Thursday, February 26, 2009

Vitamin D deficiency may increase risk of colds, flu















Vitamin D may be an important way to arm the immune system against disorders like the common cold. (File Photo)
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WASHINGTON, Feb. 23 (Chinese media) -- Vitamin D may be an important way to arm the immune system against disorders like the common cold, according to a report published on Monday in the Archives of Internal Medicine.



In the biggest and most nationally representative

study of the association between vitamin D and respiratory infections, conducted

by investigators from the University of Colorado Denver (UC Denver) School of

Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Children's Hospital Boston,

people with the lowest blood vitamin D levels reported having significantly more

recent colds or cases of the flu. The risks were even higher for those with

chronic respiratory disorders, such as asthma and emphysema.

"The findings of our study support an important role

for vitamin D in prevention of common respiratory infections, such as colds and

the flu," Adit Ginde, UC Denver Division of Emergency Medicine and lead author

of the study, said. "Individuals with common lung diseases, such as asthma or

emphysema, may be particularly susceptible to respiratory infections from

vitamin D deficiency."

While vitamin C has been used for the prevention of

colds and other respiratory disorders for decades, little scientific evidence

supports its effectiveness. In contrast, in recent years evidence has

accumulated that vitamin D -- most commonly associated with the development and

maintenance of strong bones --may also play a key role in the immune system.

Circumstantial evidence has implicated the wintertime

deficiency of vitamin D, which the body produces in response to sunlight, in the

seasonal increase in colds and flu; and small studies have suggested an

association between low blood levels of vitamin D and a higher risk of

respiratory infections, the report said.

The study analyzed data from the Third National

Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III), conducted by the National

Center for Health Statistics. Participants were interviewed in their homes

regarding their health and nutrition, and most participants also received a

physical examination that included collection of blood and other samples for

laboratory analysis. The research team analyzed blood levels of

25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) -- the best measure of vitamin D status -- from

almost 19,000 adult and adolescent NHANES III participants, selected to be

representative of the overall U.S. population.

Study participants with the lowest vitamin D blood

levels -- less than 10 nanogram per milliliter of blood -- were about 40 percent

more likely to report having a recent respiratory infection than were those with

vitamin D levels of 30 or higher. The association was present in all seasons and

even stronger among participants with a history of asthma or chronic obstructive

pulmonary disease (COPD), including emphysema. Asthma patients with the lowest

vitamin D levels were five times more likely to have had a recent respiratory

infection; while among COPD patients, respiratory infections were twice as

common among those with vitamin D deficiency.

"A respiratory infection in someone with otherwise

healthy lungs usually causes a few days of relatively mild symptoms," Carlos

Camargo of the MGH Department of Emergency Medicine and senior author of the

study, said.

"But respiratory infections in individuals with an

underlying lung disease can cause serious attacks of asthma or COPD that may

require urgent office visits, emergency department visits or hospitalizations.

So the impact of preventing infections in these patients could be very large,"

said.

The authors stressed that the study's results need to

be confirmed in clinical trials before vitamin D can be recommended to prevent

colds and flu.

"We are planning clinical trials to test the

effectiveness of vitamin D to boost immunity and fight respiratory infection,

with a focus on individuals with asthma and COPD, as well as children and older

adults -- groups that are at higher risk for more severe illness," Ginde said.

"While it's too early to make any definitive

recommendations, many Americans also need more vitamin D for its bone and

general health benefits. Clinicians and lay people should stay tuned as this

exciting area of research continues to expand," he said.

U.S. study: male infertility associated with testicular cancer

WASHINGTON, Feb. 23 (Chinese media) -- Men who are infertile

appear to have an increased risk of developing testicular cancer, according to a

report published Monday in the Archives of Internal Medicine.

Testicular germ cell cancer, the most common cancer

among youngmen in industrialized countries, has become even more prevalent

during the last 30 to 50 years, according to background information in the

article. There is evidence that semen quality and male fertility have also

declined during this time in industrialized nations; however, it is unclear

whether these two trends are related.

Thomas Walsh, of the University of Washington School

of Medicine, Seattle, and colleagues analyzed data from 22,562 male partners of

couples seeking fertility treatment between 1967 and 1998 (4,549 of whom had

male factor infertility, based on a clinical presentation with abnormal semen

analysis criteria). Their records were linked to the state cancer registry,

which includes information about cancer cases confirmed between 1988 and2004.

A total of 34 of the 22,562 men were diagnosed with

testicular cancer at least one year after seeking treatment for infertility.

Compared with men of the same age in the general population -- whose records

were identified using the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance Epidemiology

and End Results program -- men in couples seeking treatment for infertility were

1.3 times more likely to develop testicular cancer. Men with male factor

infertility were 2.8 more likely to develop testicular cancer than those without

this condition.

"In interpreting these data, we considered the

postulate that male factor infertility or its treatment could cause testicular

cancer," the authors write. "However, this theory is highly improbable given

that in many cases infertility treatment involves the use of assisted

reproductive technologies rather than specific medical or surgical treatment of

the male partner." It is also unlikely that the results representing a screening

phenomenon, in which men who seek treatment for infertility are diagnosed with a

previously unrecognized cancer because of diagnostic testing. Most cases of

testicular cancer in adults are diagnosed rapidly when a physical exam reveals a

nodule or swelling in the scrotum.

"A more plausible explanation is that a common

exposure underlies infertility and testicular cancer," the authors conclude.

Faulty DNA repair, or errors in the way the body responds to small areas of

damage in its genetic material, may contribute to both conditions, as may

environmental factors.

Nearly half of Singaporeans want to lose weight

SINGAPORE, Feb. 23 (Chinese media) -- A recent survey showed that nearly one in two Singaporeans are not satisfied with their weight, local media reported on Monday.

The Chinese language newspaper Lianhe Zaobao reported that a survey by Nielsen, a market research company, found that some 48 percent of Singaporeans said they want to shed some weight, and one in ten Singaporeans thought they are overweight.

The survey, conducted in 52 countries in last September, also found that the majority of Singaporeans who want to lose weight would choose healthier diet or exercises to achieve their goal.

The Nielsen company said this explains the thriving industries of weight losing and exercising in Singapore, adding that some 57 million Singapore dollars (about 37 million U.S. dollars) were spent on advertising in this trade.

Philippines to cull 6,000 hogs to stamp out Ebola-Reston virus

MANILA, Feb. 23 (Chinese media) -- Philippine agriculture authority will start

culling roughly 6,000 heads of pigs in a farm in Luzon, northern Philippines in

a move to curtail the transmission of Ebola Reston virus and protect the local

livestock industry.

In a press briefing held Monday, Philippine Agriculture Secretary Arthur C.

Yap said that they decided to cull animals in a farm in Bulacan, as test results

done by various local and international agencies reveal that viral transmission

continues to exist in this farm.

Blood samples collected from humans and pigs in this farm were tested

positive for the Ebola strain that is proved to pose non-fatal threat to human

health.

The testing was done by a joint mission comprised of Food and Agricultural

Organization, the World Animal Health Organization, the World Health

Organization and their local counterparts.

The investigation on Ebola strain started last month, as it is the first

time in the world that Ebola-Reston virus is find to linger in the swine and

evidence suggests that the virus might have jumped to hog-farm workers from the

sick pigs.

Yap assured that the culling won't affect meat supply in the country as the

number is less than one percent of the total hog population in the Philippines.

There are over 10 million hogs being raised all over the country.

The Philippines is one of the world's biggest pork consumers and pork is

one of the main protein sources among Filipinos.

Yap said that the joint mission recommended this "management imperative" on

the back of a possible pig to human transmission of Ebola-Reston virus.

Philippine Health Secretary earlier assured the public that the

Ebola-Reston so far will not cause significant illness to humans.

Five people with regular contact with hogs were found to carry the

anti-bodies of Ebola-Reston virus, which means they were infected by the strain

but have fully recovered without apparent syndromes.

Experts of international agencies said they will continue to study the

Ebola strain to know how it can be controlled.

"We can't speculate. We don't know the source of this virus, how it's being

transmitted. We're studying that," said Soe Nyunt-U, WHO Representative in the

Philippines.

"We support the Bureau of Animal Industry to expand surveillance in other

areas," said Kazuyuki Tsurumi, FAO Representative in the Philippines.

Mid-west Nepal on high alert of bird flu virus

KATHMANDU, Feb. 23 (Chinese media) -- After the bird flu virus (H5N1) was

confirmed again in eastern Nepal, Nepali districts bordering India have been put

on high alert, Nepali national news agency RSS reported on Monday.

Districts of mid-western region are rated on high alert after the disease

outbroke again in another village in Jhapa district, some 320 km southeast of

capital Kathmandu.

An extensive testing has begun in poultry firms in Banke, Bardiya and Dang

districts of mid-western region, RSS quoted Muni Lal Chaudhary, chief of

Regional Livestock Quarantine Office as saying.

According to Chaudhary, the government officials have been mobilized to

alert locals about the bird flu virus throughout the region.

The regional office has said that 12 districts in the region are on high

alert.

"Though bird flu virus has not been found here yet, a concrete mechanism

has been established as a part of precautionary measures," said Chaudhary. "A

joint team has launched patrolling along Nepal-India border areas."

Nepali government on Feb. 20 confirmed redetection of bird flu virus in

Sharanamtai Vilage Development Committee of Jhapa district and declared

adjoining areas in the eastern Nepal as the bird flu emergency area.

The first bird flu outbreak was confirmed in Kakarbhitta of Jhapa district

on Jan. 16.

EU to aid ASEAN to improve foodstuff hygiene deficiencies

KUALA LUMPUR, Feb. 23 (Chinese media) -- The European Union would give technical aid to any ASEAN country to help improve hygiene deficiencies which could prevent the exports of their foodstuff to the EU, local newspapers said on Monday.

EU's main co

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) was a major food exporter to the EU, he told reporters last weekend at a one-day forum on EU-ASEAN cooperation on Codex food standards in Kota Kinabalu, capital of the Sabah State in East Malaysia.

Stressing that Codex standards benefited both the EU and ASEAN, he said that ASEAN countries like Malaysia and Thailand were already active in that respect, while Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam were lagging.

Lepeintre also said that all food must be labeled as such if they contain genetically modified organisms, something which the United States has resisted.



SAR gov't: No fake eggs found in Macao

MACAO, Feb. 23 (Chinese media) -- An ad hoc group on food security appointed by the Macao Special Administrative Region government on Monday confirmed that they had not found evidence for previous media reports that eggs sold in Macao contain abnormal elements.

Last week, local broadcaster TDM reported that a pregnant woman in Macao claimed to eat six suspected artificial eggs bought from local market, which had rubber-like yolks. She said she was even more convinced that the eggs were problematic after watching a TV news report about fake eggs found in China's Fujian Province. The eggs she ate were imported from Hubei Province.

However, the ad hoc group found, through experiment, that yolk will become "elastic" and "larger", when being cooked, if the eggs were previously stored in below-centigrade-zero environments and shaken for a certain period of time. The group has taken samples from local stores and markets for tests.

Previously, an official from Macao's Civic and Municipal Affairs Bureau said it had received 10 reports of suspected fake eggs since January, according to a report by the South China Morning Post.

Suspected fake eggs were firstly discovered in Xiamen, a coastal city in Fujian, when a local person bought some from a street vendor and found the yolks could bounce like ping-pong ball after being cooked, according to media reports.

The ad hoc group said that they had found no problem concerning the wholesale process of eggs in the local market, but the mark of batch number and date printed on the shell of some eggs were not up to the national standard.

It also said that further investigation on the retail of eggs in Macao had been launched as the group did not rule out the possibility of artificial eggs being imported into local market.

Exhibition helps general public know Tibet better

Beijing, Feb. 25 (Chinese medianet) -- "Tibet has been an

inseparable part of China from ancient times, and it is the Chinese people's

common wish to safeguard the unification of the country," said Zhang Chengzhou,

a visitor toan exhibition on Tibet's democratic reform.

For those western anti-China forces in support of the

secessionist activities of Tibetan separatists, they will get nowhere and are

doomed to fail, said Zhang, in his 70s, who was very excited while writing down

this remark on a notebook at an exhibition marking the 50th anniversary of the

Democratic Reform in Tibet.









Zhang Chengzhou leaves message on a notebook as his wife looks on after visiting the exhibition marking the 50th anniversary of the Democratic Reform in Tibet Autonomous Region in Beijing, Feb. 25, 2009.





Zhang Chengzhou leaves message on a

notebook as his wife looks onaftervisiting an exhibition

marking the 50th anniversary of the Democratic Reform in Tibet Autonomous

Region in Beijing,Feb. 25, 2009. (Chinese medianet Photo)
Photo Gallery



The exhibition, titled "Democratic Reform in the

Tibet Autonomous Region," opened in the Cultural Palace of Nationalities in

Beijing Tuesday and runs until April 10. On display are more than 500 photos,

180 objects and documents, demonstrating the remarkable achievements Tibet has

made over the last 50 years.

Learning about the exhibition via radio, Zhang and

his wife were eager to visit it, but they came on the second day of the

exhibition because they were too busy.

"I was very excited when I saw the pictures showing

that March 28 was designated as the Serf Emancipation Day on Jan. 19 this year.

All people around China should know this is a historical turning point in the

history of Tibet and history can not be distorted," said Cao Wei, Zhang's wife.

"We have been paying close attention to the

development of Tibet since the 1950s. So we have had a good understanding of

Tibet. Tibet has been developing really fast. The exhibition serves as a review

of what we have known in the past decades. "

"It is under the leadership of the Communist Party of

China that Tibet has made all these achievements today," added Zhang.

The couple asked all young people to visit the

exhibition, which will help them have a better knowledge of Tibet's history.

Shang Guihua, 60, went to the exhibition together

with her six-year-old grandson.

"Although he is too young to understand what has

happened in Tibet, I still want him to know something about it. There was an

exhibit on Tibet when I was just 10, I still remember how shocked I was to see

pictures showing the skin of a serf was stripped off."









Visitors read an electronic book on the history of Tibet at an exhibition marking the 50th anniversary of the Democratic Reform in Tibet Autonomous Region in Beijing, Feb. 25, 2009.





Visitors read an electronic book on the

history of Tibet at an exhibition marking the 50th anniversary of the

Democratic Reform in Tibet Autonomous Region in Beijing,Feb. 25,

2009. (Chinese medianet Photo)
Photo Gallery



Talking about the differences between the current

exhibition and the one held 50 years ago, Shang said the arrangements of

exhibits in the exhibition hall are more reasonable, and the use of high-tech

like computer and the interpretation of guides make the exhibition easier to

understand.

Speaking of Dalai clique's secessionist activities,

many visitors expressed their indignation and voiced their support for the

unification of China.

"It is wrong for the Dalai clique to attempt to split

Tibet from the motherland," said a visitor from Beijing. "What the clique has

done would never win popular support," she added.

"From my understanding, there would have been no new

Tibet without the Communist Party of China; Tibet would not have achieved its

stability and prosperity without the People's Liberation Army. The Dalai clique

is a reactionary double-dealer and the so-called 'Tibet Independence' is a dirty

trick used western hostile forces," said another visitor.











A guide introduces photos at an exhibition marking the 50th anniversary of the Democratic Reform in Tibet Autonomous Region in Beijing, Feb. 25, 2009.





A guide introduces photosat an

exhibition marking the 50th anniversary of the Democratic Reform in Tibet

Autonomous Region in Beijing, Feb. 25, 2009. (Chinese medianet

Photo)
Photo

Gallery





Exhibit on Tibet's democratic reform

opens in Beijing


BEIJING,

Feb. 24 (Chinese medianet) -- An exhibition marking the 50th anniversary of the

Democratic Reform in Tibet opened at the Cultural Palace of Nationalities in

Beijing this morning. The exhibition will run through April 10.



Prof. Zhu Xiaoming, a senior official of the China Tibetan Studies Center, said that the exhibition aims to highlight the tremendous changes that has taken place in Tibet since the Democratic Reform began in 1959. He also asked those wishing to know Tibet better to visit the exhibition, saying it is a good opportunity.




















A visitor looks at a prictureat an

exhibition marking the 50th anniversary of the Democratic Reform in Tibet

Autonomous Region in Beijing, Feb. 25, 2009. The exhibition opened on Feb.

24 and runs until April 10.(Chinese medianet Photo)
Photo

Gallery














Visitors watch a documentary showing the past and present of Tibet at an exhibition marking the 50th anniversary of the Democratic Reform in Tibet Autonomous Region in Beijing, Feb. 25, 2009.





Visitors watch a documentary showing the

past and present of Tibet at an exhibition marking the 50th anniversary of

the Democratic Reform in Tibet Autonomous Region in Beijing,Feb. 25,

2009. (Chinese medianet Photo)
Photo Gallery




Apple says Steve Jobs still involved in strategic decisions









Apple Inc.'s Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs is shown in this combination photo of file photographs dating (top row L to R) July 2000, November 2003, September 2005, (bottom L to R) September 2006, January 2007 and September 2008.





Apple Inc.'s Chief Executive Officer

Steve Jobs is shown in this combination photo of file photographs dating

(top row L to R) July 2000, November 2003, September 2005, (bottom L to R)

September 2006, January 2007 and September 2008.(Chinese media/Reuters

Photo)
Photo

Gallery



SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 25 (Chinese media) -- Apple Inc board

members on Wednesday pacified shareholders by saying that Steve Jobs, the

company's chief executive officer, remains deeply involved in strategic

decisions and is planning to return from his medical leave as scheduled.

"Nothing has changed," Apple board member Arthur

Levinson told investors at the company's annual shareholder meeting.

Steve Jobs announced on Jan. 14 that he will take a

medical leave until the end of June, noting that his health-related issues were

more complex than he originally thought.

According to Jobs, the arrangement was fully

supported by the company's board of directors.

In recent years, concerns about Jobs' health have

become a factor that causes the fluctuation of Apple's stock prices.

It was reported that after Jobs' medical leave, the

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission started an investigation into Apple's

disclosure of his health information to determine whether investors were misled.



However, Levinson defended Apple's handling of Jobs'

health issue, saying the company has met all disclosure obligations.

Jobs was absent from Wednesday's shareholder meeting,

the first time in a decade that he did not show up at the event.

At the meeting, Jobs, Levinson and all the other

current members of Apple's board of directors were re-elected.

Commentary: Resumption of defense dialogue sends positive signal for Sino-U.S. ties

by Yang Qingchuan

WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 (Chinese media) -- The resumption of a

defense dialogue between China and the United States is widely believed to send

positive signals for furthering ties between the two nations and the two

militaries, thereby creating favorable conditions for future development.

The upcoming working meeting of the defense

ministries of China and the U.S., scheduled for Feb. 27-28, will be the first

between the two countries since October.

As both countries have long agreed, there is a shared

responsibility for China, the world's largest developing country, and the United

States, the largest developed country, to maintain peace and development in the

world.

In an era that demands more cooperation to safeguard

regional and global peace and stability, China and the United States agree that

enhanced exchanges in defense affairs will benefit the growth of ties between

the two countries and their militaries.

They agree in addition that cooperation also will

help maintain peace and stability in the Asia Pacific region and the world.

China always attaches great importance to the

development of military ties with the United States.

China issued a white paper on national defense in

January, stating clearly that developing ties with the U.S. military conforms to

the common interests of both sides.

China expects to work with the U.S. to foster

favorable conditions for both sides to improve and develop military ties, the

paper said.

China has also noticed a growing interest in the U.S.

to enhance military exchanges during and after the U.S. presidential election.

Barack Obama, in September 2008 during his successful

presidential campaign, wrote in China Brief, a periodical of the American

Chamber of Commerce in China, that the two militaries "should increase not only

the quantity of their contacts but also the quality of their engagements."

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman last week hailed the

resumption of China-U.S. defense consultations.

"We take this as a positive signal that the Chinese

are prepared to engage and begin working to resume a regular

military-to-military exchange," he said.

"We place a high priority on the U.S.-China

mil-to-mil relationship," Whitman said.

Top U.S. military officials, including Admiral

Timothy Keating, commander of the U.S. Pacific Command, said they were looking

forward to more exchanges with the People's Liberation Army of China this year.

Carol Shea-Porter, a member of the U.S. House

military committee, recently pointed out that it is important for the U.S.

military to continue dialogue with China.

With the continuous development of overall China-U.S.

relations, bilateral military-to-military ties have also generally expanded in

recent years.

Last year, the two sides officially established a

telephone link between China's Ministry of National Defense and the U.S. Defense

Department.

The two militaries most recently reportedly

coordinated with each other in the international fight against piracy in the

Gulf of Aden.

However, the development of relations between the two

militaries has not been on an even path.

For the record, some people in the United States have

not always stuck to the one-China policy while some others are still hawking the

false theory of the "China Threat."

It is evident that such actions are not helpful to

maintaining healthy and steady development of the China-U.S. defense

relationship.

Lessons from the development of military ties show

that the political foundations of the relationship will only be solidified if

China and the U.S. pay due regard to each other's core interests.

To create favorable conditions for further

development of bilateral military ties, the new U.S. administration needs to be

mindful of the critical interests and concerns of China, stick to the three

China-U.S. joint communiqués and take action to remove the current obstacles in

the relationship.

New Chinese ambassador to Myanmar on China-ASEAN co-op in dealing with global financial crisis

Special Report:Global Financial Crisis





YANGON, Feb. 26 (Chinese media) -- New Chinese Ambassador to

Myanmar Ye Dabo said on Thursday that China and the Association of Southeast

Asian Nations (ASEAN) should continue to enhance political trust mutually and

policy coordination to deal with the global financial crisis through cooperation

in a bid to realize a mutually beneficial and win-win situation.

Ye made the remarks in an interview with Chinese media in

the eve of the 14th ASEAN Summit scheduled for Friday in Thailand.

The current global financial crisis is sustainable

spreading, deepening the impact on Asian countries including China and 10-nation

ASEAN, Ye said, expressing that China wishes to further enhance mutually

beneficial cooperation with ASEAN to turn the crisis to opportunity, increase

reciprocal trade and push the cooperation to obtain practical achievement.

Ye held that the two sides should continuously raise

the level of economic and trade cooperation to find out new economic growth

point amid adversity, maintaining the healthy development of respective

countries' economy and mitigating the impact brought about by the financial

crisis.

Ye noted that despite impact at different degrees on

China and Myanmar by the financial crisis, it still scored gratifying

achievement in Sino-Myanmar economic and trade cooperation in 2008.

According to Chinese official statistics, from

January to December in 2008, China-Myanmar bilateral trade hit 2.626 billion

U.S. dollars, rising by 26.4 percent correspondingly with China's status in

Myanmar's foreign investor going up from the 6th position to the 4th.

Ye noted that there exists vast potential in the two

countries' economic and trade cooperation, saying that the two sides can enhance

the mutually beneficial cooperation in such pressing sectors as hydropower, oil

and gas and mineral production, simplifying related procedures and further push

the exchange of bilateral trade.

Speaking of the views on ASEAN Community and ASEAN

Integration, Ye said ASEAN is an important regional organization in Asia, making

active contribution for the past many years to pushing sub-regional economic,

social and cultural development and to safeguarding of regional peace, stability

and prosperity.

Along with the globalization and the rapid

development of regional cooperation and at the same time when ASEAN countries

are seeking self-development, it also attaches importance to the long-term and

the sustainable integration process and ASEAN community building, he said.

Referring to the coming into force of "ASEAN Charter"

on Dec. 15, 2008 which marked the embarkation on a new stage of the process of

ASEAN integration, Ye assured that China would as always support the building of

the ASEAN community and its integration process.

Touching on the development of relations between

China and ASEAN, Ye said since China's establishment of dialogue with ASEAN in

1991, the bilateral ties developed rapidly. In 2003, the two sides established

strategic partnership aiming at peace and prosperity. Fostered by leaders of

both sides, China-ASEAN relations have gradually heading for maturation and

all-sided development.

Politically, he said, mutual understanding and mutual

trust continued to increase. Economically, China and ASEAN have realized ahead

of a target of 200 billion U.S. dollars' bilateral trade for2010.

On the security aspects, the two sides continued to

realize the "Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea" and

through efforts of dialogue and coordination, it brought about reduced

disparities, expanded common views and secured regional peace and stability.

Culturally, the two sides enhanced mutual

understanding and friendship and extend mutually beneficial cooperation through

sponsoring seminar of young entrepreneurs and that on cultural property.

Ye stressed that China and ASEAN are good neighbors,

friends and partners, saying that the Chinese government always attaches

importance to the development of relations with the ASEAN and strive for the

enhancement of neighborly and friendly cooperative ties with all ASEAN nations

under the basis of "mutual respect, equality and mutual trust, mutual benefit

and cooperation for win-win".

He expressed genuine hope to continue efforts along

with ASEAN for the consolidation and development of the strategic partnership

towards peace and prosperity in order to enhance joint development and realize

mutual benefit and win-win.



French scholar: Applying cultural relics to human rights, Tibet issues "stupid"

PARIS, Feb. 26 (Chinese media) -- Two controversial ancient

Chinese relics were auctioned on Wednesday night for 14 million euros (17.92

million U.S. dollars) each to anonymous telephone bidders at Christie's sale of

the collection of Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Berge.

Five days before the auction, owner of the bronzes,

French businessman Berge, offered to swap the two sculptures for the application

of "human rights in China and the freedom of Tibet."

Such a remark was "very stupid," Bernard Brizay,

French historian and journalist, as well as author of the book "1860: the

Looting of the Old Summer Palace," said in an interview with Chinese media.

Brizay used the word "stupid" five times in his

comments on Berge's move, saying that combining the two relics with human rights

and Tibet issues and offering a swap "in a tough and defiant tone" was no

different to "blackmailing for ransom."

Brizay once worked for the Le Figaro newspaper and

has published various historical monographs.

Particularly fond of Chinese culture, Brizay has

traveled to China on 15 occasions, during which he learned about how the

Anglo-French allied forces looted the Old Summer Palace in Beijing in the 19th

century.

In 2003, Brizay published "1860: the Looting of the

Old Summer Palace," which, based on first-hand recollections of diplomats,

military officers and soldiers that participated in the looting, clearly

depicted this catastrophe in the history of human culture with a large amount of

valuable details.

The work triggered strong reactions in Western

countries, and former French President Jacques Chirac said it "made a

contribution to clarifying common episodes of our history."

Regarding the controversial auction of the relics, a

rat's head and a rabbit's head, Brizay said they belong to China and should go

back to where they came from. Therefore, he fully understood the Chinese anger

toward the issue.

The French scholar also expressed support for the

attempts by cultural heritage organizations and lawyers to pursue the return of

the relics through legal measures.

Brizay noted that in view of the difficulty to

collect evidence and challenge the legitimacy of the owner, the possibility of

winning the lawsuit was remote. However, such attempts were worth making as it

signified China's firm determination to reclaim the cultural relics.

Despite relevant international agreements, reclaiming

relics could be a complicated process, Brizay said.

It is Brizay's sincere hope that the French

government or individual buyers would purchase the two sculptures and return

them to China.

"If I had the money, I would have done it," Birzay

said.

The 68-year-old historian has a passionate love and

admiration for Chinese people and culture.

Chinese people are intelligent, industrious and

energetic, he said.

He could not hold back his tears when visiting the

debris of the Old Summer Palace for the first time, Brizay said.

"What the Anglo-French allied forces did was a crime

to China and all human beings," he said, "treasures in the Old Summer Palace are

the world's cultural heritage that not only belong to the Chinese people but

also to all human beings."

"As a citizen of France, the European Union and the

world, I also feel myself robbed," he said.

With such affection, Brizay decided to write "1860:

the Looting of the Old Summer Palace" to introduce the tragic history of the Old

Summer Palace, which, many French know little about.

Brizay is gratified the book got a lot of attention

after the publication of the first edition, which decupled the expected sales

volume. The book has been republished for the third time so far.

Human rights absent in relic ransacking

BEIJING, Feb. 26 -- Western media ascribe China's

outcry against the auction in Paris of two Qing Dynasty animal heads to

"nationalist sentiment", as if any other nation had a legitimate interest in

these relics.















The bronze sculpture of a rabbit's head,

which is an ancient Chinese relic, is auctioned in the Grand Palace of

Paris in Paris, France, Feb. 25, 2009. Two controversial ancient Chinese

relics including the bronze sculptures of a rat's head and a rabbit's

head, were auctioned off on Wednesday night for 14 million euros each by

anonymous telephone bidders in Christies's sale of the collection of Yves

Saint Laurant and Pierre Berge in Paris. The sculptures were looted by

invading Anglo-French expedition army in the 19th century, when the

invaders burned down the royal garden of Yuanmingyuan in

Beijing.(Chinese media/Zhang Yuwei)
Photo Gallery



Most support Mr Pierre Berge, who has asked

Christie's to auction the two bronze heads, one of a rat and the other of a

rabbit. The relics were among 12 animal fountainheads, representing the Chinese

zodiac, which once graced the front of the Xiyanglou, or European-style mansion,

at the Old Summer Palace in 19th century Beijing.

Mr Berge is apparently convinced of his legal right

to the bronzes, even though he admits they were stolen from China 150 years ago.

In asserting his right to auction off the stolen relics, he defends the

interests of museums worldwide which hold "many other looted pieces".















The bronze sculpture of a rat's head,

which is an ancient Chinese relic, is auctioned in the Grand Palace of

Paris in Paris, France, Feb. 25, 2009. Two controversial ancient Chinese

relics including the bronze sculptures of a rat's head and a rabbit's

head, were auctioned off on Wednesday night for 14 million euros each by

anonymous telephone bidders in Christies's sale of the collection of Yves

Saint Laurant and Pierre Berge in Paris. The sculptures were looted by

invading Anglo-French expedition army in the 19th century, when the

invaders burned down the royal garden of Yuanmingyuan in

Beijing.(Chinese media/Zhang Yuwei)
Photo Gallery



He even goes so far as to wrap himself in the mantle

of "human rights", telling the French media that he is "ready to give these

Chinese heads to China if they are ready to recognize human rights".

I don't see how Mr Berge qualifies as a human rights

activist when he holds onto stolen relics of what Victor Hugo called "a wonder

of the world".

For Mr Berge, "human rights" is a convenient phrase

to bolster his image. But he is still relying on imperialist logic when he

proposes to exchange the looted items.

His remarks only serve to remind us of the brutal

Opium Wars that the British and French imperialists waged against China 150

years ago. Before they ransacked the Old Summer Palace and stole its treasures,

the British and French marauders had already forced China to buy opium and

robbed it of its autonomy. Ultimately, they subjugated all of China and shot

anyone who resisted. There was no mention of "human rights" then.

Even those who witnessed the ransacking couldn't help

but note that it was "a memorable day in the history of plunder and

destruction".

James Bruce, the eighth Earl of Elgin and Kincardine,

who ordered the plunder, later recalled: "Such a scene of desolation. There was

not a room I saw in which half the things had not been taken away or broken in

pieces ..."

I don't know if Mr. Berge has read Victor Hugo's "Sur

les Expditions Franco-Britaniques en Chine", or his letter to Captain Butler on

November 25, 1861. Translated into English, the letter was re-published in the

November 1985 issue of the Unesco Courier.









 A photographer takes a picture of the Chinese bronze rat head and rabbit head sculptures displayed on the preview of the auction of Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Berge's art collection at the Grand Palais in Paris, France, Feb. 21, 2009. Chinese lawyers have filed a motion to a French court seeking an injunction to stop auction house Christie's putting two bronze relics looted from China under the hammer, lawyers said Friday. The two relics, a bronze rat head and a bronze rabbit head, were looted from China's imperial summer resort Yuanmingyuan when it was burnt down by Anglo-French allied forces during the Second Opium War in 1860.





A photographer takes a picture of the

Chinese bronze rat head and rabbit head sculptures displayed on the

preview of the auction of Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Berge's art

collection at the Grand Palais in Paris, France, Feb. 21, 2009.

(Chinese media/Zhang Yuwei)
Photo Gallery




Hugo was remarkably clear-eyed

about the actions of what he calls two bandits, France and Britain. And he

lamented the fact that "What was done to the Parthenon was done to the Summer

Palace, more thoroughly and better ... All the treasures of all our cathedrals

put together could not equal this formidable and splendid museum of the Orient."



The bronze heads being auctioned at Christie's are

only two of some 17 million Chinese relics that are scattered overseas. Many

were taken illegally, and I believe we Chinese have the right to fight for their

return. If Mr Berge wants to talk about "human rights," let's talk about our

right to our cultural heritage.

Meanwhile, I'm encouraged by the support of people

like Mr Bernard Gomez, president of the Association for the Protection of

Chinese Art in Europe, who is working to realize Victor Hugo's wish: "I hope

that a day will come when France, delivered and cleansed, will return this booty

to despoiled China."



(Source: China Daily)





Looted Chinese relics sold for 14

million euros each



PARIS, Feb. 25 (Chinese media) -- Two controversial ancient

Chinese relics were auctioned off on Wednesday night for 14 million euros (17.92

million U.S. dollars) each by anonymous telephone bidders in Christie's sale of

the collection of Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Berge in the Grand Palace of

Paris.



According to Christie's, they have received 8 phone calls

for "enquiries" before the sale. After the auction was launched, the competition

was only conducted between telephone bidders, with no one in the scene raised

for a bid. Full story

How absurd to "kidnap" cultural relics

with human rights



BEIJING, Feb. 25 (Chinese media) -- Two pieces of China's

valuable cultural past, the bronze heads of a rabbit and a rat, stolen from the

Old Summer Palace by British and French forces during the second Opium War in

1860, are scheduled for auction in Paris Wednesday night.



Long before the auction, the Chinese government, cultural

heritage organizations and lawyers have been actively pursuing the return of the

Chinese treasures. However, at this specific moment, the owner of the bronzes,

French businessman Pierre Berge, offered to swap the two sculptures for the

application of human rights in China and the freedom of Tibet. From the Chinese

point of view, it's an absurd requirement by abducting China's cultural relics

with human rights issues. Full story



American Chinese collectors urge

boycott of Christie's



LOS ANGELES, Feb. 24 (Chinese media) -- American Chinese

collectors on Tuesday urged the Chinese government to take action against

Christine's, and called for a boycott of the auctioneer if it insists on

auctioning two historic bronze sculptures looted from a Chinese imperial garden.



The American Chinese Collector's Association and the

Eastern Cultural Foundation jointly issued an open letter at a press conference

here, in an appeal to all Chinese collectors and antique dealers around the

world to stop doing business with Christine's. Full story

Chinese gov't writes to Christie's

seeking to stop auction


BEIJING, Feb. 24 (Chinese media) -- China's heritage authorities

said Tuesday they had written to auction house Christie's in a bid to stop the

sale of two looted bronze sculptures.



The State Administration of Cultural Heritage (SACH)

sent the letter to the auction house on Feb. 17, but only announced it in a

statement Tuesday. Full story



Chinese lawyers vow to carry on

despite French court rule on looted bronzes

















Ren Xiaohong (R), a lawyer for the

Association for the Protection of Chinese Art in Europe (APACE), the

plaintiff, speaks to the media with her colleague Ayagh at the Tribunal de

Grande Instance in Paris, capital of France, Feb. 23, 2009. The Paris

court on Monday ruled against stopping the sale of two looted Chinese

bronze sculptures which come up for auction at Christie's on

Wednesday.(Chinese media/Zheng Suchun)
Photo

Gallery



BEIJING, Feb. 24 (Chinese media) -- Despite losing a bid in a

Parisian court to stop two looted bronze sculptures from being auctioned at

Christie's, Chinese lawyers pledged to continue their efforts to halt the sale.



"We are disappointed about the French court rule on Monday

but we have to accept it," Li Xingfeng, one of the 81 Chinese lawyers that

participated in the project, told Chinese media here Tuesday. Full story



Paris court refuses to stop sale of

looted Chinese bronzes



PARIS, Feb. 23 (Chinese media) -- A Paris court on Monday ruled

against stopping the sale of two looted Chinese bronze sculptures which come up

for auction at Christie's on Wednesday.



Under the ruling of the Tribunal de Grande Instance

in Paris, the plaintiff, the Association for the Protection of Chinese Art in

Europe (APACE), was ordered to pay compensation to the defendant. Full story

Big-10 plan to gear up car makers

BEIJING, Feb. 25 -- China hopes to cut the number of its major auto makers from 14 to 10 and increase the market share of domestic-brand vehicles in a consolidation push designed to enhance the competitiveness of a stalling industry.

The plan,

None of China's car companies meets the top criterion now. The one that comes closest is Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp, which sold around 1.8 million vehicles last year.

The government also wants to increase the market share of Chinese-brand passenger vehicles to 40 percent from the current 34 percent, the sources added.

Backed by the merger plan and other measures contained in the stimulus package unveiled in mid-January, the government hopes domestic car makers will sell at least 10 million vehicles this year and maintain annual sales growth of 10 percent over the next three years, the sources said.

Last year, the country's vehicle sales rose 6.7 percent to 9.38 million, the slowest pace since 2000 as the global economic downturn reduced consumer purchasing power and curtailed exports.

The merger push will have the greatest effect on China's top 10 car makers, a group that accounted for 83 percent of total sales last year and includes state-owned firms such as SAIC, FAW Group Co and Dongfeng Motor Corp and privately owned Geely.

Some consolidation is already under way. The Beijing Automotive Industry Group, the nation's fifth-biggest car maker, is in discussions to take over Fujian Automotive Group in south China to expand production.

Guangzhou Auto, the Chinese partner of Toyota and Honda, is pursuing the sport utility vehicle specialist Changfeng Automobile Co.

No quick fix

Analysts warned, however, that an immediate surge in industry mergers is not likely despite the government encouragement.

"Mergers and acquisitions still depend on the goals of individual car makers," said Zhang Xin, an auto analyst at Guotai Jun'an Securities Co.

"It could become complicated if it involves conflicts among local governments" that are reluctant to lose a source of taxation.

The detailed measures have been sent to local governments for their review.

Under the larger stimulus plan, the government is setting up a 10-billion-yuan (US$1.46 billion) fund to help car makers develop new-energy vehicles.

It is offering 5 billion yuan in subsidies to support vehicle purchases in rural areas starting on March 1.

And the sales tax on vehicles with smaller engines is being cut in half to 5 percent.

(Source: Shanghai Daily)

East Asia Obama's top diplomatic priority

BEIJING, Feb. 24 -- Less than a month after Obama's inauguration, the leaders of his diplomacy and security team have flown to both Europe and Asia. At first Vice-president Joe Biden led the security team to the 45th Munich Security Conference in Europe, before Obama's presidential emissary Richard Holbrooke visited South Asia and Afghanistan.

The visit of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to Japan, South Korea, Indonesia and China from February 16-22 was even more conspicuous.

It is fair to say the diplomacy of the new Obama administration focuses for the main part on Asia.

Even before its formal declaration, Clinton's Asian trip had already been interpreted from all angles. The media closely watched her first stop in Japan.

There the Aso cabinet, hampered by the severest economic recession since World War II and a slump in opinion polls, seemed able to relax momentarily as it was made apparent that new U.S. President Obama attaches great importance to traditional allies.

At first, Japan, unsure of Obama's Japanese policy, deeply worried that the U.S.-Japan alliance, which had entered into a "dusk period", might be weakened.

The new administration of the United States has demonstrated its willingness to achieve normalization of relations with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), formulate a permanent peace agreement to replace the Korean Peninsula's truce agreement, and help to satisfy its energy demand, if the DPRK gives up its nuclear weapons and allows inspection.

It is reasonable for Clinton to visit South Korea, since it is an ally of the United States, and its relations with its northern neighbor have been strained during the tenure of President Lee Myung-bak.

Indonesia is the country where Obama spent part of his childhood, and the largest Muslim nation in East Asia. The new U.S. administration is planning to strengthen its cooperation with Indonesia in education, energy, and food security, and develop an all-round partnership. However, it's unrealistic to think that such a short trip can repair relations between the United States and the Muslim World after they were damaged during the Bush era.

China was the final leg of Clinton's first overseas tour as Secretary of State.

Before her departure, in a speech at the U.S. Asia Society, she said, "As members of the Asia Society, you know very well how important China is and how essential it is that we have a positive, cooperative relationship. It is vital to peace and prosperity, not only in the Asia-Pacific region, but worldwide."

She also declared, "The United States and China can benefit from and contribute to each other's successes".

An over-interpretation of Clinton's itinerary is unhelpful in grasping the overall key point of American diplomacy.

It is better to observe it in the grand picture of East Asia.

The sequence of Clinton's visit to Japan, South Korea, Indonesia and China successively, does have somewhat symbolic consideration. It is apparently incomplete and shallow, however, to judge the closeness of relations with the countries only from the sequence. We should note that Clinton visited East Asia first, identifying the priority of U.S. global diplomacy.

As the first Secretary of State for half a century to make a debut trip to East Asia, Clinton's visit signifies the unprecedented significance of East Asia for the United States.

As said by her, this visit aims at transmitting a crucial piece of information, the "connectedness" between the United States and the other side of the Pacific "that can address both the challenge and the promise of this new century".

The importance of the visit lies in its topics. Facing Obama is the severest financial and economic crisis for decades. What he has to undertake are two wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and three regional hot spots, namely the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and the Korean and Iranian nuclear issues.

As mentioned by Clinton in her speech to the Asia Society before her departure, the relations with countries she will visit, as well as all the partners and allies in the Asia-Pacific region, are indispensable for the security and prosperity of the United States. The United States is preoccupied with the greatest global security threats, including financial catastrophe, economic chaos, terrorism, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMD), food security, a health emergency, climate change, energy shortages, and transnational crimes.

These threats cannot be stopped by borders or oceans, and need all stakeholders to help resolve them.

While Biden laid special emphasis on dealing with security issues, such as counter-terrorism and preventing WMD proliferation at the Munich conference, Clinton committe to coordinating with East Asia to deal with the global financial and economic crisis, and push the six-party talks. As the top three economies in the world, the United States, Japan and China's responsibilities and standpoints are vital for rescuing the global economy, while advancing the process of achieving a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula is also crucial to the security of the Asia-Pacific at large.

It is key among all key points that the United States, a super power, and China, a rising power, coordinate standpoints, and set up a global strategic dialogue handling both traditional and untraditional security challenges.

The biggest diplomatic legacy of the Bush administration is the improvement in Sino-American relations, which had been turbulent in the decade after the end of Cold War. In the era of globalization, complicated and entangled interests of an unprecedented nature have emerged between China and the United States, including high economic mutual dependence, constructive cooperation to deal with regional security challenges, and effective engagement in coping with all sorts of untraditional security challenges.

The visit from Clinton, the first formal contact between the Obama administration and the Chinese leadership, can be considered the "trip to set the tune" for the new U.S. administration's Chinese policy. When meeting with President Hu Jintao, Clinton noted: "The Sino-U.S. relationship has entered a new era of positive cooperation since the two sides share broad common interests on a host of fields and global issues. The United States is willing to further enhance cooperation with China in various fields."

The "new era" said by Clinton can be identified in three aspects: Firstly, Sino-American relations today have completely transformed. With unprecedented interdependence, the two countries have formed wide, complicated, and intertwined interests. Therefore, this era needs cooperation rather than stereotypes.

Secondly, relations have grown to become one of the most important bilateral relations in the world - crucial to the development, stability and prosperity of not only the two countries, but the Asia-Pacific and even the whole world. Thus it requires handling the relations from a strategic and long-term perspective. Both sides can acknowledge the disagreements, but should focus more on the greater picture, not damage the overall relations with specific conflicts and disagreements, and not impair the long-term cooperation with myopia.

Thirdly, the Sino-U.S. cooperation has transcended mere bilateral relations. Besides comprehensive and profound cooperation on traditional issues, strengthening discussion and mutual-trust, vital for the human development amid climate change, is testing the courage and wisdom of bilateral cooperation.

During the election campaign, Clinton wrote that Sino-U.S. relations will be "the most important in the world" in this century. At her confirmation hearing on January 13, Clinton stated frankly that China is a vital country in the changing global configuration. The United States hopes to cultivate positive and cooperative relations with China, in order to deepen and strengthen the linkages in many issues, and deal with the differences between the pair.

It is especially crucial to set up a more effective high-level bilateral dialogue mechanism, so as to advance the cooperation coping with significant global issues in the new period. Among the specific issues, besides resolving economic friction, strengthening policy coordination, and pushing a nuclear-free Korean peninsula, it is also important to strengthen the cooperation and form a consensus in addressing climate change.

In her speech at the Asia Society, Clinton said: "Orville Schell's commentary in Time magazine reminds us that collaboration on clean energy and greater efficiency offers a real opportunity to deepen the overall U.S.-Chinese relationship." Cooperation gradually launched by China and the United States on this crucial issue will dictate the direction and sustainable development of human beings. Its impacts might be revolutionary for the adjustment of industrial and energy structures, energy conservation, cooperation on environmental protection technology, and even demographic and employment structures. Thus the influence will be enormous and profound.



(Source: China Daily)

With upbeat tone, Obama seeks to comfort recession-weary Americans

Special Report:Global Financial Crisis



Special Report: Barack Obama: The 44th U.S.

President









by Liu Hong, Hu Fang



WASHINGTON, Feb. 24 (Chinese media) -- U.S. President Barack

Obama vowed on Tuesday that his nation would emerge stronger from the current

economic crisis, a rare move aimed to comfort the recession-weary American

people.

In his first address to a joint session of Congress,

Obama said the weight of the current crisis "will not determine the destiny of

this nation."

"While our economy may be weakened and our confidence

shaken, though we are living through difficult and uncertain times, tonight I

want every American to know this: We will rebuild, we will recover," he

stressed.

"And the United States of America will emerge

stronger than before," the president insisted.

MORE OPTIMISTIC

TONE


The speech came a week after Obama signed a stimulus

bill of 787 billion dollars and two days before Congress receives a summary of

his 2010 budget.

The address touched lightly on foreign policy, so

Obama could focus largely on the nation's economic and fiscal crisis, according

to the White House officials.

Obama called on Americans to "pull together" and

"take responsibility for our future."

"Now is the time to jump-start job creation, restart

lending, and invest in areas like energy, health care, and education that will

grow our economy, even as we make hard choices to bring our deficit down," he

said. "That is what my economic agenda is designed to do, and that's what I'd

like to talk to you about tonight."

Obama struck a more optimistic tone than he has in

recent days by laying out a "game plan" to beat the financial crisis.

Wall Street plunged Monday with the Dow Jones average

and the SP 500 index dropping to a 12-year-low on concerns about dim

economic outlook.

But the market rallied Tuesday after Federal Reserve

Chairman Ben Bernanke signaled that nationalization of major banks was not at

hand.

Unlike the more formal State of Union speeches

delivered later in a presidency, Obama did not go into great details on

questions such as whether major banks will be nationalized.

He assured the Americans that the country could work

through the current crisis, the most severe one since the Great Depression in

1930s.

"The answers to our problems don't lie beyond our

reach. They exist in our laboratories and universities, in our fields and our

factories, in the imaginations of our entrepreneurs and the pride of the

hardest-working people on Earth," said Obama.

"What is required now is for this country to pull

together, confront boldly the challenges we face and take responsibility for our

future once more," the president noted.












Special Report:Global Financial Crisis



Special Report: Barack Obama: The 44th U.S.

President



SWIFT

ACTIONS


In the address, Obama noted his administration is

moving swiftly and aggressively to break this destructive cycle of the credit

market, restore confidence, and re-start lending.

"We are creating a new lending fund that represents

the largest effort ever to help provide auto loans, college loans, and small

business loans to the consumers and entrepreneurs who keep this economy

running," said Obama.

"Second, we have launched a housing plan that will

help responsible families facing the threat of foreclosure lower their monthly

payments and re-finance their mortgages," he said.

Obama has already committed 275 billion dollars to

strengthening the housing market. Of that, 75 billions are aimed at preventing

foreclosures.

Third, the U.S. government will "act with the full

force" to ensure that the major banks that Americans depend on have enough

confidence and enough money to lend even in more difficult times, said the new

president.

"I will not spend a single penny for the purpose of

rewarding a single Wall Street executive, but I will do whatever it takes to

help the small business that can't pay its workers or the family that has saved

and still can't get a mortgage," said Obama.

He acknowledged that reviving the stricken U.S.

economy will cost more than the trillions of dollars already committed.

"While the cost of action will be great, I can assure

you that the cost of inaction will be far greater, for it could result in an

economy that sputters along for not months or years, but perhaps a decade," he

said.

He called on Congress to move quickly on legislation

to overhaul outdated regulations on the nation's financial markets.

"I ask this Congress to join me in doing whatever

proves necessary," Obama said. "Because we cannot consign our nation to an

open-ended recession."

"To ensure that a crisis of this magnitude never

happens again, I ask Congress to move quickly on legislation that will finally

reform our outdated regulatory system," he added.

Though deep partisan fault lines are quickly

reemerging, Obama is receiving strong reviews for this first full month in

office.

A new Washington Post-ABC News survey found 68

percent of the public approves of Obama's job performance, while a Gallup poll,

also out on Tuesday, showed his approval rating falling to 59 percent.






Eastern Europe may become eye of 2nd financial storm

Special Report:Global Financial Crisis





BEIJING, Feb. 25 (Chinese media) -- The financial and

economic situation is worsening in Eastern Europe, where bank risks, withdrawal

of foreign capital, plummeting exports and devaluation of currencies, seemingly

threaten a new financial storm.



In hindsight, the woes have been long-rooted because

of Eastern Europe's high dependence on foreign capital, exports and heavy

foreign debts.

In the first few years after the EU's expansion,

Eastern Europe moved onto the express road of economic development. With robust

economic growth, the thriving new economies attracted swarms of investors from

Western European banks, thus creating a new "gold rush" in the region.

In 2007, Eastern Europe's emerging markets attracted

the most foreign investment, replacing Asia. During the year, 365 billion U.S.

dollars out of a total of 780 billion dollars of global investment in emerging

markets went to Eastern Europe, most of which was used in purchasing such

financial products as bank bonds.

However, Western Europe's heavy investments have now

become a curse to the economies of Eastern Europe in the current financial

crisis.

In order to deal with the financial and economic

crisis at home, many Western European countries have withdrawn their investments

in Eastern Europe, causing serious capital flight, and thus triggering a

systematic risk to the financial markets in Eastern Europe.

Besides the heavy reliance on foreign funds,

dependence on exports is also taking its toll on Eastern Europe's economy.

Because of the sharp fall in external demand, especially the demand from Western

Europe, exports, which once fueled Eastern Europe's economic growth, has

slumped.

What is more, the heavy debts accumulated during the

boom times have become another cause for concern.

During the good times, Eastern European countries

introduced high interest rates, and failed to stem domestic enterprises and

individuals from borrowing in cheaper foreign currencies at the time like the

euro and Swiss franc, which resulted in astronomical foreign debts.

It is estimated that last year, all Eastern European

countries' foreign debts exceeded 50 percent of their GDP, a far cry from other

emerging markets.

High trade deficits and low foreign exchange reserves

is another cause for concern. According to statistics, the average ratio of the

trade deficit in some Eastern European countries rose to 9 percent of their GDP

in 2007 from 2 percent in 2000, and the ratio is as high as 18.5 percent in some

of the Baltic countries.

Due to the withdrawal of foreign capital and the

bleak economic outlook, all the major currencies of Eastern Europe have been

devalued. Since last summer, the value of the Polish zloty dropped one-third

against the euro, the Hungary forint 23 percent, and the Czech crown 17 percent.



This has put the Eastern European countries in an

even more awkward situation. On one hand, in order to check the foreign capital

flight and alleviate the pressure of depreciation, the governments need to raise

the interest rates of their home currencies, but on the other, in order to

bolster the national economy, interest cuts seem necessary.

Another fallout of the currency devaluation is the

surge in the cost of loans in foreign currencies, which also means greater

credit risks. And because of that, analysts warn that Eastern Europe could

become the subprime of Europe and one of the biggest threats to financial

stability in the Eurozone.

Credit rating agency Moody's Investors Service

recently issued a warning that the banking system in Eastern Europe was

increasingly vulnerable to the economic crisis, because of an increasingly

tougher operating environment in the region as a result of the steep and long

economic downturn coupled with macroeconomic vulnerabilities.

As Western European banks have invested heavily in

Eastern Europe and hold huge amount of bonds, once the financial system in

Eastern Europe slumps into a crisis, there is no way the Western banks will be

able to escape unscathed.

Therefore, there are grounds to worry that without

effective actions taken, Eastern Europe might become the eye of a second

economic storm, from which at least Europe could suffer.

Aso's Washington visit underlines traditional alliance

by Chinese media writer Zhao Yi



WASHINGTON, Feb. 24 (Chinese media) -- Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso on Tuesday became the first foreign leader to visit the White House since President Barack Obama took office on Jan. 20. The summit meeting was seen as "extraordinarily important" for Washington-Tokyo

relations.

IMPORTANT ALLIANCE

"Obviously, the friendship between the United States

and Japan is extraordinarily important to our country. It is for that reason

that the prime minister (of Japan) is the first foreign dignitary to visit me

here in the Oval Office," Obama said in his remarks about the meeting with Aso.

"The alliance that we have is the cornerstone of

security in East Asia, it is one that my administration wants to strengthen,"

Obama said.

Speaking highly of Japan's leading role in issues

ranging from climate change to Afghanistan, Obama said, "We think that we have

an opportunity to work together, not only on issues related to the Pacific Rim,

but throughout the world."

Obama's latest comments about U.S.-Japan relations

are not new to Aso as during U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's visit to

Japan just a week ago, she had said "the alliance between the United States and

Japan is a cornerstone of our foreign policy."

Although details of the Obama-Aso talks are yet to be

announced, it is believed that the two leaders focused their discussion on a

range of thorny issues, including the global economic crisis, global warming,

denuclearization of the Korean peninsula and reconstruction efforts in

Afghanistan.

BEYOND AN HONOR FOR JAPAN

"We are very honored to be here as the first foreign

guest," Aso said during the meeting. Since Obama won the presidential elections

in November 2008, Japan has been seeking reassurance from the new U.S.

administration about its position as the top U.S. ally in Asia.

A traditional U.S. ally, Japan is the world's second

largest economy, the largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasury bonds, and hosts

about 50,000 U.S. military personnel.

From the U.S. point of view, as a member of six-party

talks on the settlement of nuclear issues on the Korean peninsula, Japan also

holds important leverage to pressure the Democratic People's Republic of Korea

(DPRK).

Moreover, the fact that Hillary Clinton chose Tokyo

as the first stop on her first overseas trip as Secretary of State, has in a way

made Japan's leaders and politicians confident about being in a strong position

to keep up close relations with Washington.

However, analysts noted that the latest U.S.-Japan

high-level consultations and the so-called cornerstone alliance do not cover the

serious political crisis in Japan, where Aso has become one of the country's

most unpopular post-war leaders.

Aso, who took office in September, has seen his

popularity erode amid a worsening recession, topped by last week's resignation

of Finance minister Shoichi Nakagawa after appearing to be drunk at a G7 news

conference in Rome.

According to the latest nationwide poll conducted by

leading Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun, 71 percent of respondents want Aso to

resign as soon as possible.

Japanese newspaper Mainichi Shimbun's survey also

showed that Aso's support rate dropped 8 percentage points from the previous

January poll to 11 percent. The survey also found 39 percent of people believe

Aso should step down immediately, with the disapproval rate for the the prime

minister's cabinet hitting 73 percent.

The less than 24-hour visit to Washington might in a

way help Aso boost his mass support rate. But what is more important is that the

trip has witnessed and identified a special connection between the United States

and Japan.

Long way to get out of political crisis in Madagascar

by Zhou Yu, Bai Jingshan



ANTANANARIVO, Feb. 24 (Chinese media) 每 Madagascan political

rivals, President Marc Ravalomanana and opposition leader Andry Rajoelina, have

not yet reached any agreement in their negotiations on how to end the political

crisis facing the country.

The negotiations between the rival parties began on

Saturday. Unlike their first meeting since the start of the current political

crisis in December, no official statement was issued on Monday and Tuesday from

both sides after their talks.

The negotiations were sponsored and organized by the

influential Christian Council of Churches in Madagascar. Declining to give

details about their meetings, Council President Odon Razanakolona told the media

on Monday that "a big step" was pushed forward at the second round of the

meeting between the major politicians of the Indian Ocean island country.

In a sharp contrast with their first meeting on

Saturday, the second and third meetings have just shown difficulties in reach

any agreement on their dispute.

Rajoelina, a former mayor of the capital city, has

insisted on the resignation of President Ravalomanana and his government while

Ravalomanana, keeping in mind of the scheduled African Union Summit in the

coming July, is eager to solve the domestic conflicts as early as possible.

President Ravalomanana reminded the opposition of the

respect of the constitution as well as the legality of his presidency and

government which came to power in 2002 after a national election at the end of

2001.

The opposition claimed that president Ravalomanana,

described as a dictator by Rajoelina, should resign due to his violation of the

constitution.

At a mass gathering held here early this month,

Rajoelina, 34, proclaimed himself president of the country, announced the

establishment of a transitional government and appointed ministers.

As the stalemate continued, a bloody conflict took

place shortly then when Rajoelina and his supporters marched to the presidential

palace to take over the presidential power on Feb. 7.

The troops guarding the palace were ordered to open

fire at the anti-government demonstrators when they tried to force into the

palace, killing dozens of Rajoelina's supporters and injuring many others.

The opposition also accused the president of

controlling the national crucial economy by his private business under Tiko, a

cooperation run by Ravalomanana even before he came to power in 2002.

Under the constitution, which stipulates that all

candidates for the office of president must be at least 40 year old, Rajoelina

is not qualified to be a candidate for any presidential election due to the

limitation of age.

However, it is impossible for Rajoelina and his

opposition camp to compromise, at least now, on the transitional government.

Odon Razanakolona said on Monday that the talk might

last a long process before realizing a peaceful solution to get out of the

current political crisis.

What is worrying is that the opposition may return to

street anti-government demonstrations at any time if the talk are broken down or

suspended.

Experiences in other African countries indicate that

negotiations as such might sustain for weeks, even months, before a final

solution is found.

For the outside world and even for the politicians

here, it is a big question mark whether the scheduled African Union Summit could

be held on time although Madagascar has promised to make efforts to hold the

summit as planned.

Taking the summit meeting as a national pride,

Ravalomanana, on several occasions, urged the opposition to concentrate on the

African summit rather than continuing street anti-government demonstrations.

Anyhow, the start of talks between President

Ravalomanana and opposition leader Rajoelina has brought a slight hope of a

peaceful solution to the political crisis on the world's fourth largest island.

What's behind Moscow's frequent hosting of L. American leaders?

by Hai Yang

BEIJING, Feb. 24 (Chinese media) -- Moscow does have its

eyes on Latin America. That's the word from Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

According to a report from the Itar-Tass news agency,

Lavrov told a Latin American magazine on Friday that Russia plans "to setup

comprehensive cooperation with Latin American countries."

"This year, we plan to welcome in Moscow presidents

of several Latin American countries," Lavrov said.

Indeed, in the past two months Moscow has hosted two

presidents from the continent on the other side on the planet. Raul Castro

became the first Cuban leader to visit Russia since the disintegration of the

Soviet Union when he came in late January, and on Feb. 15, Evo Morales became

the first Bolivian leader to visit Moscow since the two countries established

diplomatic relations in 1945.

Local observers believe that Russia's frequent

diplomatic interactions with the so-called "U.S. backyard" not only represents

its crucial interests in seeking all-round cooperation with Latin America but

also highlights its desire to expand its power in an increasingly diversified

world.

FRUITFUL

TRIPS


During Castro's trip to Russia, the two countries

cemented their strategic partnership and signed 33 agreements under which Russia

would provide 354 million U.S. dollars in credit and aid to Cuba.

The two sides also formalized a grant of 150 million

dollars to Cuba to buy Russian-made agricultural and construction machinery and

another 100 million dollars to buy other equipment.

As for Bolivia, Morales took home a batch of deals

concerning military, anti-drug cooperation and gas exploration.

Moscow may loan funds to Bolivia to buy Russian-made

arms, and a number of helicopters may also be supplied, said Mikhail Dmitriyev,

director of Russia's federal Military-Technical Cooperation Service, the

Interfax news agency reported.

Russia may also help explore Bolivia's gas reserves,

the second biggest in the region after Venezuela.

"We spoke about Russia helping our friends in Bolivia

with hydrocarbons and the construction of a gas transport system," President

Dmitry Medvedev said after meeting with his Bolivian counterpart, adding that a

memorandum was signed with gas giant Gazprom, whose cooperation is "moving into

the practical sphere."

PRAGMATIC

COOPERATION


When appraising Russia's development of relations

with Latin America, Lavrov said his country "proceeds not from ideology, but

from mutual advantage and pragmatism," the Itar-Tass news agency reported

Friday.

The minister saw Latin America not only as an

exporter of resources, agrarian products and textile goods to Russia, but also

as a promising partner in investment, energy, and other fields.

Russia's efforts in boosting ties with Latin America

provide a win-win situation, since some countries strive to promote their own

global influence by cooperating with the former superpower, said Sheng Shiliang,

a Beijing-based expert on international relations.

"For instance, while Venezuela regards Russia as a

high-tech supplier from whom it can gain access to technologies hardly

achievable from other countries, Russia sees Venezuela as an outlet for military

machinery, as well as a springboard into the whole Latin America," he said.

DIPLOMATIC

STRATEGY


In addition to cooperation on a practical level,

perhaps more important to Russia's foreign strategy, though, is the need to

actively engage Latin America, the region where the United States still keeps

its dominance.

Specifically, to gain leverage on the Russia-U.S.

relationship, and to seek alliance in the establishment of a multi-polar rather

than a unipolar world, especially when the global financial crisis is moving

toward a reshuffling of the world financial order.

"One vital message Russia wants to convey through

ties with Latin America is," Sheng said, "as a political, military and economic

strong nation, Russia does not allow the United States and other Western

countries to squeeze its strategic space and hinder its rise."

"It seeks to expand and consolidate its military

presence and scope of global influence, rejecting the single hegemony of the

United States," he added.

In fact, Medvedev said at a news conference with

Morales that they want "to create a fairer international system."

The joint statement issued by both leaders also

stated that the presidents expressed their concern over "the U.S. missile

defense plan in Europe and NATO's ongoing eastward expansion, which contradicted

the goals of peace and security."

Medvedev has emphasized that cooperation with Latin

America is "not aimed at going into competition with anyone," and both Moscow

and Washington have expressed willingness to improve their recently soured

relations.

Still, analysts believe the two countries have a long

way to go before the tensions actually ease.

"In terms of carrots, Russia holds out the

possibility of closer cooperation with the West on Afghanistan and Iran," said

Dmitri Trenin, director of the Carnegie Moscow Center, a Moscow-based think

tank.

However, "expecting the optics to change overnight

would be unrealistic," he said in an article published on the center's website.

Break-up of current presidential pair to determine winner of Indonesian presidential election

JAKARTA, Feb. 24 (Chinese media) -- The recent nomination of

incumbent Vice President Jusuf Kalla as presidential candidate is expected to

determine the winner of the upcoming presidential election, said political

analysts quoted by the Jakarta Post on Tuesday.



Jusuf Kalla is the chairman of Golkar Party, which is

one of the biggest parties in Indonesia, and a strong contender for the

presidency. He announced to bid for the presidency on Feb. 20, though people had

believed he would continue the coalition with incumbent President Susilo Bambang

Yodhoyono.

Analysts said that with Kalla's nomination, all

presidential candidates should quickly choose a partner as the number of viable

alternatives is becoming limited.

"The presidential candidates must select their

running mates before the legislative elections, otherwise there will be no

available options," said Johan Silalahi, executive director of the Information

Research Institute (LRI), on Monday.

According to a recent survey from LRI, the selection

of vice presidential figures will be decisive for the outcome of the upcoming

Indonesian elections.

At present, the contenders vying for the vice

presidency include Hidayat Nurwahid of the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS),

Yogyakarta Governor Sri Sultan Hamengku Bowono X, Prabowo Subiantoof the Greater

Indonesian Movement Party (Gerindra), Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati and

Women's Empowerment Minister Meutia Hatta Swasono, Also Chairwoman of the

Indonesia Justice and Unity Party.

"If Kalla picks Hidayat as his running mate, Megawati

will most likely lose in the first round, meaning a showdown between President

Susilo and Kalla will be inevitable in the second round," Silalahi said.

Battered British auto industry sends out SOS

Special Report:Global Financial Crisis



by Wang Dongying



LONDON, Feb. 23 (Chinese media) -- Car production in Britain

fell dramatically in January as shrinking demand dealt a heavy blow to

manufacturers amid the global economic crunch. The British government is now

facing calls to bail out the industry, boost output and further green

production.

FALLING

OUTPUT


In the face of the worst economic crisis in decades,

demand for made-in-Britain is at its weakest in 17 years, and a sharp decline in

output is expected over the next three months, the Confederation of British

Industry (CBI) said recently.

Only 12 percent of companies expected output to

increase over the next three months, while 56 percent said it would fall,

according to CBI's latest monthly industrial trends survey.

"The weak pound has made UK exports more competitive,

but this advantage has been outweighed by falling global demand," said John

Cridland, CBI deputy director-general.

Car production in particular has suffered a sharp

decline, plunging 58.7 percent in January to 61,404 units, with commercial

vehicle output posting a substantial fall of 59.9 percent to 8,351,according to

the latest figures released by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders

Limited (SMMT).

CALLS FOR GOVERNMENT

RESCUE


The British motor industry employs more than 850,000

people and produces about 1.75 million vehicles per year. To keep its wheels

turning, the government is facing calls to pour cash into the sector, but the

move seems to be losing favor among the public.

"The extent of the decline highlights the critical

need for further government action to deliver the measures already announced and

ease access to finance and credit," said SMMT Chief Executive Paul Everitt.

Unite, Britain's largest labor union, also warned

that a declining output underlines the fact that the country's car industry is

in crisis, joining in calls for a government bailout.

The British government unveiled a rescue package at

the end of January, which called for "both an economic objective and

environmental imperative," including loans of up to 1.3 billion pounds (1.88

billion U.S. dollars) from the European Investment Bank, as well as a further 1

billion pounds (about 1.45 dollars) in British government loans for eco-friendly

vehicles.

"The government needs to act fast to inject cash into

the car economy because the banks are failing to do so," said Tony Woodley,

joint general secretary of Unite.

To highlight the worsening situation, Woodley warned

last Friday that at least one British car producer, which employs more than

6,000 people, faces risk of closure. He declined to identify the plant but said

urgent state aid is needed to rescue the declining industry.

The government has described the statement as

scare-mongering, which could destabilize a company or even an industry. However,

the government's response failed to ease public concern that the British car

industry might be on the brink of collapse.

IS A BAILOUT

JUSTIFIED?


Production for overseas markets, particularly Europe,

has dealt with the downturn better than production for the domestic market, with

a record 83.5 percent of car output allocated for export in January.

According to Everitt, "European markets have been

lifted by scrap page incentive schemes."

It was reported that the SMMT has proposed Britain

follow France and Germany in adopting the so-called "scrap page scheme," which

says owners of old cars and vans who scrap and replace them with new ones will

receive a bonus for the changeover.

The incentive is expected to boost car sales as well

as reduce emissions since older and more polluting vehicles will be removed from

the roads.

However, critics of the government's bailout plan say

the auto industry should adjust to the changing situation by lowering car prices

to clear stocks.

Falling car sales and mounting stocks are believed to

be justification for a government rescue plan, but it will pile more pressure on

the country's taxpayers since the government has already spent billions on

bailing out many high street banks.

Some people suggest the government invest more in

small and medium-sized businesses, instead of only concentrating on big

companies.

MORE EFFORTS NEEDED FOR

GREENER CAR INDUSTRY


On the environmental front, the ailing auto sector

across the world has been strongly urged to step up efforts to turn out greener

cars with higher efficiency and less pollution.

In response, the British government decided to

increase funding to direct carmakers toward producing greener cars.

Over a period of 10 years, the average CO2 emissions

of new British cars only lost 24 grams per kilometer (g/km), or 13 percent, to

touch 165g/km in 2007. This means carmakers have to intensify efforts to improve

green production, so that they can attain the EU limit for new car emission, set

at 130 g/km for the year 2012.

Climbing the green ladder is an important goal, but

returning the industry's production to normal has become more urgent, as the

plunging output has led to significant job losses, shorter working hours and

factory closures since the economic downturn started to bite in October.

Job cuts and reduced production have hit all car

manufacturers across Britain, including Aston Martin, which is to shed 600 jobs,

BMW, set to lay off 850 staff, and Nissan, which is making over 1,200 workers

redundant.

Britain has been warned that unemployment will reach

close to 2.9 million at the end of the year. The battered car industry may cause

more people to lose their jobs as the recession deepens.