Tag Archives: asia

After Burning for 50 Years, Chinese Coal Fires May Finally Be Extinguished

Fire in Rujigou coalfield in China. Photo: Anupma Prakash The Coal, The Coal is on Fire, Let the… China has the worst underground coal fires on Earth. These fires, which have sometimes been raging out-of-control for decades, destroy as much as 20-200 million tons of coal each year (nobody knows the exact number), which is more than Germany’s entire annual coal production. Inner Mongolia, which is a part of China and not to be confused with Mongolia, is China’s biggest coal-producing region (637 million tonnes of coal just last year), and it’s also #1 when it comes to massive coal fir… Read the full story on TreeHugger

Read this article:
After Burning for 50 Years, Chinese Coal Fires May Finally Be Extinguished

Mom wants 2-year old son to cut down on smoking (link to video).

Jakarta, Indonesia (CNN) — Two-year-old Aldi yanked on his mother's hair and squirmed in her arms. Tears formed a small pool in the folds of his double chin. “He's crying because he wants a cigarette,” said Diana, his mother, who like many Indonesians goes by only one name. We caught up with Aldi, who is nearly twice the weight of other babies his age (20 kilograms or 44 pounds), and his mother at Jakarta's airport. Video of him plopped on a brightly-colored toy truck inhaling deeply and happily blowing smoke rings had circulated on the Internet last week, turning him into a local celebrity. As we spoke to his mother, a crowd gathered and a man taunted Aldi with a cigarette, blowing smoke in his direction. “Smoking has been a part of our culture for so long it isn't perceived as being hazardous, as causing illness, as poisonous,” said Seto Mulyadi, chairman of Indonesia's National Commission for Child Protection. “A lot of adults who are around children will smoke. They will carry a baby in one hand and a cigarette in another. Even mothers don't understand that they are poisoning their children.” Mulyadi met with Aldi in Jakarta, where his mother brought him for help. He said Aldi was a bright boy, quicker than most children his age. He also said Aldi was a victim of his environment. Mulyadi told Diana that she needed to find other things to occupy the boy's time. But he told us what was disturbing was that the parents motivation to get Aldi to quit wasn't stemming primarily from an understanding of the risk to his health, but more from the cost of spending four dollars a day — Aldi smokes an average of 40 cigarettes daily. “Well, I don't want to give him cigarettes, but what I am I supposed to do? I am confused,” his mother said. “I didn't let him smoke, I even forbade him from smoking, but I was trying to stop him from getting sick.” She showed us a scar on Aldi's head, where she said he smashed his head into a wall during one of his tantrums. She said he also vomits when he can't satisfy his addiction. “I was smoking when I was pregnant, but after I gave birth I quit,” she said. “I don't remember when, but we went to the market and then suddenly he had a cigarette in his hand. Even when he was a baby and he would smell smoke he would be happy.” Both she and her husband have quit smoking. She said that Aldi had cut down his habit in Jakarta and hopefully he will soon quit. “For us, it's not shocking at all, but it's very, very sad,” Mulyadi said. “What we know about this phenomenon is only the tip of the iceberg.” He said ignorance about the dangers of smoking is compounded by aggressive advertising by tobacco companies. Nearly 170 nations have signed a treaty calling for health warnings and other anti-smoking measures. Indonesia, however, is the only country in the Asia-Pacific region not to have ratified the World Health Organization's framework on tobacco control. Legislation has been stuck in parliament for years. The spokesman for the Ministry of Health, Tritarayati, said: “We're still discussing it.” A study by the child protection commission shows that between 2001 and 2007, the number of children smoking between the ages of five and nine jumped 400 percent. That is tens of thousands of cases and does not take into account children like Aldi, who are under the age of five. Mulyadi believes the number is significantly higher and child smokers are getting younger. A few months ago, video of a four-year-old Indonesian boy smoking also appeared online. An adult male voice prompts him off camera and laughs as the child blows smoke rings calling himself a “bad boy.” That child was also helped by the National Commission for Child Protection and is now smoke free, Mulyadi said. “We are fighting to remind the country that we really need to protect our children,” Mulyadi said. Aldi's mother asked to end to the interview after she had spoken with us for a few minutes. She said she was tired. “I learned that I can't use force to stop him, but I need to be gentle and try to distract him.” We asked her what she had learned about her child and smoking: “I learned that my kid is smart and he doesn't have any illnesses,” she said. Diana seemed uncomfortable with the attention and the questions. Cheeks wet, Aldi waved a chubby arm goodbye to the watching crowd. http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/05/31/indonesia.smoking.baby/index.html?er… added by: thedirtman

Latest Update on Pakistan Bombing

Two attackers on Motorbikes fired the entrance of Baitul Noor of worship in the Model Town region which resulted to at least 20 people were killed. Actually, the strikes took place at two mosque in Lahore which belong to Ahmadi religious group according to police and rescue officials. According to the officials, one of the attackers was critically injured and the other was detained. The bombings targeted houses of worships which resulted approximately 70 people killed and now its still growing.. One of the witnesses told CNN that the two attackers were armed with AK-47s and another witness saw atleast 4 gunmen. Three heads of the suicide bombers were discovered in the crime scene according to Sajjad Bhutta, a senior official. At least five people were retrieved in the other location, Garhi Shahu. Ahmadis which is a religious movement founded in 1889 which has believed that Mirza Ghulam Ahmad was a prophet sent by God. Ahmadis considered themselves as Muslim. But the Pakistani government disclaimed that they aren’t Muslims. Because the followers don’t believe Mohammed, the phrophet if Muslims as their prophet. Latest Update on Pakistan Bombing is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Kid Addicted to Smoke at 2

A kid named Ardi Rizal from Musi Banyuasin, Indonesia is a chain smoker at the age of two. The kid was given a cigarette when he was 18 months old by his father Mohammed. The kid is obviously gets addicted to smoking because he can consume 40 cigarettes a day. And if not given smoke, he gets angry and screams and hit his head against the wall. If the child can’t smoke, he feels dizzy and sick according to his Mom, Diana. It costs the Family £3.78 in Musi Banyuasin, Indonesia for a particular brand for the child to smoke. But Mohammed the father of the child at the same time a fishmonger said, that the child is pretty healthy for him so he doesn’t see it as a problem. The officials of the said place has offered the family a car if the child quits. This is becoming a problem in Indonesia facing the fact that 25 percent of age group 3-15 year-old have tried cigarettes. Kid Addicted to Smoke at 2 is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Japan’s Slowest Train Offers Best Views

Japan is famous for its high speed bullet trains. However, one of the most spectacular lines in the country has a top speed of only 20 kilometers an hour. It maybe slow compared to the bullet train of Japan, but nothing can match to the railway of the wildness of the Japanese which attracts a million of people every year to come to make this journey. By keeping the train going is a tough job for the maintenance crew who take the customer service seriously. They make sure that the tracks are clear as they wind through steep mountain sides. According to one crew, nothing is mechanized. They do everything by hand and it is physically very demanding. At the start of the summer, the team travels at the line which is originally built to transport materials for the construction of a hydro-electric dam. This is one of the few railways in the world that has to be rebuilt every year. The bridges over the mountain streams are disassembled during the winter to prevent them from being swept away by avalanches. The crews get the tracks under the tunnel where they are being kept during the long freeze. The crew must carefully balance themselves at the torrent to put them back together. One slit could spell disaster. It all has to be finish in time for the railway to reopen on the summer season. Even though the trains are running again the work is not yet done. Every night there is maintenance to keep up with. The crew wanted to make sure the safety of their passengers. The train runs through a gorge in the north of the country where the area is so mountainous and snowy. The service can only run in the summer season. Japan’s Slowest Train Offers Best Views is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

At least 160 Killed In Passenger Plane Crashes IN Southern India

Government Minister says that at least 160 people were killed when a state-run Air India Express aircraft, with 168 people on board, overshot a runway during landing and crashed near Mangalore airport in the southern Indian state of Karnataka early Saturday morning. According told to the media by V.S. Acharya, home minister of southern Indian state of Karnataka, “The crash happened while landing and the aircraft immediately caught fire. At least 160 passengers have died in the crash.” It was confirmed Anup Srivastava, Director of Air India that there were 160 passengers and six crew members on the plane. Indian authorities said that there are about 160 people were killed and six survived in the crash. The Russian pilot of the doomed Air India Boeing jet tried to abort landing when the plane overshot runway and crashed Saturday in Mangalore in southern India according to the Air India official. Official added that the probe team is being dispatched to Mangalore from Mumbai to seek more details of the crash. The passenger plane crash happened at around 06:30 a.m. when the Air India Express, a budget airliner of the state-run carrier, carrying 168 people, including six crew members, from Dubai of the United Arab Emirates, attempted to land at Mangalore airport but overshot the runway and broke into pieces, causing a huge fire. Read More At least 160 Killed In Passenger Plane Crashes IN Southern India is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

NKorea warns of war if punished for ship sinking

Washington (CNN) — The president of South Korea has vowed “resolute” measures against North Korea for its alleged attack on a South Korean warship, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency reported Thursday. A five-country committee announced Thursday morning in Seoul that they had concluded a North Korean submarine fired a torpedo that sunk the South Korea warship in March. “(We) will take resolute countermeasures against North Korea and make it admit its wrongdoings through strong international cooperation and return to the international community as a responsible member,” President Lee Myung-bak told Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd in phone talks, according to Lee's office, Yonhap reported. The warship, the Cheonan, sank after an explosion ripped it in half on March 26 in disputed waters off North Korea. Forty-six sailors were killed or lost in the incident. North Korea immediately denied the allegation. The North Korean National Defense Commission said in a statement to official television that its navy did not torpedo the South Korean ship, calling South Korean Lee Myung-bak “a traitor,” Yonhap reported. The conclusion came from a joint investigation committee composed of American, Australian, British and Swedish and South Korean experts. The United States has been “deeply and actively involved” in the investigation and “strongly supports its conclusions,” Assistant Secretary of State Kurt Campbell said. Since last month, the U.S. military has believed a North Korean torpedo attack was the most likely cause of the explosion, according to a U.S. military official. The military official said at the time that the blast of an underwater explosion sank the ship, but that the explosive device itself did not come in contact with the hull of the South Korean ship. The United States has a mutual defense treaty with South Korea and Japan to defend “against any aggression,” so if a military confrontation develops, the United States would be responsible for defending South Korea, the official said. “I don't think it will come to that,” the official said. “They know they need to have a response, but there is too much at stake for South Korea to have a confrontation on the Korean peninsula. North Korea has nothing to lose, but South Korea is a serious country with a huge economy.” There are military options for South Korea beyond firing missiles, said John Delury, who studies North and South Korea at the Asia Society. Anything combative would hurt South Korea economically, Delury said, but the country could increase its naval presence along the line that divides South and North Korea in the waters surrounding the countries. He notes that comes with a risk. “Those actions could trigger a conflict,” he noted. “It will be interesting to see how South Korean President Lee [Myung-bak] characterizes this incident,” said Nicholas Szechenyi, deputy director at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based think tank. “A military strike of some sort would be risky because the North Korean regime is so unpredictable,” he said. “You have to be careful about military retaliation because North Korea has thousands of artillery pieces pointed towards the south and could bombard Seoul very quickly.'” The senior U.S. official said that South Korea is expected to “come up with a set of responsible measures” in response, such as action at the U.N. Security Council. Included in those actions could be a resolution condemning the attack, arguing it violates the U.N. charter, Szechenyi said. “The problem is that China is a permanent member of the council and tends to take a very soft position on North Korea, so it is an open question whether the resolution will pass or not,” he said. The Chinese will face a lot of pressure from the United States, but it already sent a clear message of solidarity with North Korea when it recently rolled out the red carpet to receive North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, Delury said. The United States and South Korea could also delay the upcoming transfer of operational control of U.S. and Korean military forces from the United States to South Korea. The transfer is due in April 2012. “It would be more of a political statement to remind North Korea the U.S. is a steadfast ally of South Korea and will come to its defense,” Szechenyi said. Seoul also has limited economic activity with Pyongyang that could be suspended, including a joint industrial complex and some trade. North Korean involvement in the attack also would throw doubt on the future of six-party nuclear diplomacy talks involving the United States, South Korea, China, Japan and Russia. China has been pushing for another round of talks, but the senior U.S. official said there will be less interest now in a quick return to the negotiations. “If the North Koreans are going to continue to misbehave, we have to think whether it makes sense to return to the six-party talks,” the official said. On the other hand, the official suggested the incident might give the United States leverage. China, which hosts the talks and has the closest relationship with North Korea, could be encouraged to get a “better resumption point” in the talks, rather than just pick up where they left off, the official said. Szechenyi suggested South Korea might also ask the United States to put North Korea back on the list of state sponsors of terror, from which it was removed in 2008 as part of the effort to get the country to stop its nuclear program. Putting the country back on the terror list would trigger a number of tough economic sanctions against North Korea, he said. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who will visit Seoul next week, will talk with the South Korean government about the investigation, Assistant Secretary Campbell said. Clinton will also visit Japan and China during her trip, and the North Korean issue is likely to be high on the agenda. Clinton will have “the closest possible consultations with Japan, China and South Korea about the next phase,” added by: onemalefla

Tokyo Couple Exchanged Vows Before A Robot

Japan has hosted the world’s first wedding to be conducted by a robot. I-Fairy is an automated creature who conducted the wedding of Tomohiro Shibata and Satoko Inoue in Tokyo, Japan. Since the couple is connected to the thriving robotic industry, they have decided to use the robot to wed them. They said that the robot had brought them together, so it’s just appropriate to have one officiate at their wedding. It’s their natural choice. During the ceremony, I-Fairy a robot which officiate the wedding has flashing eyes and plastic pigtails. It instructed the groom to lift the bride’s veil for the kiss. The wedding was held in a rooftop restaurant in the Japanese capital. Tokyo Couple Exchanged Vows Before A Robot is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Huge Silk Chinese Painting “Achensee” Price Hits Record High of $15 Million Dollars

Last Monday, a huge silk Chinese painting by Zhang Daqian, one of the best-known Chinese artists of the 20th century, went for nearly 15 million U.S. dollars. According to Guo Tong, general manager of Guardian’s modern and contemporary Chinese painting and calligraphy department, the painting “Achensee” — auctioned at the China Guardian 2010 Spring Auctions Monday night — was sold for 100.8 million yuan (about 14.7 million U.S. dollars), Guo Tong added that this was the first time that a modern contemporary Chinese painting had gone for over 100 million Yuan. The Sild Chinese Painting “Achensee” measured 264.2 centimeters long and 76.2 centimeters wide. This was painted in 1968 by Zhang Dagian, inspired by his visit to Lake Aachensee in Europe, and has been exhibited in New York, Boston and Chicago. The landscape painting is widely recognized as a masterpiece. Further information from Guo Tong, this is the first time the painting “Achensee” has gone on the market and the price revealed collectors’ enthusiasm. Huge Silk Chinese Painting “Achensee” Price Hits Record High of $15 Million Dollars is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Nuestra Belleza Latina 2010 Pics and Clips

These ladies are simply gorgeous! The women of Nuestra Belleza Latina 2010 are simply amazing! Never have I seen women this beautiful with such voluptuous curves. The ladies of N uestra Belleza Latina 2010 are one of a kind. Find links to Nuestra Belleza Latina 2010 to see these women in their sexy bikinis. The Nuestra Belleza Latina 2010 winners, highlights, pictures, videos and clips are available on the link Nuestra Belleza Latina 2010 Pics and Clips is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading