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BEIJING, Nov. 27 (Xinhua) -- "I can't afford an apartment, a car or a wife, but it never occurred to me until now that I can't even afford vegetables or fruit," said Gao Lei, a 30-year-old renter in Beijing."I went to a grocery store yesterday only to find that even apples, the cheapest fruit, are sold for 4 yuan half a kilogram, doubling the price from two months ago," said Gao.China's consumer price index (CPI), the main gauge of inflation, rose to a 25-month high of 4.4 percent in October. The hike was mainly due to a 10.1-percent surge in food prices. Food prices have a one-third weighting in China's CPI calculation.An employee puts bags of sugar on to shelves at a supermarket in Beijing. The price of the commodity has doubled in China since the beginning of the year. Though Gao is slightly exaggerating his hardship during the current inflation, price rises, particularly of life necessities such as grains and vegetables, do force Chinese low-income groups into a rough time.Jiang Peng's family is hard-hit, as he and his wife both are laid-off workers and have two daughters in college. Jiang, however, has a new job, working as a janitor in Jinan-based Shandong Economic University.Jiang's family makes some 24,000 yuan (3,600 U.S. dollars) a year, half of which goes to paying tuition for their two college girls, with the majority of the rest covering their daughters' living expenses."We spend each penny carefully, because we try to save as much as possible for the kids. Now as price goes up, we find it increasingly difficult to make ends meet," said Jiang.The only vegetable Jiang and his wife have these days is cabbage, since it is the cheapest of all vegetables.Jiang said prices have dropped slightly due to government price control efforts, but it is not making a big difference yet, and prices of some daily necessities remain high, not showing signs of a decrease."We have fried dough sticks for breakfast, and even its price rose from 3.5 yuan per half a kilogram to 4 yuan, never falling again," said Jiang.For the poorest families, the government already made decisions to dole out temporary subsidies to help them cope with rising living costs.Jin Hong, mother of a fifth-grader in the city of Nanjing, east China's Jiangsu Province, now has to pay 15 percent more for her son's lunch at school. Jin's household monthly income stands at less than 1,000 yuan."I hope there will be no more increases, otherwise I will not be able to afford the school meals for my son," said Jin.p Jin's family is entitled to a 100 yuan subsidy given by the local government, which is due on Dec. 10. "Now, we are counting on the subsidy," she said.Students from poor families are also feeling the pinch, and they are paid great attention in the Chinese government's ongoing price control efforts. The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) issued a statement on Nov. 23 detailing various measures to institute price controls, including keeping prices stable in student cafeterias.Also, an earlier statement issued by the State Council, China's Cabinet, ordered local governments to offer subsidies to student canteens and increase allowances for poor students.He Ming, a student from a low-income family at Nanjing-based Southeast University, now sneaks out of classes earlier to make it to the cafeteria before all low-priced dishes are sold out.Low priced dishes are the vegetables, since meat is usually more expensive in China, and they are priced at one yuan per dish."In order not to only swallow rice for the meal, I have to quit part of the class. Though the cafeteria still serves low-price dishes, despite price hikes of vegetables lately, they serve less."He has a monthly living allowance of 300 yuan, which is given by his parents.
LANZHOU, Dec. 7 (Xinhua) -- Floods caused by torrential rains and tropical cyclones have left at least 3,222 people killed and 1,003 others missing across China in the first eleven months of this year, government statistics released Tuesday show."In 2010, China experienced the worst flooding casualties and damage since 1998," Water Resources Minister Chen Lei said during a national drought and flooding relief workshop held in the northwest city of Lanzhou.Further, the average accumulated rainfall across China this year has increased nearly 10 percent over levels recorded in previous years. In some areas, the figure shot up five times over that recorded in a usual year.Nearly 270 towns and cities were flooded, 437 rivers swelled with water and 111 of them broke past records, and thousands of dams faced dangers, Chen said.Floods also destroyed 2.27 million houses and damaged 17.87 million hectares of farmland, statistics show. The economic loss caused by this year's flooding has reached 374.5 billion yuan (56.74 million U.S. dollars), said officials.

BEIJING, Dec. 17 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang has urged family planning workers to make more contributions to the long-term balance of the country's population to pave the way for economic and social development.Li made the remarks Friday after meeting with representatives from the China Family Planning Association.Li noted that China's population was experiencing continuous increasing and aging, and limited resources and environments were holding back the country's development more than ever.Li urged family planning workers to pay more attention to the population's quality, structure and distribution, and boost the country's reproductive health in order to transform population pressures into human resources.Founded in 1980, the association is a non-profit, non-governmental organization working in the field of reproductive health and family planning. It has some 94 million members.
BEIJING, Dec.1 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu Jintao received credentials from the ambassadors of seven countries to Beijing Wednesday. Hu met with the new foreign envoys in a ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. The envoys were:-- Guyanese Ambassador David Dabydeen who arrived on July 8;-- Danish Ambassador Friis Arne Petersen, who arrived on Aug. 22; -- Costa Rican Ambassador Marco Vinicio Ruiz who arrived on Aug. 28; -- Swedish Ambassador Lars Freden who arrived on Sept. 1;-- South African Ambassador Bheki Winston Joshua Langa who arrived on Sept. 7; -- Tunisian Ambassador Mohamed Adel Smaoui who arrived on Sept. 16; -- and Palestinian Ambassador Ahmad A. M. Ramadan who arrived on Oct. 12. Enditem
BEIJING, Jan. 4 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Hui Liangyu Tuesday urged greater efforts be made to improve the country's earthquake emergency response system and promote earthquake safety knowledge among the public.Efforts should be made to improve emergency plans regarding quake responses and related regulations and laws, and boost the capacity building concerning quake rescue and relief in China, said Hui, while addressing a meeting on earthquake safety and disaster reduction here.He urged government agencies and local authorities to plan the work of quake safety and disaster reduction for the coming five years in a scientific manner."The work of quake safety and disaster reduction concerns the safety of people's lives and property, as well as a country's economic development and social stability," Hui said.Chinese Vice Premier Hui Liangyu (C) speaks at a meeting on earthquake safety and disaster reduction in Beijing, capital of China, Jan. 4, 2011.He noted that China, with its quick and efficient rescue and relief efforts, had successfully stood the test of a 7.1-magnitude quake and a huge landslide that hit its northwest regions in 2010.Further, Hui demanded reconstruction work in those disaster-hit zones to be carried on in a down-to-earth manner and urged arrangements be made to ensure people living in those areas have a warm and safe winter and New Year.
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