吉林前列腺炎应怎样治疗-【吉林协和医院】,JiXiHeyi,吉林切包皮过长医院,吉林看早泄,吉林较好的割包皮医院是哪里,吉林哪里能看早泄的,吉林龟头小泡,吉林专业慢性前列腺炎怎么检查

BEIJING, Nov. 27 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi on Saturday discussed the latest situation on the Korean Peninsula in phone calls with Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov and Japanese foreign minister Seiji Maehara.The discussions follow an artillery exchange between South Korea and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) in waters off the west coast of the divided peninsula on Tuesday.During the conversations, Yang said safeguarding peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula served the common interests of concerned parties.Those parties should call on the DPRK and South Korea to exercise calmness and restraint and hold dialogue and make contacts, and not to take actions that would escalate the conflict, he said.He said all parties should work together to help cool the situation as soon as possible and effectively ensure no repeat of such conflict.Meanwhile, the Chinese minister expressed the hope that concerned parties would take a reasonable and pragmatic approach to actively create favorable conditions for resuming the six-party talks.The parties should also commit themselves to establish related mechanisms at an early date to eliminate various factors threatening peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula and in the whole region.Lavrov said Russia agreed with China on the latest situation and was ready to keep close contact with China to help defuse the tensions on the peninsula and create conditions for a restart of the six-party talks.Maehara said that Japan is willing to work together with China to jointly safeguard peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula and push forward the denuclearization process of the Peninsula.During Tuesday's incident, shells landed on South Korea's Yeonpyeong Island near the contentious sea border called Northern Limit Line (NLL). The clash left four South Koreans dead, while damages to the DPRK have yet to be verified.
BEIJING, Dec. 22 (Xinhua) -- Chinese auditors found 142 million yuan (21 million U.S. dollars) were wrongly paid to central government departments as reimbursements of fake invoices in June this year, and now 68.31 percent of the funds, or 97.37 million yuan, had been recovered.The remaining fake invoices, valued at 45.03 million yuan, have been transferred to supervisory organs or judicial authorities for further investigation, according to a report submitted Wednesday to the 18th session of the Standing Committee of the 11th National People's Congress (NPC), running from Dec. 20 to 25.A total of 5,170 invoices were confirmed fake among the 29,363 "problematic" invoices by 56 central departments, says the report.According to the report, China's National Audit Office (NAO) had recovered 5.34 billion yuan of funds which were found embezzled in 2009, by the end of October this year.A total of 95 officials were arrested, prosecuted, or convicted in the process, and 1,103 received disciplinary punishments, says the report.

BEIJING, Jan. 8 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese laid-off cleaner never dreamed of being visited by President Hu Jintao, nor did she think the visit would be followed by a public humiliation of her. "Now half the population of China think of me as a liar," complained 47-year-old Guo Chunping, with tears in her eyes. Guo became famous overnight after President Hu visited her in her low-rent apartment on the Fifth East Ring Road in Beijing just before New Year. In footage aired by China Central Television (CCTV) on December 30, 2010, she was asked how much rent she paid. "Seventy-seven yuan (about 11.6 U.S. dollars)," she replied in front of the camera. Netizens soon posted 172 photos of a woman, appearing like Guo, posing with luggage at a long-distance bus station or sitting in a luxurious restaurant. Guo was described as a "civil servant" by Chaoyang District police, who was too rich to be qualified to have a low-rent house. Also, with China's skyrocketing house prices and with rent in Beijing generally above 1,000 yuan, paying 77 yuan in rent sounded unbelievable to many. To prove Guo right or to refute her, media workers flooded her 50-square-meter apartment. "The telephone rang endlessly, and some journalists even climbed onto the building opposite my apartment with cameras," Guo said. What troubled her most happened after a reporter asked her to pose with her unemployment certificate for a photo to prove her "innocence." The next day, the photo was everywhere online, with her detailed information. "I am not a murderer," she protested angrily, "why should I pose like that and let the entire of China know that I was laid off and divorced?" According to people close to her, Guo has become hysteric lately. Xinhua reporters had difficulty persuading her to meet with them, and she would only do so on the condition that the interview be conducted far away from her apartment. Liu Tao, vice director with the Housing Administration Bureau of the Chaoyang District, has done a calculation. The monthly rent of low-rent houses in the district was 33.6 yuan per square meter. The figure was multiplied by the size of her apartment to get the rent, 1,545 yuan. According to local policies, the government pays 95 percent of the rent. Therefore, Guo herself should turn in only 5 percent, 77 yuan in total. "In the Lijingyuan Community 487 low-income households signed leases for low-rent houses," Liu said. Despite the clarification of local officials and Guo herself, doubt still lingers. Sun Yingchun, a professor with the School of Foreign Studies of the Communication University of China, believed that people's doubt over Guo' s identity and truth of the news showed their lack of understanding to the low-rent house policy. "The TV report didn't make it clear to the people," he said.The report, without specifying calculation to the rent, just told audiences of the result, 77 yuan, which was too low to be true. Besides, Sun noted that the incident gave people an outlet to vent their anger about high housing prices. Despite a series of policies to cool down the housing market, the average price of housing sold by 30 major real estate companies in China stood at 10,286.42 yuan per square meter last year, up 23.98 percent year on year. Housing was just one of many problems concerning people's livelihood which Sun believed that "for a long time the government didn't address properly." As a result, "people would distrust what the mainstream media reported," he said. These reports, like the "77-yuan tenant" story, seemed to many as too rosy to be true, he added. However, Sun said the doubt showed democratic progress. "The voice of the netizens was not interfered with by the government, and people were free to find the truth by themselves," he said. The government also endeavored to improve people's livelihood. To make houses affordable for the people, about 3.7 million affordable houses were built nationwide in 2010 and 2011, and 10 million more apartments will be built for the low-income group this year. Beijing has now 240,000 households living in low-rent houses. The government has pledged to make low-income housing projects take up 60 percent of the housing supply in five year. Before moving to her apartment in Lijingyuan Community, Guo said she could only afford to rent houses from farmers of some six to eight square meters in size. "This is the only place I feel like I want to live," she said. "People are eager to have houses, but the government has to do its job step by step," Liu Tao said. "Helping the most impoverished is our priority." Enditem
BEIJING, Dec. 11 (Xinhua) -- China's consumer price index (CPI), a major gauge of inflation, rose to a 28-month high of 5.1 percent in November, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said Saturday.The growth rate picked up from 4.4 percent in October, according to the NBS. The inflation was driven by a 11.7 percent of surge in food prices, which accounts for one third of the basket of goods used to calculate China's CPI.The year-on-year increase in food prices grew from rises of 10.1 percent in October, 8 percent in September and 7.5 percent in August.From January to November, China's CPI rose 3.2 percent year on year, surpassing the government's target ceiling of 3 percent for the year.The producer price index (PPI) for China's industrial products rose 6.1 percent year on year in November, compared with a 5.0 percent gain in October.
BEIJING, Dec. 4 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang has urged the country to offer better services for the disabled.Li made the remarks Friday while visiting the Care and Rehabilitation Expo, a three-day international exhibition on equipment to assist disabled and aged people.Friday marked the International Day for Persons with Disabilities. China's disabled population exceeds 83 million. Li called for more efforts to care for the disabled in a bid to improve their quality of life.Further, the vice premier said the country would improve laws and regulations regarding the disabled and increase support of policies and fund input to serve the disabled population in better ways.Better services for disabled people would include improving the quality of public services, making more areas handicapped accessible, and assisting the needy and safeguarding their rights and interests in a bid to solving difficulties in their living, studying, and medical requirements, Li said.The expo, organized by the China Disabled Persons' Federation and the General Office of the National Aging Committee, brought together more than 200 manufacturers from 17 countries and regions, according to statistics released by the organizing committee.
来源:资阳报