Thursday, March 27, 2008

Free Chinese Lesson - Scientists identify new genes linked to diabetes

WORLD / Health

Scientists identify new genes linked to diabetes

(Agencies)
Updated: 2007-04-28 08:43

WASHINGTON: The most thorough probe to date of the genetic underpinnings
of the most common form of diabetes has identified a new batch of genes
that increases risk for a disease affecting 200 million people globally.

The findings by four international teams of researchers, published on
Thursday in the journals Science and Nature Genetics, provided great
insight into the role played by genes in a disease also tremendously
influenced by behavior eating too much and exercising too little.

The scientists hope the findings will help guide the development of new
drugs to treat type 2 diabetes, previously known as adult-onset diabetes,
and genetic tests to determine a person's predisposition for developing
it.

Despite its growing global prevalence, the disease's underlying causes
have been only minimally understood, restricting treatment and prevention
efforts.

The scientists scoured the entire human genome more than 22,000 known
genes of about 50,000 people in several countries with and without the
disease.

They identified at least eight genes that are clear diabetes risk factors
including three previously unknown ones - and several other likely risk
factors that merit further attention. All are common in the general
population.

Michael Boehnke of the University of Michigan, who led one of the teams,
said in a telephone interview: "I think we've made a quantum leap here in
terms of our understanding of the genetic variants that contribute as
risk factors to type 2 diabetes."

In diabetics, one's body fails to produce or properly use insulin, a
hormone necessary to convert sugar, starches and other food into energy.
It is a leading cause of heart disease, strokes, blindness, kidney
failure and amputations.

The role of the three new genes is unclear. Two may be linked to the
development, function and regeneration of certain insulin-producing cells
in the pancreas.

David Altshuler, of the Broad Institute of Harvard University and the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who led another team, said: "The
genes that have been found here are, without exception, totally
surprising."

Lifestyle factors play a major role in diabetes. Its rising prevalence
tracks an increase in obesity in many parts of the world.

Top World News 

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� China to act on pollution, warming gases

� Yang a popular choice as FM

� Hu, Lien stress cross-Straits peace

� US captures senior Al-Qaida operative

� Yang Jiechi named new FM, replacing Li Zhaoxing

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Chinese School - Virginia Tech reignites battle over gun laws

WORLD / US Gun Policy

Virginia Tech reignites battle over gun laws

(China Daily)
Updated: 2007-04-23 06:54

The guns were sold in Virginia, the lives taken violently just a few
miles away. It is the guns bought there and used for crimes elsewhere
that have long had mayors around the United States angry.

With a credit card and a lie, Cho Seung-Hui was able to walk out of a
pawnshop and a gun store with the handguns he later used to slaughter 32,
and then kill himself. The state's background check failed to turn up his
history of mental illness in each of the two sales.

Sugiarti, stepmother of Partahi Mamora Halomoan Lumbantoruan, an
Indonesian doctorate student who was among the 32 people gunned down in
Virginia Tech University massacre, breaks down as she holds Mamora's bag
in front of his coffin as his father Tohom Lumbantoruan shakes hands with
an official (not in the photograph) in Jakarta yesterday. AFP

Other guns sold in Virginia have surfaced in significant numbers of
crimes in New York and throughout the Northeast corridor - Washington,
Philadelphia, New York - inspiring Mayor Michael Bloomberg to become a
crusader against gun trafficking.

Virginia is a key source for illegal guns along the East Coast, as well
as a target of gun control activists for lax enforcement of its laws,
though they are not the nation's loosest. Bloomberg has taken on the
issue and built a coalition with more than 200 mayors.

"What happened in Blacksburg was a terrible tragedy - 32 people were
murdered. But if you take a look, 30 people are murdered every single day
in America, it is just spread across 50 states, so it isn't a newsworthy
event," Bloomberg said two days after the shooting, when more city
leaders joined Mayors Against Illegal Guns.

"The Blacksburg tragedy is taking place every single day," Bloomberg said.

The FBI found that 41 people, on average, died in homicides every day in
2005; 28 were slain with guns.

Stopping the flow of guns will be an uphill fight for the mayors. Neither
side in the gun control debate is shifting its position following the
Virginia Tech shootings and Virginia Governor Tim Kaine declared he had
nothing but "loathing" for those who would make the tragedy a "political
hobby horse to ride".

Still, the statistics put Virginia squarely in the midst of the argument.
Data once collected by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF)
tracked the source of guns used in crimes that were collected by city
police across the country.

In New York, four out of five guns came from out of state. The single
largest source of those out-of-state guns? Virginia (with Florida, North
Carolina and Georgia right behind).

The statistics run up the East Coast. In the District of Columbia,
Maryland and Virginia together supplied more than half the guns found. In
Camden, New Jersey, a poor city over the Delaware River from
Philadelphia, Virginia was the source of one out of six guns. Virginia
was the biggest out-of-state source in Philadelphia and Baltimore.

Each region of the country has its own sources of guns. Chicago drew many
from nearby Indiana, but also from the deep South; most Miami guns came
from Florida, but its out-of-state sources were Georgia, Texas and
California.

"They're going from low-regulation places towards high-regulation
places," said Daniel Webster, co-director of the Johns Hopkins Center for
Gun Policy and Research, who last year produced a national analysis of
state regulation of firearm dealers.

It's simple supply and demand - guns are easier and cheaper to get with
fewer regulations, so a network springs up in response to the demand for
guns in cities where they are harder to get.

Virginia's gun laws are far from the worst, though they are much less
restrictive than states such as New York or New Jersey.

The Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence ranks Virginia in the
middle-third of the country, chastising it for a loophole that allows
sales without background checks at gun shows, but applauding it for a bar
on bulk purchases that limits buyers to one handgun a month. Only
Maryland and California have a similar law.

And the argument that gun rights advocates often bring up that fewer
crimes would take place if existing laws were simply enforced cannot be
ignored in the Virginia Tech tragedy.

The regulations broke down because Cho's name was never sent to either
state or federal databases as a prohibited buyer, despite a 2005 ruling
by a special justice that found that his mental illness made him a danger
to himself.

That ruling should have prohibited him from buying a gun anywhere in the
country, according to federal rules that followed a 1968 law, according
to the Brady Center. Cho filled out the required forms for each of the
guns he bought, a Walther .22-caliber bought over the Web for $268
(euro197) from a Wisconsin dealer and picked up in February at a pawn
shop in Blacksburg, and a Glock 19 that he purchased in March at a
Roanoke gun shop, with ammunition, for $571 (euro420). To get the guns,
Cho had to say whether he had ever been found "mentally defective".

Another failure in the system is behind the illegal gun trade targeted by
Bloomberg and his fellow mayors. New York Police Department investigators
say it works like this: Unable to buy handguns at home, street criminals
simply look elsewhere. Of the 7,758 illegally owned firearms recovered by
the NYPD between 2004 and 2005, 90 percent originated at out-of-state gun
shops.

Some of those weapons were purchased legally by law-abiding citizens,
then stolen, but police say a larger number were bought by black-market
dealers themselves with the help of middlemen called "straw purchasers."

The traffickers pay friends and acquaintances with clean criminal records
to buy weapons at sporting goods stores and pawn shops in the states
where they live. The buyers then give the weapons to the traffickers, who
smuggle them to their home cities and sell them on the street at many
times the original price.

That is the issue at the center of the mayors' campaign, which aims to
crack down on dealers who knowingly sell to straw purchasers.

But the politics of gun control has left the national discussion dormant.

The Columbine tragedy of April 20, 1999, whose teenage killers Cho
mentioned in his delusional ramblings, did not lead to sweeping
restrictions.

Instead, political strategists widely concluded that Democrat Al Gore's
support for tougher laws lost him critical votes in his razor-thin loss
to George W. Bush in 2000.

And now, letters-to-the-editor and websites, while rife with dismay over
the glorification of and easy access to guns in our country, also feature
the counter-argument that if guns had been allowed on campus, someone
with a weapon may have been able to stop the killing.

Mayors say the political inaction has left their cities vulnerable.

Gun politics has blocked city officials from using the gun tracing data
collected by the ATF - the latest available is from 2000. Bloomberg's
group has launched a campaign to pressure Congress to change the law and
make current data available, while New York City has sued more than two
dozen gun dealers, including several in Virginia, for selling weapons
illegally.

"The fact is, crime is on the rise throughout our nation, and murder
rates are going up in far too many towns," Bloomberg said. "This
tragedy... is a terrible reminder of what can happen when guns wind up in
the wrong hands."

Killer, Page 6

Agencies

(China Daily 04/23/2007 page5)

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Chinese School - US media blanketing shooting story

WORLD / Reactions

US media blanketing shooting story

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-18 10:43

NEW YORK - Television offered a sounding board Tuesday as people
struggled to make sense - if they ever could - of why a gunman killed 32
people at Virginia Tech.

The major networks broke from regular programming to cover an on-campus
memorial service with President Bush, only hours after the shooter had
been identified and before all the identities of his victims were
publicly known.

Even though cable news networks provided continuous coverage, the pace
was slower than Monday, when the horror unfolding was fresh. CNN was even
reduced to interviewing the man who delivered mail to suspect Cho
Seung-Hui.

ABC, CBS and NBC focused on trying to piece together the mystery of a
suspect who left few tracks.

"He didn't have any friends," said CBS News' Bob Orr. "He didn't have any
criminal record. We don't have any idea why he did this."

Network anchors Katie Couric, Charles Gibson and Brian Williams all did
expanded hour-long newscasts from the campus in Blacksburg, Va.

It was the second day for Couric and Williams, first for Gibson. ABC
chose to have Gibson anchor "World News" from New York as the story broke
Monday.

Each of the anchors was granted interviews with President Bush, who
delivered condolences with a somber voice and furrowed brow.

Bush's presence in Virginia was criticized earlier in the day by Rosie
O'Donnell on ABC's "The View," who contrasted his actions following
Hurricane Katrina.

"It was interesting to note that President Bush was flying to Virginia
Tech today and took him a week to get to ... Katrina to visit the
victims," she said. "You can't pretend that it's the same. How many
people died in Katrina?"

NBC's Williams said Bush has been effective as a mourner-in-chief. "He is
quite good at it, quite soothing at it," he said.

The convocation Tuesday, with political and religious speeches and "Let's
go, Hokies" cheers, showed a community in the first stages of dealing
with the tragedy. The anchors showed it with little comment.

"This is, I suggest, the beginning of a long process of memorializing and
internalizing what happened here," Gibson said.

A technical glitch on "Dateline NBC" Monday night briefly made it appear
that a medical technician being interviewed by Williams was in the
cross-hairs of a gun. The lines, normally seen by camera operators trying
to center their pictures, usually don't appear on the screen but briefly
did in this case until corrected - an embarrassment given the nature of
the story.

A spokeswoman said NBC received no complaints.

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Chinese School - US, S.Korea press N.Korea on nuke issue

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

US, S.Korea press N.Korea on nuke issue

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-12 16:58

SEOUL, South Korea - The US and South Korea urged North Korea to move
toward dismantling its nuclear weapons programs now that its frozen bank
accounts have been freed, pressing the North to meet a Saturday deadline
to shut down its nuclear reactor.

North Korean soldiers look at the south side as a South Korean soldier
(L) stands guard at the truce village of Panmunjom, 04 April 2007, in the
demilitarized zone dividing South and North Korea. [AP]

"We certainly have confirmed that the bank accounts are open. So we have
truly fulfilled our role in this and now it's up to" North Korea, US
Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill said in Seoul.

Hill said he had yet to hear a response from North Korea to the release
of $25 million held in a Macau bank. Macau authorities said earlier this
week the money is available for account holders to access, but it
remained unclear when North Korea might do so.

"This is about (North Korea's) willingness with respect to
denuclearization," Hill said.

Although time is running short before a Saturday deadline set in a
February agreement in which North Korea pledged to take initial steps to
disarm, Hill maintained it was "possible to get going on this process in
the next two days."

South Korean nuclear envoy Chun Young-woo called for patience Thursday
and said other countries should wait "another few days" until North Korea
responds, noting it typically does not respond quickly.

Meanwhile, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson met South Korean President Roh
Moo-hyun on Thursday to share the results of his trip to North Korea
earlier this week.

During the meeting, Roh "assessed that the US is showing strong will to
resolve the North Korea nuclear issue" through six-nation disarmament
talks, Roh's office said in a statement.

Richardson, a Democratic presidential candidate, returned Wednesday from
a four-day mission to North Korea to bring back six sets of remains
believed to be of American soldiers from the Korean War. His delegation
included the top White House adviser on Korea, Victor Cha.

On Wednesday, Richardson said North Korea had pledged to welcome UN
nuclear inspectors within a day of receiving its funds, but had wanted to
extend a Saturday deadline for shutting down its main nuclear reactor by
30 days - which the US delegation rejected.

Cha told reporters Thursday that any extension of the deadline would have
to be agreed upon by all countries in the six-nation arms talks: China,
Japan, Russia, the United States and the two Koreas.

Diplomacy has intensified ahead of the Saturday deadline for the reactor
shutdown, which would be the first move by North Korea to scale back its
nuclear development since the current nuclear standoff began in late 2002
and it expelled UN inspectors. The move came after the US accused North
Korea of embarking on a secret uranium enrichment program in violation of
a 1994 deal to stop making nuclear weapons.

Hill said Thursday he would fly to Beijing on Friday to meet Chinese
officials and also would be willing to see chief North Korean nuclear
envoy Kim Kye Gwan there, but no plans have been set.

The financial issue has been an obstacle to the nuclear talks, leading
North Korea to boycott the negotiations for more than a year during which
it exploded its first nuclear device in October. The US blacklisted
Macau's Banco Delta Asia in 2005 for alleged complicity in counterfeiting
and money laundering by North Korea. BDA has denied any wrongdoing.

The North later agreed to return to negotiations and pledged in February
to shut down its main nuclear reactor by a Saturday deadline in exchange
for a US promise to resolve the financial standoff. North Korea also is
to receive energy aid and political concessions for eventually
dismantling its nuclear programs.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Wednesday
the United States had "gone the extra mile" to resolve the bank issue. He
repeated the United States' expectation that North Korea will meet the
shutdown deadline, and refused to speculate on consequences for the North
if it fails to do so.

"We'll see where we are on Saturday," McCormack said.

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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Free Chinese Lesson - Iran sees positive signs in UK stance

WORLD / Middle East

Iran sees positive signs in UK stance

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-02 19:14

TEHRAN, Iran - Iran's state-run radio on Monday cited what it called
"positive changes" in Britain's negotiating stance and said because of
those, television stations would not broadcast additional videos of
British sailors' confessions.

Image from Iran's official Arabic-language television channel aired
Sunday April 1 2007 of short video clips of what it said were two of 15
captured British sailors who in the footage pointed to a map of the
Persian Gulf. [AP]

The state-run radio did not detail what it meant by positive changes, nor
quote any officials by name. A state-run TV station had said earlier
Monday that all 15 British sailors and marines held captive by the
country had confessed to illegally entering Iranian waters.

Special coverage:
British Sailors Detained 
Related readings:
All UK captives say entered illegally
UK denounces video of seized sailors
Protest in Iran targets British Embassy
Britain studying Iran standoff options
Bush to Iran: 'Give back the hostages'

Iran airs second British's apology UN urges resolution of Iran seizure
UK turns up heat on Iran over sailors
Iran TV shows footage of UK sailors
Brit presses Iran; woman may be freed
Blair warns Iran standoff could escalate
Iran: Sailors being treated humanely

The 15 Britons were detained by Iranian naval units on March 23 while
patrolling for smugglers as part of a UN-mandated force monitoring the
Persian Gulf. They were seized by Iranian naval units near the mouth of
the Shatt al-Arab, a waterway that has long been a disputed dividing line
between Iraq and Iran.

Iran has repeatedly said it was trying to determine the intent of the
British personnel before deciding what to do with them, and has demanded
an apology from Britain as a condition for their release.

Britain contends the sailors were in Iraqi waters and has said it would
not apologize.

The Iran Broadcasting Company said Monday the 15 alleged confessions
would not be broadcast on Iranian news stations, however, due to what it
called a change in the British government's negotiating policies. The
state-run agency did not provide any further details as to what it meant
by that.

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Chinese Mandarin - British sailors seen on Iranian television

WORLD / Photo

British sailors seen on Iranian television

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-03-29 09:42

Faye Turney, the only woman crew member of the 15 British sailors and
marines detained at sea last week, speaks during an interview on Iranian
television March 28, 2007. Iranian television on Wednesday displayed some
of 15 British sailors and marines detained at sea last week and showed
the only woman crew member saying they had "trespassed" into Iranian
waters. Image taken March 28, 2007. [Reuters]

1 2 3 

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Chinese School - Abe apologises for WW2 sex slaves

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

Abe apologises for WW2 sex slaves

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-03-26 15:21

Former South Korean comfort women, who were forced to become sex slaves
by Japanese soldiers during World War II, chant anti-Japanese slogans at
a protest in front of the Japanese embassy in Seoul March 7, 2007.
[Reuters]

TOKYO - Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, under fire abroad for denying
government involvement in forcing women to serve as wartime sex slaves,
said on Monday he was "apologising here and now as the prime minister".

Related readings:
  Tokyo responsible for WWII sex slaves
  Abe tries to limit sex slave fallout
  Former S.Korean comfort women protest
  Japan's Abe will stand by sex slaves apology
  Japan condemned over sex slaves verdict
  Japan court rules against 'sex slaves'

Abe said earlier this month there was no proof Japan's government or army
kidnapped women to work as "comfort women", as the wartime sex slaves are
known in Japan.

He has also said he stood by a 1993 apology known as the Kono Statement
that acknowledged official involvement in the brothels. But he has said
there would be no new apology even if U.S. lawmakers adopted a resolution
seeking one.

"I am apologising here and now as the prime minister, and it is as stated
in the Kono Statement," Abe told a parliamentary committee in response to
a question by an opposition lawmaker.

"As I frequently say, I feel sympathy for the people who underwent
hardships, and I apologise for the fact that they were placed in this
situation at the time," Abe told the committee.

The prime minister's earlier comments denying official involvement in
kidnapping women, mostly Asian, to work in the wartime brothels have
angered Seoul and risked straining ties with Washington, where U.S.
Congressman Michael Honda has introduced a resolution calling for Japan
to make an unambiguous apology for the suffering of the sex slaves.

No vote on the resolution, which Abe has criticised as full of errors, is
expected until May, after Abe visits Washington for talks with U.S.
President George W. Bush.

The Asian Women's Fund, set up in 1995 and partly funded by the Japanese
government, has provided the "comfort women" with 2 million yen ($17,000)
each in compensation and medical support, along with a letter of apology
signed by previous prime ministers.

But many of the women have refused to accept the money, saying the
Japanese government itself should provide the compensation in recognition
of its responsibility.

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Chinese language - Bush warns Dems to take offer in firings

WORLD / America

Bush warns Dems to take offer in firings

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-21 07:28

U.S. President George W. Bush speaks about the firing of U.S. Attorneys
and allowing Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove and former White House
counsel Harriet Miers to be interviewed by Congressional judiciary
committee members while in the Diplomatic Room of the White House in
Washington, March 20, 2007. [Reuters]

WASHINGTON - A defiant US President Bush warned Democrats Tuesday to
accept his offer to have top aides testify about the firings of federal
prosecutors only privately and not under oath or risk a constitutional
showdown from which he would not back down.

Democrats' response to his proposal was swift and firm: They said they
would start authorizing subpoenas as soon as Wednesday for the White
House aides.

"Testimony should be on the record and under oath. That's the formula for
true accountability," said Patrick Leahy, chairman of the Senate
Judiciary Committee.

Bush, in a late-afternoon statement at the White House, said, "We will
not go along with a partisan fishing expedition aimed at honorable public
servants. ... I have proposed a reasonable way to avoid an impasse."

He added that federal prosecutors work for him and it is natural to
consider replacing them. "There is no indication that anybody did
anything improper," the president said.

Bush gave his embattled attorney general, Alberto Gonzales, a boost
during an early morning call and ended the day with a public statement
repeating it. "He's got support with me," Bush said.

The Senate, meanwhile, voted to strip Gonzales of his authority to fill
U.S. attorney vacancies without Senate confirmation. Democrats contend
the Justice Department and White House purged eight federal prosecutors,
some of whom were leading political corruption investigations, after a
change in the Patriot Act gave Gonzales the new authority.

Several Democrats, including presidential hopefuls Hillary Rodham
Clinton, Barrack Obama, Joe Biden and John Edwards, have called for
Gonzales' ouster or resignation. So have a handful of Republican
lawmakers.

"What happened in this case sends a signal really through intimidation by
purge: 'Don't quarrel with us any longer,'" said Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse,
D-R.I., a former U.S. attorney who spent much of Monday evening paging
through 3,000 documents released by the Justice Department.

Bush said his White House counsel, Fred Fielding, told lawmakers they
could interview presidential counselor Karl Rove, former White House
Counsel Harriet Miers and their deputies �� but only on the president's
terms: in private, "without the need for an oath" and without a
transcript.

The president cast the offer as virtually unprecedented and a reasonable
way for Congress to get all the information it needs about the matter.

"If the Democrats truly do want to move forward and find the right
information, they ought to accept what I proposed," Bush said. "If
scoring political points is the desire, then the rejection of this
reasonable proposal will really be evident for the American people to
see."

Bush said he would aggressively fight in court any attempt to subpoena
White House aides.

"If the staff of a president operated in constant fear of being hauled
before various committees to discuss internal deliberations, the
president would not receive candid advice and the American people would
be ill-served," he said. "I'm sorry the situation has gotten to where
it's got, but that's Washington, D.C., for you. You know there's a lot of
politics in this town."

Sen. Chuck Schumer, who is leading the Senate probe into the firings,
spoke dismissively of the deal offered by the White House:

"It's sort of giving us the opportunity to talk to them, but not giving
us the opportunity to get to the bottom of what really happened here."

Even without oaths, Bush aides would be legally required to tell the
truth to Congress. But without a transcript of their comments, "it would
be almost meaningless to say that they would be under some kind of legal
sanction," Schumer complained.

Fielding's meeting on Capitol Hill came a few hours after Bush spoke with
Gonzales in an early morning phone call �� their first conversation since
the president had acknowledged mistakes by his longtime friend and
lawmakers of both parties had called for Gonzales' ouster.

The White House offered to arrange interviews with Rove, Miers, deputy
White House counsel William Kelley and J. Scott Jennings, a deputy to
White House political director Sara Taylor, who works for Rove.

"Such interviews would be private and conducted without the need for an
oath, transcript, subsequent testimony or the subsequent issuance of
subpoenas," Fielding said in a letter to the Senate and House Judiciary
committees and their ranking Republicans.

He said documents released by the Justice Department "do not reflect that
any U.S. attorney was replaced to interfere with a pending or future
criminal investigation or for any other improper reason."

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� Measure adopted to cool stock market

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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Chinese School - Day after fainting, elder Bush on stage

WORLD / America

Day after fainting, elder Bush on stage

(Agencies)
Updated: 2007-03-13 13:15

Los Angeles - Former US President George H.W. Bush was in good spirits as
he gave a speech Monday night, a day after being overcome by the
sweltering desert heat and staying overnight at a Southern California
hospital.

Bush walked with a cane onstage at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion and
joked with the crowd before beginning his lecture on values. He recalled
feeling tired while playing golf with some friends Sunday afternoon.

"The next thing I know, I fainted," Bush said, adding he wasn't happy
with what happened next.

"The ugliest part of what happened was that my (male) friend ... gave me
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation," Bush said with a smile.

The crowd roared with laughter, prompting the 82-year-old to add "there
were six beautiful girls there."

Bush and former first lady Barbara Bush were in Southern California
visiting Lee Annenberg, widow of late Ambassador Walter Annenberg, when
he became dizzy and dehydrated during the afternoon golf game.

He stayed overnight at Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage and was
released early Monday.

"He's fine, he really is fine," Bush's chief of staff Jean Becker said,
adding the temperature outside was 94 degrees. "He became dehydrated, and
he had a fainting spell. He came to right away, but as a precaution, they
took him to the hospital and then, much to his dismay, as a precaution,
they held him overnight."

Bush was expected to return to Houston after Monday's speech.

President Bush was informed of his father's condition Sunday night,
before leaving Bogota, Colombia, for Guatemala City as part of a Latin
America trip. He talked to his father by phone from Air Force One.

"His father assured him he was OK," presidential spokesman Tony Snow said
Monday.

Golfing in the Coachella Valley heat felled another former president in
2003. Gerald R. Ford was 89 years old when he became dizzy during a round
of golf in 96-degree weather and he was taken to Eisenhower for
examination.

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Today's Top News 

� China's inflation hit 2.7% in February

� Promise of clean air during Olympics

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� China calls for patience as Feb trade surplus soars

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Chinese language - Iraq VP narrowly escapes assassination

WORLD / Middle East

Iraq VP narrowly escapes assassination

(Agencies)
Updated: 2007-02-27 08:36

An employee of an Iraqi ministry receives treatment at Yarmouk hospital
after he was wounded in a bomb attack in Baghdad February 26, 2007. A
blast at an Iraqi ministry building killed six people and slightly
wounded Vice President Adel Abdul-Mahdi during a ceremony on Monday.
[Reuters]

Baghdad - Iraq's Shiite vice president narrowly escaped assassination
Monday as a blast ripped through a government meeting hall just hours
after it was searched by US teams with bomb-sniffing dogs. At least 10
people were killed.

Adel Abdul-Mahdi was slightly wounded in the explosion, which splintered
chairs, destroyed a speakers' podium and sent a chilling message that
suspected Sunni militants can strike anywhere despite a major security
crackdown across Baghdad.

Related fullcoverage:
Saddam Hussein Hanged 

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Suicide car bomber kills 8 in Iraq

As US forces sealed off the area around the municipal building,
investigators grappled with the troubling question of how the bomb was
smuggled into the ministry of public works -- a seven-story structure
with crack surveillance systems from its days as offices for Saddam
Hussein's feared intelligence service.

The bomb, possibly hidden in the podium, went off moments after the
minister for public works finished a speech in the third-floor chamber,
witnesses said. Abdul-Mahdi had made a welcoming address a few minutes
earlier, raising speculation the bomb could have been on a timer-trigger
that missed the vice president by sheer luck.

Among those killed were several ministry employees, police said. More
than 25 were wounded, including the public works minister, Riyad Gharib.

Abdul-Mahdi, smothered by his bodyguards in an instant, suffered minor
leg injuries and was hospitalized for tests, his office said. He was
later released.

"I heard a big explosion," said Tagrid Ali, a public works ministry
employee who attended the gathering to honor outstanding workers. "I fell
to the ground, and the whole place was filled with black smoke."

Suspicion for the attack fell on Sunni insurgents, who have waged nonstop
bombings and attacks against Iraq's majority Shiites for cooperating with
the US-backed government.

Adbul-Mahdi is one of two vice presidents. The other, Tariq al-Hashemi,
is Sunni.

An Associated Press photographer witnessed security forces hustling a man
from the building, but there were no immediate reports of any arrests.

"The aggression against you this day is further proof that these groups
are doing their best to destroy Iraq's unity," said a message to the vice
president from Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, who heads the country's largest
Shiite political group.

Even as Iraqis learned of the attack, word was coming from neighboring
Jordan that their president, Jalal Talabani, was facing more medical
tests.

Talabani, from Iraq's Kurdish north, was taken to Amman after falling
unconscious Sunday. His son, Qubad Talabani, said the 73-year-old leader
was "up and about" and blamed the episode on fatigue and exhaustion.

"He'll be back in Baghdad soon," added Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari.

But his private physician, Dr. Yedkar Hikmat, would give no timetable on
his discharge, saying only that rumors Talabani had heart problems were
"categorically wrong."

The bombing of the municipal building was another blow to claims by US
and Iraqi forces that a nearly 2-week-old security sweep across Baghdad
is making headway. On Sunday, more than 40 people were killed in a
suicide blast at a mostly Shiite college.

Criticism of the security plan is getting louder.

Al-Hashemi, the Sunni vice president, said the security plan does not
treat all groups equally, an apparent reference to Sunni complaints that
they are facing the most pressure and attention.

"Up to now, legal procedures have not been observed," he said in an
interview. "The human rights of Iraqis have not been respected as they
should be."

Al-Hashemi also said he warned US officials during a visit to Washington
in December that sectarian rivalry had paralyzed the unity government and
the White House must study alternatives if its current security strategy
fails.

"I was very frank with the American administration. I encouraged them to
think seriously about `Plan B,'" he said. "What sort of alternative do we
have in the future in case the current security plan fails?"

In Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, a suicide bomber driving a stolen
ambulance packed with explosives struck outside a police station, killing
at least 14 people and wounding 10, police said.

In Baghdad, al-Maliki's Cabinet signed off on a proposed new oil law that
would divide revenues among all Iraqi factions. It now moves to the
Shiite-dominated parliament for a final vote.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has stressed the importance of making
rapid progress on the oil law as a way to strengthen unity in the deeply
fractured nation and encourage foreign investment in one of OPEC's former
heavyweights.

Iraq's Appeals Council, meanwhile, agreed to review the case of Saddam
Hussein's deputy, Taha Yassin Ramadan, who was sentenced to death by
hanging Feb. 12 for his role in the massacre of Shiite civilians in 1982
following an assassination attempt against the former Iraqi leader.

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Learn mandarin - Model, billionaire's widow Anna Nicole Smith dies at 39

Learn Chinese - China wins women's 4x6km biathlon relay

Sports / Team China

China wins women's 4x6km biathlon relay

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-02-02 13:48

China's Dong Xue, Liu Xianying, Kong Yingchao and Yin Qiao (from left to
right) pose with a national flag after they won the gold of women's 4x6km
biathlon relay at the 6th Winter Asian Games February 2, 2007. The
Chinese squad clocked 1:29:03.1. [Xinhua]

1 2 

Top Sports News 

� China speed up gold rush at Winter Asiad

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� Chinese skiers race to fame under foreign coaches

� China extends Winter Asiad dominance

Today's Top News 

� PLA 'not involved in arms race', poses no threat

� New firm to tap forex reserves

� Iran vows to push nuke program

� Wealth gap continues to rise: Report

� Chinese President starts visit to Liberia

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Monday, March 24, 2008

Learn Chinese - Venues

Sports / Game Info

Venues

(CAWGOC)
Updated: 2007-01-25 14:14

Changchun Wuhuan Gymnasium
--Venue for the opening and closing ceremony,short-track and figure
skating competition

The construction of Changchun Wuhuan Gymnasium was completed in July
1998. The construction area is 31,000 square meters with 11,428 seating
capacity.

Jilin Provincial Speed Skating Rink
--Venue for speed skating competition

Jilin Provincial Speed Skating Rink, functioned as the Asian Winter Games
speed skating competition venue, is one of the largest speed skating rink
of China. The seating capacity is 2000.

1 2 3 4 

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� Ronaldo negotiations proceeding well

Today's Top News 

� Young officials rapidly climb succession ladder

� China's GDP grows 10.7% in 2006

� Hu: Nurture a healthy online culture

� Former drug head faces graft probe

� China set to curb foreign waste imports

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Learn Chinese online - Sunnis blast hanging of Saddam aides

WORLD / Middle East

Sunnis blast hanging of Saddam aides

(AP)
Updated: 2007-01-16 08:57

People pray beside the coffins of Barzan Ibrahim, Saddam's half brother
and former intelligence chief, and Awad Hamed al-Bandar, former head of
Iraq's Revolutionary Court who were executed at dawn Monday in Baghdad,
in the town of Ouja, 115 kilometers (70 miles) north of Baghdad, Iraq,
Monday Jan. 15, 2007. [AP]

BAGHDAD, Iraq - The Iraqi government's attempt Monday to close a chapter
on Saddam Hussein's repressive regime - by hanging two of his henchmen -
only appeared to anger many of Saddam's fellow Sunni Muslims after the
former leader's half brother was decapitated on the gallows.

A thickset Barzan Ibrahim plunged through the trap door and was beheaded
by the jerk of the thick beige rope at the end of his fall, in the same
the execution chamber where Saddam was hanged a little over two weeks
earlier.

Special coverage: Saddam Hussein Hanged  

Related readings:
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SaddamSaddam buried in Iraq hometown
Saddam had feisty exchange at gallows Saddam compliant, calm in final
momentsTV footage shows Saddam's body

A government video of the hanging, played at a briefing for reporters,
showed Ibrahim's body passing the camera in a blur. The body came to rest
on its chest while the severed head lay a few yards away, still wearing
the black hood pulled on moments before by one of Ibrahim's five masked
executioners.

The decapitation appeared inadvertent, and Iraqi officials seemed anxious
to prove they hadn't mutilated Ibrahim's remains.

The hangings came as a suicide car bomber slammed into an Iraqi army
patrol in the northern city of Mosul Monday, killing seven people and
wounding 40 others, police said. A total of at least 55 people were
killed or found dead across Iraq, authorities said.

The US military, meanwhile, announced the deaths of two more soldiers,
both killed in Baghdad.

While Ibrahim's body was wrenched apart by the execution, his
co-defendant, Awad Hamed al-Bandar, head of Saddam's Revolutionary court,
died as expected - swinging at the end of a rope. Both men met death at 3
a.m. wearing reddish orange prison jumpsuits.

Prosecutor Jaafar al-Moussawi, who witnessed the hangings, said Ibrahim
looked tense and protested his innocence as he was brought into the
chamber. The condemned man had once ran Saddam's feared security agency,
the Mukhabarat.

"I did not do anything," al-Moussawi quoted Ibrahim as saying. "It was
all the work of Fadel al-Barrak." Al-Barrak ran two intelligence
departments in Saddam's feared Mukhabarat.

Saddam was hanged amid shouted taunts and insults from Shiite witnesses -
a scene Iraqi officials said was not repeated Monday.

All three executions took place in Saddam-era military intelligence
headquarters, located in the north Baghdad neighborhood of Kazimiyah, a
Shiite area.

By day's end at least 3,000 angry Sunnis, many firing guns in the air,
others weeping or cursing the government, assembled for the burials of
Ibrahim and al-Bandar in Saddam's hometown of Ouja, near Tikrit, 80 miles
north of Baghdad.

"Where are those who cry out in demands for human rights?" Marwan
Mohammed, one of the mourners, asked in grief and frustration. "Where are
the U.N. and the world's human rights organizations? Barzan had cancer.
They treated him only to keep him alive long enough to kill him. We vow
to take revenge, even if it takes years."

Ibrahim's son-in-law, Azzam Saleh Abdullah, said "we heard the news from
the media. We were supposed to be informed a day earlier, but it seems
that this government does not know the rules."

The execution, he said, reflected what he called the Shiite-led
government hatred for Sunnis. "They still want more Iraqi bloodshed," he
said. "To hell with this democracy."

The executed men, at their request, were buried in a garden outside a
building Saddam had built for religious events. Saddam was buried there
on New Year's eve in a grave chipped out of an interior floor.

Ouja, just outside Tikrit - about a 90-minute drive north of Baghdad on
the Tigris River - is near the scene of Saddam's capture by American
soldiers in December 2003.

Saddam was discovered hiding in a small underground bunker nine months
after he fled the US-led invasion that toppled his regime.

Saddam, Ibrahim and al-Bandar were all handed the death sentence after
their conviction for crimes against humanity, in connection with the
killings of 148 Shiites in Dujail, north of Baghdad, in 1982 - following
a failed assassination attempt there against Saddam.

Saddam was executed last month, four days after an Iraqi appeals court
upheld the verdicts in the Dujail case. Reportedly, the court was under
pressure from Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who wanted Saddam hanged
before the end of 2006.

Iraqi Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi said Monday he should have been
consulted before the executions were staged, because he and the two other
members of Iraq's presidential council - President Jalal Talabani and
Vice President Adil Abdul-Mahdi - had asked for the hangings to be
delayed.

The execution video was shown to reporters Monday in an apparent attempt
to prove that Ibrahim's corpse was not intentionally mutilated after
death.

Video of Saddam's execution was broadcast worldwide. But Ali al-Dabbagh,
the government spokesman, said there would be no similar public
distribution of the video of Monday's hangings.

"We will not release the video, but we want to show the truth," he said.
"The Iraqi government acted in a neutral way."

Monday's video was shown to reporters without sound - as was the official
video of Saddam's execution in December. But al-Dabbagh said no taunts
greeted Saddam's co-defendants.

"No one shouted slogans or said anything that would taint the execution,"
he said. "None of those charged were insulted."

The official video of Saddam's hanging was quickly pushed aside by a
second one taken with a cell phone camera by a witnesses and leaked to
the media. It showed the gallows floor opening, Saddam falling and
swinging dead at the end of the rope.

Some of those in attendance could be heard taunting the former Sunni
strongman with shouts of "Muqtada, Muqtada," an apparent reference to
Muqtada al-Sadr, a radical Shiite cleric.

Al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia is believed responsible for the deaths of
thousands of Sunnis in the past year.

The unruly scene at Saddam's hanging drew worldwide protest and calls for
Ibrahim and al-Bandar to be spared.

On Monday, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Saddam's execution
was mishandled and said she hoped that those who made cell phone videos
of Saddam's execution would be punished.

"We were disappointed there was not greater dignity given to the accused
under these circumstances," Rice said during a news conference with her
Egyptian counterpart in Luxor, Egypt.

A spokeswoman for UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Monday he
"regrets that despite pleas from both himself and the high commissioner
for human rights to spare the lives of the two defendants, they were both
executed."

After Saddam's execution, Human Rights Watch released a report calling
the speedy trial and subsequent hanging of Saddam proof of the new Iraqi
government's disregard for human rights.

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Today's Top News 

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Free Chinese Lesson - Chinese fruit may spur EU battle

WORLD / Wall Street Journal Exclusive

Chinese fruit may spur EU battle

(WSJ)
Updated: 2006-12-26 13:03

http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB116673371753457062-SWTWYNnaJEVbVEFZj
bAyW_b_Cks_20070101.html?mod=regionallinks

BAODING, China -- European fruit and vegetable farmers, already the
beneficiaries of heavy subsidies, are looking ahead to a crop-by-crop
battle for even more protection from Chinese competition.

But as the fate of Polish strawberry growers shows, trade barriers may do
little to stop Chinese industrial farms like Binghua Food Co from gaining
ground in the European market.

Stung by low-cost competition from China, Poland's strawberry producers
filed a complaint with the European Union last year, leading to the EU's
first agricultural import duty, a punitive tariff levied in October of
34.2% on imports of frozen strawberries from China.

Trade officials must decide by April whether to make the tariff
permanent, in a dispute that shows how Europe can be economically
vulnerable even in some of its most protected sectors.

Poland's strawberry growers aren't alone. EU trade officials, under
pressure from Spanish farmers, set quotas in 2004 on Chinese mandarins
and other Chinese citrus fruits. In Brussels, lobbyists representing
industries such as Spanish furniture makers and Belgian apple farmers
could pursue dumping complaints against the Chinese. The EU recently
imposed antidumping duties on Chinese and Vietnamese shoes following
complaints from Italian shoemakers.

An EU investigation into Binghua and other Chinese fruit producers found
they benefited from tax breaks that allowed them to undercut market
prices, in addition to advantages such as inexpensive land and labor. EU
trade officials decided that to turn away the Poles would have sent a
continent-wide signal of surrender to Chinese farmers, said a person
familiar with the matter.

European regulators are torn by two constituencies. While producers fear
Asian competition, thrifty consumers are increasingly hungry for it.
European jam, yogurt and ice-cream producers who need cheap fruit to cut
their costs have lined up to back China.

The EU thinks it has much to gain by striking the right trade balance.
"Agriculture will be an area of tremendous growth," says EU trade
commissioner Peter Mandelson. China can sell bulk products in the EU,
saving EU consumers money, he says, while the EU can cash in on China's
growing middle classes by selling niche products such as wine and cheese.

Chinese farm-export numbers to Europe are small but growing. Chinese
frozen-strawberry exports to the EU rose to $26.4 million last year from
$6.2 million in 2002, an increase in market share to 20% from 3.5%. That
growth came largely at the expense of other imports, and the new
strawberry tariff is likely to help exporters in countries such as
Morocco more than it helps Poland, as Moroccan strawberries won't be
affected by the tariffs.

Chinese agriculture exporters are actively pursuing sales to Europe. At a
trade fair last month in Chengdu, meant to bring together small European
and Chinese companies, agriculture was the most prominent sector
represented -- 195 of the 800 companies present -- ahead of high-tech and
heavy-machinery firms.

And in November, 120 apple vendors crowded the Renaissance Hotel in
Brussels to showcase the attractiveness of Chinese fruit. One room was
piled high with boxes of apples. "We're trying to show we have a special
taste," said Zhou Zhixiao, division chief of the Shaanxi Provincial Fruit
Administrative Bureau. He cut a deal with King Transport, a logistics
company, to stock his apples at a refrigerated warehouse in Belgium.

"We have more and more Chinese customers," said Robert Jacobs, King's
sales-and-marketing manager. Chinese apple exports to the EU have grown
to $46 million in 2005 from $4 million in 2000.

Poland is now the world's third-largest grower of blueberries. It is No.
4 in raspberries and No. 6 in strawberries. Poland joined the EU in 2004
and has an unemployment rate near 15%, and lobbyists pushing for
strawberry tariffs said without them the country stood to lose more than
2,500 jobs.

In Baoding, 80 miles southwest of Beijing, an entrepreneur named Liu
Quanhua founded Binghua Food in 2001 with $62,500 in capital.

Its fruit business took off in 2004, when Binghua hired Chen Guofan, a
35-year-old with a degree in international trade. Surfing the Web, Ms.
Chen found Materne Confilux SA, a family-owned Belgian company that turns
out 100 million euros ($131.7 million) worth of jam and other fruit
products a year. Materne ordered 360 metric tons of frozen strawberries
and cut down on supplies from its previous source: Polish farmers.

Materne needs Chinese strawberries to stay competitive, says Managing
Director Jean-Luc Heymans. Poland is vulnerable to drought and frost and
can only deliver in June, a month after the Chinese are ready, Mr.
Heymans says. "We're not convinced Poland's problems come from China," he
says. If the EU duties hold, Mr. Heymans says he will have to raise jam
prices.

In 2004, Chinese prices were 49% cheaper, in part because of frost in
Poland.

Binghua rents 3.1 acres, or 1.24 hectares, from the government for a
total of $3,500 and is charged 9.6% annual interest by a local
state-backed bank. The company says it pays its 200 temporary workers as
much as 60 cents an hour. Salaried employees get $100 a month.

Binghua is the only food processor of its kind in town. It sets prices
for peasants like Tan Baotian. He farms on eight acres he leased two
years ago for free from the local government. He sells his excess
strawberries to Binghua for around $60 a metric ton -- around one tenth
of what Polish processors pay for their strawberries, and a third the
price Mr. Tan gets at fresh produce markets in town. Mr. Tan says he
makes around $600 a year and, he adds, "I don't know where my fruit is
going."

Polish workers earn more than double what their Chinese counterparts do,
and the cost to the company is twice that due to social security and
insurance payments.

Poland's fruit industry wasn't really set up to compete on a global
scale. After Communism collapsed, many of Poland's fruit cooperatives on
its eastern plains were parceled into a network of small, privately own
farms. Though small, they were able to put the country on the map.

Janusz Majtczak wishes he could hire people like Mr. Tan. Mr. Majtczak is
the chief executive of Unifreze, a processing plant in northern Poland
owned by two fruit and vegetable cooperatives. Unifreze can't find enough
pickers who will work for ? an hour, say Mr. Majtczak. Poles can make
four times that much working at jobs in Spain or the U.K., where there is
a shortage of fruit and vegetable pickers.

"Dumping duties will help," he adds. "But we also have to cut labor costs
and the tax burden."

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Free Chinese Lesson - Wang steers China to gold

Sports / Team China

Wang steers China to gold

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-12-16 13:32

DOHA, Dec 15 - China strolled to a 59-44 victory over hosts Qatar in the
Asian Games men's basketball final on Friday, paced by former NBA player
Wang Zhizhi's 28 points.

Wang Zhizhi(L) grabs a rebound during Asian Games men's basketball final.
[Xinhua]
It was China's fifth basketball gold medal in six Asian Games, with their
only defeat coming in Pusan in 2002.

Despite the absence of Yao Ming, who was allowed to stay in the United
States with the Houston Rockets, China had the best of a lively encounter
and their relentless attacks and tight defensive play proved too much for
the Qataris.

China's coach Jonas Kazlauskas praised his entire team but singled out
Wang for his "unimaginable" talent.

"The final was a really good level of basketball, and how we beat our
opponents was a really big success," he told a news conference,

"We controlled the situation all the time, we played good defence, we
made this win. I think this team can be stronger and better in the
future."

Qatar came within five points of the Chinese at the end of the first
quarter, despite squandering a series of chances.

The hosts closed the gap to 20-19 at the start of the second, but after
17 minutes, a sluggish Wang finally got on the scoresheet and helped
China pull away to a 34-25 lead at the midway stage.

China continued to press in the second half and motored comfortably to
the 59-44 win, with Wang scoring almost half the points.

Qatari coach Joseph Stiebing said he was proud of his players but
admitted the Chinese were too strong in the end.

"They were too much for us," he told a news conference.

"They played a very good game, they really defended us, and it was a
great performance by an ex-NBA player (Wang).

"I was proud of our effort as a team. I'm really happy for my guys."

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Sunday, March 23, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Doha Games see strict doping control with more case possible

Sports / About Doha

Doha Games see strict doping control with more case possible

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-12-11 08:42

Seventh hundred and fifty doping tests have been conducted nine days
after the opening of the Asiad as the number approached the total carried
out in last Games, a doping-control official from the Doha organizing
committee (DAGOC) said here on Sunday.

"We have undertaken 750 tests with 50 blood testing, only three cases
were tested positive," said Dr. Abdulwahab Al Musleh, Healthcare, Medical
and Doping Control manager at DAGOC.

In Busan Asian Games four years ago, a total of 760 tests were carried
out.

"All athletes can be subject to a random test when they are at the
village and also in competition," he said.

And official who asked not to be named revealed that there might be more
coming out if confirmed.

So far three weightlifters have been found using banned drugs at the
Games as two are from Uzbekistan, Elmira Ramileva in women' s 69kg
category and Alexander Urinov in 105kg as well as Than Kyi Kyi of Myanmar
in women's 48kg category.

"We adopt zero-tolerance attitude towards banned drugs and we did
everything here in accordance to the OCA rules and WADA's Anti- Doping
Code," said Wei Jizhong, chairman of the Sports Commission at the Olympic
Council of Asia (OCA).

"Both OCA and WADA sent many staff here to supervise doping- control of
the Games and the organizers did a good job," he said.

An anticipated 1,200 tests will be carried out in doping control stations
at each competition venue and the Athletes' Village polyclinic in Doha
and blood testing will be conducted for the first time at an Asian Games.

Testing will be administered by 30 international doping officers and 250
locally trained staff and the samples will be analyzed at King's College
in London.

The OCA had around 20 doping-control staff here while the World
Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), an independent international organization
fighting against doping in sport, had over 40 staff in Doha.

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Chinese language - Tycoon brings polo to China's new elite

Sports / Feature and Column

Tycoon brings polo to China's new elite

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-11-30 17:14

BEIJING, Nov 29 - Warmed by a roaring fire in a hall lined with Victorian
paintings, Xia Yang reclines in his clubhouse near Beijing and dreams of
returning polo to its glory days as a noble sport favoured by China's
privileged.

Once praised by Tang dynasty (618-907) emperors, polo is now virtually
unknown in China.

But the 40-year-old property developer is banking that China's legions of
cashed-up leisure-seekers will embrace the elitist horseback ballgame
with the same gusto that they have golf and skiing.

"The growing ranks of newly affluent, and changes in people's ideas
towards more healthy and positive lifestyles, has provided a very big
market for polo in China," Xia said.

Quick out of the blocks, horse-lover and player Xia built the Sunny Time
Polo Club two hours' drive from Beijing, complete with stables, 27 horses
and trained coaches from Inner Mongolia.

Except for the ping-pong table in the hall, the clubhouse has the feel of
an English manor house, with swords hanging over the fireplace and heavy
wooden furnishings. Red-coated men gallop around a yard outside and belt
a practice ball back and forth.

Glimpses of surrounding fields where farmers eke out a basic living are a
quick reminder the club is in China.

Xia, a bespectacled, soft-spoken former architect, has ploughed 12
million yuan ($1.53 million) into Sunny Time.

He became interested in polo after watching footage of Prince Charles
playing a match with the Sultan of Brunei in 1996.

"It struck me as really courageous and visually powerful. I thought it
would be great if I could play it myself," he said.

Xia is now such an enthusiast that he is determined to "spread polo
culture" in China in the years to come.

Consisting of two teams of four mallet-wielding players on horseback
jockeying to smack a ball through goals at either end of a 300-yard
(metre) field, polo is not for the faint-hearted.

GALLOPING WEALTH

The club, which only opened last year has around 10 regular members. But
Xia is alreading talking of upgrading its facilities to meet
international specifications, staging tournaments, and bringing in
foreign coaches to improve local players.

"China's pace of development is unimaginable, so I am standing on a
treasure trove," he said.

China now has 250,000 millionaires -- the sixth-largest population in the
world -- growing at 15 percent per year, according to a Boston Consulting
Group report.

The Forbes rich list for China released in November put the combined
wealth of China's richest 40 people at $38 billion -- up 46 percent from
the previous year.

1 2 

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Learn Chinese - IAEA board agrees to deny Iran nuke aid

WORLD / Middle East

IAEA board agrees to deny Iran nuke aid

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-23 10:15

VIENNA, Austria - The UN nuclear watchdog agency effectively agreed
Wednesday to deny Iran technical help in building a plutonium-producing
reactor but left room for Tehran to renew its request in two years,
diplomats said.

An Interior view of the Arak heavy water production facility in Central
Iran, 360 km (223 miles) southwest of Tehran, October 27, 2004. [AP]

A committee of the International Atomic Energy Agency forwarded a summary
of three days of deliberations on 832 requests for technical aid to the
full board, scheduled to meet Thursday.

That gathering was expected to waive a decision on Tehran's request for
aid for its Arak reactor. That, in effect, would deny IAEA money for Arak
- at least for the next two years, after which new requests will be
considered.

The two diplomats - from countries on opposing sides of the issue - had
different interpretations of what the expected ruling would mean,
reflecting the depth of the dispute. Both demanded anonymity because they
were not authorized to discuss the topic with the media.

A European diplomat said the tentative agreement effectively meant that
Iran's request was turned down. Another diplomat, from a developing
nation, said it meant that the issue remained on the table because it
could be revisited.

"It certainly is not denied," he said.

The committee summary noted that "several members expressed the need for
caution regarding technical cooperation with the Islamic Republic of
Iran." They "expressed particular concern" over Arak, saying they could
not approve other Iranian projects if aid for the reactor were approved,
said the summary of the closed meeting, obtained by The Associated Press.

Gregory L. Schulte, the chief US representative to the IAEA, said his
country had no choice but to oppose aid to Arak, given past calls by the
board for the project to be stopped, "the widespread distrust of Iran's
nuclear program and the risk of plutonium (being) diverted from this
reactor for use in a (nuclear) weapon."

The full board on Thursday also will hear a report on the latest stage of
a nearly four-year IAEA investigation into Iran's nuclear activities.

That report essentially says the agency has been unable to make headway
in determining whether suspicions that Tehran is interested in making
nuclear weapons are well-founded. Schulte said the report also shows that
"the mistrust of Iran is only growing as Iran fails to cooperate with the
IAEA."

Iran, meanwhile, used the gathering to criticize Israel, expressing "deep
concern as a result of the threat of armed attack against Iran's nuclear
facilities and installations."

"Recently the Zionist regime has augmented the campaign and threat," said
a Nov. 13 letter from Iran's IAEA representative, Ali Ashgar Soltanieh,
obtained by the AP. The letter was attached to an IAEA document issued
for the meeting saying Soltanieh had asked that his comments be
circulated among delegates.

Still, the Arak dispute was the main focus of the meeting. While the
argument was over technicalities, it reflected the politically charged
atmosphere.

Technical aid requests are normally approved without discussion - but
since the first committee meeting Monday, suspicions that Iran might be
seeking to make nuclear weapons led to diplomatic tussling on what to do
about the request. When it is completed within the next decade, Arak will
produce enough plutonium for two bombs a year.

Past IAEA resolutions have urged Iran to stop building the Arak reactor,
which Iran says it needs to produce radioactive isotopes for medical
purposes.

Developing countries - the key recipients of IAEA technical help - are
worried that denial of aid for any project would set a precedent that
would hurt their future chances of getting agency support.

Arak is one of seven or eight projects submitted by Iran - lists
circulating among diplomats have conflicting numbers. Most, if not all,
of the 35 nations had no trouble approving Iran's request for help, along
with the other far less contentious projects, said the diplomats.

Rebuffing Iran's request would not affect Arak's construction and would
also have no effect on the country's other potential avenue to weapons
production - uranium enrichment.

Still, the denial would maintain at least symbolic pressure while the UN
Security Council is deadlocked over how to sanction Iran for ignoring
demands to stop enriching uranium.

Among the other projects submitted by Iran, one asks for help in
developing nuclear capabilities for medical use. Another seeks legal aid
for the Russian-built Bushehr reactor, which even the Americans
acknowledge does not pose a threat of nuclear proliferation. The other
requests seek assistance in administrative or safety aspects of nuclear
power.

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Chinese School - Japan bans export of luxury goods to N.Korea

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

Japan bans export of luxury goods to N.Korea

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-11-14 09:54

TOKYO - Japan on Tuesday decided to impose a ban on exporting luxury
goods to North Korea in a move experts say could dent morale among the
nation's elite who receive such items as perks.

Japan's cabinet approved bans on exports of 24 kinds of luxury goods to
North Korea including cars, wrist-watches, liquor, cigarettes, jewellery,
perfume and caviar.

The United Nations Security Council approved a resolution that among
other measures blocks trade with North Korea in luxury goods following
Pyongyang's nuclear test on October 9.

"We have decided to take measures to ban exports of luxury goods to North
Korea in response to the (UN Security Council) resolution," Foreign
Minister Taro Aso told Tuesday's cabinet meeting.

Japan first imposed punitive measures after Pyongyang fired off a barrage
of test missiles in July and stepped them up after its nuclear test on
October 9. They include a ban on imports and a prohibition on North
Korean ships entering Japanese ports.

Japan's total trade with North Korea amounted to some $180 million in
2005, about half the 2002 figure.

North Korea said recently it would return to six-party talks on ending
its nuclear programmes.

But Japan said it would maintain its sanctions on North Korea despite
Pyongyang's agreement to return to the talks, which bring together North
and South Korea, China, Japan, Russia and the United States.

Tokyo said the sanctions would not be lifted until the state committed to
abandoning its nuclear ambitions.

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Saturday, March 22, 2008

Chinese language - Russia's proposals on Iran gut Euro text

WORLD / Iran Nuke Issue

Russia's proposals on Iran gut Euro text

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-11-08 14:59

The European draft, supported in general by Washington, also bans travel
and freezes assets of people and entities involved in the nuclear and
ballistic missile programs.

Russia's amendments delete the travel ban, the freezing of financial
assets and any mention of the Bushehr nuclear power plant Moscow is
building for Iran. Churkin maintains Bushehr is not a threat to nuclear
proliferation.

The European resolution exempts from sanctions construction but not the
delivery of fuel to Bushehr, which costs about $800 million and is
expected to go into operation next year.

Russia also wants any sanctions to expire in three months, unless the
council adopts another resolution to extend them.

U.S. Ambassador John Bolton, who has submitted some of his own proposals,
accused Russia of backing away from earlier commitments by its foreign
minister, Sergei Lavrov, in framing the international response to Iran's
nuclear program.

Bolton said changes sought by Moscow conflicted with commitments by
Lavrov earlier in the year.

"We don't think the Russian text is consistent with what foreign
ministers had agreed previously," Bolton told reporters.

Churkin said Moscow's proposals were "fully in conformity with the
understandings by the ministers."

At meetings in Europe in recent months, foreign ministers from the
Security Council's permanent members - Britain, France, Russia, China and
the United States - plus Germany agreed to take action against Tehran.

Washington has insisted the foreign ministers agreed to impose tough
sanctions on Tehran.

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Chinese Mandarin - Hezbollah says in talks on soldiers

WORLD / Middle East

Hezbollah says in talks on soldiers

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-01 08:35

BEIRUT, Lebanon - Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said Tuesday that
"serious negotiations" were under way over the fate of two Israeli
soldiers whose July 12 capture by his militant group sparked a month of
brutal fighting in Lebanon.

In a three-hour taped television interview, Nasrallah said a negotiator
appointed by UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has been meeting with
Hezbollah and Israeli officials.

Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah waves during his speech at a
rally in Beirut September 22, 2006. Nasrallah said on Tuesday indirect
negotiations between his group and Israel over a prisoner exchange had
begun through a UN.-appointed mediator. [Reuters]

He would not provide details about the negotiations, but told Hezbollah's
TV station, "We have reached a stage of exchanging ideas, proposals or
conditions."

Officials from the Israeli Defense Ministry and Foreign Ministry were not
available for immediate comment.

Nasrallah has offered to exchange the two Israeli soldiers for Arab
prisoners in Israeli jails, but Israel has repeatedly refused. Although
the UN resolution that ended the 34-day war called for the soldiers'
unconditional release, Israel has exchanged prisoners in the past.

"They are serious negotiations ... It's better to keep it away from the
media ... this issue is on track. We are moving ahead. How long does it
take? It's up to the nature of the negotiations," Nasrallah said.

In the same interview, Nasrallah warned that any attempts by an
international force to disarm Hezbollah would transform Lebanon into
another Iraq or Afghanistan.

Nasrallah said there are fears that the beefed up UN peacekeeping force
in south Lebanon would be transformed into a multinational force whose
mandate would be to disarm Hezbollah.

"This is dangerous and will lead to transforming Lebanon into another
Afghanistan and another Iraq," Nasrallah said in taped interview on
Hezbollah's television station Al-Manar.

A UN-brokered cease-fire that ended the 34-day Israel-Hezbollah on Aug.
14 does not give a direct mandate to the peacekeepers to take Hezbollah's
weapons by force, unless the guerrillas are encountered in the buffer
zone along the border with Israel.

A resolution passed by the UN in 2004 did call for the disarmament of all
militias in Lebanon. But Hezbollah has refused to lay down its arms, and
the 15,000 Lebanese troops patrolling the buffer zone in south Lebanon
along with UN peacekeepers don't have the political will to take the
group's weapons by force.

Nasrallah expressed concern that deteriorating security could force
Lebanon's Western-backed government to ask UN peacekeepers to take
stronger actions than their current mandate dictates.

Since the war ended, Beirut has witnessed a string of minor attacks,
including a grenade fired at a downtown building that houses a dance
club. The explosion, which was near UN offices, injured six people, broke
windows and damaged cars.

Many people believe the attacks had political or sectarian overtones, but
no suspects have been publicly named.

Nasrallah said Hezbollah, despite attempts to keep arms from being
smuggled to the guerrilla group, has "regained all its vigor." The group
has 33,000 rockets, he said - up from the 22,000 he said his guerrillas
had on Sept. 22.

"The resistance in Lebanon is strong, cohesive, able and ready, and they
will not be able to undermine it no matter what the challenges are," he
said.

The Hezbollah leader also accused the United States of being responsible
for continued violence in Iraq and Afghanistan, saying US policy in the
region has failed.

"Afghanistan is a failure ... In Iraq, there is clear failure on the
security, military and political levels ... Who shoulders responsibility?
It's the American administration and the occupation forces in control of
the situation," he said.

Nasrallah said America's plans in the Middle East face "failure,
frustration and a state of collapse," and predicted the U.S. would be
forced to leave the region in the future - just like it left Vietnam
after the war there three decades ago.

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