Chinese Daily Photos, 2011 to 2019!

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Robots perform a dance in a competition in Mudanjiang, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, July 24, 2011. A nationwide robot competition was kicked off in the city on Sunday, with participants from 50 colleges and universities. (Xinhua/Zhang Chunxiang)

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A little girl shakes hands with a robot in a competition in Mudanjiang, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, July 24, 2011. A nationwide robot competition was kicked off in the city on Sunday, with participants from 50 colleges and universities. (Xinhua/Zhang Chunxiang)

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A team prepares for a robot competition in Mudanjiang, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, July 24, 2011. A nationwide robot competition was kicked off in the city on Sunday, with participants from 50 colleges and universities. (Xinhua/Zhang Chunxiang)

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A robot waves in a competition in Mudanjiang, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, July 24, 2011. A nationwide robot competition was kicked off in the city on Sunday, with participants from 50 colleges and universities. (Xinhua/Zhang Chunxiang)

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Participants adjust a robot for a competition in Mudanjiang, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, July 24, 2011. A nationwide robot competition was kicked off in the city on Sunday, with participants from 50 colleges and universities. (Xinhua/Zhang Chunxiang)

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A girl (R) tries a pair of earrings in a shop on Barkhor Street in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 24, 2011. A large number of tourists poured into Tibet during the summer season, as the region is celebrating the 60th anniversary of its peaceful liberation. The region received 2.25 million tourists in the first half of this year, 24.8 percent more than the same period of last year. (Xinhua/Chogo)

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Tourists wait to visit the Potala Palace in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, July 24, 2011. A large number of tourists poured into Tibet during the summer season, as the region is celebrating the 60th anniversary of its peaceful liberation.
 

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US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (2nd L) listens to Hong Kong Chief Executive Donald Tsang (2nd R) during their meeting at Government House in Hong Kong on July 25, 2011. Clinton, who arrived the night before after attending the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) regional forum in Bali, was to meet officials in Hong Kong and mainland China on July 25 as she wrapped up a series of Asian talks that touched on North Korea and South China Sea tensions.

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SHANGHAI, CHINA - JULY 25: (L-R) Bronze medalist Ying Lu of China poses for a photo during the medal ceremony after she won the Women's 100m Butterfly final on Day Ten of the 14th FINA World Championships at the Oriental Sports Center on July 25, 2011 in Shanghai, China.

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A bullet train passes the wreckage of two other high-speed trains which collided two days earlier, in the town of Shuangyu in the eastern Chinese province of Zhejiang, on July 25, 2011. China's media and public voiced anger over a deadly train crash that caused a slump in railway stocks and cast doubt on the breakneck expansion of the country's high-speed network.

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Rescuers are cleaning up a deadly train collision site in Wenzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province. The accident occurred at about 8:30 p.m. Saturday on a viaduct near the city of Wenzhou when bullet train D301 rear-ended D3115. The first four cars of the moving train fell off the viaduct onto the ground below. The last two cars of the stalled train derailed. The accident left at least 38 dead and almost 200 injured.

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Former NBA player Yao Ming adjusts his shirt during his retirement ceremony by China's Basketball Association in Beijing July 25, 2011.

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Two-year-old old Chinese girl Xiang Weiyi receives treatment while in hospital after she was the last survivor rescued some 21 hours from a Chinese high-speed train crash on July 23 in the town of Shuangyu in Wenzhou, in eastern China's Zhejiang province on July 25, 2011. There are fears her mother and father may be among the dead, which the railway ministry on July 25 put at 36, with 192 people wounded, in the country's worst rail accident since 2008.

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Customers shop in an Apple flagship store in Beijing's Sanlitun area, which is one of four official Apple stores in China, in this July 22, 2011 file photo. Apple is set to exponentially grow its China business as the country's No.1 and No.3 telecom operators jostle to stitch up deals to sell iPhones in the world's largest mobile phone market, home to more than 900 million subscribers.

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In this photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency, Chinese Navy missile frigate Luoyang, left, prepares to set sail in a harbor in Dalian, northeast China's Liaoning Province, Monday, July 25, 2011. A fleet formed by China's naval Zheng He training ship and Luoyang left Dalian on Monday for a visit to Russia and North Korea, Xinhua said.

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A shop assistant arranges smuggled Apple products at a mall in Shenzhen July 24, 2011. As Apple's gadgets become a status symbol among rich Chinese, electronics sellers are answering to the insatiable demand by smuggling the goods from Hong Kong, where the currency is weaker than the yuan and tariffs are virtually zero. Picture taken July 24, 2011.

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Citizens take part in a handstand performance in the Huashan 1914 Creative Park in Taipei, Southeast China's Taiwan, July 24, 2011. The handstand performance, as one of activities of the Huashan Acrobatics Festival, has attracted people of different ages. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Two commuters block a bus stopped at an intersection in protest that the bus did not stop at the right station in Wuhan, the capital city of Central China's Hubei province, on July 23, 2011. [Photo/CFP]

Despite the heat and rush-hour traffic, two female commuters blocked a bus stopped at an intersection in Wuhan, the capital city of Central China's Hubei province, on Saturday, in protest that the bus did not to stop at the right station.

One of the women complained that she had been waiting for the bus for about 40 minutes the previous day and it had not arrived. On the day of the protest, she said the bus came after half an hour of waiting, but the bus still didn't stop at the station.

The bus driver said that the route had been changed a month ago in response to safety and convenience concerns. But the reporter noticed a note explaining this was only plasted on the bus door and not at the station itself.

Other passengers said that they all knew of the change and muttered the two women were making trouble out of nothing.

Forty minutes later, the two women were sent home by policemen.
 

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A bullet train passes the wreckage of two other high-speed trains which collided two days earlier, in the town of Shuangyu in the eastern Chinese province of Zhejiang, on July 25, 2011. China's media and public voiced anger over a deadly train crash that caused a slump in railway stocks and cast doubt on the breakneck expansion of the country's high-speed network.
 

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LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAND - JULY 26: Li Ning, Chairman of Li Ning and IOC President Jacques Rogge sign the agreement as Asafa Powell of Jamaica, Zhang Yining of China and Yelena Isinbayeva of Russia look on during the Li Ning donation ceremony to the Olympic Museum on July 26, 2011 in Lausanne, Switzerland. Li Ning is the first Chinese sports brand to donate to the Museum.

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Workers prepare to process shark fin at a slaughter house in Puqi town, Zhejiang province July 13, 2011. Widely recognized as a major shark processing base in China, the shark processing industry in Puqi town has a history of some 800 years. The town owns many slaughter houses that produce fins, shark's meat, lips, bones, oil, maw and heads for various purposes, local media reported. Picture taken July 13, 2011.

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A worker cleans a CRH high-speed train parked at the Beijing South Station in Beijing, China, Tuesday, July 26, 2011. The Chinese government on Tuesday ordered a two-month, nationwide safety campaign for its railway system after a collision between two bullet trains killed at least 39 last Saturday.

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Luggage from a fatal high-speed train collision is displayed in the town of Shuangyu, on the outskirts of Wenzhou in the eastern Chinese province of Zhejiang, on July 26, 2011. The death toll from the July 23 crash has risen to 39, with nearly 200 others wounded. Two high-speed trains collided during a heavy thunderstorm, apparently after a lightning strike knocked out power to the first one and the second one barrelled into it from behind.

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Wu Hui-hua (2ndL), daugther of Taiwan skipper Wu Lai-yu, carries father's portrait during a protest outside the American Institute in Taipei on July 26, 2011. The family of Taiwanese skipper who died in crossfire between the US Navy and Somali pirates protested at the US mission here after the United States unveiled a report into the incident.

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CHENGDU, July 27 (Xinhua) -- Residents have resorted to panicked buying of bottled water after authorities in the southwestern city of Mianyang announced Tuesday that the city's major water source has been contaminated by flood-washed residue from a local manganese plant.

Residents have stormed supermarkets, stores and shopping malls for bottled water, despite the government's efforts to mobilize fire engines to send 375 tonnes of water to communities from Tuesday night through Wednesday morning

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A sudden downpour hit Beijing Tuesday night, disrupting traffic in many parts of the city. The downpour brought a precipitation of more than 100 millimeters in three hours from 9 p.m. Tuesday, blocking traffic in several artery roads in downtown area. [Chinanews.com]

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An excavator is used to dismantle a carriage of a derailed train from Saturday's devastating rail crash near the city of Wenzhou in East China's Zhejiang province. The mangled sections will be sent to Wenzhou West Railway Station Tuesday for further investigation. The dismantling work was carried out late at night in order not to disrupt traffic, according to Railway Ministry.

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A sightseeing helicopter takes off from Qingdao Olympic Sailing Center, in Qingdao city, East China's Shandong province, July 26, 2011. The helicopter tour was officially opened to tourists in Qingdao Tuesday. The route starts and ends both at Qingdao Olympic Sailing Center and it will cost 200 yuan ($31) per minute for each tourist to see the city from the air. [Photo/CFP]

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A 17-member Chinese peacekeeping squad departs from Beijing Capital International Airport for Liberia on July 26, 2011. The squad, which includes staff from criminal investigation, special police and traffic departments, was organized by the public security departments in Central China's Hunan province. It is the 10th peacekeeping squad sent by China to Liberia. [Photo/Xinhua]
 

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GUANGZHOU / BEIJING - A total of 89 kidnapped infants were rescued and 369 suspects arrested in two major human trafficking cases this month, police authorities announced on Tuesday.

In one case, Guangdong police, in collaboration with their counterparts in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, cracked a cross-border organization involved in abducting and selling children from Vietnam.

"A major channel used to abduct and sell children from Vietnam to China and a big criminal network were destroyed," said an officer from Guangdong provincial department of public security.

Most members of the criminal gang are Vietnamese residents, said the officer who did not want to be named. The arrests have dealt a heavy blow to criminals involved in cross-border trafficking of children in the southern region, he added.

Most of the eight abducted infants, aged from 10 days to 7 months, had been sedated with sleeping pills and were still asleep when they were rescued.

Police detained 39 suspects in the action, which was launched by more than 300 officers from Guangdong and Guangxi at 2 pm on July 15.

All the victims have now been taken to local hospitals and health centers for further medical observation.

Police immediately set up a special task force in February after they learned that many children had been trafficked to Dongxing city in Guangxi.

The case quickly raised great concern among the central and local governments. After months of investigation, the joint action was launched.

According to sources from the Guangdong provincial department of public security, police from China and Vietnam have launched joint efforts to fight cross-border crime involving the abduction and trafficking of children. The special campaign will last until Sept 15.

In the other case, police authorities in 14 provinces and autonomous regions dispatched some 2,600 officers to crack down on a giant cross-region trafficking group of 330 offenders on July 20, the Ministry of Public Security revealed on Tuesday.

A total of 81 infants were rescued in this case. Most of the children were baby girls, aged from 10 days to just 4 months. They are now being cared for in institutions.

Police in Henan province also discovered clues in the cross-region trafficking case earlier this year and with the cooperation of the Ministry of Public Security, the joint action was launched on July 20.

Since April 2009, national police have uncovered 39,194 cases involving the trafficking of people, 14,090 of which involved abducted women and 8,717 involved children.

Meanwhile, police have broken 4,885 criminal gangs, detained 33,831 suspects and rescued 14,613 trafficked children and 24,826 women
 

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GUANGZHOU - A man was sentenced to death Tuesday in south China's Guangdong Province for forging counterfeit yuan notes with a par value of 170 million yuan with 15 other gang members.

Xiao Guihong, the ring leader, was given the death penalty in the first-instance trial, according to a verdict released by the Dongguan City Intermediate People's Court.

The other 15 ring members were given sentences ranging from death with a reprieve to a year and 10 months in prison, the verdict said.

The 16 members were also ordered to pay fines ranging from 350,000 yuan ($54,400) to 60,000 yuan.

The gang members made an illegal profit of 1.8 million yuan from selling fake yuan notes worth 56 million yuan in total par value in August 2009, according to the court.

Police confiscated the rest of the notes with a par value of 114 million yuan in two raids in the same year.
 

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All members feel free to post recent news articles, photos & videos of Chinese people from the around the World. Also post comments on any item you see in this thread.

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Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao mourns for victims of the fatal train collision at the accident site in Wenzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province, July 28, 2011.

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Miao Guangyun bows as he prepares to receive his sentence at a court in Beijing, July 27, 2011. [Photo/CFP]

A man convicted of killing a mentally disabled boy by misdiagnosis was sentenced to 10 years in jail on Tuesday, the Beijing Times reported on Wednesday.

Miao Guangyun, a 26-year-old and with no medical license, gave an injection for spasm relief to 17-year-old Xiaohua (not his real name) who actually suffered from a serious intestinal blockage on December 12, 2009. Judicial experts found his misdiagnosis had caused a delay in treatment and finally led to the death of the boy.

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Drivers prepare for the trial operation of the first subway line in Southwest China's mountainous metropolis of Chongqing, July 28, 2011. The 15.7 km long subway line has a total of 13 stations and is the first of its kind built in a mountainous place. [Photo/CFP]

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Liu Yueqing, a cable worker from a local electric power company, gropes for cable lines in a stinking cable trench in Wuhan, Central China's Hubei province, July 13, 2011. Photos of the 48-year-old worker, dressed in nothing but his underwear during a cable-repairing mission, have become an Internet sensation, as netizens praise his work ethic.

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Relatives of the victims in a high-speed train crash wait in lines to register for body claim in the funeral home in Wenzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province, July 26, 2011. All of the 39 bodies of the train crash victims have been claimed by their relatives, according to the city government Tuesday. (Xinhua/Lu Chunyu)

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Two contestants present traditional costumes on a beauty contest of the 2011 China Xichang Liangshan Torch Festival of the Yi ethnic group, in Xichang, southwest China's Sichuan Province, July 27, 2011. The beauty contest is one of the most important activities of the annual torch festival. (Xinhua/Jiang Hongjing)

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Produced by Warner Bros., 20th Century Fox and Sundream Motion Pictures, the romance film "Love in Space" held its first press conference on Tuesday in Beijing, with director Tony Chan, leading actresses Rene Liu, Guey Lun-mei and Angelababy present. (Xinhua)

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Jin Linlin, 2008 Guinness World Record holder of simultaneously spinning for 300 hula hoops, spins 150 hula hoops during a promotional event at a shopping mall in Hong Kong Thursday, July 29, 2011.

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U.S. basketball player Carmelo Anthony, right, from the New York Knicks maneuvers a young local player during a basketball clinic in Hong Kong, Tuesday, July 26, 2011.

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U.S. basketball player Chris Paul from the New Orleans Hornets drives past a young local player during a basketball clinic in Hong Kong, Tuesday, July 26, 2011.

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Chelsea's Salomon Kalou, left, and Frank Lampard stand behind children during a soccer clinic at a facility run by Chelsea FC in Hong Kong Tuesday, July 26, 2011.

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Scouts from Hong Kong arrive to register at the World Scout Jamboree in Rinkaby, about 20 km (12 miles) from Kristianstad in southern Sweden, July 25, 2011. Some 40,000 scouts from 150 countries are expected to take part in the 22nd World Scout Jamboree that will take place from July 27 to August 7.

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A man walks past an advertisement featuring Chinese and foreign banknotes at an exchange shop in Hong Kong, Wednesday, July 27, 2011.
 

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Relatives of the victims in a high-speed train crash wait in lines to register for body claim in the funeral home in Wenzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province, July 26, 2011. All of the 39 bodies of the train crash victims have been claimed by their relatives, according to the city government Tuesday. (Xinhua/Lu Chunyu)

BEIJING, July 28 (Xinhua) -- China's railway regulator has collected tens of billions yuan in insurance premiums while insurance compensation has remained unchanged for decades, local press reported Thursday after a fatal high-speed train collision raised public concern over compensation.

The Ministry of Railways (MOR) collected a total of 16.9 billion yuan (2.62 billion U.S.dollars) of accident insurance premiums from 1999 to 2010, according to a report by the 21st Century Business Herald, a Beijing-based Chinese language newspaper.

The ministry has never revealed the exact amount of its income from insurance premiums, and the calculation of the total was based on railway regulations that require 2 percent of the ticket price to be levied as an accident insurance fee, said the newspaper.

But despite the fact that railway ticket prices have increased significantly in past decades, the maximum insurance compensation for railway accidents remains at 20,000 yuan -- the same amount as in 1992, according to railway regulations.

At least 39 people died and 192 others were injured in Saturday's high-speed train crash near the city of Wenzhou in east Zhejiang Province.

The MOR has promised to pay the families of the deceased 500,000 yuan each in compensation, which has aroused discontent among the public as being widely viewed as inadequate.

Moreover, insurance premiums have been collected as part of the MOR's transportation income instead of being managed by insurance companies, it said.

Therefore, this income has been operated exclusively by the ministry without third-party supervision, such as the China Insurance Regulatory Commission, it said. The ministry has been acting as both the regulator and operator of China's railway system since its establishment.

The MOR announced a profit of 15 million yuan in 2010, while the annual income from premiums stood at 2.7 billion yuan, according to the ministry's annual report last year.
 

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In this photo taken Saturday, June 11, 2011, Tyler Thompson rehearses with the Great Wall Youth Orchestra in Oakland, Calif. (Photo/AP)

OAKLAND, Calif. — Tyler Thompson is an unlikely star in the world of Chinese opera.

The black teenager from Oakland has captivated audiences in the U.S. and China with his ability to sing pitch-perfect Mandarin and perform the ancient Chinese art form.

"As soon as he opens his mouth and sings in Chinese, the Chinese are very surprised and then feel very proud of him," said his music teacher Sherlyn Chew. "When he puts on the costume, and all the acting, you can see that he's pretty good."

Tyler, 15, is a standout student in Chew's Oakland-based Purple Silk Music Education program, which teaches children and youth — mostly from low-income immigrant families — how to sing and play traditional Chinese music. The program's Great Wall Youth Orchestra & Chorus has performed around the country.

Tyler has learned to sing several well-known pieces of Chinese opera, a centuries-old form of musical theater known for its elaborate costumes, clanging gongs and cymbals, wide-ranging vocals and highly stylized movements.

At the World Children's Festival in Washington in June, Tyler, dressed in a black robe emblazoned with golden dragons, got a standing ovation when he performed as Justice Bao, a famous Song Dynasty judge who fought government corruption, from the Chinese classic "Bao Qing Tian."

"The music is very beautiful, and it's very passionate. You can hear it when it's being played," said Tyler, a theater student at the Oakland School for the Arts. "It's made me want to know more about the world outside of America or California or Oakland."

David Lei, chairman of the Chinese Performing Arts Foundation in San Francisco, has seen Tyler perform several times and arranged to have him sing at the opening of a Chinese opera exhibit several years ago.

"It's very authentic because he hits the tones just right, so you understand everything," Lei said. "People just don't expect an Afro-American kid to be doing it. It's the initial shock. There's a sense of novelty."

Tyler, who comes from a music-loving family, began learning how to sing in Chinese a decade ago when he was a kindergartner in Chew's music class at Oakland's Lincoln Elementary School, where about 90 percent of students are Asian.

Chew quickly recognized Tyler's talent and recruited him to join her Purple Silk music program, where students learn to sing Chinese songs and play traditional instruments such as a two-string violin called an erhu, a four-stringed lute known as a pipa and a bamboo flute called a dizi.

"I really took a liking to him and thought he had quite a large range," said Chew, who started the music program at Oakland's Laney College in 1995. "He hears pitch very well, and his pronunciation of Chinese characters is very accurate."

Tyler's mother, Vanessa Ladson, said her son's education at a predominantly Asian elementary school and participation in the Chinese music program have made him more open-minded.

"He's grown a lot," she said. "He's learning a different culture, and the Asian children are learning his culture, so it's a plus-plus for everybody."

Tyler said friends and classmates sometimes poke fun at him, wondering where a black kid from Oakland learned how to sing Chinese opera.

"Sometimes they don't understand it," Tyler said. "It's just joking about the fact that as dark as I am, I'm singing Chinese. What's up with that? If I go to China, I'm going to stick out like a sore thumb. It's just those types of jokes. All in good fun."

Since his first solo at age 6, Tyler has performed at San Francisco's Davies Symphony Hall and Herbst Theater, on television shows such as "Good Morning America" and at the U.S. State Department, where he sang for then-Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Chinese Vice Premier Wu Yi.

Tyler became a sensation in China several years ago after Chinese Central Television broadcast his performance at a Lunar New Year show in San Jose.

Tyler, who has learned to speak some basic Chinese, was scheduled to make his debut performance in China in July, but he and his mother ran into trouble getting visas in time, Chew said.

In recent years, Tyler has begun studying theater and acting more seriously, but he plans to keep performing traditional Chinese music, which has opened up a world of opportunities to him.

"I've been sticking to this to see where else it will take me," he said.

(Agencies)
 
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