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BEIJING, Jan. 18 (Xinhua) -- China will continue rare earth export and regulate export quotas according to World Trade Organization rules, said the Ministry of Commerce on Tuesday.China announced its first batch of 2011 rare earth export quotas at 14,446 tonnes at the end of 2010.The full-year quotas are under discussion and will be announced timely, said Yao Jian, a spokesman with the ministry, at a news briefing here.The country exported 35,000 tonnes of rare earth from January to November in 2010, up 14.5 percent from a year earlier. Exports to Japan, the European Union and the United States accounted for 86 percent of the total exports, said Yao.He said that it is normal that rare earth prices fluctuate with demand and supply and China acted responsibly last year to ensure basic demand for the minerals was met.China has noticed that other countries, such as the U.S. and Australia, have increased exploitation of rare earth in their own countries. "This will effectively safeguard the global supply," said Yao.With around 36 percent of the world's rare earth reserves, China supplies 90 percent of global demand.
BEIJING, Jan. 10 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu Jintao vowed Monday that the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the Chinese government will wage the fight against corruption with greater determination and more forceful measures as the situation remains "grave".Addressing a plenary session of the CPC Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI), the Party's anti-graft body, Hu said all work should be done with the fundamental interests of the majority of the people as the core concern.Hu, also General Secretary of the CPC Central Committee, said problems that seriously violated the public interest and sparked the most public complaints should be addressed to ensure social justice.He said efforts were needed to strengthen ties between the Party and the people and to enable the people to play a more active role in fighting corruption.Hu pledged to "combat graft strictly and punish corrupt officials severely" so as to win trust from the people.Hu admitted that prominent problems remained in the fight against corruption and efforts to build a clean government, and warned of a "grave situation and arduous tasks."He called for enhanced supervision and monitoring of the implementation of major central government and Party policies and measures and the promotion of a corruption-free work style among officials.He called for reinforced efforts to build a system to prevent and punish corruption."More efforts should be made to investigate graft in key industries and key posts," he said, stressing the supervision of procedures concerning the promotion of local officials to prevent abuse of power or other corrupt conduct.Figures from the CCDI show 146,517 officials across China were punished for disciplinary violations last year, including 5,098 leaders at the county head level or above and 804 officials who were referred for prosecution.Discipline inspection bodies received almost 1.43 million petitions and tip-offs last year and recovered 8.97 billion yuan (1.35 billion U.S. dollars) in economic losses for the state."All comrades in the Party must serve the people with all their hearts and use their power to seek benefits for them. Only by doing so can our work earn the most comprehensive and solid foundation among the people and stand the tests of storms and risks," Hu said.Hu said people-oriented education was needed to guide officials to "willingly stand beside the people, be emotionally close to the people and reply on the people in carrying out their duties."Hu called for the building of a scientific, democratic and lawful decision-making system that would take the people's benefits and ideas fully into account.Hu called for unsparing efforts to promote an efficient and legal work style and solve obvious problems concerning people's lives in order to ensure their economic, political, cultural and social rights.While urging grassroots officials to expand their knowledge and expertise through intensified education, Hu encouraged their superiors to fully understand the difficulties of grassroots work and to take good care of grassroots officials.Hu called on officials from discipline inspection departments at all levels to set an example and to initiate the people-oriented spirit in their work and fulfil their responsibilities to a higher standard.He called for improvements in the anti-corruption system in accordance with an amended anti-corruption regulation released last month.One of the latest CPC moves to battle corruption, the amended regulation adds articles detailing punishments for corrupt officials and sets out penalties for corrupt Party officials who have left their posts or retired.Along with 118 CCDI members, senior Chinese leaders, including Wu Bangguo, Wen Jiabao, Jia Qinglin, Li Changchun, Xi Jinping and Zhou Yongkang, attended the meeting, which was presided over by He Guoqiang, head of the CPC's anti-graft agency.

THE HAGUE, Nov. 29 (Xinhua) -- "China fully abide by the chemical weapons conventions and is the important state partner," the new Director General of Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) Ahmet Uzumcu said here on Monday.At the opening ceremony of the photo exhibition about"chemical weapons abandoned by Japan in China"during the 15th session of the Conference of OPCW, Uzumcu told Xinhua, "We are fully aware of the safety risks that these weapons posed to the Chinese people, who are living in the immediate neighborhood of the weapons. Thus we wish the early destruction of the weapons.""As the director general, I am particularly pleased to see the breakthrough of the process and to see the destruction has started on 12th October," Uzumcu said.Uzumcu just finished a visit to China."I was impressed by China's developments in chemical industries." He commended China' s excellent performance of implementing the chemical weapon Convention and the outstanding results followed by.The exhibition with dozens of photos, which is a comprehensive and systematic presentation of the history and the current status of this issue, attracted many visitors."It's very informative and things exhibited here are relatively new to the organization. I have heard a lot about this issue. But this exhibition has made things more come to life. It illustrated the challenges a lot more concretely,"a US representative said."It's a very large number of chemical weapons considered to be abandoned in China. I hope all of them are located, identified, and subsequently they are put in storage, and therefore they be destructed,"a representative from Pakistan said.
BEIJING, Dec. 26 (Xinhua) -- With the New Year and China's Spring Festival approaching, China will improve efforts to stabilize prices and ensure abundant supply of essential commodities, according to an official circular issued Sunday.Cracking down on price speculation and related market manipulation should be high on agenda of governments at all levels, according to the circular issued jointly by the General Offices of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and the State Council, or China's Cabinet.The circular also urged for improved supervision on the food and medicine market and demanded work concerning water, power, oil, gas and heating supplies to be handled well.It called on related departments to distribute subsidies for low-income groups in a timely way and make arrangements to help people, especially those in disasters-hit areas, to get through the winter with enough supply of necessities.Party and governmental organs should abstain from extravagance and embezzlement of public fund must be strictly prohibited, it said, ordering discipline inspection authorities, auditing agencies and finance departments to enhance supervision.According to the circular, special inspection campaigns will be launched in sectors, including mining, transportation, construction, and fireworks manufacturing, to tighten safety measures and prevent accidents.Stressing security in passenger transportation, the circular said cargo overloading, using fatigued operators or running unlicensed transportation operations are prohibited.It further called for efforts to safeguard social order and to combat violent and mafia-style crimes, property embezzlement and economic crimes.
NANJING, Dec. 13 (Xinhua) -- About 5,000 Chinese and foreigners gathered Monday in Nanjing, capital of east China's Jiangsu Province, to mourn hundreds of thousands of people who were killed by invading Japanese troops 73 years ago.Participants in the ceremony stood in silent tribute, offered wreaths and bowed in front of the Memorial Hall of the Victims in the Nanjing Massacre, with sirens wailing in the drizzling morning on Monday, the 73rd anniversary of the massive slaughter."The Japanese soldiers invaded Nanjing when I was four, and they killed some of my family members. On the anniversary of the massacre every year I would come here to express my grief," said Sun Xuelan, a 77-year-old survivor, who is confined to a wheelchair.Japanese troops occupied Nanjing on Dec. 13, 1937 and began a six-week massacre. Records show more than 300,000 people -- not only disarmed soldiers , but also civilians -- were killed.Mikhalchev Mikhail, deputy director of the Central Museum of the Great Patriotic War in Russia, said, "In the history of human civilization, some facts shouldn't be forgotten, and the Nanjing Massacre was one of them."He noted that the tragedy had become a symbol of the Chinese people's bitter suffering and prompted all people to learn the preciousness of peace.""We should remember the history, but not hatred. Peace is a common desire of all human beings," said Nanjing citizen Yu Hong , who attended the ceremony.Besides the memorial ceremony, Buddhist monks from China and Japan held a religious service Monday at the Memorial Hall of the Victims of the Nanjing Massacre.The assembly was attended by 15 monks from six Buddhist temples in Japan, more than 50 monks and Buddhist believers from China and thirty Massacre survivors and relatives of victims.The monks chanted Buddhist prayers of mourning and prayed for peace.Aori Take Shuna, abbot of Japan's Reiunti Temple, read a poem he wrote to honor the dead and prayed for long-term friendship between the peoples of China and Japan.Yamauchi Sayoko, who was a representative of a sect of Japanese Buddhism, said that the people of Japan, which invaded and occupied China in the 1930s and 1940s, were deeply regretful for the victims of the war and sincerely hoped such a tragedy would never be repeated.Built in 1985, the memorial hall annually records five million visitors since it was expanded and renovated in 2007.Zhu Chengshan, curator of the hall, said that every year when the anniversary of the Nanjing Massacre occurs , nearly 10,000 Nanjing citizens would swarm the hall and spontaneously mourn the victims.On Sunday, workers began to extend a memorial wall at the memorial hall on which names of those killed are engraved.After the extension, the wall would have 10,324 names, 1,724 more than three years ago, Zhu said.Collecting the names of the victims was an important job in researching the Massacre, but it was difficult to find witnesses and documents decades later, he said.Moreover, a group of historians from China, Japan and the United States has begun compiling an encyclopedia on the Nanjing Massacre, which was expected to embody a wide range of historical documents and pictures. "The dictionary may serve as a consolation to the deceased," Zhu said.
来源:资阳报