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China Digest : 3rd February 2015

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Around the nation: Man drinks himself into coma at business dinner


PUBLISHED : Monday, 02 February, 2015, 8:23pm
UPDATED : Tuesday, 03 February, 2015, 1:11am

alcohol.jpg


A man in Yiwu who drank two litres of liquor at a business dinner suffered a gastric perforation and lapsed into a coma. Photo: Bloomberg

ZHEJIANG

Coma? I’ll drink to that


A man in Yiwu who drank two litres of liquor at a business dinner required two weeks of hospital treatment after suffering a gastric perforation and falling into a coma, the Qianjiang Evening News reports. The man, 23, was taken to hospital after he began vomiting uncontrollably and spitting out blood. After arriving at hospital he fell into the coma and was treated with a series of blood transfusions. His family have vowed to stop him drinking.

Con victim turns arsonist

A man enraged at losing 8,000 yuan in life savings to a pyramid scheme set fire to a shoe factory in Wenzhou, the Qianjiang Evening News reports. A court convicted the man, 27, of arson and sentenced him to 11 years in jail. It ordered him to pay 110,000 yuan in compensation.

BEIJING

Old man dies in ditch


A man, 79, who was suffering from senile dementia, died in a ditch one week after becoming disoriented and lost near his home in Chaoyang district, the Beijing News reports. The man, who had wandered into the neighbouring Tongzhou district, died despite having been noticed by passers-by and sent to the police station on two occasions. Tongzhou police failed to find a note in his pocket with his family’s contact details. It was noticed during an autopsy, which determined that the man had frozen to death.

Theme park work to start

Construction of a 2 million square metre Universal Studios theme park will begin in Tongzhou district this year, Xinhua reports, citing the district’s annual government work report. The park, approved by the central authorities in September, is forecast to attract investment of 50 billion yuan (HK$62 billion) and is scheduled for completion in 2019. It will feature a retail and entertainment complex and the world’s first Universal-themed resort hotel.

CHONGQING

Nip-and-tuck tourism


Plastic surgery tourism trips to South Korea are growing in popularity among Chongqing residents, about 1,000 of whom travelled to the country for operations last year, the Chongqing Morning Post reports. Most travelled with tourist groups, according to one travel agent, who said that some agencies were offering sightseeing trips tailored towards guests who would be receiving plastic surgery during their visit. An industry insider said most opted for facial operations, which cost at least 20,000 yuan.

Trains delayed … to 2017

A property developer erected a bogus light railway sign near its project in the northern suburbs to lure people into buying homes there, the Chongqing Morning Post reports. Believing a new rail station had been built, many residents began searching for it, only to find that while a station was indeed planned, it was not scheduled to begin operation until 2017.

GANSU

Bronze price tempts gang

Rising bronze prices tempted a gang of eight to steal 12 bronze sculptures worth more than 150,000 yuan from across Yumen city, the Western Economic Daily reports. Police captured the gang after finding eight of the sculptures in a waste collection station late last month.

Love can rust a bridge


About 30 padlocks have been fastened to the Zhongshan Bridge across the Yellow River by amorous couples eager to display their love, Xinhua reports. Officials said workers had been sent to remove the padlocks but they kept reappearing. They fear the padlocks will cause the 106-year-old bridge to rust.

GUANGDONG

Couple’s home demolished


The home of an elderly couple in Guangzhou was demolished while they were away, the newspaper Xinxi Shibao reports. The couple, in their eighties, had earlier rejected the demolition company’s compensation offer of 5,000 yuan. All their belongings were destroyed. The couple, who had lived there 20 years, are suing the company.

Stabbed in head for purse

A woman in the Nanhai district of Foshan was stabbed by a robber after she refused to give up her purse, the Foshan Daily reports. The woman had been playing with her phone while waiting at a bus stop when the robber confronted her, then stabbed her repeatedly in the head and hands. Witnesses called an ambulance and the woman, bleeding heavily, was taken to hospital where doctors saved her. The police are searching for the robber.

SHAANXI

Poisoner is 4th time lucky


A woman in Yulin has been detained on suspicion of poisoning her abusive husband, after three unsuccessful attempts, Shaanxi Radio Television reports. She allegedly killed him by mixing pesticide into his dinner last month. She married the man after divorcing her first husband, with whom she had four children. She told police that her second husband often beat her children.

Detergent burns toddler

A toddler and her grandfather suffered burns to their faces when the old man, holding the girl in his arms, fell on to a floor that was being cleaned with a strong detergent in a restaurant in Hanzhong, the Huashang Daily reports. The girl’s grandmother also suffered burns to her face when she lifted her up and the girl’s wet clothes touched her face. All three, who were attending a wedding banquet, were sent to hospital.

SHANGHAI

Cabbies seek fair fare


All the money generated from taxi fare rises in the city will benefit drivers and not their companies, Xinmin.cn reports, citing transport officials. Shanghai taxi drivers have complained that they are struggling to make ends meet as too much of their takings must go to their companies. According to the municipal federation of trade unions, Shanghai taxi drivers made an average of 22 yuan per hour in 2013, which was below the municipal workers’ average.

Rare deer rarer still

Three rare deer released into a forest in Songjiang district were found dead over the weekend, two of them with bite marks on their throats, Xinmin.cn reports. Researchers who found the Chinese water deer suspect they died of fright or dog bites. The deer were among 10 released into a 12-hectare conservation area in December in an effort to reintroduce the species, which once lived in Shanghai but disappeared over a century ago.

YUNNAN

Firearms go up in fire


Police in Tengchong spent 15 hours destroying five trucks’ worth of guns and ammunition that were confiscated last year, the Spring City Evening News reports. Officers incinerated and buried more than 1,600 guns, detonated 4.8 tonnes of explosives and discharged about 38,000 bullets.

Foreigners’ high Aids rate


Foreigners last year accounted for more than 60 per cent of all Aids patients in Yunnan province’s Dehong prefecture, which borders Myanmar, China Youth Daily reports. In some counties, the rate could be more than 80 per cent, the prefecture’s deputy governor told a meeting on the weekend. He called for funds to control and prevent the disease among foreigners, but did not reveal the total number of Aids patients in the prefecture, which has a population of more than 1.2 million.


 

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Rare deer rarer still

Three rare deer released into a forest in Songjiang district were found dead over the weekend, two of them with bite marks on their throats, Xinmin.cn reports. Researchers who found the Chinese water deer suspect they died of fright or dog bites. The deer were among 10 released into a 12-hectare conservation area in December in an effort to reintroduce the species, which once lived in Shanghai but disappeared over a century ago.

Oh dear ......
 

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Around the nation: Abandoned boy, 8, stranded at school


Also: Fish with a dash of opium; woman divorces husband to marry nephew for sake of daughter's education


PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 03 February, 2015, 11:06pm
UPDATED : Tuesday, 03 February, 2015, 11:06pm

henan_boy.jpg


An eight-year-old boy has been living at a primary school in Henan after he was abandoned by his father in August. Photo: SCMP Pictures

HENAN

Son stranded at school

An eight-year-old boy has been stranded at a school in Linzhou since his father abandoned him in August, the Dahe News reports. The father took the boy to the primary school for registration in August and said he would return to pay the tuition, but has not been seen since. The father had custody of the boy after a divorce and his mother remarried into a poor family. The local civil affairs authority said they could only make the boy a ward if police proved his father was missing, but so far police say that is not legally the case.

Villagers block train

Six people were detained and 22 others faced "public security punishment" in Xixia county after they stood on train tracks to block a passenger train in a protest against their local government, Huashang Daily reports. Hundreds residents tried to petition the county government over a property dispute on Monday morning but got no response. More than 20 villagers then walked on to a railroad track and held up a train for 20 minutes.

ANHUI

Bicycle beat-up


The Fuyang government has denied it bought thousands of bicycles for nearly 10,000 yuan (HK$12,500) each, saying the funds covered all the expenses of a five-year public bicycle project, Xinhua reports. The city spent 65 million yuan on the project, which included the purchase of 6,500 bicycles to be rented to the public last year, leading to suspicions of corruption involving overpriced bikes. Officials said the money also included maintenance, setting up 7,800 stands at 200 bicycle stations, buying six bike transport vans and two maintenance vans, and wages for 90 management staff.

Personal data sold

An employee of a professional testing centre in Hefei has confessed to selling the personal information of 410,000 candidates, the Anhui Business News reports. Test candidates complained that they received unsolicited calls from vocational schools almost immediately after signing up for professional tests such as accountancy or architecture. The 31-year-old employee sold personal information for 1.4 yuan per person to training schools, pocketing 570,000 yuan.

BEIJING

Subway blitz

Beijing will dispatch inspectors to crack down on beggars, people handing out leaflets and fare evaders on the subway in May, the Beijing Morning Post reports. The subway operator said about 25,000 such people a day either bought the cheapest tickets or avoided paying altogether. The inspectors will be authorised to issue on-the-spot fines of between 50 yuan to 1,000 yuan for begging, 100 yuan to 10,000 yuan for handing out advertising leaflets, and 10 times the ticket price for fare evaders. No payout for hot pot

A court has rejected a woman's demand for 70,000 yuan in compensation after her young son ate a disinfection tablet at a hot pot restaurant, but warned the restaurant not to allow the mistake again, the Beijing Times reports. The woman took her two-year-old boy to a hot pot restaurant in March and found the boy vomiting in the middle of the meal. They then found the boy ate a disinfection tablet, used for sterilising eating utensils. The court said no compensation should be paid if the child showed no lasting effects after a series of checks and the restaurant paid the medical bills.

CHONGQING

Addictive dishes


A court in Hechuan district sentenced two restaurant owners to a year in jail, suspended for 18 months, and fined them 20,000 yuan for adding opium husks, a banned substance, to food to hook customers, Cqnews.net reports. The two ground the husks and sprinkled them on fish dishes. Growing opium is illegal in China, except for a single farm in Gansu that supplies medical morphine producers.

Airport upgrade

Chongqing Jiangbei Airport will open a third runway and a new 533,000 square metre terminal building in the first half of next year, the Chongqing Evening Post reports. The runway will raise annual capacity to 45 million passengers and 550,000 tonnes of cargo.

GUANGDONG

Vet kowtows


A 59-year-old vet in Foshan knelt down in front of the body of a dog that died a day after he performed an operation to sterilise the animal, the Southern Metropolis Daily reports. The vet insisted the owner should have told him the dog was 11 years old or he would never performed the surgery, while the owner said the vet should have told him of the risks of the operation. The owner insisted the vet kneel down to apologise to the dog and the vet obeyed, for fear of being beaten up by the owner. They settled later at a police station, with the vet apologising again to the owner, while the owner did not ask for compensation.

Bus hijacker charged

A man who was hallucinating on drugs when he hijacked a bus in Guangzhou in December has been formally arrested for endangering public safety, the Guangzhou Daily reports. The man had consumed ketamine and methamphetamine before boarding the bus and slashing seats with a knife. Passengers were able to leave the vehicle, but the driver was held by the man during a three-hour stand-off with police before being overpowered. Criminal suspects can be detained for 30 days, sometimes longer, for investigation, before being "formally arrested" when police believe they have sufficient evidence to press charges.

JIANGSU

Cracking cops


Jiangsu's public security department cracked all but two murder cases in the province last year, a rate of 99.6 per cent, Jschina.com.cn reports. Jiangsu has boasted of having the country's highest rates for 11 years, with no false convictions.

Ashes returned


Police detained two men in Donghai county for stealing a woman's ashes and demanding her family pay 200,000 yuan for their return, the Jiangnan Times reports. The ashes were stolen from her tomb last year. Last month her son received a text message demanding 200,000 yuan for the return of the ashes. Police traced the mobile phone to the two men.

SHAANXI

False sense of entitlement

A street community officer in Yanbao has been sacked for demanding 700 yuan from low-income families soon after they received 1,000 yuan allowances, Huashang Daily reports. A post appeared online on Monday claiming that the officer had gone to the homes of 15 families who had just received a 1,000 yuan allowance, and demanded - for no apparent reason - that they pay him 700 yuan. He was soon found out and sacked. The money was returned to the families.

Bathhouse arson foiled

A man in Xian has been jailed for two years for threatening to burn down a bathhouse after an argument, Huashang Daily reports. The man was drunk when he went to the bathhouse last year to demand that his membership be cancelled and refunded. He then bought a container of petrol and splashed it in the lobby, but was stopped by a relative and a staff member who grabbed a lighter from him.

ZHEJIANG

All in the family


A Ningbo woman has been prevented from marrying her nephew so her daughter could enrol at a Shanghai school, China.com.cn reports. Wedding registry staff became suspicious after finding out the couple had an age difference of 21 years and that the woman had divorced her husband only the day before. The woman said her daughter wanted to enrol at a school that required one parent to be a bachelor degree holder and own at least one property in the city. The woman divorced her husband to marry the nephew, who met the criteria.

Cashier checks out


A supermarket cashier in Ningbo has been arrested for embezzling 100,000 yuan after faking refunds for half a year, Zjol.com.cn reports. The supermarket did not require that goods be returned for refunds, so the cashier falsified receipts while pocketing the cash. Her plan came unstuck when the supermarket found records of refunds for goods that were no longer being sold. The woman gave herself up to police.


 
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