Chinese Daily Photos, 2011 to 2019!

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bd popeye

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Two CRH380BL trains were seen at a plant of Changchun Railway Vehicles Co., Ltd. (CNR CRC) in Changchun, capital of northeast China's Jilin Province, June 11, 2011.

The first EMU manufactured for Rio de Janeiro of Brazil was launched at CNR CRC on Tuesday. In late-June, twenty-two CRH380BL trains produced by CNR CRC will serve for the Beijing-Shanghai high speed railway. The CNR CRC is one of the leading railway vehicles manufacture enterprises in China. With advanced equipments and excellent research and development ability, the CNR CRC is able to produce 1,000 CRH trains, including CRH5 and CRH380 series, 1,200 subway trains, 500 common trains and 6,000 bogies each year.

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Exhibition staff presents shampoo in bottles shaped as famous cartoon characeters at Hong Kong International Lifestyle Exhibition in Beijing, capital of China, June 10, 2011. The 4-day exhibition covered digital high-tech gadgets, jewels and accessories, fashion couture, creative housewares and more. (Xinhua/Zhao Bing)
 

bd popeye

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Actress Chiling Lin and actor Chen Kun pose on a press conference of the film "Love on Credit" in Shanghai, east China, June 10, 2011. (Xinhua/Qin Gaoren)

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Chinese actress Li Bingbing (L) and South Korean actress Jeon Ji-hyun arrive on the red carpet at the opening ceremony of Shanghai International Film Festival (SIFF) in Shanghai, east China, June 11, 2011. The 14th Shanghai International Film Festival runs from June 11 to June 19. (Xinhua/Pei Xin)

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Chinese actor Chen Kun and actress Zhang Yuqi walk on the red carpet at the opening ceremony of Shanghai International Film Festival (SIFF) in Shanghai, east China, June 11, 2011. The 14th Shanghai International Film Festival runs from June 11 to June 19. (Xinhua/Pei Xin)

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Chinese director Feng Xiaogang and his wife Xu Fan arrive on the red carpet at the opening ceremony of Shanghai International Film Festival (SIFF) in Shanghai, east China, June 11, 2011. The 14th Shanghai International Film Festival runs from June 11 to June 19.(Xinhua/Liu Ying)

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Hong Kong actress Leung Wing Kei walks on the red carpet at the opening ceremony of Shanghai International Film Festival (SIFF) in Shanghai, east China, June 11, 2011. The 14th Shanghai International Film Festival runs from June 11 to June 19.(Xinhua/Pei Xin)

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Cast members of the movie "Mr. Tree" and director Jia Zhangke (third from the right) walk the red carpet at the opening ceremony of the 14th Shanghai International Film Festival at the Shanghai Grand Theater on rainy Saturday. [Pang Li/China.org.cn]
 
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bd popeye

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For those of you interested..

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Performers from Chongqing municipality sing songs during a performance named "Sing, Read, Speak, Spread" to celebrate the upcoming 90th anniversary of the Communist Party of China (CPC), in Beijing, June 12, 2011. China will celebrate the upcoming 90th anniversary of the founding of the Communist Party of China (CPC) on July 1, 2011.

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Impersonators of China's former leaders (from R to L) Deng Xiaoping, Mao Zedong, Liu Shaoqi, Zhou Enlai and Zhu De, chat as they sit on chairs outside a conference hall before a performance at the Central Party School of the Communist Party of China (CPC) in Beijing, June 11, 2011. Participants from the Great Leaders' Elegance Art Group gave a performance at the school on Saturday to celebrate the upcoming 90th anniversary of the founding of the Communist Party of China. The Great Leaders' Elegance Art Group, led by Shang Qingrui who is impersonating former Chairman Mao comes from a group of actors who look alike and are able to talk like former leaders of China. Picture taken June 11, 2011.

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Students smoke & drink beer during a party after the National College Entrance Exams in Shanghai June 12, 2011. About 9.33 million students attended China's national college entrance exams or "gaokao" from June 7 to 8, a fiercely competitive test that is seen as make-or-break for getting ahead.

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A Chinese woman walks among the tents at a relief centre after flood water swept through Linxiang, central China's Hunan province on June 11, 2011. Floods triggered by torrential rain in southern and central China have killed 52 people and forced more than 100,000 to flee their homes, state media reported.

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Chinese children gather at a relief centre after flood water swept through Linxiang, central China's Hunan province on June 11, 2011.

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Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou, seeking another four-year term, gestures while opening his first re-election campaign office in Taipei on June 12, 2011. Ma, also the leader of the ruling Kuomintang (KMT) party, pledged further reform at the gathering which drew hundreds of supporters.

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Taiwan's president and 2012 presidential candidate Ma Ying-jeou, center top, cheers with his supporters during the opening ceremony for his campaign office "Taiwan Brave" to begin presidential election campaign rally in Taipei, Taiwan, Sunday, June 12, 2011.
 

defaultuser1

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Power politics within CCP?
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Whichever way this turns out, it will affect the strategic direction of PRC's development for the next few decades.
The Mao worship has got to go... it makes it seem as if Mao's personality cult is still there. It doesn't help that Mao was not the brightest man around and was also a puppet of the CIA.

But the Maoists are right that the excessive capitalism has go to go too. If a society loses its traditional culture, the entire country will fall soon after. Fully pursuing either route will not bode well for China.
 

bd popeye

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^^^Quickie..you also win NOTHING!!:eek:

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Extras take a break during the filming of the upcoming television drama on the founding of China's Communist Party in Weihai, Shandong province June 13, 2011. China's Communist Party will celebrate its 90th anniversary on July 1.

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Wang Pengkai, an actor playing the part of China's former Chairman Mao Zedong, has his make-up applied during the filming of the upcoming television drama on the founding of China's Communist Party in Weihai, Shandong province June 13, 2011. China's Communist Party will celebrate its 90th anniversary on July 1.

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A man walks in front of a floral decoration for the upcoming 90th anniversary of the founding of China's Communist Party in Shanghai June 13, 2011. China's Communist Party will celebrate its 90th anniversary on July 1.

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Chinese fans scream during a rock music festival in Hefei, east China's Anhui province on June 11, 2011.

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In this Sunday, June 12, 2011 photo, a CRH high speed train is tested at Shanghai's Hongqiao Railway Station in China. Chinese railway authorities say all is ready for the opening of a showcase high-speed railway between Beijing and Shanghai later this month. (AP Photo)

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Members from a women's concern group (Association for the Advancement of Feminism) hold banners during a protest against Prada S.P.A.'s global offering at HSBC headquarters in Hong Kong June 13,2011. Italian fashion house Prada Spa is suspected of discriminatory practices towards female employees in Japan, and that such complaints are still currently under investigation, according to a press release by the Association for the Advancement of Feminism.

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Assistants stand with Prada bags during a press conference for Prada S.p.A. in relation to its upcoming Hong Kong Initial Public Offering, in Hong Kong on June 12, 2011. Italian luxury fashion house Prada is set to raise as much as 2.6 billion USD after setting the price range for its highly anticipated offering in Hong Kong on June 24, a report said on June 6. The Milan-based company plans to sell 423.28 million shares at an indicative price range of HK$36.50-HK$48.0 (4.70-6.20 USD) each, Dow Jones Newswires reported, quoting an unnamed source familiar with the deal.

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Military officers chat with prospective dates at the hall of the Beijing Garrison on June 11, 2011. [Photo/CFP]

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BEIJING, June 12 (Xinhua) -- Thirteen crew members were saved by a government rescue team after their vessel became flooded in seawaters near the city of Weihai in east China's Shandong Province, the Ministry of Transport (MOT) said Sunday.

According to the MOT's Rescue Bureau, the fishing vessel "Lurongyu0381," with 13 people on board, became flooded in waters some 50 km to the northeast of Weihai at around 10:56 a.m. Sunday.

After detecting a rescue signal sent out by the ship's crew, the Rescue Bureau dispatched two helicopters from the North China No. 1 Relief Flight Team, stationed in airports in the cities of Penglai and Dalian, to save the sailors.

The helicopters finished retrieving the sailors at around 1:00 p.m. and landed at an airport in Weihai half an hour later.

Nobody was hurt during the accident, according to the MOT.

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About 60 people suspected of being responsible for a spate of telecom swindles are escorted by police after being flown from Cambodia to Xiamen, Fujian province, on Friday. [Photo/Xinhua]

BEIJING - The Chinese Ministry of Public Security announced on Saturday that the mainland and Taiwan have started a joint police investigation to find the culprits behind a spate of telecom swindles.

Working with their counterparts from Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand, the officials have detained 186 mainlanders, 410 Taiwan residents, one Cambodian and one Vietnamese - 598 suspects in total.

Mainland and Taiwan police, with help from police in several Southeast Asian countries, have destroyed 106 bases of the swindling operations and captured the bankcards, computers, cell phones and other belongings of suspects in the case.

Telecom swindling, a new type of crime in which people are cheated through the use of telecommunication devices, has claimed many victims in recent years.
 

bd popeye

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Riot police confront rioting Sichuan migrant workers in Zengcheng, near Guangzhou in southern China. Riot police fired tear gas over the weekend to disperse rampaging migrant workers in Zengcheng who were protesting over the mistreatment of a young pregnant street hawker by security guards, media reports said on Monday.

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Riot police & paramilitary troops patrol on a street in the township of Xintang in Zengcheng near the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou June 13, 2011. Riot police fired tear gas to disperse rampaging migrant workers in southern China protesting over the mistreatment of a pregnant street hawker by security guards, media reports said on Monday, the latest in a series of protests across the country.

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Residents look at overturned and burnt police vehicles on the streets of Xintang, near Guangzhou, Guangdong province in this June 11, 2011 photo. Riot police fired tear gas to disperse rampaging migrant workers in southern China protesting over the mistreatment of a pregnant street hawker by security guards, media reports said on Monday, the latest in a series of protests across the country. Picture taken June 11, 2011.
 

bd popeye

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News from Rueters about the riot in Zengcheng..

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ZENGCHENG, China (Reuters) – Riot police poured into a southern Chinese factory town crowded with migrant workers on Monday, a day after militia fired tear gas to quell rioting over the abuse of a pregnant street hawker who became a symbol of simmering grassroots discontent.

Hong Kong television showed crowds of workers and stall holders, many from the rural southwestern province of Sichuan running through the streets of Zengcheng in Guangdong province over the weekend.

The rioters smashed windows, set fire to government buildings and overturned police vehicles, bringing to a climax anger over security guards who had set upon the hawker, Wang Lianmei, on Friday. Footage showed riot police firing tear gas and deploying armored vehicles to disperse the crowds, and handcuffing protesters.

By Monday evening the unrest had subsided. But hundreds of riot police guarded the streets, and continued arriving by the busload, while wary workers watched on street corners.

Though protests have become relatively common over anything from corruption to abuse of power, the ruling Communist Party is sensitive to any possible threat to its hold on power in the wake of the protests that have swept the Arab world.

Guangdong is also a pillar of China's export industries, and persistent unrest there could unnerve buyers and investors.

Witnesses said more than 1,000 protesters had besieged at least one government office in Zengcheng.

"People were running around like crazy," a shop owner in the area told the South China Morning Post. "I had to shut the shop by 7 p.m. and dared not come out."

News reports said the incident was sparked on Friday night when security personnel in nearby Dadun village pushed pregnant hawker Wang, 20, to the ground while trying to clear her from the streets.

"The case was just an ordinary clash between street vendors and local public security people, but was used by a handful of people who wanted to cause trouble," Zengcheng Mayor Ye Niuping was quoted as saying by the China Daily newspaper.

Other clashes have erupted in southern China in recent weeks, including in Chaozhou, where hundreds of migrant workers demanding payment of their wages at a ceramics factory attacked government buildings and set vehicles ablaze.

Last week, protests erupted in central China at the death under interrogation of an official.

Over the weekend, state media said that two people were slightly injured in an explosion in Beijing's neighboring city Tianjin, set off by a man bent on "revenge against society."

Despite pervasive censorship and government controls, word of protests, along with often dramatic pictures, spreads fast in China on mobile telephones and the Internet, especially on popular microblogging sites.

In 2007, China had over 80,000 "mass incidents," up from over 60,000 in 2006, according to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Many involved no more than dozens protesting against local officials over complaints about corruption, abuse of power, pollution or poor wages.

No authoritative estimates of the number of protests, riots and mass petitions since then have been released.

Guangdong's Communist Party boss, Wang Yang, is one of the ambitious provincial leaders who may win a place in China's next central leadership, after President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao retire from power from late next year.

In past months, Wang has sought to cast himself as a moderate leader willing to heed ordinary citizens' gripes, and has said his priority is improving the public sense of wellbeing -- a gentler message than the hardline one that domestic security officials have pushed.

"Use rule of law to protect and realize people's democratic rights," Wang told a meeting in April, according to the official Xinhua news agency. "People don't fear poverty; what they fear is not having the market conditions for fair competition so that they can achieve prosperity."

Also in April, the Communist Party committee of Guangdong heard a lecture from Sun Liping, a sociologist from Tsinghua University in Beijing who has bluntly warned that corruption, inequality and divisions threaten to "rupture" Chinese society.

(Additional reporting by Xavier Ng, and Chris Buckley in Beijing; Editing by Ben Blanchard and Daniel Magnowski)
 

Geographer

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What's going on here? Did the rioters capture these policemen?

The CCP needs to get a grip on the corruption and abuse of power. It's more than a question of moral discipline that internal anti-corruption education campaigns are going to solve. It's a structural problem. There needs to be more checks and balances of local officials through the courts, ombudsmen, and anti-corruption task forces for each province. More citizen input into local police chiefs and government officials would go a long way. Citizen complaints should also be a weighing factor in promotions. Corruption was the undoing of the KMT and the government of South Vietnam. The communists knew the hatred of corrupt officials and capitalized on it.
 
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