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"I was joking and did not want to hijack the airplane"Posted by Eric Mu, July 27, 2004 3:29 PM
Story of the day: Air China's "hijacking" incident The "hijacker" Yang Jinsong is a librarian at Xiangtan University in Hunan and has a record of mental illness. When he was arrested, he said "I am joking, I am joking". But the passengers were not impressed. Today's Beijing Morning Post published a photo about this story (left). ![]() People in News - Two cool Chinese armed policemen Today's stars are two cool-loooking Chinese armed policemen in China's Bagdhad embassy. Both the People's Daily and Beijing Evening News published images of the armed cops, commenting that this is the first time the Chinese government has sent special armed police to protect Foreign Ministry staff. There are six armed policemen in the embassy. The photo is from Xinhua News Agency; left to right are Sun Bigan, current head of the Chinese mission in Baghdad, with armed policemen Li Yaguang and Su Jun. Other stories in the news: Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing wants US outlaw punished |
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Tales of Old Hong Kong: The new Tales of Old Hong Kong compiled by Derek Sandhaus is available at Earnshaw Books.
Diamond Hill by Feng Chi-shun: Feng's memoir Diamond Hill describes an era of gambling and gangsters, Suzie Wong and squatter villages, fires and food stalls, and the Kowloon Walled City and its white powder. "A time when people were poor, but life was rich," he says. The world that he grew up in no longer exists, but his book - the first ever on the Diamond Hill refugee settlement, in either Chinese or English - offers a candid picture of what life was like for most Hong Kong residents in the 1950s.
William A. Callahan's China: The Pessoptimist Nation: China: The Pessoptimist Nation shows how the heart of Chinese foreign policy is not a security dilemma, but an identity dilemma. Through a careful analysis of how Chinese people understand their new place in the world, the book charts how Chinese identity emerges through the interplay of positive and negative feelings in a dynamic that intertwines China's domestic and international politics.
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+ Yu Dan: defender of traditional culture, force for harmony (2007.05): Yu Dan (于丹) gets criticized by 'real scholars'. He Dong (何东) writes in her defense, saying that TV program hosts are the ones who ought to be upset. Zhao Yong in Southern Metropolis Daily writes that she upholds the mainstream government line. + Slow, polluting seniors removed from Beijing city streets (2007.01): Zhang Rui writes about a Beijing plan to ban seniors from the city's streets, with the goal of reducing gridlock among pedestrians. + Migrant worker blues: Who cares? by Bruce Humes (2006.09): Bruce Humes reviews two recent books about migrants in China: 'I Shall Shed No Tears' (我的眼泪不会掉下来) by Wang Lili and 'La Promesse de Shanghai' by Stephane Fiere.
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