China Chronicles September 29, 2012
- 澳門路環石排灣經濟房屋地盤
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- China embassy in Tokyo receives bullet in envelope
China's embassy in Tokyo, Japan today said they received an envelope with a rifle bullet in it and Japanese police are now probing the case.
"We received a suspicious letter on Thursday. Japanese police came to check it and confirmed there was a rifle bullet in the envelope. We have asked Japanese police to beef up protection of Chinese nationalists," the embassy said in a statement.
Kyodo News Service cited the police as saying that no threatening message was found in the envelope but the sender's name was Yoshihiko Noda, Japan's prime minister.
Tokyo Police Bureau considered it a joke because the two countries are in a standoff over the disputed Diaoyu Islands. They are still checking if the bullet is a real one.
- China embassy in Tokyo receives bullet in envelope
China's embassy in Tokyo, Japan today said they received an envelope with a rifle bullet in it and Japanese police are now probing the case.
"We received a suspicious letter on Thursday. Japanese police came to check it and confirmed there was a rifle bullet in the envelope. We have asked Japanese police to beef up protection of Chinese nationalists," the embassy said in a statement.
Kyodo News Service cited the police as saying that no threatening message was found in the envelope but the sender's name was Yoshihiko Noda, Japan's prime minister.
Tokyo Police Bureau considered it a joke because the two countries are in a standoff over the disputed Diaoyu Islands. They are still checking if the bullet is a real one.
- Pilot suspended after airline gets HIV tip-off
A pilot of an unnamed Chinese airline has been suspended from flying after the company received a tip-off from his gay partner that the pilot is a HIV carrier.
A 19-year-old Shenzhen student, identified as Xiao Xiong, said early this week that he met and slept with captain Zhao Liang in May and their relationship lasted one month.
Xiao said Zhao neither took any safety measures nor told him about his HIV status. He accused the captain of "maliciously spreading the virus."
Though his medical check result was negative, Xiao Xiong was afraid that Zhao would harm more people and reported it to Zhao's company whose name was not disclosed, the Beijing News reported.
The airline management admitted the scandal and said Zhao had been banned from flying and is undergoing hospital treatment.
Another pilot told the paper that they need to pass a strict physical examination in order to obtain a flight license. However, sex-related diseases like AIDS and syphilis have just been put on the checkup list this year.
- Food poisoning sickens 42 kids, one dead
One of the 42 children suffering food poisoning in a village kindergarten in southwestern Guizhou Province died on Wednesday despite emergency treatment, local media reported today.
The children showed symptoms of diarrhea, fever and vomiting after having lunch in the Dakan Village kindergarten last Friday, said health officials in Zuiyi City which administers over the village.
Medical workers were sent to the village to treat the sick children and bring them to hospitals in Zunyi and Zheng'an County. One girl died this Wednesday and 23 children remain hospitalized. Only four recovered and returned home, according to the Guiyang Evening News.
Authorities have not yet published the result of their investigation into the food poisoning case.
- Email account ready to accept tips on suspects
THE Ministry of Public Security (MPS) yesterday publicized an email address (interpol.china@mps.gov.cn) that the public can contact to report on Chinese criminal suspects who have fled overseas.
The email account, run by the International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol) China Center Bureau, was opened to allow whistleblowers to provide clues on the whereabouts of criminal suspects that have left the country, according to a statement from the MPS.
Police encourage the public to actively and truthfully report missing suspects based on facts and the law, and the public is urged to provide information such as a suspect's name, identification number, address, contacts and suspected crimes, as well as photos of a suspect, if possible, it said.
Police have vowed to keep the identity of informants and the information they provide confidential, according to the statement. - 浙江西塘@12
- Flags on The Bund
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