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BEIJING, Oct. 18 (Xinhua) -- There will be unrelenting efforts to crack down on activities such as illegal financing and pyramid selling by insurance agents, the China Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC) said Monday.The CIRC issued the statement on its website after two cases came to the attention of the insurance regulatory bureaus in Liaoning and Zhejiang provinces.In Liaoning, He Feng, head of the Chende Insurance Agent Company, was detained for collecting capital at high interest rates. In Zhejiang, the license of the Hangzhou Minfeng Insurance Agent Company Limited was canceled for luring policyholders by exaggerating prospective earnings.The CIRC reminded the public not to be misled by similar claims and encouraged them to report illegal activities to reduce their losses.
BEIJING, Nov. 1 (Xinhua) -- China launched an association on Monday to evaluate the quality of the nation's higher education."The association, as a non-government organization, is designed to evaluate and supervise the quality of higher education," said Lin Huiqing, an official with the Ministry of Education, at the launching ceremony held in Beijing.The association is composed of over 200 educational institutions as members, including the Higher Education Evaluation Center of the Ministry of Education, Shanghai Educational Evaluation Institute, Peking University, Beijing Normal University, and others.China's higher education has been blamed for a decline in quality since 1999 when the government started to expand college enrollment."Therefore, we should establish a nation-wide network to evaluate the teaching methods, development of each discipline and curriculum designs of each school," Lin said.According to Ji Ping, a senior official in charge of the evaluation of educational quality with the Ministry of Education, China started to implement higher education quality evaluations in the 1980s, and decided to carry out evaluation once every five years since 2003."It is time for us to start a new round of higher education evaluations," Ji said, noting that the priority of China's higher education is to improve its quality."We have required the local schools to make regular evaluations themselves, and invite experts to carry out independent assessments," Ji said.
SHIJIAZHUANG, Sept. 23 (Xinhua) -- Four Japanese are being investigated in China for having entered a military zone without authorization and illegally videotaped military targets in northern Hebei Province, local state security authorities said Thursday.The state security authorities in Shijiazhuang, capital of Hebei, have taken measures against the four people according to law after receiving a report about their illegal activities.The authorities only gave one name of the four Japanese nationals, Sada Takahashi."Currently, the case is being investigated," the state security authorities in Shijiazhuang said in a statement.No further details were provided.
BEIJING, Oct. 13 (Xinhua) -- Jiang Shusheng, vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC) of China, met here Wednesday with a delegation from All Party Parliamentary China Group of the United Kingdom.The delegation, led by Chair Mark Hendrick, was invited by a China-UK friendship group of the NPC.
GUANGZHOU, Nov. 7 (Xinhua) -- Authorities in south China's Guangzhou, host city of the 2010 Asian Games, Saturday said it will cancel a newly-launched free public transportation service due to the enormous public response, which might pose a security threat to the Asian Games.The government earlier this month launched the color-coding scheme for vehicles, effectively grounding half of the city's 2.1 million private cars and those entering the city each day during the Asian Games.As a remedy, free public transport service was to be offered for 30 working days beginning November 1.The offer was met with unprecedented enthusiasm from Guangzhou residents. For days, subway trains were often crammed and stations were full as swarms of people lined up to take a free ride.Now, officials with Guangzhou's transportation authorities said they had to rescind the offer as more than 8 million passengers took the subway on an average day beginning November 1, a figure "much, much higher" than the subway system was designed to carry.Further, traffic controls were put into force 144 times during the week, which "seriously affects the normal security checks required for the Games" and causes "great inconvenience," officials said.Guangzhou authorities plan to roll back the free-day scheme on Nov. 8 and replace it with a cash subsidy program in which each household in Guangzhou will receive 150 yuan as a transportation subsidy from the government.The Asian Games are scheduled to begin on November 12, featuring 11,700 athletes competing in 42 sports.