Thursday, November 13, 2008

Brazil's minister of culture resigns to focus on artistic career

BRASILIA, Aug. 28 (Chinese media) -- Gilberto Gil, Brazil's Minister of Culture and one of the country's best known singers, on Thursday formally resigned from his post in the government, so as to dedicate more to his artistic career.



Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on the same day named Juca Ferreira, Executive Secretary of the Ministry of Culture during Gil's six-and-a-half-year tenure, as Gil's successor in a nomination ceremony held in the president palace.

At the ceremony, Lula said he was sad about Gil's departure, and said that Gil, unlike many ministers who were forgotten by the public after they leave jobs, will remain popular among Brazilians.

Gil, winner of two Grammy Awards and two Latin Grammy Awards, has been the Minister of Culture since Lula started his first term as president; while Ferreira, born in Salvad, capital of Bahia state, was a sociologist and a member of the Green Party.

Transvestites take part in gay parade during Gaijatra festival in Kathmandu

A transvestite takes part in a gay parade during the Gaijatra festival in Kathmandu August 17, 2008.





A transvestite takes part in a gay

parade during the Gaijatra festival in Kathmandu August 17,

2008.(Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo Gallery














Transvestites take part in a gay parade during the Gaijatra festival in Kathmandu August 17, 2008.





Transvestites take part in a gay parade

during the Gaijatra festival in Kathmandu August 17, 2008.(Chinese media/Reuters

Photo)
Photo

Gallery

Spanish police nabs French plastic surgeon wanted by Paris

MADRID, Aug. 19 (Chinese media) -- The Spanish police Tuesday arrested French plastic surgeon Michel Maure, who had been at large after being charged with disfiguring and endangering the lives of 96 women in France.

Maure, 59, was detained in Empuriabrava of the northeastern Spanish province of Girona, said the police.

He was sent to the Roses police station in Girona where he would be waiting for his extradition to France.

Maure, the self-styled "the best (doctor) in plastic surgery in the world," was arrested in France in 2004 on charges of false advertising, cheating and causing the deformity to 96 of his patients as a result of his surgery operations from 1990 to 2004.

The French prosecutor has demanded a four-year imprisonment and a fine of about some 75,000 euros (111,000 U.S. dollars) against Maure.

Maure, whose movement was restricted during the trial, went missing in July, two months before his verdict due in September.

The French police issued an arrest warrant against Maure and intensified the contact with their Spanish counterparts to track the fugitive as they were convinced that he was hiding in Spain.

Pingpong ball: I wanna kiss you, gaze at you









Suraju Saka of Congo serves during the men's singles first round match against Lei Kou of Ukraine at Beijing Olympic Games table tennis event in Beijing, China, Aug. 19, 2008. Suraju Saka of Congo beat his rival 4-1.(Chinese media/Xu Jiajun)





Suraju Saka of Congo serves during the

men's singles first round match against Lei Kou of Ukraine at Beijing

Olympic Games table tennis event in Beijing, China, Aug. 19, 2008. Suraju

Saka of Congo beat his rival 4-1.(Chinese media/Xu Jiajun)
Photo

Gallery











Sharath Kamal Achanta of India serves during the men's singles first round match against Alfredo Carneros of Spain at Beijing Olympic Games table tennis event in Beijing, China, Aug. 19, 2008. Sharath Kamal Achanta of India beat his rival 4-2.(Chinese media/Xu Jiajun)





Sharath Kamal Achanta of India serves

during the men's singles first round match against Alfredo Carneros of

Spain at Beijing Olympic Games table tennis event in Beijing, China, Aug.

19, 2008. Sharath Kamal Achanta of India beat his rival 4-2.(Chinese media/Xu

Jiajun)
Photo

Gallery

Israeli premature baby "comes back to life"

JERUSALEM, Aug. 18 (Chinese media) -- A premature baby who was pronounced dead "came back to life" after being put in a cooler for five hours in Nahariya Hospital, local daily Jerusalem Post reported Monday on its website.



The baby girl, born as a result of induced labor, was announced dead by a senior doctor and was transferred to the cooler.

But the baby's father, who came to the hospital to take what he thought was his dead baby girl for burial five hours later, found his baby began to breathe after being taken out of the cooler.

The premature baby was then taken to the intensive care ward, where doctors were attempting to save her life.

Doctors estimated that the cooler brought the fetus "back to life," the report said.

The mother, 26, from a Western Galilee village, was in the fifth month of her pregnancy when she underwent a series of tests and was discovered that she was suffering from internal bleeding and that the embryo had ceased to show signs of life.

The woman underwent an abortion and the baby, weighing 610 grams, was extracted from her womb without a pulse, hospital officials was quoted as saying.  



17-year-old student fastest text messager in Sweden

BEIJING, Aug. 18 (Chinese medianet) -- A 17-year-old student

has won the Swedish text messaging championship after writing a 141-character

SMS message in only 61 seconds, media reported Sunday.



My Svensson out-thumbed her nearest rival by seven

seconds in the competition held in Stockholm. However, she failed to surpass her

personal best of 50 seconds, achieved during the semi-finals.

"I was very tense in the finals when I realized how

much money I could win," said My. "Everyone was talking about how much money was

at stake."

My said the 25,000 krona (3,900 U.S. dollar) prize

will be used for a trip to France next year after she graduates from high

school.

The girl has a special training schedule to become

the fastest Swedish in text messaging -- she sends 40-50 texts per day, mostly

to her three best friends.

(Agencies)

Iraqi woman gives birth to sextuplets

BAGHDAD, Aug. 16 (Chinese media) -- A woman in southern Iraq has given birth to sextuplets, local media reported Saturday.



However, two of the infants died of breathing problems soon after their birth due to a lack of proper medical equipment at the hospital in Nassiriya.

Two boys and two girls survived.

Their mother, Ibtisam Najim Abid, now is puzzled by the problem of how to feed so many babies.

Rare septuplets born in Egypt

CAIRO, Aug. 16 (Chinese media) -- A woman gave birth to seven babies Saturday in the Egyptian coastal city of Alexandria after a caesarean operation, local media reported.

The 27-year-old mother and her septuplets, four boys and three girls, were in good condition, local media quoted medical staff at the El-Shatbi Hospital as saying.

The Egyptian woman had the operation at the end of her eighth month of pregnancy due to pressure on her kidneys.

She used to take fertility drugs.

Local media said the Egyptian government is to offer the seven infants free milk and diapers for two years.

Egyptian woman gives birth to septuplets









Egyptian nurses tend to newborn septuplets at the el-Shatbi hospital in the Egyptian coastal city of Alexandria, Egypt, Saturday, Aug. 16, 2008. The newborns, four boys and three girls, were delivered by caesarian section at the end of the eighth month of 27-year-old Ghazala Khamis' pregnancy.(Photo: China Daily/Agencies)





Egyptian nurses tend to newborn septuplets at the el-Shatbi hospital in the Egyptian coastal city of Alexandria, Egypt, Saturday, Aug. 16, 2008. The newborns, four boys and three girls, were delivered by caesarian section at the end of the eighth month of 27-year-old Ghazala Khamis' pregnancy.(Photo: China Daily/Agencies)
Photo Gallery



BEIJING, Aug. 17-- A 27-year-old Egyptian woman gave birth to septuplets early Saturday in the coastal city of Alexandria, family members and the hospital director said.

Ghazala Khamis was in good condition after having a blood transfusionduring her Caesarean sectiondue to bleeding, said Emad Darwish, director of the El-Shatbi Hospital where she gave birth.



The newborns, four boys and three girls, weigh between 3.2 pounds and 6.17 pounds and are in stable condition, Darwish said. They have been placed in incubators in four different hospitals that have special premature babyunits, he said.

"This is a very rare pregnancy — something I have never witnessed over my past 33 years in this profession," Darwish told The Associated Press by phone from the hospital.

Darwish decided to carry out the Caesarean section at the end of Khamis' eighth month of pregnancy due to the pressure on her kidneys. He said Khamis, who already has three daughters, took fertility drugs in an effort to have a son.

Khamis, the wife of a farmer in the northern Egyptian province of Beheira, was admitted to the hospital two months earlier, Darwish said.

"From the initial checkup, I say that none of the babies have any sort of deformities or incomplete organs," Darwish said.

The woman's brother, Khamis Khamis, said even though his sister was trying to conceive more children so she could have a son, the family was astonished when they found out she would give birth to multiple babies.

"We thought about an abortion, but then we felt it's religiously forbidden. So we said 'Let God's will prevail,'" he told the AP by phone.

Egypt's health minister announced that the seven babies will receive free milk and diapers for two years, the brother added.



(Source: China Daily/Agencies)

Bat-breaking stroke during baseball event

Special Report:

2008 Olympic

Games











Michael Saunders of Canada breaks the bat during the match the United States VS Canada in Men's Preliminaries of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games Baseball event in Beijing, China, Aug. 16, 2008. The United States beat Canada 5-4. (Chinese media/Zhang Ling)





Michael Saunders of Canada breaks the bat during the match the United States VS Canada in Men's Preliminaries of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games Baseball event in Beijing, China, Aug. 16, 2008. The United States beat Canada 5-4. (Chinese media/Zhang Ling)
Photo Gallery











Michael Saunders of Canada breaks the bat during the match the United States vs Canada in Men's Preliminaries of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games Baseball event in Beijing, China, Aug. 16, 2008. The United States beat Canada 5-4. (Chinese media/Zhang Ling)





Michael Saunders of Canada breaks the bat during the match the United States vs Canada in Men's Preliminaries of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games Baseball event in Beijing, China, Aug. 16, 2008. The United States beat Canada 5-4. (Chinese media/Zhang Ling)
Photo Gallery
















Brian Duensing of the United States pitches during the match the United States VS Canada in Men's Preliminaries of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games Baseball event in Beijing, China, Aug. 16, 2008. The United States beat Canada 5-4. (Chinese media/Zhang Ling)





Brian Duensing of the United States

pitches during the match the United States VS Canada in Men's

Preliminaries of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games Baseball event in Beijing,

China, Aug. 16, 2008. The United States beat Canada 5-4. (Chinese media/Zhang

Ling)
Photo

Gallery











Baseballers (white) of the United States shake hands with their competitors of Canada after the match the United States VS Canada in Men's Preliminaries of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games Baseball event in Beijing, China, Aug. 16, 2008. The United States beat Canada 5-4. (Chinese media/Zhang Ling)





Baseballers (white) of the United States

shake hands with their competitors of Canada after the match the United

States VS Canada in Men's Preliminaries of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games

Baseball event in Beijing, China, Aug. 16, 2008. The United States beat

Canada 5-4. (Chinese media/Zhang Ling)
Photo

Gallery




King penguin receives Norwegian knighthood







Nils Olav, an Edinburgh Zoo penguin and

Colonel-in-Chief of the Norwegian King's Guard, an elite unit tasked with

protecting the Norwegian royal family, inspects soldiers of his regiment

as they visit him in Edinburgh, Scotland, Friday Aug. 15, 2008, where he

was presented with a medal. The original Nils Olav first became an

honorary member of the regiment in 1972, when a young lieutenant called

Nils Egelien visited the penguins at the zoo, but died in the 1980s, and

was replaced by the current Nils Olav. (Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo Gallery






















Tourists photograph King penguin Nils

Olav as he walks past soldiers from the Norwegian King's Guard after he

received a Knighthood at Edinburgh Zoo August 15, 2008. Edinburgh Zoo

penguin Olav has been an honorary member and mascot of the Norwegian

King's Guard since the 1980s and was made Honorary Colonel-in-Chief in

2005.(Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo

Gallery




Peru's dog dodges punches and throw jabs

Chela, a 3 and 1/2-year-old German Pointer, fights with boxing gloves against her trainer, police office Cesar Chacaliaza of Peru, during a demonstration in Lima Aug. 13 2008.





Chela, a 3 1/2-year-old German shorthaired

pointer, fights with boxing gloves against her trainer, police officer

Cesar Chacaliaza of Peru, during a demonstration in Lima Aug. 13, 2008.

Chela, is the only dog in Peru, if not the world, who knows how to box.

She dodges punches and throw jabs while balancing on her hind

legs.(Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo Gallery













Chela, a 3 and 1/2-year-old German Pointer, fights with boxing gloves during a demonstration in Lima Aug. 13, 2008.





Chela, a 3 1/2-year-old German shorthaired

pointer, fights with boxing gloves during a demonstration in Lima Aug. 13,

2008. (Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo Gallery

World's tallest woman, Sandy Allen, dead at age 53

BEIJING, Aug. 14 (Chinese medianet) -- A U.S. woman who grew to about the same height as Chinese NBA star Yao Ming, 2.31 m (7 feet, 7 inches) tall, and was listed in the Guiness World Records as the world's tallest female, died early Wednesday. Sandy Allen was 53.





Allen, who used her height to inspire schoolchildren to accept those who are different, died at a nursing home in her hometown of Shelbyville, Indiana.

"She loved talking to kids because they would ask more honest questions," Rose said, "Adults would kind of stand back and stare and not know how to approach her."

A tumor caused her pituitary gland to produce too much growth hormone, said Allen. She underwent an operation in 1977 to stop further growth.

But she was proud of her height, Rose said. "She embraced it," she said. "She used it as a tool to educate people."

Allen appeared on television shows and spoke to church and school groups to bring youngsters her message that it was all right to be different.

Rose is working to set up a scholarship fund in Allen's name, with proceeds going to Shelbyville High School.

(Agencies)

Employees wear only aprons for less packaging use

An employee of British cosmetics manufacturer "Lush", wearing only an apron, poses for the media in a shop in Berlin, Aug. 13, 2008, to campaign for the use of less packaging of beauty products and toiletries.





An employee of British cosmetics

manufacturer "Lush", wearing only an apron, poses for the media in a shop

in Berlin, Aug. 13, 2008, to campaign for the use of less packaging of

beauty products and toiletries.(Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo

Gallery






















Employees of British

cosmetics manufacturer "Lush", wearing only aprons, talk to tourists in front of a

shop in Berlin, Aug. 13, 2008, to campaign for the use of less packaging

of beauty products and toiletries.(Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo

Gallery


Burger King employee fired for bath in utility sink

BEIJING, Aug. 13 (Chinese medianet) -- Posting a video of

yourself taking a bath in a utility sink of the Burger King Corp. restaurant

where you workon your MySpace page is a good way to lose your job.



Burger King spokeswoman Denise Wilson said earlier Tuesday

that two employees involved in the incident were fired and a third quit.



That's what happened to Timothy Tackett, 25, of

Centerburg, Ohio, after the nearly 4-minute video to celebrate his birthday

appeared online lastThursday. In the video, shot by another

worker,Tackett refers to himself only as "Mr. Unstable" and appears to be

naked.



Not only was Tackett fired, but also the employee who

took the video and the restaurant's shift manager.



Wilsondeclined to identify the employees or say

whether the man who took the bath quit or was fired. Tackett said he was

fired.



Greene County Health Commissioner Mark McDonnell said

he dispatched an inspector to the restaurant, but workers had already sterilized

the sink, which is used to clean large pieces of equipment.



(Agencies)

Dog loyal to owner to life's end and beyond

BEIJING, Aug. 13 (Chinese medianet) -- Loyal to her owner to

the end of his life and beyond, a dog stayed by her master's body for up to six

weeks after he died on America's remote northeastern Colorado high plains,

according to local authoritiesas quoted by media Wednesday.



The body of Jake Baysinger, 25, was discovered Sunday

about 120 km (75 miles) northeast of Denver on the Pawnee National Grasslands.

Found next to him, thin and dehydrated, was his German shepard, Cash.

Authorities said the dog apparently survived by eating mice and rabbits.



The cause of death has yet to be determined, pending

an autopsy, but authorities found a gun nearby, the Weld County coroner's office

said Tuesday.



An extensive search failed to find Baysinger after he

was reported missing June 28. But a rancher spotted Cash last weekend and

discovered his body.



"At least we know it's over now," said Baysinger's

wife, Sara. "We'd been looking for my husband for six weeks, and this isn't how

we wanted it to end. At least we can close this."



Cash has been reunited with her and her 2-year-old

son, Lane. She said her little boy is "very close to that dog" and happy to see

her again.

Investigators said the dog probably kept coyotes away

from the body.



(Agencies)

World's deepest swimming pool















The undated photo shows Nemo33, the

world deepest swimming pool with a depth of 33 meters (105 feet), on the

outskirts of Brussels. It is designed by Belgian John Beernaerts.(Photo:

china.org)
Photo

Gallery




















The undated photo shows Nemo33, the

world deepest swimming pool with a depth of 33 meters (105 feet), on the

outskirts of Brussels. It is designed by Belgian John Beernaerts.(Photo:

china.org)
Photo

Gallery






U.S. cop suspended for demanding free coffee

BEIJING, Aug. 11 (Chinese medianet) -- A U.S. cop had to

give up her badge fordemanding free coffee and pastries from six different

Starbucks in Chicago.



Officer Barbara Nevers, a 14-year veteran, was

suspended from duty for 15 months and has also been ordered to undergo

counseling.



The Police Board ruled in May that 55-year-old Nevers

intimidated Starbucks employees by screaming at them and flashing her badge,

handcuffs or gun when they wanted her to pay. The board released its findings

Thursday.

Nevers' attorney said her client never used her job

to demand coffee. She said some coffeehouses gave it to her for free because she

was an officer.

(Agencies)

Real catwalk in New York

BEIJING, Aug. 9 -- It was the catwalk that really was a catwalk. Cats dressed in everything from an Elvis costume to a sequined satin dress were strutting their stuff at New York's Algonquin Hotel.



The feline fashion show unfolded in the dining room where Dorothy Parker presided over famously catty Round Table literary luncheons in the 1920s.















Hale Bopp doesn't look too happy but certainly sets a trend at a cat fashion show in New York which was raising money for an animal shelter and celebrating the birthday of a famous hotel's resident feline.(Photo Source: Shanghai Daily/Agencies)
Photo Gallery



Thursday's show benefited an animal welfare group and honored Matilda, the Algonquin's resident cat, who has just turned 13.

She is the hotel's ninth cat since the tradition started in the 1930s, when actor John Barrymore dubbed a bedraggled stray Hamlet.

Earlier in the day, Matilda, a pedigreed ragdoll breed with long, silky, cream-colored hair, held court on a chaise longue by the entrance.

In her honor, cocktails with names like Purr-tini and Pink Pussycat were being served at US$20 apiece to guests including representatives of the North Shore Animal League in Port Washington, Long Island. The adoption shelter, which was to receive the proceeds of the benefit, offered more than a dozen homeless cats for adoption.

The Westchester Feline Club supplied the show-quality cats, with fashions created by New Jersey pet fashion company Meow Wear.

Matilda is an Algonquin celebrity, receiving about 30 e-mails a month.

(Source: Shanghai Daily/Agencies)

Mexico: woman fights off 500-lb lion with machete

BEIJING, Aug. 7 (Chinese medianet) -- A Mexican woman said she used a machete to fight off a 500-pound lion that attacked her donkey on Monday near the resort city of Acapulco.



Celsa Aleman, 35, said she and her 7-year-old niece were riding a donk

The woman says she found the courage to fight the lion because she thought it would attack her niece. She hit the animal with a machete until the beast ran away. Aleman and her niece were unharmed.

The state government said in a statement the lion had escaped from a private zoo owned by a former local congressman.

It said the animal killed two dogs and ate a pig before it was sedated and taken back to the zoo.

(Agencies)

Yahoo/AP

Bullet-proof bras for German policewomen















A handout photo received August 6, 2008,

shows a German federal police issue sports bra.(Chinese media/Reuters

Photo)
Photo

Gallery



BEIJING, Aug. 7 (Chinese medianet) --Three

thousandfemale members of Germany's police force are to receive what the

media Thursdaylabelled "bullet-proof bras."



These bras are meant to better protect policewomen who

wear bullet-proof vests, the German police said.



When policewomen wear normal bras with metal parts

underneath a bullet-proof vest, there is a slight safety risk. "The impact of a

bullet can push the metal and plastic bits of the bra into an officer's body,

causing serious injury," said Carmen Kibat, an adviser for equal opportunity in

the federal police force and the policewoman who started the push for the

bulletproof bras.

Without under-wire or metal fasteners that can lodge

into flesh on impact with a bullet, the new brasnamed "Wonderbras"

looksimilar to sports bras, letting them both support and protect.

Thebras are white, made from cotton or

polyester and padded. Theyalso havethe word Polizei (Police) printed

at the bottom.

"Wonderbras" have been distributed to female officers

in airports, train stations, and border crossings. But for individual police

woman, the new bras "are optional" so far.



(Agencies)

U.S.: Death row inmate too fat to execute?

BEIJING, Aug. 5 (Chinese medianet) -- A death row inmate in

the United States says he is too fat to be executed.



Lawyers for Richard Cooey in a federal lawsuit argue that because Cooey is 5-feet-7 and 267 pounds, executioners would find it difficult to locate his veins and his weight could diminish

the effectiveness of one of the lethal injection drugs.



The lawsuit, filed Friday in federal court,says

prison officials have had difficulty drawing blood from Cooey for medical

procedures.



Cooey, 41, is sentenced to die for raping and

murdering two young women in 1986. His execution is scheduled for Oct. 14.

His attorneys say a drug he is taking for migraine

headaches could affect the execution process. The drug Topamax, a type of

seizure medication, may have created a resistance to thiopental, the drug used

to put inmates to sleep before two other lethal drugs are administered, Dr. Mark

Heath, a physician hired by the Ohio Public Defender's Office, said in documents

filed with the court.

Heath says Cooey's weight, combined with the

potential drug resistance, increases the risk he would not be properly

anesthetized.

"All of the experts agree if the first drug doesn't

work, the execution is going to be excruciating," Cooey's public defender, Kelly

Culshaw Schneider, said Monday.

Prison system spokeswoman Andrea Carson and Jim

Gravelle, a spokesman for the Ohio Attorney General's Office, both said Monday

they hadn't seen the lawsuit and couldn't comment.

(Agencies)

Study: Large waist almost doubles premature death risk















Having a large waistline can almost double your risk of dying prematurely even if your body mass index is within the "normal" range, according to a new study of over 350,000 people across Europe, published Wednesday in the U.S. magazine New England Journal of Medicine. (File Photo)
Photo Gallery











WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 (Chinese media) -- Having a large waistline can almost double your risk of dying prematurely even if your body mass index is within the "normal" range, according to a new study of over 350,000 people across Europe, published Wednesday in the U.S. magazine New England Journal of Medicine.



The study provides strong evidence that storing

excess fat around the waist poses a significant health risk, even in people not

considered to be overweight or obese. It suggests that doctors should measure a

patient's waistline and their hips as well as their body mass index as part of

standard health checks, according to the researchers, from Imperial College

London, the German Institute of Human Nutrition, and other research institutions

across Europe.

Comparing subjects with the same body mass index, the

risk of premature death increased in a linear fashion as the waist circumference

increased. The risk of premature death was around double for subjects with a

larger waist (more than 120 cm for men and more than 100 cm for women) compared

to subjects with a smaller waist (less than 80 cm for men and less than 65 cm

for women). Body mass index is commonly used to assess if a person is of

"normal" weight.

Each 5 cm increase in waist circumference increased

the mortality risk by 17 percent in men and 13 percent in women, according to

the study.

An increased risk of mortality may be particularly

related to storing fat around the waistline because fatty tissue in this

areasecretes cytokines, hormones and metabolically active compounds that can

contribute to the development of chronic diseases, particularly cardiovascular

diseases and cancers, suggest the authors.

Tobias Pischon, the lead author of the paper, said

"The most important result of our study is the finding that not just being

overweight, but also the distribution of body fat, affects the risk of premature

death of each individual."

U.S. "super bugs" invading South America

WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 (Chinese media) -- Two clones of highly

antibiotic-resistant organism strains, which previously had only been identified

in the United States, are now causing serious sickness and death in several

Colombian cities, say researchers at The University of Texas Medical School.



The study, done in collaboration with Colombian

researchers, is published on Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

U.S. clones of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus

aureus (MRSA) and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecalis (VREF) have emerged

in communities across Colombia. The variation of the MRSA clone, referred to as

the USA 300, has been previously reported to be the most important cause of

severe skin and soft tissue infections in the United States. The VREF clone is

genetically related to a strain that hit a Houston hospital in 1994.

In Colombia before 2005, there were no recorded cases

of any community-associated MRSA infections, including USA 300 MRSA. In 2005,

there were two: one in Bogota and one in the city of Villavicencio. Now the

number of MRSA infections is climbing across the country.

The paper reports a total of 15 infections, some of

which were documented in two additional cities between 2006 and 2007.

USA 300 MRSA has also been recorded in multiple

patients in Ecuador and Venezuela.

The first case of VREF was reported in Bogota in

2001. Since then, 50 additional cases have been identified at seven hospitals.

"The goal is to find out why and how these organisms

got there. With this information, researchers hope to better understand the

molecular epidemiology of these super bugs to understand how they spread and how

to control them," said Cesar Arias from UT medical school.

All patients diagnosed with community-associated MRSA

infections suffered severe skin and soft-tissue infections. Some patients also

experienced death of tissue surrounding bones, bacteria in the bloodstream and

meningitis, and 20 percent of the patients died. The MRSA infections were

treatable with common antistaphylococcal antibiotics, although 40 percent were

resistant to tetracycline.

Cholera death toll rises to 53 in Mozambique

MAPUTO, Nov. 12 (Chinese media) -- The number of deaths from

cholera in the district of Guro in the central Mozambican province of Manica has

risen to 53, out of 180 cases notified, since the outbreak of the disease about

two weeks ago, AIM reported on Wednesday.



Chinda, 180 kilometers north of Guro town, is the

most severely affected area, with 48 of the known deaths.

According to the state news agency, the death toll

was so high in Chinda because the area is dominated by a religious sect, the

Johan Marangue Church, which forbids its believers from using modern medicine.

Members of this church obstructed the initial work of

health brigades in Chinda, and have also refused to support the national

sanitation campaign launched a few months ago by President Armando Guebuza.

The majority of the dead were members of this church.



The local health authorities describe the current

situation as stable, since no further cases have been reported since Monday, but

they are still maintaining the maximum alert recently decreed, and the cholera

treatment center is still open.

Meanwhile, one cholera death has been reported from

the western city of Tete where at least 83 cases were notified, from the Filipe

Samuel Magaia and Sansao Muthemba neighborhoods.

Tete provincial health Director Luisa Cumba said that

the Tete Cholera Treatment Centre has also been receiving patients with diarrhea

and vomiting since last week, from the rural districts of Chiuta and Machanga.

Bird flu outbreak occurs in central Vietnam

Special report: Global fight against bird flu



HANOI, Nov. 12 (Chinese media) -- A bird flu outbreak has been confirmed in Nghe An, a central province of Vietnam, the local newspaper Liberty Saigon reported on Wednesday, citing a statement from the provincial People's Committee.



The outbreak was spotted at the Dien Hong commune, causing the death of nearly 1,000 poultry. Specimens from the dead poultry have recently been tested positive to the bird flu virus strain H5N1, according to the statement.

The local authority has established a zone covering the outbreak to prevent the virus from spreading. Consumption and sale of birds and bird-related products within the zone are banned.

Bird flu outbreaks in Vietnam, starting in December 2003, have killed and led to the forced culling of dozens of millions of fowls in the country.

Seasonal stomach virus circulating in New York City

NEW YORK, Nov. 10 (Chinese media) -- The highly contagious

stomach illness that typically turns up in each fall is circulating in New York

City, the New York Health Department reported Monday.



The department's surveillance system finds that

visits to the city's emergency departments for vomiting and diarrhea have

increased 19 percent in the past two weeks, to about 400 per day, according to a

report posted on the metropolitan government's website.

New Yorkers are suggested to take basic steps to

prevent the illness, such as washing hands thoroughly and regularly.

The illnesses have been attributed to norovirus,

which affects people of all ages and is transmitted by faecally contaminated

food or water and by person-to-person contact.

Norovirus infections are usually not serious and most

people get better within a few days, according to the report.

Rising health costs drive Americans to seek medical treatment overseas

LOS ANGELES, Nov. 10 (Chinese media) -- Rising health costs

and dwindling insurance coverage are driving hundreds of thousands of Americans

to travel far to seek crucial treatment overseas in order to avoid potentially

devastating medical bills, a newspaper report said Monday.



Although there is little data on the safety of such

medial travels, there is no question that the number of patients considering

foreign treatment is increasing, the Sacramento Bee daily quoted a medical

expert as saying.

"In the U.S., it's getting to be pretty Darwinian in

terms of who lives and who dies," Arnold Milstein, chief physician at Mercer

Health and Benefits, which advises companies on medical insurance, told the

newspaper.

Wayne King, an insurance adjuster who flew to

Malaysia ten months ago to get two artificial disks to ease the grinding pain in

his back, paid about 27,000 dollars for the treatment, including surgery,

hospitalization, hotels and airfare. The same surgery would cost him 105,000

dollars in the United States.

King said he traveled to Gleneagles hospital in

Malaysia for the treatment because his insurance company refused to improve his

coverage to include such an operation.

Gleneagles is among dozens of hospitals in the

developing world racking up international accreditations or affiliations with

prestigious U.S. universities. Many of them boast English-speaking and highly

trained doctors.

Ten months after surgery, King is almost pain-free.

His American doctor said his post-surgical X-rays and mobility were about what a

doctor would expect in some who had had the same surgery in the United States.

Almost 1,300 Chinese infants still hospitalized from tainted milk

BEIJING, Nov. 12 (Chinese media) -- China's Ministry of Health said on Wednesday that 1,272 infants nationwide were still receiving hospital treatment for kidney disorders caused by tainted powdered milk.

Two were in serious condition, the ministry said on its website.

The number of infants currently hospitalized compares with more than 2,390 two weeks ago.

No children died from milk-related toxicity last month and all deaths reported to date occurred between May and August, the ministry said.

It said 50,306 children had recovered and left the hospital since milk powder produced by the Sanlu Group was reported to contain the industrial chemical melamine in mid-September.

Further inspections implicated several other dairy producers.

China drug agency recalls hemorrhoid medicine over liver damage fears

BEIJING, Nov. 12 (Chinese media) -- China's drug regulator on Wednesday ordered the withdrawal of a hemorrhoid medicine over concern it might cause liver problems.

The State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA) ordered the Sichuan-based Vital Pharmaceutical Holdings Ltd. to stop producing and selling Zhixue capsules and begin a nationwide recall.

The recall came after 21 people around the country developed liver problems after taking the medicine in recent months, according to Sichuan's local drug safety authority. At least 14 other patients also reported various adverse reactions after using the medicine, it said.

"An obvious connection can be found between the hemorrhoid medicine and the liver damage after case analysis," the SFDA said on its website, "but the cause of the adverse reactions remains unknown."

The SFDA has advised the public not to use the drug and ordered the manufacturer to investigate the cause of liver injuries and conduct a reassessment of its risk analysis of the drug.

China has made progress in dealing with reporting of adverse drug reactions since 2000, by using a system of electronic reporting and online real-time reporting.

In 2007, some 400 such cases per million people were reported, a ratio approaching that of developed countries. This demonstrated the marked improvement in China's monitoring and early-warning abilities.

Drug administrations promptly collect, evaluate and publish information about adverse reactions. As of June, they had issued 13 bulletins about such cases, involving 44 types of drugs.

China says latest-tested liquid milk safe

BEIJING, Nov. 11 (Chinese media) -- The latest tests have found that Chinese liquid milk met the new temporary restrictions on melamine, the country's top quality control agency said on Tuesday.



It was the 23rd test on the industrial chemical following the tainted baby formula scandal that sickened more than 50,000 infants, according to China's General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (GAQSIQ).

The latest test covered 978 batches of liquid milk under 100 brands in 37 major cities nationwide, the administration said.

To date, 12,209 batches of liquid milk under 197 brands in 60 cities produced after Sept. 14 were tested and all were in line with the limit, it added.

Melamine, often used in the manufacturing of plastics, was added to substandard or diluted milk to make the protein levels appear higher.

China set the temporary limits last month. They stipulate a maximum of 1 mg of melamine per kg of infant formula and a maximum2.5 mg per kg for liquid milk, milk powder and food products containing at least 15 percent milk.

The administration Tuesday urged local quality watchdogs to strengthen quality and safety inspection on food and agricultural products, especially those supplied to Hong Kong.

The GAQSIQ also signed a memorandum of understanding on toy safety with the visiting German delegation here on Tuesday.

China quality watchdog says latest-tested milk powder safe

BEIJING, Nov. 10 (Chinese media) -- The latest quality inspections of Chinese milk powder show the products continuing to meet new temporary limits on melamine content, the country's top quality watchdog said on Monday.



They are the 16th round of milk powder quality tests for the industrial chemical since the scandal of the tainted baby formula that sickened more than 50,000 babies broke in September, according to the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (GAQSIQ).

Melamine, often used in the manufacturing of plastics, was added to substandard or diluted milk to make the protein levels appear higher.

The latest tests covered 138 batches of baby formula from 18 brands produced in five provinces, as well as 135 batches of other milk powder products under 33 brands manufactured in 13 provinces nationwide, including leading producers Yili and Yashili, the administration said.

To date, 1,645 batches of baby formula under 78 brands produced in 17 provinces since Sept. 14 were tested and all were in line with the limits, it added.

China set the temporary limits last month. They stipulate a maximum of 1 mg of melamine per kg of infant formula and a maximum2.5 mg per kg for liquid milk, milk powder and food products containing at least 15 percent milk.

Beijing pharmacies restrict cold medicine purchase to curb illegal drug processing

BEIJING, Nov. 10 (Chinese media) -- Drugstores in Beijing on Monday began to

restrict the purchase of cold medicines containing ephedrine to prevent illegal

abstracting of the element to make drugs.

The regulation was applied to about 30 kinds of commonly-used cold and

cough medicines. Customers were allowed to buy no more than five of the smallest

packages of the medicines at a time.

The move was adopted in line with a circular issued by the State Food and

Drug Administration last Friday, which said that police had found ephedrine was

abstracted from cold medicines by criminals to make the drug 'Ice' in some parts

of the country.

Cong Luoluo, a spokesman with the Beijing Drug Administration, said the

regulation wouldn't cause inconvenience to people's normal drugs use, as the

smallest package of a medicine referred to a box or a bottle, which usually

could satisfy a week's dosage.

Cong said there was no need for people to worry about taking such medicines

as they contained a tiny amount of ephedrine. So long as patients take it

following a doctors' prescription, they will not become drug addicts, he

said.

Indonesia denies new case of bird flu death

JAKARTA, Nov. 13 (Chinese media) -- Indonesian Health Ministry on Thursday denied foreign reports that a 15-year-old girl from Central Java had died of avian influenza, saying two laboratory tests had showed her blood samples negative of H5N1.









The girl died on Friday in Karyadi Hospital in

Semarang city, 250 miles east of Jakarta after 10 days of medical treatment.

Denying several foreign reports that the girl had

been confirmed dead of bird flu, Health Minister Siti Padilah Sufari said: "Both

of the laboratory tests showed that she was negative of bird flu, so the total

death toll (of bird flu) remains 112."

A total of 137 people had been infected by bird flu

in Indonesia, making the country hardest hit by the deadly virus. The avian

influenza has killed so far 244 people in the world.

Indonesia has been striving to diminish the factors

that facilitate the spread of the bird flu virus, including big territory,

traditional way of rising chickens on back yard and lack of obedience of

provincial administration in implementing Jakarta's relevant

decisions.

UAE to make medical tests mandatory for school students

ABU DHABI, Nov. 12 (Chinese media) -- The United Arab Emirates (UAE) government

will make medical tests mandatory for students during their enrollment process

in schools, local newspaper Khaleej Timesreported on Wednesday.

The mandatory tests, which will include blood and urine tests, are part of

the Health Ministry's school health program to detect and prevent diseases among

children at an early age, said the report.

The ministry's decision to make the tests mandatory firstly in public

schools results from the fact that diseases such as anaemia, diabetes and

thalassemia go undetected for years until they become full-blown cases, Fawzia

Al Jaziri, a senior official with the ministry, was quoted as saying.

The official added that "the tests will be conducted during the time of

admission among children of kindergarten 1, again when the child enters grade 5

and finally in grade 9."

According to the official, the tests will be handled by the school doctor

or nurse.

If a serious case is detected, it will be forwarded to a primary healthcare

center while the school doctor or the nurse will be required to maintain a

regular follow-up with the parents regarding proper treatment and medicine for

the student.

The schools will be required to train teachers to deal adequately with such

children.

Obese smoker face higher death risk

LOS ANGELES, Nov. 11 (Chinese media) -- Obese smokers may have a six to eight

times greater risk of dying compared with normal weight people who never smoke,

a new study showed.

In addition, among smokers with a large waist, the risk of dying was five

times greater than among people with the smallest waists who never smoked, said

the study conducted by researchers at the U.S. National Institute on Aging

(USNIA).

The study found that as weight increased, so did the rate of death. Across

all weights, people who smoked had the highest death rates.

"We know that obesity and smoking by themselves are important health risk

factors," said lead researcher Annemarie Koster, a USNIA epidemiologist. "We

found that smoking and obesity are independent predictors of mortality, but

smoking and being obese especially increases the mortality risk."

Smoking and obesity both carry a significant mortality risk, but

particularly smoking, Koster said. "It seems that smoking cessation was

associated with significantly lower mortality risk in every weight group," she

said. "Quitting smoking will definitely improve your mortality risk, no matter

in what weight group you are."

Losing weight will also lower mortality risk, Koster said. "Both losing

weight and quitting smoking will increase your health and lower your mortality

risk," she said.

The report was published in the November issue of The American Journal of

Clinical Nutrition.

For the study, Koster's group collected data on 3.5 million people, aged 50

to 71. In 1995-1996, and again in 1996-1997, questionnaires were sent out,

asking people about diet, family history of cancer, physical activity, hormone

replacement therapy, weight, waist size, and smoking.

Using the U.S. Social Security Administration Death Master File, the

researchers linked the data with death records of the survey participants from

1996 to 2006. During that period, almost 20,000 men and 7,500 women

died.

Austrian scientists find transgenic maize cause lower fertility















After long researches and observations, Austrian scientists have discovered that test mice show lower fertility with lighter and weaker offspring after long-term consumption of transgenic maize.(File Photo)
Photo Gallery









VIENNA, Nov. 11 (Chinese media) -- After long researches and observations, Austrian scientists have discovered that test mice show lower fertility with lighter and weaker offspring after long-term consumption of transgenic maize.



The Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety (AGES)

released on Tuesday the findings of the research which is entrusted by Austrian

Federal Ministry of Health, Family and Youth (BMGFJ) and carried out by

Veterinary University Vienna.

The research was led by Professor Juergen Zentek of

Veterinary University Vienna, aiming at discovering whether long-term

consumption of transgenic maize would have harmful effect on mice. The

scientists divided the test mice into two groups, one of which were fed with

American "NK603xMON810" transgenic maize and the other with common Austrian

local maize.

After twenty weeks, the offspring of the two groups

of mice began to differ. The transgenic maize fed mice gave birth to less and

lighter offspring. After several generations, the reproductive organs of female

mice, eating transgenic maize for ever, began to change.

However, Professor Juergen Zentek noted in the press

release about the research findings that we can not assert it is the same with

human-beings simply by the result derived from test mice. He emphasized that the

harmful effect of transgenic maize on other animals' fertility needs further

researches.

Netherlands to ban hallucinogenic mushrooms

BRUSSELS, Nov. 11 (Chinese media) -- The cultivation and sale of fresh hallucinatory mushrooms, or "magic mushrooms," will be banned in the Netherlands beginning Dec. 1, Dutch officials said Tuesday.



"The use of magic mushrooms has hallucinogenic effects. Experience shows that this can lead to unpredictable and risky behavior," the Dutch Health Ministry said in a statement.

The sale and possession of dried magic mushrooms has already been outlawed in the country.

The Dutch Parliament called for a ban last year after the death of a 17-year-old French tourist who was believed to have eaten so-called magic mushrooms before she jumped off a bridge in the capital of Amsterdam.

According to Amsterdam health service figures, ambulances were called out 149 times last year to deal with people who had ingested hallucinogenic mushrooms.

Most of the incidents involved young tourists, especially from Italy and Britain, who often come to Amsterdam because of its reputation for easily available drugs.

Magic mushrooms are sold at 180 so-called smart shops in the Netherlands. The association representing these shops has expressed disappointment with the ban and said it would take legal steps to prevent the action.

The ban comes at a time of political and social debate on the Dutch policy of tolerating soft drugs such as marijuana and mushrooms.

The Christian Democrats, the biggest coalition party, recently called for a complete ban on the so-called coffee shops where marijuana is sold.

Report: Leprosy still present in U.S.















Leprosy bacteria. (File Photo)
Photo Gallery









WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 (Chinese media) -- Long believed to be a disease of biblical times, leprosy, also known as Hansen's Disease, continues to be seen in the United States, a newly-released report available here on Monday shows.



Approximately 150 cases are diagnosed each year with

3,000 people in the U.S. currently being treated for leprosy, according to U.S.

National Hansen's Disease Program (NHDP).

"We believe there are more cases of leprosy not

identified due to the lack of awareness about the disease among physicians in

the U.S., which is leading to misdiagnosis and wrong treatments for patients who

are left to suffer with the debilitating damage caused by this disease," said

James Krahenbuhl, Director of the program.

Although researchers do not clearly understand how

leprosy is transmitted, they do know that it is a slow, chronic disease that

attacks the peripheral nervous system and motor skills often leading to

disability and disfigurement.

According to the NHDP, the onset of infection and

symptoms can take three to 10 years, making it difficult for researchers to find

the origin of where or how people acquire the disease. Although leprosy can be

fully treated with medicine when diagnosed in early stages, once the disease has

advanced nerve damage cannot be reversed.

Because many of the population in the U.S. affected

by leprosy are immigrants in poor communities who primarily seek treatment in

free clinics or emergency rooms, the NHDP says that many of those physicians are

not familiar with the disease to make an accurate diagnosis. Therefore, many

physicians mistake the skin lesions of leprosy for a fungus or ringworm and

treat it with a topical cream. And, because leprosy is a slow-progressing

disease, it can take months, if not longer, before the doctor or the patient

realizes that the treatment isn't working -- giving the disease enough time to

start destroying the nervous system.

Due to changes in immigrant relocation, leprosy is

now being diagnosed throughout the U.S. The NHDP sees approximately 30 cases

each year among residents in southern Louisiana and the Gulf Coast of Texas who

were born in the U.S. and who have never visited an endemic country. "As we see

leprosy move toward internal regions of the States, it becomes more urgent to

reach those physicians to let them know about the symptoms of this disease,"

explains Krahenbuhl.

Top Chinese legislator arrives in Seychelles for official visit

Special report: Top legislator Wu Bangguo visits five African

nations

















Wu Bangguo, chairman of the Standing

Committee of China's National People's Congress(NPC), the country's top

legislature, is greeted upon his arrival in Victoria, capital of the

Indian Ocean archipelago, Nov. 12, 2008. (Chinese media/Liu Weibing)


Photo

Gallery



VICTORIA, Nov. 12 (Chinese media) -- At the invitation of

Seychellois President James Alix Michel and Speaker of the country's National

Assembly Patrick Herminie, Chinese top legislator Wu Bangguo arrived here

Wednesday afternoon to begin an official visit to the country on the final leg

of his five-nation African tour.



In a written statement released at the airport upon

his arrival, Wu, chairman of the Standing Committee of China's National People's

Congress, highlighted the rapid development of the China-Seychelles relations in

the past 32 years since the two nations forged the diplomatic relations, noting

that the bilateral cooperation between the two nations have brought concrete

benefit to the two peoples.















Wu Bangguo (L), chairman of the Standing

Committee of China's National People's Congress(NPC), the country's top

legislature, is greeted by James Alix Michel, president of the Republic of

Seychelles, upon his arrival in Victoria, capital of the Indian Ocean

archipelago, Nov. 12, 2008. (Chinese media/Liu Weibing)
Photo Gallery



"I expect to meet with President Michel and Speaker

Herminie to exchange views on issues of common concern," Wu said in the

statement, calling on the two sides to develop "new ways and new approches" to

expand cooperation so as to boost the ties between the two nations to a higher

level.

Wu arrived here after he concluded his official visit

to Madagascar. In addition to Madagascar, his Africa tour had already taken him

to Algeria, Gabon and Ethiopia.

UN conference on culture of peace kicks off

UNITED NATIONS, Nov. 12 (Chinese media) -- The two-day UN

conference on culture of peace kicked off at the United Nations headquarters

Wednesday, with President of the UN General Assembly Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann

calling for morals and ethics in all human activity.



"Our world is experiencing an extremely difficult period, the worst since the founding of the United Nations," said d'Escoto in his opening remarks. "It is a time of numerous bankruptcies, but the worst is the moral bankruptcy of humankind's self-proclaimed 'more advanced societies,' which has spread throughout the world."















(Chinese media/Hou Jun)
Photo Gallery











"It is not only Wall Street that needs to be bailed

out. We need to bail out all of humankind from its social insensitivity," he

added.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said that

globalization can be a great force of progress, adding that as economies merge,

as cultural boundaries disappear, as new media bring human societies closer

together than ever before, "new fault lines can emerge."

"One of the great challenges of our time must now

surely be to ensure that our rich cultural diversity makes us more secure -- not

less," he said. "For peace to endure, individuals, groups and nations must come

to respect and understand each other."

The secretary-general also commended the various interfaith initiatives including the World Conference on Dialogue held in Madrid this past July at the invitation of King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, who asked the UN General Assembly to hold Wednesday's conference as a follow-up to the July meeting.















The U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (1st, L) attends the UN conference on culture of peace at the United Nations headquarters on Nov. 12, 2008.(Chinese media/Hou Jun)
Photo Gallery











Speaking at the conference, King Abdullah said that

throughout history, preoccupation with differences between the followers of

religions and cultures has engendered intolerance, causing devastating wars and

considerable bloodshed without any sound logical or ideological justification.

"Every tragedy suffered in today's world is

ultimately a result of the abandonment of the paramount principle enunciated by

all religions and cultures: the roots of all global crises can be found in human

denial of the eternal principle of justice," the king said.

The Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, Amir of the State of Kuwait Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, Israeli President Shimon Peres, King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa of the Kingdom of Bahrain, King Abdullah II bin Al Hussein of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, the President of Finland Tarja Halonen, Lebanese President Michel Sleiman, Afghan President HamidKarzai, and other heads of state and high-level officials also spoke at the meeting.

U.S. President George W. Bush is expected to attend the meeting on Thursday.





UN report: Cultural sensitivity critical to development strategies


LONDON, Nov. 12 (Chinese media) -- Development strategies that are sensitive to cultural values can reduce harmful practices against women and promote human rights, says a new report from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) launched here on Wednesday.



The State of World Population 2008 report says that culture is a central component of successful development of poor countries, and must be integrated into development policy and programming. Full story






















Afghan President Hamid Karzai delivers a speech during the UN conference on culture of peace at the United Nations headquarters on Nov. 12, 2008. (Chinese media/Hou Jun)
Photo Gallery

2,900-year-old earthenware pottery found in S Lebanon







Archaeologists work on earthenware

potteries found at an excavation site in the port city of Tyre, southern

Lebanon Nov. 12, 2008. (Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo Gallery













A worker unearths Phoenician potteries found at an excavation site in the port city of Tyre, southern Lebanon November 12, 2008.





A worker unearths Phoenician potteries

found at an excavation site in the port city of Tyre, southern Lebanon

Nov. 12, 2008. (Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo Gallery

Philips develops "intelligent pill"

The mechanical design of Philips Research's intelligent pill (iPill) in the form of an 11 x 26 mm capsule is seen in this undated handout illustration. Dutch group Philips has developed an 'intelligent pill' that contains a microprocessor, battery, wireless radio, pump and a drug reservoir to release medication in a specific area in the body. Philips, one of the world's biggest hospital equipment makers, said on November 11, 2008 that the 'iPill' capsule, measures acidity with a sensor to determine its location in the gut, and can then release drugs where they are needed.





The mechanical design of Philips

Research's intelligent pill (iPill) in the form of an 11 x 26 mm capsule

is seen in this undated handout illustration. Dutch group Philips has

developed an "intelligent pill" that contains a microprocessor, battery,

wireless radio, pump and a drug reservoir to release medication in a

specific area in the body. Philips, one of the world's biggest hospital

equipment makers, said on Nov. 11, 2008 that the "iPill" capsule, measures

acidity with a sensor to determine its location in the gut, and can then

release drugs where they are needed.
(Chinese media/Reuters

Photo)
Photo

Gallery














Philips Research's intelligent pill (iPill) for electronically controlled drug delivery is seen in this undated handout. Dutch group Philips has developed an 'intelligent pill' that contains a microprocessor, battery, wireless radio, pump and a drug reservoir to release medication in a specific area in the body. Philips, one of the world's biggest hospital equipment makers, said on November 11, 2008 that the 'iPill' capsule, measures acidity with a sensor to determine its location in the gut, and can then release drugs where they are needed.





Philips Research's intelligent pill

(iPill) for electronically controlled drug delivery is seen in this

undated handout. Dutch group Philips has developed an "intelligent pill"

that contains a microprocessor, battery, wireless radio, pump and a drug

reservoir to release medication in a specific area in the body. Philips,

one of the world's biggest hospital equipment makers, said on Nov. 11,

2008 that the "iPill" capsule, measures acidity with a sensor to determine

its location in the gut, and can then release drugs where they are needed.

(Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo Gallery




Stimulus package to push long-term growth

By Bian Yi



BEIJING, Nov. 12 -- As the international financial tsunami spreads to the

whole world, darkening the gloom over the global economy, China has come up with

a package of stimulus policy to boost its economy.



At a recent State Council meeting presided over by Premier Wen Jiabao, the

central government vowed to adopt a proactive fiscal and a moderately loose

monetary policy and take more forceful measures to spur domestic demand and

promote a steady and relatively rapid economic growth.

The government announced a 4 trillion yuan (586 billion U.S. dollars)

investment package before 2010. It ranges from building affordable houses for

urban low-income residents to constructing major transportation networks and

rural infrastructure; from stepping up development of medical care, culture and

education to ecological construction; and from pushing for economic

restructuring and innovation to improving people's living conditions.

To step up the construction pace, the central government has decided to

allot an additional 100 billion yuan investment for this year.

All these measures serve to show the shift in the country's macro-control

policy, according to Luo Yunyi, director the Institute of Investment Research

under the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC). The country had

long clung to a prudent fiscal and tightened monetary policy to prevent the

economy from overheating.

"To expand domestic demand through increasing fiscal investment is a viable

short-term tool to offset the negative influences caused by the current export

decline and inactive consumption. But it is also badly needed in the long run

given that the country has to think over how to make full use of its huge size

of savings and to meet the conditions for its accelerated process of

urbanization and industrialization," he said.

It is expected that the stimulus package will help the sluggish markets and

enterprises regain confidence. In the aftermath of the 1998 Asian financial

crisis, China also turned to a proactive fiscal policy and that contributed a

lot to the country's strong economic performance in the ensuing years.

"The unprecedented economic crisis in a century does need a forceful

financial policy to counter it. The central government got to the point when it

decided at the recent executive meeting to resort to a moderately loose currency

policy because too much loosening may push inflation up once again," said Tang

Min, vice-secretary-general of the China Development Research Foundation.

Different from the mainly currency-centered policy, such as lowering

interest rates, taken by most countries to cope with the ongoing financial

crisis, the Chinese government has also adopted a proactive financial approach

alongside monetary measures.

Currency policies alone cannot solve the country's emerging economic

problems in the current situation when domestic banks remain reluctant to lend

and enterprises fall short of production confidence.

"The enormous economic stimulus plan is not meant to directly rescue the

rocky financial organs as the US did. It will be used for infrastructure

construction and improvement of people's medical care, culture and education.

This will not only stoke economic growth but also press ahead with the country's

structural reforms," he said.

According to Zhao Xijun, vice-president of the School of Finance under the

Renmin University of China, the ongoing international financial crisis presents

an occasion to test the governing capability of the Chinese government.

"The government's responsiveness to changed economic situations at home and

abroad and its latest demand-boosting investment package have fully indicated

its rich experiences and sophisticated tactics in driving the market economy,"

Zhao said.

"In the long term, all these measures will lay a solid foundation for an

enduring and steady growth of the national economy."

By appropriating an added 100 billion-yuan investment in the fourth quarter

of this year, the central government has demonstrated its determination to take

immediate steps to counter the otherwise contracting economy in the context of

global economic slowdown.

But how to ensure an effective use of the money remains a key issue. At an

emergency meeting held by the NDRC, a clear-cut principle was laid out for the

utilization of this huge amount of central government fund.

According to the country's top economic planning body, the additional money

is due to be used in fields related to people's livelihoods, such as solving and

improving people's housing conditions and constructing rural infrastructure.

The money will also be spent on the construction of the country's transport

networks, ranging from pivotal railways, highways and airports, it said.

The NDRC also demanded the government money is used more for grassroots

medical care, education and culture, especially those in the underdeveloped

western regions.

To step up the country's economic restructuring and industrial upgrade, the

NDRC said some innovative and hi-tech enterprises are due to get government

financial supporting.

The article is based on a report published in People's Daily Tuesday.

(Source: (China Daily)

Tax reform to reduce costs of Chinese enterprises

Special Report:Global Financial Crisis



BEIJING, Nov. 11 (Chinese media) -- China's new tax reform will

ease the tax burden for the country's small and medium enterprises, and revive

and enhance their healthy development, experts told Chinese media on Tuesday.

The Chinese government announced a long-awaited tax

reform on Monday, under which companies will no longer pay value-added tax (VAT)

for equipment purchases.

It would reduce the tax burden on companies and save

them an estimated 120 billion yuan (17.59 billion U.S. dollars) a year, the

biggest cut ever, said officials from the Ministry of Finance (MOF) and State

Administration of Taxation.

In 2007, the VAT revenue exceeded 1.5 trillion yuan,

accounting for 31 percent of the total tax income.

Under the reform, VAT exemptions for exempted

imported equipment and VAT rebates for foreign companies buying made-in-China

would be both abolished.

Zhang Bin, researcher at the Institute for Finance

and Trade Economics of Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the reform put

foreign and domestic companies on an equal footing.

MOF fiscal science institute director Jia Kang said

the reform would encourage enterprises to improve equipment and technology, and

push them to become the main body of long-term market investment.

Renmin University of China Professor An Tifu said the

sound development of small and medium enterprises would offer more job

opportunities.

Xie Baijun, chairman at a Zhenjia-based

thermo-electric company, said the reform would help pare costs on technological

upgrades.

His company's annual investment stood at 20 million

to 30 million yuan. Two million to 3 million in taxes would be cut after the

reform.

Ten million yuan would be saved from a

100-million-yuan project, which could be used to further expand investment, he

added.

The reform on VAT was proposed as early as 2003. The

11th Five-Year plan set the goal of shifting from a production-based to a

consumption-based VAT regime from 2006 to 2010.

In 2004, the tax reform was piloted in eight

industries, including equipment manufacturing and the chemical and oil industry

in the northern Heilongjiang, Jilin and Liaoning Provinces.

From July 2007, the trial was extended to eight

industries, including power and excavating sectors in 26 traditional industrial

bases in the six central provinces.

In July this year, quake-hit areas in Sichuan

Province and five cities in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region were covered.

Zhang said the reform had to be gradually implemented

to prevent economic overheating.

However, due to the global economic downturn,

concerns over falling investment emerged. The policy would stimulate investment

and boost business development.

MOF officials said the ongoing financial crisis had a

negative impact on the real economy. The extension of the reform nationwide

would empower companies, increase competitiveness and enhance their

risk-resistance. It would cushion the blow incurred by the worsening world

economy.





China's central bank reiterates credit

support for small business and rural

banking


BEIJING, Oct. 23 (Chinese media)

-- China's central bank said on Thursday it would continue to encourage

commercial lenders to extend credit support to small enterprises and rural

banking to sustain the stable and rapid development of the national economy. Full story



Fake New York Times announces "Iraq War Ends"







This photo shows a spoof edition of The

New York Times announcing "Iraq War Ends," part of a hoax executed by

pranksters. An elaborate New York Times spoof hit the streets of New York

on Tuesday announcing not just the withdrawal of troops from Iraq but a

raft of other US liberal fantasies.(Chinese media/AFP Photo)
Photo Gallery
























A fake copy of the New York Times

(bottom), declaring "Iraq War Ends," is seen here with a copy of the real

New York Times in New York November 12, 2008. A group of pranksters handed

out more than 1.2 million fake New York Times newspapers mainly in New

York City and Los Angeles on Wednesday with a front page story declaring

"Iraq War Ends.(Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo

Gallery




Man to break Guinness with 1.895-meter long beard

Sarwan Singh holds onto the end of his beard prior to a ceremony in Surrey, British Columbia Nov. 11, 2008. Singh was attempting to break the Guinness World Record. Singh's beard measured at 1.895-metres.





Sarwan Singh holds onto the end of his

beard prior to a ceremony in Surrey, British Columbia Nov. 11, 2008. Singh

was attempting to break the Guinness World Record. Singh's beard measured

at 1.895-meters. (Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo Gallery
















Sarwan Singh has his beard brushed before a measurement is taken during a ceremony in Surrey, British Columbia Nov. 11, 2008. Singh was attempting to break the Guinness World Record. Singh's beard measured at 1.895-metres.





Sarwan Singh has his beard brushed

before a measurement is taken during a ceremony in Surrey, British

Columbia Nov. 11, 2008. Singh was attempting to break the Guinness World

Record. Singh's beard measured at 1.895-meters. (Chinese media/Reuters

Photo)
Photo

Gallery




Indonesian students make record in eating eggs together

JAKARTA, Nov. 12 (Chinese media) -- A total of 5,678

elementary school students and kindergarten children gathered at a Park in Solo,

Indonesia, on Wednesday and ate eggs together, breaking a national record for

assembling the most people for an egg-devouring event.

The event was aimed to encourage people, especially

students to consume more eggs, Rabby Susanto, chair of the Information Center

for Marketing Husbandry Products, which organized the event, was quoted by the

Jakarta Post daily as saying.

He said Indonesian people consumes far fewer eggs per

capita than the peoples in other countries. Indonesia consumes annually 88 eggs

per capita, compared with 650 in Japan, 510 in France, 450in the United States

and 330 in Britain.

The Eating Eggs Together event coincided with

Indonesian National Health Day which fell on Wednesday.

The last Eating Eggs Together event in Indonesia was

involved 4,250 participants.



Danish couple's wedding marathon

BEIJING, Nov. 11 -- A Danish couple got married four times in one day.

Anette and Kenneth Lund-who broke the world record for the most weddings in

a day-now plan to tie the knot once a year for the rest of their lives in a bid

to keep their relationship exciting.

Anette, 32, said: "I'll never get tired of marrying him, even when we're

old and grey. I'll have a new dress, flowers and pictures every year. What bride

wouldn't love that?"

The couple travelled to Las Vegas to break the world record last year.

They wed in a hotel, in a limousine-with the service conducted by

'Elvis'-in a helicopter and while sky diving.

For their next ceremony they plan to exchange vows while swimming with

dolphins.

(Source: chinadaily.com.cn)

Monday, November 10, 2008

Rare agate-jade stone resembles Bird's Nest







Stone collector Hao shows his unique agate-jade stone in Yinchuan, capital of northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, on Aug. 4, 2008. The unique stone, four-centimeter long and two-centimeter tall, resembles the steel structure of China's National Stadium, the Bird's Nest. (Chinese media/Wang Peng)
Photo Gallery
















Stone collector Hao shows his unique agate-jade stone in Yinchuan, capital of northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, on Aug. 4, 2008.(Chinese media/Wang Peng)
Photo Gallery

Man sells his laughter















Zheng Yu, 30, who sells his laughs in a Chongqing street, shows his hairstyle on August 3, 2008.
Photo Gallery



BEIJING, Aug. 5 -- A real-life version of the nightclub claque depicted in German writer Heinrich Boll's short story "The Laugher" has been found in a Chinese street, trying to earn a living by laughing.

Zheng Yu, a 30-year-old man in southwestern China's Chongqing Municipality, began selling his laughter on Sunday in a local street, Chongqing Times reported.

The self-claimed "the world's number one laughter-selling professional" has 12 types of facial expressions on sale. For one yuan (14 U.S. cents), one can ask him to smile or grin, smirk, sneer, etc. Or you can pay 10 yuan to see him perform all 12 expressions.

The man even sports a hairstyle featuring a smiley face on the back of his head.

"We should laugh more. Laughing makes us healthy," Zheng told onlookers, who crowded around him. Few, however, actually paid to see him laugh.



(Source: CRIENGLISH. com)















Zheng Yu (R), 30, sells his laughs in a Chongqing street on August 3, 2008.
Photo Gallery

Mexico: 7 arrested for possessing 9,000 sea turtle eggs

BEIJING, Aug. 4 (Chinese medianet) -- Seven men in a truck

containing 9,000 protected sea turtle eggs have been arrested by policeat

highway checkpoint in the southern Mexico state of Guerrero.



Sea turtles are a protected species in Mexico, but their eggs have long been considered a delicacy and an

aphrodisiac by some consumers. The suspects face prison terms of up to nine

years if convicted of possessing the eggs.



Several kinds of sea turtle lay their eggs on the

Mexican coast. Authorities did not specify the species, but it appeared likely

they were from Olive Ridley turtles.



Last week, 59 Olive Ridley turtles apparently killed

in fishing nets washed up on beaches in and around the resort of Acapulco. It

was unclear which fishing boats were involved.

The sea turtles were declared a protected species in

1990. Fishermen are required to include turtle escape devices in their nets.

(Agencies)

2 die at soccer match from lightning strikes

BEIJING, Aug. 4 (Chinese medianet) --Two people died and six were injured when a lightning bolt struck a soccer match in southern Mexico, police said.



One player from each side died during Friday's local match in the southern state of Guerrero, officials said.

Mexican new

The injured were being treated at hospitals for second-degree burns.

(Agencies)

Yahoo/AP

U.S.: funeral director didn't know he died in 1976

BEIJING, Aug. 4 (Chinese medianet) -- A 63-year-old funeral director in America didn't realize he haddied in a Colorado flood in 1976 until he was contacted about placing his name on memorial.



Darrell Johnson told the Fort Collins Coloradoan newspaper for a story Fridayhe di

Barb Anderson said residents didn't want his name on a memorial plaque without proof he was dead.

Johnson and his family had decided to leave their shabby cabin the morning of the flood just a few hours beforethe resort was washed away.

How Johnson ended up on the victims list remains a mystery.

He now livesin Oklahoma City and acknowledges he was lucky to get the bad cabin.

(Agencies)

Parents dash to boarding gate, forget 3-year-old girl

BEIJING, Aug. 4 (Chinese medianet) -- A 3-year-old girl was

found wandering around an Israeli airport terminal crying for her mother after

her parentscollected their duty-free shopping, 18 suitcases and made a mad

dash to theboarding gate, according to airport police.



The couple and their five children

were late for a flight to Paris Sunday and in the confusion, their daughter got

lost.



Israeli media report Monday the ultra-Orthodox Jewish

parents, whose names were not released, didn't realize the child was missing

until they were told, in the air, that she had been found at Ben-Gurion airport.



The child, accompanied by an airline staffer, took

the next flight to Paris where she was safely reunited with her parents.

(Agencies)

Olympic-themed haircut popular among kids

Special report: 2008 Olympic Games















A boy gets a haircut featuring an

Olympic Fuwa mascot in Tianjin August 3, 2008. Wu Dasheng, a local Beijing

barber, offers the boys in his neighborhood a free Olympic-themed haircut

as part of his effort to cheer for the upcoming Beijing 2008 Olympic

Games. (Photo: China Daily/Agencies)
Photo Gallery





















A pair of twins show their

Olympic-themed haircuts in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province, August 3,

2008.(Photo: China Daily/Agenices)
Photo Gallery

11-year-old boy finds original jaw bone of dinosaur

Eleven-year-old Jacob Walen from the Netherlands looks at a reconstructed skull of Torvosaurus at Lourinha museum in Lourinha, near Lisbon August 2, 2008.  Walen found an original jaw bone of a dinosaur in Lourinha on July 27, 2003. Portuguese paleontologists presented a reconstructed skull of Torvosaurus, a giant prehistoric dinosaur they say is the largest known terrestrial predator of the Jurassic Period. Reconstructed from parts of a cranium, including a jaw bone with a 5.1 inch (13 cm) long blade-like tooth, found in 2003 near Lourinha in central-western Portugal, the skull measures 4.6 feet (1.4 metres) in length -- bigger than an earlier Torvosaurus find made in the United States in the 1970s. The species roamed the earth about 150 million year ago, according to the New University of Lisbon.(Chinese media/Reuters Photo)







Eleven-year-old Jacob Walen from the Netherlands looks at a

reconstructed skull of Torvosaurus at Lourinha museum in Lourinha, near

Lisbon August 2, 2008. Walen found an original jaw bone of a dinosaur in

Lourinha on July 27, 2003. Portuguese paleontologists presented a

reconstructed skull of Torvosaurus, a giant prehistoric dinosaur they say

is the largest known terrestrial predator of the Jurassic Period.

Reconstructed from parts of a cranium, including a jaw bone with a 5.1

inch (13 cm) long blade-like tooth, found in 2003 near Lourinha in

central-western Portugal, the skull measures 4.6 feet (1.4 metres) in

length -- bigger than an earlier Torvosaurus find made in the United

States in the 1970s. The species roamed the earth about 150 million year

ago, according to the New University of Lisbon.(Chinese media/Reuters

Photo)
Photo

Gallery













Eleven-year-old Jacob Walen from the Netherlands looks at a reconstructed skull of Torvosaurus at Lourinha museum in Lourinha, near Lisbon August 2, 2008. Walen found an original jaw bone of a dinosaur in Lourinha on July 27, 2003.(Chinese media/Reuters Photo)





Eleven-year-old Jacob Walen from the Netherlands looks at

a reconstructed skull of Torvosaurus at Lourinha museum in Lourinha, near Lisbon August 2, 2008.

Walen found an original jaw bone of a dinosaur in

Lourinha on July 27, 2003.(Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo Gallery











Eleven-year-old Jacob Walen of the Netherlands holds a piece of an original jaw bone of a dinosaur next to a reconstructed skull of Torvosaurus at Lourinha museum in Lourinha, near Lisbon August 2, 2008. Walen found an original jaw bone of a dinosaur in Lourinha on July 27, 2003. Portuguese paleontologists presented a reconstructed skull of Torvosaurus, a giant prehistoric dinosaur they say is the largest known terrestrial predator of the Jurassic Period. Reconstructed from parts of a cranium, including a jaw bone with a 5.1 inch (13 cm) long blade-like tooth, found in 2003 near Lourinha in central-western Portugal, the skull measures 4.6 feet (1.4 metres) in length -- bigger than an earlier Torvosaurus find made in the United States in the 1970s. The species roamed the earth about 150 million year ago, according to the New University of Lisbon.





Eleven-year-old Jacob Walen of the

Netherlands holds a piece of an original jaw bone of a dinosaur next to a

reconstructed skull of Torvosaurus at Lourinha museum in Lourinha, near

Lisbon August 2, 2008.(Chinese media/Reuters Photo)
Photo

Gallery