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BEIJING, Oct. 12 (Xinhua) -- China said Tuesday people-to-people exchanges between China and Japan are important in the improvement and development of bilateral relations.Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu made the comment at a regular press briefing here.According to reports, Japan's Japan-China Friendship Association Sunday said on its website that China has informed the Japanese Foreign Ministry that it will accept a visit by some 1,000 Japanese youngsters to Shanghai to attend the 2010 World Expo.The youngsters will visit Shanghai from October 27 to 30.Ma's comment confirmed the visit by Japanese youngsters."We welcome more Japanese youngsters attending the 2010 Shanghai World Expo," Ma said.People-to-people exchanges, youngsters in particular, between the two countries are very important in the improvement and development of bilateral relations, Ma said.
BEIJING, Sept. 6 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping has urged authorities of a southeastern province to press ahead with its reforms and opening-up, and to embrace innovations in its economic development.In his four-day inspection tour in Fujian Province that began Friday, Xi spent time visiting high-tech enterprises, inquiring about villagers' incomes and held talks with university students.Efforts should be made to improve people's livelihood and solve practical difficulties for them with regard to employment, medical care, housing and children's schooling, Xi said during his visit to villages and urban communities.When visiting areas hit by June's torrential rains and massive floods, Xi urged local authorities to continue with disaster-relief work, rebuild damaged homes and agricultural infrastructures, as well as increase support for enterprises.In the coastal city of Xiamen, Xi urged government administrations in Fujian to take proactive measures to offer services to, and create "better conditions", for people from Taiwan.Further, efforts should be made to expand the scope and upgrade the level of cross-Strait exchanges and cooperation, he said.
GUANGZHOU, Nov. 7 (Xinhua) -- Authorities in south China's Guangzhou, host city of the 2010 Asian Games, Saturday said it will cancel a newly-launched free public transportation service due to the enormous public response, which might pose a security threat to the Asian Games.The government earlier this month launched the color-coding scheme for vehicles, effectively grounding half of the city's 2.1 million private cars and those entering the city each day during the Asian Games.As a remedy, free public transport service was to be offered for 30 working days beginning November 1.The offer was met with unprecedented enthusiasm from Guangzhou residents. For days, subway trains were often crammed and stations were full as swarms of people lined up to take a free ride.Now, officials with Guangzhou's transportation authorities said they had to rescind the offer as more than 8 million passengers took the subway on an average day beginning November 1, a figure "much, much higher" than the subway system was designed to carry.Further, traffic controls were put into force 144 times during the week, which "seriously affects the normal security checks required for the Games" and causes "great inconvenience," officials said.Guangzhou authorities plan to roll back the free-day scheme on Nov. 8 and replace it with a cash subsidy program in which each household in Guangzhou will receive 150 yuan as a transportation subsidy from the government.The Asian Games are scheduled to begin on November 12, featuring 11,700 athletes competing in 42 sports.
BEIJING, Sept. 19 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Wang Guangya made solemn representations to Japanese ambassador to China Uichiro Niwa on Sunday evening to express strong indignation and protest against Japan's prolonged detention of a Chinese skipper."The incident created by the Japanese side has severely damaged China-Japan relations," said Wang, stressing how the situation develops completely depends on what choices the Japanese side will make.The Japanese authorities on Sunday afternoon extended the detention of the captain to Sept. 29.Two Japan Coast Guard patrol ships and the Chinese fishing boat collided in waters off the Diaoyu Islands on Sept. 7. The Japanese side illegally seized the Chinese trawler and fishermen, and continued to illegally hold the Chinese captain despite firm protests by the Chinese side.Wang warned China will take strong counter measures if the Japanese side fails to release the Chinese captain immediately and unconditionally."Japan shall bear all the consequences that arise," he noted.Sources with the Foreign Ministry said earlier Sunday China had already suspended bilateral exchanges at and above the provincial or ministerial levels, halted contact with Japan on the issues of increasing civil flights and expanding aviation rights between the two countries.A bilateral meeting on coal has also been postponed.In the mean time, the number of Chinese citizens traveling to Japan as tourists has already declined.
ZHOUQU, Gansu, Aug. 27 (Xinhua) -- Authorities are set to drain stagnant water by the end of the month which continues to submerge part of a remote mountainous town in northwest China's Gansu Province. This comes three weeks after a devastating mudslide left more than 1,700 people dead or missing, a senior military official said Friday.For weeks, soldiers and work crews have been using explosives and excavators to remove the massive debris and rocks that were swept down by the mudslide into the waterway and formed a barrier lake, flooding the riverside areas of Chengguan Township, Zhouqu County.People's Liberation Army Deputy Chief of Staff Zhang Qinsheng, who also serves as the deputy head of the work group for Zhouqu relief under the State Council, announced Friday that the deadline for removing stagnant water is 12 p.m. August 30, and rescue crews are working hard to meet the deadline.Experts have warned that the stagnant water -- at some point rising high enough to completely submerge a street light pole -- would rot the foundations of 80 flooded buildings and caused them to collapse. The water also posed a serious threat to public health, as it was an easy breeding ground for mosquitoes and bacteria.Meanwhile, the government of Zhouqu on Friday ordered the sludge-covered area of the mudslide to be sealed off for both safety and health reasons.This came five days after authorities banned the recovery of bodies in the hard-hit area -- about five kilometers long and 300 to 500 meters wide, at the foot of Sanyanyu Mountain.An avalanche of rocks and mud roared down the Sanyanyu mountain slope at midnight on Aug. 7, leaving 1,456 dead and 309 missing as of Aug. 27. The bodies of the missing, along with an undetermined number of animals, were believed to be buried under the meters-deep sludge.Soldiers have dug a water channel in the sludge-covered area to direct waters into the Bailong River. The mud and debris were carried away and dumped at farmlands outside the town properof Zhouqu. However, they might be stopped from continuing and leave the devastated hard-hit area untouched. Authorities are looking for new areas to settle homeless residents who are now housed in disaster relief tents."No dumping sites can be found for the sludge if the clearing efforts continue. Also, the site sits in an area where mudslides frequently occur. It is not suitable for reconstruction," said a directive issued by the Zhouqu county government. Before the disaster, the county seat, hit by the mudslide, had about 45,000 residents. Nearly half of them lost their homes in the disaster.