Sunday, 2 January 2011

China celebrates 2011 with a bang

01-02-2011 10:00 BJT Special Report:2011 New Year |

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In China, 2011 was greeted with parties and celebrations, as millions regaled in the festive mood. Whether young or old, local or tourist, all held jubilant celebrations to get a jump start in the year of the rabbit.

This is the acrobatics art school in Puyang, in central China's Henan Province. The acrobats are putting on a skillful and splendid performance to celebrate the arrival of the new year.

Among this talented group, the youngest is only 10 years old. Despite the young age, these children are showing a skill level beyond your imagination.

"We wish everyone a happy life in the new year!"

Meanwhile in southern China's Guangdong Province, a marathon was held in Zhaoqing. The event attracted both local residents and tourists, who were looking to start off the year on a healthy note.

The marathon has become a tradition for the city to welcome the new year, with more than ten thousand people getting an early start to their new year's resolutions.

Tourist, Zhaoqing, said, "I know it is an annual event to celebrate the new year at Zhaoqing. I came here to join the activity from another city. It is a good way to both celebrate the new year and enhance fitness. Although I am not that young, I am determined to come."

Just a little to the south in Hong Kong, more than 400 thousand local residents and tourists gathered at Victoria Harbor to welcome the new year.

A spectacular fireworks display was held at the harbor, where people made their wishes for the new year.

Local Resident, Hong Kong, said, "I wish for a good health and a happy new year."

South Kroean Tourist, Hong Kong, said, "I want to have a baby in the new year with my husband. It's the year of the rabbit."

"Happy New Year!"

Chinese Premier Wen inspects Inner Mongolia on New Year's Day

01-02-2011 16:34 BJT

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (2nd R, front), who is also a member of the Standing
Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central
Committee, talks with herdsmen in Xilingol, north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous
Region, Jan. 1, 2011. Wen Jiabao inspected Inner Mongolia on Saturday and Sunday.
(Xinhua/Yao Dawei)

Fire causes evacuation of water ride at Florida theme park

By the CNN Wire Staff
January 2, 2011 -- Updated 0216 GMT (1016 HKT)
Smoke billows from a fire Saturday at the Islands of Adventure theme park in Orlando, Florida.
Smoke billows from a fire Saturday at the Islands of Adventure theme park in Orlando, Florida.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Rest of the park open
  • Investigators look into the cause of the fire, officials say
  • No one transported from the park
  • Ripsaw Falls ride is closed indefinitely, Universal Studios says

(CNN) -- A fire Saturday led to the evacuation and indefinite closing of a water flume ride at the Islands of Adventure park in Orlando, Florida, officials said.

The Orlando Fire Department got the call just after 5 p.m. and raced to the Universal Studios venue, Deputy Chief Greg Hoggatt said.

Dozens of patrons were at the Ripsaw Falls ride, but only a few were in the area where the smoke was noticed by an employee, Universal Studios spokesman Tom Schroder said. Staffers shut the ride down and got passengers out of the area.

A structure that houses part of the ride was fully engulfed in flames when firefighters arrived. They were able to knock it down in 30 minutes and contain it in 45 minutes, Hoggatt said.

The rest of the park was open Saturday evening, as investigators began looking into a cause, officials said.

Officials did not have a damage estimate and did not know when the ride, which is in the Toon Lagoon portion of the park, would reopen, Schroder said.

While some guests complained about smoke, no one was transported from the park for additional medical assistance, according to Schroder.

CNN's Chuck Johnston and Tina Burnside contributed to this report.

Eyewitness: Chinese police, protesters clash after villager's death

By Eve Bower, CNN
January 2, 2011 -- Updated 0653 GMT (1453 HKT)

(CNN) -- Villagers and police clashed outside a small town in southeastern China on Saturday, one week to the day after a popular local leader there died under contested circumstances, an eyewitness said.

The eyewitness, who asked not to be identified because of safety concerns, said villagers threw rocks at police at a major intersection on a road between the towns of Hongqiao and Puqi, outside of the city of Wenzhou.

Authorities chased protesters, the eyewitness said. They beat some and arrested others, the person said.

CNN was not immediately able to independently verify the account of the protest.

The incident was not reported in China's official state media, and the Chinese government had not released an official statement on the clash as of late Saturday.

The eyewitness sent CNN amateur video of the event, which showed police and groups of villagers clustered around a busy intersection. At one point, what looks to be a rock is thrown into the crowd. People scurry away.

Earlier, activists and journalists in the area had announced on Twitter that local villagers were planning a protest march in response to Qian Yunhui's death and its aftermath. The march was scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. Saturday in the town of Hongqiao.

At 9 a.m., anti-riot and traffic police appeared at major intersections in the area to prevent the protest, the eyewitness said. Blocked by police, the crowd began to head away from the town and toward the village of Zhaiqiao, the hometown of Yunhui, said the eyewitness. Zhaiqiao is located in Yueqing city.

Yunhui was killed in Yueqing city on December 25, and photos of his corpse underneath the wheel of a large truck went viral in the Chinese blogosphere.

The photograph was unmistakably graphic: a lifeless man under the large tire of a truck -- his eyes shut, mouth half-open with blood streaming out and his head detached from his crushed body.

The circumstances surrounding the death of 53-year-old Yunhui last Saturday, however, almost resemble the plot of Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa's classic "Rashomon" -- with differing versions of the event and flip-flopping witnesses.

The government initially said Qian died in an ordinary traffic accident and detained the truck driver.

But as shocking images from the scene in Yueqing city began to appear on a popular Chinese online forum last Sunday, some posts suggested he was murdered by local officials for advocating villagers' rights in a land dispute. Word quickly spread online and mainstream Chinese news media picked up the story.

Many people were appalled by the gruesome details described by two people who claimed to have witnessed the death. Qian was held down to the ground by three masked men as a heavy truck slowly drove over his neck, the Southern Daily newspaper quoted one of them as saying, adding that police had detained another witness.

Qian's life story also struck a chord with the public. When the Yueqing government in 2004 approved the construction of a power plant in Qian's village, the farmers were tricked into signing their land away for free, according to a report in the 21st Century Economic Herald newspaper.

Qian, then the village chief, led his fellow villagers in protesting the land grab and demanding proper compensation. He was arrested and sentenced to prison twice but continued the fight after his release -- even traveling to Beijing to petition the central government, the Herald report said.

Amid rising national outrage over the alleged murder of a local hero, authorities in Wenzhou city in Zhejiang province, which oversees Yueqing, launched a criminal investigation Tuesday -- and drew their conclusions less than 48 hours later.

In a late-night press conference Wednesday, officials reiterated that Qian was a victim of a traffic accident, not a murder. Police assigned blame to the inexperienced trucker driving without a license, the severely overloaded vehicle with faulty brakes, the slippery road on a rainy day -- and even Qian himself for not being careful when crossing the road.

"We thoroughly investigated the life and work as well as social connections of the suspect (driver), and eliminated the possibility of him intentionally killing (Qian)," said Shen Qiang, deputy police chief of Wenzhou. "There were obvious skid marks, drag marks of the body and collision marks on the scene, all of which contradicted the scenario of someone being held down and crushed," he added.

State-run China Central Television later aired interviews of the two eyewitnesses, including a man detained for assaulting police. Contrary to earlier reports quoting them, they both denied seeing Qian's brutal murder. "Several men told me if I said these things, they would help me treat my daughter's illness," Huang Diyan told CCTV.

The police conclusions and CCTV interviews have not satisfied many online, however, especially as state censors quietly erased earlier news reports, personal posts and comments on the topic on the internet.

With mainstream media's independent reporting on Qian's death coming a screeching halt, grassroots activists continue chasing the case, digging up new information on the land dispute and traveling to Yueqing to talk to villagers.

Wu Gan, a rights activist, has obtained a lengthy police video that showed the chaotic scene after the truck crushed Qian. He posted it online for the public to view and analyze before heading to the village Thursday evening to offer legal assistance to anyone in need.

"I don't prejudge -- I just want to restore the truth," he told CNN. "The way the authorities dealt with this incident was just not open or fair -- they have lost all credibility."

Wu said the Internet provides ordinary Chinese with an outlet to express their anger over injustice resulting from a storyline common in the country -- poor farmers losing land to corrupt officials working with businesses, and then losing even more in failed attempts to petition to higher authorities.

"This death really shows the bottom line of what is intolerable keeps getting lower," he said.


Fewer Iraqi civilians, more security forces killed in 2010

From Mohammed Tawfeeq, CNN
January 2, 2011 -- Updated 1314 GMT (2114 HKT)
Nine people, including four police officers, were killed in this attack in western Iraq's Anbar province last month.
Nine people, including four police officers, were killed in this attack in western Iraq's Anbar province last month.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • The number of Iraqi civilians killed declines from 2,809 to 2,505
  • The number of Iraqi police and army deaths rises from 670 to 1,100
  • Security officials attribute the increase to Iraq conducting more operations on its own

Baghdad (CNN) -- The total number of Iraqi civilians and security forces personnel killed in violence in 2010 was higher than in 2009, according to a CNN tally based on figures released throughout 2010 from Iraq's defense, interior and health ministries.

A total of 3,605 Iraqi civilians, police and army members were killed last year, compared to 3,479 killed in 2009. According to CNN's tally, the number of Iraqi civilian deaths dropped in 2010 compared to the previous year, but the rise in the overall death toll was due to an increased number of Iraqi police and army personnel killed.

According to CNN's tally, a total of 2,505 civilians were killed in 2010 -- down 304 from 2,809 in 2009. But 1,100 security forces personnel were killed in 2010 -- up 430 from 670 in 2009.

Iraqi security officials attribute the increased number of casualties among Iraqi police and soldiers to Iraq conducting more security operations on their own, as the United States has decreased the number of troops it has in the country and shifted its focus from combat to training and advising Iraqi troops.

Iraq: U.S. military preps for final year

Figures compiled by Iraq's defense, interior and health ministries showed 89 civilians, 41 police and 21 soldiers were killed in December 2010 -- the lowest number of deaths in a month since November 2009.

Meanwhile on Sunday three people were killed and 13 others were injured in separate attacks in Iraq, according to officials.

The most severe attack occurred at the home of a judge outside Balad, about 70 kilometers (44 miles) north of Baghdad. According to police, gunmen planted a number of improvised explosive devices around the home of Balad Chief Judge Hardan Khalaf Jasim early Sunday morning. Jasim's nephew was killed in the ensuing explosions while Jasim was critically wounded, police said.

Eight other family members, including Jasim's wife and sister-in-law, were also injured, according to police.

The attack caused severe damage to the home.

Elsewhere, gunmen opened fire on a vehicle carrying two members of the Shaheed al-Mihrab Shiite institution in eastern Baghdad, killing one person and wounding another, an Iraqi interior ministry official told CNN. The institution belongs to the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq.

In another incident, gunmen attacked an Iraqi police checkpoint in western Falluja, killing a police officer and wounding three others, Falluja police told CNN. Falluja is about 60 kilometers (37 miles) west of Baghdad.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's car auction gets '$1m bid'

President Ahmadinejad's Peugeot 504, undated photo. The white 1977 Peugeot 504 has sky-blue seats and less than 37,000km on the clock

A 33-year-old car owned by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad that has been put up for auction has reportedly attracted an offer of $1m (£640,000).

Ahmad Esfandiari, head of Iran's welfare agency, was quoted by Iran's Irna news agency as saying that the bid had come from an Arab country.

Proceeds from the sale of the Peugeot 504 will go to a fund for homes for disabled people and to needy women.

Bidders have one month to submit offers for the car.

Earlier, officials had said they hoped the car would fetch more than the $2,000 (1,500 euros; £1,300) such cars usually sell for in Iran.

The sale comes at a time when Mr Ahmadinejad's government has cut food and energy subsidies, raising the cost of living substantially.

Veteran Hong Kong activist Szeto Wah dies

2009 file picture of pro-democracy leader Szeto Wah at a rally in Hong Kong Mr Szeto was a well-known critic of the Chinese regime

One of Hong Kong's most influential campaigners for democracy and human rights, Szeto Wah, has died after a long battle with cancer, aged 79.

He was a leading campaigner for the victims of Beijing's 1989 crackdown on protesters at Tiananmen Square.

Known as Uncle Wah, he was also a voice for mainland dissidents jailed by the Chinese government.

Originally a teacher, he started his political career as a leader of one Hong Kong's largest teachers' unions.

Along with others, he organised the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Democratic Movements in China, which he headed until his death, and which routinely criticised Beijing for human-rights abuses.

A core member of the leading Democratic Party, he served as a legislator for almost 20 years.

The chief executive of Hong Kong, Donald Tsang, said Mr Szeto would be "dearly missed".

"Passionate about China and Hong Kong, Mr Szeto Wah was devoted in promoting democracy. Upright, industrious and unwavering in the pursuit of his ideals, Mr Szeto earned great respect from across the community," he said.