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Friday, February 12, 2010

CHINA: Tiger Farms in China Feed Thirst for Parts

Some tigers roam treeless, fenced-in areas at the Xiongsen Tiger and Bear Mountain Village in Guilin. Many others are packed in small cages. Until two years ago, the farm sold tiger steaks. Shiho Fukada for The New York Times

February 13, 2010

By ANDREW JACOBS

GUILIN, China — The crowd-pleasing Year of the Tiger, which begins Sunday, could be a lousy year for the estimated 3,200 tigers that still roam the world’s diminishing forests.

With as few as 20 in the wild in China, the country’s tigers are a few gun blasts away from extinction, and in India poachers are making quick work of the tiger population, the world’s largest. The number there, around 1,400, is about half that of a decade ago and a fraction of the 100,000 that roamed the subcontinent in the early 20th century.

Shrinking habitat remains a daunting challenge, but conservationists say the biggest threat to Asia’s largest predator is the Chinese appetite for tiger parts. Despite a government ban on the trade since 1993, there is a robust market for tiger bones, traditionally prized for their healing and aphrodisiac qualities, and tiger skins, which have become cherished trophies among China’s nouveau riche.

With pelts selling for $20,000 and a single paw worth as much as $1,000, the value of a dead tiger has never been higher, say those who investigate the trade. Last month the Indian government announced a surge in killings of tigers by poachers, with 88 found dead in 2009, double the previous year. Because figures are based on carcasses found on reserves or tiger parts seized at border crossings, conservationists say the true number is far higher.

“All of the demand for tiger parts is coming from China,” said Belinda Wright, executive director of the Wildlife Protection Society of India. “Unless the Chinese change their attitude, the tiger has no future on this earth.”

Although conservationists say India must do a better job of policing its 37 tiger reserves, they insist that the Chinese government has not done all it can to quell the domestic market for illicit tiger parts. Anti-trafficking efforts are haphazard, experts say; China bans the use of tiger parts in traditional Chinese medicine but overlooks the sale of alcohol-based health tonics steeped in tiger bone.

It is a gray area that has been exploited by Chinese tiger farms, which raise thousands of animals with assembly-line efficiency.

If there is any mystery about what happens to the big cats at Xiongsen Tiger and Bear Mountain Village in Guilin, it is partly explained in the gift shop, where fuzz-coated bottles in the shape of a tiger are filled with “bone strengthening” wine. The liquor, which costs $132 for a six-year-old brew, is sold openly across the surrounding Guangxi region and beyond.

“This stuff works wonders,” said Zhang Hanchu, the owner of a spirits shop in Guilin. A daily shot glass of the rice-based alcohol, he said, can reduce joint stiffness, treat rheumatism and increase sexual vigor. With the Year of the Tiger nearing, demand has been soaring, he said.

Opened in 1993 with financing from the State Forestry Administration, Xiongsen is China’s largest tiger-breeding operation. Some of its 1,500 tigers roam treeless, fenced-in areas, while many others are packed in small cages where they pace agitatedly.

The park is a fairly dispiriting place. In addition to the tigers, there are hundreds of capuchin monkeys rattling in cages, awaiting their fate as fodder for medicinal elixirs or medical experiments. There are also about 300 Asiatic brown bears which are tapped for their bile, the main ingredient of a lucrative supplement said to improve eyesight.

Those who pay the park’s $12 entry fee are treated to an extravaganza of tigers jumping through rings of fire or balancing on balls; if the crowds are large enough, workers will place a cow and a tiger in an enclosure with predictably gruesome results.

Until a spate of negative press two years ago, Xiongsen proudly sold tiger steaks at its restaurant as “big king meat.” These days, the park takes a more low-key approach. The word “tiger” no longer appears on the wine packaging — “rare animal bones” is used instead — although those who sell the wine say the key ingredient remains tiger bone.

On a recent visit, a regular stream of cars, some with government license plates, pulled up to a building at the center of the park and drove away with their trunks full of Xiongsen’s wine tonic. A large sign in the building’s interior declares “Protecting Wild Animals is the Bounden Duty of Every Citizen.”

A woman who answered the phone at Xiongsen’s winery said the owner, Zhou Weisen, was not available to comment, but she insisted that tigers were not an ingredient in the 200,000 bottles a liquor produced each year.

In addition to overlooking the sale of tiger wine, the Chinese government has fueled the market in tiger parts by letting such farms exist, critics say. Although the State Forestry Administration reiterated its support for the ban on the trade of tigers last December, it reconsiders the restrictions each year, giving hope to the politically powerful owners of China’s 20 tiger farms.

If the ban were lifted, critics say, trade in farm-bred tigers would simply provide cover for poached tigers, which are far cheaper to harvest and bring in far higher prices because most Chinese believe the healing properties of wild tigers are greater than those raised in cages.

An employee at the forestry administration said the entire staff was away on a retreat and could not be reached.

Debbie Banks, who runs the tiger campaign at the Environmental Investigation Agency in London, said China’s stated resolve to help end the international trade in tigers was diluted by its ambivalent stand on domestic sales.

“The government is stimulating and perpetuating demand, which is the real problem we’re facing,” she said.

Despite the grim news, conservationists say the coming year also presents an opportunity to raise awareness about the problem. All the hoopla surrounding the Year of the Tiger has captured the attention of many nations, especially China, whose government is sensitive to criticisms that it is encouraging the tiger’s extinction. In September, Russia and the World Bank will host a summit meeting on tigers that conservationists hope will yield a solid plan to restore plummeting tiger populations.

James Compton, Asia program director for TRAFFIC, which monitors the global wildlife trade, thinks the most important step would be for China and other nations to elevate the interdiction of tiger parts to that of illicit drugs. “It’s not rocket science to knock out the big traders,” he said, adding that bodies like Interpol and the World Customs Organization should take on the fight.

Guarded optimism aside, Mr. Compton cannot help but recall the last time the Year of the Tiger came around, in 1998. There was similar talk then of using the occasion to marshal the international community. He also has a vivid memory of the poster produced for the occasion. Its pitch: “Save the Last 5,000 Tigers.”

Xiyun Yang contributed reporting.

China's largest tiger farm is in Guilin and holds 1,500 tigers. The New York Times

View Article in the New York Times

OLYMPICS: Opening Ceremony: Dazzling opening pays tribute to tragic luger


Vancouver (AFP) - The Winter Olympic Games opening ceremony was launched in a flurry of ticker-tape Friday in an event dedicated to Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili, who died earlier in a horror smash.

The domed BC Place stadium in Vancouver was packed with thousands of people clad in white in an event involving a host of stars and linking Canada's past with the modern nation, including a welcome from Native peoples.

Ahead of the start of the ceremony, organisers said it would include several elements in honour of Kumaritashvili who was killed after flying off the luge track at high speed and smashing into a metal pillar during a training run.

As the Georgian team, dressed in red and wearing black armbands, marched into the stadium, the crowd cheered and stood to applaud.

The show was being staged in front of International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge, Canadian governor general Michaelle Jean and the chiefs of the Four Host First Nations.

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JAPAN AT THE OLYMPICS: Snowboarder Kokubo barred from Games opening ceremony over dress code

Seiko Hashimoto, the head of Japan's Vancouver Winter Olympic delegation, said Friday snowboarder Kazuhiro Kokubo will be barred from the opening ceremony of the Games for flouting the Olympic dress code. The dreadlocked 21-year-old drew sharp criticism for the way he wore Japan's official Olympic uniform when he traveled with the snowboard team to Vancouver and was not allowed to attend an arrival ceremony at the Olympic athletes' village on Wednesday.

View Article on News on Japan

CHINA AT THE OLYMPICS: Figure Skating: Love conquers all for Shen and Zhao


Vancouver (AFP) - Chinese figure skating stars Shen Xue and Zhao Hongbo are determined that their love with help them finally conquer Olympic gold in Vancouver.

The three-time world pairs champions made a dramatic return to competitive figure skating last year in a bid to seal gold at the Vancouver Games.

Their return surprised many with even Shen conceding that she had needed some persuading from husband Zhao.

After more than 15 years competing and dealing with injuries in a physically gruelling sport, the 31-year-old was ready to hang up her skates.

The pair married in 2007, shortly after capping the most successful year of their career with a third world title, and duly retired.

But Zhao was still hankering for the only title missing from their collection, and Shen was ready to help him fulfil the dream.

They had won Olympic bronze twice - in Salt Lake City and Torino.

"He wanted to come back," explained Shen. "Hongbo persuaded me. We were already married. So even if I said no it's not like he's going to divorce me," she joked.

Zhao insisted: "It was a joint decision. We're really happy to be back competing. To win an Olympic gold is a dream for us."

Injury had hampered their preparation for the 2006 Olympic Games.

Zhao had suffered a torn Achilles tendon, a potentially career-ending injury, but through sheer determination was able to recover to claim bronze.

Last year they contacted Canadian choreographer Lori Nichol, who had worked with them for two seasons before they retired, and she actively encouraged them to pursue their dream.

She was not mistaken.

They have been undefeated this season with world records for the total score (214.25) and the short programme score (75.36) putting them among the favourites for gold.

Right now they are enjoying their fourth Olympic experience, apart from Zhao admitting to an upset stomach because of the Canadian food.

"We're seeing a lot of old friends," said Zhao.

"This is our last chance to win a gold medal. I'm the oldest athlete in the Chinese team. I'm here because I wanted to win gold so much."

Shen believes their maturity has helped their performance.

"I would have to say the main difference is in the details," she said of when they first competed in the Nagano Olympic Games.

"We used to be more concerned about the difficulty of the elements. Now we focus on perfecting the details and bringing all the elements together as seamlessly as possible."

Fittingly, they open their campaign on Valentine's Day with a short programme to Queen's Who Wants To Live Forever, and will perform Adagio in G Minor by Tomaso Albinoni for the free skate the following day.

View article...

OLYMPICS: Ice hockey: USA-Canada women's rivalry heats up


Vancouver (AFP) - Two-time defending Olympic champion Canada and two-time reigning world champion United States are raring to renew their rivalry for women's hockey supremacy at the Vancouver Olympic Winter Games.

Sweden, Finland, China, Russia, Slovakia and the Swiss are also in the field but except for the Torino 2006 Winter Games, when the US team lost a semi-final shocker to the Swedes, major championship matches have been strictly US-Canada affairs.

"Playing Canada is like Christmas for me," four-time US Olympian Angie Ruggiero said ahead of the competition starting on Saturday.

"One of the exciting things about the sport is how close this rivalry is when it comes to talent.

"It's all about who can pull it together for one game. I feel like we're in a really good position."

The Canadians lead the Americans 12-7 in world and Olympic play since the women's game joined the Olympic line-up in 1998 at Nagano, where the US squad beat Canada for gold.

Canada won Olympic titles in 2002, spoiling US dreams in the final on home ice at Salt Lake City, and 2006.

Asked if the US women were anxious to give their Canadian rivals a taste of their own medicine by denying them gold on home ice, US coach Mark Johnson quipped, "I'm certainly not a doctor."

The Americans beat Canada in the 2009 and 2008 world championship finals after Canada won the 2007 world crown on home ice. That adds to the pressure on Canada to win Olympic gold for a third time in a row, and on home ice no less.

"In Canada you are expected to win," said Canada coach Melody Davidson, the only woman among the Olympic coaches. "It doesn't matter if you are male or female. It's just Canada."

Two world titles have given the Americans high expectations as well.

"The players understand what they are going to have to do to meet those high expectations," Johnson said. "The challenge is difficult but the expectations have been high since day one."

And they know the Canadian supporters are expecting gold as well.

"There is the weight of a nation on them," Ruggiero said. "There's no pressure on our shoulders. We know what we have to do to win."

Canadian captain Hayley Wickenheiser will spark the hosts, who have special hats and shirts for their team bearing the words "luctor" and "emergo" - Latin for struggle and emerge.

"It's something the leadership group within the team came up with," said Wickenheiser. "It's what we want to do every game."

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OLYMPICS: Georgia will march in opening ceremony and compete in Olympic Winter Games

Vancouver (AFP) - Georgia will march in the 2010 Olympic Winter Games Opening Ceremony, officials said on Friday, despite the death of one of the country's lugers.

"Officials have confirmed the Georgia team will march in the opening ceremony of the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games," said a statement.

Nodar Kumaritashvili, 21, was killed in a high-speed crash in training at the Whistler Sliding Centre on Friday.

Georgia will compete in the 2010 Olympic Winter Games despite the death of one of the country's lugers, a senior minister said Friday.

"On the Georgian team's participation, during the 2008 Summer Olympics Georgia was invaded by Russia and despite this they stayed and won several medals," said minister for sports and culture Nikolos Rurua.

"So our sportsmen have decided to be loyal to the spirit of the Olympic Games and compete and dedicate their efforts to their fallen comrade."

Nodar Kumaritashvili, 21, was killed in a high-speed crash in training at the Whistler Sliding Centre on Friday.

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FUKUOKA, JAPAN: Former Prefectural Hall & Official Guest House

LONELY PLANET:

  • Address:  Nishinakasu 6-29, city centre
  • Phone:  751 4416

Tenjin has historic Western-style buildings, like the 1910 Former Prefectural Hall & Official Guest House in Tenjin Chūō-kōen.

OLYMPICS: Freestyle: Heil eyes history for Canada


Vancouver (AFP) - Olympic champion Jennifer Heil is set to take to the slopes Saturday strongly tipped to retain her women's moguls crown as she bids to make history by winning Canada's first gold on home soil.

But the in-form freestyle skier will be keeping a nervous eye on the heavy skies at Cypress Mountain amid growing fears over deteriorating weather at the venue, which has been plagued by rain and fog.

Heil, well on the way to her fifth moguls world cup title after winning all four races she has entered this season, will also be wary of the challenge from the powerful US team featuring Heather McPhie and and veteran Hannah Kearney.

But Japan's Aiko Uemura has shown she is capable of breaking the North American stranglehold on the sport. She won the moguls World Cup title in 2008 and took two golds at the 2009 FIS Freestyle World Championships.

And Canada could also be celebrating a medal from Kristi Richards, who won a World Cup event in Finland earlier this season. Richards was seventh at the last Olympic Games in Torino in 2006 and is fifth in the moguls World Cup standings.

Heil cannot wait to perform in front of her home crowds, despite the pressure to bring home gold for her native country.

"For me it's a huge opportunity. I feel like I've won the lottery, to get to compete at home," the 26-year-old said.

"We're so well supported and it gives us a huge boost. We know the whole country is behind us."

Heil, who took gold in Torino, comes into the Games in sparkling form after winning four consecutive World Cup races in January and leads the World Cup points race ahead of McPhie and Kearney.

"Certainly she's been skiing phenomenally well through January and I think her chances are very, very good," said Peter Judge, leader of Canada's freestyle team.

"Whether she will be the first (to win gold for Canada) or not is really immaterial."

Cypress has been hit by torrential rain and thick fog in the latest setback to organisers preparing the mountain courses, throwing the first day of competition Saturday into doubt.

It followed the launching of a round-the-clock operation to ferry in snow from higher ground using helicopters and lorries.

If the fog continues, it is possible that the women's moguls could be cancelled or delayed.

"If there is a band of fog and we cannot see, then we cannot start the competition," said Joe Fitzgerald, director of freestyle competition with the International Skiing Federation.

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OLYMPICS: Alpine Skiing: Men's downhill results


Vancouver (AFP) - Olympic Winter Games men's downhill skiing results on Thursday after the second training session:

1. Michael Walchhofer (AUT) 1:34.46

2. Robbie Dixon (CAN) 1:34.55

3. Erik Guay (CAN) 1:34.68

4. Ambrosi Hoffmann (SUI) 1:34.78

5. Didier Defago (SUI) 1:34.81

6. Klaus Kroell (AUT) 1:34.98

7. Aksel Lund Svindal (NOR) 1:35.19

8. Bode Miller (USA) 1:35.20

9. Mario Scheiber (AUT) 1:35.27

10. Andrew Weibrecht (USA) 1:35.39

10. Hans Olsson (SWE) 1:35.39

12. Johan Clarey (FRA) 1:35.45

13. Jan Hudec (CAN) 1:35.49

14. Patrik Jaerbyn (SWE) 1:35.61

15. Patrick Kueng (SUI) 1:35.63

16. Andrej Sporn (SLO) 1:35.67

17. Andrej Jerman (SLO) 1:35.69

18. David Poisson (FRA) 1:35.87

19. Tobias Gruenenfelder (SUI) 1:35.88

20. Werner Heel (ITA) 1:35.89

21. Manuel Osborne-Paradis (CAN) 1:35.91

22. Patrick Staudacher (ITA) 1:35.92

23. Stephan Keppler (GER) 1:35.95

24. Peter Fill (ITA) 1:36.03

25. Hans Grugger (AUT) 1:36.18

26. Ted Ligety (USA) 1:36.20

27. Steven Nyman (USA) 1:36.26

27. Christof Innerhofer (ITA) 1:36.26

29. Ivica Kostelic (CRO) 1:36.31

30. Romed Baumann (AUT) 1:36.36

31. Rok Perko (SLO) 1:36.46

32. Guillermo Fayed (FRA) 1:36.47

33. Carlo Janka (SUI) 1:36.49

34. Marco Buechel (LIE) 1:36.55

35. Johannes Reichelt (AUT) 1:36.59

36. Dominik Paris (ITA) 1:36.62

37. Petr Zahrobsky (CZE) 1:36.63

38. Georg Streitberger (AUT) 1:36.69

39. Kjetil Jansrud (NOR) 1:36.72

40. Andreas Romar (FIN) 1:36.86

41. Silvan Zurbriggen (SUI) 1:36.94

42. Natko Zrncic-Dim (CRO) 1:37.07

43. Ondrej Bank (CZE) 1:37.24

44. Lars Elton Myhre (NOR) 1:37.26

45. Benjamin Raich (AUT) 1:37.31

46. Louis-Pierre Helie (CAN) 1:37.36

47. Sandro Viletta (SUI) 1:37.77

48. Craig Branch (AUS) 1:37.78

49. Marco Sullivan (USA) 1:37.86

50. Julien Lizeroux (FRA) 1:37.93

51. Edward Drake (GBR) 1:37.98

52. Manfred Moelgg (ITA) 1:38.05

53. Andrej Krizaj (SLO) 1:38.09

54. Tyler Nella (CAN) 1:38.22

55. Ryan Semple (CAN) 1:38.33

56. Markus Larsson (SWE) 1:38.99

57. Ales Gorza (SLO) 1:39.17

58. Jono Brauer (AUS) 1:39.23

59. Thomas Mermillod Blondin (FRA) 1:39.32

60. Ferran Terra (ESP) 1:39.34

61. Will Brandenburg (USA) 1:39.49

62. Alexandr Horoshilov (RUS) 1:40.07

63. Paul de la Cuesta (ESP) 1:40.08

64. Roger Vidosa (AND) 1:40.20

65. Ivan Ratkic (CRO) 1:40.67

66. Truls Ove Karlsen (NOR) 1:40.98

67. Johnny Albertsen (DEN) 1:41.44

68. Filip Trejbal (CZE) 1:41.53

69. Kevin Esteve Rigail (AND) 1:41.74

70. Roberts Rode (LAT) 1:41.86

71. Stepan Zuev (RUS) 1:41.91

72. Michael Janyk (CAN) 1:42.19

73. Jaroslav Babusiak (SVK) 1:42.40

74. Stefan Georgiev (BUL) 1:42.83

75. Martin Vrablik (CZE) 1:43.20

76. Bjoergvin Bjoergvinsson (ISL) 1:43.28

77. Cristian Javier Simari Birkner (ARG) 1:43.41

78. Arni Thorvaldsson (ISL) 1:46.51

79. Andrey Drygin (TJK) 1:46.82

DNS: Gauthier de Tessières (FRA)

DNF: Igor Zakurdaev (KAZ), Dragos Staicu (ROM), Stefan Jon Sigurgeirsson (ISL)

DSQ: Didier Cuche (SUI), Adrien Théaux (FRA), Erik Fisher (USA), Maui Gayme (CHI), Krystof Kryzl (CZE), Jorge Mandru (CHI)

afp

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OLYMPICS: Short Track Speed Skating: Ohno, Hamelin battle Koreans to make history


Vancouver (AFP) - American Apolo Anton Ohno and home hero Charles Hamelin will have history within their grasp when they battle South Korean aces on the first day of thee Olympic Short Track Speed Skating competition on Saturday.

Lee Ho-suk, Lee Jung-Su and Sung Si-bak race against each other for the men's 1,500-metre gold medal won by their compatriot Ahn Hyun-Soo four years ago in Torino.

But Ohno, who claimed the title in his Olympic debut at the 2002 Salt Lake Games, is plotting to derail their efforts and become the most medalled Olympic short-track skater.

The 27-year-old American has won two gold, one silver and two bronze medals in his two previous Games. Five other short-trackers have picked up five Olympic medals each but are already retired.

Hamelin, the 500m world champion who finished runner-up to Lee Jung-Su in this season's 1,500m World Cup series, can become the first Canadian to win an Olympic gold medal on home soil.

Canada remains the only country to have hosted both summer (1976 in Montreal) and winter Olympics (1988 in Calgary) without winning a gold medal at either.

The 25-year-old French-Canadian will share that possibility on Saturday with downhiller Manuel Osborne-Paradis and defending moguls champion Jennifer Heil.

About his possible victory, Hamelin said: "For sure, if it happens, it will be the greatest moment of my life and will be a great moment for Canada."

In Turin, Hamelin finished fourth in the 1,500m and was part of Canada's silver-medal performance in the 5,000-metre relay.

But Lee Ho-Suk has declared his goal is to win a gold by beating Ohno and Hamelin. "When I get my first gold, I will then aim at another," said the 23-year-old, famous for his dynamic outside pass.

In Turin, Lee finished runner-up to Ahn in the 1,000m and 1,500m and teamed with him to win the 5,000m relay.

Ahn has not raced internationally since injuring his knee two years ago and failed to qualify for Vancouver.

Ohno denied South Korea's sweep of four men's gold medals in Turin by winning the 500m.

He beat Lee into second spot overall at the 2008 world championships but finished fifth last year when the Korean won overall with another American J.R. Celski second and Hamelin third.

"I'm in the best physical shape of my life," Ohno said. "I want the podium. I want to win races."

sps/dj10

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JAPAN AT THE OLYMPICS: Luge: Japan's Oguchi is luge lone ranger


Whistler (AFP) - It's a lonesome job if you'e a Japanese luger, but that won't deter Japan's Takahisa Oguchi as he targets a shock medal at the Vancouver Games.

The student slider from Matsumoto city just missed a top-10 finish in Wednesday training at the Whistler Sliding Centre and on Thursday said he's gunning for all the German speakers who traditionally dominate his discipline.

And with home expectations low Oguchi says he can relax as his country's sole entrant in the sport plots a shock podium finish.

"It's my third Olympics so it doesn't feel like too much pressure," said the 31-year-old from Shinshu University.

Success lies, he explains, very much in the mind's eye.

"Yesterday (Wednesday) I knew that the image of the track in my mind was wrong and so before I went to sleep last night I spent a long time creating a new image.

"It worked. I woke up and I was faster," culminating in the 14th fastest time on the opening run.

Even a late night session on recalcitrant equipment didn't spoil his night's rest.

"Yesterday one of my runners was a little too round so I spent time sharpening. In fact I was up until 12.30 a.m."

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SHANGHAI, CHINA: Shanghai Museum & Museum Shop

  • Address:  201 Renmin Ave, Shanghai, 200003
  • Location:  On the People's Square in the Huangpu District
  • Phone:  021/6372-5300
  • Web Site:  www.shanghaimuseum.net
  • Price:  Free admission; special exhibitions around ¥20
  • Hours: Mon-Fri 09:00 - 17:00 Sat 09:00 - 20:00

NEW YORK TIMES: 

This museum in People’s Square is an important repository of ancient Chinese art, including bronzes, jade, ceramics, calligraphy and painting. It’s located just next to the Shanghai Art Museum and the Museum of Contemporary Art.

PETER  GREENBERG:

On the artistic front, the city’s creative culture is alive and well, trumping the common misperception of Shanghai as a purely industrial locale. For example, the Shanghai Museum, which is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. everyday, houses some the world’s foremost collections of jade, seals, calligraphy, coins, and furniture. Even better—as of March 10, the prestigious museum now offers free admission all day, everyday. Peoples Great Road, #201; 86-21-63723500, shanghaimuseum.net

FODOR’S:

China's best museum houses an incomparable collection of art and artifacts, including paintings, sculpture, ceramics, calligraphy, furniture, and fantastic bronzes.

Shanghai Museum Shop

  • Address: Shanghai Museum, 201 Renmin Dadao, Huangpu, Shanghai
  • Phone: 021/6372-3500

The selection of books on China and Chinese culture at the main store is impressive, and there are some children's books. Expensive reproduction ceramics are available as well as smaller gift items such as magnets, scarves, and notebooks. Cool purchases like a Chinese architecture-ink stamp (Y90) make great gifts. A delicate bracelet with Chinese charms costs Y150.

  • Other location: 123 Taicang Lu, Luwan, Shanghai, 021/6384-7900
LONELY PLANET:

Rocked slightly from its jealously guarded throne by the 2006 unveiling of Běijīng's tip-top Capital Museum, the monarch of China's museum world remains one of Shanghai's highlight sensations. Expect to spend half, if not most of, a day here. A primer of Chinese civilisation recounted via 120,000 exhibits, the intelligently designed museum guides you through the pages of Chinese history.

Before you go in, admire the exterior of the building. Designed to recall an ancient bronze dǐng (a three-legged food vessel used for cooking and serving), the building also echoes the shape of a famous bronze mirror from the Han dynasty, exhibited within the museum.

JAPAN AT THE OLYMPICS: Figure skating: Japanese trio predict free-for-all

Vancouver (AFP) - Japan's top male figure skaters, tasked to emulate their women compatriots in winning an Olympic medal, say they are facing a free-for-all at the Vancouver Winter Games.

"The top 10 in the men's field are so close in their abilities that a single mistake can drastically change the standings," Nobunari Oda said on Wednesday after moving into Vancouver from his training base in the United States.

Oda, 22, who won two Grand Prix events this season and finished behind world champion Evan Lysacek of the United States at the Grand Prix Final, added: "The top 10 skaters are all strong rivals."

"It is impossible to predict the winner under a new judging rule," said Daisuke Takahashi, who beat Oda into second spot at the national championships on his comeback from knee injury which forced him to miss the 2008-2009 season.

The new system, in place after the judging scandal at the 2002 Salt Lake City Games, awards accumulative points to elements, compared to the old maximum 6.0-point formula.

Takahashi, the 2007 world silver medalist who has already trained in Vancouver for 10 days, named Lysacek as one of his rivals.

"He is among my fellow contenders for the gold medal."

The men's contest, beginning on Tuesday, is expected to be dominated by Russian reigning champion Yevgeny Plushenko who has been lured out of retirement by the dream of a second Olympic title.

Takahiko Kozuka, 20, who finished runner-up to Plushenko at the Grand Prix in Moscow in October, said: "I have always aimed to skate clean in training. So I will do what I usually do and let the judges decide."

Japanese men have yet to medal in the Olympic Games while Shizuka Arakawa won Asia's first Olympic figure skating title when she triumphed in the women's singles at the last Torino Games.

In the women's contest in Vancouver, two former Japanese world champions Mao Asada (2008) and Miki Ando (2007) will challenge reigning champion and hot favourite Kim Yu-Na of South Korea.

The Japanese men admitted that the quadruple jump, a high-scoring but technically demanding element, would be the key to the podium against the competition -- also including Olympic silver medallist Stephane Lambiel of Switzerland and world silver and bronze medalists Patrick Chan of Canada and Brian Joubert of France.

"I know Plushenko and every other top skater will work in the quad," Takahashi said.

"I have trained by imagining myself landing on a quadruple. If I don't do it, what I have done in the past season will be wasted."

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SHANGHAI, CHINA: Shanghai discount tour card covers Suzhou

2010-2-12

By Zhang Xuanchen     

HOLDERS of Shanghai discount tour card can now get discounts at national scenic spots in neighboring Suzhou City, eastern China Jiangsu Province, the Shanghai Tourism Administration said today.
Launched last June, the card gives holders discounts at stores, tourist attractions, restaurants, hotels and travel agencies in Shanghai.


In Suzhou, holders can gain up to 20 percent discount at local tourist destinations as Zhouzhuang,a water town and Tianchi Mountain.


It can also be used to pay for transport on the Metro, buses, taxis and ferries.

View Article in the Shanghai Daily

CHINA AT THE OLYMPICS: Shen and Zhao draw first

Posted: Feb 12, 5:53p ET | Updated: Feb 13, 2:18a ET

VANCOUVER (AFP) -- Two-time Olympic bronze medalists Shen Xue and Zhao Hongbo will skate first in Sunday's short program, while the rest of the top pairs teams don't go until the last two groups.

Shen and Zhao retired after winning their third world title in 2007, but are back in hopes of finally winning Olympic gold. They quickly established themselves as the team to beat.

Aliona Savchenko and Robin Szolkowy of Germany, winners of the last two world titles, will skate last. Zhang Dan and Zhang Hao , silver medalists in Turin; Pang Qing and Tong Jian , the 2006 world champions; and Canadian champions Jessica Dube and Bryce Davison are also in the final group.

European champions Yuko Kavaguti and Aleksandr Smirnov skate 16th.

U.S. champions Caydee Denney and Jeremy Barrett will skate fourth with fellow Americans Amanda Evora and Mark Ladwig eighth.

View AFP Article on NBC Olympics

JAPAN: Toyota faces massive legal liability

Donald Craig

Donald Craig, pictured with wife Wanda in their home in Los Angeles, says his 2008 Toyota Corolla suddenly accelerated near Reno in October, causing a rollover crash that broke his neck. (Ringo H.W. Chiu / For The Times)

February 12, 2010

By Jerry Hirsch and Stuart Pfeifer

Legal expenses and damages could add billions to Toyota's recall costs, with dozens of suits pending over injuries and deaths and at least 30 seeking class-action status over lost use of vehicles.

Toyota Motor Corp.'s massive recalls for acceleration and braking problems are creating a huge legal liability for the company -- and Toyota owners may share in the pain.


The Japanese automaker faces dozens of lawsuits over injuries and deaths attributed to safety problems, with many more suits expected. Lawyers and legal experts said the lawsuits could be particularly expensive for the automaker if plaintiffs prove that Toyota was aware of problems but failed to correct them.


On top of that, there are at least 30 lawsuits seeking class-action status to recover damages for the reduced value of the cars and the lost use of vehicles during repairs.


"This has the potential to be the biggest product liability case in the automotive industry," said Richard Cupp, a professor at Pepperdine University School of Law.


Toyota drivers also face their own share of woes from the recalls.  They might have to pay a portion of any damages from an accident resulting from a known safety defect that they didn't get fixed promptly, said Marshall Shapo, who teaches product liability law at Northwestern University.


The drop in the resale value of Toyota and Lexus autos could also prompt insurers to reduce what they pay when a Toyota is destroyed in an accident.


But the biggest liability will fall on Toyota, which as a matter of policy declined to talk about pending cases.


Legal expenses and damages resulting from the safety defects could tack billions of dollars onto the $2 billion that Toyota had said it would cost the company in repairs and lost sales. That was before the global recall of 437,000 Prius and Lexus hybrids this week. Since fall, Toyota has issued 10 million recall notices for problems related to unintended acceleration, with about 2 million vehicles subject to more than one recall.


P. Tim Howard, a Northeastern University law professor, is leading a team of 22 law firms in 16 states that are pursuing a class-action lawsuit seeking compensation for lost car value. He said the suit could rival tobacco litigation in its complexity.


All the suits could end up before a single federal judge, perhaps in Los Angeles, because Toyota's U.S. sales operation is based in Torrance, Howard said.


"It's easy to prove damages here. You don't think you're damaged, try to sell your Toyota and see if you can get for it today what you could have four weeks ago," Howard said.


Auto pricing experts such as Kelley Blue Book and Edmunds.com have started to document declines in the value of Toyota's products. Kelley says prices for used Toyotas caught up in the recalls have dropped 2.5% to 4.5%, depending on the model. Edmunds.com estimates that used Toyota models are down about 3% for retail and about 6% on trade-in value.


Howard noted that if a typical vehicle was worth just $10,000 before the recalls and drops 3.5% in value, that's $350 per car. Multiply that by 6 million -- the approximate number of Toyota autos recalled in the U.S. -- and the potential damages reach $2.1 billion. If a trial attorney can prove allegations that Toyota hid its knowledge of the defects, punitive damages could easily double the tab, other product liability law experts said.


Normally, diminished-value lawsuits are difficult to pursue, and the Toyota case presents challenges for class-action attorneys, Cupp said. Each member of the class will have a car with a slightly different age, mileage and condition from every other member of the group, he said.


But the case also has some advantages that similar lawsuits would not. The concept will be something that jurors can easily understand and relate to, Cupp said. And attorneys will be able to point to independent estimates from Kelley and Edmunds, auto information brand names that many on the jury will have heard of and would trust, he said.


The flood of liability lawsuits involving motorists who were injured or killed in accidents blamed on vehicle defects could be even more challenging for Toyota, Cupp said.

"Toyota will be dealing with jurors who have already heard bad things about Toyota, and in some instances, Toyota has acknowledged bad things about itself. There will be blood in the water," Cupp said.


For example, Toyota's conflicting statements about sudden-acceleration complaints are raising doubts about whether the company knows the exact cause of the defects, Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Beverly Hills), the chairman of the House committee investigating the automaker, told The Times this week.


Toyota is swimming against a tide of negative news that consumer surveys and industry research indicate is damaging its vaunted image for building reliable and safe vehicles.


That increases pressure on the automaker to settle claims, "because every time there's a jury verdict with a big reward, it is going to remind everyone and do more damage to the company's image," Cupp said.


One lawsuit filed last week by the husband and adult son of an Upland woman contends that a defect caused the woman's 2006 Camry to unexpectedly accelerate to 100 mph and crash into a light pole in August, killing her. The motorist, Noriko Uno, applied the brakes and pulled the emergency brake but was unable to gain control of the car, said the Uno family's attorney, Garo Mardirossian. The lawsuit, which seeks compensatory and punitive damages, alleges that an electronic problem -- not floor mats or sticky gas pedals -- caused the crash.


"They haven't addressed the sudden-acceleration issue," Mardirossian said. "All they've tried to do is take the attention away from what the real problem is."


To put Toyota's potential exposure in context, consider a $368-million verdict against Ford Motor Co., which was blamed in the rollover of an Explorer that rendered a San Diego woman quadriplegic in 2002. The verdict was reduced on appeal to $82 million and the U.S. Supreme Court in November declined to reduce the damages.


In 1978, an Orange County jury ordered Ford to pay $125 million in punitive damages to a teenager who was critically burned when a rear-end collision caused the gas tank in a Pinto to explode. That award was reduced to $6.6 million.


Toyota's liability could exceed what Ford faced in the Explorer rollover cases, Mardirossian said.  "It might be even bigger because of the number of vehicles. Ford was one model. This is many, many vehicles."


David Owen, a law professor at the University of South Carolina, said the litigation in the coming months could tie up Toyota for two to four years. He believes the company's exposure in the class-action case would be unlikely to exceed $1 billion -- a manageable figure for the world's largest automobile manufacturer. The company reported more than $200 billion in worldwide sales for the fiscal year that ended in March 2009.


"I'm considering $1 billion or $2 billion or even $3 billion as not catastrophic to the company," Owen said. "If it were a much smaller company it could be very destructive, but it won't be to Toyota.


"Just as Ford rebounded from the Explorer problems in the early 2000s, my guess is Toyota in five years will have this completely behind them . . . and the economic damages to the company will prove to have been painful but far from devastating," he said.


For drivers, it's not all bad news. Many insurance companies will seek reimbursement from the automaker for damages from any accidents that are linked to a Toyota safety defect.


Drivers in such instances would probably get their deductible waived or repaid, and the accident wouldn't count against their driving record.


And it's unlikely that there will be any changes in the premiums people pay to insure Toyotas. A person's driving record, age and years behind the wheel far outweigh reparable safety defects in vehicles when rates are calculated. The full legal and financial effects of the Toyota recalls are expected to take years to play out.
"We are just seeing the tip of the iceberg," said Pete Moraga, spokesman for the Insurance Information Network of California. "This has the potential of being much bigger, and it depends on what Toyota does and whether it actually fixes the problem."

View Article in the LA Times

RUSSIA: On this day: 12 February

On February 12, 1953, the USSR officially declared the severance of diplomatic relations between the USSR and Israel. An explosion in the Soviet embassy which had happened on February 9 precipitated the move.

The bomb exploded at the doors of the embassy, slightly damaging the building and injuring three people. Followed an investigation conducted by Israel’s police and secret service, an underground anti-Soviet organization was revealed as the culprits. In the court hearing, its members claimed that they had carried out the act of terror in answer to the “Doctors' Plot” and the anti-Semitic campaign which had been going on in the USSR at that time.

The campaign had started in 1949, and in the beginning was not openly anti-Semitic. It was announced as a campaign against “cosmopolitism” and pro-Western ideas, but Jews seemed to be the main bearers of such ideas. Israel had been founded the previous year and the USSR had recognized the new country. In fact, the majority of the Soviet Jews were going to emigrate there. Many Jews were accused of animosity towards the patriotic feelings of the Soviet people, and such accusations were enough for firing from jobs, expulsion from higher education or even arrest.

On February 8, 1949, Stalin signed the resolution to close down the Soviet Jewish Writers’ Union. In the following years, many Jewish writers and journalists were arrested and charged with spying for the USA. All museums of Jewish culture, Jewish theaters and magazines were closed.

The infamous “Doctor’s Plot” – a medical malpractice case - was initiated in January 1953. Nine doctors, six of whom were Jews, were charged with a conspiracy to poison government leaders and with the murders of General-Colonel Andrey Zhdanov and of General-Colonel Aleksandr Sherbakov. The article in the “Pravda” newspaper, the main communist press organ, described the crime and the investigation in a very emotive manner, and laid stress on the ethnic origin of the accused: “The majority of the members of this terrorist group were recruited by the branch of the US secret service – the international Jewish bourgeois-nationalistic organization ‘Joint’.” The woman who slandered the doctors, Ludmila Timoshuk, was decorated with the Order of Lenin.

There is a version of events that the “Doctor’s Plot” was to become a pretext for deporting all the Soviet Jews to Siberia and the Far East. It did not happen, but the campaign, started in 1949, became openly anti-Semitic after the arrests of those doctors. The main newspapers published spiteful caricatures of Jews and satirical articles about their alleged crimes. However, those were the last days of the campaign. After Stalin’s death on March 5, 1953 it was over. The case about “The Doctor’s Plot” was closed, the accused medics were discharged, and Lieutenant-Colonel Mikhail Rumin, who had headed the investigation, was executed.

The explosion in the embassy broke up Soviet-Israeli relations only for a short time. In June 1953, they were formally restored, and in 1967, were broken again due to the Six Day War. That time it was for decades.

View Article on RT