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BEIJING, April 27 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese government announced Tuesday the lifting of the 20-year-old ban on entry for foreigners with HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted diseases and leprosy.According to a statement released Tuesday by the State Council, after gaining more knowledge about the diseases, the government has realized that such ban has a very limited effect in preventing and controlling diseases in the country. It has, instead, caused inconvenience for the country when hosting various international activities.The revision comes days ahead of the opening of the Shanghai World Expo. The government temporarily lifted the ban for various large-scale events, including the 1990 Beijing Asian Games, the Fourth World Conference on Women in 1995 and the 2008 Beijing Olympics.Mao Qun'an, spokesman for the Ministry of Health, said the groundwork for the lifting of the ban began years ago. The ministry had been advocating lifting the restriction since the Beijing Olympic Games. It took a few more years only because of the necessary procedures.The two decisions altered regulations for the Border Quarantine Law and the Law on Control of the Entry and Exit of Aliens, which set down the ban in the 1980s.The previous ban was made in accordance with the "limited knowledge about HIV/AIDS and other diseases," the statement said.Zhang Beichuan, a medical professor with Qingdao University and a front-runner in advocating the rights of people living with HIV (PLWHIV), said it's the move is huge progress."Previously, China viewed HIV/AIDS as an imported disease related to a corrupted lifestyle. But now the government handles it with a public health perspective," he said.He Tiantian, a woman in her 30s living with HIV and an AIDS activist, said, "This revision shows us a silver lining, because we have been advocating for the rights of PLWHIV for years, and now we know we didn't do it in vain.""However, it still takes time to end discrimination, but the change in the government's stance will help change the public's attitude towards this group of people," she added.According to the health ministry, the estimated number of people living with HIV in China had reached 740,000 by October 2009, with deaths caused by AIDS totalling 49,845 since the first case was reported in 1985.The statement said the lifting of the ban won't bring an outbreak of disease in the country as scientific research has proved daily contact doesn't cause infection.HIV/AIDS is usually transmitted through blood, sex and from mother to infant. Leprosy is usually transmitted through skin injuries.Meanwhile, the government also narrowed the restrictive scope for mentally ill and tuberculosis patients to only "severe mental patients" and those with infectious tuberculosis.According to the statement, not all tuberculosis diseases are infectious and mental patients won't harm the country's social order and personal safety.Statistics show that currently 110 countries and regions around the world have no ban on entry for HIV/AIDS carriers. The United States and Republic of Korea both lifted the ban in January.
BEIJING, May 3 -- Ma Weihua, president and chief executive officer of China Merchants Bank (CMB), said he wanted to see Chinese banks elevate their level of globalization in the context of expedited overseas expansion of Chinese companies during his bank's recent road show in the United States. He said CMB would pursue this process ambitiously but cautiously.The bank is soon to relocate its night-shift foreign exchange trading team to its New York branch, which was established in 2008, and will move on to security trading as well in the future, according to Ma during a group interview. The branch is also working on consolidating its dollar settlement business."What I'm concerned about right now is to first have my New York branch familiarized with the US market, customers and rules as soon as possible so I can expand the business steadily," Ma told the audience at a recent speech at New York University's Leonard N. Stern School of Business. "We won't consider faster expansion until we have secured our position here."Because of policy restrictions, CMB and other Chinese banks are only able to provide very limited services overseas for now. Retail banking, which CMB is best at, is still being constrained in its New York branch, its first branch in the West. But the bank is eyeing up other opportunities.The branch is attaching increasing importance to the loan business for Chinese companies during their overseas merger and acquisition activities. It just completed a big deal for a Chinese State-owned conglomerate but declined to reveal its name."The most fundamental motive to globalize our bank is to support Chinese companies' overseas growth and to provide the same quality service for foreign companies as well when they come to China," Ma said.According to Ma, over the past five years, Chinese companies' overseas direct investment saw an annual increase of 60 percent and their non-financial overseas investment grew by 68.5 percent year-on-year.In comparison, overseas assets only make up less than 4 percent of Chinese banks' total assets, while in large banks in Europe and the US, the proportion is about 40 percent, he said.

NARA, Japan, April 19 (Xinhua) -- Former Chinese Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan said Monday that China, Japan and South Korea are " mutually complementary in economy and closely linked in trade.""The considerable disparity in their resources, technological levels and labor costs highlights enterprises' comparative advantages and is conducive to transnational investments and trade, " said Zeng in his keynote speech at the fifth session of the Northeast Asia Trilateral Forum."Japan and South Korea are more advanced than China in economic development, and have accumulated much experience in achieving economic transformation, dealing with the relation of development and environment and tackling international trade frictions, from which China could draw lessons and benefit," he said at the one- day forum taking place in the ancient Japanese city of Nara.There thus exists great potential as well as a broad prospect for their future practical cooperation among the three nations, said Zeng.The three need to continuously substantialize the content of their partnership, infuse new elements in their cooperation and improve their communication and coordination from trilateral, regional and global aspect, he said.In his keynote speech, former Japanese Prime Minister Nakasone Yasuhiro said that Japan, China and South Korea should further prompt their cooperation and make their voice more clearly heard on the world stage in a bid to safeguard the stability of Asia as well as that of the world at large.The three need to set as their long-term aim the establishment of a regional cooperative mechanism in areas of East Asia's politics and security, economy and culture, and jointly play a leading role to that end.Former South Korean Prime Minister Lee Hong-koo, for his part, said that faced with problems such as the security and stability of global financial markets, trade liberalization, climate change and the proliferation of nuclear weapons, it draws worldwide attention how the three nations coordinate with each other to adopt a unanimous stance.Zeng arrived here Saturday to attend the fifth session of the Northeast Asia Trilateral Forum that opened earlier Monday.The trilateral gathering drew 29 former high-ranking officials and prominent figures from political, academic and business circles of China, Japan and South Korea.The forum, cosponsored by China's Xinhua News Agency, Japan's Nikkei news group and South Korea's leading daily newspaper JoongAng Ilbo, aims to strengthen non-governmental exchanges among the three nations.The yearly event has been held alternately in the three countries since 2006.
YUSHU, Qinghai, April 23 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese official Thursday said there had been no looting of quake relief materials in northwestern province of Qinghai and the aid had been distributed to victims in a fair and transparent way.Geng Yang, director of the Qinghai Provincial Department of Civil Affairs, said sparse looting did happen in the early period of the distribution of the relief materials."But this has been promptly stopped by government," Geng said in response to some media reports which also said some individuals in the Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Yushu, hit by a 7.1-magnitude quake on April 14, stockpiled and sold the materials at high prices. Rescuers search for possible survivors and useful articles of local people in Gyegu Town of quake-hit Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Yushu, northwest China's Qinghai Province, April 22, 2010.Geng said their own investigations did not discover the alleged misconduct.
SHANGHAI, June 5 (Xinhua) -- Cities should facilitate interaction and provide spaces so people can bond, says Chui Huili, director of the Taiwan Pavilion at the Shanghai World Expo.The Taiwan Pavilion, a transparent cube with a huge globe suspended in its center, consists of three layers: a dome-screen cinema showcasing scenes from Taiwan, a platform to "fly lanterns" -- a traditional way to pray for luck, and a huge tree made of bamboo, providing shade for people to sit, chat, taste Kung Fu tea and listen to folk music."Though the Taiwan Pavilion is relatively small, what makes us stand out is that the whole trip is accompanied by guides and we allow in only 40 visitors at most each time, making it possible for each visitor to enjoy their time and space the fullest, in the 20-minute tour," Chiu says.The pavilion, 650 meters wide and about 24 meters high, is mainly made of steel and glass, with the outlines of the island's iconic mountains painted on the facade and water from Taiwan's Sun Moon Lake forming a pool, Chiu says.An elevator first takes you to the third floor for a dome-screen film showcasing tourist attractions in Taiwan including Sun Moon Lake, Ali Mountain and Jade Mountain. Chiu calls it their "future cinema" as spectators could watch three-dimensional images without wearing 3D glasses and get the feeling they were walking in a film.The second floor provides a multimedia lantern-flying ceremony for at most 40 visitors. They can select "wishes" through touching screens and trigger off LED lanterns that light up the center globe. The wishes favored by visitors include "love and peace," "best wishes come true" and "happiness and health."Spiraling down the pavilion, you come to the last stop: a huge banyan tree made of bamboo knitted together. There a Taiwan artist will play the guqin, a traditional musical instrument, while visitors sit chatting and sip Kung Fu tea."The third floor represents technology. The second floor is about cities' application of technology or the connection between technology and cities. But all these should serve the most important things in cities: people's hearts," Chiu says.Chiu believes cities should facilitate interaction between people. "Most villagers keep a big tree in front of their houses in traditional rural Taiwan, providing places for villagers to drink tea, chat and sing or listen to folk songs," Chiu says."Similar places are necessary in cities to bond people together," he says.Zhao Qiang, a visitor from Kaifeng in Henan Province, says, "I felt like I was really walking through Taiwan's sceneries in the dome-screen film ... It was terrific. I will definitely take my family to go sight-seeing in Taiwan after the visit."Zeng Heng, a visitor from Taiwan, queued for almost three hours before entering the Taiwan Pavilion. "The Taiwan Pavilion is small and the most exquisite of all 12 pavilions I've visited. The sky lantern allows visitors to interact with the culture," Zeng says.Chiu believes the Taiwan Pavilion can boost tourism in Taiwan and serve as a remarkable platform for cross-Strait peoples to understand each other better through interaction and exchanges.The Shanghai Expo, opening on May 1, had received 10 million visitors as of midday Saturday, the event's organizers said.
来源:资阳报