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ISLAMABAD, Aug. 2 (Xinhua) -- All the Chinese trapped in the flood-hit Pakistan's northwest province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have been evacuated to safe places with the assistance of the Pakistani side, said Liu Jian, Chinese Ambassador to Pakistan on Monday.According to Liu, a total of 265 Chinese workers and engineers working at a hydro power station project in the Patan area of Kohistan District in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa were trapped on a mountain after a huge landslide triggered by floods and torrential rains washed across their work site on July 29.Three Chinese engineers and workers went missing after they were reportedly washed away by the flood water and landslide while working inside a tunnel.The trapped Chinese who retreated up to a nearby mountain surrounded by the flood water suffered a great deal as they were in serious lack of food and water and had to fight the coldness of living in the open atop a mountain lashed by torrential rains.Upon hearing the news of the Chinese trapped in the flood-hit area of northwest Pakistan, the Chinese embassy immediately kicked off an emergency rescue operation under the assistance of the Pakistani government, army and police.Three military helicopters were dispatched to the site where the Chinese were trapped for the rescue work. Large numbers of troops and police forces were mobilized as well. The Chinese ambassador together with his embassy colleagues also rushed to the site from Islamabad on July 31 by fighting the difficulties on the disrupted roads leading to Patan.After nearly five days of cocerted efforts by the Chinese and Pakistani sides, all the Chinese trapped on the mountain in the Patan area had been evacuated to safe places as of late Monday afternoon, said Liu Jian, adding that the search operation for the three missing Chinese is still underway.However, the chance for the survial of the three missing Chinese is very slim, said Pakitani police officers who are involved in the search operation.
BEIJING, July 5 (Xinhua) -- Donations to the Yushu quake zone in northwest China's Qinghai Province have exceeded 8.7 billion yuan (about 1.28 billion U.S. dollars) as of Monday noon, with about 7.9 billion yuan in cash and the remaining in relief materials, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.In a statement, the ministry said it had received 2.417 billion yuan and the Qinghai provincial government received over 2 billion yuan in donations, while the Red Cross Society of China and the China Charity Federation had each raised about 2 billion yuan.Nearly 2,700 people died after the 7.1-magnitude earthquake hit Qinghai's Yushu prefecture on April 14.

BEIJING, July 11 (Xinhua) -- Growth of China's foreign exchange reserves are slowing as the total reached 2.4543 trillion U.S. dollars by the end of June, up 15.1 percent year on year, the People's Bank of China (PBOC), the central bank, announced on Sunday.Statistics from the central bank show China's foreign exchange reserves increased by 7.2 billion U.S. dollars in the second quarter, a drastic decrease compared to the last quarter in 2009, when reserves grew by 126.5 billion U.S. dollars.Reserves in the first quarter increased by 47.9 billion U.S. dollars.The PBOC also said the declining euro was the major reason behind the slowing growth in foreign exchange reserves.The exchange rate between the euro and U.S. dollar had fallen by nearly 20 percent between the end of 2009 and May this year, according to the PBOC.China's basket of foreign exchange reserves include the U.S. dollar, euro, Japanese yen and others.On a monthly basis, reserves increased by 43.4 billion U.S. dollars in April followed by a reduction of 51 billion U.S. dollars in May, while June saw reserves increase by 14.8 billion U.S. dollars.China's gold reserves stood at 33.89 million ounces at the end of June, according to PBOC figures.
BEIJING, Aug. 16 (Xinhua) -- Ye Ling, a college student in Nanjing, got a present delivered to her doorstep Monday morning, a watch for China's Valentine's Day sent by her boyfriend from faraway Gansu Province.Her boyfriend Liu Le, a medical student, sent the gift on his way to Zhouqu in the northwest Gansu which was hit by a catastrophic mudslide. He went there as a volunteer."I ordered the gift online when I was transferring in Lanzhou (capital city of Gansu)," Liu said.Qixi Festival, or Chinese Valentine's Day, falls on Aug. 16 this year according to the lunar calendar.The festival originated from a folk tale that a fairy called Zhi Nu married a mere mortal called Niu Lang and had two children. But the Goddess of Heaven was against their marriage and when they ascended to heaven as two stars, she separated them by the Milky Way.But, according to the story, magpies felt sorry for the lovers and so every year fly up to the heaven to form a bridge, so that the lovers can reunite for a single night.Moved by the story, Chinese began to celebrate love on the date of the couple's annual reunion since the Han Dynasty (202 B.C. to 220 A.D.). In 2006, Qixi was listed as an intangible cultural heritage by China's State Council.Now as many couples are separated by work or study, people have begun looking for their modern "magpie bridge" to unite them in virtual space, enabled by the Internet.Jin Jing, a magazine editor based in Beijing, 26, planted "a tree of love" in her virtual garden, a game application on the social networking site, Kaixin001.com."My husband is working in Shanghai, and I wanted to give him the tree as a Qixi gift. I miss him."Special Qixi gifts have been on Kaixin001 since Aug. 10, and users can plant "lover fruits" or "heart-shaped tree root" in their online gardens.Lu Hua, a graduate student in Beijing, sent his girlfriend, who is pursuing a doctorate degree in Hong Kong, a MSN text to wish her happy Qixi Monday morning.Lu said he and his girlfriend celebrated the day by watching movies and TV series online simultaneously, and then exchanged ideas online by chatting via video.On the micro-blog on sina.com.cn, Qixi has topped today's topic list. Tens of thousands of bloggers expressed their views of scenarios they believed as the most romantic.A blogger identified as Kaka0403 said, "I think talking with my husband through online video is the most romantic thing, because I can see his smile and hear his voice."
BEIJING, Aug. 19 (Xinhua) -- China's domestic corn supply was adequate, and a recent price increase was the result of market speculation, a senior official told Xinhua Thursday.Shang Qiangmin, director at the China National Grain and Oils Information Center, said both the supply and corn reserves were adequate in China and the government was determined to regulate the corn market."Imbalance between corn supply and demand is a misjudgement," Shang said.Although floods that ravaged the country's northeastern regions in late July have caused adverse impacts on regional corn growing, final output was expected to increase from one year earlier due to the expanding of planting areas, Shang said."China has enough corn reserves to meet market demand," he said.The buying boom in the northeastern region is currently caused by enterprises' increasing corn stocks on speculation of price increase, he said.According to Shang, corn stocks at major grain enterprises in northeastern Jilin, Liaoning and Heilongjiang provinces, and Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, increased by 5.12 million tonnes at the end of July compared with one year earlier.The Chinese government has strengthened macro control of corn market by increasing supply and cracking down on illegal activities that force up corn prices.As the world's major corn producer and consumer, China's annual corn production and consumption both exceed 150 million tonnes.
来源:资阳报