2013年4月26日星期五

Ben Harrington charity set up to ensure Reigate man's death in Thailand was not in vain


His mum Pat, 59, of Vevers Road, said: "I want something to come out of Ben's death, I don't want it all to be for nothing."The charity will raise money to help other families struck by tragedy abroad, and also aims to spread awareness for travellers about what their insurance covers, and what to do and who to contact when something goes wrong.Mark, 29, said: "Not that many people are going to be unfortunate enough to find themselves in a situation like that. But you come from this country and you expect there to be a system set up, and really you are on your own."A friend of Ben's, Connell Knights, 28, who is helping set up the charity, said: "For those outside the immediate family, it was hard enough losing Ben but to deal with everything else they have had to deal with, it is hard.

"We just want to do everything we can to make sure it wasn't all in vain."A website will be set up to provide key information and contact details for travellers abroad. It will feature downloadable PDF documents, individual to different countries, that travellers can take with them.The fundraising side of the charity will be launched with a dinner and dance at Reigate Manor Hotel in September, which another of Ben's many friends, Louise Markwick, is helping to organise.His brother Mark, who was travelling with him, spent a very difficult week trying to liaise with the Thai authorities before he could fly home with his brother's body.The family also discovered that Ben's travel insurance did not cover death and they were left with a bill of thousands of pounds.

2013年4月19日星期五

Chinese express condolences for student slain in Boston



Many Chinese went online Wednesday to mourn Lü Lingzi, 23, the Boston University graduate student who died in Monday's Boston Marathon explosions. More than 20,000 people posted messages of condolence on her micro-blog, where her final entry featured her last breakfast. Many more people noted their sorrow on other social media platforms.She called herself Dorothy Lu in English, but to her parents and the Chinese nation sharing their grief, she will forever be Lü Lingzi, whose given name Lingzi means "Excellent Child" in Chinese. She had been living up to that exacting name.Born in the northeast province of Liaoning, an industrial heavyweight under China's planned economy that declined into rust belt in more recent, capitalist times, Lü attended the Northeast Yucai School in the provincial capital Shenyang. Yang Yongkun, a former teacher, called Lü "especially smart, sincere and honest," according to the Shenyang Evening News, her hometown newspaper.BU Chaplain Robert Hill said he had visited the injured woman twice, and "she has her friends around her, and she will soon have family around her."

Despite regular tensions in the U.S.-Chinese relationship, Chinese students flock to U.S. universities in such numbers that they are the leading source of international students in the USA, known as the "Beautiful Country" in Chinese.Like most young, urban Chinese, Lü enjoyed documenting and sharing her life and likes online. Twitter, Facebook and YouTube are banned by China's communist authorities because of their capacity to inform and organize protest and opposition, but their domestic, censored versions are hugely popular.Once she reached the USA, Lü kept posting on Sina Weibo, China's Twitter equivalent, and could more easily access her Facebook page, where she wrote "New Hampshire is such a great place!" last October.On Weibo, Lü listed her interests as food, music, reading and finance. She enjoyed posting pictures of cooking experiments, including her first "successful" kimchi pancake March 30. She noted unhappier moments, such as the time a professor's criticism "wrecked" her good mood March 8.Some state-owned Chinese media used the bombings as a chance Wednesday to criticize what they see as the West's "double standards" on terrorists, meaning the failure to meet Beijing's request to crack down on exile groups advocating independence for Xinjiang, China's Muslim province in the far northwest.

2013年4月18日星期四

China and climate sceptics


    We're already in a bad place. We're on a sliding scale. China west tour language "it's too late" is very unsuitable for most environmental issues. It's too late for the dodo and for people who've starved to death already, but it's not too late to prevent an even bigger crisis. The sooner we act on the environment, the better. The sooner we cut off the carbon dioxide going into the air, etc. The worse accidents we will prevent from happening are 20, 30, 40 years from now. The same applies to food. The faster we act to improve the situation, the fewer Africans – North Africans, in particular – will come to grief. What is happening through the market mechanism is that the rich countries, by being unnecessarily sloppy – and by the Chinese getting richer in a real hurry and eating more meat – we are pricing up grain so that the poor are getting hungry. It's hard to see this stopping in the immediate future. It's also very hard to see the poor and hungry getting richer at the same speed as the way we are driving up the price of grain.
   
    There is a stretching disparity between the haves and have nots. It's not the win-win of globalisation that we all grew up with studying in Econ 101. The irony is that as China gets richer, it burns more coal. They put pressure on the global environment and on global grain prices. Uyghur culture in order to give them a nice middle class, variegated diet, they could cause poorer Asians and Africans to starve. There is no mechanism to prevent that. Egypt runs a trade deficit. Their population is programmed to grow dramatically. Three million at the time of Napoleon. Eighty-three million, said their standard when they marched into the Olympic Games last year. And they're on their way to 140m. They've always been very efficient, but they can't feed much more than half their people. It's the kind of curve than anyone in finance would look at and jump nervously, when you see an exponential curve like that.The only numbers I was paying attention to in 2002 was for oil. A little wheel was turning at the back of my brain that noted that oil was beginning to act differently. Our firm specialises in the study of investment bubbles.

2013年4月12日星期五

lying and other outrageous things you do while traveling



You walk into your Caribbean resort's lobby and see a promotional sign: "Free suite upgrade for newlyweds."Do you and your mate tell a white lie and snag the cheap trip?According to a recent survey, 5.55% said they've pretended to be on honeymoon or celebrating a birthday or anniversary to get a room upgrade while on vacation.Others admitted to sneaking into the swimming pool of a resort where they weren't staying. In an effort to save some coin, a few skinflints have gone so far as leaving a bar or restaurant without paying the tab.These are just some of the outrageous things British holidaymakers admitted to doing while on vacation in order to cut costs, according to a March survey commissioned by the London-based International Currency Exchange to mark the launch of the company's new Travellers Cashcard.Conducted by market research company OnePoll, the survey also revealed a number of ways that Brits have saved money prior to going on vacation.Pocketing food from the breakfast table in order to avoid having to pay for lunch is the most popular way to save money, with close to 39% of those surveyed admitting to pilfering from the breakfast buffet.

Of survey respondents, 1.35% said they've left a restaurant or bar without paying their tab.If stealing isn't enough, 11.2% admitted to lying about the age of their children to pay less for theme park admission.To get a five-star holiday on a two-star budget, you could follow the lead of 11.65% of respondents who have "borrowed" the facilities of a nearby resort or the 7.65% who have used another hotel's shuttle bus services.Others simply avoided tipping at bars and restaurants or bought food and drink from the supermarket.Most worryingly, perhaps, is the more than 27% who admitted to using "other" money-saving methods, leaving us to ponder what nefarious techniques they might be employing to skimp on costs.  How about you? Ever dined and dashed? Lied about your marital status or stuffed breakfast muffins in your pockets on the way out the door?

2013年4月11日星期四

Issues Affecting Cross-Border Mergers and Acquisitions in China



Along with the rapid development of China's economy in recent years, there has also been an increase in inbound and outbound investments by both domestic and foreign investors, as well as corporate restructuring transactions to improve the operational efficiencies of these investments. kashgar border transfer special purpose vehicle  was the most common structure used by foreign companies to hold direct investments in China. An SPV is a holding company set up by a foreign investor outside of China – usually in Hong Kong or other locations that boast notable tax advantages and favorable tax treaties with China – for the special purpose of holding equity interest in an onshore foreign-invested enterprise One of the advantages of using an SPV is that it may benefit from preferential withholding tax rates on dividends and other passive income under the tax treaties between China and the jurisdiction in which the SPV is located.

For example, Hong Kong's double tax agreement with China reduces the withholding tax rate on dividends from 10 percent to 5 percent. In addition, the jurisdiction in which the SPV is located usually imposes low, or even zero, capital gains taxes on income from equity transfers. When the foreign investor disposes of the investment in China by transferring equity in the SPV , the transfer is also technically exempt from capital gains taxes in China since both the seller and subject matter are located offshore.A general anti-avoidance rule was first introduced in China under the CIT Law which came into effect in 2008. silk road group tour GAAR empowers Chinese tax authorities to make reasonable adjustments where an enterprise implements an arrangement without reasonable business purposes in order to reduce its taxable income or profit. The CIT Law's Implementing Rules provide that “an arrangement without reasonable business purpose” refers to an arrangement which has the main purpose of obtaining tax benefits such as the reduction, elimination, or deferral of tax payments.

2013年4月3日星期三

Most Chinese cities hiding vital pollution data from public



Most city governments on the mainland withheld vital information on pollution from the public last year, with many scaling back their disclosure to protect polluters as economic growth slowed, two major environmental organisations said in a study released in Beijing yesterday.The 10 most secretive cities were Zaozhuang in Shandong , Datong and Yangquan in Shanxi, Xiangyang in Hubei , Karamay in Xinjiang, Changchun and Jilin city in Jilin, Zhangjiajie in Hunan , Jinzhou in Liaoning and Ordos in Inner Mongolia. They disclosed barely any environmental information, such as the amounts of pollutants discharged or the identities of major polluters.Datong and Yangquan are among China's largest coal and power production centres and were responsible for much of the smog that shrouded many parts of northern China in recent months. Jilin, Changchun and Jinzhou, in the northeast, are centres of heavy industry.The Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs in Beijing and the Natural Resources Defence Council in the United States have been monitoring the environmental transparency of 113 major mainland cities since 2009, releasing an annual pollution information transparency index.The researchers said they had grown used to the persistent lack of transparency in mining and industrial centres over the years, but had been surprised this time by the large number of cities that took big steps backwards.

Forty cities scaled back their information disclosure last year, with Wuhu in Anhui, Foshan and Shantou in Guangdong, Baoding in Hebei, Taizhou in Zhejiang, Changzhou in Jiangsu , Anshan and Dalian in Liaoning, Weifang in Shandong and Yinchuan in Ningxia the most regressive. Wuhu's index score was only 34.6 last year, down from a respectable 57.1 in 2011.Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs director Ma Jun said it was an alarming development."This is totally new to us," he said. "We have never seen so many cities, about 35 per cent of the total, stepping backwards."They have significantly slowed down after promising progress on transparency in recent years."A key reason for the increase in secrecy was local protectionism, the report said, with some city governments choosing to sacrifice the environment in their blind pursuit of economic growth.Apart from a few exceptions, such as Ningbo in Zhejiang, Dongguan and Shenzhen in Guangdong and Qingdao in Shandong, most mainland cities refused to disclose some of the most important and basic information about pollution and polluters, such as pollutant discharge data and records of administrative punishments handed out to polluters, the report said.

2013年4月1日星期一

Lessons in taking good care



Teaching young to guard health of their families in Xinjiang Uygur region Marjorie Yang can still remember the shock she had when finding out that the most expensive medicine in a public health center at a small town in Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region was ice. "This means that the people living there almost had no medicine at all, which is beyond imagination," china tour packages.As chairman of Esquel Group, a leading Hong Kong-based textile and apparel manufacturer with operations throughout the world, Yang went to Xinjiang with the Jiankangkuaiche project, which literally means Health Express, a program launched by Esquel Group and Swiss pharmaceutical maker Novartis International AG in 2010 with the aim of improving the medical treatment and health of people living in Xinjiang, especially those in rural areas.The program consists of three elements - health-education for primary and middle school students, medical training about infectious diseases for physicians and support for the research of epidemic diseases related to Brucella, a potentially fatal parasitic bacteria.In order to carry out the health education project more effectively, the two companies have worked together to recruit health education training specialists from local residents. So far they have developed 24 full-time specialists as health educators, all of whom are from ethnic groups. The textbooks are written in Chinese and the Uygur language.Students can take classes in the psychology of adolescence and physical health and then become guardians of health in their families.

"The health education project can create extended beneficial effects on the families of the children who receive our lessons on health because the adults' access to knowledge about health is rather limited and, for some of them, knowledge of Mandarin is not great," said Helen Chui, president of Novartis Group (China)."My father used to smoke a lot and, after I learned from the class that smoking can lead to cancer, I told him immediately. He was quite shocked at this and finally made up his mind to quit smoking," said a girl named Guli.The poor roads and lack of infrastructure in the rural areas of Xinjiang made it a lot harder for health education teachers to carry out their work."The furthest school is about 80 kilometers away from the downtown area and we have to take several buses, a three-wheeled bicycle and even walk a few minutes to get there," said local resident Aliye Kurban.Several times she burst into tears when she got lost and could not find the school.Despite the work being arduous and painstaking, she doesn't regret her choice. "I feel that what I'm doing now is really something of significance to my hometown," said the young mother whose baby is only 1 year old.Speaking of the difficulty in promoting the program in Xinjiang, kashgar border transfer Yang said: "It is the process of learning the culture, history, social customs and religious faiths of local people that takes a lot of effort but is quite indispensable."Understanding local people's culture and lifestyles helps the program run more smoothly. By the end of December 2012 more than 400,000 students and 10,900 adults had benefited from the program."Under the poor medical circumstances, the first thing people can do is to strengthen their physical health by themselves. Education is what helps to make this happen," said Yang.Providing medical training about infectious diseases to doctors is another aspect of the Health Express program, also known as the Spring Rain project.