2014年12月24日 星期三

Week 7- Hong Kong, occupation

Hong Kong protests: What changed at Mong Kok?


Clashes have erupted again in Hong Kong after the authorities moved in to clear protest camps. For two months pro-democracy activists have occupied various parts of the territory, and protests have occasionally turned violent.


Why are the authorities cracking down now?
Since the street occupations began in September in three key spots - Mong Kok, Admiralty and Causeway Bay - the authorities have largely tolerated protesters.
But the High Court began granting injunctions to businesses and industry groups to clear roads in November, triggering a round of clearances by bailiffs and the police.
The first clearance in Admiralty on 18 November passed off peacefully.
But clashes erupted the following week when the authorities demolished the entire Mong Kok camp.
Student protesters accused the police of violence, and tried to shut down government offices in Admiralty on 1 December, prompting a strong response from the police.
Another injunction has been granted to clear a section of Connaught and Harcourt Roads - the major stronghold of protesters.
The students have insisted that public opinion is still on their side, but the numbers at protest sites and polls indicate that the public has grown increasingly weary of the disruption and unrest.
At its peak, the pro-democracy movement saw tens of thousands of Hong Kong residents from all walks of life take to the streets. Two months on, just a few hundred remain camped out in tent cities, most of whom are students and young workers.
Meanwhile, a mid-November poll done by the University of Hong Kong's public opinion programme found that a majority of respondents did not support the protests.
A majority also backed the Hong Kong government's clearance of the sites, though some believed that it could allocate other areas for protesters.
Student leaders have also found it difficult to make headway. Earlier talks with city officials proved fruitless, an attempt to travel to Beijing was blocked by Hong Kong authorities, and two leaders - Joshua Wong and Lester Shum - were arrested for obstructing police in Mong Kok and are now out on bail.
On 2 December, three of the co-founders of the Occupy Central movement called for protesters to retreat. The three turned themselves in to a police station the next day, though the authorities have not charged them with any offence.


What is the Chinese government saying?
China's central government has continuously condemned the ongoing street occupations, and state-controlled mainland media outlets have accused pro-democracy activists of "intensifying" the crisis with the latest clash.
One of the Hong Kong business groups that has taken out an injunction to clear the protest sites is a joint-venture controlled by Chinese state-owned Citic Group.
Though it remains unclear whether Beijing had a direct hand in the applications, many in the business sector - which is increasingly reliant on China - have opposed the protests since day one, on the grounds that it would hurt the economy and anger Beijing.


Structure of The Lead:

What---the street occupations in Hong Kong
When---in September
Who---the students, young workers and residents in Hong Kong
Why---the authorities moved in to clear protest camps
Where---Hong Kong

Keywords:

1. granting---發放
2. injunctions---禁令
3. triggering---觸發
4. clearances---間隙
5. bailiffs---法警
6. demolished---拆除
7. allocate---分配
8. obstructing---阻礙
9. reliant---信賴的


http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-29054196

2014年12月17日 星期三

Week 6- Jackie Chan's son Jaycee in drug arrest

Jackie Chan's son Jaycee in drug arrest

The son of Hollywood actor Jackie Chan has been arrested on drug-related charges 

19 August 2014

Actor Jaycee Chan, 31, and Taiwanese movie star Kai Ko, 23, were detained last Thursday, Beijing police said in a statement on their official microblog.
Police said both men tested positive for marijuana, with more than 100 grams of the drug found at Mr Chan's home.
Their arrest comes amid an ongoing crackdown on drugs which has already netted several celebrity figures.
Gao Hu, 40, who appeared in the 2011 Zhang Yimou film "The Flowers of War", was detained earlier this month for possession of marijuana and methamphetamines, state media said.

'Huge influence'
In June, Chinese President Xi Jinping called for "forceful measures" to tackle illegal drug use.
By arresting the son of one of the country's most famous actors, the Chinese authorities are sending a clear sign that drugs will not be tolerated, reports the BBC's Martin Patience in Beijing.
A government anti-drug advisor told the Associated Press news agency that Chinese celebrities were being targeted because of the "huge influence" their behavior had on "their large numbers of fans".
Beijing Municipal Anti-Drug Office deputy director Jin Zhihai however, said that police were not specifically targeting celebrities.
"If there is an increased crackdown on drugs, the number of celebrity offenders will also rise," he told the Beijing Times on 14 August.
Last week, 42 artist management agencies in Beijing signed an agreement with police pledging not to recruit celebrities with reported drug use problems.

'Very big mistake'
Mr Chan, whose father Jackie was named an official "Narcotics Control Ambassador" by Chinese police in 2009, had been put under "criminal detention" for the suspected crime of "providing a shelter for others to abuse drugs", Beijing police said.
If convicted, he faces a maximum prison term of three years.
Mr Ko, a Taiwanese actor and singer, won the best new actor award in 2011 at the Golden Horse film awards - known as the Oscars of the Chinese-language film industry. He also won a Chinese Film Media award for his role in the movie "You Are the Apple of My Eye".
Accused of consuming drugs, Mr Ko had received a two-week detention term, his management firm Star Ritz Productions said.
"I feel very regretful, very sorry to all the people who support me. I've been a very bad example, I've made a very big mistake," he said in an interview broadcast on Chinese state television on Tuesday.
Beijing police also said two other people, a 36-year-old assistant and a 33-year-old suspected dealer, were detained in the incident.
Mr Chan's management firm M'Stones International apologised on his behalf for the "social impact" caused and said they would "supervise his rehabilitation and help him return to the right path".
His father Jackie has not yet commented on the incident but his publicist told the Associated Press news agency that Mr Chan had travelled to Beijing to deal with his son's arrest.

Structure of  The Lead :

What---Jackie Chan's son Jaycee in drug arrest
When---19 August 2014
Why---Jaycee Chan and Kai Ko has been arrested on drug-related charges 
Who---Jaycee Chan and Kai Ko
Where---China

Keywords :

1. marijuana---大麻
2. crackdown---嚴打
3. methamphetamines---甲基苯丙胺
4. tolerated---容忍
5. deputy---副
6. You Are the Apple of My Eye---那些年,我們一起追的女孩
7. rehabilitation---復原
8. publicist---公關

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-28848199

2014年12月10日 星期三

Week 5-Kaohsiung gas pipeline explosion

Taiwan gas explosion kills dozens

Hundreds more injured as streets of Kaohsiung are ripped open by petrochemical pipeline blast 

Friday 1 August 2014

At least 24 people have been killed and 271 others injured when several underground gas explosions ripped through Taiwan's second-largest city overnight, hurling concrete through the air and blasting long trenches in the streets.
The series of explosions about midnight Thursday and early Friday struck a district where several petrochemical plans operate pipelines alongside the sewer system of Kaohsiung, a south-western port with 2.8 million people.
The fires were believed to have been caused by a leak of propene, a petrochemical material not intended for public use, but the source of the gas was not immediately clear, officials said.
Video from the TVBS broadcaster showed residents searching for victims in shattered storefronts and rescuers pulling injured people from the rubble of a road and placing them on stretchers while passersby helped other victims on a sidewalk. Broadcaster ETTV showed rows of large fires sending smoke into the night sky.
Four firefighters were among the 24 dead and 271 people were injured, the National Fire Agency said. The firefighters had been at the scene investigating reports of a gas leak when the explosions occurred, Taiwan's Central News Agency reported.
At least five blasts shook the city, said Taiwan's Premier Jiang Yi-huah.
Chang Jia-juch, the director of the Central Disaster Emergency Operation Center, said the leaking gas was most likely to be propene, meaning that the resulting fires could not be extinguished by water. He said emergency workers would have to wait until the gas was burnt away.
The source of the leak was unknown. Chang said, however, that propene was not for public use and that it was a petrochemical material.
The Kaohsiung mayor, Chen Chu, said several petrochemical companies had pipelines built along the sewage system in Chian-Chen district, which has both factories and residential buildings. "Our priority is to save people now. We ask citizens living along the pipelines to evacuate," Chen told TVBS television.
Power was cut off in the area, making it difficult for firefighters to search for others who might be buried in rubble.
Channel NewsAsia said the local fire department received reports from residents of gas leakage at about 8.46pm and explosions started around midnight.
Closed-circuit television showed an explosion rippling through the floor of a motorcycle parking area, hurling concrete and other debris through the air. Mobile phone video captured the sound of an explosion as flames leapt at least nine metres (30ft) into the air.
One of the explosions left a large trench running down the center of a road, edged with piles of concrete slabs torn apart by the force of the blast. A damaged motorcycle lay in the crater and TVBS showed cars flipped over. The force of the initial blast also felled trees lining the street.

Structure of The Lead :

Who---people lived in Kaohsiung
What---24 people have been killed and 271 others injured
When---midnight Thursday (7/31) and early Friday (8/1)
Why---several underground gas explosions
Where---Kaohsiung

Keywords :

1.concrete---具體
2.trenches---壕溝
3.petrochemical---石油化的
4.propene---丙烯
5.shattered---打碎
6.storefronts---店面
7.leak---洩漏
8.extinguished---熄滅
9.sewage---污水
10.rubble---瓦礫

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/31/taiwan-city-kaohsiung-gas-explosion

2014年11月12日 星期三

Week 4- Ice Bucket Challenge.ALS

Here’s What’s Happening With the Ice Bucket Challenge Money

Justin Worland  Nov. 4, 2014

The ALS Foundation is tripling the money spent on research

New research projects across the country dedicated to solving ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, have begun to receive millions of dollars in additional funding thanks to this year’s Ice Bucket Challenge. The funding marks the ALS Association’s first move toward distributing the $115 million it raised to fight the disease.
“We are tripling the amount annually that we spend on research,” said ALS Association President Barbara Newhouse. “We have a sense of urgency, but we also we recognize that we have to be good stewards of the donor dollars as we move this forward as quickly as researchers can research.”
Some of the first projects to receive funding include one trying to sequence the genes of 15,000 people with ALS, one partnering with pharmaceutical companies to advance drug treatment, and one developing gene therapy that might reduce the spread of the disease through the body. Hospitals and labs around the world that have received funding are Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles, the University of California San Francisco, the New York Genome Center and others. The ALS Association has distributed more than $20 million so far and has committed to seeing any project it’s funded through to completion.
"In addition to funding research, the Ice Bucket Challenge money will be used to improve treatment for people living with disease," Newhouse said.
Despite the organization’s now-deeper pockets, Newhouse insists that it will take time before the group will determine fully how to best leverage its influx in cash. Newhouse said she’s been “inundated with proposals” for research projects, and they continue to arrive in her inbox.
“It’s been amazing how many people have come out of the woodwork to say ‘I have the answer,’” she said. “We’re trying to sort through what’s fact and what’s fiction.”
And, while $100 million represents a marked increase in funding for the fight against ALS, Newhouse said it’s more of a starting point than the key to a solution.
Newhouse thinks the funding could lead to a breakthrough—”I’m always a glass half-full kind of person,” she said. “But we would be kidding ourselves if anybody believed that $100 million is going to be all that’s needed to find an effective treatment.”

Structure of the Lead :

Who---The ALS Foundation
Why---distribute money to fight the disease, ALS
What---donate money to people who have ALS by Ice Bucket Challenge 
When---Nov. 4, 2014
Where---all over the world

Keywords :

1.      urgency---急迫性
2.      steward---管理員
3.      pharmaceutical---製藥的
4.      completion---完成
5.      leverage---槓桿作用
6.      sort---分類
7.    ALS---漸凍人肌萎縮性脊髓側索硬化症

2014年11月5日 星期三

Week 3 -nuclear power plant stop construction

Protesters stop Taiwan nuclear plant construction

Monday 28 Apr 2014 1:23 p.m.

Taiwan will stop construction at a controversial nuclear power plant after tens of thousands of protesters blockaded a main street in the capital calling for it to be scrapped. 
Demonstrators broke a police cordon to take control of a busy eight-lane intersection demanding an end to construction of the "Nuke Four" power station outside Taipei. Later on Sunday the ruling Kuomintang party yielded to pressure and promised to stop the work.
"There will be no further construction of reactor one," Kuomintang spokesman Fan Chiang Tai-chi told reporters.
"Only safety checks will be done and after that it will be sealed for storage. Construction of reactor two will be terminated," he said.
"In the future, any of its commercial operation will be decided by a referendum."
Protest leaders said on Sunday night they were meeting to discuss the announcement.

Chanting crowds gathered on Sunday morning in the square outside the presidential palace where some protesters had already staged an overnight sit-in.
Demonstrators then marched to nearby Chung-Shiao West Road - an eight-lane artery adjacent the main railway station - and swarmed through police lines to occupy the street, bringing traffic to a halt.
Around half an hour later, the outnumbered riot police, who had offered no resistance, retreated to wild applause from the crowd.
Buses and other vehicles were forced to detour around the intersection and traffic ground to a halt.
Police put protester numbers at around 28,500.
The demonstrators are pledging to continue their sit-in until Tuesday, when parliament is due to meet to discuss the power plant.
The power station has been one of the most contentious projects in Taiwan. Intense political wrangling has repeatedly delayed its construction, which began in 1999 and has already cost around TW$300 billion (NZ$11.5 billion).

Structure of the Lead :

Who---demonstrators and parliament
What---Taiwan will stop construction at a controversial nuclear power plant
Why---tens of thousands of protesters calling for stopping nuclear power plant construction
Where---Taiwan
When---Sunday 27 to Tuesday 29 Apr 2014
How---blockaded a main street in the capital

Keywords :

1.controversial---爭論的
2.blockaded---封鎖
3.demonstrators---示威者
4.cordon---警戒線
5.terminated---終止
6.referendum---公投
7.adjacent---鄰里的
8.detour---繞行
9.pledge---誓言
10.parliament---議會

http://www.3news.co.nz/world/protesters-stop-taiwan-nuclear-plant-construction-2014042813

2014年10月29日 星期三

Week 2- Malaysia Airlines MH370, missing

Malaysian Official Denies Report That Missing Jet Flew for Hours


Charlie Campbell  March 13, 2014

Malaysia’s defense minister denied reports  Thursday that the Missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 may have stayed airborne for as much as four hours after it was lost from radar screens, the Associated Press reports.

The Wall Street Journal reported earlier Thursday that U.S. investigators and national-security officials believe that data automatically downloaded and sent to a maintenance-and-monitoring program from the aircraft’s two Rolls-Royce Trent 800 engines indicated that the plane may have remained in the air for much longer than previously believed.
That would mean the plane may have traveled more than 2,000 additional nautical miles, reaching points as far as the Pakistani border or even the Arabian Sea, said the Journal.
Acting Defense Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said that Rolls-Royce and Boeing, the maker of the Boeing 777, had denied the report, according to the AP.

Erin Atan, Rolls-Royce head of Asia-Pacific and Middle East communications, was unable to confirm or deny the Wall Street Journal reporter earlier when contacted by TIME, citing the terms of sharing information relating to an official accident investigation.

“We are monitoring the situation, and we have offered Malaysia Airlines and related parties all cooperation from the outset,” she said, naturally raising questions as to why this information, if accurate, was not shared with passengers’ families earlier. On Wednesday, U.S. officials told AFP that American spy satellites detected no sign of a mid-air explosion when the jet vanished. Heat signatures from exploding aircraft have been used as a clue in previous incidents but none was spotted in this case, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The Wall Street Journal report appeared to widen rather than shrink the search for Flight 370, which has entered its sixth day. Debris spotted in the South China Sea by Chinese satellites on Sunday — but only released overnight — has since been dismissed by Vietnamese officials who claim the area had already been “searched thoroughly.”

India has also now agreed to help out with efforts. “Malaysia and India are in contact on this since yesterday and contact points are being discussed. These contact points will ascertain what assistance is required and what India can offer,” a spokesman at New Delhi’s Foreign Ministry said on Wednesday.
India boasts a large military command in its territory in the Andaman and Nicobar islands and operates navy patrols in the busy shipping routes of the Malacca Strait.

Flight 370 took off from the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur at 12:41 a.m. on Saturday, heading for Beijing, with 227 passengers and 12 crew on board. Contact with Malaysian air-traffic control was lost after some 40 minutes over the Gulf of Thailand, at a height of around 10,700 m.

Vietnamese air-traffic control says the plane never entered its airspace, and conflicting reports have emerged that it may have turned back and been spotted by military radar on the northeastern side of the Malay Peninsula by Pulau Perak. No distress call was received. A dozen countries are taking part in the search, with 42 ships and 39 aircraft involved. But efforts have been plagued with confusion and contradictory reports, and complaints increasingly hurled at the Malaysian authorities.

At his end of Congress press conference on Thursday, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang revealed that the superpower had eight boats and 10 satellites trying to locate the plane. “As long as there is a glimmer of hope, we will not stop searching for the plane,” he told reporters gathered at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People. Of the 239 people on board, 153 were Chinese.


Structure of the Lead :

Who---Charlie Campbell
When---March 13, 2014
What---Missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 may have stayed airborne for as much as four hours after it was lost from radar screens
Why---Malaysian air-traffic control was lost
Where---Malaysia

Keywords :

1.      radar---雷達
2.      maintenance-and-monitoring---維護和監控
3.      nautical---航海天文
4.      spy---間諜
5.      signatures---簽名
6.      shrink---縮小
7.      ascertain---查明
8.      plagued---困擾
9.      contradictory---矛盾
10.  glimmer---微光

http://time.com/22814/missing-jet-may-have-flown-for-extra-four-hours/

2014年10月22日 星期三

Week1 -Cross-strait service trade pact

Cross-strait service trade pact signed

By Mo Yan-chih  /  Staff reporter
The Straits Exchange Foundation and the Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) yesterday signed a cross-strait service trade agreement in Shanghai during the ninth round of cross-strait talks, opening the service sectors on both sides to further cross-strait exchanges.
Under the pact, which includes four chapters and 24 articles, 64 Taiwanese industries will be opened to Chinese investment, while China will open up 80 industries to Taiwan.
The Taiwanese industries include transportation, tourism and traditional Chinese medicine, while China will open up its finance, retail, electronics, publishing and travel sectors.
Under the agreement, Chinese investors will be allowed to open hotels in Taiwan.
Taiwan will also allow Chinese travel agencies to establish a maximum of three branches in the country and provide services to Taiwanese. However, they will not be allowed to accommodate any foreign tourists, including Chinese.
Taiwanese investors will be allowed to set up travel agencies in China, as well as open restaurants or hotels.
Chinese companies will be allowed to open beauty parlors or hair salons in Taiwan, but would only be allowed to employ Taiwanese.
While China will open its publishing industry to Taiwanese investment, Taiwan will allow Chinese companies to invest in Taiwanese businesses in the printing service industry, with a maximum of 50 percent stock ownership.
On financial services, Taiwanese companies will be allowed to invest security companies in Shanghai, in Shenzhen and Chinese-controlled Fujian Province.
In signing the pact, foundation Chairman Lin Join-sane (林中森) and ARATS Chairman Chen Deming (陳德銘) both lauded the agreement for deepening cross-strait exchanges in the service sector.
Lin said 80 percent of the deal opens the two sides’ service sectors to the same or greater degree as the Closer Economic Partnership Arrangement (CEPA) that was signed between Hong Kong and China in 2003, with 90 percent of financial services covered in the cross-strait agreement opened, just like in the CEPA.
The cross-strait service trade agreement is a major follow-up to the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) and the General Agreement on Trade in Services under the WTO.
“The service trade agreement is a pact that benefits related sectors across the Taiwan Strait and promotes the interests of the public on both sides. It will result in a win-win situation for both sides,” Lin said.
After signing the pact, Taiwan and China cannot revise or cancel the agreement within the next three years.
The two sides will hold an annual meeting to review the implementation of the pact.
The agreement also includes an emergency negotiation mechanism, which gives related industries from each side the right to demand negotiations and seek solutions if the agreement negatively affects their businesses sectors.
This story has been viewed 5289 times.

Structure of the Lead

Who---The Straits Exchange Foundation and the the Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits
What---signed a cross-strait service trade agreement during the ninth round of cross-strait talks, opening the service sectors on both sides to further cross-strait exchanges.
When---yesterday
Why---The service trade agreement is a pact that benefits related sectors across the Taiwan Strait and promotes the interests of the public on both sides. It will result in a win-win situation for both sides.
Where--- Shanghai
Keywords

1.The Straits Exchange Foundation---財團法人海峽交流基金會
2.Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits---海峽兩岸關係協會
3.cross-strait service trade agreement---海峽兩岸服貿協議
4.sector---行業
5.laud---讚美
6.Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement---海峽兩岸經濟合作架構協議
7.revise---修改
8.implementation---履行
9.negotiation---談判
10.mechanism---機制

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2013/06/22/2003565371