Tag Archives: chinese

Witnesses recall fear after China train station attack

Witnesses recall fear after China train station attack (Reuters) / 2 March 2014 Armed riot police stood guard as people streamed into the railway station on Sunday only hours after the attack. Police stand near luggages left at the ticket office after a group of armed men attacked people at Kunming railway station, Yunnan province. Reuters Witnesses to chilling violence at a Chinese train station placed under heavy security on Sunday recalled moments of fear and chaos after at least 29 people were killed in what authorities called a terrorist attack by Xinjiang militants. Officials said a group of knife-wielding “terrorists” from the restive Xinjiang region launched a premeditated attack at the Kunming Railway Station in China’s southwest on Saturday night. More than 130 people were wounded. Armed riot police stood guard as people streamed into the railway station on Sunday only hours after the attack, one of the worst of its kind in China in recent memory. Standing near shops about 50 metres from the site, a parking attendant surnamed Chen said he could not believe what was happening when he saw the attackers. “I walked out and I saw a person with a knife this big, Chen said, spreading his arms wide. “Then I saw five or six of them. They all had knives and they were stabbing people madly over by the first and second ticket offices,” he said. Police shot four of the attackers dead and captured one, state news agency Xinhua reported. About five others were on the run, it said. Xinhua quoted the Kunming city government as saying evidence at the crime scene showed the attack was carried out by Xinjiang separatist forces. This photo taken on March 1, 2014 shows police cars (top L) parking on a street outside the Kunming railway station after an attack in Kunming, southwest China’s Yunnan province.  AFP The attack comes at a sensitive time as China gears up for the annual meeting of its largely rubber-stamp parliament, which opens in Beijing on Wednesday and is normally accompanied by a tightening of security across the country. Word of the violence spread quickly, with graphic pictures that showed bodies covered in blood posted to the Twitter-like microblogging service Sina Weibo – posts that were later deleted by government censors. State television showed police wrapping a long, sword-like knife in a plastic bag. Shop and restaurant workers said hundreds of people had fled into their stores seeking refuge. “Last night everyone ran over into my supermarket. The supermarket was full of people, including two passengers who had been stabbed,” Ren Guangqin said inside his supermarket. “I was terrified. They were killing people. How could I not be scared?” said 28-year-old Ren. Brutal attack China’s domestic security chief, Meng Jianzhu, vowed those responsible would be brought to justice. “This brutal attack on defenceless, innocent people by violent terrorists devoid of conscience exposes their inhuman and anti-social nature,” Xinhua quoted Meng as saying. “They inevitably will face the severe punishment of the law. We must mobilise all resources and adopt all means to break this case,” Meng said, echoing comments made by Chinese President Xi Jinping. Meng, who is also a member of the ruling Communist Party’s elite 25-member Politburo, made an emergency trip to Kunming, visiting the train station and wounded victims in hospital. The attack marked a major escalation in the simmering unrest that had centred on Xinjiang, a region in China’s far west strategically located on the borders of Central Asia. It is the first time people from Xinjiang have been blamed for carrying out such a large-scale attack so far from their homeland, and follows a smaller incident in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in October that shook the Communist Party leadership. China stepped up security in Xinjiang after a vehicle ploughed into tourists on the edge of Tiananmen Square, killing the three people in the car and two bystanders. China labelled it a suicide attack by militants from Xinjiang. Xinjiang is home to the Uighur people, many of whom chafe at Chinese restrictions on their culture and religion. Kunming, the capital of Yunnan province, is hundreds of miles from Xinjiang and has little connection to the violence there that has killed more than 100 people in the past year. China bristles at suggestions from exiles and rights groups that the unrest is driven more by unhappiness at government policies than by any serious threat from extremist groups who want to establish an independent state called East Turkestan. One senior member of an advisory body to the parliament said such attacks in China had foreign links. “The well-planned attack was not an issue of (ethnicity) or religion, it was an issue of terrorism with links to the terrorist forces out of the country,” Xinhua quoted PLA Navy Rear Admiral Yin Zhuo as saying. For more news from Khaleej Times, follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/khaleejtimes , and on Twitter at @khaleejtimes Continue reading

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Over 1.2 million visited Global Village during DSF

Over 1.2 million visited Global Village during DSF Lily B. Libo-on / 6 February 2014 International entertainers at the village during the month-long DSF included American street performer, Todd Various; drummers from Kerala and the Level Up acrobatic dance show. Over 1.2 million families and tourists experienced shopping, fun and entertainment at the Global Village, Dubai’s leading family entertainment and cultural destination, during the month-long Dubai Shopping Festival (DSF), which ended on February 2. Kuwaiti couple Talal and Fatima Al Jaber said every year they take their four children to the Global Village for the fun rides, shopping and dining experience which they cannot experience in their country. The Global Village, with its numerous pavilions, food outlets, amazing shows and fun fair, provides wholesome entertainment for the whole family. —KT photo by Juidin Bernarrd Their eldest son, Midhat, likes everything at the Global Village, from the variety of food to the amazing shows, toys and clothes — everything is delightful. “I love all the rides. My sisters, brother and I go for all of them. So nice.” The Dubai Shopping Festival Parade comprising 700 performers makes it the biggest parade of its kind in the Middle East, the international shows and the numerous performances taking place at the 30 pavilions have all enthralled visitors from within the UAE and abroad. International entertainers at the village during the month-long DSF included American street performer, Todd Various; drummers from Kerala and the Level Up acrobatic dance show. Ahmad Hussein, Director of Operations at the Global Village, said the village recorded some 95,000 tourists and residents visiting it last Friday, January 31, the last weekend before DSF ended. “We are extremely pleased with the number of visitors during the Dubai Shopping Festival. We made sure there was some activity for everyone to enjoy during this special time of the year. The sheer range and number of unique entertainment and cultural shows made the Global Village more attractive this year. The festival itself is a great opportunity for the public and the private sector to work together, and brings together a unique experience between shopping and entertainment,” Hussain said. Visitors to the Global Village also experienced the excitement during DSF with the park hosting the Dubai Shopping Festival Raffle Draw. The daily raffle saw lucky winners walk away with two brand new cars — Infiniti QX60 and G25 — as well as a cash prize of Dh100,000. For February, special promotional packages have been introduced for families. Entry will be free for children below the age of 12 every Monday, or Family Day, and there will be a discount of Dh10 on food for every Dh60 spent at its most popular restaurants. A mix of cultural and modern entertainment offerings this February include the Fairy Tales on Ice, which is being done in a specially designed rink just beside the World Culture Stage. Plays such as Aladdin and Cinderella will be performed there. Monday saw the story of Pinocchio being performed in the Fairy Tales on Ice. Visitors can also enjoy the high flying six-man All Star Dunkers, the rhythmic Argentinian Gauchos performance, Level Up and the Chinese Unicyclists on the World Culture Stage. — lily@khaleejtimes.com For more news from Khaleej Times, follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/khaleejtimes , and on Twitter at @khaleejtimes Continue reading

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Thin Pickings For Agri-Investors

ROBIN BROMBY   The Australian October 21, 2013 Will we control enough food production to feed ourselves in 15 years In 15 years, Australia will have 28 million people. Will we control enough food production to feed ourselves?. Picture: Sam Mooy  Source: TheAustralian AGRICULTURE may be the investment story of the coming decade but, unlike the resources sector, you don’t have a choice of nearly 1000 stocks (good, mediocre and awful). In fact, choice of vehicles is disappointingly small.   Jim Rogers was the man who, with George Soros, founded the Quantum Fund. He has been a believer in gold, mineral commodities — anything that is likely to be in short supply and will keep its value in a world where central banks are creating trillions of dollars of new money. He tells US Barron’s magazine that agriculture is going to be one of the best investments over the coming decades. Food prices are going to have to rise dramatically to attract people and capital into farming. “The average farmer is 58 in the US and Australia, 66 in Japan,” he says. “Old farmers are dying or retiring, and young people aren’t going into agriculture. Young Americans go into PR, not agriculture.” He then lists the options for Americans to get into the farm sector, among them banks in agricultural areas, shares in farm equipment, fertiliser or seed companies, and agriculture funds. Unfortunately, we don’t have regional banks, although there are a few companies exposed to the fertiliser business, including Incitec Pivot (IPL), although it seems more enthusiastic about the explosives side of the business. Or there’s Australia New Agribusiness & Chemical Group (ANB), controlled by Chinese interests and expanding its fertiliser manufacturing by going upstream into phosphate mining. Of course, we have a selection of phosphate and potash explorers. But the prices for both commodities are becoming more depressed, and too many investor fingers have been burned since the great phosphate bubble of 2008. Several years ago, your correspondent was expounding to an investor about the need for more investment instruments connected with farming and food as the world population kept growing and the area of arable land kept shrinking. That investor insisted on setting up a meeting with two very canny mining stock entrepreneurs for yours truly to expound on the theme. These gentlemen were polite, carefully avoiding yawning, but were clearly dubious about this whole agricultural thing. It’s still a hard story to sell. So it was encouraging that, in his latest client note, Peter Strachan of StockAnalysis takes up the Jim Rogers line. As Strachan sees it, foreigners now recognise the agricultural opportunities in Australia. In February, PrimeAg Australia (PAG) sold the bulk of its farm properties to a New York-based investment fund that has been building its agriculture exposure. A month later, incidentally, the US fund announced it was financing a farmland research centre at the University of Illinois. More recently, Americans in the form of Archer Daniel Midlands made a bid for GrainCorp (GNC), an acquisition that will require Joe Hockey’s nod. And Canadian interests are one of three bidders for Warrnambool Cheese & Butter (WCB). Local investors will retain access only if the first bidder, Bega Cheese (BGA), is the successful suitor. As Strachan notes, 1 per cent of Australia’s land mass, prime beef-growing country, has just passed to Indonesian interests and buyers from Asia are leading the hunt for grain-growing land. “Long-term money from around the globe sees the value that local owners do not,” Strachan notes. In 15 years, Australia will have 28 million people. Will we control enough food production to feed ourselves, especially if there’s a severe drought? In the meantime, local investors wanting to gain exposure to the global food supply story face very thin pickings. Continue reading

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