Wednesday, 29 December 2010

Chinese acrobats perform for holiday in Manila

2010-12-29 03:28:04 GMT2010-12-29 11:28:04 (Beijing Time) China Daily

Chinese acrobats perform during the "Grand China National Acrobatic Circus Splendide!" at Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City Metro Manila Dec 28, 2010. Over 100 award-winning acrobats, jugglers, aerialists, contortionists will be in Manila for a series of family entertainment acts this holiday season. [Photo/Agencies]

Chinese acrobats perform their plate-spinning skills during the "Grand China National Acrobatic Circus Splendide!" at Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City Metro Manila Dec 28, 2010. [Photo/Agencies]

Chinese acrobats balance plates spinning three at a time atop slender sticks during the "Grand China National Acrobatic Circus Splendide!" at Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City Metro Manila Dec 28, 2010. [Photo/Agencies]

Chinese performers ride on a bicycle during the "Grand China National Acrobatic Circus Splendide!" at Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City Metro Manila Dec 28, 2010. [Photo/Agencies]

Chinese acrobats performed at the "Grand China National Acrobatic Circus Splendide!" at Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City Metro Manila, the Philippines, Dec 28, 2010.

Over 100 award-winning acrobats, jugglers, aerialists, contortionists will be in Manila for a series of family entertainment acts this holiday season.

Suicide bombers hit Iraqi police HQ, kill chief

2010-12-29 12:43:13 GMT2010-12-29 20:43:13 (Beijing Time) SINA.com

An Iraqi policeman stands guard while hundreds of vehicles are in queue, waiting to be searched, at a checkpoint in Baghdad, Iraq, Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2010. (AP Photo)

BAGHDAD – Three suicide bombers attacked Iraq's federal police headquarters in Mosul on Wednesday, leveling the building and killing the top police commander in the northern city, a prominent figure who had escaped several past assassination attempts, officials said.

While violence has subsided significantly in Iraq in the past years, insurgents frequently target the country's government institutions and security forces in an effort to destabilize the U.S.-backed Iraqi authorities as American troops prepare to leave by the end of next year.

The attack in Mosul, a former al-Qaida stronghold, began when three men with explosives vests slipped though an opening in the blast walls surrounding the compound housing Iraq's 1st Battalion of the National Police at around 6 a.m. Wednesday, police said.

Police shot one of the attackers in an open-air yard, and his vest exploded — but while the police were distracted by the blast, the other suicide bombers charged into the police headquarters building, police said.

One of the bombers entered the ground floor office of the battalion's commander, Lt. Col. Shamil Okla Ahmed al-Jabouri, where he was sleeping, and blew himself up, killing al-Jabouri instantly, a police officer at the scene said.

The other bomber detonated his explosives-laden vest on the ground floor of the building shortly after the first blast, police said.

The twin explosions were so powerful that they brought the police headquarters down, burying the slain commander and possibly others under the rubble, police said.

Hospital officials in the city, located 225 miles (360 kilometers) northwest of Baghdad, confirmed the fatality and said they've treated one policeman who was wounded in the blast. Morgue officials in the city said they have not received any bodies.

Rescuers worked frantically to clear the rubble of the collapsed building to get to those possibly trapped underneath.

Abdul-Raheem al-Shemeri, a top security official on the Mosul Provincial Council, said he believed al-Jabouri, who fought to rid the northern city of al-Qaida militants, was the target of Wednesday's attack.

"We've lost a sword of Mosul, who chased al-Qaida terrorists out of the city," al-Shemeri said, adding that al-Jabouri was believed to have been one of few people in the building since the official work day had not yet started.

Militants had tried to kill al-Jabouri several times before, al-Shemeri and several police officials said. A few months ago, al-Jabouri's guards shot a suicide bomber who approached the commander in an attempt to blow himself up, police said.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Wednesday's attack.

But suicide bombers have been al-Qaida's most lethal weapon in Iraq, killing hundreds of civilians and members of Iraq's security forces.

On Monday, two suicide attackers blew themselves up in front of a government office in Iraq's provincial capital of Ramadi in Anbar province in the west, killing nine people and wounding dozens.

In a separate incident Wednesday, five civilians were wounded when a roadside bomb hit an Iraqi police patrol in eastern Baghdad, police and hospital officials said.

All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

(Agencies)

Third cold snap set to strike

2010-12-29 00:06:53 GMT2010-12-29 08:06:53 (Beijing Time) China Daily

BEIJING - A new blast of cold air will hit the country in the next three days, following two rounds of temperature falls in the past month, a meteorological authority said on Tuesday.

The National Meteorological Center of the China Meteorological Administration posted a warning of a cold snap on its website on Tuesday, saying that from Tuesday afternoon to Thursday freezing air will strike Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, North China and some areas in Southwest and East China.

The cold wave is likely to bring a 12 C to 14 C drop in temperatures along with wind and snowfalls in some regions.

"The cold wave came from the northwest, entered Xinjiang this morning and will move southeast along the Gansu Corridor (in Northwest China) in one or two days," said Lin Jian, the chief forecaster of the administration.

"This cold air is different from the last two because it won't chill most areas in South China," Lin said.

The past month saw two rounds of colder weather, on Dec 14 and 22, forcing temperatures to drop in North China's Inner Mongolia autonomous region, East China's Shandong province and all of North China.

Blizzards have hit Altay in north Xinjiang since Sunday night, resulting in 150 cm-deep snow on the ground in mountainous areas.

The temperature there will stay at -26 C until Wednesday before dropping further on Thursday, said Li Li, a forecaster for Altay meteorological department.

Blizzards in the Ili Kazak autonomous prefecture, Xinjiang, on Dec 22 killed two people in a car and caused 20 snowslides along the G218 Highway.

Although snowstorms in Xinjiang ceased on Monday, persistent fog resulted in 14 flights being canceled and 26 delayed at the Urumqi, Yining and Tacheng airports.

In Shandong, the cold wave reduced temperatures to as low as -11 C in some costal areas. More than 100 fishing boats were frozen on the icy water in Laizhou Bay of northwest Shandong.

In Harbin, capital of Northeast China's Heilongjiang province, snow has been falling for four days and will not stop until Jan 3, the local meteorological bureau said.

Residents in the city were cleaning snow off the streets every day.

"The snow never stopped in the past four days, and the ice stuck to the ground was hard to get rid of," said a local resident surnamed Luo.

Shao Wei, Zhao Ruixue and Zhou Huying contributed to this story

Chinese president stresses price stability

2010-12-29 11:27:27 GMT2010-12-29 19:27:27 (Beijing Time) Xinhua English

BEIJING -- Chinese President Hu Jintao has stressed the need to stabilize commodity prices, extend the coverage of the social security network and boost employment to ensure the country develops in a comprehensive, coordinated and sustainable manner.

Hu made the call Tuesday when presiding over lectures on economic development attended by members of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee.

The lectures were given by two researchers respectively from the National Development and Reform Commission and the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Efforts should be made to establish a long-term mechanism that increases consumptions, renovate and upgrade traditional industries, and cultivate and support strategic emerging industries, Hu noted.

Hu, also general secretary of the CPC Central Committee, called for deepening of the country's reform and opening up, adding that improving people's livelihood and ensuring their well-bring, promoting economic growth and maintaining social stability are the Party's top agenda.

Hu said impetus should be given to the development of the service industry as well as to the coordination of regional development, and vigorous yet steady endeavors should be made to advance urbanization

Hu also called for efforts to embrace reform and innovation in the country's economic, political, cultural and social systems and urged local authorities to seek opinions and advice from the people in formulating regional development blueprints.

Further, Hu asked CPC officials to cement their ties with the people and do practical things for the public.

New Year market painted in red

2010-12-29 06:33:30 GMT2010-12-29 14:33:30 (Beijing Time) China Daily

Residents of Suzhou, East China's Jiangsu province shop for holiday ornaments at a market in Suzhou, East China's Jiangsu province, Dec 28, 2010.[Photo/Xinhua]

A Suzhou resident shows rabbit toys at a market in Suzhou, East China's Jiangsu province, Dec 28, 2010. The Year of the Rabbit on the Chinese lunar calendar starts on Feb 3, 2011. [Photo/Xinhua]

Rabbit toys are displayed at a market in Suzhou, East China's Jiangsu province, Dec 28, 2010. [Photo/Xinhua]

Lanterns are hung along a street in Suzhou, East China's Jiangsu province, Dec 28, 2010. [Photo/Xinhua]

Shops in Suzhou have begun stocking holiday items as the annual Spring Festival approaches in China. The festival, also called Chinese New Year, begins on the first day of the first lunar month and ends with Lantern Festival on the 15th day. New Year's Day will fall on Feb 3, 2011.

Using A Bank Card? Then Give To Charity

1:00pm UK, Wednesday December 29, 2010

Shoppers could be asked to make donations to charity every time they use their bank card in a shop or cash machine, the Government has suggested.



Plans unveiled by the Cabinet Office also say that people could be prompted to give money when filling in tax returns or applying for passports and driving licences.

The initiatives were included in a consultation paper which ministers hope will make charitable giving of both money and time a "social norm".

The document said that UK banks could copy a system used in Colombia that allows customers to make a donation each time they withdraw cash.

It also suggested a national "round up the pound" scheme which would allow people to give donate "change" when paying by debit or credit card.

The report said that while Britons are generous with their money, they rank only 29th in a list of all countries when it comes to volunteering.

Public services will be encouraged to take on more volunteers, but the Government has denied that the move is an effort to provide public services "on the cheap" amid big spending cuts.

Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude said a consultation with a working group of businesses would last until March 9 and would lead to firm proposals in the spring.

He told Sky News: "What we're looking for is are there ways of making it easier for people to do more."

John Low, chief executive of the Charities Aid Foundation, told Sky News: "Government wants people to get together in communities and wants them to somehow find a way of fixing the problems in society and this is part of trying to fix that problem."

Insurance Fraud Costs £2.3m Every Day

11:47am UK, Wednesday December 29, 2010

Michael Burgess, Sky News Online

Insurance companies are uncovering an average of 335 fraudulent claims every day, says a report.



According to the Association of British Insurers, the claims, which are being detected with increasingly sophisticated techniques, are costing £2.3m every day.

The most common type of insurance fraud is home insurance, says the report, with 170 bogus claims made each day.

Fraudulent home insurance claims usually involve people claiming for alleged accidental damage to carpets or furniture - such as spilled red wine or coffee - only for insurers to find the damage was done deliberately.

The second most common type of insurance fraud was motor insurance, with 108 fraudulent claims made each day, costing approximately £1.1m.

Insurance cheats do not prosper – they can expect to get caught, face problems getting future insurance and risk getting a criminal record.

Nick Starling, of the Association of British Insurers

Speaking to Sky News, Malcolm Tarling, of the Association of British Insurers, said: "We've had people who have travelled overseas and claimed for stolen cameras and items they’ve never had."

He said some people also "spill paint and coffee on carpets and then claimed for the complete refurbishment of the home".

One claimant crashed his car during a race at the Nuerburgring race track in Germany, but shipped it back to the UK to claim it was damaged at the side of the road in Britain.

Another policy holder alleged he had sustained a head injury after tripping over a loose paving stone, only for it to emerge he had been hit by a baseball bat during a fight.

Red wine spillage

Carpets are being deliberately damaged for bogus insurance claims

Nick Starling, also of the Association of British Insurers, said: "Insurance cheats do not prosper – they can expect to get caught, face problems getting future insurance and risk getting a criminal record."

He added: "The majority of customers are honest and rightly object to subsidising the cheats. Insurance fraud adds and extra £44 to the average UK household’s annual insurance bill.

"This is why 2011 will see insurers intensify their war against the cheats to protect their honest customers."