witnesses tell of a city in shock
Transcription
witnesses tell of a city in shock
Monday 3 March 2014 Rain 6/12°C Subscription and service hotline: (86-21) 962288 The scene at the main railway station in Shanghai yesterday as two armed police officers stand guard in the station square. Security has been tightened at all railway stations and airports in the city following Saturday’s attack in Kunming. President Xi Jinping has urged all-out efforts to investigate the terrorist atrocity in the southwestern city and punish those responsible. — Xu Xiaolin WITNESSES TELL OF A CITY IN SHOCK • China promises severe punishment after terrorist atrocity in Kunming • Victims describe attackers clad in black wielding knives and machetes TOP NEWS/A3-4 CHINA promised tough punishment for knife-wielding attackers who killed at least 29 people in an unprecedented train station rampage in Kunming by separatists from the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, as witnesses described a city in shock. Victims spoke of more than 10 black-clad attackers slashing indiscriminately with large knives and machetes as people queued to buy tickets at the main railway station in the southwestern city on Saturday night. The attack lasted about half an hour. More than 130 people were wounded in the attack in the capital city of Yunnan Province, prompting shock and outrage nationwide. Buses and taxis were used to ferry people to hospital. Police shot dead four of the assailants, captured one and are continuing to search for the other terrorists. China Central Television said that at least two of the attackers were women — one was killed while the other was captured and later taken to hospital for treatment. A shop worker told reporters some of the victims took refuge in her store. SEE ‘IN SHOCK’ ON TOP NEWS/A3 Ukraine ready for war after Putin declaration Prime minister tells Russia: ‘This is not a threat’ Price 2 Yuan Vol.015 No.4628 WORLD/A9 A2 PAGE TWO Index Top News A3-A4 Metro A5 News Feature A6 Nation A7 Business A8 World A9-A10 Opinion A11 Hangzhou Special A12 What’s On A13 Comics/Games Sports A14 A15-A16 Finance B1-B8 Give us a call Editorial: (86-21) 5292 0884 editor@shanghaidaily.com Supplements: (86-21) 5292 0242 Advertising: (86-21) 5292 0242 (86-21) 5292 1234 ext. 618012 advertising@ shanghaidaily.com Monday 3 March 2014 Shanghai Daily Lu: ‘You know what I mean’ Yang Jian A SPOKESMAN for China’s top political advisory body sidestepped a question about the country’s former security chief yesterday, telling reporters: “You know what I mean.” At a press conference ahead of annual political meetings in Beijing, a reporter with the South China Morning Post asked about online reports concerning Zhou Yongkang, the former head of the Party’s Commission for Political and Legal Affairs and also a former member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Party’s Central Committee. Zhou retired in 2012 but Reuters reported he had been put under virtual house arrest while the Party investigated allegations of corruption. He was last seen at an alumni celebration at the China University of Petroleum on Marketing: (86-21) 5292 0762 marketing @shanghaidaily.com • BEYOND NEWSPAPER demonstrate to the whole Party and the whole society that when we see that anyone violates law and Party discipline they will be investigated and dealt with severely, and no matter who they are or what their position is, we mean it.” Lu added: “This is all I can say. You know what I mean.” Lu’s comment was greeted with laughter from those in the room. The phrase "You know what I mean” has since become a popular buzzword among China’s Internet community. Xinhua news agency later published a short commentary online, saying the government will crack down on anyone violating the law and Party discipline and ended the piece with “You know what I mean.” The Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference opens its annual session today. 2014 NPC/CPPCC October 1. The Party has yet to make a formal announcement on his fate, and there has been widespread speculation about what has happened to him. “Actually, I also merely got some information from handful of media like you, but I will try to answer your question in this way,” spokesman Lu Xinhua said, adding that the government had investigated corruption cases involving many Party officials, including 31 high ranking officials. “We a re doi ng th is to March 3-7: Free issues download on SHD iPaper, Shanghai Daily’s iOS PDF e-reader app. Details see http://coverage.shanghaidaily.com/2014/ WHAT’S NEWS Besides the print issue, Shanghai Daily also offers new media products on various platforms. WORLD Seven days a week Tougher On Pollution Bombings Kill 90 Published by Shanghai United Media Group Stiff new penalties are in store for anyone polluting the city’s air, with revised legislation set to come into force. “The city’s air protection standard has been quite strict but we want it even stricter to deter violators,” says an official. A5 Two car bomb blasts at a marketplace kill at least 90 people in Maiduguri, the birthplace of a Nigerian extremist terrorist group. Many more are believed buried in rubble. A10 ݚୄ၉ृރ+6 ႶنքރƘ! ࣣ݃ۨ႖྿ढ़ᆪ Price 2 Yuan March 3: complimentary newspaper copies at downtown news kiosks and Wagas, Costa Coffee, Element Fresh, Jamaica Blue outlets. Availability limited. Scan to download SHD iPaper METRO Shanghai Daily Address: 38F, 755 Weihai Road, Shanghai 200041, China ׀ᆽƥഏݡ൮ຶݡރ Fresh look, free deals Website iPhone App iPad App Android Phone App Amazon Kindle Windows Phone App BlackBerry Phone App PlayBook App SPORTS NEWS FEATURE City Captures Cup China’s Paper Chase The scale of bureaucracy in China has long been an issue, and the number of permits, certificates and documents a Chinese citizen has to get can be staggering. A6 Manchester City stages a second-half comeback with three stunning goals to beat Sunderland 3-1 and win the League Cup at Wembley. A16 Scan to explore more www.shanghaidaily. com/subscription FINANCE NATION Road To Reform Subscribe today Prowlers At Palace (86-21) 962288 (86-21) 5292 0024 subscription@ shanghaidaily.com Ping’an strolls through Beijing’s Forbidden City at night, roaming the empty lanes of the former royal palace after it closes its doors to visitors, in search of his archenemy — mice. 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We were terrified. Everyone in Kunming is still in shock,” she said. Police shot dead at least four attackers, arrested one and were hunting for more. In a commentary, Xinhua news agency called the terrorist attack “China’s 9/11” and a “severe crime against humanity.” China's security chief Meng Jianzhu, who rushed to Kunming to oversee operations, promised “all-out efforts” to “severely punish terrorists according to the law.” He “urged forcible measures to crack down on violent terrorism activities.” The Kunming city government said the attack was orchestrated by separatists from the northwest region of Xinjiang. Attacks are almost unheard of in Yunnan, more than 1,600 kilometers from Xinjiang and a popular tourist destination. The attack comes months after three terrorists of the same Xinjiang family crashed their car into crowds of tourists in Tian’anmen Square in Beijing, killing two people. The attackers then set the vehicle on fire, killing themselves, according to police. Many Internet users expressed outrage yesterday. “Targeting ordinary people in a terrorist attack is disgraceful,” was one comment on Sina Weibo. Li Chengpeng, a social commentator who has more than 7 million followers on Weibo, said: “No matter who did this, for what purpose, and no matter which race, to target innocent people at a train station is an evil choice. Their hearts will be punished and they will go to hell.” Xinhua said in its commentary that the attack had shrouded the whole nation in terror. “Mothers, sons and daughters were slaughtered by strangers,” it said. “Nothing justifies such a carnage against innocent civilians. A nationwide outrage has been stirred.” (Shanghai Daily) Xi urges all-out efforts to catch those responsible President Xi Jinping has urged all-out efforts to investigate the Kunming terrorist attack and punish those responsible. Xi also stressed the careful rescue and treatment of injured civilians and proper handling of the dead. The president, who is also head of China's national security commission, asked law enforcement agencies to crack down on violent terrorist activities, safeguard social stability and guarantee the safety of lives and property. Premier Li Keqiang urged severe punishment for the attackers and said public security departments should strengthen prevention and control measures to guarantee safety in public places. (Xinhua) “ All-out efforts should be made to treat the injured people, severely punish terrorists according to the law ... Senior security official Meng Jianzhu visits an injured passenger at the No. 1 People’s Hospital in Kunming after he arrived in the southwestern city early yesterday morning. Meng urged timely treatment for the injured and assistance for the families of the people who were killed in the terrorist attack at Kunming Railway Station on Saturday night. — Xinhua Official pledges harsh punishment for terrorists SENIOR security official Meng Jianzhu has pledged harsh punishment for terrorists in accordance with the law to ensure social stability. Meng, head of the Commission for Political and Legal Affairs of the Party’s Central Committee, arrived in Kunming early yesterday morning to oversee anti-terrorism work following the deadly train station attack on Saturday night. People injured in the attack are being treated at 11 hospitals in Kunming and the National Health and Family Planning Commission has sent a team of doctors to direct rescue operations in the city. Meng said the terrorists were devoid of conscience and had brutally attacked unarmed civilians, exposing their contempt for humanity and society and should be harshly punished in accordance with the law. “All-out efforts should be made to treat the injured people, severely punish terrorists according to the law, and prevent the occurrence of similar cases, to ensure the safety of people's lives and property and social stability,” Meng said. He ordered the use of all resources and means to thoroughly investigate the case and urged forcible measures to crack down on violent terrorism activities. Meng called for patrols to be stepped up at public places where crowds might be expected and a harsh crackdown on violent crimes to heighten the public’s sense of security. Meng visited the station square and also met with some of the injured and the families of those killed. He expressed his sympathy and condolences and urged timely treatment for the injured and assistance for the families of the deceased. Guo Shengkun, minister of public security, also arrived in Kunming yesterday to guide work. (Xinhua) Shanghai steps up security at rail stations, airports Ma Yue and Yang Jian SHANGHAI’S railway police have raised security to its highest level following Saturday’s terror attack at Kunming Railway Station. Armed police were on patrol at all the city’s railway stations yesterday and police were carrying out spot checks on passengers. Security checks at entrances were stepped up to prevent anyone getting through with dangerous items, especially knives. The railway police also tightened realname checks on major routes and there will be more officers on board trains from Shanghai to Beijing this week when the capital will be hosting the annual sessions of the national political advisory body, the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Congress, and China’s parliament, the National People’s Congress. Shanghai has also ordered stricter anti-terrorist checks in public places where large crowds would be expected to gather. The city’s airports also tightened security yesterday. Passengers are being asked to open carry-on luggage for inspections more frequently, a security official at Hongqiao International Airport said. “An anti-explosive inspection has been added to passengers entering the terminal buildings,” according to a notice at the airport’s Terminal 2. Passengers are also being asked to take out portable mobile phone battery chargers and other electronic devices from their bags during security checks. More police and police dogs have been deployed at both the Hongqiao and Pudong airports. Airports at Beijing and Kunming in southeast Yunnan Province have also tightened security checks. A4 TOP NEWS Monday 3 March 2014 Shanghai Daily Normal operations resume at terror scene Heavy police presence eases public concern ORDER has been restored at Kunming Railway Station after Saturday’s deadly terrorist attack, officials said yesterday. Train arrivals were back to normal yesterday after three trains with 3,000 passengers bound for Kunming, the capital of Yunnan Province, had been disrupted by Saturday’s attack. Meanwhile, 60,000 passengers were expected to leave the station yesterday. Part of a major road in front of the station remains under traffic control and a waiting area on a square east of the station has been cordoned off. However, with a heavy police presence, normal operations resumed at the station and passengers could walk into and out of the building with no new restrictions. Security screening of passengers and luggage is being carried out and staff are maintaining order in more crowded areas, officials said. In a ticket hall, people were seen queuing to buy train tickets. Some chatted with each other while others were playing cards. “I was a little frightened when I learned about the terrorist attack in the morning,” Liu Yujiao, a college student who was leaving for the city of Qujing in Yunnan. “But with the heavy security presence I’m no longer worried.” Meanwhile, the city’s education authorities said that all local middle and primary schools would be having classes as normal today, but extra security would be provided at campuses. School officials will be on duty before and after class, while police officers will patrol campuses and the surrounding areas. (Xinhua) Above: Mourners light candles at the scene of the terror attack at the main train station in Kunming last night. Knife-wielding assailants left at least 29 people dead and more than 130 wounded in what was described as an unprecedented terrorist attack at a Chinese railway station. Victims described attackers dressed in black bursting into the station in the southwestern province of Yunnan and slashing indiscriminately as people queued to buy tickets. Left: Police officers stand guard outside the railway station in Kunming yesterday. Security at the city’s Changshui International Airport was also stepped up as staff carried out tighter checks on all travelers and their luggage. — AFP ‘At first I thought it was just someone fighting, but then I saw blood’ MORE than 10 terrorists attacked people in the square and ticket hall of Kunming Railway Station at 9:20pm on Saturday, killing at least 29 civilians and injuring more than 130 others. A Xinhua news agency reporter at the scene said the injured people had been rushed to more than 10 local hospitals for treatment. A doctor with the Kunming No. 1 People’s Hospital said that medical workers were busy treating the injured. Reporters at the hospital told of seeing a dozen bodies and said that by midnight Saturday night more than 60 victims had been sent to the hospital. Liu Chen, a 19-year-old student from Wuhan City in central China’s Hubei Province, had been traveling in Yunnan and was with a friend at the station to get tickets for the tourist city of Lijiang when the attack started. “At first I thought it was just someone fighting, but then I saw blood and heard people scream, and I just ran,” Liu said. At the No. 1 People’s Hospital, Chen Guizhen, a 50-year-old woman, said her husband Xiong Wenguang, 59, was killed in the railway station attack. “ I saw a person come straight at me with a long knife and I ran away with everyone...” Yang Haifei A resident of Kunming who was attacked and sustained injuries to his chest and back “Why are the terrorists so cruel?” she cried, holding her husband's bloodstained ID card in hands shaking with emotion. The couple, both farmers from the Chuxiong Yi Autonomous Prefecture, had just bought tickets to the eastern province of Zhejiang where they were due to start new jobs. “I found his ID card on his body. I can’t believe he has just left me,” she said in tears. Yang Haifei, a Kunming resident, said he was attacked and sustained injuries to his chest and back. Yang said he was buying a ticket when he saw a group of people rush into the station, most of them dressed in black, and start attacking others. “I saw a person come straight at me with a long knife and I ran away with everyone,” he said, adding that people who were slower were seriously injured. “They just fell on the ground,” he said. At the guard pavilion in front of the station, three victims were crying. One of them, Yang Ziqing, told Xinhua they were waiting in the station square for a 10:50pm train to Shanghai, but had to run when a knife-wielding man suddenly came at them. “My two friends’ husbands have been rushed to hospital, but I can’t find my husband, and his phone went unanswered,” Yang sobbed. Pictures posted on Weibo show police officers patrolling the station. Gruesome images also show bodies covered in blood and doctors helping to transport the injured to hospital. Weibo user “HuangY3xin-Dione,” who was dining in a restaurant near the railway station, said she was “scared to death” when she saw a group of men in black carrying long knives and chasing people. The security management bureau under the Ministry of Public Security called the attack a “severe violent crime” at its official Weibo account. “No matter what motives the murderers hold, the killing of innocent people is against kindness and justice. The police will crack down the crimes in accordance with the law and without any tolerance. May the dead rest in peace,” it read. Zhang Yumin, 59, a retired cashier from Beijing, was due to fly to Kunming yesterday with her husband for a sightseeing tour. She said she was not going to change her schedule despite the attack. Kunming Railway Station, situated in the downtown area of the capital city of Yunnan, is one of the largest railway stations in southwest China. It was put into operation in 1958. (Xinhua) METRO A5 Shanghai Daily Monday 3 March 2014 Revised law to be even tougher on air polluters Yang Jian PEOPLE and companies found guilty of polluting the city’s air will face stiff new penalties under revised legislation set to come into force this year, lawmakers said yesterday. “The city’s air protection standard has been quite strict but we want it even stricter to deter violators,” Zhang Quan, director of the Shanghai Environmental Protection Bureau and a national legislator, told Shanghai Daily. Zhang made the statement yesterday as 59 of the city’s legislators arrived in Beijing for the annual National People’s Congress, which starts on Wednesday. Lawmakers have had their final discussions on the new Shanghai Air Pollution Protection Law, which will be issued within the year, he said. “ The city’s air protection standard has been quite strict but we want it even stricter to deter violators Zhang Quan Shanghai Environmental Protection Bureau Director Under city law, violators will face harsher punishments than under national law, and there will be no upper limits on the penalties in some cases, the official said. Criminal charges will be applied if necessary, he said. I n prepa ration for the revised legislation, local government has developed a new color-coded air pollution alarm system. The warnings will be indicated by the colors of blue, yellow, orange and red, officials said. On days with the worst air quality, work at factories discharging pollutants will be suspended, construction sites will be told to cease operating, and earth-moving vehicles will be banned from the roads. In all cases, the parties involved will be informed of the suspension orders. Separately, Jin Donghan, an NPC deputy from Shanghai and member of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, said the city government must have stricter standards to prevent air pollution by ships and boats, an area which has long been neglected. Many channels cut through populated areas, and in those places, emissions from ships have been a major contributor to air pollution, Jin said. Special “Emission Control Areas” should be established along key waterways to help tackle the problem, he said. Shanghai ranked 48th of 74 cities that adopted a new air quality system last year. Its PM2.5 density was twice the national standard, according to a Greenpeace survey. • Are you sure I look cute? Visitors to home show angered by entry fee Ke Jiayun A baby is given a new haircut yesterday to celebrate Dragon Head-Raising Day, which falls on the second day of the second lunar month. It is a tradition for people, especially children, to have a trim to celebrate the new year. — Zhang Suoqing Woman who bit, stabbed cop gets year in prison Ke Jiayun A WOMAN has been sentenced to a year in prison for attacking a police officer who tried to shut down her illegal waste oil recycling business, Jiading District prosecutor’s office said yesterday. The court heard the woman, surnamed Cai, bit the officer and cut him with a knife at her workshop in Nanxiang Town, Jiading District. Last July, police received a report that the workshop was being used to process waste oil from leftovers. When officers visited the shop they found Cai and her husband working over a pot of boiling oil and ordered them to stop. As one officer approached Cai, she bit him and slashed at him with a knife. Cai denied the attack, saying the officer cut himself on the knife when he lunged at her. Producing oil from waste is an offense in Shanghai, but the court did not say if the couple would face any charges. VISITORS on the final day of the inaugural Design Shanghai event were outraged yesterday after being asked to pay a 100 yuan (US$16.27) entrance fee. Entry to the home design event, which began on Thursday at the Shanghai Exhibition Center, was free on all other days. “We got here at 7am and have been standing for two hours, but no one told us we would have to pay to get in,” a visitor said. At 9am the organizers appeared holding paper signs saying there would be a charge. The tickets went on sale at 10:30am. “Professional visitors who registered for the exhibition online and those who had VIP tickets can enter for free, but everyone else has to buy a ticket,” an official announced to the crowd. Another visitor said: “The organizers said the event was free to enter. But now they’ve just changed their minds and want to charge us.” Lee Newton, one of the event’s organizers, said the company had stated on its official website that weekend visitors would have to pay to get in, but that it did not apply the charge on Saturday. “Yesterday we tried to allow as many people as possible to come in, but there were just too many and it became dangerous,” Newton told Shanghai Television yesterday. “But if you go to our website it says you have to pay today,” he said. Design Shanghai 2014 attracted more than 60,000 people, the organizers said. EXPLORE MORE AT WWW.SHANGHAIDAILY.COM/METRO City to get 6,000 green car charging spots Last buses from Metro stations to leave later Police database to help find items lost in taxis THE city government plans to expand its network of charging spots for new-energy vehicles to 6,000 by the end of next year. The move will help to provide a comprehensive service to users of environment friendly cars, the Shanghai Electric Power Co said. By the end of 2015, there is likely to be 10,000 “green” cars on the city’s streets, it said. The city now has 24 power stations and 2,020 charging spots, most of which are near car dealerships, offices and residential areas. The new network will increase coverage to parking lots and park-and-ride areas. SIX bus routes have extended their operating hours to provide a more integrated service with the city’s Metro network. On each of the routes, whose terminals are close to Metro stations, the time of the final bus has been delayed by an hour to about 11:30pm, 15 minutes after the Metro ends. The routes are: No. 98 (Zhongshan Road N. Station, Line 1), No. 518 (Jiangwan Town Station, Line 3), No. 705 (Wenshui Road Station, Line 1), No. 727 (Dachang Town Station, Line 7), No. 962 (Shanghai Railway Station, Line 1) and Baoshan No. 19 (Shanghai University Station, Line 7). SHANGHAI Dazhong Taxi Co said it has been working with local authorities and will soon publish full details of the hundreds of items left in its vehicles by passengers on the police’s service network. The company said it has built up a large collection of items left in its cabs, including handbags, guitars, umbrellas, and even ID and social security cards. The Shanghai Public Security Bureau will post information about the items in its “Lost and Found” section, where people will be able to search for the things they have lost or misplaced, the bureau said. The government’s target is to have one charging spot for every 10 square kilometers in suburban areas, and one every 5km in downtown areas. Shanghai International Auto City in Jiading will be used as a trial area for the new network. A collection of electric vehicles are parked close to a charging point near the Oriental Pearl TV Tower yesterday to help publicize a new campaign to promote the use of environment friendly vehicles in Shanghai. — Ding Ting A6 NEWS FEATURE Monday 3 March 2014 Shanghai Daily Il l u s trat ion by Z ho uT ao /S h an gh ai D ai ly A government adviser presented a 3.8-meter scroll made up of 103 common permission cards needed from birth to death. Lack of a centralized registry exacerbates the nation’s paper chase. Chinese facing long march of the permits Yao Minji L ily Jia, 32 years old, works for a foreign tourism company in Shanghai. The Liaoning native holds a special talent residence permit, the best of all such permits and most difficult to obtain. It took her two years to get everything needed for the application. But if she wants to get married or divorced, she has to travel back to Benxi City, her hometown in northeast China, to do so, where she has had her hukou, or household registration officially issued. Jia is also required to renew the permit every year though the paperwork for that is not much easier than the first time. The number of permits, certificates and documents that an average Chinese citizen needs, and the tedious, painful and long march leading to them, is hardly Jia’s problem alone. The scale of bureaucracy in China has long been an issue, and it made a buzz recently after a 3.8-meter-long scroll of 103 common cards — what an average Chinese needs from birth to death — was displayed. The number can reach to more than 400 when including less common ones. “Chinese are either getting permits or on the way to getting them,” said Cao Zhiwei, a member of the Guangzhou Committee of Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), when presenting the scroll at a meeting of the government’s advisory body last week. It was named “On the Long March to Permits.” Cao’s survey, based on Guangzhou, shows one has to visit 18 departments and 39 places and be charged over 28 times to get more than 100 stamps to finish the long march. The most frequently used cards include the identity card and hukou, household registration. In addition to Cao’s survey, things can get even harder for those not residing in their hometown, where they have their hukou registered. It was reported that an older couple from Xinjiang Autonomous Region who had been married and living in Guangzhou for more than 40 years, was advised by a local department to file for marriage registration again in Guangzhou. They needed to provide their marriage certificate in order to be the guarantor for their child’s mortgage, but they couldn’t find it anymore. Due to a failure to bridge marriage information between Xinjiang and Guangdong, their options were either to travel the long way back or to get a local marriage registration. “The scale of bureaucracy is somewhat related to the country’s past of having a planned economy, when an individual was tied to a company/organization and was required to get proof/permit from the company/organization to get anything done,” said Yue Jinglun, associate professor of Politics and Public Administration at Zhongshan University. “Now, it is mainly due to the poor level of the social credit system and administrative management. In order to prevent and fight counterfeiting and to make it easy to manage, government departments have continuously raised the bar by asking for a lot of permits and certificates,” Yue added. Before a Chinese citizen is born, the parents would have already filed for a certificate to be entitled to maternity care and service — otherwise the mother could not be admitted to public hospitals. In addition to a birth certificate, a vaccine card is also required within days after birth; without it — a proof of inoculation, the child will not be admitted to public schools. A one-child certificate allows parents to get cash rewards for following the family planning policy — in Shanghai, a one-time bonus of 5,000 yuan after retirement for each parent. If a person is single, a certificate proving that is required from his/her company when he/she wants to buy a Shanghai collector Feng Jianzhong’s vast collection includes some of the strangest certificates and permits. — Yao Minji house. When over 70 (in Shanghai), one needs to get a senior citizen card, in addition to the existing identity card that lists the age, in order to get extra benefits such as free bus rides at non-rush hours. After a person dies, his relatives must get a certificate proving the body was cremated as required to proceed with the funeral, and a rest-in-peace permit so the ashes can be buried. Cao suggested building a database for citizen information to avoid repetitive procedures and permits. Many netizens complain about not having a system like that in the United States, where one social security card provides all the information needed in most cases. “Well, it actually isn’t that bad in Shanghai, or maybe I’m just too used to it,” said Wang Fang, a retired middle school teacher. “After all, I grew up in the years when you needed a permit to leave the city, and another one to get back.” Local collector Feng Jianzhong has picked some of the strangest and most rare permits from his collection — a five greatness honorary certificate (for good soldiers), a permit for free train rides as red guards and a permit exempting a person from being sent to the country for re-education during the “cultural revolution” (1966-76), among others. The “long march” doesn’t get much easier for expatriates either, especially for those freelancing, changing jobs, or working for a small company. American freelance photographer Amanda, reluctant to give her full name for fear of trouble at the immigration office, is currently getting a new work visa and employment permit. Without a fixed, long-term employer, she has been switching between a tourist visa and a work permit in the past two years, which sometimes requires her to leave the country every few months in order to apply for a new one. “I understand that I need to follow the regulations of the host country when I visit,” she said. “But the papers and the types of visas and permits are very complicated. It also doesn’t feel great knowing I must register every time I change my address.” NATION A7 Shanghai Daily Monday 3 March 2014 Cargo ship likely to go into space by 2016 CHINA is likely to launch a cargo ship into space to serve the Tiangong-2 laboratory by 2016, a leading space scientist said yesterday. The ship, named “Tianzhou” or “Heavenly Vessel” in Chinese, will be delivered by the new Long March-7 carrier rocket and dock with Tiangong-2 automatically, Zhou Jianping, chief designer of China’s manned space program, said. A cargo system that supplies goods and propellants is a key technology China must master to build its own space station, he said. Tiangong-1, China’s first space lab and target orbiter, was sent to orbit on September 29, 2011. The Tiangong-2 space lab is expected to be launched in 2015. “Manned spaceships are expensive and have limited capacity. But cargo ships don’t have to return to Earth and don’t carry people, which makes them more economical,” Zhou said. The Tianzhou cargo ship can send supplies to the space station, including propellants, living necessities for astronauts and equipment for scientific research. It can also send large-sized facilities and equipment for the construction of the space station, he said. Three cabin structures are being designed for the Tianzhou cargo ship, a fullyenclosed one, a semi-open one and a wholly-open one, he said. The loading capacity of the cargo ship will reach the world-class level and will be even better than some developed countries, he said. (Xinhua) • All cheer for Wood Horse Year Tibetan friends in Lhasa greet each other yesterday on the first day of the Tibetan New Year, or Losar. This year the local people are celebrating the Year of the Wood Horse and as usual everyone in Lhasa will have a week’s holiday. — Xinhua Stray cats strut in Forbidden City Pests or protectors, the palace prowlers are here to stay WALKING on tiptoe, Ping’an strolls through Beijing’s Forbidden City, his suspecting eyes glowing in the dark of the palace that once housed emperors and their concubines. For years, the cat has roamed the empty lanes of the former royal palace after it has closed its doors to visitors, in search of his archenemy: mice. Before being taken in by Shan Jixiang, curator of the Forbidden City, also called the Palace Museum, the animal lived a much harder life and had to forage for food in trash cans. According to Ma Guoqing, director of the san itation department of the Palace Museum, about 200 cats, including Ping’an, whose name translates as “safety” in Chinese, have in recent years found a home in the Forbidden City. “Some of them might even be the descendants of royal pets, but most are strays taken in by the museum staff,” Ma said. As a result, a policy originally aimed at bringing down the population growth of stray cats in the Forbidden City has also generated unexpected results by scaring away rats from the cultural relics. Cats have long lived in the Forbidden City, which dates back more than 600 years. They were kept as royal pets, but now they have outlived their masters. Though there is no official tally for the number of stray cats in Beijing, a Capital Animal Welfare Association report in 2010 said it was about 200,000. A female can have three or four litters a year and might add 100 cats to the stray population in its lifetime. Stray cats have always been a headache for city authorities, who often receive complaints from residents about bad smells and nightly screeching. For the conservators of the Forbidden City, the surge in the number of cats has also brought the challenge of how to treat them humanely while maintaining a clean environment. Ma Guoqing said the museum started to realize the seriousness of the problem in 2009, when strays in large numbers were seen skulking through the yard and on the walls. “The presence of cats could pose a threat to visitors, and their excrement is definitely an eyesore,” Ma said. A special program began in 2009 to take care of the cats. It follows the trap-neuter-return principle, a method of humanely trapping unaltered stray cats, spaying or neutering them, and returning them to the location where they were collected, Gao Haiying, who works for an animal protection group, said. Chinese people don’t have a tradition of neutering their pets as they think it is better for the animals, but that’s led to an increase in the number of abandoned pets, he said. Ma said 181 cats in the Forbidden City have been neutered in the past five years and their number is now steady. He said he even has a ledger in which he records all “personal information” about the cats: names, pregnancy status, neutering operation type and the amount of money spent on the operation. Money spent on the program was not for naught, however. The cats have played an important role in safeguarding precious antiques, Ma said. “They keep away the rats and we’ve never found any damage to relics caused by cat claws.” (Xinhua) Most on-the-run Chinese are top officials, execs Yang Meiping CORRUPT officials, fraudulent financiers and embezzling executives accounted for the vast majority of the public figures who fled China with their illgotten gains from 1992-2012. According to a report by Beijing News, of the 54 people named in 50 publicly reported cases, 26 were government employees, of which just two were low-level civil servants. Several were government leaders, while others held key positions in the public security, transport and energy sectors. Among the provincial and m i n iste r ia l-leve l off ic ia ls named in the report were Lan Fu, former deputy mayor of Xiamen; Lu Wanli, former head of the Transport Department of Guizhou Province; and Yang Wanzhong, ex-director of Shanghai Nuclear Power Office. A total of 10 officials were engaged in corruption cases involving more than 1 billion yuan (US$162.7 million), while the sums involved in cases from the financial sector and large state-owned enterprises were even larger, the report said. In 2001, three former governors of Bank of China’s Kaiping Branch in Guangdong Province — Xu Chaofan, Yu Zhendong and Xu Guojun — simultaneously fled to the United States after embezzling a combined US$482 million. In 2003, Yang Xiuzhu, the former deputy mayor in charge of urban construction in Zhejiang Province’s Wenzhou, fled with an alleged 253.2 billion yuan. In total, financial institutions accounted for 15 of the people who fled, while 13 others worked in state-owned enterprises, all of them in executive-level positions, the report said. Of all the runaways, the highest ranking was Gao Yan, a former secretary of the Yunnan Provincial Party Committee, who fled while employed as general manager of the State E lect r ic Power Cor p. The amount of money he embezzled has never been revealed. The report said that the US was the most popular destination for the fleeing officials, followed by Canada, Australia and EU member countries. Huang Feng, a law expert from Beijing Normal University, said that many officials chose their destination countries not just for the quality of life they offer but because their governments did not have repatriation agreements with China. Beijing has taken great steps to make it more difficult for officials and executives to flee China, including signing extradition treaties with 36 countries and judicial assistance treaties with the US, Canada and 47 other nations. High court crackdown Guangdong’s high court said it has rejected 135 applications for prison terms to be commuted in a bid to crack down on judicial corruption. In each case the applications was convicted either of dereliction of duty, undermining the financial order, financial fraud or organizing a mafia-style crime group. The applications were also made by people who had served less than three years of their sentence. (Hu Xiaocen) A8 BUSINESS Monday 3 March 2014 Shanghai Daily ‘Internet of things’ set to make daily life even more convenient TECHNOLOGY WE’RE in the beginning of a world in which everything is connected to the Internet and with one another, while powerful yet relatively cheap computers analyze all that data for ways to improve lives. Toothbrushes tell your mirror to remind you to floss. Basketball jerseys detect impending heart failure and call the ambulance for you. At least that’s the vision presented this past week at the Mobile World Congress wireless show in Barcelona, Spain. The four-day conference highlighted what the tech industry has loosely termed “the Internet of things.” Some of that wisdom is already available or promised by the end of the year. Fitness devices from Sony and Samsung connect with your smartphones to provide digital records of your daily lives. French startup Cityzen Sciences has embedded fabric with heart-rate and other sensors to track your physical activities. Internet-connected toothbrushes are coming from Procter and Gamble’s Oral-B business and from another French startup, Kolibree. The mirror part is still a prototype, but Oral-B’s smartphone app does tell you to floss. Carmakers are building in smarter navigation and other hands-free services, while IBM and AT&T are jointly equipping cities with sensors and computers for parking meters, traffic lights and water systems to all communicate. Internet-connected products represent a growth opportunity for wireless carriers, as the smartphone business slows in developed markets because most people already have service. With the technological foundations here, the bigger challenge is getting people, businesses and municipalities to see the potential. Then there are security and privacy concerns — health “ Information seems harmless and trivial at the moment, but can be recorded forever and can be combined with other data. I don’t think we’ve come to terms with that yet. insurance companies would love access to your fitness data to set premiums. At a more basic level, these systems have to figure out a way to talk the same language. You might buy your phone from Apple, your TV from Sony and your refrigerator from Samsung. It would be awful to get left out because you aren’t loyal to a single company. Plus, the smartest engineers in computing aren’t necessarily the best in clothing and construction. Expect companies to work together to set standards, much the way academic and military researchers created a common language decades ago for disparate computer networks to communicate, forming the Internet. Gadget makers are starting to build APIs — interfaces for other systems to pull and understand data. Building everything is too much for a single company, yet “they want all this stuff to work together,” said Jim Zemlin, executive director of the Linux Foundation, a backer of the Tizen project for connecting watches, cars and more. Samsung’s new fitness watches will use Tizen, and tools have been built to talk with Samsung’s Android phones. Some customers might worry about security, given recent breaches compromising credit and debit card numbers at Target and other major retailers. Determined hackers seem to constantly find loopholes. Imagine someone spying on you remotely through security cameras in your home or tricking your home security system into believing your car is approaching, so it opens your garage door automatically. AT&T emphasizes that it uses encryption and other safeguards for its connected services, which include security monitoring and energy-efficiency controls in homes. Glenn Lurie, AT&T’s president of emerging enterprises and partnerships, said the US wireless carrier goes through extensive security certification and exceeds industry recommendations. Gilbert Reveillon, international managing director for Cityzen, said he’s had interest from a UK car insurance company and Chinese hospitals. Health data can tell you whether you’re fit to drive and can call paramedics in an emergency. Reveillon said any data sharing by Cityzen will be in aggregate form, with users’ identities removed. He said individual users could decide to share more, but that would be up to them. He said French regulators are quite strict on that. Jonathan Zittrain, a law professor at Harvard University, said it’s difficult for people to say no when presented with immediate benefits because any potential problems are vague and years away. “Information seems harmless and trivial at the moment, but can be recorded forever and can be combined with other data,” he said. “I don’t think we’ve come to terms with that yet.” (AP) Berkshire’s Q4 earnings rise 10% to US$5b INVESTMENT WARREN Buffett’s company said on Saturday that fourth-quarter earnings rose 10 percent to nearly US$5 billion as its insurance, rail and energy businesses generated major gains in the improving economy. Berkshire Hathaway’s insurance companies, which include Geico and General Reinsurance, reported a US$394 million underwriting profit for the final three months of 2013, compared with a US$19 million loss a year earlier. The Nebraska company also benefited from the strong performance of its non-insurance companies including BNSF railroad and electric utility MidAmerican Energy. Berkshire Hathaway Inc owns roughly 80 subsidiaries, including railroad, clothing, furniture and jewelry firms. Its insurance and utility businesses typically account for more than half of the company’s net income. The company also has major investments in such companies as Coca-Cola Co, IBM and Wells Fargo & Co, and last year bought NV Energy and a major stake in H.J. Heinz. Berkshire’s fourth-quarter report and Buffett’s annual letter to shareholders released on Saturday show the company doesn’t face any significant business issues in the coming year, said author and investor Jeff Matthews, who wrote “Warren Buffett’s Successor: Who It Is and Why It Matters.” “Life is good at Berkshire Hathaway,” Matthews said on Saturday. Quarterly net income rose to US$4.99 billion on revenue of US$47.05 billion from US$4.55 billion on revenue of US$44.72 billion in 2012. Operating earnings, which exclude investments and derivatives, grew to US$3.78 billion. (AP) EXPLORE MORE AT WWW.SHANGHAIDAILY.COM/BUSINESS/CALENDARLIST.ASPX 1 2 Ch oad uR 5 4 d eng 3 oad nR ’a Yan ing 6 R ner 1 ad Ro In 1. Shanghai New International Expo Center ႎࡔाձબዐ႐ Add: 2345 Longyang Road ୄᄞୟ3456ࡽ Tel: 2890-6666 4. Shanghai International Exhibition Center ࡔाቛબዐ႐ Add: 77 Xingyi Road ႗ᅭୟ88ࡽ Tel: 6275-5800 2. Shanghai World Expo Exhibition & Convention Center ฉ࡛๘ձቛબ࠷ Add: 1099 Guo Zhan Road ࡔቛୟ21::ࡽ Tel: 2089-3600 5. ShanghaiMart ฉ࡛๘ஹฆ! Add: 2299 West Yan’an Road ჽҾဇୟ33::ࡽ Tel: 6236-0000 3. Shanghai Exhibition Center ฉ࡛ቛબዐ႐ Add: 1000 Yan’an Road M. ჽҾዐୟ2111ࡽ Tel: 6279-0279 3. Shanghai Everbright Convention & Exhibition Center ࠼ࣷٷቛዐ႐ Add: 88 Caobao Road ᠒Ԑୟ99ࡽ Tel: 6475-3288 East China Import & Export Commodity Fair It’s the largest regional trade fair in China with the most traders, great variety of exhibits and the most onsite deals. Date: Saturday to Wednesday (March 1-5) 2 China International Trade Fair for Textiles and Accessories Date: Monday to Wednesday (March 3-5) China Shanghai Textile, Fabric & Accessories Expo It’s one of the most important leading markets of outside material in east China, which provides a professional platform for the topgrade textile manufactures and international buyers. Date: Monday to Wednesday (March 3-5) The 9th China International Hosiery Purchasing Expo A trade fair for purchasing and showcase of hosiery products. Date: Tuesday to Thursday (March 4-6) China Wedding Expo Date: Saturday to Sunday (March 8-9) 4 CWIEME Shanghai 2014 China’s largest international coil winding, insulations and electrical manufacturing exhibition Date: Monday to Wednesday (March 3-5) Toy China Date: Saturday to Monday (March 8-10) 5 Premiere Vision China An exhibition of fabric and textile for international buyers and sellers. Date: Tuesday to Wednesday (March 4-5) Scan to check business events online WORLD A9 Shanghai Daily Monday 3 March 2014 Ukrainian soldiers (left) and unidentified gunmen (right) guard the gate of an infantry base in Privolnoye, Ukraine, yesterday. Hundreds of unidentified gunmen arrived outside the base in the Crimea region. The convoy includes at least 13 troop vehicles and four armored vehicles with mounted machine guns. The vehicles have Russian license plates. — Darko Vojinovic US warns Russia over G8 seat loss, sanctions US Secretary of State John Kerry bluntly warned Russia yesterday that it risked losing its seat among the prestigious Group of Eight nations, as well as economic turmoil, if it fails to pull its forces out of Crimea. Moscow could also face sanctions from its G8 allies and see American businesses pull out of the country if President Vladimir Putin failed to deescalate tensions in Ukraine, Kerry said, hitting the Sunday talk shows to ratchet up pressure on Russia. Kiev’s interim government warned yesterday Ukraine stood on the brink of disaster, and called up military reservists after the Russian parliament voted to allow Putin to send in troops to its western neighbor. Putin “is not going have a Sochi G8, he may not even remain in the G8 if this continues. He may find himself with asset freezes on Russian business, American business may pull back, there may be a further tumble of the ruble,” Kerry said. “There is a huge price to pay. The United States is united, Russia is isolated. That is not a position of strength,” he told NBC’s Meet the Press. Britain and France have already pulled out of preparatory meetings this week for the G8 summit to be held in June in Sochi, and, along with the US and Canada, have also threatened to boycott the summit. “Russia chose this brazen act of aggression and moved in its forces on a completely trumped up set of pretexts,” Kerry told CBS’s “Face the Nation.” “If Russia wants to be a G8 country, it needs to behave like a G8 country.” But Kerry steered clear of warning of any US military action as pro-Moscow gunmen controlled swaths of Ukraine’s southern peninsula where the Kremlin has based naval fleets since the 18th century. (AFP) West and Russia set to confront over Putin’s Ukrainian invasion UKRAINE mobilized for war yesterday after Russian President Vladimir Putin declared he had the right to invade, creating the biggest confrontation between Moscow and the West since the Cold War. “This is not a threat: this is actually the declaration of war to my country,” said Ukraine’s Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk, head of a pro-Western government that took power when Russian ally Viktor Yanukovich fled last week. Putin obtained permission from his parliament on Saturday to use military force to protect Russian citizens in Ukraine, spurning Western pleas not intervene. Russian forces have already bloodlessly seized Crimea, an isolated Black Sea peninsula where Moscow has a naval base. Yesterday they surrounded several small Ukrainian military outposts there and demanded the Ukrainian troops disarm. Some refused, although no shots were fired. Ukraine’s security council ordered the general staff to immediately put all armed forces on highest alert, the council’s “ This is not a threat: this is actually the declaration of war to my country. Arseny Yatseniuk Ukraine’s Prime Minister secretary Andriy Parubiy said. The Defense Ministry was ordered to conduct a call-up of reserves — theoretically all men up to 40 in a country with universal male conscription, though Ukraine would struggle to find extra guns or uniforms for huge numbers of them. “If President Putin wants to be the president who started the war between two neighboring and friendly countries, between Ukraine and Russia, so he has reached this target within a few inches. We are on the brink of disaster,” Yatseniuk said in televised remarks in English, appealing for Western support. At K iev’s I ndependence Square, where anti-Yanukovich protesters had camped out for months, thousands demonstrated against Russian military action. Placards read: “Putin, hands off Ukraine!” Of potentially even greater concern than Russia’s seizure of the Crimea are eastern swathes of the country, where most of the ethnic Ukrainians speak Russian as a native language. Those areas saw v iolent protests on Saturday, with proMoscow protesters hoisting flags at government buildings and calling for Russia to defend them. Kiev said the protests were made by Russia, accusing Moscow of sending hundreds of its citizens across the border to stage them. Putin’s declaration that he has the right to invade his neighbor — for which he quickly received the unanimous approval of his senate — brought the prospect of war to a country of 46 million people on the ramparts of central Europe. Ukraine has appealed for help to NATO, and directly to Britain and the United States, as co-signatories with Moscow to a 1994 accord guaranteeing Ukraine’s security after the breakup of the Soviet Union. NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen accused Russia of threatening peace and security in Europe before NATO ambassadors met in Brussels to discuss their next steps. The US has proposed sending monitors to Ukraine under the United Nations or Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, bodies where Moscow would have a veto. In Crimea, Ukraine’s tiny contingent made no attempt to oppose the Russians, who bore no insignia on their uniforms but drove vehicles with Russian plates and seized government buildings, airports and other locations in the past three days. Kiev said its troops were encircled at least three places. Igor Mamchev, a Ukrainian navy colonel at a small base near the regional capital Simferopol, told Ukraine’s Channel 5 television Russian troops had arrived at his checkpoint and ordered him to surrender. (Reuters) Frenchman latest foreigner to die in Benghazi GUNMEN killed a French national in Libya’s eastern city of Benghazi yesterday, a security official said, the latest slaying of a foreigner in the restive area. Separately, gunmen in Benghazi also shot and wounded an Eg y ptian who had been working in a grocery, while a Libyan police officer survived an assassination attempt, a security source said. The Frenchman worked for a company upgrading a large hospital in Benghazi, which has been rocked by car bombs and assassinations amid Islamist militant activity, the official said. “He was killed with three shots,” the official said. The French foreign ministry had no immediate comment. The killing comes a week a fter pol ice fou nd seven Egyptian Christians shot dead execution-style on a beach outside Benghazi, home to several oil firms. No one has claimed responsibility for the killing of the Egyptians but residents said gunmen had looked for Christians in their neighborhood, suggesting radical Islamists might be behind it. Most countries have closed their consulates in Benghazi and some foreign airlines have stopped flying there since the US ambassador and three other Americans were killed in an Islamist militant onslaught in September 2012. An American schoolteacher was also killed by gunmen in December while he exercised in the city. Th ree yea rs a fte r t he revolution that ousted Muammar Gaddafi, Libya’s weak government and army are struggling to control brigades of former rebels and Islamist militias in a country awash with weapons. Western diplomats worry the violence in Benghazi will spill over to the capital, Tripoli. In January, a British man and a New Zealand woman were shot execution-style on a beach 100 kilometers west of Tripoli. (Reuters) A10 WORLD Monday 3 March 2014 Shanghai Daily Islamic extremists kill 90 in Nigeria violence TWIN car bombs at a bustling city marketplace blasted buildings to rubble and tore apart bodies the same night an attack on a farming village razed every thatched-roof hut. At least 90 people have been killed, officials and survivors reported yesterday, as Nigeria’s Islamic extremists step up attacks and criticism mounts of the failure of the military and government to suppress the 4-year-old Islamic uprising in the northeast. In Maiduguri, capital of Borno state and birthplace of the Boko Haram terrorist network, the attackers chose a densely populated area with narrow alleyways that maximized the blasts and a Saturday night when the market was open late. The victims include children dancing at a wedding celebration and people watching a soccer match at a cinema, survivors said. Fifty-one bodies were retrieved by yesterday morning but many more are believed buried in rubble, said a Red Cross official who insisted on anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press. Some were burned beyond recognition in fires caused by the explosions. In a village 60 kilometers away, suspected extremists also struck Saturday night, killing 39 people, according to cab driver Mansur Buba. He said he returned home yesterday to find victims being buried in Mainok village, which has been attacked many times in the past year. A State Security Service agent said no huts were left standing there. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to reporters. In Maiduguri, the headquarters of the army and air force offensive against Boko Haram, the first bomb came from a pickup truck loaded with firewood, said Hassan Ali, the leader of an anti-terror vigilante group. More people were killed in the second blast, which was timed to catch people who rushed to help those wounded in the first explosion, survivors said. Survivors said they captured a man who drove the second car to the scene, jumped out, grabbed a tricycle taxi and tried to make off. He was badly beaten and taken to nearby Umaru Shehu General Hospital, where a security guard said all the wounded brought in had died. Most survivors insisted on anonymity for fear of reprisals. Some bodies were blown apart, said trader Mallam Sumaila. An Associated Press reporter saw a charred corpse at Umaru Shehu hospital, where wailing families were collecting bodies for immediate burial, in the Muslim tradition. (AP) Thailand’s first poll re-runs peaceful A team charges during the start to the Iditarod dog sled race in Anchorage. — Reuters Alaska’s famed Iditarod race begins DOZENS of mushers and their sled-dog teams on Saturday joined in the ceremonial start to Alaska’s famed Iditarod Trail Sled Dog race that will take contestants through nearly 1,600 kilometers of wilderness this week. Fans lined the streets of downtown Anchorage with cameras, banners and signs and outstretched hands hoping for a passing high five from the competitors. The 18-km jaunt through the state’s largest city set the stage for yesterday’s start of a race that marks a 1925 rescue mission that carried diphtheria serum to Nome by sled-dog relay. A total of 69 mushers, some from as far away as Jamaica and New Zealand, were expected to take part. “Saturday is an opportunity to interact with mushers, watch dog teams excited to leave the starting line, travel 11 miles of the city streets and call it a day,” said race Executive Director Stan Hooley. “There is much more of an opportunity to touch and feel the race, and celebrate this great race.” Timed racing was set to start yesterday when the mushers reached Willow, a small community about 80km north of Anchorage. The competition will eventually see them glide into Nome, a city on the coast of the Bering Sea. They will hit 21 checkpoints with distances between stops ranging from 29 to 137km before reaching the finish line in Nome. (Reuters) THAILAND’S first poll re-runs passed peacefully yesterday following a widely disrupted general election, as pro-government “Red Shirts” stepped up rallies in support of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra’s battered administration. The February 2 election failed to ease a four-month political crisis when protesters seeking to topple Yingluck’s government caused the closure of around 10 percent of polling stations, many in opposition strongholds. The Election Commission said results cannot be announced until polls have been held in all constituencies, setting a late-April deadline for their completion. Yingluck can only remain prime minister in a caretaker role until then with limited power over policy, further eroding her authority as she handles ongoing street protests and a series of legal challenges against her administration. E le c t i o n c o m m i s s i o n e r Somchai Srisutthiyakorn said around 120,000 people were registered to vote yesterday across more than 100 constituencies in five provinces. He said the re-runs, the first attempted since February 2, had been held “peacefully ... without any problems.” But only a trickle of voters were seen at several polling stations in Phetchaburi, an opposition heartland around 160 kilometers south of Bangkok, according to an AFP reporter. “I was disappointed that I had the right to vote on February 2 but couldn’t,” Sangwan Yuusuk, 57, said at a polling station. Under election law, 95 percent of the 500 seats in the lower house of parliament must be filled to enable the appointment of a new government. On its website the Election Commission said senators will be elected on March 30. The main opposition Democrat party, which boycotted the general election, last month lost a legal attempt to nullify the poll. In addition to the protests, Yingluck faces a series of legal complaints against her government, including charges of negligence over a troubled rice subsidy scheme which could see her removed from office. Pro-government Red Shirts have ramped up their rallies and rhetoric in support of Yingluck and her billionaire brother Thaksin, a former prime minister who lives in exile to avoid jail for a corruption conviction. (AFP) Will, Jaden Smith get Razzies for ‘After Earth’ roles WILL and Jaden Smith have something they can bond over. They were awarded Razzies for their acting in “After Earth.” Jaden was selected as worst actor for his starring role in the sci-fi flop about a father and son stranded on an untamed earth, while the elder Smith was chosen as worst supporting actor at Saturday’s Golden Raspberry Awards, which mock Hollywood’s awards season on the eve of the Oscars. They were also chosen as the worst screen combo by online Razzies voters. Razzies organizer John Wilson noted the pair was “stranded on Planet Nepotism.” “After Earth,” which was directed by M. Night Shyamalan, tied with “Movie 43” for the most prizes with three awards. The raunchy comedy anthology featuring Halle Berry, Richard Gere, Kate Winslet and Naomi Watts earned Razzies for worst picture, screenplay and director. Apparently, it took a village to craft something so loathed. Will Smith (left) and Jaden Smith in a scene from “After Earth” — Sony The Razzies noted that “Movie 43” is credited with 13 directors and 19 screenwriters. Tyler Perry also didn’t receive any good tidings from the Razzies. Perry, as feisty alterego Madea, was picked as worst actress for “A Madea Christmas,” while Kim Kardashian was selected worst supporting actress in “Tyler Perry’s Temptation.” Despite being the year’s biggest box-office bomb, “The Lone Ranger” lassoed just one prize: worst remake, rip-off or sequel. Adam Sandler went home empty handed at this year’s Razzies. His “Grown-Ups 2” originally led the hate-fest with eight nominations, including worst picture and actor for Sandler, but the comedy sequel wasn’t awarded a single trophy. Sandler made Razzie history in 2011 by winning both the worst actor and actress prizes for his brother-sister cross-dressing comedy “Jack & Jill.” (AP) OPINION A11 Shanghai Daily Monday 3 March 2014 “ The new rules on petitioning prioritize improvements in people’s well-being to help prevent and ease social unrest. In this way, it is hoped, there will be less need for petitioning. Ni Tao nitao@shanghaidaily.com WOODPECKER AT WORK Suit over smog may help clear up citizen rights Ni Tao A resident of Shijiazhuang, capital of Hebei Province, recently made headlines by ta k i ng t he loca l environmental watchdog to court. While the past few years have w itnessed an increase in the number of cases that pit citizens against government agencies, it’s the first time a citizen has sued environmental authorities for not doing enough to tackle the smog. The activist, named Li Guixin, filed a lawsuit with a district People’s Court in Shijiazhuang on February 20. He also demanded 10,000 yuan (US$1,666) in compensation, but added that this was intended to “galvanize the local environmental bureau to fulfill its mission of clean ing up the polluted air according to law.” This is cause for celebration. F i n a l ly t he r e i s a c it i ze n representative who acted out of a civic sense of shared environmental responsibility on behalf of the wider public, who are often wary of any onerous remedy that curtails their “rights,” such as the right to drive cars. But if common sense is any g u ide, we shou ld n’t be too sanguine about the prospect of this milestone lawsuit, because even if it is accepted and dealt with, the case will predictably drag on, and the final ruling may take months to materialize, at which point the smog would have worsened to an extent defying easy solutions. Rude awakening Any sensible person can see that Li’s move is essentially a symbolic act. As Xinhua noted, the suit is a kind of “awakening” of civil rights as well as a “rude awakening” to lackadaisical law enforcement, prodding them to take forceful measures to ensure the air is breathable. Confronted with the same health risks, we hope the best for Li’s legal campaign, but hope should be pinned equally on the easy availability of means for citizens to air their grievances. Unfortunately, the chan nels through which popular woes can be openly publicized are sometimes ver y l i m ited, if not blocked altogether. When “orderly” means are exhausted, people habitually turn to the dramatic, messy and risky option of petitioning. The plight of petitioners in China is not news. We have frequently heard about cases in which disgruntled groups, frustrated in their dealings with local governments, hop on a train bound for Beijing, hoping that the supposedly enlightened big shots in Beijing will address their plight. The journey is often fraught with tensions. Fearful that petitioners will make local bosses look bad in the eyes of their superiors, governments often send in “stability-keeping” squads to intercept these troublemakers, and in some egregious cases of illegal incarceration, have even confined them to re-education camps or mental hospitals. ‘Catch me if you can’ This type of “catch me if you can” saga is unfolding on a daily basis. The reason many petitioners get around local authority and take their cases directly to Beijing is that they tend to have more trust in disinterested Beijing officials to handle their cases fairly, whereas at home they are likely to be ignored, snubbed and mistreated. Neve r t he less, too muc h petitioning traffic in the Chinese capital is compelling the national government to discourage this practice. Recently, the General Office of the Communist Party of China and the General Office of the State Council, China’s cabinet, jointly issued a set of directives regarding the handling of petitioners. One directive stipulating that the two agencies will no longer take petitions that skip proper procedures — meaning traveling directly to Beijing to seek redress— stirred a controversy. Some obser vers a rg ue that Beijing’s refusal to take petitions will leave petitioners at the mercy of venal cadres back home, paving the way for more corruption and injustice. After all, a few petitioners’ grievances would never have been redressed if they did not attract the attention of people at the very top. That’s exactly why this kind of petitioning odyssey is popular. The directives have a new focus on strict separation of lawsuit from petition. Petitions that touch on legal issues are to be settled in court, not primarily through petitioning offices. In general, this is a laudable development that strengthens the rule of law, as petitioning is supposed to be a last resort when one has no legal recourse. Besides, the new arrangement will greatly ease the burden on those in charge of registering petitioners’ complaints. The message seems to be: Let the law run its course and everything will be fine. That sounds good, but in practice the directive has several caveats. If the local judiciary is in cahoots with the very people that crush and oppress petitioners, what’s the point of asking for its help? Indeed, many turned to petitioning out of desperation, after they tried and failed to get justice from the court. The new rules on petitioning prioritize improvements in people’s well-being to help prevent and ease social unrest. In this way, it is hoped, there will be less need for petitioning. Despite thei r wel l-mea n i ng nature, the rules leave a question unanswered: How do they plan to address the root cause of the huge petitioning traffic to Beijing. Why would it be necessary to trek thousands of miles to Beijing if problems could be solved locally? At the end of the day, the most effective way to stem the flow of petitioners flocking to Beijing would be to order local bosses to treat them better, and sternly punish transgressions like locking up petitioners and slighting them with endless subterfuges. If Li’s pro bono lawsuit can drive official initiatives to tackle pollution, it will send positive signals to the public, especially to potential petitioners who are fed up with being stonewalled by environmental watchdogs. Shanghai Daily welcomes the ideas of others. Please send your idea to opinion@shanghaidaily.com Li Xinran lixinran@shanghaidaily.com Reprimand centers show some officials ignore rule of law A TEAM of lawyers has urged Henan provincial authorities to provide an explanation over the reprimand education centers where innocent petitioners were confined and maltreated without any legal cause. Henan has ordered the closure of all such centers in the province after the family of a detainee made it public on Weibo. Zhang Fengmei, 70, had been held for five days at the center in Nanyang City after seeking to file a petition in Beijing, according to a Beijing News report on February 13. The report did not give details of the petition. Zhang said that while in detention she was watched by up to 10 people, including police officers. She wasn’t even allowed to go to the toilet, but was made to use a bucket in the corner of the room. No rules in China’s legal system allow the practice, but it was carried out in many places in Henan. Henan’s public security department, department of justice and bureau of calls and visits (petitioning) jointly issued a rule on September 26, 2009 to cope with petitioners who go to Beijing to file their complaints. The document says “for those who go to Beijing to file abnormal petitions shall be taken to a designated place to accept reprimand, warning and persuasion for at least 24 hours.” According to pictures taken from the outside, the full name for facilities of the kind is “reprimand education center for abnormal petitions.” Who is more abnormal? In an open letter to Henan’s provincial government, the lawyers asked for an official interpretation of what an “abnormal petition” is. Who, indeed, is behaving abnormally? The petitioners are usually quite reasonable. An earlier media report said many villagers in Henan‘s Puyang City had their land illegally seized by Lieutenant General Gu Junshan’s family for real estate development. They went to Beijing to petition for justice but were dispersed by security staff led by Gu‘s wife — a senior police officer stationed in Beijing to intercept them and other petitioners. Any innocent person’s freedom and other fundamental rights are protected by the Constitution and legally guaranteed. Any officers involved in the illegal practice of “reprimanding petitioners” shall be liable for violating the Constitution and laws. China has abolished its “re-education through labor” system, which allowed police to sentence petty criminals, drug addicts and some petitioners to up to four years’ confinement in labor camps without going through the courts. However, the so-called reprimand centers in Henan alert us that camps under different names might grow rampantly since the ground is still fertile. Without a legal basis, they might be operated more secretly in the future, which could be more harmful to our society. A12 HANGZHOU SPECIAL Monday 3 March 2014 Shanghai Daily WEST LAKE EXPO / CULTURE / TOURISM / ECONOMICS Efforts to aid public • Preparing West Lake for spring THE Hangzhou govern ment announced new health, transportation and other initiatives to bring substantial benefits to local residents. It said the city will buy 1,000 hybrid taxies this year. Half of them will be put into service by the end of June and the rest will join the fleet by the end of the year. The Hangzhou Transport Bureau is responsible for the task. The city will shut down or relocate 20 polluting factories that are in the vicinity of protected water sources this year. Ten will be closed or relocated by August. The city will add 6,000 beds in oldage nursing homes, with 1,200 added before April, 3,000 before July and the rest before the year’s end. The Hangzhou Bureau of Culture, Radio, TV, Film, Press and Publication will establish 10 self-service minilibraries before November with five put in use before June. The city will also make sure that 90 percent of school sports grounds are open to the public this year and will inform the public via media before October. The city government also will evaluate the result of its initiatives, the officials said. Traffic-easing plan HANGZHOU traffic authorities announced several measures, which started on Saturday, to ease traffic congestion around West Lake during the peak travel season in the spring. The measures include converting the roads south and north of the lake into one-way traffic on weekends and implementing the odd-even license plate system to reduce cars around the lake before June 1. The one-way traffic rule will be enforced on roads south and north of West Lake from 8:30am to 5pm on weekends. Odd-even traffic restrictions will be implemented on private cars entering the West Lake scenic area between 8:30am and 5pm, based on the last digit of their license plates. Call (0571) 8506-6910 or 8798-5571 (in Chinese) for more information. The West Lake scenic area spans from Beishan Road in the north to Hupao Road and Fenghuangshan Road in the south, and from Yuhuangshan Workers clean up the withered lotus stalks in West Lake. The dried tops of the lotus, typical of the winter scenery of the lake, are removed to allow for lotuses to sprout again in the upcoming spring. — Xinhua Road in the east to Meiling Road in the west. Motorists are advised to park their cars at the Huanglong Stadium, Zhejiang Provincial Hall of the People, and Zijingang Interchange Center. Parking will be free and buses will ferry them to the West Lake area. Buses, coaches and taxies will not be affected by the new measures. Second-child permit SINCE January 17, when China’s onechild policy was eased, 1,745 couples in Hangzhou have applied for a second-child permit, the city’s population and family planning officials said. Among them, 572 couples have received the permits and the rest are still waiting for consideration. Zhejiang is the first province in China to allow couples to have a second child if either parent is the only child. Hangzhou, the provincial capital, has about 125,000 couples who are eligible for having a second child and two-thirds of them plan to have a second child, the officials said after doing a survey. China’s one-child policy was enacted in 1979 and was incorporated in the Population and Family Planning Law in 2002. Station names given NAMES of Metro Line 2 stations along a newly built extension line were revealed at the annual meeting of the city’s political advisers. The northwest terminal was named Xinliang Road Station, instead of Liangzhu Station as previously suggested. The second phase of Metro Line 2 runs from Fengtan Road Station to Xinliang Road Station, through Wenhua Road, Sanbacun, Yuying Road, Sandun, Dongjia Road, Gouzhuang, and Xinyue Road stations, according to Zhang Jinrong, deputy chief engineer of Hangzhou Metro Corporation. The extension line is scheduled to go into operation in 2018. The first phase of Metro Line 2, which will run from Caoyang Station to Fengtan Road Station, while sharing Fengqi Road Station with Metro Line 1 and also Qianjiang Road Station with Metro Line 4, is anticipated to go into service in October. WHAT’S ON A13 Shanghai Daily Monday 3 March 2014 http://www.iDEALShanghai.com/whats-on Stage PICK OF THE DAY Mister M Multimedia Piano Show To mark the 50th anniversary of the establishment of the diplomatic relation between China and France, French rock singer, songwriter and guitar player Matthieu Chedid, better known by his stage name M, is back to Shanghai on his China tour, this time collaborating with Chinese musicians ChaCha and AM444. Date: March 7, 8:30pm Tickets: 250 yuan (presale), 350 yuan (at door) Tel: 962-388 Venue: Shanghai Qianshuiwan Culture Center Address: 1/F, 179 Yichang Rd A multimedia piano concert named “Nodame Cantabile” that once astonished audiences with its innovative presentation in 2009 will return to Shanghai. The concert will be staged at Shanghai Culture Square tonight by young Chinese pianist Song Siheng. Date: Today, 7:15pm Tickets: 80 yuan Tel: 6217-2426, 6217-3055 Venue: Shanghai Culture Square Address: 597 Fuxing Rd ް႗ୟ6:8ࡽ Swiss Flutist Geneva-born flutist Emmanuel Pahud is world-famous for his interpretation of Baroque and Classical flute works. Pahud was tutored and mentored by flutists Francois Binet, Carlos Bruneel and Aurele Nicolet. Classically trained at the Conservatoire de Paris, he plays in diverse music genres, whether baroque, jazz, contemporary, classical, orchestral, or chamber music. Date: March 4, 7:30pm Tickets: 80-680 yuan Tel: 962-388 Venue: Concert Hall of Shanghai Oriental Art Center Address: 425 Dingxiang Rd, Pudong ۫ۡၑୟ536ࡽ Piano Recital Polish American pianist Anna Kijanowska will present local music lovers a piano recital. The pianist has established herself as a multifaceted musician. Her concert performances represent the stunning diversity of today’s globalized classical music scene. Date: March 7, 7:30pm Tickets: 80 yuan Tel: 5415-8976 Venue: Shanghai City Theater Address: 4889 Dushi Rd ۼୟ599:ࡽ HK Orchestra The Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra begins a tour in the Chinese mainland next week under the baton of its music director Jaap Van Zweden. The all-Beethoven program includes “Egmont Overture,” Violin Concerto in D major” and “Symphony No. 5.” The tour will stop in Beijing, Shanghai, Xiamen and Guangzhou. Dutch violinist Simone Lamsma will join the tour. Date: March 8, 7:30pm Tickets: 80-380 yuan Venue: Shanghai Oriental Art Center Address: 425 Dingxiang Rd, Pudong ۫ۡၑୟ536ࡽ Percussion Duo Joint Venture Percussion Duo will present a marimba concert featuring a broad selection of compositions of the African percussion GO ᅓׅୟ28:ࡽ2୍ instrument that’s dubbed “the pearl of percussion instruments.” The audience can look forward to Bartok’s seven pieces from “Mikrokosmos,” Ravel’s “Le Tombeau de Couperin” (“The Tomb of Couperin”) and Egberto Gismonti’s “Infancia.” Date: March 28, 7:30 pm Tickets: 80-580 yuan Venue: Shanghai Oriental Art Center Address: 425 Dingxiang Rd, Pudong four parts — namely “Ocean Paradise,” “Forest Fun,” “Prairie Hero” and “Urban Home.” Traditional beast training is replaced with interactive performances. Date: Saturdays and Sundays, 2pm Tickets: 80-150 yuan Tel: 962-388 Venue: Shanghai Circus World Address: 2266 Gonghexin Rd ࠌࢅႎୟ3377ࡽ Horse Sculpture Music from Budapest Exhibition The Arkansas Jazz Orchestra from the United States will stage a Jazz performance. Beautiful and romantic scores of “Sweet Home Chicago,” “Wood Choppers Ball” and “Little Brown Jug,” as well as popular Chinese songs “Sweet” and “Rose Rose I Love You” are featured in the repertoire. Date: March 23, 7:30pm Tickets: 80-280 yuan Tel: 5415-8976 Venue: Shanghai City Theater Address: 4889 Dushi Rd ۼୟ599:ࡽ ‘Happy Circus’ The circus show is focused on a “green” theme with 31 programs in The solo exhibition of horse sculptures of South Korean artist Kim Seon Gu echoes the coming Chinese Year of the Horse. Kim is exhibiting nearly 30 of his bronze sculptures, ranging in height from 20 centimeters to 2.5 meters. Most of his works feature a rider in different poses on a running horse. Date: Through March 15, 10am-5:30pm Tel: 5213-5366 Venue: Levant Art Gallery Address: 1/F, 107 Huqiu Rd ࢸ൮ୟ218ࡽ2୍ ට௷ڢٷ411ࡽ Jazz Show Art lovers are treated to an exhibition of the artworks by young Chinese artists. The avant-garde paintings, sculptures and art installations are winning pieces of the annual Creative M50 awards. Date: Through March 12, 10:30am-6:30pm Tel: 6299-6610 Venue: M Art Center Address: 1/F, Bldg 2, 50 Moganshan Rd ఎ߅ୟ61ࡽ3ࡽ୍2୍ ۫ۡၑୟ536ࡽ Under the baton of veteran conductor Iván Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra will present a concert of classical music. Program includes Borodin’s “Polovtsian Dances,” Glazunov’s “Violin Concerto” and Beethoven’s “Symphony No. 7.” Date: March 12, 7:30pm Tickets: 180-1,280 yuan Tel: 962-388 Venue: Lyric Theater of Shanghai Grand Theater Address: 300 People’s Ave Creative Artworks Paintings of Sundry Media Contemporary Ink-Wash An exhibition featuring the paintings created by Hou Wei and his six students is underway at Xuhui Art Museum through March 11. For the viewers, it is difficult to differentiate Hou’s paintings via materials, as he is swift to use sundry media together including oil, water-color and acrylic. According to the artist, it is more reasonable to categorize his paintings by contents and spirit. Hou’s subjects vary from landscape, tiny abandoned objects to female. Date: Through March 11, 9am-4pm Venue: Xuhui Art Museum Address: 1413 Huaihai Rd M. Chinese ink-wash paintings have featured stereotypical subjects for centuries. Yet some artists are not content reproducing the flowers, trees and mountains found in most ink-wash paintings. They have started venturing into new territory. The exhibition “A Fragment in the Course of Time — Landscape of Chinese Ink Art in the 1980s” features a group of Chinese artists who have chosen their own paths to create something different. Date: Through April 10, 10am6pm, close on Monday Admission: 30 yuan Venue: Shanghai Himalayas Museum Address: 3/F, 869 Yinghua Rd ࡛࣊ዐୟ2524ࡽ ᆉࢾୟ97:ࡽ4୍ 8am Talk to Lei 8:30am Travel Front 9am Culture Matters 10am High Drama 11:45am A Fistful of Kung Fu 12pm Pop Big Shot 12:10pm City Beat 12:45pm You Are the Chef 1pm The Funniest Home Video 1:30pm Real Fun 2:30pm High Docu 3:30pm ICS Show 4:30pm Fun Club 5pm On the Red Carpet 5:30pm Docu View 6pm The Funniest Home Video 6:30pm You Are the Chef 6:45pm Pop Big Shot 7pm Real Fun 8pm Docu View 8:30pm Talk to Lei 9pm Shanghai Live 9:45pm A Fistful of Kung Fu 10pm High Drama 9:30am, 3:30pm Nature and Science 9:55am, 3:55pm Civilization 11am, 2pm, 6pm, 9pm Biz China 11:30am, 6:30pm Around China 8pm Asia Today 1pm, 7:30pm, 12:30am Dialogue 8am, 7pm Worldwide Watch 8:30am, 2:30pm, 8:30pm Culture Express 9:15am, 3:15pm Learning Chinese 1:30pm, 9:30pm Rediscovering China 9:50am Hugo 12pm True Detective S106: Haunted Houses 1pm Argo 3pm Paranorman 4:30pm The Pirates! Band of Misfits 6pm Mirror Mirror 7:50pm Spider-Man 2 10pm Django Unchained 9:30am Hush 11:15am The Postman 2:15pm Hard Target 4pm King Creole 6:25pm Switchback 8:20pm Payback 10pm Gone (2012) Starring: Amanda Seyfried, Sunjata Powers and Jennifer Carpenter Jill Parrish comes home from a night shift to discover her sister Molly has been abducted. Jill, who had escaped from a kidnapper a year before, is convinced that the same serial killer has come back for her sister. Afraid that Molly will be dead by sundown, Jill embarks on a heart-pounding chase to find the killer, expose his secrets and save her sister. A14 COMICS/GAMES Monday 3 March 2014 Shanghai Daily GARFIELD HOROSCOPES change your life or your direction. A move or the way you live will improve if you embrace change. Expanded interests equal greater possibilities. Happy Birthday: Seize the moment. Don’t let any opportunity that comes your way slip past you. Pick up the pace and go after your dreams with passion, discipline and the mindset of a winner who will not stop until victory has been achieved. Reevaluate your personal position and consider your options. A serious attitude regarding love will enhance your personal life. Your numbers are 5, 11, 18, 20, 27, 36, 48. PISCES (Feb 19-Mar 20) Don’t let confusion set in. Help others without making a cash donation. Greater focus should be put on ways to develop your creative dreams. Join groups that share similar interests. Love is on the rise, but you must avoid secret affairs. POOCH CAFÉ ARIES (Mar 21-Apr 19) Don’t jump into something without doing your due diligence. The decision you make based on your findings will keep you from making a costly mistake. Getting angry will be a waste of valuable time. Take care of business and don’t share personal secrets. STONE SOUP TAURUS (Apr 20-May 20) Concentrate on learning and gathering experience and opportunities will surface. Don’t be too quick to share with someone who is likely to use the information against you in a competitive situation. Personal and professional partnerships are highlighted. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A change of heart will lead you in a much better direction. Offering assistance to someone inspired to take the same path will enable you to accomplish much more as a team. Get any agreement in writing to avoid problems. NON SEQUITUR CANCER (June 21-July 22) Do something creative that captures your imagination. Too much idle time will lead to boredom and expenditures that you cannot afford. Check your moodiness before you blame someone else for your dissatisfaction. Make peace, not war. LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You are heading upward and must not let anything or anyone stand in your way. Make calls that can CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Word before “a prayer” or “a clue” 6 Tug-of-war need 10 — up (energizes) VIRGO (Aug 23-Sep 22) Keep a tight lid on the way you feel, especially with regard to contracts, settlements and money matters. Listen to what’s being said. Collect information that is pertinent to a decision or response you will be expected to make. LIBRA (Sep 23-Oct 22) Test the waters. Make your choices clear, and you will tempt someone you least expect to see things your way. Offer positive alternatives and use your intellect and ability to find solutions. Lead the way, and you will attract allies. SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov 21) Make whatever job you do speak for your integrity, work ethic and ability to take whatever you are given and turn it into a masterpiece. Once you put your project behind you, plan a little downtime with friends or family. SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22-Dec 21) Take a step in the right direction. Make a couple of personal improvements and you will raise your self-esteem and invite others to compliment you on your progress. Social events should be attended and appear to be encouraging romantically. CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) Don’t expect everyone to agree with you. Be prepared to take the bad with the good. Have your answers and suggestions ready. Don’t make changes that will upset your personal or emotional situation. Walk away from negative influences. AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 18) Take the role of the person in your group who gets things done. Wheel and deal and make plans that are geared toward moneymaking endeavors. Do your best to advance by making positive changes to the way you earn your living. ©2014 UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE SUDOKU 14 Inappropriate looker 15 “Urn” homonym 16 What gives irises their color 17 Go from C’s to B’s, eg 20 Arm decoration 21 Absolute power 22 NASA’s domain 25 Flower that blooms in the fall 26 Dashing style 30 Ewe’s offspring 32 Stuffed Italian morsels 35 Awkward state 41 Proceed, say 43 Ruby’s victim 44 Lip woe 45 “Buzz off!” 47 One enjoying the sights 48 “Ristorante” course 53 Little bird of prey 56 Balticrepublic 58 Rasta’s music 63 Revealing too much beforehand 66 Sea eagle 67 Ta-ta in Turin 68 Morning wakerupper 69 “This — on me!” 70 Weigh by lifting 71 Dined at home 4 DOWN 33 1 2 3 34 Ball thrower? Ottoman official Place for a quarter 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 18 19 23 24 26 27 28 29 31 36 Politico Gingrich Groups of three Exerciser’s unit Rower’s necessity President — (acting head) Green feeling? Some big cats Big to-do Ziti alternative Attendant of Bacchus Bucket go-with Important historic period Reached ground Dependable money-maker “Cogito, — sum” Vientiane locale Confess openly One of a noted nautical threesome Elaborate inlaid work Parent of 53Across Oft-flipped items? Rod and Todd’s animated dad 37 In — (existing) 38 Nautical greeting 39 Not gracious, as a loser 40 Nightstand water vessel 42 Hammer or hacksaw, eg 46 Submarine sandwich 48 Basil-based sauce 49 Ghostlike 50 Shop-’til-youdrop site 51 Population Puzzle answer centers 52 What goes in nose to make noise? 54 Prior, to poets 55 Roadster maker 57 Move stealthily 59 Mountain pass in India 60 Way in or out 61 “Nay!” sayer 62 First garden 64 Nincompoop 65 “Wayne’s World” zinger Fill the grid with the numbers 1 to 9 so that each row, column and 3x3 block contains the numbers 1-9. SPORTS A15 Shanghai Daily Monday 3 March 2014 Sharks to stick with domestic coaches Ma Yue YAO Ming has told the Shanghai Sharks to get him the CBA trophy. The club’s general manager Zhang Mingji said Yao had made it clear he would only be satisfied when the Sharks bring home the CBA title. Yao, who took over the club five years ago, is exploring better development options for the club, whose best performance since he took over was finishing fourth in the 2009-10 season. Though the Sharks advanced to the CBA playoffs, their primary goal this season, they could have surpassed that with a better team management. “ In the future, the club will only hire domestic coaches to take charge of the team. ” “We did regret hiring Australian Rob Beveridge as head coach in the middle of the season, which proved to be unsuitable. In the future, the club will only hire domestic coaches to take charge of the team,” Zhang said. The Shanghai outfit struggled with issues off the court with frequent changes of coaches. Veteran head coach Wang Qun resigned citing family issues after just five rounds. The club then turned to young coach and former player Wang Yong, who is only 27 years old. They signed Beveridge in December to assist Wang. However, the former Australian national youth team head coach also left the team before the end of the regular season. “Some coaches have a high profile and tactical ability, while others are simply good at communicating with players and inspiring them to perform to their potential. We favor the latter,” Zhang said. The Sharks finished eighth in the 18-team Chinese Basketball Association regular season. They were trounced 0-3 by Guangdong Southern Tigers in the first round playoffs. “Currently, Wang Qun is still the team’s head coach,” Zhang said. But the team might need a backup coach as well as Wang’s wife was reported to be sick and needs constant care. “Foreign coaches are not familiar with the operation of the Chinese league, and sometimes don’t communicate well with local players. We did not put enough emphasis on the stability of the coaching staff. We really doubt whether foreign coaches can bring stability to the team.” Zhang said there was always debate on whether the team should play foreign and experienced players more often or give the younger players more time on court. “We still favor a long-term development method, but we must be realists as well under the current system,” he said. He also stressed that player management will be improved next season. He said one player smoked everyday that affected his form. The team will meet in April for training when it will put more emphasis on technique, including shooting skills. “We hope to create a more aggressive playing style during the summer training,” he said. LeBron James (right) of the Miami Heat handles the ball during a game against the Orlando Magic in Miami on Saturday. — AFP Blazers complete a rare season sweep of Nuggets BASKETBALL PORTLAND completed a season sweep of Denver for the first time in 15 years by beating the Nuggets 102-96 on Saturday to move within three games of the NBA Western Conference lead. In the Eastern Conference, Indiana maintained its two-game lead over Miami by struggling past lowly Boston, the Los Angeles Clippers widened their lead in the Pacific Division by crushing New Orleans, and Houston held on to beat Detroit. Portland’s Robin Lopez scored 18 points and LaMarcus Aldridge returned from an injury to add 16 for the Trail Blazers, who won their fifth straight. Denver, by contrast, has lost five straight. Indiana had difficulty in dispatching Boston, winning 102-97, with Paul George scoring 10 of the Pacers’ last 12 points. George led the Pacers with 25 points and Evan Turner added 17 as Indiana won its fourth straight game. Jeff Green had 27 points for the Celtics, who have lost six of seven. The Clippers had the luxury of resting Chris Paul and Blake Griffin in the fourth quarter and still cruising to a 108-76 win over New Orleans. Paul had 21 points and eight assists, while Griffin added 20 points. Houston opened a big early lead and hung on to beat Detroit 118-110, with Terrence Jones leading the way with 22 points and 10 rebounds. Jones finished 10 of 15 from the floor as Houston shot 50 percent for the game, including 61 percent in the first half. Houston scored 41 points in the first quarter. James Harden added 20 points and 12 assists. Miami won its seventh-straight game, beating lowly Orlando 112-98, with LeBron James scoring 20 points, having switched to a clear face mask to protect his broken nose. Memphis used a big second half to overwhelm Cleveland, winning 110-96, with Zach Randolph having 23 points and 14 rebounds. Minnesota beat Sacramento 108-97, with Kevin Martin scoring 26 points to help the Timberwolves reach a .500 record. Washington beat Philadelphia 122-103, with Trevor Ariza making eight 3-pointers and scoring a career-high 40 points. Brooklyn’s Marcus Thornton scored 12 of his 25 points in the fourth quarter to guide the Nets to a 107-98 win over Milwaukee. (AP) EXPLORE MORE AT WWW.SHANGHAIDAILY.COM/SPORTS GOLF ALPINE SKIING TENNIS ATHLETICS Creamer ends drought in stunning style Jansrud wins World Cup super-G at home Federer snares record sixth Dubai crown Pearson clocks fastest time in 60m hurdles PAULA Creamer thanked the “man of my dreams” for her return to winning ways as she ended the longest drought of her career in thrilling fashion in Singapore yesterday. Creamer sank a 75-foot eagle putt on the second playoff hole to win the US$1.4 million HSBC Women’s Champions, her ninth victory but the first since the 2010 US Women’s Open. Boosted by her pilot fiance Derek Heath, a new swing thought and extra practice, she eked out a fabulous playoff win over Spain’s Azahara Munoz. “It has everything to do with it,” said Creamer, when asked what role her relationship had KJETIL Jansrud of Norway continued his fine run of form by winning the men’s alpine skiing World Cup super-G race in Kvitfjell, Norway, yesterday. The 28-year-old Oly mpic champion in the discipline made it two wins in three days following his joint first finish with Austria’s Georg Streitberger in a downhill on Friday. Jansrud took the super-G honors ahead of Switzerland’s Patrick Kueng and downhill Olympic champion Matthias Mayer of Austria, who collected his second podium finish in two days having entered it without ever finishing in the top three in World Cup racing. ROGER Federer won a record sixth Dubai Championships — and 78th career title — by beating Tomas Berdych 3-6, 6-4, 6-3 in the final on Saturday. Federer, who maintains a home in Dubai, delighted a packed stadium for back-toback wins over Novak Djokovic in the semifinals and Berdych. “Things definitely went my way out here tonight,” Federer said. “I’ve had a lot of tough matches in the last year and a half so it was nice to get a lucky break again.” Federer’s win, his sixth here in the last 12 years, extends his record of winning at least one title a year to 14 consecutive years. OLYMPIC champion Sally Pearson of Australia clocked the fastest 60m hurdles indoor time of the season on Saturday, just a week out from the world championships. Pearson timed 7.79sec in the heats at the Berlin meet before winning the final in 7.80sec for a perfect confidence boost ahead of the world indoor championships at Sopot in Poland next week. Cuba’s 2008 Olympic 110m hurdles gold medalist Dayron Robles claimed the men’s 60m hurdles in 7.53sec. More than 10,000 spectators were buoyed by seeing Germans David Storl and Malte Mohr claim victories in the shot and pole vault respectively. Paula Creamer reacts after winning the final round of the HSBC Women’s Champions. played in the victory. “I am in such a good place, I am blessed with what I have, I’m blessed with what I’ve been given. It’s a lot of hard work, there’s a lot of up and downs but Derek just makes me so happy, he makes me want to be better.” SPORTS Monday 3 March 2014 Shanghai Daily A16 Wenger: Stoke loss major blow ARSENE Wenger conceded Arsenal’s stuttering Premier League title bid had suffered a “major setback” after it lost ground at the top with a shock 0-1 defeat at Stoke. Jon Walters’ second-half penalty handed Stoke a famous win at the Britannia Stadium on Saturday and left the Gunners four points behind Premier League leader Chelsea in third place. Liverpool beat Southampton 3-0 to move into second place. Andre Schurrle scored a hat-trick in Chelsea’s 3-1 win at Fulham. “It is not slightly worrying, it is a big worry for us to lose a game like that. It’s a massive setback,” Wenger said. “In a game like that, we didn’t produce the performance we wanted. To win a title when you are expected to perform you have to perform. It’s as simple as that.” Although it was Mark Hughes, as opposed to predecessor Tony Pulis in the Potters’ home dugout, the game retained the same feisty edge so memorable from these teams’ recent meetings. Glenn Whelan and Charlie Adam both escaped without sanction from referee Mike Jones despite controversial challenges on Olivier Giroud, frustrating the striker. “I have nothing to say about that. I am long enough in the game to make my own judgement,” Wenger said. “It would be a shame if people highlight that as it wasn’t that type of game,” Potters boss Hughes said. However, the Arsenal manager was unimpressed by Jones’ decision to point to the spot after adjudging Laurent Koscielny handled inside the penalty area as Walters attempted to lift the ball over him. “We conceded a goal that was a nice gift from the referee but that can happen,” Wenger added. “He was one yard away. How could he take his hand away in time? There was no intention at all.” Wenger’s side could have few complaints with the outcome, however. “We had a good defensive performance and overall we are unlucky to lose this game but offensively we did not create enough,” Wenger said. “Our offensive game was poor considering our standards.” (AFP) Manchester City substitute Jesus Navas celebrates after scoring the third goal against Sunderland during their English League Cup final at Wembley Stadium in London yesterday. City fought back to win the match 3-1. — Reuters Magical City rallies to take Cup SOCCER TWO moments of magic in the space of two second-half minutes helped Manchester City to a 3-1 victory over Sunderland in the English League Cup final at Wembley yesterday. Manuel Pellegrini’s favorites were trailing to Fabio Borini’s 10th minute strike for Sunderland and a shock looked on the cards until Yaya Toure and Samir Nasri intervened. Jesus Navas completed the turnaround late on. Toure curled in City’s equalizer after 55 minutes before Nasri thumped home the winner to snatch the season’s first silverware for Pellegrini’s title-chasing side. It was City’s first League Cup title since 1976. “We needed to win today, it was very important. And we deserved it the way we played in the second half,” Toure told Sky Sports. “Today we showed we are a great team. I think it was my best goal.” Sunderland spent the opening five minutes entrenched inside their own half as City, which scored 19 goals en route to the final, moved the ball around with ease on the lush turf. But minutes later the ball was in the back of the City net. There seemed no imminent danger as Borini closed down Vincent Kompany but City’s skipper was guilty of over-complication and Borini robbed him of the ball before bursting into the penalty area and thumping a shot with the outside of his right boot past Costel Pantilimon. City dominated possession for the rest of the half without ever carving open a Sunderland rearguard bolstered by former Manchester United stalwarts Wes Brown and John O’Shea. Aguero denied Phil Bardsley, who scored in Sunderland’s semifinal penalty shootout win over United, reacted superbly to deny Sergio Aguero a certain goal but keeper Vito Mannone was not required to make any outstanding saves. Sunderland was always dangerous on the counter-attack and could have doubled its lead when Borini ran through on goal from a suspiciously offside position but Kompany recovered to nick the ball away as the Italian cocked his leg to shoot. A city onslaught was expected at the start of the second half but again, Sunderland continued to impress. Ki Sung-yueng, part of the Swansea City side to lift the trophy last season, let fly from 30 meters, forcing Pantilimon to tip his dipping strike over the crossbar. Then the wheels fell off Sunderland’s bandwagon. One nonchalant swing of Toure’s right leg sent a curling 25 meter shot beyond the fingertips of Mannone after 55 minutes and two minutes later Nasri turned the final on its axis with an unstoppable shot from the edge of the penalty area after Aleksandar Kolarov’s cross was half cleared. It was cruel on Sunderland which until then had been worth its lead but a further demonstration of the formidable firepower available to Pellegrini. Substitute Navas made absolutely sure there was no way back for Sunderland with City’s third on the stroke of full time. (Reuters) Bayern on a roll in Bundesliga ARJEN Robben scored a hat-trick as Bayern Munich routed Schalke 5-1 on Saturday to extend its Bundesliga lead to 20 points, a record after 23 games. David Alaba opened the scoring with a deflected freekick in the third minute, Robben chipped in his first in the 15th, Mario Mandzukic’s header made it 3-0 in the 24th, and Robben claimed his second in the 28th, with a fine finish inside the far post. It was utter dominance from Bayern in the first half, with more than three-quarters ball possession, 409 completed passes to Schalke’s 65, and a successful pass rate of 91 percent. Bayern stretched its league record unbeaten run to 48 games after its 15th win in a row — also a league record. Earlier, Borussia Dortmund took advantage of Bayer Leverkusen’s freefall by beating Nuremberg 3-0 at home to move to second. Leverkusen lost 0-1 at home to Mainz for its fifth consecutive defeat. (AP) Monday 3 March 2014 B FINANCE PASCAL LAMY: Driving reform is ‘no easy feat’ Ye Zhen “ I t’s like trying driving a car when some people are slamming on the brakes and others are pushing on the accelerator,” Pascal Lamy, former head of the World Trade Organization, said of China’s reform experiment in creating a pilot free trade zone in Shanghai. Lamy, who was director-general of the WTO between 2005 and 2013, said he expects the “car” to experience a pretty bumpy ride. “As happens all over the world, when reforms of this kind are undertaken, there will be resistance, either from sectors that reject foreign competition or from administrations for bureaucratic reasons,” said Lamy, who sat down with Shanghai Daily after he delivered a keynote speech to an academic seminar organized by the School of Economics and Management of Tongji University. “Driving such a car will be no easy feat and will require careful political management,” said Lamy. Even so, the French political advisor, businessman and former European Union commissioner for trade said he remains optimistic about the prospect for the new zone, coming as it does when a dramatically changing international economy is pushing China to develop new competitive advantages. “My own judgment, based on past experience, is that this new stage in economic reform will work, will happen and will benefit China and the rest of the world,” Lamy said. CONTINUES ON B3 YUAN: Alarm bells mute on recent weakness CURRENCY/B2 B2 CURRENCY Monday 3 March 2014 Shanghai Daily Blip in the yuan signals its strength in the future No cause for alarm, free-market exchange rates fluctuate. Recent weakness in the yuan is viewed as a natural step in the evolution toward becoming a world reserve currency. Feng Jianmin T he Year of the Horse started with the exchange rate of the Chinese yuan galloping downhill. The once seemingly unstoppable appreciation of the yuan began going into reverse on February 18, touching a ten-month low of 6.1808 per US dollar last Friday. The yuan has lost more than 2 percent against the dollar since January 14, when the yuan hit a 20-year-high of 6.0406. This reversal goes beyond matters of mere high finance. The declining exchange rate has affected many ordinary consumers, much to their surprise. An office worker surnamed Chen went for a holiday abroad before the Chinese New Year and spent some dollars while overseas. She waited too long to pay off her credit card bills. “As usual, I waited for the deadline because later has always been cheaper,” said Chen. “I could have saved about 100 yuan (US$16.31) for every thousand dollars I spent if I had acted sooner.” But Chen is among many who believe the yuan will rise again. “Everything needs a rest,” Chen said. 1.4% The yuan has lost about 1.4 percent against the US dollar since January 14, when it hit a 20-year high. bolder reform steps, such as moving from daily to weekly or even monthly settings of the reference rate and widening the band in which the currency is allowed to trade against the dollar. China currently allows the yuan to trade between 1 percent on either side of central bank’s daily reference rate. Zhu with JPMorgan said he expects the band to double in the next two or three months, when the official rate and trading rate converge and when capital flow is balanced. Resuming appreciation Under control Financial authorities and economists are interpreting the yuan’s new trend as a sign that everything is under control. The State Administration of Foreign Exchange called it a “normal” reaction amid recent cash withdrawals from emerging markets and said the possibility for large and continuous outflows of foreign capital is “relatively small.” The foreign-exchange watchdog said two-way volatility in the yuan is likely to increase as the Chinese market gains strength. Economists attributed the depreciation to economic data pointing to slower industrial activity, to concerns about financial stability amid quick expansion of trusts and to withdrawal of foreign capital from emerging markets after the US Federal Reserve started paring back its monetary stimulus. The message Chinese officials want to send is that the depreciation of the yuan is orchestrated and under control. “We believe the recent yuan depreciation is supported by a shift in policy stance,” said Zhu Haibin, JPMorgan’s chief China economist. “In particular, the central bank would like to revert to a two-way volatility regime and to mitigate the near-term pressure of capital inflows.” The yuan was one of the best performing currencies in 2013, appreciating by 3 percent against the US dollar — about 7 percent in terms of the real effective exchange rate, or a weighted average exchange rate with major trading partners, according to the investment bank. The fast appreciation of the yuan in Photo by Huang Yihuan/Shanghai Daily real effective terms placed heavy pressure on exporters and changed market sentiment from 2012, when the yuan barely moved against the US dollar. Because of fast appreciation and relatively high interest rates, banks in China purchased 2.78 trillion yuan of foreign exchange in 2013, nearly 6 times more than in 2012. Over the same period, China’s foreign-exchange reserves added another US$500 billion to US$3.82 trillion. Last November, the People’s Bank of China said that there is “no longer any benefit” from increasing the forex reserves. Financial risk Continuous currency inflows could damp the central bank’s efforts to contain credit expansion and rebalance the economy. Excessive US dollar assets are seen as adding to financial risk, and a strong yuan hurts exporters. By allowing a relatively sharp depreciation, the central bank may be testing new ground in its long-term aim to turn the yuan into an international reserve currency. “The central bank never really wants too much yuan appreciation,” said Yao Wei, an economist with Societe Generale. “What matters is how it manages the currency.” Yao said that to make a real difference, the central bank should take “ The central bank never really wants too much yuan appreciation ... What matters is how it manages the currency. Yao Wei Economist Societe Generale Most financial institutions are still predicting that the yuan will resume a stable appreciation this year. The central bank signaled further currency reforms in four documents it issued in the past two weeks related to the newly formed Shanghai free trade zone. They outlined operational details, including cross-border yuan lending and fully liberated interest rates for foreign currencies. Foreign interests are watching closely. European Central Bank executive board member Yves Mersch said last week that the currency may eventually become the lead reserve currency, rivaling the greenback, if China is efficient in reforming the economy and especially the financial sector. A poll of 200 institutional investors conducted by State Street, the world’s second-largest custodian bank, and the Economist Intelligence Unit found that 53 percent of respondents said the yuan may become a major reserve currency. “We expect yuan depreciation to be moderate and temporary,” JPMorgan’s Zhu said. “The reluctance to see significant yuan depreciation is still deep in the mind of Chinese policymakers, as it may cause large capital outflows, raise political objections from major trading partners and also impede the central bank’s efforts to promote the international use of the yuan.” He said that JPMorgan maintains its expectation for 1 percent or 2 percent appreciation of the yuan this year, supported by China’s 7.4 percent annual economic growth, a stable current-account surplus at 2 percent and the low likelihood of any full-blown financial crisis. Credit Agricole and Bank of America Merrill Lynch continue to hold their target of a rate of 6 yuan to the dollar by the end of the year, while Australia & New Zealand Bank said that the yuan may end 2014 at 5.98. COVER STORY B3 Shanghai Daily Monday 3 March 2014 Containers are piled in the Yangshan Free Trade Port Area, which is part of the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone. — Zhang Suoqing ‘Work in progress’ may face pockets of resistance FROM B1 Q: The establishment of the Shanghai free trade zone is seen as a milestone in China’s commitment to reform and wider opening up to the world. But there are different voices. The zone generates both expectations and skepticism. How do you view its role in China’s economy? A: I think it’s a work in progress. The policy direction is very clear. It’s one more way to open up trade, investment, financial markets and the customs system. Shanghai has always been at the frontline of opening to trade and investment. So the direction is clear, but it takes time to get things going. There is still some distance between expectations and reality. This is to be expected. It’s normal. This is a major process of change. It takes time to happen. You need a lot political energy. There will be resistance, either from sectors that resist foreign competition or from administrations for bureaucratic reasons. So it will necessitate quite a lot political push, as was done in the past. But what matters is the strategy and direction, the sense of where the policy is going. Of course, this is to be tested step-by-step. There are obviously quite a number of operational implementations on the way. Q: How do you view what’s being done in the zone to date? A: What has been done, for the moment, affects finance, transport, shipping, trade and legal work. These are areas that China intends to push beyond its commitments to the WTO. So what China is really doing here is testing WTO-plus. There is an opening up of the services market and also a huge simplification in regulations. Of course, there are also a few experiments in financial services, with more freedom for equity operations, for cross-border currency flows and for yuan transactions. There are also tests in trade facilitation, customs procedures and customs clearance. Although a positive step forward, I believe that the negative list is still a bit long-ish. I expect the list to shrink with time. And the area where it still is not very clear is in the sector of stateowned enterprises. Obviously, there is an intention to clear the decks and have a clearer division between the provision of public services on the one side and market-based production of services or commodities on the other. This still remains to be done. And in my view it will be tough because shrinking the SOE sector is always politically very difficult. Q: Many foreign investors are showing less enthusiasm than expected for the free trade zone. Why do you think that is? A: So far, there has been more initiative from Chinese companies than from foreign enterprises. It’s normal because the Chinese are more familiar with the system. But it also shows there is still quite a way to go in providing the necessary certainty and confidence for the future. In some areas, decisions that have been taken are pretty clear, but when you look at detailed regulations, they are not. Until and unless the necessary degree of certainty is available, I think this imbalance will remain. Q: How do you see China’s long-term economy prospects? A: I think the 10 percent growth rate of the last decade is not sustainable in the long term. But we also have to understand that 7 percent growth today is much more than 10 percent five years ago. It’s not about percentage but about the volume and the absolute number. Although there are changes taking place and although difficult issues remain to be addressed in the financial sector, in the environment, in regional imbalance and in the social system, I think the Chinese economy will remain rationally manageable. But I expect the growth rate will be less as the economy grows bigger in size. The way to sustain growth momentum, as in the past, will be based on domestic reforms and in increased competition. Of course, this is a process that is not painless. It necessitates political energy not only from within China but also from elsewhere abroad. In my view, the key for the future lies in the quality of the social system, including the environment, which we all know is a serious problem here. Q: What do you think will be the implications for WTO of trade talks such as the Tans-Pacific Partnership and the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership? A: Until they are concluded, nobody knows what the impact of these trade negotiations will be. If you look at the past, bilateral, regional and multilateral negotiations have gone hand-in-hand. In recent decades, there has been convergence and synergy between bilateral and multilateral market opening. So far, so good. It will depend on what’s in the final agreements, which still seem to be very elusive. The TPP talks have been going on for five years. It’s a long and complex process. And the TTIP is only at the beginning of negotiations. So let’s see what exists if and when these negotiations conclude. We are not there yet. It’s too soon to make a judgment. “ There will be resistance, either from sectors that resist foreign competition or from administrations for bureaucratic reasons ... But what matters is the strategy and direction, the sense of where the policy is going. B4-5 FINANCE Monday 3 March 2014 Shanghai Daily WINNER NO.4: CHINA PACIFIC INSURANCE WINNER NO.1: JIADING JISHIYU MICRO-CREDIT CO Helping small businesses thrive JIADING Jishiyu Micro-Credit Co won third prize from the Shanghai government for devising a system to become the personal accountant for sole proprietors taking out loans. “Most of our customers run businesses of their own,” company Chairman Song Mei told Shanghai Daily. “They may be owners of tea shops, fishmongers or butchers. They like to keep money in their drawers, not cash registers. The bank notes normally were greasy and crumpled. Our onsite inspectors now count the money and create records for them.” The company was founded in March last year by a group of alumni from the China Europe International Business School, one of the leading MBA schools in Shanghai. “We tuned ourselves to our customers,” Song said. “Not many people want to do that for small borrowers. It’s very time-consuming and risky, especially when you don’t have the right information.” Song and her university associates operate what is known as “grassroots finance.” Small loans from commercial banks typically start at 20 million yuan (US$3.3 million). Jishiyu clients last year borrowed, on average, 15,000 yuan. “We are serving the real grassroots here,” she said. “We get to know our customers personally. Sometimes they are late with payments because they have an awful lot of things to do running a solo business. So our system has automatic text messages reminding borrowers of payment dates three days in advance. That has cut the incidence of late payments.” The Shanghai financial innovation award cited Jishiyu for its efforts in assisting cash-strapped small businesses and in advancing information management systems. Song said the tolerance for bad loans among small credit companies is around 10 percent. However, Jishiyu has slashed that ratio to under 3 percent. “We take that 3 percent as our operational cost, not risk,” she said. “Anything beyond that level is considered risk to us.” The biggest challenge Song and her peers is the lack of access to the credit rating system run by the People’s Bank of China, which provides financial institutions with personal credit history. The system was opened to all commercial banks in 2005 but has yet to be extended to firms doing small business or personal loans. Song said the central bank began a trial project last year, which reviewed the business records of 10 selected small loan companies, including hers. She is hoping that is a sign that access to credit histories will soon be expanded, cutting down the time it now takes to process a loan application. Nonetheless, Jishiyu has been successful. It plans to double its capital to 200 million yuan this year and has secured a 50 million yuan loan from the Shanghai Branch of China Development Bank. Thinking smarter yields rewards 15k Jishiyu clients last year borrowed, on average, 15,000 yuan. In comparison, small loans from commercial lenders typically start at 20 million yuan. Hu Xiaocen Shanghai equates innovation with progress in its campaign to build itself into an international financial center. So every year, the city bestows awards honoring innovation to financial institutions it deems demonstrate the spirit of reform and transformation. 3% Jishiyu’s tolerance for bad loans is under 3 percent. The awards showcase firms that are committed to improving the financial environment and enhancing the competitive edge of the burgeoning financial hub. Shanghai Daily sat down with executives from some of the most recent winners to explore how their strategies benefit their firms and the city. ‘Everyone pays’ in an eye-blink who don’t have Internet access, such as the elderly and people live in remote regions. The platform handled 13 million transactions a month last year, totaling more than 30 billion yuan (US$4.9 billion). Zhu Guang, senior manager of product innovation department at UMS, told Shanghai Daily that the company is working on other innovative products and is hoping to win more innovation prizes in the future. UMS recently partnered with China CITIC Bank to provide unsecured loans to its 2.7 million merchant customers. Loan underwriting is based on a merchant’s daily point-of-sale transactions. Loan approvals are done in the blink of an eye. The merchant normally receives the money on the same day the loan application is filed. A loan of up to 500,000 yuan is available. UMS said it has extended 2.3 billion yuan to over 3,600 merchant in the past three months — growth it describes as “swift.” CHINA Pacific Insurance Group took top honors in the financial innovation awards, cited as a pioneer in providing coverage for damage resulting from physical defects in buildings. The Shanghai-based insurer is the city’s second-biggest property insurer and the third-biggest life insurer on China’s mainland. Shao Jian, vice general manager at the firm’s Shanghai branch, said China Pacific was the first to offer what is called “inherent defects” insurance in the mainland. The new policy is still in a trial run and available only in Shanghai. The policy protects owners from property damage caused by defective design, materials or workmanship. It also reduces the risk for developers who carry legal responsibility for buildings up to 10 years after their completion. Shao said she and her colleagues were motivated by several high-profile incidents in Shanghai. In 2010, fire destroyed a 28-story apartment building in downtown Jingan District, killing at least 58 people and injuring over 70. The cause of the fire was traced to unlicensed welders whose sparking ignited scaffolding erected for repair work. Six months earlier, a new 13story apartment building in suburban Minhang District collapsed because of shoddy construction. No one was injured because the building hadn’t been opened yet to residents. Third-party supervisor WINNER NO.2: CHINA UNIONPAY MERCHANT SERVICES SHANGHAI-BASED China UnionPay Merchant Services (UMS), the biggest operator of its kind for bank card transactions in the country, won an innovation prize for its one-stop platform that makes bill payments easier for consumers. UMS is a subsidiary of UnionPay, Chinese mainland’s only interbank network operator. The platform — called Quan Min Fu, which means “everyone pays” — allows consumers to pay utility bills, credit card debts, mobile phone top-ups and online purchases with no extra charge. There are similar service providers in the market, such as Alibaba Group’s Alipay platform. However UMS has extended the system’s access point beyond computers and cellphones to offline channels. It has more than one million terminals across the country, including point-of-sale machines, automatic teller machines and Quan Min Fu self-service machines. It offers the one-stop service to consumers Insurer pares risk of defects in buildings 2.3b UMS said that it has extended 2.3 billion yuan to more than 3,600 merchant in the past three months. WINNER NO.3: STANDARD CHARTERED BANK Pioneering expanded use of the yuan globally CHINA views foreign banks as important players in transforming the yuan into an international currency. The Shanghai government honored Standard Chartered for its efforts in boosting use of the yuan among multinational companies. The British lender was the only foreign bank so honored. It received second prize last year for launching a cross-border lending structure for the yuan to encourage more companies to use the Chinese currency in trade settlement. “We know that liquidity is the lifeblood of every business,” said Loh Long Hsiang, general manager of the bank’s Shanghai branch. “So we have designed flexible repayment schedules for yuandenominated cross-border loans, giving our clients greater flexibility in capital deployment from a global perspective,” Loh said. Loh said the bank plans more new products along the same line, such as multi-currency notional pooling and regional yuan pooling facilities. Notional pooling is a treasury management tool used by multinationals to concentrate virtual cash balances from subsidiaries to reflect an aggregate account balance but avoid physical inter-company money transfers and loans. A number of foreign banks on China’s mainland started to provide cross-border lending in yuan after the People’s Bank of China last year expanded pilot projects for crossborder yuan transactions in trade and investment. Standard Chartered was the first foreign bank on the mainland to assist a multinational company in cross-border yuan lending. In late 2012, it obtained a loan quota of 3.3 billion yuan (US$541 million) from the central bank for an American company, allowing the client’s headquarters in China to lend surplus yuan to overseas branches. Since then, Standard Chartered China has supported 19 companies in yuan cross-border lending totaling 39 billion yuan. The service was extended after the central bank announced in late February that cross-border cash pooling in yuan would no longer be limited by quotas or administrative approvals. It was a bid to help businesses in the Shanghai pilot free trade zone to improve their capital management. Following the latest relaxation of the rules, Standard Chartered set up a yuan-denominated, two-way sweeping transaction for Baoxin Auto Group, the biggest BMW dealer on China’s mainland, to assist the Hong Kong-listed company’s crossborder fund transfers and trade settlement. Other foreign banks have also embraced the new measures and launched similar sweeping services for clients. HSBC China said it has launched a centralized yuan cross-border transaction management solution for Saint-Gobain’s subsidiary in the Shanghai free trade zone. SaintGobain is a Paris-based designer and manufacturer of building materials. Citi China announced the launch of a yuan cross-border pool for the European pharmaceutical giant Roche in the pilot zone. 19 Since late 2012, Standard Chartered Bank has supported 19 companies in yuan cross-border lending totaling 39 billion yuan. “Under our policy, the insurer becomes a third-party supervisor that manages the risks along with the developer during the entire construction process,” Shao said. That gives the insurer the right to advise the builder to halt the construction process if inspections reveal defects. The policy also offers lower costs for property developers. In Shanghai, developers are required to set aside 3 percent of the total construction cost with the local housing authority for 10 years to cover any future repairs. The developer is required to replenish the reserves after payouts during that period. Under the China Pacific policy, they need to set aside only 1.5 percent to 1.7 percent of the construction cost, according to Shao. “The policy is still on a three-year trial,” she said. “We need more data from damage claims to improve the product. Our underwriters are taking a prudent stance on this policy, which covers the buyers for 10 years.” Premium income from the trial policy has reached 23 million yuan (US$3.8 million) so far, and Shao said the company sees even bigger potential, given that Shanghai builds 2,000 hectares of commercial and residential buildings each year. Risk is mitigated by having the new policy co-insured by four companies. China Pacific assumes 47 percent of the premium as well as the claims. B6 COMMENTARY Monday 3 March 2014 Shanghai Daily Hong Kong bottleneck: Decoupling of growth and unemployment Chris Leung A holistic approach to understanding unemployment Chris Leung Senior economist DBS Bank “ While importing “ labor can in theory relieve labor shortages, it is not very practical in Hong Kong’s case. High housing and rental costs make significant labor imports too costly. Hong Kong’s GDP growth used to be a good predictor of the unemployment rate but this is no longer the case. The unemployment rate has consistently stayed between 3.1 percent and 3.5 percent since July 2011 even though GDP growth has been fluctuating. The main reason why Hong Kong’s unemployment rate has stayed low while GDP growth has been weak is that demand for Hong Kong’s labor has come from both local demand and explosive demand derived from China’s mainland. To compare, Hong Kong’s labor supply growth was rather stable and predictable over the years, averaging 1.1 percent in the past 10 years. On the other hand, “derived” labor demand — for example, that coming from neighboring parts of the mainland — has grown exponentially. To put this into perspective, the number of mainland visitors coming to Hong Kong in 2013 is 4.8 times to size of that in 2003, when the Individual Visits Scheme was first introduced, but total labor supply was only 1.1 times larger over the same period. In the retail sector, retail sales volume growth averaged 13.4 percent annually over 2009-2012 while the sector’s labor force growth averaged just 2.1 percent annually over the same period (labor force data for the retail sales sector only available since 2008). Derived labor demand impacts more than the retail sector. Closer integration with the mainland has increased demand for labor in almost all sectors, the more obvious ones being retail, catering, accommodation and property. In fact, any corporation that is doing business with the mainland would have more derived labor demand. Recently, even the demand for educational and medical services has risen due to integration between Hong Kong and nearby regions. In the past, when Hong Kong was less integrated with the mainland, labor demand was a simpler function of local demand. Besides the impact from rapid growth in derived demand for labor, supply-side factors can also explain Hong Kong’s consistently low unemployment rate. Many sectors face chronic labor shortages regardless of the state of the economy. According to a recent report by Manpower Group, some 57 percent of Hong Kong employers are having trouble finding the right staff, the most since 2008. Demographic factors, such as an aging population, could be one of the reasons. The percentage of male employees aged below 50 have now decreased to 64 percent from 77 percent back in 2005, and this may have caused labor shortages in some sectors requiring intensive manual work. Fundamental changes in the labor demand-supply equation explain why low unemployment rates have been consistently seen in the past two and a half years. As Hong Kong integration with the mainland grows, the unemployment rate will likely remain at low levels for a prolonged period. Nevertheless, one must be careful not to equate this with a healthy labor market. The behavior of unemployment in retail and real estate sectors To further explore this peculiar phenomenon, we focus on two sectors: retail and real estate. In the retail sector, the unemployment rate behaves differently compared with previous cycles. The uptick of unemployment coincided with the drop in retail sales growth in the past, but the unemployment rate practically stayed flat throughout the second half of 2012 even when retail sales growth plummeted. This is likely attributable to the increasing influence of tourists on the retail sector. Although retail sales plunged in the second half of 2012, tourist numbers did not — mainland tourist arrivals grew 25.5 percent in the second half of 2012 versus 22.7 percent in the first half of 2012. If many people stop shopping altogether (e.g., in the midst of a financial crisis or epidemic), it would lead to layoffs. However, if shoppers remain active but are simply spending less, retail employees are still required to serve these customers. This is especially true now as the influx of tourists generate high demands on retail employment. In addition, changing patterns of tourist consumption can also explain the relative stability of retail sector employment. For instance, mainland tourists may visit high-end stores less amid an economic slowdown but spend more time shopping for personal products or clothing, increasing staffing needs in those stores. In the real estate sector, the unemployment rate runs against intuition even more. The sector’s unemployment rate stood at just 2.5 percent in the fourth quarter of 2012, even though residential flat transactions have fallen by more than 40 percent year on year to 4,000 per month. In comparison, when transactions averaged 9,000 per month or more between the second quarter of 2009 and 2012, the sector’s unemployment rate was 3.2 percent. The present low rate of unemployment is explainable: large agencies have decided to freeze headcount rather than lay off workers; discouraged agents went to find jobs in other industries; potential entrants into the industry may have been deterred by the poor prospects. Another reason is that real estate agents only account for about onethird of all real estate employees in Hong Kong. Real estate developers have been busily launching projects recently, and these companies demand labor. The situation in the real estate sector is a good example of how industry-specific characteristics and microeconomic factors sometimes affect unemployment more than broad macroeconomic indicators like GDP growth. For now, employment surveys offer more insights By now it should be clear that there are limits to conventional macroeconomics when analyzing Hong Kong’s labor market. Microeconomic factors are crucial to understanding hiring decisions and job seekers’ aspirations, particularly at the industry level. Thus, it is worth paying more attention to employment surveys. Over the period the third quarter of 2011 and the first quarter of 2014, when the unemployment rate stayed flat, export/ import trade and wholesale was the only sector that experienced notable deterioration in the employment outlook (mostly over the first quarter of 2013 and the first quarter of 2014). Employers in other sectors consistently expressed intentions to increase staffing levels despite apparent swings in Hong Kong’s growth rate over that period. The results of these surveys are consistent with the prognosis that there is, indeed, a labor supply issue. In the absence of labor shortages, one would have expected hiring sentiment to fluctuate with the economic situation. Implications for employers and policymakers The government has started exploring long-term solutions to labor supply shortage, including the possibility of importing foreign labor and increasing female participation in the labor force. While importing labor can in theory relieve labor shortages, it is not very practical in Hong Kong’s case. High housing and rental costs make significant labor imports too costly. Firstly, it is unlikely that employers would be willing to provide housing subsidies to imported labor. Without subsidies, however, foreign workers, especially those in low-skilled sectors, would have no incentive to work in Hong Kong. Secondly, even if a significant inflow of workers were somehow made possible, it would ramp up housing demand and property prices much further. This means releasing local labor supply is the only viable solution to the labor shortage problem. One way to do this is by increasing female labor force participation. This is complicated by the need for supporting infrastructure such as child care facilities. Meanwhile, to slow down population aging, the government needs to encourage childbirth, which again involves detailed long-term planning. These solutions are viable but visible results would not be seen for years. For the time being, the widening gap between labor demand and supply will increase wage pressures. This is already happening in the construction sector, where the wages of steel fixers are even higher than white-collar professionals. Wages for menial jobs like dishwashing have also jumped in recent years. To minimize wage inflation and its impact on profits and growth, employers will have to find ways to raise productivity. COMMENTARY B7 Shanghai Daily Monday 3 March 2014 A preview of People’s Congress: Major targets and reform measures Zhu Haibin C hina’s two-week-long National People’s Congress will begin on Wednesday. Along with the NPC meeting, the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) begins today. During the NPC meeting, the congress will review and vote on the following reports: Zhu Haibin Chief China economist JPMorgan Chase & Co “ Judging from the near term impact, some reforms, including the removal of government administrative controls and opening private sector investment could generate new sources of growth. • The government work report (the Politburo reviewed and discussed this report on February 24); • The report on the implementation of the 2013 plan for national economic and social developments and on the draft 2014 plan for national economic and social developments; • The report on the implementation of the central and local budgets for 2013 and on the draft central and local budgets for 2014; • The work report of the NPC Standing Committee; • The work report of the Supreme People’s Court; • The work report of the Supreme People’s Procuratorate. The two main issues to watch for at the NPC meetings are: the major economic targets for 2014, and reform measures to be taken in 2014. • Economic targets The Central Economic and Working Conference held in December is a tonesetting economic meeting attended by top Chinese leaders. During that meeting top leaders vowed to seek steady economic progress through more reforms. It reiterated adoption of “proactive” fiscal policy and “prudent” monetary policy in 2014. Overall, we expect the government will stick to economic targets similar to those of 2013. • GDP growth: “about 7.5%” Although the government has toned down the importance of GDP growth, it remains the most important economic indicator to watch out. The new leaders are more willing to tolerate slower growth for better quality. In our view, there are good reasons to lower the GDP growth target to 7 percent in 2014, because: 1. It is consistent with the 12th FiveYear Plan growth target (7 percent in 2011-2015) and longer-term target of doubling GDP between 2010 and 2020; 2. It will provide more room for structural reform, which will support long-term growth but could drag near-term growth. However, based on recent observations, it is likely that the government will keep the growth target at 7.5 percent (possibly adding “about”) in 2014. For instance, local governments have recently held People’s Congress. While most of them lowered 2014 growth targets (to below actual growth in 2013), the minimum GDP growth target at local levels is 7.5 percent (for Beijing and Shanghai). In addition, Premier Li Keqiang has mentioned in various cases that 7.2 percent is the growth floor to ensure that unemployment rate will stay at reasonable levels. • CPI inflation: 3.5% The government has reiterated the importance of an upper bound (inflation) and a lower bound (employment) in its economic work. In 2013, CPI inflation averaged 2.6 percent, significantly lower than the 3.5 percent target. We expect inflation to drift up to 3.0 percent in 2014, still comfortably lower than the government target (expected to remain unchanged at 3.5 percent). This means that inflation is unlikely to become a priority policy consideration. On the positive side, the low inflation pressure provides a favorable environment to proceed on resource pricing reform and other structural reform. • M2 growth: 13% M2 growth printed at 13.6 percent in 2013, exceeding the government target of 13 percent. We expect M2 growth will slow down to 12.8 percent in 2014, and the target will stay unchanged. Our interpretation of the “prudent” monetary policy in 2014 is that policy rates and reserve requirement ratios (RRR) will stay unchanged, but credit slowing that started in the second half of 2013 will continue in 2014. Although the People’s Bank of China no longer announces a loan growth target, loan quota continued to be used in its window guidance operation. We expect new loan creation at 9.8 trillion yuan (US$1.6 trillion) in 2014 (vs. 8.9 trillion yuan in 2013, or 13.8 percent vs. 14.1 percent in growth term), and total social financing at 18.5 trillion yuan (vs. 17.3 trillion in 2013, or 16.2 percent vs. 17.8 percent in growth term). • Fiscal budget In 2013, the government set the fiscal deficit target at 1.2 trillion yuan. The actual fiscal deficit came out to be 1.06 trillion yuan, about 1.86 percent of GDP. We expect the 2014 fiscal deficit to stay unchanged at 1.2 trillion yuan, or about 1.9 percent of GDP. The bias is tilted toward upside if considering that the quota for local government bond is likely to be lifted (350 billion yuan in 2013). However, it is more meaningful to also include “fiscal deficit” at local levels (i.e. local government debt) when assessing the fiscal policy stance. If adding fiscal deficit at both central and local government levels, the socalled augmented fiscal deficit could be as high as 8.8 percent of GDP in 2012 and 8.1 percent in 2013 (JPMorgan estimates). In 2014, we expect the government will contain the pace of further increase in local government debt, bringing down the augmented fiscal deficit to 6.5 percent of GDP (no target will be announced). In that sense, fiscal policy has a tightening bias in 2014. • Structural reforms The Third Plenary Session of the 18th Communist Party of China Central Committee outlined an ambitious reform agenda, with most tasks scheduled to be completed by 2020. As the starting year of the new grand reform, what will happen in 2014 is closely watched out. We think reform is serious, yet the key features of macro policy for 2014 will evolve around the balance between structural reforms and near-term growth stabilization. The sequencing in economic reforms will affect the growth outlook in 2014. Judging from the near term impact, some reforms, including the removal of government administrative controls and opening private sector investment (e.g. in the service sector, financial services, telecommunications), could generate new sources of growth. However, credit slowing, tightening on local government debt/expenditure, production adjustments to correct for overcapacity in a few key manufacturing sectors, among others, could drag on near-term growth momentum (as have been reflected in recent data). The tradeoff between reform and growth implies that those reforms with neutral or positive near-term impact could progress faster, including administrative reform, fiscal reform, financial reform, resource pricing reform and easing the one-child policy. By contrast, for other challenging tasks (such as rising debt and overcapacity) it is less likely to make significant progress in 2014, and the near-term objective will focus more on containing the tail risk rather than problem-solving. The Central Economic Working Conference held last December confirms the above understanding. The top leaders listed six major tasks in 2014: 1. Ensuring stable supply and quality of agricultural products and food safety; 2. Speeding up industrial structural adjustment and resolving overcapacity problems; 3. Preventing and containing risks from local government debt; 4. Pushing for coordinative regional developments; 5. Raising average living standard and improving social welfare; 6. Further opening up the economy and pushing ahead with free trade zone negotiations. These tasks have two main purposes: to foster new sources of growth (task 2, 4, 6) and to maintain stability and contain downside risks (task 1, 2, 3, 5). In addition to economic issues, the NPC will also touch on other issues, such as anti-corruption, environmental protection, improving the legal system, B8 COMMENTARY Monday 3 March 2014 Shanghai Daily Policy to boost offshore fundraising “ An explicit guarantee from an onshore company with stronger credit gives investors more assurance that they would recover their principal if the offshore bond issuer defaults. “ Chasing hot valuations is understandable, but investors should be wary of what looks like an attempt to create something from nothing. Hu Kai, Cindy Yang and Gary Lau Moody’s Investors Service C hina’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) is seeking comments on proposed changes to the country’s cross-border guarantee policies that, if implemented, would help companies incorporated in China raise funds in the offshore markets and support their overseas expansion. One important change included in the February 13 proposal on SAFE’s website would allow onshore companies to register cross-border payment guarantees with SAFE rather than seeking the foreign exchange regulator’s approval. This proposal is another step in the Chinese government’s efforts to relax the country’s capital controls. It is difficult for Chinese corporates to obtain cross-border guarantee approval from SAFE. Among the offshore bonds issued by Chinese corporates, only a small number used cross-border guarantees from onshore parents, including high profile state-owned enterprises (SOEs) State Grid Corporation of China, China Petrochemical Corporation and Baosteel Group Corporation. These SOEs obtained SAFE’s approval to support offshore bonds raised for strategic overseas acquisitions or offshore funding needs. As a result, Chinese corporates do not have many options for supporting their offshore debt, which is sometimes issued by a thinly capitalized offshore subsidiary. Such offshore subsidiaries usually have much weaker credit quality than their onshore parents, meaning they need to pay a higher credit premium or may even be unable to obtain offshore funding to pursue overseas development opportunities. An explicit guarantee from an onshore company with stronger credit gives investors more assurance that they would recover their principal if the offshore bond issuer defaults. And that in turn should enable the offshore subsidiary to obtain lower funding costs and capture acquisition opportunities in a more timely manner. For some strategically important SOEs that have received cross-border guarantee approval in the past, the proposed policy change should enable them to make overseas acquisition decisions in a more flexible way. The existing approval process for cross-border guarantees, which are used to support offshore funding for acquisitions, is time consuming and cumbersome. Another proposed change would replace preapproved annual quotas with quantitative limits for financial institutions. Though the proposed quantitative limits would not deviate materially from the maximum quota a bank could acquire based on current calculation standard, the current actual quota approved could be smaller than theoretical maximum due to regulators’ intention to incorporate policy directions. In this sense, we expect the change could give Chinese banks more flexibility to provide cross-border guarantees to meet their clients’ needs. Striking a balance With that being said, whether Chinese banks would fully explore this flexibility hinges on some other considerations. For instance, banks have to take capital charges and make loss provisions to off-balance sheet items, including financial guarantees. So ultimately they need to strike a balance between factors such as client relationship, premium income and regulatory requirements in the guarantee business. We have seen an increasing number of China-incorporated companies, mostly large SOEs and property companies, using keepwell agreements and other credit support mechanisms such as equity interest purchase undertakings to enhance the credit quality of offshore bonds issued and/or guaranteed by their offshore subsidiaries. One of the key considerations in assessing a keepwell agreeement structure is the strategic importance of the offshore subsidiary to its onshore parent. For Chinese corporates without meaningful offshore operations, simply setting up an offshore borrowing vehicle and using a keepwell agreement would make it difficult to establish the strategic linkage and get the rating of the offshore entity and/ or offshore bond closer to the onshore parent’s rating. In addition, owing to the legal uncertainty of keepwell agreements, the credit quality of bonds supported by these agreements is weaker than that of bonds with explicit guarantees from the bond issuer’s parent company. This weakness is reflected in the lower ratings of offshore bonds using the keepwell agreement structure compared to their onshore support provider. The difference in credit quality and ratings would likely result in higher funding costs for bonds using the keepwell agreement structure than those guaranteed or issued directly by the ultimate support provider. It is noteworthy that, under SAFE’s proposed changes, the proceeds that Chinese corporates receive from the guaranteed bonds cannot be transferred to the onshore parent for equity or debt investments, unless approved by SAFE. Thus, the removal of the cross-border guarantee approval requirement would not immediately benefit corporates, such as property developers, that raise offshore debt primarily to support their onshore operations. SAFE’s proposed policy changes follow a separate new policy it released on January 24, which loosens certain restrictions on intercompany loans between Chinese corporates’ onshore and offshore entities, and simplifies the documentation requirements and removes certain limitations on the amount of dividends that a foreign invested company can repatriate to its foreign shareholders. These changes also reflect the government’s efforts to further relax capital controls. Weibo IPO plan stretches financial logic Robyn Mak SINA Weibo’s planned initial public offering stretches financial logic. Listing a US$500 million stake in China’s version of Twitter looks like a response to sky-high tech valuations — most recently Facebook’s US$19 billion acquisition of messaging service WhatsApp. But investors can already buy shares in parent Sina, whose value is mostly made up of Weibo already. They should be skeptical about the idea that two plus two is five. With over 61 million active users a day, Weibo is one of China’s most hyped social networks. Yet owner Sina Corp, which also operates web portals, has only lately started to try and monetize it. Revenue from the microblog grew 34 percent in the quarter ending December 31 to US$71.4 million, compared with the previous three months. A chunk of that came from a tie-up with e-commerce giant Alibaba, which owns 18 percent of the microblog, with the option to increase to 30 percent. Sina is now seizing on red-hot tech valuations to plan a listing of a minority stake in Weibo. Indeed, since Alibaba bought its stake in April 2013, valuing the microblog at US$3.3 billion, Weibo’s prospects may have increased dramatically. Assume Weibo’s revenue continues to grow at about a third, quarter on quarter, for the next year. It could potentially make around US$620 million in revenues for 2014. Apply an earnings margin of 30 percent, comparable to gaming group Tencent and search engine Baidu, and the same valuation multiple investors give to parent Sina, and Weibo could be worth over US$5.5 billion — an increase of 67 percent in less than a year. Sina’s own share price over that time has increased by just a third. The question is why investors would give a higher value to Weibo after a partial spin-off. Sina’s 70 percent share of a theoretically listed Weibo is already the lion’s share of its market capitalization, which increased just 4 percent on February 24 to US$5.1 billion. And Sina’s structure isn’t complex — its only other business is a shrinking web portal division, so it’s unlikely investors are missing something important. Chasing hot valuations is understandable, but investors should be wary of what looks like an attempt to create something from nothing. The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist.