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ISLAMABAD, March 30 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese embassy official Tuesday called on an official of the Pakistan Red Crescent Society (PRCS) to donate 30,000 U.S. dollars on behalf of the China Red Cross Society (CRCS) to assist the residents affected by the landslide in northern Pakistan early this year.Muhammad Ilyas Khan, PRCS secretary general, asked Yao Jing, counselor of the Chinese embassy to Pakistan, to convey his appreciation to the CRCS for its generous donation to Hunza, Gilgit-Baltistan due to the landslide in January, 2010.He said that Chinese friends always extend assistance to Pakistan in difficult times and Pakistan is proud of its friendship with China.At present, the local government and PRCS are working hard to provide relief to the villages. The government is also trying to control the damage and tackle with the challenge caused by the lake in the area.On January 4, a serious landslide occurred in Gilgit-Baltistan and formed a huge barrier lake. The slide blocked over 20,000 local residents in Upper Hunza from outside. The Pakistani government is conducting the rescue and relief work . On January 19, at the request of the Pakistani government, the Chinese side made special arrangements to open the Kunjirap border and facilitate the purchase of relief goods from China and its clearance.The China Road and Bridge Corporation, which is conducting the project of upgradation of the Karakoram Highway, has also provided engineering consultations and equipment to help the Pakistani side to deal with the problem.
BEIJING, May 21 (Xinhua) -- The U.S. commerce chief Friday said the United States would complete its review of the exports control system this summer, without specifying the possibly relaxed controls against exports to China."With respect to our export control reform, we want to have that done by this summer," U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke told reporters during his trade mission to China Friday.Locke is leading a delegation of business executives from American clean energy companies looking to China's fast growing green energy market, the size of which the United States has predicted will be 100 billion U.S. dollars by 2020."We have restrictions on items already readily available from companies around the rest of the world and our restrictions make no sense," Locke said.The United States' 1979 Export Administration Act limits the export sales of some commercial high-technology goods to China.The exports control system, operated by the U.S. Defense Department and the Commerce Department, is widely seen as a major cause for the trade imbalance between China and the United States.U.S. products accounted for 7.5 percent of China's high technology imports last year, down from 18.3 percent in 2001 partly due to the U.S. exports control system, according to China's Commerce Ministry."If the share in 2001 is used as a benchmark, U.S. companies lost at least 33 billion U.S. dollars worth of export opportunities in 2009," Commerce Minister Chen Deming said in March.In a meeting with Locke Thursday, Chinese Deputy Commerce Minister Ma Xiuhong said China-U.S. cooperation would be impaired unless the United States takes substantive measures to ease its restrictions on exports to China.Locke didn't specify which exports are likely to be available to China,citing U.S. national security as the major factor to be considered when reviewing the export control system.Locke stressed restrictions will be eased on some commonly available high-tech goods and strengthened on sensitive technologies with military uses."We need to intensify and increase our protection on some very super-sensitive technologies to make sure that they don't get in the hands of those who want to do America ... harm, especially terrorist organizations," he said."Some of it can be implemented almost immediately while some can be done in a matter of months once there is agreement within the administration on the review," Locke said in response to Xinhua's question on when the new export control system will be in operation.
BEIJING, May 2 (Xinhua) -- The People's Bank of China (PBOC), the central bank, announced Sunday it will raise the deposit reserve requirement ratio (RRR) for most financial institutions for the third time this year amid growing concerns of asset bubbles and economic overheating.The bank said in a statement on its website that it would raise the deposit reserve requirement ratio (RRR) for financial institutions by half a percentage point from May 10.The ratio for the rural credit cooperatives and rural banks would remain unchanged at 13.5 percent, said the PBOC.However, the RRR for other small financial institutions would rise to 14 percent, and that for large financial institutions to 17 percent.This is the third rise in the deposit ratio this year. On Jan. 12 and Feb. 17, the central bank raised the deposit ratio by half a percentage point each time.The move indicated the government was taking further steps to tighten monetary policy in response to concerns of overheating and asset bubbles, said Liu Yihui, an expert with the Financial Research Center of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS).The PBOC has cut the bank reserve requirement ratio four times during the second half of 2008 to stimulate growth, as the global financial crisis started to weigh on the economy.The country posted a better-than-expected 11.9 percent year-on-year economic growth in the first quarter, but the government was cautious and had repeatedly warned that the economic conditions this year were "very complicated."China's consumer price index (CPI), the main gauge of inflation, saw a rise of 2.4 percent year on year in March, nearing the ceiling of 3 percent inflation this year that the government has set at the annual parliamentary session that month."There is an obvious tendency of overheating," Liu said.
XIANGNING, Shanxi, April 5 (Xinhua) –- Chinese President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao conveyed sympathy to the nine coal miners who were safely taken out of the Wangjialing Coal Mine in north China's Shanxi Province Monday morning.Luo Lin, head of the State Administration of Work Safety, read a telegraph of Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang on the site. In the letter, Zhang expressed sympathy to the survivors on behalf of Chinese President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao and ordered rescue workers to race against time and go all out to continue the rescue work.The nine survivors lifted out of the shaft were immediately sent to a nearby hospital for medical treatment.Underground water gushed into the pit of under-construction Wangjialing Coal Mine at about 1:40 p.m. last Sunday. Altogether 261 miners were working underground, and 108 were lifted to safety.
URUMQI, May 29 (Xinhua) -- China would spend 120 to 150 billion yuan (17.6 to 22 billion U.S. dollars) on transport infrastructure in its far-western Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region over the next five years, the regional government said Saturday.The money will be used to build new roads and renovate old ones to support Xinjiang's "leapfrog development" promised by the central government earlier this month, according to a statement issued after a conference of the Ministry of Transport and Xinjiang's regional government.The paved roads to be built or renovated will reach 75,000 to 80,000 kilometers in the region where there were just 15,000 kilometers of paved roads in place by the end of last year, said Song Airong, a regional Party official.Xinjiang's current 838 kilometers of highways will also be extended to 4,000 kilometers over the next five years, he said.The central government unveiled a policy package last Thursday to support the development of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, setting a goal that the region should undergo a spurt in development so that by 2015 its per capita gross domestic product could reach the national average.Under the package, fixed asset investment in Xinjiang in the next five years will be more than double the amount in the current five-year plan that ends this year.