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XIANGNING, Shanxi, April 2 (Xinhua) -- Rescuers Friday sent food and messages of hope to miners who have been trapped for five days in a flooded north China coal mine.The rescue team sent 360 bags of glucose, each 200 ml, down the 250-meter Wangjialing Coal Mine in Shanxi Province after hearing banging on a metal pipe.Pan Zengwu, deputy chief of the Shanxi provincial coal geological bureau, said rescuers heard what they believed to be the trapped miners making the noise at 2:15 p.m..The rescuers knocked on the drill pipe to respond, Pan said.A rescuer tears up a bag of glucose by his teeth at Wangjialing Coal Mine, which straddles Xiangning County, of Linfen City, and Hejin, a county-level city within Yuncheng City, north China's Shanxi Province, on April 2, 2010. Rescuers on Friday heard the sound of knocking on pipes at the flooded mine where 153 miners have been trapped for five daysHe said the rescue team sent 360 bags of glucose, each 200 ml, down the 250-meter pit.Rescuers have been drilling holes to pump out water and send down food.An iron wire was found attached at the end of a drill pipe when it was lifted to the surface at 3 p.m..Pan said this was apparently tied on by the trapped miners.Rescuers tried again to make contact with the miners by shouting through the pipe and knocking on the pipe at about 6:02 p.m. and 6:10 p.m. after they sent more bags of glucose down the pit.After a period of silence, Xinhua reporters at the site clearly heard several sounds of tapping on the pipe from underground."It is a good news. So long as they are still alive, it is all worth it for us to work even harder," said a rescuer surnamed Liu from central Henan Province.With glucose, rescuers sent a plastic bottle containing two short letters, a ballpoint pen and paper down the pit. They also sent down a special phone for use in mines.One letter said: "Dear fellow workers, the Party Central Committee, the State Council and the whole nation have been concerned for your safety all the time... All of us are very happy about the message of life you have conveyed, and are racing the clock and going all out to save you. You must have confidence and hold on to the last!"The other said: "Dear brothers, please wait in patience... The water will be soon drained. You must hold on and on! How about the gas and ventilation underground? What do you need us to do? Please tell us..."About 3,000 rescuers are struggling to pump water and reach the trapped miners.The water level underground had dropped by 3.3 meters by 4 p.m. Friday after a total of 66,000 cubic meters of water had been pumped from the shaft, said Liu Dezheng, a spokesman of the rescue headquarters and deputy director of the General Office with the Shanxi Provincial Work Safety Committee, at a news conference late Friday.Altogether 14 pumps were pumping up to 1,935 cubic meters of water per hour, he said, adding rescuers were installing one more pump.Rescuers said the trapped miners were working on nine different platforms, and four platforms had not been totally submerged, making it possible that some workers could have survived.The flooding happened at about 1:40 p.m. Sunday when underground water gushed into the pit of Wangjialing Coal Mine, which was under construction. Altogether 261 miners were working underground, and 108 were lifted safely to the surface.Rescuers said the flooding took place when workers digging tunnels broke through into an old shaft filled with water.The mine, which straddles Xiangning County, of Linfen City, and Hejin, a county-level city within Yuncheng City, covers about 180 square kilometers.The mining zone was estimated to have more than 2.3 billion tonnes of coal reserves, including 1.04 billion tonnes of proven reserves, according to the company's official website.The mine, affiliated to the state-owned Huajin Coking Coal Co. Ltd., is a major project approved by the provincial government. It is expected to produce 6 million tonnes of coal annually once in operation.If the trapped workers cannot be saved, the accident will be China's worst mining disaster in more than two years. In August 2007, a total of 181 workers died at two flooded coal mines neighboring each other -- 172 at one mine -- in Xintai, eastern Shandong Province.

OMAHA, The United States, May 1 (Xinhua) -- U.S. billionaire Warren Buffett said on Saturday that China is an amazing economy and the Chinese people will be living better lives in 20 years than today.When responding to a question from a Chinese student who is currently studying at Kansas City, Buffett said China is a country with great potential."China is an amazing economy, there's no question about that, and China's excising this kind of potential," Buffett said at the annual shareholders' meeting of Berkshire Hathaway.Buffett, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, also emphasized that countries around the world do learn from each other.China may learn a few things from U.S. in its own development, but "they don't take everything we have," he said, adding that at the same time, countries like India and China are also helping improve U.S.The billionaire said he was full of hopes for emerging economies like India and China. "People in India and China will be living better lives in 20 years than today."
BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhua) -- The goal of China's foreign trade policy in 2010 was to improve its trade balance while maintaining steady export growth, said the Ministry of Commerce (MOC) spokesman Thursday.The country's trade surplus was expected to shrink by another 100 billion U.S. dollars in 2010, said Yao Jian, the MOC spokesman, at a press conference.The statement came less than a week after the country posted its first monthly trade deficit for March in six years, which was valued at 7.24 billion U.S. dollars, according to the General Administration of Customs (GAC) last Saturday.The GAC said the March deficit mainly stemmed from shrinking exports of labor intensive products, surging imports volumes and rising commodity prices, and predicted the country's trade surplus might continue decrease for the rest of the year.Echoing the GAC, Yao said the country's foreign trade was likely to keep heading toward a more balanced state, while some experts predicted China's trade would soon return to surplus."The trade deficit registered in March demonstrated expanding domestic demand accompanied by lukewarm demand in the international market," Yao said."Because such a situation would continue, the monthly trade deficit seen in March would remain, at least in the first half of 2010," he said.The deficit also proved that, in an era of economic globalization, it was market supply and demand, and other factors that decided trade balance rather than exchange rates, said Yao.Yao portrayed the deficit in March as the continuation of a shrinking trade surplus that started to appear in 2008, and also as a result of the central government's macroeconomic policy in balancing the economy.In recent years, China has worked hard to restructure its economy away from excessive dependence on exports and the manufacturing sector, while a whole range of measures have been taken to expand domestic demand.The goal of China's foreign trade policy was to further balance trade while maintaining stable growth in exports, he said.Yao expected the ratio of China's trade surplus to its gross domestic product (GDP) to fall to 3 to 4 percent from last year's 5.7 percent.When an economy's ratio stays between 5 percent and minus 5 percent, its trade can be considered as more or less balanced, said Yao Jian, citing a commonly accepted standard adopted in the economics field.The conclusion coincides with another set of data provided by the GAC chief Sheng Guangzu in an exclusive interview with Xinhua on Wednesday.Sheng said the ratio of China's trade surplus to its total trade volume declined to 2.3 percent in the first quarter this year from more than 10 percent registered between 2006 and 2008."When the ratio is below 10 percent, it means the country's foreign trade can be deemed as balanced," said Sheng citing an international standard.Sheng also said that China never worked towards having a trade surplus and the country was committed to making its foreign trade more balanced.China's trade surplus would continue to shrink as a result of the country's efforts to restructure and balance its foreign trade, he said, echoing the views of Yao.
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