Archive for May, 2009

Chinese gymnasts back on top with best-ever Olympic performance

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

China’s all-conquering gymnasts concluded their gold haul at the Beijing Olympics on Tuesday, snatching nine out of the 14 golds on offer.

It’s the Chinese gymnasts’ best Olympic record. The previous record was set in the Los Angeles Olympics in 1984, when the Chinese harvested 5 gold medals, 4 silver and 2 bronze in gymnastics.

The nine golds also made China’s gymnastics team the No. 1 contributor to the country’s gold medal tally in a single Olympics.

China and the United States finished on top on Tuesday night, the last night of the gymnastics individual finals at the Beijng Olympic Games.

Earlier, Chinese gymnasts had swept seven gymnastics gold medals, including men’s team, women’s team, men’s all-around, men’s floor exercise, women’s floor exercise, men’s pommel horse, rings, women’s uneven bars, men’s parallel bars and horizontal bar.

Li Xiaopeng and Zou Kai continued China’s gold run on Tuesday, with Li, a three-time Olympian and multi-world champion, was crowned in his speciality apparatus of parallel bars, and Olympic debutant Zou winning China’s first horizontal bar gold.

The 27-year-old Li, the most decorated finalist on parallel bars, won gold with a score of 16.450 points. Li added to his medal collection, which includes gold medals at the Sydney Olympic and at the 2002 and 2003 world championships, and a bronze medal at the Athens Olympics.

Zou, 20, was the dark horse among Tuesday’s horizonal bar competitors, when he outplayed strong rivals such as reigning world champion Fabian Hambuchen from Germany with the hardest routine of the night.

This is Zou’s third gold at the Beijing Olympics, after he won in the team and floor exercise finals. The three golds also made Zou the biggest winner at the Beijing Olympic gymnastics.

But in balance beam, China’s traditional favourite apparatus, U.S. pair Shawn Johnson and Nastia Liukin defeated their Chinese challengers Cheng Fei and Li Shanshan to pocket the gold and silver. Cheng won the bronze.

“The gymnastics competitions of the Beijing Olympics were spectacular. Some of them were so fierce,” said Gao Jian, director of the gymnastics center of the State General Administration of Sport, the country’s Sports Ministry.

“I can assure you some gymnastics competitions at the Beijing Games, such as men’s team and women’s team contests, are classics which cannot be seen for a very long time,” said Gao. “We are so proud of our team. Our four years’ hard work eventually paid off.”

For the Chinese gymnastics team, their victory at the Beijing Olympics has never come easily, specially after their Waterloo in Athens. In Athens, the Chinese gymnasts brought home a sole gold medal, much to the disappointment of their compatriots.

As a matter of fact, gymnastics, one of the sports that brought China most Olympics gold medals, means so much to the country and its people. Three gymnasts were chosen for important roles at the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics.

Former gymnast Huang Liping swore at the ceremony on behalf of judges, Li Xiaoshuang, one of China’s greatest gymnasts of his age, was one of the eight torch bearers, and above all, China’s gymnastics legend Li Ning lit the cauldron.

But being the focus equals pressure, resulting from high expectations piled on them. That’s exactly what made Chinese male gymnasts’ failure in Athens a bitter and lasting scar.

From the first world all-around gold medal by Li Ning in 1982, to the first Olympic all-around champion by Li Xiaoshuang in 1996, to the first Olympics men’s team gold in Sydney, the Chinese finished their journey from being nothing to a gymnastics superpower.

They were expected to gain more, particularly the team title, because it is placed above individual titles as a measurement of the country’s overall level of gymnastics. But their dream to build on their Sydney achievement was crushed in Athens.

The Chinese gymnastics team came under heavy fire after the Athens Games, and some media even described the Athens as “drawing the line between Chinese gymnasts’ paradise and hell”. The Chinese gymnastics team sank to its lowest.

How the Chinese gymnasts made their impressive comeback may be a long story, but Gao prefered to keep it short. “In the past four years, we had worked so hard to come from our lowest to the peak.”

Like Gao, Huang Yubing, head coach of the men’s team, summed up Chinese gymnasts’ renaissance with one sentence. “We adjusted ourselves to the gymnastics new scoring system and new rules. ”

With the newly-obtained golds, Chinese gymnasts won a total of 52 Oympic medals, including 22 gold medals, 22 silver and 15 bronze.

China arrests most-wanted suspect in human trafficking cases

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

One of China’s most wanted criminals has been arrested after a national search on charges connected with human trafficking, the Ministry of Public Security said here Friday.

Zhang Weizhu, a 35-year-old woman born in southwest Yunnan Province, was allegedly involved in 10 cases of child trafficking in southern Guangdong Province, said a statement on the ministry’s website.

She was arrested in Zhuhai, Guangdong on Wednesday, the statement said.

Nine suspects in the same cases were arrested between February and March in Jiangmen and police rescued 11 children kidnapped by them.

Zhang was one of the top 10 most wanted suspects in human trafficking cases listed by the ministry on April 29. Two others were arrested earlier this month.

Chinese police launched a nationwide action against human trafficking of children and women in early April, which will run through this year.

According to the ministry’s figures, police rescued 196 children and 214 women and broke up 72 human trafficking rings from April 9 to May 4.

Most of these crimes occurred in Guizhou, Jiangsu, Guangdong, Shandong, Henan and Shanxi Provinces.

Zhang Xinfeng, vice minister of Public Security, said in a statement on May 8 that police at all levels would continue their efforts to deal with human trafficking, an increasing social problem in China that seriously violated human rights.

The ministry also started the compilation of a nationwide DNA database by collecting blood samples from the rescued children and parents who lost their children.

Preliminary results: Israel’s Kadima wins most seats in parliamentary election

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Preliminary results showed Wednesday that Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni’s Kadima party won most seats in the parliament.

Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni waves to supporters. Livni’s Kadima party won a razor-thin victory in the Israeli election Wednesday, gaining one more seat than right-wing rival Likud, according to a final ballot count.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
Photo Gallery>>>

With votes counted from 99 percent of polling station, the centrist Kadima won 28 seats in the 120-seat parliament while Benjamin Netanyahu’s hawkish Likud Party was right behind with 27.

Another two hawkish parties of Yisrael Beiteinu and the ultra-Orthodox Shas had 15 and 11 seats respectively, with the labor gaining only 13.

Though earlier exit polls showed Livni with a slight lead, but strong gains by right-wing parties overall would make it extremely difficult to form a unity government. Overall, the right-wing parties got a majority of 64 seats in the parliament.

Israeli Foreign Minister and Kadima party candidate Tzipi Livni speaks in Tel Aviv, Israel, Feb. 10, 2009. Preliminary results of Israel’s general elections released on Wednesday morning showed that the centrist Kadima party won the most seats in the new parliament, but its edge is seen too limited to send its chief Tzipi Livni to the prime minister’s office for sure. (Xinhua/Yin Bogu)
Photo Gallery>>>

Earlier Wednesday, Livni claimed winner of the election and called on Netanyahu to join a Kadima-led unity government.

“Today the people have chosen Kadima,” Livni told supporters in Tel Aviv.

“Today all that remains is … to do what is right for Israel at this time particularly in the face of the political, security and economic challenges both at home and abroad and to join a unity government led by us,” Livni said.

Netanyahu also claimed victory.

Israel’s Likud Party Chief Benjamin Netanyahu (L) speaks at an election night rally in Tel Aviv, Israel, Feb. 11, 2009. Preliminary results of Israel’s general elections released on Wednesday morning showed that the centrist Kadima party won the most seats in the new parliament, but its edge is seen too limited to send its chief Tzipi Livni to the prime minister’s office for sure. (Xinhua)
Photo Gallery>>>

“With God’s help, I will lead the next government,” Netanyahu told supporters, adding that the national camp led by the Likud has won a clear advantage.

According to the percentage of votes each party garnered, most analysts predicted a harsh political wrangling following Tuesday’s vote on forming the next government.

Earthquake jolts central Indonesia

Monday, May 25th, 2009

An earthquake measuring 5.1 on the Richter scale jolted northeast of Kupang, East Nusa Tenggara Province in central Indonesia, on Saturday, the Indonesian meteorological and geophysics office said.

The quake occurred at 8.36 a.m. local time (0036 GMT), the national meteorological and geophysics office (BMG) was quoted by the national Antara news agency as saying.

The earthquake’s epicenter was located at 9.46 degrees southern latitude and 124.71 degrees eastern longitude, around 148 km northeast of Kupang, at a depth of 30 km below sea level.

The quake did not have potential to trigger a subsequent tsunami, BMG said. Indonesia, the world’s largest archipelago, sits on the Pacific “Ring of Fire”, the edge of a tectonic plateprone to seismic upheaval.

“We can’t abandon the city”: L’Aquila earthquake survivors

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

For Gabriella De Lucchi, a survivor in the deadly earthquake that struck L’Aquila, central Italy on early Monday, “abandoning the city is impossible.”

“My roots are here, my family, friends and childhood memories are part of these ruins,” she told Xinhua on Friday.

“L’Aquila has turned into a ghost town, but Abruzzo people are strong and will react well to the tragedy even if it will take a long time to overcome it. I hope we are not forgotten once the emergency is over and media will have switched off their lights,” she added.

“It’s a miracle we are still alive,” said her husband Luigi. “Many people we know are not here anymore. We are afflicted, in just 20 seconds it seemed the world was coming to an end.”

Gabriella and Luigi have lost friends and relatives in the earthquake. Their house in the historical center of L’Aquila was partly damaged, and they moved to Rome temporarily following the tremor.

On Friday they returned to L’Aquila to participate in the funeral of their cousin’s daughter, 20-year-old Claudia who died in the earthquake.

More than 8,000 weeping mourners took part in the national funerals for the 289 earthquake victims, including 20 children. Friday was declared a day of national mourning and a moment of silence was observed nationwide.

At least 205 flower-covered coffins were laid out in the city square, brown for adults and white for children. The mass service was led by Vatican’s second highest official, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, who said that death teaches people “everything can stop in a moment and when everything ends all that remains is love.”

The Vatican granted a special dispensation to hold a Mass on Good Friday, the only day on the Roman Catholic calendar on which Mass is not normally said.

Sadness and pain filled the square. Desperate mothers and fathers clutched the white coffins of their deceased children, people cried and hugged each other.

The list of names of the victims was read out loud. More than a hundred psychologists are assisting the victims’ families and other survivors.

Prime Minister Berlusconi, President Giorgio Napolitano and other institutional leaders took part in the funerals.

“People have been asking me, please don’t leave us alone. I made a promise to them in front of their coffins,” said Berlusconi. “The government has assumed this responsibility. I will even offer several of my homes to those in need.”

A solidarity message from Pope Benedict XVI was read by his secretary, Monsignor Georg Gaenswein, at the opening of the collective funeral. The Pope plans to visit the quake-hit Abruzzo region after Easter.

Gabriella De Lucchi sounded exhausted. “My poor cousin’s daughter has been extracted dead from the ruins after 4 hours of search. We were all there with our hearts in our hands, praying for her but it was too late,” she said with a sigh.

“After nearly a week from the tragic event I’m having a mental breakdown because I finally realize what has happened. In the earthquake I have also lost two dear friends, along with their children and husbands.”

“The homeless people feel my heart with sadness,” she added.

“At night the temperature goes sharply down, rescuers are doing a great job but it’s not easy. My brother has fled to the seaside. Our apartment in the center, just reconstructed, has disintegrated,” she noted.

“It’s the first time L’Aquila has experienced such a violent earthquake. I still remember early Monday morning when I heard a deep thunder-noise and (the) next thing I knew (was that) the ground was shaking violently,” she recalled in tears.

She added that “L’Aquila has turned into a battlefield but I cannot abandon the city, it’s my home. I have grown up here, my parents are buried (here) and my remaining friends are still here.”

The survivor also described the terrible scenes she bore witness to. “I remember a father digging with his own hands to search for his young daughter, after 12 hours found dead. One of my friends recognized his wife by the hair and a ring she wore, that’s all there was left of her.”

“Everyone of us has lost something precious,” she added.

But she also remembered some touching stories, like “The suffering and anguish has helped bring back together a divorced husband and wife.”

“I really hope we are not forgotten as the people in Irpinia, who after 20 years from the earthquake that devastated the area still live in tents. Foreign aid is welcome in this moment of economic crisis, when financial resources are scarce,” she said.

“We never thought this could happen to our town,” she added.

“What will be of L’Aquila?” asked her husband Luigi. “Only time will decide, the city can be rebuilt but the human loss can never be recovered.”

Safe sex ring tone sings “condom!”

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

A cell phone ring tone that sings “Condom, condom!” has been launched to promote safe sex in India, where condoms carry a strong social stigma and HIV and AIDS are growing problems.

The acappella ring tone features a professional singer chanting the word condom more than 50 times, a playful approach that public health activists hope will spark discussion and make condoms more socially acceptable.

“We’ve made a conscious effort to move the concept of the condom away from negative association, like HIV and sex work,” said Yvonne MacPherson, country director of BBC World Service Trust India. “Condoms are actually health products and if you have a condom and you use it, you are seen to be smart and responsible.”

Vanessa Hudgens to date new men?

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Vanessa Hudgens has told boyfriend Zac Efron she wants to date other men.

The 20-year-old actress - who met her 21-year-old beau when they were both starring in ‘High School Musical’ - was reportedly livid after hearing Zac doesn’t want to get married until he is 40, and decided to make him jealous by seeing other people.

A source said: “When Vanessa heard about Zac’s plan to stay single for the next couple of decades she was shocked and shattered. She’d secretly hoped for an engagement ring within the next year or two!”

After discussing the matter with her friends, Vanessa is believed to have told Zac she wants the freedom to go out with other guys.

The source added to National Enquirer magazine: “Zac’s totally upset - he doesn’t want Vanessa dating anyone else. Even though he’s not ready to commit himself to settling down at this stage of his young life, the thought of Vanessa in another man’s arms drives him crazy.”

Mel Gibson responds to Robyn’s divorce petition

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Robyn Gibson, 53, Gibson’s wife of 28 years, filed the petition last Thursday. The petition doesn’t give any details about the split.

Robyn is seeking jewelry and some other property, and has suggested joint custody for their 9-year-old son.

Mel, unlike his wife, gives a specific date of separation — the papers say the date is Aug. 26, 2006.

Robyn and Mel grew apart after his infamous arrest on July 28, 2006, according to media reports.

Mel also lists “irreconcilable differences” as the reason for the divorce.

They issued a joint statement Monday, saying they have “always strived to maintain the privacy and integrity of our family and will continue to do so.”

Mel is one of Hollywood’s biggest names, with a pair of Oscar wins for best picture and director for “Braveheart.”

Vice police chief vows to strike against human trafficking

Monday, May 18th, 2009

A senior Chinese police officer Thursday vowed to give more enforced strikes against human trafficking and urged public security organs to complete the DNA database for identification of the abducted children.

The police authorities at all levels should acquire more help from the public by asking for information, Zhang Xinfeng, vice minister of Public Security, said in a statement released by the ministry’s Web site on Thursday.

The officer urged police authorities at all levels to continue their efforts to deal with human trafficking, an increasing social problem in China that seriously violates human rights.

The Public Security Ministry launched a special campaign involving police forces throughout the country between April 9 and May 4 to crack down on human trafficking crimes.

On April 29, the ministry published a top-wanted circular listing ten human trafficking suspects who escaped from the nationwide campaign .

So far two of the ten have been arrested and the rest are still at large.

Wei Jiapei, a 28-year-old east China’s Shandong native, has been arrested. He and other three accomplices kidnapped a one-year-old infant from a woman’s arms on a street in his hometown and then sold the infant to another city in the province.

According to the ministry, police authorities around the country rescued 196 children and 214 women during the campaign and destroyed 72 human trafficking rings in the country.

Most of the human trafficking crimes occurred in Guizhou, Jiangsu, Guangdong, Shandong, Henan and Shanxi Provinces.

In a trafficking case cracked in Jiangsu, police rescuers found that a kidnapped woman was tortured by six traffickers who forced her to prostitute.

In another case in Shanxi, six women were beguiled by a trafficking gang with labor jobs and sold to farmers as “wives.”

To identify trafficked children more quickly and accurately, the ministry has started the compilation of a nationwide DNA database by collecting blood samples from the rescued children and parents who lost their children.

Zhang Xinfeng stressed that all police organs should be able to collect blood samples from the parents who have been confirmed to have lost their children, parents who actively ask for donating their blood samples, rescued children, children with unknown origin and are suspected of trafficking experience and homeless children in streets.

Health advocates tout new model of female condom

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

Advocates of the female condom are promoting a less costly, more user-friendly version that they hope will vastly expand its role in the global fight against AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases. An early version of the female condom was introduced in 1993, and it remains the only available woman-initiated form of protection against both STDs and unintended pregnancy.

Yet despite global promotion by the United Nations and other organizations, its usage is still minuscule, even as women bear an ever-growing share of the AIDS epidemic.

Advocates hope the dynamics will change following last month’s approval by the Food and Drug Administration of the FC2, a new version of the female condom produced by the Chicago-based Female Health Co.

About 35 million female condoms were distributed worldwide last year, but that compares to more than 10 billion male condoms, which are far cheaper and, at least initially, easier to use. However, in some nations with high HIV rates, many men refuse to wear condoms, putting women at risk.

Though it looks similar to its predecessor — a soft, transparent sheath with flexible inner and outer rings — the FC2 is made from synthetic rubber rather than polyurethane, making it cheaper to produce.

Mary Ann Leeper, former president of Female Health Co. and now its strategic adviser, said the FC2 also is less noisy during use. Complaints about squeaky noises were among the factors that slowed acceptance of the original version.

The cost of the FC2 is one-third less than its predecessor, and may go lower, enabling health organizations to distribute many millions more than at present. For now, the price is about 60 cents compared to less than 4 cents for mass-distributed male condoms — a difference that’s an issue in the developing world.

The FC2 had been accepted previously by some international organizations, and the Female Health Co. distributed 14 million of them abroad last year along with 21 million of the older version. Advocates of the female condom praised the FDA announcement because it opens the door for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), one of the largest global providers of condoms, to distribute the FC2 overseas.

“This is a tremendous victory,” said Susie Hoffman, an assistant professor of clinical epidemiology at Columbia University who contends the female condom has suffered from misconceptions.

“In the United States, there has been strong bias against it,” Hoffman said. “Some people involved in AIDS and family planning would say, ‘Why do we need these? … It’s so weird that women are not going to pick it up.’”

“But if presented in the right way, many women do like it,” Hoffman said. “To find these people and help them and train them, you need systematic programming, which costs money.”

Resistance is less of a problem in some developing nations. The U.N. Population Fund, government agencies and nonprofits are aggressively promoting female condoms in places such as Brazil, Ghana, Zimbabwe and South Africa.

Women’s groups in Zimbabwe collected more than 30,000 signatures demanding access to the female condom. In Ghana, nonprofits say more than 10,000 people have attended training programs that teach women how to insert female condoms — they require careful instruction to be used properly — and how to negotiate with their male partners.

“The mindset is changing, but there are still a lot of challenges,” said Bidia Deperthes, the Population Fund’s HIV technical adviser for condoms. “Accessibility is still minimal. There’s a huge demand, and we’re not meeting it.”

Deperthes hopes that with FDA approval of the FC2, the number of female condoms distributed globally could climb to 50 million this year. If the numbers keep rising, she said, the cost to public-sector distributors for each FC2 could drop as low as 25 cents.

Jeff Spieler, a science adviser with USAID’s Office of Population and Reproductive Health, said the female condom’s future may depend on whether its promoters can develop a private-sector market. Its commercial price in the United States generally has been more than $2.

Another challenge is a stigma associated with the female condom in some places because prostitutes are among those deemed to benefit most from using it. On the other hand, advocates of the female condom say it has invaluable safe-sex potential for married women whose husbands are unfaithful and shun male condoms.

Serra Sippel, executive director of the Center for Health and Gender Equity in Washington, said FDA approval of the FC2 is a key step toward “putting the power of prevention in women’s hands.” But she bemoaned the product’s limited over-the-counter availability.

“We’d love to see the profile raised, to have commercials about it and normalize it so people aren’t embarrassed,” she said.

Mary Ann Leeper said the Female Health Co. is seeking a corporate partner to help market the FC2. She suggested that concern about HIV/AIDS may generate interest among women in communities with high infection rates.

The female condom’s advocates stress that it will never be the “magic bullet” that by itself turns the tide in fighting AIDS. But, they say, it should be a bigger part of the arsenal.

“It’s not going to be the one answer,” Hoffman said. “But it’s got a lot more to contribute than it has to date.”