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China's southern province installs 1 mln cameras to monitor crimes. Xinhua, Sept. 5, 2009
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-09/05/content_11999933.htm
(Guangdong is installing 1 million cameras, ON TOP OF 900,000 already in place)
--------------Separately
(1) Editorial, Taipei Fault Lines; Ma Ying-jeou can't mollify China all the time. Asia Wall Street Journal, Sept. 2, 2009
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204731804574384154143519662.html
("The Kuomintang also sent a representative to Beijing last week to discuss the Dalai Lama's trip. To their critics, this sounds an awful lot like asking Beijing's permission for what should be a domestic decision.")
(2) Taiwan's foreign exchange reserves hit record high in August. DPA (Germany), Sept. 4, 2009
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/284226,taiwans-foreign-exchange-reserves-hit-record-high-in-august.html
(increased $4.3bn to $325.4 bn, through the appreciation of the euro, Japanese yen against the US dollar")
(3) 2009 Kaohsiung Film Festival between October 16-29 to screen, among other films, "Ten Conditions of Love" on the World Uighur Congress leader Rebiya Kadeer. Organiser Liu Hsiu-ying, a woman, added that it was a coincidence that none of them was from China.
My comment:
(a) I guess the coincidence is convenient, so that no PRC director or film can boycott the festival.
(b) Kaohsiung City Government (KCG) is a cosponsor of the film festival. Mayor Chen Chu 陳菊 again!
Regarding the film festival, see
Ocean Capital Kaohsiung, December 2001.
http://kcginfo.kcg.gov.tw/english/index.php?strurl1=publication&strurl=a2/9012.htm
("Cosponsored by the Kaohsiung Cultural Foundation, Tainan National College of the Arts, and KCG's Department of Information, the first Kaohsiung Film Festival [in 2001] proved to be a big success.")
(4) China boycotted the opening ceremony of the Taipei-hosted Deaf Olympics on Saturday, apparently to protest the presence of Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou at the event.
(5) Larry Rohter, New Home for Chinese Experience in America. New York Times, July 8, 2009.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/09/arts/design/09chinatown.html?_r=1&ref=arts
(New director S, Alice Mong of Museum of Chinese in America was "born in Taiwan and raised in Virginia and Ohio")
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※ 修改:.choi 于 Sep 5 12:49:19 修改本文.[FROM: 128.197.0.0]
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