Showing posts with label BEIJING. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BEIJING. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

DTN News - 2012 Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Summit: Leaders Gather For The Family Photo At Great Hall Of The People In Beijing

DTN News - 2012 Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Summit: Leaders Gather For The Family Photo At Great Hall Of The People In Beijing 

(NSI News Source Info) TORONTO, Canada - June 6, 2012: Uzbekistan's President Islam Karimov, Kyrgyzstan President Almazbek Sharshenovich Atambayev, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Hu Jintao, Kazakhstan's President Nursultan Nazarbayev and Tajikistan's President Emomali Rakhmon gather for the family photo at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on June 6, 2012, at the start of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit. 

Security in Central Asia, including the situation in Afghanistan, is set to be the focus of talks at a meeting in Beijing of a regional group dominated by China and Russia. (Photo - Getty)

Monday, April 23, 2012

DTN News - DEFENSE NEWS: Chinese Firm Suspected In Missile-Linked Sale To North Korea According To U.S. official

DTN News - DEFENSE NEWS: Chinese Firm Suspected In Missile-Linked Sale To North Korea According To U.S. official

(NSI News Source Info) TORONTO, Canada - April 23, 2012: The United States believes a Chinese firm sold North Korea components for a missile transporter showcased in a recent military parade and will press Beijing to tighten enforcement of a U.N. ban on such military sales, a U.S. official said on Saturday.

The Obama administration suspects the Chinese manufacturer sold the chassis - not the entire vehicle - and may have believed it was for civilian purposes, which means it would not be an intentional violation of U.N. sanctions, the senior official said.

But such a sale - coming to light amid tensions over a failed North Korean rocket launch earlier this month - raises concerns in Washington on whether China is making enough of an effort to abide by the prohibition on weapons sales to Pyongyang.

The New York Times first reported on U.S. findings about the origin of parts of the transporter launcher system - essentially a large truck on top of which a missile is mounted - displayed in a parade in Pyongyang on Sunday.

The newspaper said the administration suspected the Chinese manufacturer involved in the transaction was Hubei Sanjiang. The official, who confirmed details of the administration's thinking on the matter, said the firm likely sold the part to a front company that was used to mask the buyer's true identity.

Beijing, reclusive North Korea's only major ally, has denied it has broken any rules, although a modern, eight-axle missile transporter spotted in the military parade to celebrate the founder of North Korea was said by some western military experts to be of Chinese design and possibly origin.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

DTN News - CHINA NEWS: Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra With Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao Review A Honor Guard And Is On Official Visit To China

DTN News - CHINA NEWS: Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra With Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao Review A Honor Guard And Is On Official Visit To China

(NSI News Source Info) TORONTO, Canada - April 17, 2012: Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (L) and Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra (R) review the Chinese military honor guard during an official welcoming ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on April 17, 2012.

 Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra is on a four-day official visit to China. (Photo - Getty)

Saturday, April 14, 2012

DTN News - DEFENSE NEWS: The Coming War With China

DTN News - DEFENSE NEWS: The Coming War With China

(NSI News Source Info) TORONTO, Canada - April 14, 2012: Is China a peaceful nation that only wants to turn out Apple iPads and iPhones? Or is the Middle Kingdom bent on attacking the U.S.? Beijing is the long, and strong, pole in the tent for the U.S. military – and they know it. China is the new Soviet Union, and perhaps it should be.

But is there a downside to view Beijing through such a lens? (Congress has created the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission to track China’s growing clout [remember when the CIA was our chief threat exaggerator?] It also compels the Pentagon to report annually on Chinese military threats [remember when, for good or for ill, we counted on the Defense Intelligence Agency to keep track of such things?])

Do such assessments only create a self-fulfilling prophecy (self-fulfilling prophecy: something that allows the self-licking ice-cream cone, with apologizes to John Cameron Swayze, to keep on licking)? Perhaps not. After all, former Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger’s multi-colored annual editions of Soviet Military Power — which portrayed the Soviet Union as a military superpower during the 1980s as the Pentagon, DIA and CIA missed its internal rot — hardly strengthened the Red Army.

http://defense-technologynews.blogspot.ca/2012/04/dtn-news-defense-news-coming-war-with.html

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

DTN News - CHINA NEWS: Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan In Beijing China

DTN News - CHINA NEWS: Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan In Beijing China

(NSI News Source Info) TORONTO, Canada - April 11, 2012: Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (L) and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (R) review the Chinese military honor guards during the welcoming ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, April 9, 2012. 

Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is paying the first official visit to China by a Turkish premier in 27 years from April 8 to 10.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

DTN News - CHINA DEFENSE NEWS: Chinese Military And Ethnic Minority Delegates Arrive For Final Session Of National People's Congress At Great Hall Of The People In Beijing

DTN News - CHINA DEFENSE NEWS: Chinese Military And Ethnic Minority Delegates Arrive For Final Session Of National People's Congress At Great Hall Of The People In Beijing

(NSI News Source Info) TORONTO, Canada - March 14, 2012: Military and ethnic minority delegates arrive for the final session of the National People's Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on March 14, 2012.

 Chinese lawmakers on March 14 passed into law controversial changes that give police powers to detain some suspects for up to six months in so-called 'black jails'.

DTN News - CHINA DEFENSE NEWS: Chinese Military Delegates Gather On Tiananmen Square Prior To Final Session Of National People's Congress At Great Hall Of The People In Beijing


DTN News - CHINA DEFENSE NEWS: Chinese Military Delegates Gather On Tiananmen Square Prior To Final Session Of National People's Congress At Great Hall Of The People In Beijing


(NSI News Source Info) TORONTO, Canada - March 14, 2012: Chinese military delegates gather on Tiananmen Square prior to the final session of the National People's Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on March 14, 2012.


Chinese lawmakers on March 14 passed into law controversial changes that give police powers to detain some suspects for up to six months in so-called 'black jails'


http://defense-technologynews.blogspot.com/ 



Friday, March 9, 2012

DTN News - CHINA DEFENSE NEWS: Chinese Military Personnel Arrive For National People's Congress At Great Hall Of The People In Beijing

DTN News - CHINA DEFENSE NEWS: Chinese Military Personnel Arrive For National People's Congress At Great Hall Of The People In Beijing

(NSI News Source Info) TORONTO, Canada - March 9, 2012: Senior Chinese military personnel arrive for the second plenary session of the National People's Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, Friday, March 9, 2012. 

China's government vowed Friday that it will not deviate from its socialist path, defending anew its authoritarian system and saying Western capitalist political systems are not suitable for China.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

The ten oddest former Olympic events

To continue Olympic theme on my blog, I present the article from Observer Sports Monthly published for Athene's Olympics in 2004. I do believe it still be interesting 4 years latter, during Beijing Olympics of 2008. Enjoy!

Ceri David
Sunday August 1, 2004
Observer Sport Monthly


1 Tug of war
1900-1920

Entertainment for West Country cider heads during the summer fête? Tell that to the ancient Greeks, renowned for their physical and intellectual stamina, who staged their first tug in 500BC. In modern Olympic rules, a team of eight had to pull the opposition six feet to win, but if no such drama had occurred after five minutes, the side who had pulled their opponents the furthest triumphed. London 1908 saw the sport at its most intense, when America were beaten in just a few short seconds by Great Britain. The unhappy losers accused Team GB, all of them policemen, of wearing illegal spiked boots, so we offered them a rematch in our socks ... and still stuffed them.


2 Motor boating
1908

Britannia ruled the waves all right, or at least we did until the solitary appearance of motor boating at the Games. Rome, the original choice for 1908, had gone into a suitable panic following the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, so London stepped in to host the event, bringing some brand new sea toys along for the party. There were three categories - the eight-metre, 60-foot and open class - and average speeds were almost funereal, hovering around the underwhelming 19mph mark. To make matters even less appealing, virtually no one could see the action, which took place off Southampton. Lousy British weather meant six out of the nine scheduled races were cancelled. A first-rate flop all round, then, and never to be repeated.

3 Cricket
1900

The gentleman's game was so unpopular at the turn of the last century that only two nations competed at the games in Paris: Great Britain and France. L'equipe francaise was comprised almost entirely of ringers: British Embassy staff who secured a few days off from the office. A report summed up the hopelessly one-sided contest (England won the two-innings match by 158 runs) thus: 'The French temperament is too excitable to enjoy the game and no Frenchman can be persuaded to play more than once.' More significantly, no one on the Olympic committee could be persuaded that cricket should stay in the games.

4 Club swinging
1904, 1932

Not in fact a night out for bored couples, but an event that involved swinging a club festooned with ribbons very quickly around the body and head, in a complicated routine. At the 1932 Games, American George Roth displayed a level of dedication seldom seen in the modern Olympic era. It was the Great Depression and Roth was unemployed and hungry. Yet he won gold. Seconds after being awarded his medal in front of 60,000 spectators, he walked out of the stadium in Los Angeles and hitchhiked home.

5 Solo synchronised swimming
1992

This exercise in stupidity sneaked its way on to the O-list in 1984, only to be cast out in 1992. Perhaps this had something to do with the fact that one lonely person floating in a pool could never, would never, be in sync with anyone else (pedants maintain that it's the choreography that is synchronised with the music). Whatever, it's no big loss, and the strange smiles, nose clips and pointless treading of water linger on, courtesy of the two- and eight-person team events.

6 Tumbling
1932

Certain black-and-white era mat events (hands up callisthenics) had all the acrobatic verve of school gymnastics certificate six, which, I recall, featured skills as demanding as the 'forward roll' and the gravity-defying 'standing up'. Tumbling, however, was no such primary-school farce. American Rowland 'Flip' Wolfe took gold in Los Angeles thanks to his revolutionary backflip with double twist, only to see the event flick-flack off the floor and into gymnastic history.

7 Rope climb
1896, 1904, 1906, 1924, 1932

How long is a piece of string? In this case, anywhere between 7.62m and 14m, depending on which year you were competing. The object of the 'climb' was to shin up to the top of your rope. This was no easy task: only two of the 1896 climbers made it to the summit, prompting officials to send the rope back for alterations. Yet whatever the length of the rope, this event was a crowd-pleaser. For a modern-day equivalent, you need look no further than to the heyday of Gladiators . And, indeed, the two were linked by a common, tragic fate: both spectacles were unceremoniously dumped.

8 Live pigeon shooting
1900

For a country that happily permits dogs to dine in restaurants, though not on the table, France has an alarming track record when it comes to animal cruelty. Quel surprise , then, that Paris 1900 featured the only Olympic event in history at which animals were deliberately harmed: 300 poor, defenceless pigeons, to be precise. Pest control fans watched in awe as Belgium's Leon de Lunden (above) won gold, bagging himself a healthy 21 birds and, presumably, a place on the RSPB's most wanted list.

9 Pistol duelling
1906

Before Olympic anoraks start writing letters, we know the 1906 Intercalated games don't count as an official Olympiad (see Rationale). But this one entry is too good to leave out. Instead of shooting at each other, participants shot at dummies in fancy frock coats with a bullseye embroidered on the chest. The event never appeared on the Olympic list again, but qualifies here for its exhilarating oddity.

10 Long jump for horses
1900

Yes, this was an event for horses, although it is not clear whether the beasts themselves ever mounted the podium to collect their own medals. From an animal as lean, powerful and disciplined as the horse, one would expect Eddie Kidd bus-jumping antics, but, in fact, these equine leaps were a tad more modest. Extra Dry won the contest at the Paris Olympics with a jump of 20 feet and a quarter of an inch. Putting it into perspective, that's 2.63 metres shy of the current world record. For humans.

Friday, August 8, 2008

Beijing Olimpics


Today is opening ceremony for Beijing Olympics. The day it is starts is significant for Chinese because of repetition of number eight (08-08-2008). The word for "eight" in Mandarin sounds similar to the word which means "prosper" or "wealth". In regional dialects the words for "eight" and "fortune" are also similar, eg Cantonese "baat" and "faat". Couple of cool Olympic maps in honer of the day. The image below is a Soviet post envelope dedicated to Moscow Olimpics back in 1980. Moscow was my home town during that time.