Google Finally Leaves China


After two months of negotiation with the Chinese authorities, Google on Monday closed its Internet search service in China and began directing users in that country to its uncensored search engine in Hong Kong.

This move is a tentative attempt to circumvent the Beijing censorship without violating Chinese laws. However, the Chinese government seems angry at Google’s move and could block the Hong Kong search service in mainland China altogether.

The state-controlled Xinhua news agency quoted an unnamed official with the State Council Information Office describing Google’s move as “totally wrong.”

“Google has violated its written promise it made when entering the Chinese market by stopping filtering its searching service and blaming China in insinuation for alleged hacker attacks,” the official said.

Google did not comment on its talks with Chinese authorities but according to Google co-founder Sergey Brin, Google got “reasonable indications that this was O.K.” Indicating Google’s retreat to Hong Kong. However, Sergey added that “we can’t be completely confident.”

Google’s retreat from China, for now, is only partial. In a blog post, Google said it would retain much of its existing operations in China, including its research and development team and its local sales force. While the China search engine, google.cn, has stopped working, Google will continue to operate online maps and music services in China.

Google’s pullout will not affect users in China using other services by Google like Gmail or Google Docs unless China decides to block Google entirely, just as it blocks Youtube, Blogspot, Twitter, Facebook, Typepad, Vimeo, just to name a few.

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Study Shows 1 in 10 Meals in China is Cooked with Illegal Cooking Oil

Illegal Cooking Oil

My wife and I used to have our dinners in restaurants because we simple do not have the time to come home after work and cook for ourselves. Lucky, we stopped doing that after our parents find out our dinner habits and strongly suggested to us that we should try to cook dinner at home even if cooking takes time.

After reading the following story, I was sick to my stomach and glad we followed our parents’ suggestions.

Immediately after a leading food expert revealed that one in every 10 meals in the country may be cooked with dirty oil, the State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA) on Thursday issued an emergency notice to restaurants nationwide warning them against recycling oil.

Food service providers will be punished if they use illegal cooking oil or oil of an unknown origin. In severe cases, their licenses could be revoked, the notice said.

He Dongping, a food science professor at the Wuhan Polytechnic University (WHPU), told the China Youth Daily on Thursday that people in China consume “about 2 to 3 million tons” of illegal cooking oil every year.

“And the Chinese people’s annual oil consumption is about 22.5 million tons, which means a ratio of 1:10,” he told the newspaper.

The “illegal cooking oil” is usually made from discarded kitchen waste that has been refined, the report said, adding that the oil, which contains a highly toxic and carcinogenic substance called “aflatoxin”, can cause cancer.

He’s revelation was a result of a research project he is conducting, along with nine of his students, with the aim of finding an effective way to detect and identify illegal oil used in food production.

So far, no such method has been found, the report said.

According to He’s research, the illegal cooking oil business is extremely profitable.

“One ton of cooking oil made from kitchen waste costs only 300 yuan ($44). A barrel of oil makes a profit of 70 to 80 yuan. On average, one person collects four barrels. Even if the oil is sold at half the price of ordinary oil, you could make over 10,000 yuan a month. Even a chore man in the business gets a monthly wage of 2,500 yuan,” He told the newspaper.

All efforts to contact He for a comment on Thursday failed.

Wang Chunsheng, who also teaches at WHPU, said “pressure from higher authorities and personal threats” were reasons for the researchers to refuse further interviews.

“He also works with the National Grain and Oil Standardization Committee. Without permits from superiors, releasing related data is not authorized,” Wang said.

“The project has been going on for several years, during which time his students have received threats from illegal dealers. Now that his name is out in public, he is worried that his students might get in trouble,” he said.

Most of the illegal cooking oil in Wuhan is sold to the under-developed areas of the city, an insider surnamed Liu told China Daily.

Having lived in central Wuhan for over 30 years, Liu said he had talked with some of his friends in the dining business about illegal cooking oil.

“I would say about 80 percent of the oil is sold to the less-developed areas, where regulations aren’t too strict and public consciousness on food safety is weak,” Liu said.

He said that illegal cooking oil had become widespread in the city for years, but with regulations getting stricter, the business is moving to the suburbs.

“Regulating illegal cooking oil involves several governmental departments, and the SFDA is only concerned with the restaurants,” an official with the SFDA said.

“The production process belongs to the quality inspection departments and the Ministry of Health. Once the illegal cooking oil gets into the market, the State Administration of Industry and Commerce (SAIC) will step in,” said Chen Hongrang, director of the publicity office with the SAIC.

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Chinese Happiest in Smaller Cities


I noticed this report from the China Daily:

The happiness index of people in Jiangsu, Sichuan, Fujian provinces and Chongqing municipality was found to be high, with half of families saying they were satisfied with family life, while people living in big cities like Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen were not so lucky.

According to a survey conducted in 10 Chinese cities on the happiness of middle income families with annual incomes of more than 50,000 yuan ($7,325), the happiness index in smaller cities was much higher than in big cities.

In terms of income, the survey showed families with annual incomes of between 11,000 and 20,000 yuan were happiest. People aged between 30 and 35 were happiest, according to the survey.

The pinch of high housing prices, fierce office competition, traffic congestion and high cost of kids’ education were the main causes of the low happiness index in big cities like Shenzhen, the Guangzhou Daily reported Wednesday.

I live and work in Beijing and I regularly visits Kunming (a second-tier city and capital of Yunnan province). The cost of living in smaller cities are lower compared with cities like Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou.

With a monthly income of 5,000 yuan, a person can live a very conformable live in these smaller cities while they would struggle in larger cities. For example, the average price of an apartment in Kunming is currently ~7000 yuan/square meter while the average price for cities like Beijing and Shanghai is ~20,000 yuan/square meter.

Another example from my personal experience is the rift in cost of food. A hotpot dinner with 10 guests in Kunming cost me around 200 yuan while a hotpot dinner in Beijing with 10 guests cost me around 700 yuan.

No wonder people living in smaller cities feel happier because just from the financial side of the matter, these people can purchase more with their money.

From the lifestyle aspect, my personal experience is that the pace of life in smaller cities are slower than larger cities. For example, I noticed shops on the streets open late and close early; usually open around 9 or 10 in the morning and close around 7 or 8 at night. Although, on average, incomes in smaller cities are less compared with Beijing and Shanghai but people tend to have more time for themselves.

Moreover, although many people are still migrating to large cities to earn more money, I’m beginning to see another trend.

Some people are leaving large cities and finding a better life in smaller cities due to the high cost of living and out of control housing prices in metropolises like Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou.

According to Beijing Municipal Statistics Bureau, the per capita annual income in 2008 was 44,715 Yuan, while apartments are selling for an average 20,000 yuan per square meter.

This translates to an apartment of 80 square meters would costs almost 1.6 million Yuan, which would require a household of two wage-earners to repay with all of their salaries for about 17 years, excluding the interests. Moreover, if the couple wants children, the cost of food and education for the child would be impossible for the couple to handle if they don’t seek help from their parents.

Personally, I would be happier living back in Kunming because in Beijing I feel like I live for work and in Kunming I feel like I work for a life.

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Contaminated Milk Resold in China

Most thought when the dairy products company Sanlu bankrupted and the chief culprits was sentenced to death in the wake of the 2008 melamine scandals, it was safe to trust the domestic dairy producers and that melamine would be no more.

Indeed, despite the initial fears and boycotts that almost ruined dairies, consumers have returned and the dairies industry has reported a “better-than-expected” recovery according to the Ministry of Agriculture.

But that was prior to the re-emergence of melamine-contaminated dairy products on store shelves. Five companies were found to have used melamine-tainted materials that should have been destroyed in 2008.

As a result, the Chinese government has launched a 10-day market wide probe to thoroughly investigate and destroy tainted milk powders produced in 2008.

However, it’s doubtful that this 10-day purge will be effective given that the authorities were ineffective when they had more than a year to investigate and destroy.

For example, the Shanghai-based Panda Dairy Co Ltd had been on the official blacklist of melamine users in the 2008 scandals. The fact that it has survived and even committed new offenses is a serious and loud alarm. And for melamine to be redistributed into the marketplace is embarrassing proof that our food safety monitoring system is not working.

10-day crackdown is for show, we need a real long-term solution to hold all offenders, not just those adding melamine to our daily milk, accountable at all times.

Posted in China, Ugly Side of Life | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Some Chinese Characters are Gender-Biased

Character for Woman

A recent post on the popular Chinese forum Tianya has caused a sensation online. Author and lawyer Ye Mantian rallied against the structure of many vulgar Chinese characters as containing elements in reference to women.

Ye Mantian asked that such gender biased and often offensive characters are replaced with gender-neutral forms. For example, the character for rape is written as “姦”, or simply the three characters for women (女) stacked together.

In her post, Ye stated that “during my elementary school years, looking through the dictionary left me with many impressions – many dirty, wretched, negative meaning words contain the radical “女”[female], and this type of [character] structure is not fair to women.”

Ye listed 16 characters that are particularly offensive and gender biased; these characters are: “娱”[amusement], “耍”[playful], “婪”[greedy], “嫉”[envy], “妒”[envy], “嫌”[dislike], “佞”[to flatter], “妄”[presumptuous], “妖”[evil], “奴”[slave], “妓”[prostitute], “娼”[prostitute], “奸”[rape], “姘”[have an affair], “婊”[prostitute] and “嫖”[prostitute].

Ye went on to say that “to construct a egalitarian society where both men and women can mutually respect one another, we must respect our mothers, because she gave us nurturing kindness; we must respect our wives, because they and their husbands brings the household together, weathering through the highs and lows in life; we must love our daughters, because they are the future of our nation and people.”

Do you think Chinese characters should be changed?

Posted in China, Cultural Note | Tagged | 2 Comments

China to Ban Eating Cats and Dogs

cartoon dog and cat

Legislators are soliciting opinions on the draft of an animal abuse law according to China Daily.

According to the draft, individuals will be fined up to 5000 Yuan plus a detention within 15 days if the eat the meat of a dog or a cat; moreover, instituions can be fined 10,000-500,000 Yuan.

The law has been in the draft stage for over a year and will be submitted to higher authorities come April. But draft legislation can take years to approve.

Drafters at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences have been consulting for more than a year with Britain’s Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and the US-based International Fund for Animal Welfare.

Ending the culinary tradition is going to be difficult even it is passed in to law, as it dates back thousands of years. Dog meat was once considered a medicinal tonic.

The economic impact of this law would be small as China’s affluent don’t partake in the delicacy. In fact, such traditions have received much scrutiny from affluent, pet-loving, urban middle class. And online petitions against dog and cat consumption have attracted tens of thousands of signatures.

Posted in China, Law | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Beijing Wants More Bikes on the Streets to Reduce Traffic and Air Pollution

Beijing Wants to Add More Bicycles on the Road

The Beijing authorities are fighting congested roads and air pollution with old technology by adding more bicycles to the roads.

The government aims to increase the proportion of cyclists on road from the current 19.7 percent to 23 percent by 2015 for a clearer sky and less traffic jams.

According to the director of the Municipal Communications Commission, the government will revise and eliminate regulations that discourage bicycle usage, and install more restrictions against car drivers.

The proportion of Beijing residents riding bicycles was only 19.7 percent in the first four months in 2009, compared with more than 80 percent in the 1980s.

The city will restore bicycle lanes which were cut to make more room for cars and buses. It will also work to relieve a shortage of secure bicycle parking, Liu said.

The government will build more parking lots for bikes alongside bus and subway stations so that cyclists could easily transfer to other transport vehicles.

Meanwhile, the city is making bikes more available for hire. By 2015, about 1,000 outlets will be offering 50,000 bikes for rent.

China was called “kingdom of bicycles” with a large army of bicycles, once totaling some 500 million, on the streets. But the number of bikes has plummeted as rapidly as private car ownership has expanded over the past decade.

Personally, I welcome this idea but I’m afraid that more bikes on the road does not necessarily mean less car on the road and the result might be more traffic jams and chaos because everything is on the road.

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Chinese Village Construct 15th Tallest Building

Huaxi village is a rural village in Jiangsu Province, China. Often regarded as the “No. 1 Village in China”, Huaxi is the richest village with average per capita income many times that of the national average.

Heralded by the central government as a successful example of a communist style commune, the transformation of Huaxi village was the brainchild of former village Party Secretary Wu Renbao who along with his sons created a prosperous community modeled on both communism and capitalism.

However, Huaxi village recently stirred up debates online with the construction of a 328 meters tall skyscraper at village center where some netizens question the huge costs associated with the construction especially in a rural village. However, others believe that Huaxi village could be a model of development for villages across China.

The new skyscraper is designed in accord with a 5-star hotel standard, with a construction area of 200,000 square meters, it can accommodate more than 2000 residents, with a dining capacity of 3,000, and having the largest 360 degree revolving restaurant in Asia. Inside the building contain 35 elevators, with speeds of 10 meter per second, the fastest in the world, in addition to having the world’s most advanced monitoring and fire safety equipment.”

You must be having a hard time imagining that a “socialist new village” is building this soon-to-be completed luxury tower. In Jiangyin Huaxi village, this building with height ranked number 8 in China, and number 15 in the world will be completed in June of this year.

January 3rd, the newly re-elected Huaxi village party secretary Wu Xie’en stated, this building designed with a height of 328 m and 74 floors will require an investment of RMB 2.5 billion, predicted to be operational by 2011 during the 50th anniversary of the village, by that time Huaxi will have a new landmark.

Do you think a rural village should build such skyscraper?

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China to Scan Text Messages for “Unhealthy” Contents


China Mobile customers in Shanghai and Beijing will have their texting service blocked after sending obscene messages according to China Daily.

China Mobile, one of the nation’s largest cellular providers, reported that text messages would automatically be scanned for “key words” provided by the police. Messages will be deemed “unhealthy” if they violate undisclosed criteria established by the central government.

Chinese authorities say the new restrictions are necessary to root out pornography, piracy and other law-breaking activity on the Internet and in electronic communications.

According to China Daily, the police will evaluate the text messages of users suspected of transmitting unhealthy content, and during that time, China Mobile will suspend the text-messaging function for those phone numbers. If the authorities clear a user of any violation, they will issue a certificate allowing text-messaging services to be resumed, the newspaper said.

Do you think the telecommunication company have the rights to scan users’ text messages?

Posted in China, Ugly Side of Life | Tagged , | 2 Comments

I didn’t know making money was so easy (Student Rewarded for Finding Porn)

A college student in China who said his studies suffered after he discovered Internet porn has been awarded 10,000 yuan (1,466 dollars) for helping the government crack down on sexual content online.

The unidentified student at an unnamed college in northern Shanxi province reported 32 websites that contained pornography, winning a nationwide contest that has encouraged web-surfers to hunt down porn.

The unnamed student said, “In the past, when I was in middle school, I used to get grades that were good enough to enter a really good university. It is because of the influence of pornography on the Internet that I was only able to go to junior college.”

During an interview with the Shanxi Daily, this student stated his first encounter with porn was in middle school.

“I used Google because we couldn’t find any porn on Chinese websites. After our English teacher taught us the word “sex”, I entered the word and many foreign porn sites came up.”

Nearly 62,000 websites were reported during the first month of the crackdown, the paper said — an indication that a hefty number of web users were on the lookout for porn.

Chinese authorities arrested more than 5,000 people in a crackdown on Internet pornography in 2009, officials said earlier this year.

Internet use has expanded at a dizzying pace in China, which now has the world’s largest online population with at least 338 million users.


I don’t know what to say. Each site that the govern-ment takes down, about 100 new ones pops up. So in a way, one can make a living just by reporting porn sites; it is a sustainable way of making money.

The comment about can’t find any porn on Chinese websites and had to resort to using Google is simply outrageous and is a tell tale sign of being scripted ahead of time.

Posted in China, Internet | Tagged , | 5 Comments