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BEIJING, Oct. 3 (Xinhua) -- China's work safety supervisor will soon launch a nationwide inspection campaign on coal mines to crack down on illegal mining and prevent deadly accidents.A spokesman of the State Administration of Work Safety (SAWS) said Sunday the campaign, which starts on Oct. 10 and lasts until Nov. 30, will check whether accident-prone small coal mines of outdated capacity have been shut down according to state policies.Technological upgrades, merger and acquisition of coal mines will also be examined during the campaign, the spokesman said.According to the SAWS, 1,539 small coal mines of outdated capacity have to be closed in China this year to meet the country's carbon dioxide emission and pollution-reduction requirements.China's annual fatalities at coal mines had dropped from a peak of 6,995 deaths in 2002 to 2,631 in 2009, according to data from the SAWS.Six people were killed and 12 were injured in a coal mine gas outburst Sunday in southwest China's Guizhou Province, a spokesman with the provincial work safety bureau said.The accident occurred at around 1:20 a.m. Sunday in Xinglong Coal Mine in Tongzi County, Zunyi City of Guizhou, said the spokesman.Thirty-five people were working in the mine when the accident happened. Twenty-two people escaped, and another 12 were rescued.One worker missing was later found dead in the mine, and five died when being taken to hospital.
BEIJING, Aug. 28 (Xinhua) -- China's top political advisor Jia Qinglin on Friday watched a classical Peking Opera show along with other audience in Beijing.The opera "Women General of Yang Family", which was staged at the Mei Lanfang Theatre, starred three generations of artists with the China National Peking Opera Company (CNPOC).The opera, set against the backdrop of warfares in the Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127), eulogizes the patriotism demonstrated in Yang Family's battle against the invading Liao Kingdom and Western Xia Kingdom.The CNPOC created and rehearsed the opera in 1959, which was later widely believed to have marked a milestone for the development of Peking Opera with a history of nearly 200 years.

WUHAN, Sept. 8 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang has called on local authorities to "put people first" and give priority to the improvement of people's incomes when forging ahead with the country's ambitious health care reform.To ensure people have an equitable access to basic health care is not only an important task of the health care reform, but an important means to promote social equity, resolve financial difficulties for people, and boost the country's employment, he said during a two-day inspection tour in central China's Hubei Province that began Monday.China has launched a health care reform to last from 2009 to 2011. Under the 850 billion yuan (125 billion U.S. dollars) plan, the government promised universal access to basic health insurance, the introduction of an essential drug system, improved primary health care facilities, equitable access to basic public health services and a pilot reform of state-run hospitals.Efforts would be made to comprehensively strengthen basic public services, build a safety net for residents to make sure they have basic living expenses, accelerate the reform of the income distribution system, and increase the income of low-income groups in order to ensure the benefits of China's reform and development are shared by all people, he said.8 In a tour to Dongshan Village of E'zhou City, the vice premier stressed the importance of innovation in the local development mode, the improvement of farmers' incomes and social development in rural areas.When visiting a community health care service station, Li called on medical staff to improve their professional competence and expand the scope of their service for the people.
HANGZHOU, Sept. 24 (Xinhua) -- He Hongwei, a college graduate living in central eastern China's Zhejiang Province, five years ago fussed over landing a decent job amid red-hot competition in the world' s most crowded job market.He then began selling novelty toys on the Internet. Five years on, he has grown into a billionaire and today is busy seeking employees to work in his own factory."I never thought I would make my fortune on the Internet, starting from scratch," the 35-year-old He said.Several years ago, e-shopping was only a "shelter" for many young Chinese who turned to the Internet marketplace to make their living after failing to find decent jobs offline. Most of them earned only paper-thin profits, as e-commerce in China then was still in its infancy.He's story, however, reflected a trend that e-business in China was no longer merely a way of survival, but has become an incubator for the newly-rich who had not expected they could make their fortunes online.According to a report released by Alibaba.com earlier this month, China's largest Nasdaq-listed e-commerce company, some 77 million Chinese individuals and businesses have opened E-shops as of the end of this June.Further, the number of e-shoppers has reached 142 million, or one-third of the nation's total online population.Retail sales at e-shops more than tripled between 2007 and 2009, much faster than the 18 percent growth of retail sales in general during the same period. In the first half of this year, retail sales of e-businesses more than doubled to 211.8 billion yuan (31.6 billion U.S. dollars).Booming sales helped entrepreneurs with e-business start-ups live decent lives, as more than 1 million e-shops at Taobao.com, China's largest online marketplace, earn profits of at least 2,000 yuan a month.As their businesses grow larger, more shops reported profits of over 10 million yuan a year. Sheng Zhenzhong, senior analyst with the research center of Taobao.com, declined to disclose how many such shops were listed on Taobao, but said the number is steadily rising.INTEGRITYAs an old Chinese saying goes, free traders are not bad, which means businessmen should cheat to stay competitive.The old tenet used to work in the early 1980s' when the market economy was initially practiced in China and many businessmen profited from selling shoddy goods.But that could hardly be the case in today's online market, as integrity has become the most important traits for the Internet's commercial success in China.Shi Hongwei is a wholesaler of stockings at Taobao.com. He sells more than 2,000 pairs of socks everyday. For Shi, a young e-shop owner, this is quite a big deal. But, what he cares about most is the rating feedback from his customers.
TIANJIN, Oct. 8 (Xinhua) -- The capacity of China's plantation industry might decline as a result of global warming, according to a report released during a new round of UN climate talks being held in north China's Tianjin Municipality from Oct. 4 to 9.If no proper measures were taken, the capacity of China's plantation industry might decline by 5 to 10 percent by 2030, characterized by a reduction in the output of wheat, rice and corn, said the report, released by the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences and several other organizations during the conference."The situation may get worse after 2050," the report warned.It said the soaring content of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere would have a "significant" impact on the output of wheat, rice and corn.Also, higher temperatures might put more farmland in China at risk from of insect damage and forest fires, the report explained.Further, some farmland might be inundated if the sea level rises as a result of global warming, it said.China has only about 7 percent of the world's arable land, while feeding more than 1.3 billion people which accounts for about 20 percent of the world' s population.
来源:资阳报