Starbucks shop opens at Great Wall
Tue Sep 20, 2005 at 11:11 am |
china news |
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From the CNN website...
BEIJING, China (AP) -- Five years after Starbucks infiltrated China's historic Forbidden City, the company is making a caffeinated assault on another centuries' old landmark: the Great Wall.
The Seattle-based coffee chain said in a statement Tuesday it had opened a store at Badaling, a heavily touristed section of the wall about 40 kilometers (25 miles) north of Beijing.
Starbucks, which first opened in China in 1999, has 140 outlets in China, compared with almost 6,000 stores in the United States.
The firm drew controversy in 2000 when it opened a store within the gates of the imperial-era Forbidden City, a massive complex of palaces and courtyards where China's emperors once lived.
Some Chinese complained it was unseemly to have such an instantly recognizable symbol of American consumerism inside a national monument.
The Seattle-based coffee chain said in a statement Tuesday it had opened a store at Badaling, a heavily touristed section of the wall about 40 kilometers (25 miles) north of Beijing.
Starbucks, which first opened in China in 1999, has 140 outlets in China, compared with almost 6,000 stores in the United States.
The firm drew controversy in 2000 when it opened a store within the gates of the imperial-era Forbidden City, a massive complex of palaces and courtyards where China's emperors once lived.
Some Chinese complained it was unseemly to have such an instantly recognizable symbol of American consumerism inside a national monument.
Click to close...
13 killed in China firework blasts
Fri Sep 16, 2005 at 11:26 am |
china news |
0 comments
From the CNN website...
SHANGHAI, China (AP) -- A series of explosions ripped through fireworks workshops in southern China, killing 13 people, a local official and the government's Xinhua News Agency said Friday.
An initial blast occurred late afternoon Thursday, spreading to six other workshops at the Jiangnan Fireworks Plant in Hunan province' Anhua county, Xinhua said.
Workshops were reduced to rubble and an area of around 500 square meters (5,400 square feet) was obliterated, the report said.
A spokesman for the Anhua county industrial safety commission said one person remained in critical condition.
The accident's cause was under investigation and no other details were being released, said the man, who like many Chinese bureaucrats refused to be identified by name.
Xinhua said the county originally had 17 fireworks factories, but eight had already been closed due to safety concerns.
Fireworks production is a major source of revenue in many poor parts of China, but lax safety standards routinely lead to accidents.
The accident came just days after the circulation of a notice from the central government urging strengthened management over fireworks production, storage, transport, sales and use.
Among the demands of the September 14 document was for standardized design of factories and warehouses to feature firefighting equipment and tougher crackdowns on illegal fireworks production and storage.
Fireworks have been used for centuries in China to mark auspicious occasions such as weddings and business openings.
An initial blast occurred late afternoon Thursday, spreading to six other workshops at the Jiangnan Fireworks Plant in Hunan province' Anhua county, Xinhua said.
Workshops were reduced to rubble and an area of around 500 square meters (5,400 square feet) was obliterated, the report said.
A spokesman for the Anhua county industrial safety commission said one person remained in critical condition.
The accident's cause was under investigation and no other details were being released, said the man, who like many Chinese bureaucrats refused to be identified by name.
Xinhua said the county originally had 17 fireworks factories, but eight had already been closed due to safety concerns.
Fireworks production is a major source of revenue in many poor parts of China, but lax safety standards routinely lead to accidents.
The accident came just days after the circulation of a notice from the central government urging strengthened management over fireworks production, storage, transport, sales and use.
Among the demands of the September 14 document was for standardized design of factories and warehouses to feature firefighting equipment and tougher crackdowns on illegal fireworks production and storage.
Fireworks have been used for centuries in China to mark auspicious occasions such as weddings and business openings.
Click to close...
Feng shui course blows up a storm
Thu Sep 15, 2005 at 11:21 am |
china news |
0 comments
From the CNN website...
BEIJING, China (Reuters) -- A university in eastern China has stirred up a storm of controversy about feng shui, with academics around the country sounding off on whether the ancient Chinese study of geomancy is a science or mere superstition.
Feng shui, or "wind and water", is the process of maximizing the flow of energy to achieve harmony between people, structures and nature, for instance in making a decision about the siting of a building or placing of furniture in a room.
It is taken very seriously in Hong Kong, Taiwan and among overseas Chinese, but was branded a superstition on the mainland when the Communists swept to power in 1949.
In recent years it has staged a comeback in China, but a new feng shui course offered by an institute affiliated to Nanjing University has prompted calls from some academics to have it shut down, Xinhua reported on its English Web site, http://www.chinaview.cn.
"Feng shui is no science. It only fills the wallets of some charlatans," Chen Zhihua, an architect and professor at prestigious Tsinghua University, was quoted as saying.
An unnamed feng shui practitioner was quoted by Xinhua as saying at least 70 percent of the real estate projects in Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu province, had been evaluated by masters before construction began.
"More and more individuals and organizations are approaching feng shui experts for various advice, from how to decorate their homes to where to rent office space," Xinhua said.
Before construction began on the new Disneyland in Hong Kong, which opened this week, designers consulted feng shui masters to make sure "qi", or energy, would flow smoothly through the park.
Sources connected to the Nanjing feng shui course said the classes would continue, despite the ill wind
Feng shui, or "wind and water", is the process of maximizing the flow of energy to achieve harmony between people, structures and nature, for instance in making a decision about the siting of a building or placing of furniture in a room.
It is taken very seriously in Hong Kong, Taiwan and among overseas Chinese, but was branded a superstition on the mainland when the Communists swept to power in 1949.
In recent years it has staged a comeback in China, but a new feng shui course offered by an institute affiliated to Nanjing University has prompted calls from some academics to have it shut down, Xinhua reported on its English Web site, http://www.chinaview.cn.
"Feng shui is no science. It only fills the wallets of some charlatans," Chen Zhihua, an architect and professor at prestigious Tsinghua University, was quoted as saying.
An unnamed feng shui practitioner was quoted by Xinhua as saying at least 70 percent of the real estate projects in Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu province, had been evaluated by masters before construction began.
"More and more individuals and organizations are approaching feng shui experts for various advice, from how to decorate their homes to where to rent office space," Xinhua said.
Before construction began on the new Disneyland in Hong Kong, which opened this week, designers consulted feng shui masters to make sure "qi", or energy, would flow smoothly through the park.
Sources connected to the Nanjing feng shui course said the classes would continue, despite the ill wind
Click to close...
China Grapples With Legacy Of Its ‘Missing Girls’
Wed Sep 14, 2005 at 9:56 am |
china news |
0 comments
Well duh...
From the MSNBC website...
From the MSNBC website...
China is asking where all the girls have gone.
And the sobering answer is that this vast nation, now the world's fastest-growing economy, is confronting a self-perpetuated demographic disaster that some experts describe as "gendercide" -- the phenomenom caused by millions of families resorting to abortion and infanticide to make sure their one child was a boy.
The age-old bias for boys, combined with China's draconian one-child policy imposed since 1980, has produced what Gu Baochang, a leading Chinese expert on family planning, described as "the largest, the highest, and the longest" gender imbalance in the world.
Ancient practice
For centuries, Chinese families without sons feared poverty and neglect. The male offspring represented continuity of lineage and protection in old age.
The traditional thinking is best described in the ancient "Book of Songs" (1000-700 B.C.):
"When a son is born,
Let him sleep on the bed,
Clothe him with fine clothes,
And give him jade to play...
When a daughter is born,
Let her sleep on the ground,
Wrap her in common wrappings,
And give broken tiles to play..."
After the Communists took power in 1949, Mao Zedong rejected traditional Malthusian arguments that population growth would eventually outrun food supply, and firmly regarded China's huge population as an asset, then with an annual birth rate of 3.7 percent. Without a state-mandated birth control program, China's sex ratio in the 60's and 70's remained normal.
Then in the early '80s, China began enforcing an ambitious demographic engineering policy to limit families to one-child, as part of its strategy to fast-track economic modernization. The policy resulted in a slashed annual birth rate of 1.29 percent by 2002, or the prevention of some 300 million births, and the current population of close to 1.3 billion.
‘Missing girls’
From a relatively normal ratio of 108.5 boys to 100 girls in the early 80s, the male surplus progressively rose to 111 in 1990, 116 in 2000, and is now is close to 120 boys for each 100 girls at the present time, according to a Chinese think-tank report.
The shortage of women is creating a "huge societal issue,” warned U.N. resident coordinator Khalid Malik earlier this year.
Along with HIV/AIDS and environmental degradation, he said it was one of the three biggest challenges facing China.
"In eight to 10 years, we will have something like 40 to 60 million missing women," he said, adding that it will have "enormous implications" for China's prostitution industry and human trafficking.
China's own population experts have been warning for years about the looming gender crisis.
"The loss of female births due to illegal prenatal sex determination and sex-selective abortions and female infanticide will affect the true sex ratio at birth and at young ages, creating an unbalanced population sex structure in the future and resulting in potentially serious social problems," argued Peking University's chief demographer back in 1993.
Prenatal sex selection
The abortion of female fetuses and infanticide was aided by the spread of cheap and portable ultra-sound scanners in the 1980's. Illegal mobile scanning and backstreet hospitals can provide a sex scan for as little as $50, according to one report.
"Prenatal sex selection was probably the primary cause, if not the sole cause, for the continuous rise of the sex ratio at birth," said population expert Prof. Chu Junhong.
A slew of reports have confirmed the disturbing demographic trend.
- In a 2002 survey conducted in a central China village, more than 300 of the 820 women had abortions and more than a third of them admitted they were trying to select their baby's sex.
- According to a report by the International Planned Parenthood Federation, the vast majority of aborted fetuses, more than 70 percent, were female, citing the abortion of up to 750,000 female fetuses in China in 1999.
- A report by Zhang Qing, population researcher of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the gender imbalance is "statistically related to the high death rate of female babies, with female death rate at age zero in the city or rural areas consistently higher than male baby death rate." Only seven of China's 29 provinces are within the world's average sex ratio. Zhang Qing's report cited eight "disaster provinces" from North to South China, where there were 26 to 38 percent more boys than girls.
- In the last census in 2000, there were nearly 19 million boys more than girls in the 0-15 age group. "We have to act now or the problem will become very serious," said Peking University sociologist Prof. Xia Xueluan. He cited the need to strengthen social welfare system in the countryside to weaken the traditional preference for boys.
Gravity of imbalance beginning to be felt
The hint of "serious" problems ahead can be seen in the increasing cases of human trafficking as bachelors try to "purchase" their wives.
China's police have freed more than 42,000 kidnapped women and children from 2001 to 2003.
The vast army of surplus males could pose a threat to China's stability, argued two Western scholars. Valerie M. Hudson and Andrea M. Den Boer, who recently wrote a book on the "Security Implications of Asia's Surplus Male Population," cited two rebellions in disproportionately male areas in Manchu Dynasty China.
According to their analysis, low-status young adult men with little chance of forming families of their own are "much more prone to attempt to improve their situation through violent and criminal behavior in a strategy of coalitional aggression."
The growing crime rate in China which is being linked to China's massive "floating" or transient population, some 80 million of which are low-status males, seems to add weight to their observation.
Girl Care Project
The imbalance has spurred some official efforts to shift public opinion.
The "Girl Care Project" is described as a multi-pronged approach to encourage the birth of girls, although some experts complain that it's being framed in terms of the future needs of men.
"That's too male-oriented and discriminatory of women," said Dr. Gu, the population control expert.
According to one estimate, over the next decade, some 40 million Chinese men will be unable to find wives due to the "scarcity" of females, thus the growing number of so-called "bachelors' villages" in various parts of China.
"This project ought to be seen as a way to foster more respect and concern for women and girls," Gu said.
The program aims to end pre-birth sex selection, as well as "attacking the criminal activities of drowning and abandoning baby girls [while] rewarding and assisting families that plan to give birth to baby girls," reported The People's Daily, China's leading paper and the flagship of the Communist Party.
Benefits for girls
The pilot program is being launched in more than a dozen of China's poorest provinces, with funding split between the national and local government.
Leading the way is Fujian province where some $24 million has been allocated for distribution among nearly half a million households, with some 100,000 girls to be exempt from school fees.
Under the program, couples who limit themselves to two girls would receive a combined annual pension of about $150 for the rest of their lives. Preferential treatment in health care, housing and employment would also be provided.
A recent glowing report in the The People's Daily cited a village where new houses for beneficiaries worth more than $2,300 each were built along a "Family Planning Basic Policy Street.”
China's birth control policy is now "a diversified mechanism," according to Population Vice-Minister Zhao Baige, which allows for one-child in the cities, two in the rural areas, and three in ethnic regions, with no limit in Tibet. "To normalize the sex ratio, illegal sex determination and sex-selective abortions must be strictly banned," Zhao declared recently.
An American demographer, who has been closely following China's population program and who spoke on condition of anonymity, lauded China's "coming to grips" with the problem.
"Still, they are in a deep dilemma -- emotional and policy dilemma -- because the solution to the problem will conflict with other parts of their population strategy to reduce birth rate or some of the measures could perhaps make the problem even worse," warned the demographer.
"We still have a lot of work to do," said Dr.Gu. "There's no road map yet on how to achieve the goal of normal sex ratio."
And the sobering answer is that this vast nation, now the world's fastest-growing economy, is confronting a self-perpetuated demographic disaster that some experts describe as "gendercide" -- the phenomenom caused by millions of families resorting to abortion and infanticide to make sure their one child was a boy.
The age-old bias for boys, combined with China's draconian one-child policy imposed since 1980, has produced what Gu Baochang, a leading Chinese expert on family planning, described as "the largest, the highest, and the longest" gender imbalance in the world.
Ancient practice
For centuries, Chinese families without sons feared poverty and neglect. The male offspring represented continuity of lineage and protection in old age.
The traditional thinking is best described in the ancient "Book of Songs" (1000-700 B.C.):
"When a son is born,
Let him sleep on the bed,
Clothe him with fine clothes,
And give him jade to play...
When a daughter is born,
Let her sleep on the ground,
Wrap her in common wrappings,
And give broken tiles to play..."
After the Communists took power in 1949, Mao Zedong rejected traditional Malthusian arguments that population growth would eventually outrun food supply, and firmly regarded China's huge population as an asset, then with an annual birth rate of 3.7 percent. Without a state-mandated birth control program, China's sex ratio in the 60's and 70's remained normal.
Then in the early '80s, China began enforcing an ambitious demographic engineering policy to limit families to one-child, as part of its strategy to fast-track economic modernization. The policy resulted in a slashed annual birth rate of 1.29 percent by 2002, or the prevention of some 300 million births, and the current population of close to 1.3 billion.
‘Missing girls’
From a relatively normal ratio of 108.5 boys to 100 girls in the early 80s, the male surplus progressively rose to 111 in 1990, 116 in 2000, and is now is close to 120 boys for each 100 girls at the present time, according to a Chinese think-tank report.
The shortage of women is creating a "huge societal issue,” warned U.N. resident coordinator Khalid Malik earlier this year.
Along with HIV/AIDS and environmental degradation, he said it was one of the three biggest challenges facing China.
"In eight to 10 years, we will have something like 40 to 60 million missing women," he said, adding that it will have "enormous implications" for China's prostitution industry and human trafficking.
China's own population experts have been warning for years about the looming gender crisis.
"The loss of female births due to illegal prenatal sex determination and sex-selective abortions and female infanticide will affect the true sex ratio at birth and at young ages, creating an unbalanced population sex structure in the future and resulting in potentially serious social problems," argued Peking University's chief demographer back in 1993.
Prenatal sex selection
The abortion of female fetuses and infanticide was aided by the spread of cheap and portable ultra-sound scanners in the 1980's. Illegal mobile scanning and backstreet hospitals can provide a sex scan for as little as $50, according to one report.
"Prenatal sex selection was probably the primary cause, if not the sole cause, for the continuous rise of the sex ratio at birth," said population expert Prof. Chu Junhong.
A slew of reports have confirmed the disturbing demographic trend.
- In a 2002 survey conducted in a central China village, more than 300 of the 820 women had abortions and more than a third of them admitted they were trying to select their baby's sex.
- According to a report by the International Planned Parenthood Federation, the vast majority of aborted fetuses, more than 70 percent, were female, citing the abortion of up to 750,000 female fetuses in China in 1999.
- A report by Zhang Qing, population researcher of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the gender imbalance is "statistically related to the high death rate of female babies, with female death rate at age zero in the city or rural areas consistently higher than male baby death rate." Only seven of China's 29 provinces are within the world's average sex ratio. Zhang Qing's report cited eight "disaster provinces" from North to South China, where there were 26 to 38 percent more boys than girls.
- In the last census in 2000, there were nearly 19 million boys more than girls in the 0-15 age group. "We have to act now or the problem will become very serious," said Peking University sociologist Prof. Xia Xueluan. He cited the need to strengthen social welfare system in the countryside to weaken the traditional preference for boys.
Gravity of imbalance beginning to be felt
The hint of "serious" problems ahead can be seen in the increasing cases of human trafficking as bachelors try to "purchase" their wives.
China's police have freed more than 42,000 kidnapped women and children from 2001 to 2003.
The vast army of surplus males could pose a threat to China's stability, argued two Western scholars. Valerie M. Hudson and Andrea M. Den Boer, who recently wrote a book on the "Security Implications of Asia's Surplus Male Population," cited two rebellions in disproportionately male areas in Manchu Dynasty China.
According to their analysis, low-status young adult men with little chance of forming families of their own are "much more prone to attempt to improve their situation through violent and criminal behavior in a strategy of coalitional aggression."
The growing crime rate in China which is being linked to China's massive "floating" or transient population, some 80 million of which are low-status males, seems to add weight to their observation.
Girl Care Project
The imbalance has spurred some official efforts to shift public opinion.
The "Girl Care Project" is described as a multi-pronged approach to encourage the birth of girls, although some experts complain that it's being framed in terms of the future needs of men.
"That's too male-oriented and discriminatory of women," said Dr. Gu, the population control expert.
According to one estimate, over the next decade, some 40 million Chinese men will be unable to find wives due to the "scarcity" of females, thus the growing number of so-called "bachelors' villages" in various parts of China.
"This project ought to be seen as a way to foster more respect and concern for women and girls," Gu said.
The program aims to end pre-birth sex selection, as well as "attacking the criminal activities of drowning and abandoning baby girls [while] rewarding and assisting families that plan to give birth to baby girls," reported The People's Daily, China's leading paper and the flagship of the Communist Party.
Benefits for girls
The pilot program is being launched in more than a dozen of China's poorest provinces, with funding split between the national and local government.
Leading the way is Fujian province where some $24 million has been allocated for distribution among nearly half a million households, with some 100,000 girls to be exempt from school fees.
Under the program, couples who limit themselves to two girls would receive a combined annual pension of about $150 for the rest of their lives. Preferential treatment in health care, housing and employment would also be provided.
A recent glowing report in the The People's Daily cited a village where new houses for beneficiaries worth more than $2,300 each were built along a "Family Planning Basic Policy Street.”
China's birth control policy is now "a diversified mechanism," according to Population Vice-Minister Zhao Baige, which allows for one-child in the cities, two in the rural areas, and three in ethnic regions, with no limit in Tibet. "To normalize the sex ratio, illegal sex determination and sex-selective abortions must be strictly banned," Zhao declared recently.
An American demographer, who has been closely following China's population program and who spoke on condition of anonymity, lauded China's "coming to grips" with the problem.
"Still, they are in a deep dilemma -- emotional and policy dilemma -- because the solution to the problem will conflict with other parts of their population strategy to reduce birth rate or some of the measures could perhaps make the problem even worse," warned the demographer.
"We still have a lot of work to do," said Dr.Gu. "There's no road map yet on how to achieve the goal of normal sex ratio."
Click to close...
Magic Kingdom Enters Middle Kingdom
Mon Sep 12, 2005 at 9:36 am |
china news |
0 comments
From the CNN website...
HONG KONG, China -- Disneyland flung open its gates in Hong Kong on Monday in its first foray into the massive China market.
With traditional Chinese performances such as Chinese lion dances and singing children as a backdrop, Chinese Vice President Zeng Qinghong, Hong Kong leader Donald Tsang and top Disney executives Michael Eisner and Robert Iger officiated at the park's opening on Monday.
As many as 16,000 people were set to flock to Penny Bay on Lantau Island, a half-hour train ride from this congested city's central business area.
Organizers say the opening of Hong Kong Disneyland is likely to be the biggest media event since the former British colony was handed over to China in 1997.
In a show of support for the special administrative territory perched on its southern coast, China's Vice President Zeng Qinghong will attend the opening at the 129-hectare (318-acre) park, flanked by Hong Kong's leader and Disney's top executives.
The opening comes six years after Hong Kong's government and the California-based Disney agreed to jointly develop the $3.5 billion project.
Hong Kong was in the doldrums at the time, and desperately wanted to add some glamour and diversity to its economy, known primarily as a banking, investment, shopping and shipping center.
The Hong Kong region in recent years also has battled setbacks from the Asian financial crisis in the 1990s and the deadly SARS epidemic of 2003.
For Disney, Hong Kong was a launch pad into the world's most populous nation and fastest-growing market, and a huge play on China's burgeoning middle class.
In a show of support for the beleaguered Hong Kong, China allowed its nationals to travel to the city of 6.8 million people in 2003.
Since then, floods of mainland Chinese have flocked to Hong Kong picking up brand-name goods, crowding to its jewelry stores and eating out at its myriad restaurants.
The world's best-known entertainment company is counting on these increasingly affluent mainland tourists in its third international venture, and it's second in Asia after Japan. Disney and Hong Kong officials estimate one-third of the visitors at Hong Kong Disneyland will be from mainland China, one-third from Hong Kong and the rest from Southeast Asia.
As many as 150 million people live within a 300-mile (482-kilometer) radius of Disneyland, and Disney is counting on this population to visit and stay at the park.
In a telephone survey of 1,500 mainland Chinese who lived in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, market research firm AC Neilsen said one-third would either consider going or would go to Disneyland.
Disney says it has learned from its park in France. It decided to start off small in Hong Kong, so that it could become profitable with 5.6 million visitors a year, and build the second phase later on.
The U.S.-based company also learned that it needed to fit into the local culture after it realized it made a major faux pas in Paris by not serving wine.
In Hong Kong, feng shui has played a large part in the park's design. It moved its main gate so it was facing the right direction, put a bend in its walkway so that "chi" or energy does not flow into the South China Sea and does not have the unlucky number four in its elevators. (Full story) A feature of the Hong Kong park are the Chinese garden pavilions, where trigger-happy picture snappers can pose with Mickey Mouse and other Disney characters. The 21 rides at the Hong Kong park are tame, after market research showed Asians weren't after the more scary versions.
In weeks of rehearsals leading up the grand opening, where as many as 100,000 people turned up, Disney discovered that Asians like to have long, expensive dinners and had to upscale on mobile food trolleys and seats.
The park -- which looks much like the first Disneyland in California, with a Sleeping Beauty Castle, Space Mountain thrill ride and a Cinderella Carousel -- has been beset by obstacles.
Earlier in the year, beetles began eating up the beds, while in August packs of wild dogs wondered in down the hill and invaded the park.
And the reviews have not all been rosy. Early visitors said the lines were too long and the size at 126 hectares (311 acres) was too small (Tokyo has 180 hectares, Paris 1,943 and Florida 11,300 hectares).
Disney also had to ditch shark fin's soup after local uproar over its use.
Still, the majority of people in Hong Kong support the park, according to local surveys and China's government is also very much behind the project.
Disney officials believe once the park is built out to 180 hectares, it will attract 10 million visitors annually.
Hong Kong leaders hope that the region will diversify into a family destination, China's state-run news agency said in September report.
Disney has said that it will focus on Hong Kong for the next decade, with the second phase of the park under discussion.
With traditional Chinese performances such as Chinese lion dances and singing children as a backdrop, Chinese Vice President Zeng Qinghong, Hong Kong leader Donald Tsang and top Disney executives Michael Eisner and Robert Iger officiated at the park's opening on Monday.
As many as 16,000 people were set to flock to Penny Bay on Lantau Island, a half-hour train ride from this congested city's central business area.
Organizers say the opening of Hong Kong Disneyland is likely to be the biggest media event since the former British colony was handed over to China in 1997.
In a show of support for the special administrative territory perched on its southern coast, China's Vice President Zeng Qinghong will attend the opening at the 129-hectare (318-acre) park, flanked by Hong Kong's leader and Disney's top executives.
The opening comes six years after Hong Kong's government and the California-based Disney agreed to jointly develop the $3.5 billion project.
Hong Kong was in the doldrums at the time, and desperately wanted to add some glamour and diversity to its economy, known primarily as a banking, investment, shopping and shipping center.
The Hong Kong region in recent years also has battled setbacks from the Asian financial crisis in the 1990s and the deadly SARS epidemic of 2003.
For Disney, Hong Kong was a launch pad into the world's most populous nation and fastest-growing market, and a huge play on China's burgeoning middle class.
In a show of support for the beleaguered Hong Kong, China allowed its nationals to travel to the city of 6.8 million people in 2003.
Since then, floods of mainland Chinese have flocked to Hong Kong picking up brand-name goods, crowding to its jewelry stores and eating out at its myriad restaurants.
The world's best-known entertainment company is counting on these increasingly affluent mainland tourists in its third international venture, and it's second in Asia after Japan. Disney and Hong Kong officials estimate one-third of the visitors at Hong Kong Disneyland will be from mainland China, one-third from Hong Kong and the rest from Southeast Asia.
As many as 150 million people live within a 300-mile (482-kilometer) radius of Disneyland, and Disney is counting on this population to visit and stay at the park.
In a telephone survey of 1,500 mainland Chinese who lived in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, market research firm AC Neilsen said one-third would either consider going or would go to Disneyland.
Disney says it has learned from its park in France. It decided to start off small in Hong Kong, so that it could become profitable with 5.6 million visitors a year, and build the second phase later on.
The U.S.-based company also learned that it needed to fit into the local culture after it realized it made a major faux pas in Paris by not serving wine.
In Hong Kong, feng shui has played a large part in the park's design. It moved its main gate so it was facing the right direction, put a bend in its walkway so that "chi" or energy does not flow into the South China Sea and does not have the unlucky number four in its elevators. (Full story) A feature of the Hong Kong park are the Chinese garden pavilions, where trigger-happy picture snappers can pose with Mickey Mouse and other Disney characters. The 21 rides at the Hong Kong park are tame, after market research showed Asians weren't after the more scary versions.
In weeks of rehearsals leading up the grand opening, where as many as 100,000 people turned up, Disney discovered that Asians like to have long, expensive dinners and had to upscale on mobile food trolleys and seats.
The park -- which looks much like the first Disneyland in California, with a Sleeping Beauty Castle, Space Mountain thrill ride and a Cinderella Carousel -- has been beset by obstacles.
Earlier in the year, beetles began eating up the beds, while in August packs of wild dogs wondered in down the hill and invaded the park.
And the reviews have not all been rosy. Early visitors said the lines were too long and the size at 126 hectares (311 acres) was too small (Tokyo has 180 hectares, Paris 1,943 and Florida 11,300 hectares).
Disney also had to ditch shark fin's soup after local uproar over its use.
Still, the majority of people in Hong Kong support the park, according to local surveys and China's government is also very much behind the project.
Disney officials believe once the park is built out to 180 hectares, it will attract 10 million visitors annually.
Hong Kong leaders hope that the region will diversify into a family destination, China's state-run news agency said in September report.
Disney has said that it will focus on Hong Kong for the next decade, with the second phase of the park under discussion.
Click to close...
China’s One-Child Generation Faces Loneliness
Mon May 16, 2005 at 12:13 pm |
china news |
0 comments
From China Daily...
A survey shows that more than 60 per cent of Chinese young people growing up without siblings say they felt lonely in their childhood.
And about 46 per cent of them, who were born in the 1980s said that they would prefer to have two children themselves.
The survey, carried on by the cultural channel of sin.com.cn - one of the country's most popular websites - drew responses from about 7,000 young people between the ages of 15 to 25. It ended Friday.
The questions focused on views of family and marriage.
China implemented its family-planning policy in the late 1970s. Officials say that without it, the country would have 300 million more people than it has today.
In urban centres, most children born in the late 1970s and 1980s are the only child in their family.
They have no brothers or sisters and have largely enjoyed all the their parents' and grandparents' love and care.
They are often compared to the "sun" of a family, meaning the centre of the family's universe.
It is time now for young people born from that period to work and organize their own families. The survey was designed with that in mind.
According to its results, more than 58 per cent of these young people admitted they are lonely, selfish and willful.
And more than 66 per cent of them expressed disappointment at having no brothers or sisters with whom they can share their happiness or sorrow in life.
"It is very natural and unavoidable for them to be lonely, selfish and willful," said Zhou Xiaozheng, a professor with the Sociology Department of the Beijing-based Renmin University of China.
"Affection among family members, friends and lovers are necessary emotions for a person's growing up in a healthy way. Without these three emotions, life is incomplete."
"And the affection among brothers and sisters is just a normal feeling these people lack. The absence of such emotion results in the selfishness of the people. But the society should not blame their shortcomings, because it is not their fault," said Zhou.
Actually most of these want to have brothers and sisters.
"Although I had peers to play with me in my childhood, sharing my happiness and sorrow, the friendship between us was totally different from the emotion among brothers, which is more intimate," said Wang Meng, who was born in 1982 and is now working for a construction company in Beijing.
"I remember among my friends, there were twin brothers. They were so close. How I envied them! But it is not usual to have a twin brother or sister."
While Wang is representative of the majority, Wu Ye belongs to the group who do not want to have brothers or sisters - 14 per cent. She was also born in 1982 and works at a real estate company in Beijing.
"I do not want another child to share the love and care from my parents. I want my parents to love me as the only one, forever. And I did not feel lonely when I was a child. I had friends accompanying me when I was happy or sad. It was enough for me," said Wu.
But after more than 20 years of the family planning policy, problems of the policy have begun to emerge on the national scene.
"For example, the aging population structure is one of them," said Zhou.
China has adjusted the policy in recent years in some cities, such as Beijing and Shanghai, where couples that both come from one-child families are free to have a second child with a four-year interval between the first and the second child.
The adjustment gives the hope and chance for these people to make up for the regrets of their childhood.
About 46 per cent of people in the survey chose to have two children.
"I love children. If my economic condition allows it, I want to have two babies. Then they can play together and help each other. They can also learn how to share something precious and important, such as parents' love, with others. It is good for them in their lives." said Wang.
About 14 per cent of those polled said they did not want children at all.
"Having a child? Of course not!" said Wu. "If I have a child, I will love him/her so much. I am afraid such love will weaken my care for myself, which I cannot accept. I do not want a child."
"And I also think that having a child is not good for the relations between my future husband and me.
Although the only-child group has to bear the disappointment of having no brothers or sisters, they have also got what their parents have dreamed of but did not achieve. That is, they enjoyed better material enjoyment and full educational support.
Of them, about 78 per cent say they value having a good education.
As for taking care of their aged parents, about 84 per cent of participants said that they are devoted to filial respect, and will not give up the obligation of taking care of their parents under any circumstances.
But Zhou said "few people will say no when asked to take care of their parents. But whether or not they can spare time, money and energy to do so is a problem. Does one child have enough money, time or energy to take care of two aged parents? I doubt it."
His worry is not unreasonable. In another item of the survey about the basic situation of their lives, 66 per cent of people agreed that they have too many things to learn and they are busy with the task of learning.
And 61 per cent of them complained that they have to shoulder heavy pressures from their jobs. Under such circumstances, how much time and energy they can contribute to their parents is a problem. And if they have children, that time and energy might be less.
And about 46 per cent of them, who were born in the 1980s said that they would prefer to have two children themselves.
The survey, carried on by the cultural channel of sin.com.cn - one of the country's most popular websites - drew responses from about 7,000 young people between the ages of 15 to 25. It ended Friday.
The questions focused on views of family and marriage.
China implemented its family-planning policy in the late 1970s. Officials say that without it, the country would have 300 million more people than it has today.
In urban centres, most children born in the late 1970s and 1980s are the only child in their family.
They have no brothers or sisters and have largely enjoyed all the their parents' and grandparents' love and care.
They are often compared to the "sun" of a family, meaning the centre of the family's universe.
It is time now for young people born from that period to work and organize their own families. The survey was designed with that in mind.
According to its results, more than 58 per cent of these young people admitted they are lonely, selfish and willful.
And more than 66 per cent of them expressed disappointment at having no brothers or sisters with whom they can share their happiness or sorrow in life.
"It is very natural and unavoidable for them to be lonely, selfish and willful," said Zhou Xiaozheng, a professor with the Sociology Department of the Beijing-based Renmin University of China.
"Affection among family members, friends and lovers are necessary emotions for a person's growing up in a healthy way. Without these three emotions, life is incomplete."
"And the affection among brothers and sisters is just a normal feeling these people lack. The absence of such emotion results in the selfishness of the people. But the society should not blame their shortcomings, because it is not their fault," said Zhou.
Actually most of these want to have brothers and sisters.
"Although I had peers to play with me in my childhood, sharing my happiness and sorrow, the friendship between us was totally different from the emotion among brothers, which is more intimate," said Wang Meng, who was born in 1982 and is now working for a construction company in Beijing.
"I remember among my friends, there were twin brothers. They were so close. How I envied them! But it is not usual to have a twin brother or sister."
While Wang is representative of the majority, Wu Ye belongs to the group who do not want to have brothers or sisters - 14 per cent. She was also born in 1982 and works at a real estate company in Beijing.
"I do not want another child to share the love and care from my parents. I want my parents to love me as the only one, forever. And I did not feel lonely when I was a child. I had friends accompanying me when I was happy or sad. It was enough for me," said Wu.
But after more than 20 years of the family planning policy, problems of the policy have begun to emerge on the national scene.
"For example, the aging population structure is one of them," said Zhou.
China has adjusted the policy in recent years in some cities, such as Beijing and Shanghai, where couples that both come from one-child families are free to have a second child with a four-year interval between the first and the second child.
The adjustment gives the hope and chance for these people to make up for the regrets of their childhood.
About 46 per cent of people in the survey chose to have two children.
"I love children. If my economic condition allows it, I want to have two babies. Then they can play together and help each other. They can also learn how to share something precious and important, such as parents' love, with others. It is good for them in their lives." said Wang.
About 14 per cent of those polled said they did not want children at all.
"Having a child? Of course not!" said Wu. "If I have a child, I will love him/her so much. I am afraid such love will weaken my care for myself, which I cannot accept. I do not want a child."
"And I also think that having a child is not good for the relations between my future husband and me.
Although the only-child group has to bear the disappointment of having no brothers or sisters, they have also got what their parents have dreamed of but did not achieve. That is, they enjoyed better material enjoyment and full educational support.
Of them, about 78 per cent say they value having a good education.
As for taking care of their aged parents, about 84 per cent of participants said that they are devoted to filial respect, and will not give up the obligation of taking care of their parents under any circumstances.
But Zhou said "few people will say no when asked to take care of their parents. But whether or not they can spare time, money and energy to do so is a problem. Does one child have enough money, time or energy to take care of two aged parents? I doubt it."
His worry is not unreasonable. In another item of the survey about the basic situation of their lives, 66 per cent of people agreed that they have too many things to learn and they are busy with the task of learning.
And 61 per cent of them complained that they have to shoulder heavy pressures from their jobs. Under such circumstances, how much time and energy they can contribute to their parents is a problem. And if they have children, that time and energy might be less.
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