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Chinese cause trouble the world over?

tanwahtiu

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Samantha u is complaining w no ends in sight...

Has anyone noticed how the Chinese end up causing trouble no matter where they are in the world. Drugs, kidnapping, copyright theft etc regularly committed by Chinese nationals who show a complete lack of gratitude towards the host country which gave them residency.

It really is disgusting.:mad:

***

Crime Story

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<hr class="displayNone"> $135m drug bust: six stand trial

5:00AM Saturday July 26, 2008
By Andrew Koubaridis


DrugBust230.jpg


Detective Inspector Bruce Good with the captured drugs and firearms. Photo / Paul Estcourt

New Zealand's largest drugs bust foiled a plot to flood the country with enough methamphetamine to supply a hit for every person in Auckland.

Six men are accused of executing an elaborate plan to smuggle $135 million worth of drugs into the country in plastic boxes secreted in tins of green paint.

The men were arrested in May 2006 after a joint police and customs investigation which also seized tens ofthousands of dollars in cash and loaded guns including a military-style rifle, pistols and a pen gun banned in New Zealand.

The men - Ming Chin Chen, Guo Wei Deng, Li Fan, Kin Kwok Leung, Wei Feng Pan and Yong Lei Zhang - have pleaded not guilty to a raft of charges and are defending them at a trial expected to last a further month in the High Court at Auckland.

The crown case is that the drug shipments came into the country from China within days of each other.

One contained 95kg of crystal methamphetamine and the other had 154kg of pseudoephedrine, a substance that can be used to make methamphetamine.<script type="text/javascript" defer="true">cument.getElementById('adSpace3').innerHTML = document.getElementById('INVadSpace3').innerHTML;document.getElementById('INVadSpace3').innerHTML = '';</script>

Detective Sergeant Scott Steedman, who led the inquiry dubbed Operation Major, said the pseudoephedrine could have made 30-40kg of methamphetamine, also called P.

It was hidden in plastic blocks secreted in the bottom of cans of green paint. Mr Steedman said the drugs were discovered after every tin was individually removed from the container.

They were hidden so well when they were screened by sophisticated x-rays at Customs they were not noticed. It was only when investigators probed into the tin that theyrealised that the "bottom 100ml was solid".

The arrests came after the police left a car in St Lukes shopping centre carpark with 19 packages of a placebo meant to look like methamphetamine inside - and a 20th package containing 50 grams of real crystal methamphetamine that was laced with a marking powder and an electrical device that let off a signal when the bag was open.

A jury this week heard the first details of a police operation, the "controlled delivery phase" of methamphetamine on May 22, 2006.
Just after 3pm a police officer parked a grey Toyota Corolla in the St Lukes carpark.

The officer - a detective with the Auckland drug squad - got out and put the car key under the front-right-wheel arch and walked off. An Asian man approached soon after and drove away.

Police followed the car to a Kohimarama Rd address and executed a search warrant, kicking the front door down and allegedly finding the methamphetamine, cash and loaded guns.

Two of the accused men - Guo Wei Deng and Li Fan - were inside. Deng was allegedly found in the living room while Li was in an upstairs bedroom.

Mr Steedman told the court a rifle had been found, wrapped in a bedspread, in the garage but other guns were found inside, including a revolver and a small pen gun.

"All the firearms were in working order, capable of firing."

The rifle, a military-style semiautomatic, had also been modified to be able to fire on fully automatic.

Mr Steedman said $50,000 was also found in a shopping bag in the corner of the room while a money counter was also discovered.

THE BUST
* 95kg of crystal methamphetamine worth $95m was found hidden in paint tins imported from the Chinese port of Shekou.
* 154kg of pseudoephedrine was found in a separate shipment that could have made a further 40kg of methamphetamine.
* The drugs were intercepted by police who, with customs officials, set up a "controlled delivery" of real and fake methamphetamine.
* Police tracked two of the accused to a Kohimarama Rd house where they allegedly found methamphetamine, cash and loaded guns.
* The drugs bust was the largest of its kind in New Zealand.
 

tanwahtiu

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With Samantha is the boss, shw whinged on Chinese likely she was dumped....


For the sake of upholding the professional image of this forum, shall we all exercise some restraints in our comments, especially on issues as sensitive as races?

I really do not wish to see this forum degenerating into a platform for verbal war. but rather an open and intellectual sharing among friends here while sparing a thought for others' feeling.
 

tanahcow

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BS!! Don't try to pull a SPH on us, posting bias articles to try to manipulate the publics opinion for their own agenda. :p

There are plenty of organized criminal gangs formed by foreign immigrants in other countries. Perhaps you can share with us just how many different gangs are there in Australia alone.

K.N.N.

Me nephew said CIA lagi big big t/m.
 

tanwahtiu

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If u dont know the head dont show the tail... knn..

Hitting+a+Coolie3.jpg


This poor man was taking a rest outside a bridal shop in china and was suddenly attacked by the shop's employee. This employee even threaten the photographer. If this is how they behave in their authoritarian country, do u think they will behave nice in a 'free-er' country.
 

syed putra

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SoftBank’s Arm Says China CEO Fired for Major Irregularities
By
Ian King
and
Debby Wu
10 June 2020, 03:29 GMT+8Updated on 10 June 2020, 17:31 GMT+8
  • Arm China’s board voted to replace CEO amid Huawei curbs
  • Arm’s designs underpin most of the world’s mobile computing
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SoftBank Group Corp.’s Arm Ltd. and its Chinese venture clashed publicly over whether the venture’s CEO had been fired, a dispute that threatens to disrupt a Western company central to the global semiconductor industry.


The conflict erupted after the British firm told Bloomberg News the board of Arm China -- jointly owned by Arm and investors including China’s sovereign wealth fund -- voted to oust Chief Executive Officer Allen Wu. Hours later, Arm China posted a statement to its official WeChat account asserting he was still in charge, a stance repeated across domestic social media. The U.K. firm then fired back to say Wu had been dismissed after an investigation uncovered undisclosed conflicts of interest and violations of employee rules.


“Following a whistleblower complaint and several other current and former employee complaints, an investigation was undertaken by Arm Limited,” the company said in its latest statement, jointly issued with shareholder Hopu Investment. “Evidence received from multiple sources found serious irregularities, including failing to disclose conflicts of interest and violations of the employee handbook.” Wu didn’t respond to emails and a message sent via his LinkedIn profile seeking comment.


The spat comes at a sensitive time for Arm and its 49%-owned Chinese affiliate, when Western companies are struggling to navigate an escalating clash between Washington and Beijing over technology leadership. Any prolonged conflict could also have ramifications for Arm, whose semiconductor architecture underpins the majority of the world’s mobile devices. The British firm relies on Chinese names like Huawei Technologies Co. for a large portion of its global revenue, and leans on Arm China to help it conduct business in the world’s biggest smartphone market.


Arm typically maintains a low profile, licensing its designs and collecting royalties via consumer brand corporations from Apple Inc. to Samsung Electronics Co. The dispute over Wu’s status, however, thrust it uncharacteristically into the spotlight, igniting a plethora of stories online about how the U.S.-educated executive was still Arm China’s legal head honcho. Wu himself was cited several times in local media pledging to work with Huawei last year, when Washington first banned the sale of American software and circuitry to the Chinese tech champion.


“Arm is a U.K.-based company but they have a huge amount of activities in the U.S. and in the U.S. ecosystem,” said Alex Capri, a research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation. “What could make this really messy is that the US could start to put pressure on Arm to cut off its Chinese entity.”
He pointed to Washington’s prior move to stop Dutch semiconductor equipment maker ASML’s supply of advanced technology to China. Capri said potential U.S. pressure on Arm may prod its Chinese venture to try and operate as a standalone or separate entity, but that will still have huge implications for Huawei, whose chipmaking unit HiSilicon depends on Arm’s designs.
“This is what Arm China’s going to do -- embed itself in a ringfenced Chinese operation, but it will be super messy,” Capri said.

How Huawei Landed at the Center of Global Tech Tussle: QuickTake

SoftBank acquired Arm for $32 billion in 2016 in one of its largest acquisitions, a deal intended to further Masayoshi Son’s ambition of creating a global Internet of Things ecosystem. The company licenses the fundamentals of chips for companies that make their own semiconductors, and also sells processor designs. Most of the world’s smartphones depend on Arm’s technology, and it is trying to expand into servers and PCs.
Arm China was then formed in 2018 when SoftBank sold 51% of the subsidiary to a consortium that included China Investment Corp., the Silk Road Fund and Singaporean state investment firm Temasek Holdings Pte. It now operates offices in Shenzhen, Beijing and Shanghai and acts as an intermediary between Arm in the U.K. and clients like Huawei.
Arm Ltd. said the board had appointed Ken Phua and Phil Tang as Arm China’s interim co-CEOs. But Arm China said on WeChat that Wu remained in charge. “In accordance with relevant laws and regulations, Allen Wu continues to serve as chairman and CEO,” the post read.
It’s unclear how the public dispute would affect Arm’s relationships in the world’s No. 2 economy. The company has been ensnared in Washington’s campaign against Huawei because of its central role in semiconductor architecture. The U.S., home to many of the world’s chipmakers and a chunk of Arm’s operations, wants to block Huawei’s access to key chip technology after labeling the company a national security threat -- something the Chinese firm has consistently denied.


The British company has said it will comply with the so-called U.S. Entity List restrictions. It continues to supply technology to Huawei’s HiSilicon, but it’s unclear if it can license future designs to the Chinese company.
Read more: SoftBank’s Son Aims to Re-List Chipmaker ARM Within 5 Years
(Updates with analyst comment from sixth paragraph)

Garden
 

tanwahtiu

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Hey abang Mat, u don't get the satirical meaning... u blur like sotong..... add in more year to yr study to Form 5, what hv u done to waste 1 more year in m&d school...

:eek: say it isn't so! I like China food. ok. they tend to be to free with the oil, but I like some of the stuff. Especially Szechuan food.
 
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