says Kuznetsova

Sports / Feature and Column

Bring on the music, says Kuznetsova
(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-10-04 15:08

STUTTGART, Oct 4 - The changes sweeping through women's tennis are music
to the ears of world number

Sports/Olympics / Group B

Spain
(fiba.com)
Updated: 2006-08-15 14:26

ROSTER SPAIN
Name P Heigth DOB Place Of Birth Current Club

4 Pau
GASOL 4/5 215cm
7'1" 06/07/1980 Barcelone
(ESP) Memphis Grizzlies, NBA (USA)

6 Rudy
FERNANDEZ 2 196cm
6'5" 04/04/1985 Palma
(ESP) DKV Joventut Badalona, ACB (ESP)

7 Juan-Carlos
NAVARRO 2 191cm
6'3" 13/06/1980 Barcelone
(ESP) Winterthur Barcelona, ACB (ESP)

8 Jos��-Manuel
CALDERON 1 190cm
6'3" 28/09/1981 Villanueva Serena
(ESP) Toronto Raptors, NBA (USA)

9 Felipe
REYES 4/5 206cm
6'9" 16/03/1980 Cordoba
(ESP) Real Madrid, ACB (ESP)

10 Carlos
JIM��NEZ 3 204cm
6'8" 10/02/1976 Madrid
(ESP) Adecco Estudiantes Mardid, ACB (ESP)

15 Jorge
GARBAJOSA 3 207cm
6'9" 19/12/1977 Madrid
(ESP) Unicaja Malaga, ACB (ESP)

Carlos
CABEZAS 1 187cm
6'2" 14/11/1980 M��laga
(ESP) Unicaja Malaga, ACB (ESP)

Marc
GASOL C 210cm
6'11" 29/01/1985 Barcelona
(ESP) FC BARCELONA (ESP)

Alex
MUMBR�� 2/3 202cm
6'8" 12/06/1979 Barcelone
(ESP) DKV Joventut Badalona, ACB (ESP)

Berni
RODR��GUEZ F 197cm
6'6" 07/06/1980 M��laga
(ESP) UNICAJA MALAGA (ESP)

Sergio
RODRIGUEZ GOMEZ 1 -/- 12/06/1986 Tenerife
(ESP) Adecco Estudiantes Madrid, ACB (ESP)

Average height: 200cm/6'7"

COACHES
Head coach: Jos�� Vicente HERN��NDEZ

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four Svetlana Kuznetsova.

While other top players are cautious about plans to jazz up tournaments
for spectators and television viewers, former U.S. Open champion
Kuznetsova is right behind the innovations.

"I think it's very important to bring changes to the women's game, to
bring more fans to the courts. I think we should try more new things,"
said Kuznetsova at the Stuttgart Grand Prix, where she is seeded second.

Some players are wary about being interviewed before they walk on court
and having music playing during changeovers but the Russian believes they
should make a sacrifice for the good of the game.

"I know some players are distracted by having an interview before the
match but people like it and this (playing music) is something else they
can do for the fans," she told reporters.

"I feel very strongly about that. Other sports have grown -- football,
basketball, hockey -- and if we want to bring tennis to the same level or
higher we also have to add other things."

In a growing debate about the changes, world number one Amelie Mauresmo
has opposed the idea of allowing players to consult their coaches on
court during set breaks, a system that is being used in Stuttgart this
week where the Frenchwoman is the top seed.

PLAYERS' WORKLOAD

Mauresmo and former world number one Lindsay Davenport also fear that the
round-robin format being introduced in the early rounds of some men's
events next year could increase players' workload.

The idea is still in the discussion stage in the Women's Tennis
Association (WTA).

The round-robin format is designed to guarantee that marquee players stay
in an event for more than one match but Davenport said recently that it
could be open to abuse. If a player had already qualified for the
semi-finals, for example, they might not play to their potential in a
"dead" round-robin match.

"That could happen," said Davenport in Bali last month. "Although in
women's tennis I don't see it happening because everyone's so neurotic
about always winning.

"But there's (the potential for) a lot of fixing if your friend needs you
to win or lose or whatever. A lot of things could happen. There are some
kinks to be worked out for sure."

In Stuttgart, tennis officials have been listening to the players' points
of view.

Tournament director Markus Gunthardt said safeguards needed to be
developed against lack of effort by players in a round-robin event.

1 2 

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Friday, March 21, 2008

Chinese Online Class - Chirac: Don't refer Iran to Security Council

WORLD / Middle East

Chirac: Don't refer Iran to Security Council
(AP)
Updated: 2006-09-18 16:00

PARIS - French President Jacques Chirac suggested Monday that the
international community renounce referring Iran to the U.N. Security
Council during nuclear talks _ and that Iran, in return, suspend uranium
enrichment.

French President Jacques Chirac, seen here, has urged world powers not to
refer Iran to the UN Security Council over its nuclear programme, at the
same time calling on Tehran to give up uranium enrichment. [AFP]

"I don't believe in a solution without dialogue," Chirac said on Europe-1
radio, suggesting that the international community suspend the threat of
U.N. sanctions in exchange for Iran's suspension of enrichment during
negotiations.

"I am not pessimistic," Chirac said. "I think that Iran is a great nation
and that we can find solutions through dialogue."

He suggested that both sides set an agenda for talks _ and that both make
a concession during the negotiations. He said the six nations currently
involved in the Iran issue _ France, Germany, Britain, Russia, China and
the United States first set an agenda for talks with Iran.

"We must, on the one hand, together, Iran and the six countries, meet and
set an agenda for negotiations then start negotiations. Then, during
these negotiations I suggest that the six renounce seizing the U.N.
Security Council and Iran renounces uranium enrichment during
negotiations, " Chirac said.

He spoke before heading to New York for the U.N. General Assembly. It was
not immediately clear whether he would meet with Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad during his stay.

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Learn Chinese online - Russia: Too early to talk of sanctions against Iran

WORLD / Middle East

Russia: Too early to talk of sanctions against Iran
(AP)
Updated: 2006-08-25 14:00

MOSCOW - Vice-premier Sergei Ivanov said Friday that Russia will continue
to pursue a political resolution of the dispute over Iran's nuclear
program and that it is too early to consider imposing sanctions, news
agencies reported.

"Talk about sanctions is premature and inexpedient, to say the least,"
Ivanov said in the Far Eastern city of Magadan, according to the news
agency ITAR-Tass. "In any case, Russia will keep pressing for a political
and diplomatic settlement coupled with full and strict observance of all
non-proliferation regimes."

The comments followed this week's submission by Iran of a written
response to a package of incentives offered by the United States and five
other world powers, including Russia, if Iran rolls back on its nuclear
program.

Iran said it was ready for "serious negotiations." But the United States
said Iran's response fell short of conditions set forth by the United
Nations Security Council.

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� US war prisons legal vacuum for 14,000

� Vatican tries to calm Pope row as militants vow war

� Finance ministers back WB anti-corruption plan

� US military deaths in Iraq hit 2,681

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Chinese Mandarin - Puerto Rico

Chinese Online Class - Motor racLearn mandarin - China loses some allure as a manufacturing hubing-Hungary a very different place 20 years on

Sports/Olympics / Feature and Column

Motor racing-Hungary a very different place 20 years on
(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-08-04 16:37

BUDAPEST, Aug 3 - Monaco

WORLD / Wall Street Journal Exclusive

China loses some allure as a manufacturing hub
By ANDREW BATSON (WSJ)
Updated: 2006-08-07 10:02

http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB115489994036428120-x8gD_CqWa81zuWhbb
TYVRE4oByw_20060813.html?mod=regionallinks

BEIJING -- Foreign investment in China's manufacturing sector has started
to slowly decline after years of strong gains, suggesting the country is
losing some of its luster as a base for inexpensive production.

China has for years been one of the world's biggest recipients of foreign
direct investment, money that has helped turn the country into the
world's factory floor. Yet China's take of direct investment dropped
slightly in 2005, excluding a series of one-time deals in the financial
sector. After a 12% plunge in June, the figure is down a further 0.5% for
the first half of 2006. Given that China's economy is continuing to
expand at a rate of about 10% annually, the size of foreign investment as
a proportion of the whole economy is shrinking even faster.

Total investment coming into the country remains huge -- roughly $60
billion a year -- a testament to how China has been able to diversify its
industrial base and keep attracting new money. But even a flattening in
the trend is striking, given the reputation China has developed as an
irresistible magnet for foreign companies' money.

Many factors are at work. At this point, much of the manufacturing that
can be profitably shifted to China has already moved, while the
lowest-end production is starting to migrate away to less-expensive
locations. And while multinationals' interest in China is broader than
just export-driven manufacturing, the difficulty of buying domestic
companies and the limits on foreign participation in service businesses
are keeping those channels from becoming big new drivers of investment.

"China should think about how the country is going to position itself for
the next 10 years," says Xiang Bing, dean of the Cheung Kong Graduate
School of Business. "Multinational corporations won't put all their eggs
in one basket. There are incentives for diversification."

Government officials say they aren't worried by a modest drop in
investment, but acknowledge that some foreign companies are starting to
look elsewhere as wages and land prices have risen. "It is possible that
the costs for some foreign investors have increased," says Zheng
Jingping, spokesman for the National Bureau of Statistics. "Other
countries are also stepping up their efforts to attract foreign
investment."

Foreign investment in Southeast Asian nations such as Malaysia and
Indonesia is starting to pick up after languishing for years in the wake
of the regional financial crisis of 1997-98. Even once-closed Vietnam has
become a new hot spot for manufacturing, as it can offer even
less-expensive conditions than China.

No one is predicting an exodus from China, as the country's huge domestic
market and high-quality infrastructure continue to attract many
businesses. But some entrepreneurs, like Wang Lih-hwa of Taiwan, have
begun shifting operations abroad in search of more competitive prices.
Ms. Wang and her husband, who run a food-ingredients business, opened a
factory in the southern province of Guangdong in 1995.

At the time, the move helped them cut production costs by 50% from the
level in Taiwan. But steadily rising wages have since eroded that
advantage. So in 2004, she and her husband opened a factory in Vietnam,
and it now accounts for 60% of the company's output. Ms. Wang expects
average costs in their Vietnam operation this year to be at least 35%
lower than in China, thanks chiefly to inexpensive labor and rent. "It
was time for us to consider a new spot outside China to protect our
company and maintain our slender profits," Ms. Wang says.

Taiwanese companies, which were among the first to recognize and exploit
the mainland's advantages in low-cost manufacturing, are now putting much
of their new investment in other Asian countries. Thanks to big projects
from the likes of petrochemical company Formosa Plastics Group and
contract shoemaker Yue Yuen Industrial (Holdings) Ltd., the Taiwanese are
now the biggest foreign investors in Vietnam.

In a way, China has become a victim of its own success. So much of the
Asian electronics industry has already relocated to China that there is
little left to move. And for other big investors, there are limits to how
much more they can realistically put in.

Total investment from Japan, South Korea and the island of Taiwan -- a
group that has collectively been a bigger investor in China than either
the U.S. or the European Union -- dropped 6.5% in 2005 and has plunged
31% in the first half of this year. Foreign direct investment into China
from the U.S. has fallen every year since 2003, according to Chinese
statistics. (Figures for foreign direct investment measure money that
goes into building or buying businesses, not purchasing stocks or bonds.)

At this point, many Japanese companies have "more or less completed"
their major manufacturing investments in China, says Tomoharu Washio, a
Tokyo-based researcher at the Japan External Trade Organization. For
instance, Honda Motor Co. in 2004 started investing to double its
car-making capacity in China, but plans to complete the program this
year. With the Japanese economy reviving, many companies are now focusing
on adding to higher-end production capacity in their home market, Mr.
Washio says.

Yet, stagnation or a small decline in foreign direct investment isn't
necessarily bad news for China. At a time when the biggest worry is that
the economy could be growing too fast and authorities are trying to slow
down domestic investment, a reduction in foreign inflows is probably
welcome. Less foreign investment could also trim the external imbalances
that created pressure on China to push up the value of its currency, the
yuan.

It wouldn't be hard for the government to attract even more foreign
investment -- if its leaders really wanted to. A hint of investors'
appetite for China was given by the recent sale of stakes in the major
state-owned banks to overseas institutions, a program that drew an
additional $12.1 billion in direct investment in 2005. But those landmark
deals are unlikely to be repeated, and authorities are keeping limits on
foreign investment in other key service sectors and have shown reluctance
to approve some major acquisitions.

Optimists see in all this a welcome stimulus for Chinese companies to
move out of low-cost production. "You don't want to be a place that can
only attract low-end industries," says Nicholas Kwan, an economist with
Standard Chartered Bank in Hong Kong. For foreign investment, he says,
"Increasingly, the quality matters more than the quantity."

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without the houses is one popular way of
describing the twisty Hungarian Grand Prix circuit.

Forget glamour and glitz. If some drivers stifle a yawn when they
contemplate a visit to the hot and dusty Hungaroring, it is because of
its reputation as the second slowest track in the championship.

Races can be processional, due to the extreme difficulty in overtaking,
and dull in comparison to others at more flowing circuits.

"Watching paint dry, counting the grains of fluff in your belly
button...filling in your tax return form; all these things can be rather
more exciting than watching the Hungarian Grand Prix," declared a Red
Bull handout on Thursday.

It was not ever thus.

There was a time, 20 years ago, when a visit to the Hungaroring
represented, in the words of the Times newspaper's then Formula One
correspondent, 'motor racing's boldest experiment for many years'.

When the travelling circus arrived in Budapest for the first grand prix
behind the then-Iron Curtain in August 1986, there was a palpable sense
of excitement about the place that seems unthinkable in the current era
with its new races in China, Malaysia and Bahrain.

Hungary, now an EU member state, was then firmly in the embrace of the
old Soviet Union and light years away from the free-spending extravagance
and luxury represented by the high-tech world of Formula One.

Eastern Europe had seen nothing like it.

SMOKE-BELCHING

The governing body put the race day turnout at 200,000 spectators, many
of them stripped down to their underpants in the scorching heat on an
afternoon unlike any other.

"I recall standing on the grid and being aware that there was something
very different, very strange about the scene," Briton Martin Brundle, who
finished sixth for now-defunct Tyrrell, wrote in his book "Working the
Wheel".

"At first I couldn't work out what it was. Then I realised it was the
silence.

"I felt like a gladiator in the ring. All those people were looking on in
almost complete silence, not knowing what was going to happen
next...there were a lot of people present who had never seen a grand prix
live before."

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