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BEIJING, Aug.6 (Xinhua)-- China's Ministry of Finance announced Friday it will float a batch of 273-day book-entry treasury bonds worth 10 billion yuan (1.48 billion U.S. dollars) next week.A statement on the ministry's website said the bonds will be sold at 98.62 yuan per bill, with an annual yield of 1.88 percent.The bill will be sold to the public from Aug. 9 to 11, and become tradable in the exchange markets since Aug. 13, according to the statement.The interest is to be calculated on August 9.This is the 10th batch of its kind launched by the ministry this year.
BEIJING, June 18 (Xinhua) -- Many Chinese parents do not like their children using the Internet and a majority of them worry that surfing Internet could negatively affect children's school work, according to a blue paper on Internet use by minors in China released Friday.The blue paper says 42.6 percent of the parents surveyed "strongly oppose their children's use of Internet" or "relatively oppose", while as high as 78.4 percent say they worry that surfing Internet could adversely affect children's study. Another 44.9 percent worry about their children's exposure to pornography online.The blue paper was jointly published by the career development center for Chinese Young Pioneers, the Center for Humanities and Social Sciences Studies by Young Scholars at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and the Social Science Academic Press.This was the first blue paper on Chinese youngsters, and the figures in the report were based on a survey conducted from 2006 to 2009, Li Wenge, director of the career development center for the Chinese Young Pioneers, said at a press conference for the release of the blue paper here Friday.Li said the respondents surveyed were elementary and middle school students as well as their parents and teachers in both urban and rural areas, developed and less-developed areas in 11 provincial-level regions in China.According to the blue paper, 46.9 percent of the online community users are under 25 years old.However, there are very few websites designed especially for minors, and children did not know
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, July 28 (Xinhua) -- President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao on Wednesday respectively sent condolence messages to their Pakistani counterparts after a deadly airplane crash that killed all the 152 people on board.In his message, Hu, on behalf of the Chinese government and the people and in his personal name, conveyed to Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari his profound condolences for the victims and sincere regards to the families of those killed in the worst plane crash ever in Pakistan.In a separate message, Premier Wen Jiabao extended to Pakistani Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani his condolences for the victims and offerred regards to the families of those killed.Earlier Wednesday, an Airbus 321 carrying 152 people crashed minutes before it was supposed to land in Islamabad, killing everyone onboard, including at least 20 women and seven children as well as two Americans and a Somalian.The Airblue flight carrying 146 passengers and six crew members left Karachi in the morning and lost contact with the control tower at the Islamabad airport shortly before the crash. The plane was on its way from Turkey to the Pakistani capital via Karachi.The plane, which was manufactured in 2000, was leased in January 2006 by Airblue, a private service based in Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, according to local media.Also Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi sent a condolence message to Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi for the deadly air crash and the serious casualties.
NANJING, July 3 (Xinhua) -- The population of China, the world's most populous country, is projected to reach 1.39 billion by the end of 2015, with those age 60 or over topping 200 million people, said Li Bin, head of the country's top population policy agency.Li, director of the National Population and Family Planning Commission, released these estimates Saturday during a speech at the annual conference of the China Population Association in Nanjing, capital city of east China's Jiangsu Province.The urban population is projected to be over 700 million over the next five years, for the first time exceeding the rural population, according to Li.She said the increase in the next five years would be based upon the nation's population momentum, which, according to her, would begin to decline after 2015.Population momentum is the tendency of a highly fertile population that has been rapidly increasing in size to continue to do so for decades after the onset of even a substantial decline in fertility.Chinese government statistics show China's population stood at 1.32 billion at the end of 2008, which was about 2.5 times the number in 1949 when the People's Republic of China was founded.To put a hold on the fast growth, the Chinese government adopted a one-child policy in the late 1970s. The policy had helped China's total population increase less than 40 percent between 1978 and 2008, whereas it nearly doubled between 1949 and 1978.However, during the next five years the development of China's population is expected to go through major transitional changes, Li said.China's first boom in its aging population is expected in the next five years, with roughly an average of eight million people turning 60 each year, 3.2 million more than occurred between 2006 and 2010, she said.In the coming five years, the ratio of the population aged 15 to 59 would peak and then slowly fall, whereas the population dependency ratio, a measure of the proportion of the population too young or too old to work, would rise for the first time after over 40 years of decreasing.In general, China would still retain the advantage of a plentiful labor supply and a relatively low population dependency ratio, she said.