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Kai Wing SHIU ???
A man on a mission to transition from being an English speaking Consultant in the UK, to a Mandarin speaking Consultant in China, even though the market there hasn't quite matured yet. Nothing about this is supposed to be easy - and so it should be very interesting. Please read, and send me your comments on my thoughts and opinions.
Ok, in closing down shiufamily.com
I'm closing down my domain (www.shiufamily.com)
I suppose it's fair enough that my blog is banned in China. It's not my reporting though....
A top justice official has called on mainland police to stop using torture to extract confessions - the biggest cause of wrongful verdicts - acknowledging a problem widely criticised by foreign human rights groups.
"Nearly every wrongful verdict in recent years relates to illegal interrogation," Wang Zhenchuan , a deputy procurator-general of the Supreme People's Procuratorate, told a seminar in Sanya , Hainan province at the weekend. He did not define what is illegal under Chinese law, but said the government needed to do more to protect the rights of suspects by curbing torture, Xinhua said yesterday.
The mainland saw at least 30 cases annually with wrongful verdicts due to confessions extracted by torture or other coercive tactics, but the true number could be even higher, Mr Wang said. Torture methods cited by rights experts included shocks from electric batons, cigarette burns, submersion in pits of water or sewage and exposure to conditions of extreme heat or cold.
China previously denied accusations by the United Nations special rapporteur on torture, Manfred Nowak, following his visit to the mainland in December last year, that torture was still widely practised in the country.
"Torture is on the decline but it is still widespread," Mr Nowak said at the time.
In March, following the release of a more comprehensive report, Mr Nowak said a major problem of China's justice system was that it was largely based on obtaining confessions, especially for suspects in rural areas and for political prisoners.
"The major reason for torture and ill-treatment remains the old system, with a lot of pressure on the police to extract confessions. My particular concern is the strong interest of the system that people finally admit guilt," he said.
The mainland has launched a political campaign to halt such practices. Under regulations issued in March, interrogations in major cases, such as murder and gang-related crime, must be both video- and audio-taped.
Another procuratorial official, Chen Lianfu, head of the office with the task of fighting malfeasance, was quoted by Xinhua, saying the government needs to better enforce rules to curb illegal practices in interrogation.
He Jiahong , president of the law school at Renmin University, said China should study other countries to help develop its legal system in this regard.
Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse
MUMBAI: A quick Google search reveals how a catchphrase became a cliche. From visions of grandeur that Shanghai conjured three years ago, Mumbai has decided that as long as the roads don't have potholes, and trains run on time and buses do the same it will be content. The dream is being held in abeyance to focus on the execution.
No one knows for certain where the cliche 'Mumbai like Shanghai' first originated. It could have been the 'Vision Mumbai' report of '03, prime minister Manmohan Singh's speech before the state polls in '04 or Mr Vilasrao Deshmukh's post election statement.
Says Dr T Chandra Shekhar, metropolitan commissioner of Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority (MMRDA), who has been associated with the 'Mumbai Shanghai dream' ever since the inception of the 'Vision Mumbai' report: "Frankly speaking, even I don't know where the phrase originated from." But he is quick to add, "The idea was about having a role model. Just as individuals have role models, in '03 we realised that the city also needs to have a role model. Duplication is unwarranted and impossible but its the spirit that matters."
For the uninitiated, the spirit is the 'pace' of development that Shanghai has witnessed over the years (As a popular joke goes, in Shanghai, you take to bed a lake and get up in the morning with a high rise).
In 1987, Shanghai was a dilapidated, financial wreck. This was at a time when Tiananmen massacre had given China a bad name. However, with Zhu Rongji's term as Mayor from 1987 to 1991, the city witnessed a vast renaissance-like improvement. "One-chop Zhu" - the nickname he earned as Mayor of Shanghai for cutting through red tape - led the development and opening up of Pudong (Shanghai's hinterland). 'If you build it they will come' was the strategy followed by Pudong since it began its development.
The city undertook 10 major infrastructural projects (including bridges, tunnels, the metro, deep-water port) as a result of which Shanghai grew at 8-10% per annum in the '90s and Pudong at around 16 and 18%. Moreover, the $40 billion investment in infrastructure changed the face of Shanghai - entire blocks were rebuilt and its roads, buildings, transport and telecom emerged as the best in the world, an international airport, a subway and a pedestrian passageway across the Huangpu River separating that area from downtown Shanghai.
Taking cue from the above model, Mumbai's planners sat with their drawing board and drafted a mega development plan for the crumbling, reeling, overburdened and bursting metropolis. That was easier said than done. Says Dr Chandra Shekhar, "By that time we realised that slums were everywhere. If you need to widen the roads there were slums, construct rail corridors there were slums, build airports there were slums. Almost all the free land in the city had been occupied by slums and there was no way in which one could bulldoze them."
And that's where came in the most burgeoning and time taking aspect of Mumbai's transition into a world class city. What followed eventually were court cases, petitions, political dictat, delays and finally a stage where delay overtook delay. That's when the planners designed the 'resettlement with a human face' concept.
Things have changed but not very much. As a senior transportation planner puts it, "The projects are crawling along." But, its also important to understand that there couldn't have been any fast forward development.
Says Dr Chandra Shekhar, "The republican government of Shanghai could pace itself through quick evacuations and compensation policies met with little resistance. But, ours is a democratic set up and any resettlement has to go through political hurdles, slum lords, petitions, court cases and a whole range of approvals." Of course, while complex R&R issues cropped up, the development process took a beating, and crawled its way through all hurdles.
So can Mumbai ever become a Shanghai? Answers Dr Chandra Shekhar with a glint in the eye, "Not Shanghai, but surely a world class city. I lay my bet on Navi Mumbai and the hinterland. Once the Trans Harbour link connectivity and the Maha SEZ come up, they will bolster our economic development and give shape to that dream." The city of Mumbai waits for its Pudong with the same eagerness as the average citizen of the city awaits the 9:14 fast to Churchgate.
I've been reading Friedman's The World is Flat recently (http://www.amazon.com/World-Flat-History-Twenty-first-Century/dp/0374292884 ). The book talks of Amazons, e-bays, Indian accountants doing US tax returns, but so far... no mention of Columbian drug lords.
The Columbian drug barons of this world got wind of China FDI, and the Workshop of the World. Put two and two together, and hey presto, a neat little money laundering operation.
Colombian drug gangs are using China as a money laundering hub, using the proceeds of their illegal activities to buy Chinese textiles, toys and electronics for resale on the domestic market, Reuters reported. The claims were made in Beijing Monday by Colombian Vice President Francisco Santos Calderon, who said the authorities were trying to engage Beijing in talks over how to stop the flow of money. Santos said Columbia was also keen to impose controls on the sale of chemicals from China that can be use to create synthetic drugs in addition to legal products. The main purpose of his visit was to negotiate a number of free trade deals aimed at boosting Chinese investment in the South American country. Colombia wants Chinese firms to use it as an export platform to sell products to countries with which Bogota has free trade deals.
A nebulous and inefficient safety management system overseen by multiple government departments is to blame for the mainland's regular scares relating to foodstuffs and other consumer goods, according to leading food safety experts.
Li Jianrong , a food science professor from Gongshang University in Zhejiang , said the "multi-monitoring" scheme was one of the key factors behind the many food scandals in recent years and "governments should streamline their co-ordination and improve their working efficiency".
Food and other consumer goods scares are a staple of mainland news. During the past few months, consumers have been rattled to learn of carcinogenic Sudan Red dye detected in salted duck eggs from Hebei , and high levels of carcinogens in turbot fish in Shanghai. The Sudan scandal widened yesterday when authorities announced seven more companies were found making contaminated eggs in Beijing and Hebei, Anhui , Henan , Zhejiang and Hubei .
In September, Japanese cosmetics manufacturer SK-II got into trouble with safety inspectors in Guangdong, although it was later clarified that its products were safe.
Professor Li said the safety of agricultural products and livestock was monitored by five government bodies. Provincial agriculture departments had responsibility over farm operations, quality inspection departments governed processing and packaging, industry and commerce departments monitored the market, and public health departments dealt with the food as it was consumed.
Meanwhile, the State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA) and its local branches were entitled to co-ordinate with other departments and monitor the whole process.
"But the SFDA seems to lack the power to motivate other government departments. The SFDA is young and was only established in the late 1990s. And it doesn't have its own key labs," he said.
Pan Jiarong , from the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, agreed, saying the existing government management system was not efficient enough to supervise the mainland's complex and chaotic food market. "In many cases those government bodies are duplicated, but sometimes there are procedures which fall through the monitoring gaps."
In a renewed effort to bring order to the system, the Ministry of Commerce has drafted rules for the distribution of food products and put the proposal out for public comment until Saturday.
Wholesalers and retail food markets would be required to sign agreements with vendors defining their food quality responsibilities, and markets would be encouraged to fix links with food suppliers.
But experts said scares perpetuated by rogue manufacturers in the past couple of years did not point to a decline in mainland quality.
Professor Pan said: "From the high media exposure, maybe it is easy to conclude that the food on the market is of poorer quality. But I don't think so and I think the problematic foods about five or 10 years ago would have been about the same proportion or even greater."
China Agriculture University professor Shen Jianzhong said people were now not only concerned about the quantity of food, but also its quality. A more active media industry was an additional factor. "The media is become more transparent than before and quickly publish reports about those problems."
Fujian officials find eggs with cancer-causing dyeA duck egg scare in Hubei province has spread south to Fujian province, with Fujian authorities discovering 6,000 chicken eggs contaminated with the carcinogenic Sudan dye.
The eggs found in Fuzhou, Fujian's capital, came from the same Hubei company that produced the tainted duck eggs.
Hong Kong's Centre for Food Safety said Sunday it has yet to find out if eggs from the company are being sold in the territory.
Fuzhou health officials said they found the tainted chicken eggs to contain a higher amount of the chemical than in duck eggs.
But, instead of the red-colored Sudan 1, the dye used in the chicken eggs was Sudan 4, which is mainly used to color oils, fats, wax and grease.
The use of Sudan 4 dye is banned in food as it could cause cancer if consumed by humans over a long period.
But Fuzhou officials warned it would be difficult to tell if an egg had been dyed with Sudan 4 because a dyed egg yolk would still appear golden yellow. The chicken eggs were found to contain 0.2 milligrams to 0.3mg of Sudan 4 which was a higher dosage than found in duck eggs.
A spokesperson for Hubei company Shendan Healthy Food told TVB Sunday they were not aware of the incident. A Hong Kong egg wholesaler, Yip Tie, said he has been selling boxes of Hubei eggs to local restaurants, but did not import eggs from Shendan Healthy Food. He is worried that the dye scare may affect his business.
Other Hong Kong egg wholesalers said they have been mainly importing cheaper eggs from Shandong and Liaoning provinces in the past few years.
Eggs from the Hubei company have been taken off the shelves in Fuzhou's supermarkets.
Amid the duck egg scare last Thursday, the Guangzhou Industrial and Commercial Administration Bureau ordered a ban on the sale of fresh and salted duck eggs in markets as well as the serving of duck eggs in restaurants.
Hubei authorities have also raided seven farms, killing 5,000 ducks and destroying 300 kilograms of duck eggs.
BEIJING, Nov. 20 (Xinhua) -- Beijing banned the sale of turbot on Monday after detecting excessive amounts of carcinogens in the fish.
A 12315 hotline has been set up so that citizens can report sales of the contaminated fish, according to the municipal food security office.
Several other cities and provinces -- including Tianjin, Xi'an and Liaoning -- have also started quality inspections of turbot after Shanghai announced Friday it had detected excessive residue including nitrofuran and chloromycetin in 30 samples of turbot. The chemicals are known cancer causing agents.
The finger has been pointed at fish farmers who knowingly feed banned chemicals to the fish.
Fish markets, shopping malls, and hotels in Shanghai have stopped selling turbot following government warnings.
The eastern province of Shandong, a major turbot producing area, has taken measures to monitor turbot farms.
It has also called on local authorities to trace contaminated fish and crank up inspection efforts in the cultivation, transportation, storage and sales of turbot and other fish.
Due to their low resistance to disease, the fish, introduced from Europe in the 1990s, are sometimes fed large quantities of medicinal supplements, which leave harmful, cancer causing residue in their flesh.
The State Food and Drug Administration has ordered local offices and authorities in coastal areas including Shandong, Jiangsu, Hebei, Zhejiang, Fujian, Guangdong, Liaoning, and Tianjin to closely monitor the case.
China is currently assailed by severe food security problems as suspect food products continue to come to light. Recent cases include parasite-infested snails, steroid-tainted pork and ducks and hens that were fed cancer-causing Sudan dye to make their
yolks red.
November 2006 Chicken eggs in Fujian found to contain Sudan IV, a red dye used in industry.
November In Beijing, red-yolk salted duck eggs found to contain Sudan II, a carcinogenic red dye. Thousands of ducks culled. Hong Kong's Centre for Food Safety says the city does not import the tainted eggs.
July Sudan I red dye found in food in Hunan .
March 2005 Sudan I found in mainland KFC and Heinz products.
February ParknShop removes products containing Sudan I.
February UK blacklists 360 foods made with contaminated chilli powder containing Sudan I, which originated in India.
So Hofstede says Chinese are a collectivist society? Well today there are certainly some brave individuals looking to buck the trend and stand out for their views.
http://www.globalvoicesonline.org/top/about-global-voices/
The article below is an example of how China wants to change, and does so through policy and education, but ultimately the people are not so quick to keep up with what the Government wants them to do.
Vice-Minister of Health Jiang Zuojun revealed a few days ago that less than 3 per cent of China's newly-weds have a medical examination before they tie the knot. He said the rate had fallen dramatically since China scrapped the compulsory pre-marriage medical check three years ago.
China dropped its compulsory test for couples getting married in October 2003 in the new "Regulations on Marriage Registration," a move advocating increased respect for citizens' human rights and privacy. The following year, however, the rate of pre-marriage medical checks plummeted drastically. Take Beijing for example. Only 5 per cent of couples planning to get married received a medical examination. As a result, the incidence of congenital defects among newborn babies soared to 1.4 per cent. The incidence had been about 1 per cent during the six years from 1997 to 2003 in the Chinese capital.
The rate of voluntary medical check-ups is even lower in other places. In East China's Fujian Province, for example, only 0.98 per cent of newly-weds received examinations in 2004. In the same year, Northeast China's Heilongjiang Province also reported a low check-up rate 0.43 per cent and a rising incidence of congenital defects.
Falling rates of pre-marriage medical checks across the country also increased the risk of AIDS and venereal diseases spreading.
The situation was so serious that Heilongjiang's people's congress passed new regulations in 2005 to resume the practice of compulsory pre-marriage medical examinations.
This is an embarrassing dilemma for the central public health authorities: Resuming the compulsory treatment would mean a kind of retrogression in civilization; but continuing the present policy would be tantamount to giving up an otherwise effective defence blocking marriage and birth-related diseases and defects.
Actually this dilemma reflects the relationship between compulsory administration on the part of the government and the voluntary action of contributing to social goodness on the part of citizens in a broader sense. Less administrative measures and more voluntary public action is certainly the ideal for good management of society and progress of civilization. Voluntary public action, however, is based on citizens' awareness of their responsibility to society. This awareness needs time to build up. For some issues, it is a slow course.
China began its compulsory pre-marriage medical examinations about 20 years ago. Over the period, Chinese citizens gradually developed a sense of obligation about pre-marriage medical examinations. And people's awareness of its importance became increasingly stronger until the time when compulsory check-ups were abolished. Why the sudden collapse, then, of people's willingness to take the test?
The easiest explanation is that people lack conscientiousness. The sudden removal of the requirement gave them the liberty to evade obligation. The final reason, however, lies in the way compulsory examinations were conducted in the past.
First, the examination was conducted in a way that put more emphasis on people's obligation than on helping them understand the importance, even the vital need, of the check-up. Examinations were done in government-designated hospitals, where doctors and nurses behaved like bureaucrats. Newly-weds were ordered about in different departments. Marriage-related health education was also conducted in a condescending manner rather than in a friendly way. Unpleasant experiences caused repulsion in the recipients of the examination.
To make things worse, the medical examination was costly. A fairly large number of, if not all, hospitals even turned it into a profit-making business. Those being forced to undergo examinations felt they were being ripped off.
Under the circumstances, people took the examination more as an obligation to the government than a necessity for their health and that of their offspring.
Given the fact that AIDS and sexually transmitted diseases have shown a tendency to spread quickly and that the worsening ecological environment has increased the risk of foetal defects, compulsory medical check-ups must be resumed.
But it should be done in a different way from the past practice. It should be free and people should be given the freedom to choose their hospital for the examination.
Email: liushinan@chinadaily.com.cn
I think many companies in China are growing in sophistication. In doing so though, the potential for them to get bogged down in reports, statistics, meetings and cross cultural misunderstanding is immense.
Extract From The Forgotten Battleground; Markets are supposed to be smart. So what are they trying to tell us?
Apparently the smog in Beijing isn't just unsightly... it's bad for your health. It's not great out here, but it seems quite commonplace. I wonder how much lung cancer there is in Beijing....
My colleagues also tell me that this is nothing... there are many manufacturing towns that are far, far worse.
Beijing's pollution index soared to hazardous levels yesterday as heavy fog continued to blanket northern China from Liaoning to Shandong .
The fog has cast a pall over the region since the weekend, leading to road closures and flight delays. But experts said that although pollution contributed to the grey outlook, there was no direct relationship between the density of the fog and pollution.
Pollution in the capital reached the worst level on the index yesterday, soaring to 415 for the 24 hours to noon, the China Environmental Monitoring Centre said. Readings of up to 100 are not considered a danger to health, while pollution levels above 300 are considered hazardous.
He Lifu , a meteorologist with the Central Meteorological Observatory, was quoted by the China News Service as saying the widespread, dense fog was mainly due to a drop in temperatures.
Zhao Jinghong , a weather forecaster from the Tianjin Meteorological Observatory, said fog was common in winter. "The fog aggravates the worsening air condition and the pollutants offer nuclei for fog to form around," Ms Zhao said. "But even back in the days when pollution was not so serious, the fog was still as thick as nowadays."
Advanced Medical Optics Inc. voluntarily recalled 2.9 million units of its 12-ounce Complete MoisturePLUS contact-lens solution after three lots sold in Japan were found to have bacterial contamination.
The Santa Ana, California, eye-care company said it stopped all manufacturing at its Chinese facility.
The recall comes after rival Bausch & Lomb Inc. suspended sales of MoistureLoc contact-lens solution in Singapore and Hong Kong in February and the U.S. in April. It initiated a global recall in May. Bausch later acknowledged the solution was the potential "root cause" of increased risk of a rare fungal infection.
Advanced Medical Optics said charges and costs to complete its recall are expected to be $35 million to $40 million in 2006 and 2007. The company also expects the recall to reduce revenue for the remainder of 2006 and 2007 by a total of $40 million to $45 million, as a result of expected product returns, supply shortages and temporarily lost market share.
In midday New York Stock Exchange trading, Advanced Medical Optics was at $36.01, down 8.3%.
Yes I'm in China. Writing on a blog seems ok. But it seems my blog is not accessible to people in China.
Just wonder if you are still in Shanghai, I thought Blogger has been blocked in China?
--
Posted by 子非魚 to KW in Shanghai at 11/20/2006 02:10:18 PM
http://www.wired.com/news/wiredmag/0,72138-0.html?tw=rss.index
WSJ: What kind of cultural issues come up between the American and Chinese sides of the company?
Mr. Amelio: Every day there's something. On both sides, you need to have great trust in your colleagues to know that their intentions are good, even though the words might not come out right.
In the U.S. and Europe, we have highly opinionated executives who like to make their voices heard. The China team tends to listen more and express themselves more thoughtfully. The Americans and Europeans need to know that if a Chinese colleague is nodding silently, it doesn't mean they're agreeing. We also have a program in place to teach our China team better confrontational management skills.
The Chinese team also tends to be very, very thorough -- and sometimes when you want to get something implemented, it's important to have conciseness.
Sometimes it's great to rally the whole team around something that everybody is interested in. Last week, we had an event where we brought in the 1992 Chinese Olympic ping pong champion, and had him play our executives. Our chairman is the reigning champion [at the company].
Terrible business.
__._,_.___(中文请见下)
Dear IFC,
Li Yuxia, one of our sopranos, recently had a tragedy in her family
and is in dire need of financial support. We would like to call for
help of any form and magnitude among the greater IFC community.
In a car accident in early October, Li Yuxia's father was killed,
her brother and sister-in-law seriously injured and her 6-year-old
nephew left in a coma, from which he has still not waken up. With
her mother already retired and living on 1000 RMB per month, and her
nephew's parents both unable to work for at least 6 months, Li Yuxia
is now the sole wage earner in the family. She has been desperately
searching for ways to provide the 50,000 RMB per month for her
nephew's ICU and related treatment, which has complete depleted her
brother's family's savings. She herself is in the final year of her
Ph.D. studies at Peking University, which she does not want to give
up but may be forced to in order to start working full time.
So let's sing in our hearts a requiem for the dead and think in our
minds about what we can do to help the living. Cash donations would
be much appreciated, as would any advice/recommendations on how to
obtain funds, or perhaps suggestions of work opportunities (Li Yuxia
is researching English Literature and has perfect spoken/written
English). Please contact me to offer help: kholahan@wesleyan or 1350
100 1426.
Thank you very much!
亲爱的IFC同志们:
李玉霞(女高)不久前家庭遭遇不幸,现在迫切需要帮助,请IFC各位伸出援助之手。
事故总是会发生,甚至我们身边最亲的人也不放过。十一期间,李玉霞的父亲与兄嫂一
家外出,不幸遇到车祸,父亲当场身亡,兄嫂重伤,至少半年内均无法工作,而李玉霞6
岁的侄子重度昏迷,至今尚未苏醒。现在全家的收入就只有李玉霞母亲每月1000块的退
休金,兄嫂家只有很少的积蓄,对于小侄子每月5万圆左右的重症监护病房费及其它治疗
费用来说,只是�shy;水车薪。兄嫂基本上有医疗保险,而小侄子的治疗费用就全落在李玉
霞的身上了。她本人现在仍在北大读博,尽管不想就此休学,但很可能必须放弃,才能
找一个全职工作挣钱。
那么让我们心中唱着悼念死者的挽歌,脑中想想怎样帮助还活着的人吧。任何形式的帮
助都将感激不尽,不管是捐钱,还是有什么可能会有用的信息,请联系我 - 邮件:
kholahan@wesleyan.edu,或电话1350 100 1426。
多谢大家!!![]()
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Hello Arun
Yes I’m an alumni of the University of Hong Kong & Fudan University (
PS. Better to include your email address on queries in future!