Monday, 14 March 2011

Lim Hock Siew sues “Chronicle of Singapore” editor and related parties for defamation


Former political detainee Dr. Lim Hock Siew, who was detained for close to twenty years, has sued the editor, publisher and printer of “1959-2009: Chronicle of Singapore - Fifty Years of Headline News” for defamation. He has requested for compensation from the respondents and demanded that they desist from repeating false information relating to him.

Railway chief pledges war on corruption

The new party chief of the railways ministry, Sheng Guangzu, has pledged his new team will not become personally involved in the ministry’s lucrative construction contracts, a hotbed for corruption that allegedly led to the downfall of his predecessor.

Court dismisses Tony Chan’s ‘totally dishonest’ appeal

Tony Chan Chun-chuen yesterday lost a second round in his “totally dishonest case” to wrest the fortune of the late Nina Wang Kung Yu-sum from the Chinachem Charitable Foundation.

Average incomes tell a different story

News that China had officially surpassed Japan as the world’s No. 2 economy was greeted with neither surprise nor much cheer by most Chinese people yesterday.

Mainlanders shun Japan amid simmering Diaoyus row

Tourism industry feels the impact of a collision at sea

Renault managers in police custody over spy probe

Carmaker says it may have been duped into paying 250,000 euros for false information

Chinese property ‘bubble’ fuels hard landing fears

The world business elite raised concerns over China’s property prices at its annual get-together in Davos, with some worrying that if the bubble bursts it could hurt growth.

China’s investment makes big imprint on Portuguese world

Risks grow as Chinese companies expand role in Africa, Brazil

‘My father is Li Gang’ case a cue for reform

If anything ought to convince Beijing of the urgency of pursuing justice reforms, it is public scepticism about the administration of the law. This sentiment is finding increasing expression in internet forums. Without respect for the law, the official goal of stability and harmony will be harder to achieve.

China policeman’s son gets 6 years for hit-and-run

A Chinese court sentenced a man who attempted to exploit his father’s senior police rank to flee a fatal road accident to six years in jail on Sunday, state media reported.

Sunday, 13 March 2011

Chinese boost prices in world’s auction houses

A Chinese face or two in the crowd at the world’s auction houses often means one thing: the gavel will fall on a price far beyond the seller’s wildest dreams.

China’s first property taxes kick in

China on Friday launched a long-awaited property tax in two of the country’s biggest cities, but the mayor of Chongqing in the southwest warned the measure was not a cure-all for soaring prices.

Carrefour faces fines over mainland prices

Mainland regulators want to fine French retail giant Carrefour 2.5 million yuan (HK$2.95 million), the maximum for overcharging customers, state media reported yesterday.

Carrefour faces fines and refunds over price fraud

French retailer Carrefour says it will refund customers five times the difference between the stated price and the actual amount charged after the authorities said on Wednesday that they had uncovered fraudulent pricing in 11 of its mainland supermarkets.

Profit bliss in wedded splits

New measures aimed at cooling an overheated mainland property market appear to have done the opposite as couples fake marriage or divorce to defeat the rules and buy

Friday, 11 March 2011

Thursday, 10 March 2011

Friday, 4 March 2011

Wu Jieping, the doctor who tended leaders, dies


The man who looked after the health of the mainland’s paramount leaders for years, Dr. Wu Jieping, died in Beijing on Wednesday night at the age of 94.

Beijing to track all mobile phone users’ movements

Government to monitor 20m people

China to revamp growth model in next 5 years

If successful, the overhaul could see a slowdown in the country’s economy

Thursday, 3 March 2011

Home supply to spike in next few years

Prices and rents may drop in 2013 and 2014 as a result

Moscow turns its military gaze east

New world order has Russia considering China as the enemy, writes Thomas Grove

Property controls distort the market

After several unsuccessful attempts to rein in runaway housing prices, the central government has resorted to restricting home purchases in the hope of dealing the “killer blow” to cool the market.

The flowering of an unconventional revolution

There are no slogans, no banners and no petitions. In fact, to the uninitiated, it is difficult to spot the demonstrations at all.

Tuesday, 1 March 2011

China’s population now stands at 1.34b

China’s population grew to 1.341 billion by the end of 2010, the National Bureau of Statistics has announced.

Sunday, 27 February 2011

Secrets of the last emperor


Pu Yi in a work unit after the revolution


Pu Yi at his marriage ceremony when he was still a teenager.


Pu Yi before his arrest at the end of the war, dressed to impress in uniform and medals.

The famed memoirs of Pu Yi were a lie, its publishers reveal as the real autobiography goes on sale

Thursday, 24 February 2011

China to evacuate 30,000 from Libya


China will attempt to evacuate more than 30,000 of its nationals trapped in violence-torn Libya, with the first chartered jet taking off for the North African country yesterday.

Deportation of 14 Taiwanese not about sovereignty

The Philippines’ deportation of 14 Taiwanese to mainland China along with 10 mainlanders, who were believed to be involved in an international fraud scheme, has stirred up a hornet’s nest in Taiwan, with politicians claiming violation of the nation’s sovereignty.

Cannon wants Chinese fugitives returned

Chinese fugitives in Canada should be “repatriated,” Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon said Wednesday, despite fears over their fate if forcibly returned.

Monday, 21 February 2011

Japan probes WWII prisoner experiment site

The site is linked to Unit 731 of the Japanese Imperial Army, which carried out experiments in germ warfare on prisoners.

The excavation was ordered after former nurse Toyo Ishii spoke out

Oral sex linked to cancer risk

US scientists said on Sunday there is strong evidence linking oral sex to cancer, and urged more study of how human papilloma viruses may be to blame for a rise in oral cancer among white men.

Thursday, 17 February 2011

Beijing imposes stiff rule to fight rising property prices

Non-local homebuyers must prove taxes paid for five years

Beijing quiet on venture in disputed Kurils


Chinese analysts see no reason to stop Sino-Russian sea cucumber farm going ahead

Wednesday, 16 February 2011

Stanley Ho files new lawsuit to reclaim casino stake


Lawyers for billionaire Stanley Ho Hung-sun on Wednesday filed a fresh lawsuit seeking the return of his shares in Lanceford - the company that holds the bulk of his wealth - including his stake in the Macau casino business.

Tuesday, 15 February 2011

Genghis Khan Red God Mask

No regrets for defiant Tiananmen general


A former People’s Liberation Army general arrested after defying a martial law order to crack down on Tiananmen Square protesters in 1989 says he has no regrets.

Monday, 14 February 2011

China proving to be saviour of the world’s poorest people

Millions benefiting from Beijing’s massive overseas spending

Clean power not always green power

The mainland’s push to adopt alternative energy may have ecological drawbacks

Fake Liquors Flow as Demand Soars for China’s Fabled Sorghum Spirit

If history is indeed written by the victors, then this isolated mountain hamlet in southern Guizhou Province hit the jackpot when Red Army soldiers sought refuge here in the spring of 1935. Exhausted by their long-distance retreat from Nationalist forces, Mao’s guerrillas used the town’s bracing 144-proof liquor to disinfect wounds, tame diarrhea and take the edge off their jangled nerves.

The Chinese Are Coming by BBC

Part 1 of 4

Part 2 of 4

Part 3 of 4

Part 4 of 4

Nina Wang lover 'dishonest', says Hong Kong court


A Hong Kong appeals court Monday rejected a "thoroughly dishonest" claim by a bartender-turned-fortune teller to the massive estate of late property tycoon Nina Wang.

Japan eclipsed by China as No. 2 economy

Japan surrendered its 42-year ranking as the world’s second-biggest economy to China last year, after data on Monday showed a fourth-quarter contraction caused by weaker consumer spending and a strong yen.

Registration scheme could end in 20 years

The central government could end the mainland’s household registration system that controls the movement of migrant workers within 20 years, according to a top government think tank.

Singapore’s casino bet pays off in extra visitors, revenue

City-state tipped to be Asia’s No 2 gaming centre after Macau

PayPal zooming along in Singapore

Online payment facilitator PayPal has been on a roll in Singapore, growing its user base here 45 per cent year-on-year to 870,000 total accounts by the end of 2010.

Sunday, 13 February 2011

Road ahead plagued by culture of greed

New emphasis on structural change in economy subverted by officials’ self-interest

Payout for tour dispute raises legal issues

A mainland couple who fought with a tour guide reportedly received a hefty sum in compensation, sparking a debate about whether this was proper with criminal proceedings then pending.

Why China’s next generation could be fed by Africa

With farmland shrinking fast, the problem of how to feed 1.3 billion is becoming a major worry for Beijing

Japan, US foil Beijing push to end EU arms embargo

Japan and the United States appear to have thwarted a fresh push by China to end the European Union’s long-standing embargo on arms sales to the PLA - for now at least.

Mainland railway and air transport sectors undergo hi-tech revolution

On land and in the skies, the mainland is in the grips of an unprecedented transport revolution that has potentially far-reaching economic ramifications.

Recruiting in China Pays Off for U.S. Colleges

Dozens of other American colleges and universities are seeing a surge in applications (and similar brochures) from students in China, where a booming economy means that more families can pursue the dream of an American higher education.

Living within limits

Asia must reject consumption-led growth and start putting constraints on the use of its resources

Free entry on way for museums, libraries

Thousands of museums and libraries on the mainland are set to give free access to the public under a government proposal that has been widely welcomed.

China restricts smoking in films, TV

China has ordered that smoking scenes in films and television series be restricted, amid concern it is failing to deliver on pledges to help its 300 million smokers kick the habit.

Scandal shows cracks in Taiwan’s spy network

Taiwan’s worst espionage case in 50 years and its failure to track the mainland’s next generation stealth fighter jet J-20 project indicate that the island’s military intelligence capability lags far behind that of its main political rival, military experts say.

China’s Railway Minister Loses Post in Corruption Inquiry


The railway minister of China, Liu Zhijun, has been removed from the top post in the ministry because he is being investigated for corruption, according to a report on Saturday by Xinhua, the state news agency. Mr. Liu is the most senior Chinese official to come under such investigation in years.

Not enough hours in the day for top cop


Interpol chief Ron Noble on what keeps him going and why Singapore was chosen for global complex

Saturday, 12 February 2011

Corrupt tobacco boss made bureau a family business


It’s a classic case study in corruption: one man, with two identities, in charge of a government bureau employing more than 20 relatives that spent up to two million yuan (HK$2.36 million) a month on entertainment.

Interpol global complex in Tanglin to be ready by 2013

A building smack in the middle of the busy Tanglin area will become home to international policing agency Interpol’s new global complex.

Stuxnet: How it seeks and destroys

The malicious software which came to be known as Stuxnet was not only the most sophisticated piece of malware ever invented, but it also had a specific target: computers produced by Germany’s Siemens company that are used by Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Carrefour faces tough times in China

# Shopper attacked by two security guards after dispute over prices
# Fined by Chinese government for fraudulent pricing
# Closed three stores in last six months - first closures since entering the country in 1995
# Expansion slowed from high of 112 stores in 2007 to 30 last year

China's High-Speed Rail

Friday, 11 February 2011

Beaten lawyers await apology

Eight lawyers in Heilongjiang who were brutally beaten by court officials while trying to attend a trial on January 24 are still waiting for an apology that might never come.

Land of free spenders

In a skit aired by China’s state-owned CCTV last September, four children - each wearing a national flag representing China, the United States, India and Brazil - were lined up for a race.

Wednesday, 9 February 2011

War on independent Web cafes worries Net users

A plan to shut down tens of thousands of independent internet cafes across the mainland is stoking fears that officials are further tightening their grip on the circulation of online information.

Monday, 7 February 2011

There’s nothing inevitable about China’s economic rise

Open any major business publication these days and the chances are you will come across an article about how China is destined to overtake the United States as the world’s dominant economy.

Euro recovering its strength, thanks to Chinese debt support

The euro has defied predictions of its demise by rising almost 8 per cent against the dollar since mid-January, in large part owing to Chinese confidence in the debt-ridden euro zone, analysts say.

China saw more people divorce than marry in 2010

A total of 1.96 million couples applied for divorce last year, and only 1.2 million tied the knot, the Legal Evening News quoted the civil affairs ministry as saying.

Sunday, 6 February 2011

Answering the call of the Wild Wild East

More young Americans and Europeans are heading to Asia for work and executive education

Thursday, 3 February 2011

Kung fu star Jet Li becomes Singaporean citizen


Chinese kung fu superstar Jet Li publicly confirmed on Tuesday that he has become a Singaporean citizen, saying he wants his children to receive a bilingual education in the city-state.

VeryCD pledges to bounce back in wake of IPR violations crackdown

Mainland internet users lost a popular download service for music, TV series and movies when the central government forced VeryCD, a leading mainland peer-to-peer file-sharing internet portal, to overhaul much of its core business.

Download website faces shutdown

Verycd.com, a leading Chinese website offering free movie and music downloads - most deemed unauthorized - on Saturday removed its entire music download links and posted a note saying the move was done “to meet copyright owners’ requests”.

Sentence for hit-and-run death criticised

Scepticism greets six-year jail term for the man who shouted ‘my father is Li Gang’

Inflation makes Beijing more expensive than Hong Kong

Rising prices have made daily necessities in big mainland cities even more costly than in Hong Kong, which consistently rates as one of the most expensive cities in the world.

Wednesday, 2 February 2011

New generation aspiring to Taiwan’s leadership

Of all the younger members of prominent political families in Taiwan, Eric Chu Li-luan may have the brightest future.

Ho family rifts laid bare on YouTube

Videos detail sparring over tycoon’s empire

Monday, 31 January 2011

Macau tycoon's family brawl takes another U-turn

The family feud between Macau tycoon Stanley Ho and relatives he accused of trying to steal his empire took another bizarre turn on Monday, with both sides disputing whether a lawsuit had been dropped.

Later in the day, Ho's lawyer said lawsuit is still on.

Stanley Ho drops legal action against family

Feud over mogul’s fortune takes new twist after secret talks draw a blank

First, on Monday morning, Ho's 3rd mistress said lawsuit withdrawn.

Sunday, 30 January 2011

Congressmen play games as US economy is hurting

You know we’ve got problems when Barbra Streisand and Herbie Hancock understand the global economy better than John Boehner and Harry Reid. Singer Streisand and jazz great Hancock were on hand for the Chinese president’s White House dinner last week, while House Speaker Boehner, Majority Leader Reid and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell wimped out and stayed away.

Clubs reopen after vice crackdown

Two Beijing nightclubs ordered to close last year for alleged links to prostitution and breaches of fire-safety regulations have reopened, it was reported at the weekend.

Saturday, 29 January 2011

Stanley Ho sues family despite TV denial

Ho lodged a lawsuit formally accusing five of his children, two of his four wives and his long-time banker of “improperly and/or illegally” seizing control of the holding company that controls the bulk of his fortune.

What Ho did when he found out he was poor

When the phone rang in the South China Morning Post’s Causeway Bay newsroom on the morning of January 7, the caller made an offer that no journalist could refuse: would you like an exclusive interview with Stanley Ho Hung-sun?

TV appearance adds to Ho mystery

Everything is back in order, I won’t be suing, casino king tells viewers

Macau tycoon sues family over casino empire

Macau tycoon Stanley Ho is suing relatives he has accused of trying to steal his vast casino empire, the latest twist after a bizarre TV appearance that seemed to end the nasty family feud.

Ho the daddy of them all when it comes to his hectic love life


The father of 17 children, Ho changed the four women’s lives when he teamed up with them.

Details differ in two letters signed by Stanley Ho


It is the tale of two letters, both with vastly different implications for the future ownership of billionaire Stanley Ho Hung-sun’s sprawling empire.

Stanley Ho seeks answers from family members

Macau casino magnate Stanley Ho Hung-sun has accused family members of “fraudulently misappropriating” his shares in the private Hong Kong company that ultimately controls the bulk of his wealth - including his entire remaining stake in gaming firm SJM Holdings.

Friday, 28 January 2011

Saving tycoon’s empire just the latest adventure for busy lawyer


Gordon Oldham, the lawyer representing the interests of Stanley Ho, is as colourful as the family drama of his billionaire client.

China’s first property taxes take effect

Mainland property shares recouped slight losses suffered on Friday on views the first-ever property taxes introduced by the government in two main cities were less harsh than some had feared.

Carrefour, Wal-Mart ‘sorry’ for China pricing

Retail giants Wal-Mart and Carrefour have apologised after Chinese authorities accused them of overcharging customers, state media said Friday.

Thursday, 27 January 2011

Tuesday, 25 January 2011

Chinese universities that turn out the richest alumni

01. Peking University - 79
02. Tsinghua University - 70
03. Zhejiang University - 66
04. Fudan University - 46
05. Renmin University of China - 30
06. Shanghai Jiaotong University - 25
07. Sun Yat-sen University - 22
08. Nanjing University - 20
09. South China University of Technology - 18
10. Huazhong University of Science and Technology and Wuhan University - 17 (tie)

Monday, 24 January 2011

Japan should concede the Diaoyus to China

Tokyo’s recent plan to deploy troops to islands near China raises the prospects of more confrontation with Beijing. But does this move serve Japan’s broader strategic interests? It may be time for Tokyo to think the unthinkable and consider the merits of handing over the Diaoyu Islands, which the Japanese call the Senkakus, to China.

China on the Way



youku

Sunday, 23 January 2011

Sidewalk Tiles For The Blind



Are they planning for the blind to play snake and ladder?

Saturday, 22 January 2011

A door closes on a shameful past


California’s first two Chinese-American mayors emerge out of an ugly history of racism and oppression

Sunday, 16 January 2011