Thursday, March 27, 2008

Learn Mandarin online - Rockets lose to Jazz 67-81 in Game 3

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Sports / flash

Rockets lose to Jazz 67-81 in Game 3

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-27 11:45

Utah Jazz forward Andrei Kirilenko, left, of Russia, rejects a shot by
Houston Rockets forward Chuck Hayes (44) during the first quarter of
their NBA playoff basketball game Thursday, April 26, 2007, in Salt Lake
City. [AP]

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?? 上一页?? 1?? 2?? 3?? 4?? 5?? 下一页??

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Chinese language - Rules should have barred weapon purchase

WORLD / America

Rules should have barred weapon purchase

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-20 11:29

McLEAN, Va. - A judge's ruling on Cho Seung-Hui's mental health should
have barred him from purchasing the handguns he used in the Virginia Tech
massacre, according to federal regulations. But it was unclear Thursday
whether anybody had an obligation to inform federal authorities about
Cho's mental status because of loopholes in the law that governs
background checks.

Customers watch a video of Cho Seung-Hui on the NBC Nightly News as they
dine in a local restaurant Blacksburg, Va. on Wednesday, April 18, 2007.
[AP]

Cho purchased two handguns in February and March, and was subject to
federal and state background checks both times. The checks turned up no
problems, despite a judge's ruling in December 2005 that Cho "presents an
imminent danger to himself as a result of mental illness."

"On the face of it, he should have been blocked under federal law," said
Denis Henigan, legal director of the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence.

The 23-year-old South Korean immigrant was evaluated by a psychiatric
hospital after he was accused of stalking two women and photographing
female students in class with his cell phone. His violence-filled
writings were so disturbing that professors begged him to get counseling.

The language of the ruling by Special Justice Paul M. Barnett almost
identically tracks federal regulations from the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Those rules bar the sale of guns to
individuals who have been "adjudicated mentally defective."

The definition outlined in the regulations is "a determination by a court
... or other lawful authority that a person as a result of marked
subnormal intelligence, or mental illness ... is a danger to himself or
to others."

Virginia State Police send information on prohibited buyers to the
federal government. They maintain that the sale was legal under state law
and would have been barred only if the justice had committed Cho to a
psychiatric hospital. Barnett ordered outpatient treatment instead.

The Virginia attorney general's office declined to discuss the
application of gun laws to Cho's case. Barnett also declined to comment.

The state uses a slightly different standard than the federal government,
barring sales to individuals who have been judged "mentally
incapacitated."

George Burke, a spokesman for Democratic Rep. Carolyn McCarthy of New
York, said millions of criminal and mental-health records are not
accessible to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System,
mostly because state and local governments lack the money to submit the
records.

McCarthy has sponsored legislation since 2002 that would close loopholes
in the national background check system for gun purchases.

Initially states were required to provide all relevant information to
federal authorities when the instant background checks were enacted, but
a US Supreme Court ruling relieved them of that obligation.

"The law is very confused about this," said Richard Bonnie, a professor
of law and psychiatry at the University of Virginia who heads a state
commission on mental-health reform. "The source of the confusion is the
relation between federal and state law."

Also Thursday, the owner of an Internet gun store based in Green Bay,
Wis., told The Associated Press that Cho used his Web site to purchase
one of the weapons used in the shootings. Cho paid $268 for the gun.

Eric Thompson, who runs http://www.thegunsource.com, said the Walther
.22-caliber handgun was then shipped to a Virginia pawnbroker so Cho
could pick it up.

Thompson said he had no idea his business was involved until he was
contacted Tuesday by ATF agents.

"I just feel absolutely terrible that this tragedy even happened in the
first place," he said.

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Chinese language - International death toll in Virginia Tech massacre

Chinese Mandarin - N.Korean money frozen to be unblocked

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

N.Korean money frozen to be unblocked

(AP/chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2007-04-11 10:27

Macau's Monetary Authority said Wednesday that holders of North Korean
accounts frozen at a bank blacklisted by the United States can withdraw
or transfer their money.

The funds at the small Macao lender Banco Delta Asia have become a key
sticking point in six-party negotiations to close North Korea's nuclear
programs. The money was to be released last month, but disputes over the
accounts have stalled the process.

Wendy Au, a spokeswoman at Macao's Monetary Authority, told The
Associated Press that the money was ready to be handed over to the owners
of the accounts.

"The account holders, as long as they are authorized, can proceed to the
bank to withdraw or transfer the money," she said, without commenting
further.

A Treasury Department statement released by US Embassy in Beijing
Wednesday said the US understands that the Macao authorities are ready to
unblock all money frozen in the Banco Delta Asia in Macao.

It said that the US supports the decision to unblock the accounts.

In a deal struck in February, North Korea pledged to shut down its main
nuclear reactor by Saturday in exchange for energy aid and political
concessions.

North Korea had insisted that US$25 million (euro18.6 million) frozen at
Banco Delta Asia, blacklisted by Washington for allegedly helping the
North launder money, must be released before it closes its Yongbyon
reactor.

BDA will try its best to accomodate its account holders' requests, the
bank's spokesman Joe Wong said. He said he did not know whether any of
the frozen funds were withdrawn yet.

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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Learn mandarin - UK denounces video of sailors

WORLD / Europe

UK denounces video of sailors

(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-02 11:07

A video grab from footage shown on Iranian television on April 1, 2007,
shows a man in a khaki uniform standing in front of a map of the Persian
Gulf while speaking. Iranian television showed pictures of two of the 15
British sailors and marines held in Iran, and said they admitted that
they were captured after entering Iranian waters.  [Reuters]

TEHRAN, Iran - Iranian state television aired new video Sunday showing
two of the 15 captured British sailors pointing to a spot on a map of the
Persian Gulf where they were seized and acknowledging it was in Iranian
territorial waters.

Britain's Foreign Office immediately denounced the video, saying it was
"completely unacceptable for these pictures to be shown on TV."

Adding to tensions between the two countries, about 200 angry Iranian
youths chanting "Death to Britain" and "Death to America" threw rocks and
firecrackers at the British Embassy and tried to rush the compound but
were held back by police.

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  near the mouth of the Shatt al-Arab, a
waterway that has long been a disputed dividing line between Iraq and
Iran. Iran insists the sailors illegally entered its waters, but Britain
says the team was in Iraqi waters at the time of their capture.

The captives first appeared on the state-run Arabic-language TV channel
Al-Alam in separate video clips looking relaxed in military fatigues and
pointing at the same map of the Persian Gulf.

The first sailor, who was identified as Royal Marine Capt. Chris Air,
pointed with a pen to a location on the map where he said two boats left
a warship of the US-led coalition in Iraq around 8:30 am on March 23. He
said the seven marines and eight navy sailors were captured around 10 am.

Pointing to the map, he said "we were seized apparently at this point
here on their maps and on the GPS they've shown us, which is inside
Iranian territorial waters."

"And so far we have been treated very well by all the people here. They
have looked after us and made sure there's been enough food and we've
been treated very well by them so we thank them for that."

The second sailor, identified as Lt. Felix Carman, pointed to an area on
the map and said that location was where he and the 14 others were
arrested.

"I'd like to say to the Iranian people, I can understand why you are so
angry about our intrusion into your waters," he said.

The newscaster said the two had confessed to "illegally" trespassing in
Iranian waters.

Al-Alam broadcast longer videos of the Britons earlier this week,
including footage on Friday of captured marine Nathan Thomas Summers
apologizing for entering Iranian waters "without permission" and
admitting to trespassing in Iranian waters.

He was shown sitting with another serviceman and the female British
sailor Faye Turney against a floral curtain. Both servicemen wore
camouflage fatigues with a Royal Navy label on their chests and a little
British flag stitched to their left sleeves.

Al-Alam also aired video on Wednesday showing Turney wearing a headscarf
and saying: "Obviously we trespassed."

Iran has also made public three letters purportedly written by Turney.
The last letter contained an apology.

Britain has denounced the videos, calling them "propaganda" and
"outrageous."

Iran's decision to air three videos on its Arabic-language TV channel,
rather than on its main Farsi channels has not been explained. But it
appears to be an attempt to seek support from Arabs in Iraq and the Gulf
states, where many resent Britain's military deployment in Iraq and its
historical role as a colonial power in the region.

Earlier on Sunday, British Defense Secretary Des Browne said his
government was in "direct, bilateral communication with the Iranians." A
Ministry of Defense spokeswoman said Browne was referring to letters and
other contacts between diplomats, rather than any new face-to-face talks.

Browne, on a visit to Afghanistan, said Britain had "the support of
almost the whole international community" in calling for the release of
its personnel.

IS President Bush on Saturday demanded the release of the 15 "hostages."
He said they were innocent and called their capture "inexcusable
behavior."

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called world powers "arrogant" for
refusing to apologize.

British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett appeared to soften rhetoric
against Iran Saturday - though she stopped far short of an apology.

"I think everyone regrets that this position has arisen," Beckett said
during a visit to Germany. "What we want is a way out of it."

In Iran, hardliners called for their government to remain firm.

The protesters at the British Embassy called for the expulsion of the
country's ambassador because of the standoff.

Several dozen policemen prevented the protesters from rushing the embassy
compound, although a few briefly scaled a fence outside the compound's
walls before being pushed back, according to an Associated Press reporter
at the scene.

The demonstrators hurled stones into the courtyard of the embassy. They
also demanded that the Iranian government expel the British ambassador
and close down the embassy, calling it a "den of spies."

Britain's Foreign Office said there had been no damage to the compound.

A British Foreign Office spokeswoman in London said diplomats continued
to work normally inside the embassy and had not been at risk.

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Learn mandarin - Ding and Mark Williams ousted at China Open

Sports / China

Ding and Mark Williams ousted at China Open

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-03-29 09:09

Defending champion Mark Williams and China's Ding Junhui were all knocked
out off the 2007 China Open snooker tournament in Beijing on Wednesday.

Ding Junhui reacts after lost to Defending champion Mark Williams at 2007
Snooker China Open in Beijing March 28,2007.[sina.com]

Jamie Cope fired in breaks of 134, 68, 72, 104 and 86 as he cruised to a
5-1 win to end the reign of Mark Williams in this tournament.

Williams, who beat John Higgins 9-8 in last year's final, has slipped to
the tenth in the latest world rankings.

"That's one of the best performances I've ever seen against me.

He hardly missed a ball and I didn't get much of a look-in." said the
former world champion.

The only disappointment for the 21-year-old Cope was his failure to
convert either of two chances to deliver 147 points.

"That's the best game I've played for a long time, If I keep playing like
that I can beat anyone, so maybe I could be the champion," said Cope.

He missed a tricky red on 72 in frame four then a much easier penultimate
red on 104 in the next.

"I make a lot of 147s in practice so I always go for them when I have a
chance, it's a shame I couldn't make one this time," added Cope.

Cope faces Stuart Bingham in the last 16 after he beat veteran Steve
Davis 5-4 with a tight final-frame decider.

Defending champion Mark Williams hit a shot during at 2007 Snooker China
Open in Beijing March 28,2007. Mark Williams ousts Ding Junhui of China
to advance to the top 16.[sina.com]

Barry Hawkins signaled his intent from the start with a wonderful 116
clearance, before breaks of 134, 77, 59 and 73 to help him seal a 5-3 win
over "China Ding" in a more then three hours-match. "Clearly, Ding was
under pressure, and he still did his best," said Hawkins.

Ding Junhui refused to open his mouth after the match despite dozens of
journalists flooded the conference room.

In the previous matches, Li Hang of China was beaten by former world
champion Ken Doherty 5-1, and his team mate Mei Xiwen was also eliminated
out of the tournament.

Former world champion Shaun Murphy cruised to a 5-1 win over Chinese
wildcard Mei Xiwen with a breaks of 67, 58, 43, 43 and 54.

"I didn't score that heavily, but it was my first professional victory in
China, so it meant a lot to me," said Murphy.

"Clearly, I was not in the same level with British professional players,
such as Murphy. I hope next time I could do better," said Mei Xiwen.

Murphy faces Stephen Maguire in the next round after the Scotsman
defeated Mark King 5-3.

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Free Chinese Lesson - Hit on Iraqi official seen as inside job

WORLD / Middle East

Hit on Iraqi official seen as inside job

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-26 10:31

BAGHDAD - The suicide attack against Iraq's Sunni deputy prime minister
is now seen as an inside job carried out by a member of his own security
detail - a distant relative who had been arrested as an insurgent, freed
at the official's request, then hired as a bodyguard, a senior security
official and an aide to the victim told The Associated Press on Sunday.

Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Salam al-Zubaie speaks during a press
conference with USAgriculture Secretary Mike Johanns at Baghdad's heavily
fortified green zone, Tuesday, Aug. 1, 2006, in Iraq. [AP]

The assassination attempt, at least the third major security breach
involving a top politician in four months, prompted Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki to order a government-wide security shake up, including plans
to hire a foreign company to guard the Green Zone building where
parliament meets, the security official said on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to speak with reporters.

A suicide attacker came within feet of Deputy Prime Minister Salam
al-Zubaie and exploded his vest during a Friday prayer service in the
private mosque attached to al-Zubaie home. The Sunni official was
seriously wounded and nine people were killed.

The senior security official as well as a key aide to al-Zubaie said
Wahab al-Saadi, the distant relative accused of involvement in the
attack, was the only person at the prayer service who has not been
accounted for.

They said al-Saadi's car, which was parked outside the al-Zubaie
compound, exploded within minutes of the suicide attack.

The al-Zubaie aide said al-Saadi had recently been removed from the
bodyguard detail as a "troublemaker" but was still on the deputy prime
minister's payroll and - for that reason and because he was a relative -
was not searched when he entered the mosque.

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chief in Baghdad

A cook for al-Zubaie who has since disappeared is also under suspicion.
He was in the kitchen that was only about 30 feet from the prayer room
when the attack occurred.

Sami al-Askari, a top aide to al-Maliki, said al-Saadi had been arrested
in the past on suspicion of insurgent activities but that al-Zubaie
successfully lobbied for his release and then made him a part of his
security detail, most likely because of their family relationship. The
security official and al-Zubaie's aide confirmed those details.

Other government security officials theorized that al-Saadi enlisted the
cook's help to let a second person into the compound to carry out the
bombing. They believed al-Saadi was the suicide attacker, although they
conceded he could just be on the run.

The attack on al-Zubaie, who is now said to be out of danger after
surgery in the US-run military hospital in the Green Zone, was the third
major security breakdown involving key members of the government or
parliament since Nov. 21.

Al-Askari and the security official said those attacks had prompted
al-Maliki to order a full investigation of all security guards. Once
complete, all those protecting Iraqi officials or lawmakers will be
issued new badges by the government.

Security IDs currently are issued by the American military. Those passes
allow access to secure locations, especially in the heavily guarded Green
Zone - site of the US Embassy and most Iraqi government offices and
parliament.

In the Nov. 21 incident, a bomb exploded in the motorcade of Parliament
Speaker Mahmoud al-Mashhadani, also a Sunni, as it drove into the parking
lot at the Green Zone Convention Center where the legislature meets.

1 2 

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Chinese Online Class - Saddam's former deputy hanged

WORLD / Middle East

Saddam's former deputy hanged

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-20 09:58

BAGHDAD - Saddam Hussein's former deputy was hanged before dawn Tuesday
for the killings of 148 Shiites, an official with the prime minister's
office said.

Iraq's former vice president Taha Yassin Ramadan speaks during final
arguments for their trial in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone in
this July 27, 2006 file photo. [Reuters]

Taha Yassin Ramadan, who was Saddam's vice president when the regime was
ousted by the U.S.-led invasion that began four years ago Tuesday in
Iraq, was the fourth man to be executed in the killings following a 1982
assassination attempt against the former leader in the town of Dujail.

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Bassam al-Hassani, an adviser to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, said
precautions were taken to prevent a repeat of what happened to Saddam's
half brother and co-defendant Barzan Ibrahim, who was inadvertently
decapitated on the gallows during his January execution.

Ramadan, who was nearly 70, was weighed before the hanging and the length
of the rope was chosen accordingly, al-Hassani said.

The execution took place at 3:05 a.m. an Iraqi army and police base,
which had been the headquarters of Saddam's military intelligence, in a
predominantly Shiite district in northern Baghdad. Ramadan had been in
U.S. custody but was handed over to the Iraqis before the hanging,
according to al-Hassani, who witnessed the hanging.

The prosecutor read out the verdict of the appeals court upholding the
death sentence along with al-Maliki's decision to carry it out,
al-Hassani said, adding that a defense lawyer received Ramadan's written
will. The contents were not revealed.

Al-Hassani said the execution went smoothly, although Ramadan appeared
frightened and recited the two shahadahs -- a declaration of faith
repeated by Muslims -- "There is no God but Allah and Muhammad is his
Prophet."

Ramadan was convicted in November of murder, forced deportation and
torture and sentenced to life in prison. A month later, an appeals court
said the sentence was too lenient, and returned his case to the High
Tribunal, which sentenced him to death.

Ramadan, who became vice president in March 1991 and was a Revolutionary
Command Council member -- Iraq's highest political body under Saddam --
had maintained his innocence, saying his duties were limited to economic
affairs, not security issues.

Saddam was executed on Dec. 30 for his role in the killings. Two of his
co-defendants in the Dujail case -- Ibrahim, Saddam's former intelligence
chief, and Awad Hamed al-Bandar, former head of Iraq's Revolutionary
Court -- were executed in January.

Ibrahim plunged through the trap door and was beheaded by the jerk of the
thick rope at the end of his fall, causing a furor; the Iraqi government
said the decapitation was an accident. Saddam's execution drew
international outrage after a clandestine video showed the former
president being taunted on the gallows. Another leaked video showed
Saddam's corpse with a gaping neck wound.

Saddam's regime was predominantly Sunni and many members of the sect have
protested the executions on the grounds they are politically motivated by
the newly empowered Shiite majority in Iraq. International human rights
groups have, by and large, protested that the trial that found the men
guilty did not provide them with due legal process.

Around Iraq, meanwhile, bombs tore through a Shiite mosque during prayers
in Baghdad and struck several targets in the oil-rich city of Kirkuk on
Monday, killing at least 26 people.

The latest attacks highlighted the challenges facing U.S. and Iraqi
forces in their bid to curb sectarian bloodshed with the month-old
security crackdown. Execution-style killings usually blamed on Shiite
militias have fallen dramatically but bombings have not kept pace in the
downward trend.

Late Monday, U.S. and Iraqi troops engaged in a major operation as part
of the crackdown in the volatile Hurriyah neighborhood in northern
Baghdad, state television said. Witnesses said there were many people
reported holed up in two Shiite mosques, surrounded by U.S. forces.

The state-run Iraqiya network said six civilians had been killed. The
U.S. military did not immediately comment on the reports.

With the war entering its fifth year, President Bush pleaded for patience
as he faced Democrat-sponsored legislation that effectively would require
the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq by the fall of 2008. He said
his plan to curb violence by sending more U.S. troops to Baghdad and the
surrounding areas needed more time. Fewer than half the reinforcements
have arrived.

"There will be good days and bad days ahead as the security plan
unfolds," he said in a televised statement, adding that he had received
news of positive signs during a briefing on the war with his National
Security Council and in a video conference call with al-Maliki.

The first military action of the war occurred in the early morning on
March 20, 2003, in Baghdad, but it was still March 19 in the United
States.

Al-Maliki's office said the Shiite leader assured Bush in their half-hour
call that his government was pressing ahead with reconstruction and
political reforms and that it remained committed to national
reconciliation and the passage of a draft oil law.

Nobody claimed responsibility for Monday's bombings, but they bore the
hallmarks of Sunni insurgents.

The violence in Baghdad began shortly after the afternoon call to prayer
in a small green-domed mosque in the Shorja market area, where a truck
bomb killed 137 people last month.

Salah Baqir, a 42-year-old vendor who saw the attack, said the bomber
slipped past the guards and placed the explosives in a bag behind the
preacher's lectern. The blast left a crater and a pile of rubble on the
floor. At least eight worshippers were killed and 32 other people were
wounded, including the preacher, police said.

Iraqi authorities have imposed strict security in the area to prevent car
bombings that often target crowded markets, but Sunni insurgents have
proven resilient in finding ways to circumvent the stepped up security
since the start of the crackdown Feb. 14.

At least 18 people were killed and more than 50 wounded in a series of
bombings in Kirkuk, 180 miles north of Baghdad -- the most devastating
when two parked car bombs exploded within 10 minutes in a southern part
of the city. Fourteen civilians and four policemen were killed and 40
were wounded, police said.

In all, at least 55 Iraqis were killed or found dead in Iraq, including
the mayor of a Shiite village southeast of Baghdad and 29 bullet-riddled
bodies that turned up in the capital.

In the Sunni insurgent stronghold of Anbar province, police said at least
25 decomposed bodies -- some beheaded -- were found near a post office
east of the provincial capital Ramadi. The U.S. military said it had no
information on the report.

The U.S. military also said two Iraqi soldiers were killed and 12 were
wounded when explosives planted by insurgents in a building being used as
an observation post were detonated on Sunday, causing the structure to
collapse in Fallujah.

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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Chinese School - IAEA chief in Beijing before North Korea visit

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

IAEA chief in Beijing before North Korea visit

(AP)
Updated: 2007-03-12 17:19

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Mohamed
ElBaradei (C) speaks to the media as he arrives at the Beijing airport
March 12, 2007. Moving forward with a plan to inspect and close atomic
facilities behind North Korea's nuclear weapons ambitions is likely to be
painstaking, the chief of the U.N. nuclear watchdog said on Monday in
Beijing. [Reuters]

BEIJING -- The UN's chief nuclear inspector played down expectations
Monday that his trip to North Korea heralded North Korea's rapid
disarmament, saying a build up of trust and confidence were needed first.

Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy
Agency, stopped in Beijing on his way to North Korea for discussions on
how to implement a landmark nuclear disarmament agreement reached at
six-nation talks last month.

"I should caution that is a very complex process," ElBaradei told
reporters at the airport. "It is going to be a very incremental process.
There's a lot of confidence that needs to be built."

Under the hard-won February 13 agreement, the North is to ultimately give
up its nuclear arsenal in exchange for economic and political concessions.

China hosted the talks, which also involved the two Koreas, the United
States, Japan and Russia.

ElBaradei was scheduled to meet with China's nuclear envoy, Wu Dawei, on
Monday.

He said North Korea's nuclear ambitions were also tied to security,
economic and political issues, so "you have to bear with us and with the
six parties as things move."

But, he said, "as long as we are talking, as long as we are making steady
progress, I am quite pleased."

The nuclear crisis came to a head in 2002, when Washington alleged that
North Korea had a uranium enrichment program in addition to its
acknowledged plutonium program. North Korea then withdrew from the
Nuclear Nonproliferaton Treaty and expelled ElBaradei's inspectors. In
October, the North conducted an underground nuclear test.

ElBaradei said he hoped the talks would "provide a good framework for the
agency and inspectors to return" as well as normalize North Korea's
relations with the IAEA.

"We have been away for many years and it's good to go back and it's good
to have a good discussion with (North Korea) and inform them that we have
a job to do and we'd like to work with them," he said.

The first phase of the agreement requires North Korea to shut down its
main nuclear reactor and allow UN inspectors back into the country within
60 days. In return, it is to receive aid equal to 50,000 tons of heavy
fuel oil from the other participants in the nuclear talks.

In the next phase, North Korea is required to make a complete declaration
to the IAEA and the other parties about its nuclear program, which then
is to be dismantled.

"At a certain time, they need to make sure that we see everything and we
are able to clarify that the program is exclusively for peaceful
purposes," ElBaradei said.

US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, the chief American
negotiator, has said the 60-day schedule is on track so far.

Even so, work on implementing the agreement remained on shaky ground.

On Saturday, North Korea's main nuclear representative, Kim Kye Gwan,
said it expects the United States to lift financial sanctions as part of
the deal or North Korea will retaliate. He did not elaborate.

Washington imposed restrictions on the Macau-based Banco Delta Asia after
accusing it of aiding North Korean counterfeiting and money-laundering.
The restrictions are one of the main sticking points in the six-nation
negotiations.

The US pledged in the February 13 agreement to resolve the fate of US$24
million (euro19 million) in North Korean funds frozen at the bank within
30 days. That deadline falls on Thursday.

Also last week, Wu, China's nuclear representative, cautioned that deep
mistrust was undermining the process and urged countries to "improve
contact and establish trust."

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Today's Top News 

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Learn mandarin - 'The Departed' wins Oscar best picture

WORLD / America

'The Departed' wins Oscar best picture

(Agencies)
Updated: 2007-02-26 13:25

Martin Scorsese accepts his Oscar for best director for 'The Departed' at
the 79th Annual Academy Awards in Hollywood, California, February 25,
2007.  [Reuters]

Los Angeles - The mob saga "The Departed" won the best-picture Academy
Award on Sunday, a triumph for a homegrown American film in an evening
that featured the most internationally diverse field of nominees in the
history of Hollywood's highest honors.

Related readings:
'Dreamgirl' Jennifer Hudson wins Oscar
Arkin wins supporting-actor Oscar
Partial list of Oscar winners
Diverse set of nominees grace red carpet
Oscar gala to be unveiled
Wide-open races may boost Oscars ratings
"Dreamgirls" no sure thing for Oscar song win

Martin Scorsese finally won the best-director Academy Award that had
eluded him throughout his illustrious career, taking the prize for his
mob epic "The Departed" after five previous losses.

Forest Whitaker earned the best-actor Oscar for "The Last King of
Scotland," in which the soft-spoken actor played an uncharacteristically
flamboyant role as Ugandan dictator Idi Amin.

Helen Mirren reigned, winning best actress for her portrayal in "The
Queen" of British monarch Elizabeth II facing ebbing loyalty after the
death of Princess Diana.

Jennifer Hudson won the supporting-actress Oscar for "Dreamgirls," though
her co-star and fellow front-runner Eddie Murphy lost the
supporting-actor prize to Alan Arkin of "Little Miss Sunshine."

"More than anything, I'm deeply moved by the open-hearted appreciation
our small film has received, which in these fragmented times speaks so
openly of the possibility of innocence, growth and connection," said
Arkin, who plays a foul-mouthed grandpa with a taste for heroin in the
road comedy.

Hudson won an Oscar for her first movie, playing a powerhouse vocalist
who falls on hard times after she is booted from a 1960s girl group. The
role came barely two years after she shot to celebrity as an "American
Idol" finalist.

"Oh my God, I have to just take this moment in. I cannot believe this.
Look what God can do. I didn't think I was going to win," Hudson said
through tears of joy. "If my grandmother was here to see me now. She was
my biggest inspiration."

"Little Miss Sunshine," which came out of the low-budget independent
world to become a commercial hit and major player in Hollywood's awards
season, also won the original screenplay Oscar for first-time
screenwriter Michael Arndt.

The film follows a ghastly but hilarious road trip by an emotionally
messed-up family rushing to get their darling girl (10-year-old
supporting-actress nominee Abigail Breslin) to her beauty pageant.

"When I was a kid, my family drove 600 miles in a VW bus with a broken
clutch," Arndt said, describing a road trip that mirrored the one in the
film. "It ended up being one of the funnest things we did together."

The nonfiction hit "An Inconvenient Truth," a chronicle of Al Gore's
campaign to warn the world about global warming, was picked as best
documentary.

"People all over the world, we need to solve the climate crisis. It's not
a political issue. It's a moral issue," Gore said, joining the film's
director, Davis Guggenheim, on stage.

"An Inconvenient Truth" also won original song for Melissa Etheridge's "I
Need to Wake Up."

"Mostly, I have to thank Al Gore for inspiring me, showing me that caring
about the earth is not Republican or Democrat, it's not red or blue. It's
all green," Etheridge said.

Earlier, Gore appeared with best-actor nominee Leonardo DiCaprio to
praise organizers for implementing environmentally friendly practices in
the show's production.

DiCaprio set up a gag with Gore, asking the 2000 presidential candidate
if there was anything he wanted to announce.

"I guess with a billion people watching, it's as good a time as any. So
my fellow Americans, I'm going to take this opportunity here and now to
formally announce my intentions ...," Gore said, his voice trailing away
as the orchestra cut him off.

Composer Gustavo Santaolalla won his second straight Oscar for original
score for "Babel," a film "that helped us understand better who we are
and why and what we are here for," he said. He won the same prize a year
ago for "Brokeback Mountain."

The dancing-penguin musical "Happy Feet" won the Oscar for feature-length
animation, denying computer-animation pioneer John Lasseter ("Toy Story")
the prize for "Cars," which had been the big winner of earlier key
animation honors.

"I asked my kids, `What should I say?' They said, `Thank all the men for
wearing penguin suits,'" said "Happy Feet" director George Miller.

The savage fairy tale "Pan's Labyrinth" took the first two Oscars, for
art direction and makeup, the wins for the Spanish-language film kicking
off an Oscar evening stuffed with contenders from around the world.
"Pan's Labyrinth" also took the cinematography Oscar.

"To Guillermo del Toro for guiding us through this labyrinth," said art
director Eugenio Caballero, lauding the writer-director of "Pan's
Labyrinth," the tale of a girl who concocts an elaborate fantasy world to
escape her harsh reality in 1940s Fascist Spain.

Germany's "The Lives of Others," about a playwright and his
actress-girlfriend who come under police surveillance in 1980s East
Berlin, won the foreign-language Oscar, the films it beat including
"Pan's Labyrinth."

"Letters From Iwo Jima" won the sound-editing Oscar for Alan Robert
Murray and Bub Asman. Murray's father was an Iwo Jima survivor.

"Thank you to my father and all the brave and honorable men and women in
uniform who in a time of crisis have all made that decision to defend
their personal freedom and liberty no matter what the sacrifice," Murray
said.

The record holder for Oscar futility, sound engineer Kevin O'Connell,
extended his losing streak to 19 nominations without a win. This time,
O'Connell and two colleagues were nominated for sound mixing on
"Apocalypto," Mel Gibson's portrait of the savage decline of the ancient
Mayan empire, but they lost to another trio of sound engineers that
worked on "Dreamgirls."

"Apocalypto" lost in all three categories in which it was nominated, all
for technical achievements. Gibson, whose "Braveheart" was the big winner
at the 1995 Oscars, had been condemned by many in Hollywood for an
anti-Semitic rant he made during his drunken-driving arrest last summer.

Once an evening of backslapping and merrymaking within the narrow
confines of Hollywood, the Academy Awards this time looked like a United
Nations exercise in diversity.

The 79th annual Oscars feature their most ethnically varied lineup ever,
with stars and stories that reflect the growing multiculturalism taking
root around the globe.

"What a wonderful night. Such diversity in the room," said Ellen
DeGeneres, serving as Oscar host for the first time, "in a year when
there's been so many negative things said about people's race, religion
and sexual orientation.

"And I want to put this out there: If there weren't blacks, Jews and
gays, there would be no Oscars," she said, adding: "Or anyone named
Oscar, when you think about that."

Competing for best picture was Mexican director Alejandro Gonzalez
Inarritu's "Babel," a sweeping ensemble drama. The film's cast ranges
from A-listers such as Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett to comparative
unknowns Adriana Barraza from Mexico and Rinko Kikuchi from Japan, who
both earned supporting-actress nominations for "Babel."

Also in the running were Stephen Frears' classy British saga "The Queen,"
a portrait of the royal family in crisis, and Clint Eastwood's
Japanese-language war tale "Letters From Iwo Jima."

Those films joined two idiosyncratic American stories nominated for best
picture, Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris' road comedy "Little Miss
Sunshine" and Martin Scorsese's crime epic "The Departed."

Though set among the distinctive cops and mobsters of Boston, "The
Departed" had a global connection, it was based on the Hong Kong crime
thriller "Infernal Affairs." The film won the adapted-screenplay Oscar
for William Monahan, who thanked Scorsese and "The Departed" star
DiCaprio, a best-actor nominee.

"Thanks to Marty and Leo for reading the script and calling each other
and saying let's make it," Monahan said.

With a Directors Guild of America award and other top film honors behind
him, Scorsese was considered a shoo-in to earn the directing Oscar, a
prize that has eluded him throughout his illustrious career.

The best-picture race was up for grabs, with all five films in the
running but many Oscar watchers generally figuring it was a three-way
race among "Babel," "The Departed" and "Little Miss Sunshine."

Organizers at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences hoped the
suspense of the wide-open best-picture category would help offset
moviegoers' relative lack of interest in the competing films.

TV ratings for the Oscars tend to be lower when fewer people have seen
the top nominees. Collectively, the five best-picture nominees had drawn
a total domestic theatrical audience of about 38.5 million people, about
a third the number of fans who have gone to see the contenders in recent
peak years when such blockbusters as "Gladiator" or "The Lord of the
Rings: The Return of the King" have won.

Top World News 

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Today's Top News 

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Learn Chinese - 4 US Marines killed; Iraq official held

WORLD / Middle East

4 US Marines killed; Iraq official held

(AP)
Updated: 2007-02-08 19:35

AGHDAD, Iraq - Four US Marines were killed in fighting in Anbar province,
the military said Thursday. The Marines, who were assigned to
Multi-National Force - West, died Wednesday from wounds sustained due to
enemy action in two separate incidents in the insurgent stronghold west
of Baghdad, according to a statement.

An Iraqi army soldier oversees traffic at a vehicle checkpoint in
Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, Feb. 8, 2007. US officials confirmed the new
security operation which will involve about 90,000 Iraqi and American
troops and is seen by many as a last chance to curb Iraq's sectarian war
was under way after a delayed start. [AP]

The deaths raised to at least 3,114 members of the US military who have
died since the Iraq war started in March 2003, according to an Associated
Press count.

Iraqi forces on Thursday detained a senior Health Ministry official
accused of corruption and helping to funnel millions of dollars to
Shi'ite militiamen blamed for much of the recent sectarian violence in
the capital, the US military said.

The raid was the latest action in a crackdown on radical Shi'ite cleric
Muqtada al-Sadr's militia, coming a day after the chief US military
spokesman Maj. Gen. William Caldwell said a security sweep to stop the
rampant attacks in the capital was under way.

Violence also was unrelenting Thursday, with car bombs striking Shi'ite
targets in Baghdad and south of the capital. At least 43 people were
killed or found dead in Iraq.

The US Embassy in Baghdad, meanwhile, said US officials were
investigating a Jan. 31 incident involving a civilian helicopter after
The New York times reported that insurgents had brought the chopper down
with ground fire during a flight between Hillah and Baghdad.

If confirmed, it would be the sixth helicopter to crash in Iraq since
Jan. 20, prompting the US military to review flight operations. The most
recent crash occurred Wednesday when a CH-46 Sea Knight went down
northwest of Baghdad, killing seven people.

The military statement did not name the official, but a ministry
spokesman said earlier that US and Iraqi forces had seized deputy Health
Minister Hakim al-Zamili, an al-Sadr supporter, from his first-floor
office in northern Baghdad.

The detainee was implicated in the deaths of several ministry officials,
including the director-general in Diyala province, northeast of Baghdad,
the military said.

He reportedly orchestrated several kickback schemes related to inflated
contracts for equipment and services, with millions of dollars allegedly
funneled to the Mahdi Army militia that is loyal to al-Sadr, according to
the statement.

The official also was suspected of providing large-scale employment of
militia members who used Health Ministry facilities and services for
"sectarian kidnapping and murder," the military said.

Joint US-Iraqi forces stormed the Health Ministry compound early
Thursday, causing all the employees to flee, spokesman Qassim Yahya said.

One of al-Zamili's bodyguards said he heard gunshots, then the Americans
asked him to step aside and approached the deputy health minister, who
introduced himself by name and title. A US soldier told al-Zamili he was
on a list of wanted names and handcuffed him before leading him away, the
bodyguard said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of security
concerns.

In the deadliest attack Thursday, a parked car bomb exploded about 10:30
a.m. at a meat market in the predominantly Shi'ite town of Aziziyah, 56
miles south of Baghdad, killing 20 people and wounding 45, police said.

Another parked car bomb tore through a minibus nearly an hour earlier in
the mainly Shi'ite Amin neighborhood in southeastern Baghdad, killing
seven passengers and wounding 10, police said.

The blast blew out the windows of at least one car parked in a nearby
driveway and left piles of rubble and ashes that were being cleared away
by street sweepers as the burned out frame of the bus stood nearby.

Baghdad's streets have been electric with tension as US officials
confirmed the new security operation was under way. US armor rushed
through streets and Iraqi armored personnel carriers guarded bridges and
major intersections.

New coils of barbed-wire and blast barriers marked checkpoints that
caused traffic bottlenecks. US Apache helicopters were in the air over
parts of the city where they hadn't been seen before. Gunfire still rang
out across the city and some residents said they doubted life would get
better.

"Nothing will work; it's too late," said Hashem al-Moussawi, a resident
of the Sadr City Shi'ite enclave who was badly wounded in a bombing in
December.

Underlining the dangers ahead, a Sea Knight helicopter crashed Wednesday
northwest of Baghdad, killing all seven people on board, the US military
said.

A military statement did not give a cause for the crash, but a senior US
defense official in Washington said the CH-46 helicopter did not appear
to have been hit by hostile fire. An Iraqi air force officer said,
however, the helicopter was shot down with a missile. An al-Qaida-linked
Sunni group said in a Web statement it was responsible.

The New York Times reported Wednesday that insurgents attacked another
helicopter with ground fire in a previously undisclosed incident on Jan.
31, forcing it to land on a flight between Hillah and Baghdad in support
of State Department operations.

Another American helicopter rescued passengers and crew but a US military
quick reaction force suffered several casualties while responding to the
scene, the newspaper said, citing unnamed American officials. The US
military had no immediate comment.

The five confirmed helicopter downings include a chopper operated by the
private security group Blackwater USA, which provides guards for State
Department employees.

Caldwell said Wednesday that the much-awaited Baghdad security operation
was finally under way but would be implemented gradually. It is the third
attempt by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his US backers to pacify
Baghdad since the Shi'ite leader came to office in May. The operation,
which will involve about 90,000 Iraqi and American troops, was seen by
many as a last chance to curb Iraq's sectarian war.

Top World News 

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Today's Top News 

� US envoy says N. Korea talks went well

� President Hu: We are forces for peace

� Astronaut suffered 'mental anguish'

� 4 US Marines killed; Iraq official held

� N.Korea nuclear talks resume amid optimism

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Learn Chinese - Chirac backtracks after gaffe on Iran bomb threat

WORLD / Europe

Chirac backtracks after gaffe on Iran bomb threat

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-02-02 09:36

PARIS - French President Jacques Chirac backtracked on Thursday after
saying it would not be dangerous for Iran to have a nuclear bomb, a
sudden departure from the position France has long held with key allies.

France's President Jacques Chirac makes a point as he speaks at a
ceremony to mark the 30th anniversary of Centre Pompidou modern art
museum in Paris January 31, 2007. [Reuters]

Chirac made the comments to two US newspapers and a French magazine but
called the reporters back for another interview the next day and said he
thought he was speaking off the record.

His comments raised doubts about where France stands after years spent
jointly spearheading a diplomatic push aimed at ensuring Iran does not
develop atomic weapons, and prompted Chirac's office to say France's
position has not changed.

"What is dangerous about this situation is not the fact of having a
nuclear bomb - having one, maybe a second one a little later, well,
that's not very dangerous," Chirac, was quoted as telling the reporters
from the International Herald Tribune and New York Times newspapers, and
weekly Le Nouvel Observateur.

If Iran used a nuclear weapon against arch-foe Israel its capital Tehran
would be obliterated in retaliation, he said.

Chirac's office said the decision to publish the remarks was an attempt
to spark "a shameful scandal."

France and allies the United States, Britain, Germany, Russia and China,
have been pressuring Tehran to abandon technology that could be used to
make atom bombs.

Tehran denies charges that it is seeking nuclear weapons, saying it only
wants atomic technology to generate electricity.

Influential French daily Le Monde said Chirac's comments represented "a
radical turning point," adding: "One asks what credibility the French
position will now have."

But Washington and London played down Chirac's remarks.

"It is not a sentiment I share. What is more I understand the president
of France doesn't share it any more either," British Foreign Secretary
Margaret Beckett said.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini told Iranian
state radio that Chirac's comments would "only worsen the current
unbalanced atmosphere which is the result of the wrong US policies."

The newspapers said that in the first meeting Chirac, 74 and approaching
the end of his second mandate, appeared distracted at times and struggled
to remember names and dates, but was more alert in the second interview.

1 2 

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Today's Top News 

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

� EU seeks joint efforts on energy

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� Chinese President starts visit to Liberia

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Monday, March 24, 2008

Chinese language - Changchun at a glance

Sports / Host Cities

Changchun at a glance

(CAWGOC)
Updated: 2007-01-25 10:11

General Information

Changchun City is situated at the heart of Songliao Plain in northeast
China, and it's counties and districts located at 124'18" - 127'02" east
longitude, 43'05" - 45'15" north latitude.

The Jingyuetan National Forest Park

The total area of Changchun is 20,571 square kilometers, including
municipal areas of 2,583 square kilometers, and the municipal constructed
area is 159 square kilometers. The city is 250 - 350 meters above the sea
level. The city stands at the center of the three northeast provinces,
and at the crisscross point of the third east-westward "Europe-Asia
Continental Bridge".

Topographic Features

Changchun area shows the variety of topographic features combining
mountainous regions, mesas and plains, accounting for 9 per cent, 41 per
cent and 50 per cent of total area.

Population

Upon the establishment of Chao'an County of Jia Qing Emperor on July 8,
1800, many immigrants settled down in Changchun. Therefore, the
population has been increased since then.

The Puppet Manchurian Imperial Palace

By 1911, the third year of Xuan Tong Emperor, the population of Changchun
Fu, Yushu, Nongan, Dehui and Shuangyang was 591,000, 423,000, 432,000,
328,000 and 233,000 respectively.

Just before the "9.18" Event in 1931, the population of Changchun County,
Yushu County, Nongan County, Dehui County and Shuangyang County recorded
478,000, 502,000, 318,000, 376,000 and 247,000.

China has so far carried out several national censuses since 1949. The
outcome of the population of Changchun in each of the past censuses was:

The first national census in 1953: the total population was 3.163
million, including 1.70 million males and 1.54 million females, a sex
ratio of 110:67 (males per 100 females)

The fifth national census in 2000: the total population was 7.14 million,
including 3.65 million males and 3.49 million females, a sex ratio of
104:72 (males per 100 females). The population of urban citizens was 3.55
million, accounting for 49.79% of the total, and number of rural
residents accounted for 50.21% totaling 3.59 million. Family size
recorded 3.41 members averagely.

The Changchun World Sculpture Park

The total number of the registered permanent residents reached 7.24
million at the end of 2004, including 3.15 million in Changchun City and
4.09 million in Changchun��s four administrative areas. The birth rate,
death rate and natural increase rate was 8.94%, 4.76% and 4.17%
respectively.

The population density of Changchun is 368 persons per square kilometer.
Of the urban areas, Nan'guan District registered the highest rate of 2388
persons per square kilometer, while other counties (cities) recorded
relatively lower, of which, Nongan only had 206 persons per square
kilometer.

Ethnics

Changchun, a multi-ethnic region, has 46 minorities with a total
population of 252,000(excluding Han), accounting for 3.53% of the total
population. They are: Manchu, 143,000, accounting for 56.72%; Korean,
496,000, 19.67%; Hui, 437,000, 17.33%; Mongolian, 110,000, 4.4%; the
rest, 1.88%.

There are 4 minority towns, 47 minority villages and 258 communities all
over Changchun city.

The Changchun Movie Wonderland

Climate

Changchun is known as the Spring City of the North due to its cozy
climate characteristics.

Changchun, situated between the east humid mountainous region and west
sub-dry plain, has a continental monsoon climate of a temperate region.
The spring and autumn are short and the weather changes all the time. The
summer is warm and humid. The winter is long, cold and dry. The four
distinctive seasons make Changchun area a good location to research and
exploit the nature.

Following is the average climate information of January and February from
2001 to 2005.

- Sunrise: 7:15; Sunset: 17:05

- Wind speed (m/s): 2.9(light breeze); wind direction: Southwesterly wind

- Average temperature (��C): -12

- Snowfall (mm): 7.7

- Number of Days with Grade-A Air: 83.1%

- Overcast and Sunny Days: Percentage of sunny days: 40.5%; Percentage of
overcast days: 6.5%; Percentage of sunny to overcast days: 53%

Monsoon Climate

The special continental monsoon climate characteristics make the winter
cold and dry, and summer rainy and hot. Temperature Changes distinctively
in the four seasons, making the temperature lower in winter but higher in
summer than that of the other regions at the same latitude.

Due to its transitional location, Changchun enjoys more sunshine and rain
falls, thereby offering favorable climate for the local agriculture.

The whole year's average temperature is 4.8 degrees centigrade. The
lowest temperature is -39.85 degrees centigrade and the highest 39.5
degree centigrade. In summer, the southeaster prevails. Its annual
precipitation is in the range between 522 and 615 mm, with 60 per cent
falling in summer. The average temperature in July is 23 degrees
centigrade. In autumn, pleasant and mild weather may last for days
combined with more conspicuous temperature changes and lower wind speed
than those in spring.

History

Changchun is a new city with only about 200 years of history. In the year
of 1800, Emperor Jiaqing of Qing Dynasty selected a small village on the
east bank of the Yitong River and named it as "Changchun Ting", and in
the year of 1889, it was promoted as "Changchun Fu".

In 1930, the Japanese imperialists invaded the Northeast China,
established the Manchurian Public country, and selected Changchun as its
capital. Later, they renamed Changchun as "Xinjing (new capital )" and
made it suffered from this shameful history.

After the founding of the People's Republic of China, especially since
the reform and open door policy, great changes have taken place in
Changchun for its construction development. Now Changchun has formed its
own advantage and characteristics with very solid foundations in industry
and agriculture, and prosperous commerce.

It is a very influential regional center city in China with high degree
openness and advanced science and education. It is characterized as the
automobile city, forest city, film city and city of science, technology
and culture.

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Chinese Mandarin - Thailand has first bird flu outbreak in 6 months

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

Thailand has first bird flu outbreak in 6 months

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-01-15 17:08

BANGKOK - Thailand has suffered its first outbreak of the H5N1 bird flu
virus in six months, an Agriculture Ministry official said on Monday
after a rash of outbreaks in Vietnam and four human deaths in Indonesia
this year.

"The lab results confirmed that some ducks in the northern province of
Phitsanulok have been infected with H5N1 bird flu virus," Livestock
Department chief Pirom Srichan told Reuters.

"We have culled about 1,900 ducks in the area."

Thailand's last outbreak of the virus in poultry was in late July, and
the last human death in August, the country's 17th since the virus
re-emerged in Asia in late 2003.

The World Health Organization says the virus has killed 159 people
worldwide since 2003 by January 12, including 61 in Indonesia.

It has urged countries to be vigilant because H5N1 continues to circulate
in poultry.

Vietnam, which has had no human H5N1 cases since November 2005, is
battling new outbreaks in poultry in the Mekong Delta.

Scientists fear the virus could mutate into a form that jumps easily
between people although it has not yet shown an ability to do so.

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Chinese School - N.Korea says not afraid of war after nuclear impasse

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

N.Korea says not afraid of war after nuclear impasse

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-12-23 22:12

International negotiators leave after making closing statements at the
six-party talks in Beijing December 22, 2006. From left are Chinese Vice
Foreign Minister Wu Dawei, Russian Ambassador to China Sergei Razov, US
Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, Japanese chief envoy
Kenichiro Sasae, South Korean chief negotiator Chun Yung-woo and North
Korea's Kim Kye Gwan. [Reuters]

Seoul - North Korea's official media blamed the United States on Saturday
for an impasse in talks aimed at ending Pyongyang's nuclear weapons
programme and said it was not afraid of war.

Special coverage:
North Korea Nuclear Crisis

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Hopes for progress of talks low

Five days of talks among the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the
United States ended on Friday with the envoys failing to reach any deal.

The UN imposed sanctions on North Korea after it conducted its first
nuclear test in October but North Korean officials had focused at the
talks on trying to get separate US financial curbs lifted, envoys said.

North Korean delegate Kim Kye-gwan said Pyongyang had rejected pressure
from the United States to end its nuclear programme and accept
inspections of its nuclear facilities.

"We decisively opposed this and told the US side to further study our
proposal," Kim was quoted as saying.

In a separate official report, North Korea said: "Sanctions and pressure
will never work on the DPRK (North Korea)."

"The revolutionary armed forces of the DPRK want peace but they are not
afraid of war. They will never allow anyone to infringe upon the
sovereignty and dignity of their country even a bit," the report on its
KCNA news agency said.

In September 2005, North Korea said in principle it would give up its
nuclear arsenal in exchange for aid and security guarantees.

North Korean accounts at Macau's Banco Delta Asia were frozen after the
US Treasury designated the bank as a "primary money-laundering concern",
also in September 2005. North Korea said the curbs showed Washington had
negotiated in bad faith.

Washington maintains the nuclear talks and the financial crackdown are
separate issues and should not be confused.

The crackdown, which froze US$24 million in funds, had wide implications
for North Korea because it has scared other international banks away from
doing business with Pyongyang.

South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun appeared to sympathise with the North
Koreans' position, asking this week why the US Treasury would act just
days before the nuclear deal was struck.

"If one wants to look at it in a bad light, one may say it was all
coordinated between the two (the US State and Treasury Departments)," Roh
said in a speech.

South Korea's envoy said he wanted to see the six-party talks continue
because they contributed to peace in the region, Yonhap news agency
reported on Saturday.

The mainstream South Korean daily JoongAng Ilbo cautioned Pyongyang
against dragging its heels.

"If North Korea holds its ground obstinately, it will only face more
serious isolation and pain," it said in an editorial.

China, which has hosted the talks since 2003, counselled more flexibility
in the negotiations and avoided placing blame on either Washington or
Pyongyang for this week's failure.

The overseas edition of the People's Daily said the contending sides
needed to continue talking and "make necessary compromises."

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===========================================================================
� N. Korea talks ends without breakthrough
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� N.Korea nuclear talks end without deal
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Learn Mandarin online - Asian Games close in spectacular Arabian fantasy

Sports / Games News

Asian Games close in spectacular Arabian fantasy

(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-12-16 13:20

DOHA, Dec 15 - The 15th Asian Games closed in spectacular fashion on
Friday in a multi-million dollar arabesque fantasy, with swashbuckling
sailors duelling in the soft light of 40,000 lanterns.

Just hours after hosts Qatar won the 428th and final gold medal of the
continent's biggest sporting extravaganza, the President of the Olympic
Council of Asia Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah officially closed the Doha
Games.

"May the youth of Asia ever celebrate the Asian Games in the spirit of
brotherhood and for the good of humanity," he told the crowd in the
Qatari capital.

Athletes from 45 countries marched around a packed Khalifa stadium for
the final time as hundreds of dancers armed with glittering swords
twirled around giant Persian urns to the sound of traditional Arab beats.

The floor of the stadium was transformed into a vast desert, which played
host to a caravan of camels and Arabian horses.

Flying carpets and boats with neon-lit sails descended from the sky as
sword-wielding sailors unleashed a torrent of brightly-coloured fireworks
into the air.

The theme then switched to a more oriental flavour as singers and dancers
from China took the stage to showcase the next Asian Games in Guangzhou
in 2010.

The Asian Games flag and torch were handed over to Liu Peng, president of
the Olympic Committee of China, as the ceremony drew to a close in a
crescendo of dazzling fireworks.

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Sunday, March 23, 2008

Chinese Mandarin - Saddam's nephew escapes Iraqi prison

WORLD / Middle East

Saddam's nephew escapes Iraqi prison

(AP)
Updated: 2006-12-10 08:27

Baghdad - A nephew of Saddam Hussein serving a life sentence for
financing insurgents and possessing bombs escaped from prison Saturday in
northern Iraq with the help of a police officer, authorities said.

Special coverage:
Iraq after War 
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Sectarian attacks killed at least 20 people, including five who died in a
suicide car bombing outside a Shiite shrine in Karbala, police said.
Officers also found 39 bullet-riddled bodies in Baghdad that apparently
were victims of revenge killings by Sunni Arabs and Shiites.

The escape by Saddam's nephew underlined one of the problems facing the
US military as it tries to train enough Iraqi security personnel so US
troops can go home: the ability of Sunni Arab insurgents and Shiite
militiamen to infiltrate Iraqi police forces.

Ayman Sabawi, son of Saddam's half brother Sabawi Ibrahim Hassan
al-Tikriti, escaped from a prison 45 miles west of the northern city of
Mosul in the afternoon with the help of a policeman, said a local police
commander, Brig. Abdul Karim al-Jubouri.

Brig. Abdul-Karim Khalaf, an Interior Ministry spokesman, confirmed the
escape but declined to discuss any details.

Sabawi, who was arrested in May 2005 by US and Iraqi forces near Saddam's
hometown of Tikrit, 80 miles north of Baghdad, was convicted of illegally
crossing the border from Syria and sentenced to 15 years in prison late
last year by an Iraqi court. He was sentenced to life in prison in an
earlier case for possession of illegal weapons and manufacture of bombs.

He "played a particularly active role in sustaining the terrorism by
providing financial support, weapons and explosives to terrorist groups,"
Iraq's government said.

In July 2005, the United States froze Sabawi's assets along with those of
five other Saddam nephews, accusing them of providing funds to Iraq's
Sunni Arab-dominated insurgency.

Sabawi's father was captured in February 2005. Formerly the head of
Saddam's intelligence service, al-Tikriti was No. 36 on a US list of the
55 most-wanted members of Saddam's ousted regime.

The suicide bomb attack occurred near the Al-Abbas shrine in Karbala, a
Shiite holy city 50 miles south of Baghdad.

The shrine's golden dome and minarets didn't appear damaged in video
shown on Iraqi state TV, but the blast set many parked cars on fire in a
nearby street. Two men with bloody faces could be seen running through
heavy black smoke past the body of another victim.

A main goal of Sunni Arab insurgent groups such as al-Qaida in Iraq has
been to spark sectarian violence by attacking sites revered by the
country's Shiite majority.

In Baghdad, some of the worst violence was in a Sunni pocket of Hurriyah,
a mixed neighborhood. Witnesses said Shiite militiamen entered the area
after Sunnis warned the few Shiites living there to leave or be killed.
Heavy machine gun fire was heard and three columns of black smoke rose
into the sky, the witnesses said on condition of anonymity out of concern
for their own safety.

Mohamed al-Askeri, a Defense Ministry spokesman, said some people were
chased from their homes, but Iraqi security forces drove off the
attackers, handed out food to displaced people and persuaded most to
return to their homes. But "others are still frightened," he said.

Adnan al-Dulaimi, who heads a large Sunni bloc in Parliament, went on a
Sunni-run TV station to demand protection for the district's Sunnis. "We
appeal to the government and US forces to rescue Sunni families in
Hurriyah who are facing killings and displacement by militias."

The US military, meanwhile, announced that two Marines were killed in
combat in Anbar province, raising to 42 the number of US troops who have
died in Iraq this month. At least 2,930 have died since the Iraq war
started in March 2003.

Iraq's influential Association of Muslim Scholars and the country's
largest Sunni Arab political party, the Iraqi Islamic Party, on Saturday
condemned a deadly US military attack the previous day in al-Ishaqi
village in volatile Salahuddin province.

The US command said a ground raid and airstrike killed 20 insurgents, but
local officials claimed at least 19 civilians died, including seven women
and eight children.

About 1,000 residents of the predominantly Sunni village of al-Ishaqi
held a funeral for the 19 dead Saturday, shouting "Down with the
occupiers," "Long live the resistance," and "There is no God but Allah."

The Association of Muslim Scholars, a group of hard-line Sunnis that
opposes the coalition, issued a statement alleging US soldiers entered
two Iraqi houses, shot 32 civilians to death, including women and
children, and then blew up the buildings to make it look as if the
victims died in a US airstrike targeting insurgents.

The Iraqi Islamic Party, part of a Sunni bloc that controls 44 of
parliament's 275 seats, made a similar claim, calling the attack "a new
massacre by the American occupiers."

Last spring, a US investigation cleared American soldiers of misconduct
during a March 15 raid in al-Ishaqi in which Air Force planes destroyed a
building believed to be hiding al-Qaida in Iraq insurgents. Villagers
claimed soldiers killed 11 civilians before ordering for the airstrike.

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Chinese language - Mother microwaved her baby - police

WORLD / America

Mother microwaved her baby - police

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-29 08:30

DAYTON, Ohio - A mother was arrested on suspicion of murdering her
newborn daughter by microwaving the baby in an oven. China Arnold, 26,
was jailed Monday on a charge of aggravated murder, more than a year
after she brought her dead month-old baby to a hospital. Bail was set
Tuesday at $1 million.

This photo provided by the Montgomery County Sheriff's office shows China
Arnold, 26, of Dayton, Ohio, after she was arrested and charged, Monday,
Nov. 27, 2006, with aggravated murder in the death of her three week old
daughter, Paris Talley, in 2005. [AP]

"We have reason to believe, and we have some forensic evidence that is
consistent with our belief, that a microwave oven was used in this
death," said Ken Betz, director of the Montgomery County coroner's office.

He said the evidence included high-heat internal injuries and the absence
of external burn marks on the baby, Paris Talley.

Arnold was arrested soon after the baby's death in August 2005, then was
released while authorities investigated further. Betz said the case was
difficult because "there is not a lot of scientific research and data on
the effect of microwaves on human beings."

The death was ruled homicide by hyperthermia, or high body temperature.
The absence of external burns ruled out an open flame, scalding water or
a heating pad as the cause, Betz said.

Arnold's lawyer, Jon Paul Rion, said his client had nothing to do with
her child's death and was stunned when investigators told her that a
microwave might have been involved.

"China - as a mother and a person - was horrified that such an act could
occur," Rion said.

The night before the baby was taken to the hospital, Arnold and the
child's father went out for a short time and left Paris with a baby
sitter, Rion said. The mother didn't sense anything out of the ordinary
until the next morning, when the child was found unconscious, Rion said.

Arnold has three other children.

In 2000, a Virginia woman was sentenced to five years in prison for
killing her month-old son in a microwave oven. Elizabeth Renee Otte
claimed she had no memory of cramming her son in the microwave and
turning on the appliance in 1999. Experts said that Otte suffered from
epilepsy and that her seizures were followed by blackouts.

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Chinese Online Class - NASA losing hope of finding Mars probe

WORLD / America

NASA losing hope of finding Mars probe

(AP)
Updated: 2006-11-22 09:16

WASHINGTON - NASA's best effort to find a missing Mars space probe have
failed, scientists said Tuesday as they began to lose hope for the
10-year-old planet-mapping workhorse.

A computer design downloaded from the internet of the Mars Global
Surveyor, is shown in this Jan. 29, 1999 file photo. NASA's best effort
to find the missing probe failed Monday night, as scientists at the space
agency began to lose hope for the 10-year-old planet-mapping workhorse,
which has been silent for more than two weeks. [AP]

After more than two weeks of silence from the Mars Global Surveyor, NASA
will make other tries to locate it, but scientists were pessimistic.

"We may have lost a dear old friend and teacher," Michael Meyer, the lead
scientist for NASA's Mars Exploration Program said in a news conference.

The $154 million surveyor, which was supposed to last only two years but
continued sending data for almost a decade, is the oldest of six
different active space probes on or circling the red planet.

Among its accomplishments are more than 240,000 pictures of Mars,
offering the best big-picture view of the planet. Meyer credited the
probe with proving that Mars once had water.

"Every good thing comes to an end at some point," said Arizona State
University scientist Phil Christensen. "It certainly in my mind greatly
exceeded our wildest expectations of what to hope for. It revolutionized
what we were thinking about Mars."

1 2 

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