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/ 31 July 2007

Drought hits 1,2-million in central China

More than 1,2-million people in the central Chinese province of Hunan are facing a ”water crisis” after four weeks of drought and high temperatures, which are also straining power-generating capacity, state media said on Tuesday. Hunan has received 25% less rain than normal and about half of its two million water-storage facilities are half-empty.

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/ 27 July 2007

China defends Darfur stance as pressure grows

China defended its stance on Darfur on Friday and urged patience as Western critics warned that Beijing’s reluctance to back stronger action in the troubled Sudanese region could blight Olympic Games goodwill. China has pressed Sudan to accept United Nations peacekeepers alongside African Union forces struggling to quell bloodshed in Darfur.

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/ 27 July 2007

Chinese correspondent AWOL in Zimbabwe

A correspondent for China’s international radio station who has not been seen since apparently abandoning his post in Zimbabwe was officially warned on Thursday to return to work. China Radio International posted a notice in the <i>China Daily</i> newspaper saying that Cheng Qinghua "left his post without authorisation" on April 20.

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/ 23 July 2007

Let them eat mice

The business management philosophy that one person’s crisis is another’s opportunity may perhaps never have been taken to such bizarre extremes. A plague of two billion mice in central China was described just days ago as being so bad that it resembled a scene from a horror movie, with hillsides turned black with rodents.

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/ 22 July 2007

Floods kill at least 100 across China

More than 100 people have died in floods and landslides in China where dykes protecting a swollen river in the east, which has already prompted tens of thousands to flee their homes, are in danger of being breached. Severe flooding has hit about half of China since the start of the summer, killing hundreds in what has become the deadliest rainy season in years.

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/ 18 July 2007

Storm kills 37 in south-west China

Thirty-seven people died in a 16-hour thunder storm in south-west China that caused heavy flooding and brought air, road and rail traffic to a halt, the government and state media said on Wednesday. Chongqing municipality received 266,6mm of rain between Monday night and Tuesday afternoon, the largest volume since records began in 1892, Xinhua news agency said.

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/ 18 July 2007

UN confirms North Korea nuclear shutdown

The United Nations nuclear watchdog said on Wednesday that North Korea had shut down its nuclear reactor and four related facilities, a major step in efforts to get it to give up its nuclear-weapons programmes. The announcement came as negotiators at six-party talks on North Korea’s nuclear-weapons programme sat down to a first day of talks in Beijing.

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/ 9 July 2007

China weighs damage from food safety scares

China risks damaging its global credibility if it does not tackle its food and drug quality problems, an official newspaper said amid a series of health scares. China’s safety failings have drawn world attention since mislabelled chemical exports were found in cough syrup in Panama and pet food in the United States.

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/ 3 July 2007

Beijing says food will be safe for athletes, tourists

Athletes and visitors heading to Beijing for the Olympics should not be concerned by recent Chinese food scandals, as many safety measures are being put in place for the Games, city officials said. International alarm over Chinese food exports has been building for weeks amid reports of toxic produce endangering lives in the United States and other countries.

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/ 28 June 2007

Olympics: Beijing to ban cabbies with shaved heads

Beijing’s long-suffering taxi-drivers are in the cross-hairs once again — with shaved heads to be banned from the driving seat ahead of next year’s Beijing Olympics, a report said on Thursday. Just two months after women taxi drivers were banned from wearing "too-fancy" hairstyles, new rules will outlaw beards and shaved heads for the men.

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/ 26 June 2007

Dozens killed by lightning in China

At least 48 people have been killed in rainstorms in southern and eastern China over the last five days, with 37 succumbing to lightning strikes, state media reported on Tuesday. Twelve people remain missing following the storms, which drenched areas, including the lower reaches of the Yangtze River, the Xinhua news agency said.

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/ 13 June 2007

Top fossil hunter finds giant bird-like dinosaur

One of the world’s top fossil hunters unveiled a previously unknown gigantic, chicken-like dinosaur on Wednesday that may change evolutionary theory on prehistoric animals. The remains of the animal, thought to have weighed 1 400kg, was discovered in a freak find by Xing Xu in the Erlian basin in Inner Mongolia.

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/ 12 June 2007

What’s in a name? Maybe a lot more in China

Police in China, where most of the 1,3-billion people share just 100 surnames, are considering rules which would combine both parents’ family names to prevent so much duplication, state media said on Tuesday. At least 100 000 people share the name ”Wang Tao”, the China Daily said, citing the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

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/ 4 June 2007

China says 180 000 evacuated after earthquake

About 180 000 people have been evacuated from their homes in China’s south-west following a powerful earthquake that killed at least three and injured 313, the official Xinhua agency said on Monday. The tremor shook the tea-producing city of Pu’er early on Sunday morning, bringing down over 90 000 rooms and crushing a four-year-old boy.