Posts Tagged ‘Beijing’
Gas leak in China: 17 dead
Posted December 25, 2008
on:At least 17 people have died from a gas leak at a steel plant in China’s northern Hebei province.The leak began at about 9 a.m. on Wednesday at the Ganglu Iron and Steel Company in Zunhua City, about 150 kilometers (93 miles) east of Beijing.
The workers were believed to have been poisoned by carbon monoxide.Forty-four people were working near the blast furnace where the leak occurred at the time of the accident. Two people died instantly, while 15 others died later at the hospital.
The remaining workers were hospitalized in stable condition.Company officials have shut down the blast furnace and no further leaks.Ganglu is a seven-year-old company that employs 7,000 people with an annual output of 3 million tons of steel products.
China’s Defence Ministry said on Tuesday that three warships will be sent to waters off Somalia to protect Chinese vessels from pirate attacks. The two destroyers and a supply ship will leave the island province of Hainan in southern China, on Friday, Defence Ministry spokesman Huang Xueping told a news conference in Beijing.
He said during the mission the Chinese navy was “ready and willing to strengthen information and intelligence sharing, as well as humanitarian rescue operations with vessels of relevant countries”. Piracy has taken an increasingly costly toll on international shipping, especially in the Gulf of Aden, one of the world’s busiest sea lanes.
Spurred by widespread poverty in their homeland, the pirates have made an estimated 30 (m) million US dollars from hijacking ships for ransom this year, seizing more than 40 vessels off Somalia’s 1,880-mile (3,000-kilometre) coastline.
Last week, the Foreign Ministry said about 20 percent of the 1,265 Chinese ships passing through the area had come under attack so far this year. Seven hijackings have involved Chinese ships.
Experts said most of the commercial ships were not armed, meaning crews had few options when attacked.
A Chinese cargo ship’s crew, aided by the international anti-piracy force, fought off an attempted hijacking this week using Molotov cocktails and water hoses. China’s plans to send warships are a cautious step toward more engagement.
Though Beijing has a huge global commercial maritime presence, the People’s Liberation Army Navy has primarily focused on defending China’s coast and, until now, limited operations abroad to port calls, goodwill visits and exercises with other navies.
The Chinese fleet would join ships from the US, Denmark, Italy, Russia and other countries in patrolling the Gulf of Aden, which leads to the Suez Canal and is the quickest route from Asia to Europe and the Americas.
Akhil
Posted December 10, 2008
on:Akhil Kumar gave India a resounding start at the inaugural AIBA boxing World Cup, out-punching Germany’s Marcel Schneider 15-6 to enter the bantam weight semi-finals and assure himself of a medal in Moscow on Wednesday (Dec 10).
The 27-year-old Indian will be up against Beijing Olympics silver medallist Yankiel Leon Alarcon of Cuba in the semi-finals on December 13. The Cuban beat Botswana’s Khumiso Ikgopoleng 7-0 in the other last eight bout.
Today’s win has not just assured Akhil of a bronze medal but also USD 2,500 in prize money. “I was slightly nervous to start with because the first bout is always crucial. He (Schneider) was not attacking and I also stuck to counter-punching. I kept my guard down, like I usually do and gained in confidence as the bout progressed,” Akhil said after the bout.
Akhil, who was a quarter-finalist in Beijing, was in rampaging mood today and didn’t allow his opponent to land a single scoring punch in the first round, at the end of which he led 4-0.
The diminutive counter-puncher built on the lead in the next two rounds, scoring seven points. Though Schneider managed to hold his own in the third and fourth rounds by landing six blows, Akhil’s first-round lead gave him a comfortable six-point cushion.
The final round belonged to the Haryana-boxer, who picked up three more points to complete the formalities.
“The coaches — GS Sandhu and Jaidev Bisht — asked me to keep moving around the ring at good pace and that did the trick for me. My fitness is nowhere near what it was during the Beijing Olympics but it is good,” said Akhil.
“My target is the gold medal. The bronze and silver medals are the ones you get by luck. Next up for me is a Cuban boxer and though he is formidable, I am ready for the challenge,” he said.
Among the other bantam weight results, world champion and local favourite Sergey Vodopyanov, whom Akhil beat in the second round of Beijing Olympics, scored a comfortable 13-7 win over Uzbek Hoorshid Tojibaev.
Vodopyanov next faces Beijing bronze medallist Veaceslav Gojan of Moldova, who defeated Azerbaijan’s Rahim Najafov.
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