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SHANGHAI, Oct. 30 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao's trip to Vietnam, during which he attended a series of summits between the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and its partners, enhanced good-neighborly relations, promoted regional cooperation and common development, Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi said Saturday.During his three-day stay in Hanoi, Wen attended the 13th summit between China and ASEAN (10+1), the 13th summit between ASEAN, China, Japan and the Republic of Korea (10+3) and the fifth East Asia Summit. He also had bilateral meetings with some leaders on the sidelines of the summits.When briefing reporters on the outcome of the premier's trip, Yang said that the situation in East Asia is undergoing profound changes, with both opportunities and challenges ahead.Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (6th L) poses for a group photo with leaders attending the 13th China-ASEAN Summit in Hanoi, capital of Vietnam, Oct. 29, 2010.To boost political mutual trust, promote mutually beneficial cooperation and push for regional integration and sustainable development is the common will shared by countries in the region, and is also the main theme of the summits, Yang said.He said peace, stability and development of East Asia is crucial to China, and that China has always valued and participated in cooperation with East Asian partners.The goal of Premier Wen's trip was to cement good-neighborly relationship, deepen regional cooperation and boost common development, Yang said.During his 48-hour stay in Hanoi, Wen attended some 20 activities, delivered several important speeches, and put forward dozens of proposals, Yang said.The premier also had extensive contacts with leaders of other countries, held in-depth exchanges with them, and expounded in a sincere and objective manner China's foreign policy principles of "building friendship and partnership with neighboring countries" as well as its policy of seeking mutually beneficial and peaceful common development with other countries, Yang said.China's position was hailed by all sides, and Wen's trip further strengthened China's friendly cooperative ties with its neighbors, and boosted East Asia cooperation, Yang said.Premier Wen's pragmatic and highly-efficient trip scored great successes, the top Chinese diplomat said.
MUSCAT, Nov. 5 (Xinhua) -- A top Chinese delegation will sign agreements on two-way investment and personnel training with Oman amid efforts to deepen the cooperation between China and the Gulf oil-rich Sultanate, Chinese ambassador to Oman Pan Weifang said Friday.Jia Qinglin, China's top political advisor, will pay a three- day good-will visit to Oman starting from Saturday. This is a visit of the highest level in 11 years in the history of bilateral relations, ambassador Pan told Xinhua ahead of the visit.The delegation will meet Omani Sultan Qabus bin Said al-Said, deputy prime minister and other ministers and sign the important agreements during the visit, he said."I am very pleased to see that the senior Chinese leader will meet with His Majesty Sultan Qabus as the friendly Omani people are celebrating the 40th National Day," Pan said. "I believe Jia's visit will be another milestone in promoting the friendly cooperation, which has been valued in the long traditions of each country."An agreement will also be signed to build a monument for Zheng He, China's ancient seafaring hero whose fleets arrived in Oman for four times and visited Oman's southern area of Dhofar about 600 years ago.The voyage witnessed large amount of goods exchanges, such as china, silk and tea from China to Oman and frankincense, dates and Arabian horses from Oman to China.Nowadays, as the Sultanate's largest trade partner, China is ready to contribute to Omani government's drive to diversify the sources of revenue, 70 percent of which derives from oil and gas.Amid efforts for economic multi-polarization, Oman will develop non-oil sectors including infrastructure, renewable energies, tourism and finance, Pan said. "China and Oman will become essential partners in these fields.""Oman's free trade zones in Sohar, Salalah and Duqm will also attract and facilitate China's investment in Oman," he added.Recently, Chinese companies participated in the construction of a one-billion-U.S. dollar power plant project in the southern Salalah, which will begin generating electricity in 2012. As more Chinese investors are willing to start their businesses, the Bank of China opened a "China desk" in Bank Muscat, Oman's largest lender, to finance infrastructure projects.Chinese travel agencies are keen to develop tourist routes in the Sultanate, which is very rich with spectacular landscapes, archaeological sites and historical monuments, Pan said, adding that an agreement was signed to encourage tourism between Oman and China.About 5,000 Omani people go to China to do business and travel every year. During the Shanghai Expo, more than 10 ministers of Omani government went to China for a visit. "All these mirror the strong tie between the two countries," Pan noted.China is the largest buyer of Oman's crude oil. The bilateral trade reached 7.1 billion U.S. dollars in the first eight months this year, a 60 percent year-on-year increase.
BEIJING, Sept. 16 (Xinhua) -- After several similar criminal cases led to greatly varying punishments triggering public concerns, Chinese courts are adopting a series of measures to ensure uniform standards for sentencing criminals.On Oct. 1, two documents that instruct judges on uniform procedures for sentence measurements will be put into use in all Chinese courts, which is said to be a "major reform" for the country's legal system regarding criminal prosecution.According to the new procedures, courts should first set up a penalty baseline for a criminal case based upon basic criminal facts. Then additional punishments will be added according to the amount of money involved, the frequency of the defendants' violations, the consequences and other factors. At last, courts will adjust the results considering the case's overall nature and issue a final sentence.The move came after a series of similar drunk driving cases that led to greatly varying punishments.In July 2009, the Intermediate People's Court of Chengdu in southwestern Sichuan Province sentenced a drunk driver named Sun Weiming to death following an auto accident in which he was driving without a license and killed four people. In the second trial, the verdict was changed to life imprisonment.Sun's case was deemed as a crime against public security.However, one month later another drunk driver in central China's Henan Province only received a jail term of six years and six months for killing six and injuring seven people.That case was ruled to be a traffic accident crime."(The reform) is of significant importance for regulating judicial actions, providing uniform standards for law applications, promoting righteous and uncorrupted justice and boosting the authority and credibility of the country's courts," said Wang Shengjun, president of the Supreme People's Court (SPC), at a Thursday meeting."The Criminal Law only lays down a very wide range of sentences for certain types of crimes, and thus it is very difficult for prosecutors to give a specific sentence based on that," said SPC vice president Xiong Xuanguo in an exclusive interview with Xinhua Thursday.Xiong noted that different judges, given their different knowledge, manners and experience, will also have varied views on the same case.According to the documents, another major change is to introduce advice on sentence measurements from procuratorate organs, including the types and scopes of punishments and how to implement them.Also, courts are allowed to organize public prosecutors, parties involved, their defenders and legal representatives to offer their own advice on sentencing measurements.With the introduction of sentencing measurement advice from defenders, legal representatives and other parties involved, the new rules were expected to balance judges' considerable powers of discretion, said Professor Chen Weidong with the Renmin University of China.According to the SPC, since June last year more than 120 pilot Chinese courts have already been following the new procedures when prosecuting 45,000 criminal cases in 15 regular categories, including traffic accidents, robbery, theft, and drugs, among others.The trial practice has seen positive results as sentences among cases of similar natures and those in different regions were not as varied as before.The rate of appeals and change of sentences in second trials also dropped in these courts, according to Xiong.Meanwhile, Xiong sought to assure those concerned that the new rules would not excessively limit judges' powers as "the standards for sentence measurements, themselves, were made based on all prosecutors' discretion." < "If the measurement results are not appropriate, judges will still have the right to make certain adjustments," Xiong said, adding that local courts will also set down detailed sentence measures according to the characteristics of their regions."The reform is an inevitable process for China's criminal prosecution to transform from rough estimation to precise, scientific and canonical," Professor Chen said.
BEIJING, Sept. 1 (Xinhua) -- China on Wednesday rejected reports of the presence of over 11,000 Chinese troops in northern Pakistan, saying that such "groundless reports" were made with "ulterior motives.""We believe the attempts of some people to fabricate stories to provoke China-Pakistan or China-India relations are doomed to fail," said Foreign Ministry spokesperson Jiang Yu in a statement.The comment came in response to recent reports of some American and Indian press that China had deployed more than 10,000 troops in the Gilgit-Baltistan region of Pakistan.
BEIJING, Oct. 16 (Xinhua) -- When the 18 farmers in east China's Anhui Province, their bellies rumbling, stamped red fingerprints on the land-contracting agreement three decades ago, they never expected they might be making history."We had no other choice," said 70-year-old Yan Lixue. Prior to World Food Day this Saturday, he recalled the bitterness and successes from those past days.The elderly man used to be head of the production team at Xiaogang Village in Fengyang County.At that time, Fengyang was dubbed the "hometown of beggars", and was infamous for its poverty. It was the hometown of Zhu Yuanzhang, the first emperor (1368-98) of the Ming Dynasty. Ironically, Zhu, started as an insurrectionary army leader, though he used to be a beggar, too. The local opera in Fengyang was said to be sung for begging, at the beginning.With stubble on his square chin, Yan said his only memory of those days was hunger."At that time, we ate from the 'big cooking pot'," he recalled. The "big cooking pot" referred to the public kitchen. Establishment of the Peoples' Commune was made official state policy in 1958. In the Commune, everything was shared and people were encouraged to eat in the commune's kitchen. Private cooking was then banned and replaced by communal dining.But the food from the "big cooking pot" was not enough. In Yan's memory, the days were horrible when there were fewer than 0.25 kilograms of grain per person."Sometimes people ate wild herbs or bark from the trees," he said.As a result, 67 people died of hunger during the Great Leap Forward from 1959 to 1961 when six out of over 30 households in Xiaogang disappeared. In Fengyang, 90,000 people, or one in four people, died."Sometimes you would see a person tumble and never stand up again," Yan said.The nightmare was shared by another villager, Guan Youjiang."I had four children. When they cried with hunger, my heart ached," he recalled. In his home there were only pots and beds.Yan went out to beg in 1976. At first he begged in nearby Huaiyuan County, and then roamed further to the richer Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces.He then refused to lead the production team any more. "The young people mostly went out to beg and few were left to work on the field."In fact, they were not allowed to beg all year long. "We took turns going out. There had to be someone working for the village."Realizing that they could starve to death, Yan believed that they had nothing to lose, although "signing the land contracting agreement could mean severe penalties, like imprisonment or even execution," he said.