Forecast: Vancouver house prices to rise 11.7% in 2007; 6.3% in 2008

CMHC Housing Market Outlook 3Q 2007

Overview

Income growth, a tight labour market and high levels of consumer confidence will help to offset the dampening effect of rising mortgage rates on the demand for new and existing homes in British Columbia. The result will be a high, stable level of resale activity in 2007, rising home prices and a slight decline in new home construction compared to last year.

Fewer Single-Detached Starts Anticipated

Some home buyers will choose to purchase an existing home rather than a new home, leading to a decline in the number of single-detached home starts. Multiple-unit home starts will continue at a pace similar to last year’s, resulting in a modest decline in overall new construction.

MLS® Price Growth to Slow

Average resale home prices in BC will rise slower in 2007 and 2008. An increased supply of existing homes will provide buyers with more choice, while higher mortgage carrying costs result in fewer resale transactions compared to last year’s near record level.

Housing Forecasts

Potential home buyers will find more choice in the resale markets in 2007 and 2008. High and rising prices will limit choice for first-time and low-equity home buyers. A surge in home resales during the first half of this year will result in total 2007 home sales on par with last year’s level. In 2008, the number of MLS® resale transactions will moderate to 92,500 as higher mortgage carrying costs dampen demand.

For three consecutive years, demand for existing homes exceeded the supply of listings, resulting in double-digit price increases. This year the average MLS® price is projected to increase 11.7%. Price growth will slow in 2008 as increased listings and fewer resales bring supply and demand for existing homes into balance. The average MLS® price will reach $464,000 in 2008, a 6.3% increase from 2007’s projected level.

The gap between new and existing home prices has widened as construction costs increased at a faster pace than resale home prices. As a result, some home buyers will turn to the existing homes rather than buying new. Developers will respond to the shift in demand by building fewer single-detached homes. The number of single-detached housing starts will drop decline in most urban centres, compared to last year. In 2008, the downward trend in single starts will continue, with 13,500 homes expected to get underway.

Mulitple-family starts will reach a 13 year-peak of 21,275 units in 2007. Apartment condominium starts will continue to dominate this home type with very few rental starts projected, despite low rental vacancy rates.

Renovation spending in British Columbia will approach $7 billion in 2008, an 8.3% increase from 2007. This upward trend in home improvement expenditures will continue through 2008 spurred by high levels of resales and homeowners desire to participate in trends in home improvement.

Economic Forecasts

Consumer demand for goods and services will drive overall economic growth. Retail sales and housing-related spending continue to trend upward. Income growth and a low unemployment rate are two factors contributing to the growing consumer confidence, a key driver of housing sales and housing-related spending.

Increased employment, concentrated in full-time jobs, will boost wages and salaries. In the first quarter of 2007, wages and salaries were 6.9% higher than levels recorded one year ago. Jobs in higher paying sectors such as mining, construction, and professional services will contribute to the solid income growth.

Reflecting weaker demand from the United States, the trade side of the economy will slow overall real gross domestic product (GDP) growth in 2007, to 3.2% from 3.6% last year. Global demand for BC commodities remains strong. Investment in non-residential construction, including major transportation, mining and energy projects, will bolster the provincial economy in 2008. As a result, real GDP growth will pick up to 3.4% next year.

BC’s relatively low unemployment rate and strong job growth make it an attractive destination for job seekers. Higher home prices in neighbouring Alberta may also be a factor behind the westward move, as people looking to retire in BC face a smaller gap in relative home prices. Migration will add close to 100,000 people to the province’s population in the next two years, boosting housing demand.

Full report here.

More CIV real estate articles here.

[Read More....]

Vancouver area home prices 2Q 2007

STANDARD TWO-STOREY






Price Price 3 Price 1 % Chg

Apr-Jun months yr ago 1 yr

2007 ago






Ladner - 365,000 455,000 -
North Vancouver 720,000 670,000 640,500 12.4
Richmond 555,000 530,000 500,000 11.0
Surrey 385,000 385,000 - -
Tsawwassen - 520,000 480,000 -
Vancouver East 593,000 565,000 505,000 17.4
Vancouver West 1,200,000 1,175,000 1,100,000 9.1
West Vancouver 990,000 940,000 924,000 7.1
Chilliwack - 290,000 290,000 -
Cranbrook - 350,000 305,000 -
Kelowna - 380,000 365,000 -
Victoria 414,000 418,000 402,000 3.0










STANDARD TOWNHOUSE






Price Price 3 Price 1 % Chg

Apr-Jun months yr ago 1 yr

2007 ago






Ladner - 365,000 350,000 -
North Vancouver 570,000 550,000 495,000 15.2
Richmond 361,000 350,000 315,000 14.6
Surrey 305,000 305,000 - -
Tsawwassen - 395,000 380,000 -
Vancouver East 410,000 391,000 - -
Vancouver West 750,000 725,000 650,000 15.4
West Vancouver 639,000 639,000 589,000 8.5
Chilliwack - 170,000 150,000 -
Cranbrook - 168,000 125,000 -
Kelowna - 275,000 255,000 -
Victoria 315,000 312,000 293,000 7.5















STANDARD CONDOMINIUM APARTMENT






Price Price 3 Price 1 % Chg

Apr-Jun months yr ago 1 yr

2007 ago






Ladner - 265,000 235,000 -
North Vancouver 320,000 300,000 283,500 12.9
Richmond 250,000 250,000 240,000 4.2
Surrey 155,000 155,000 - -
Tsawwassen - 290,000 270,000 -
Vancouver East 317,000 299,000 254,000 24.8
Vancouver West 625,000 600,000 550,000 13.6
West Vancouver 415,000 415,000 388,500 6.8
Chilliwack - 150,000 140,000 -
Cranbrook - 129,000 90,000 -
Kelowna - 195,000 185,000 -
Victoria 260,000 248,000 229,000 13.5


SOURCE: ROYAL LEPAGE

More CIV real estate articles here.

[Read More....]

Abe holds fast to nationalist view of wartime history

Japan PM Abe to meet son of Indian WW2 trial judge

Reuters - Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said on Tuesday he would meet the son of an Indian judge who opposed punishing Japanese war criminals convicted by an Allied tribunal, a move likely to refuel debate about his views on wartime history.

Abe denied the meeting, to be held next week when he visits India, would invite protest from Asian countries that suffered under Japan's aggression during World War Two.

The 52-year-old Abe, the first prime minister born after the war, caused an uproar in March after saying there was no proof the Japanese government or military had forced women - mostly Asian - to work at wartime brothels.

He has since reiterated that he stands by a 1993 government apology to the women, but Abe has in the past questioned the legitimacy of the Allied tribunal and made visits to Tokyo's Yasukuni Shrine, which honours some of the convicted war criminals along with Japan's war dead.

"Judge Pal has ties to Japan. I am looking forward to hearing stories about his father," Abe told reporters, referring to the meeting with the son of Radhabinod Pal, who was on the 11-judge panel of the Allied tribunal and the only one to voice dissent.

Pal said the tribunal was judgment of the vanquished by the victors - a point shared by some historians and jurists. Although he also said there was overwhelming evidence of atrocities committed by the Japanese military, he is revered by Japanese nationalists.

A monument dedicated to him even stands on the grounds of Yasukuni Shrine, seen by many in Asia as a symbol of Japan's wartime militarism.

Abe has moved to mend ties with China and South Korea, visiting the two countries within weeks of taking office in September, and has stuck to a strategy of refusing to say whether he will visit Yasukuni while in office.

Many analysts say he is unlikely to pay respects there on Wednesday, the emotive anniversary of Japan's World War Two surrender, which could reverse gains in Tokyo's ties with its Asian neighbours.

Relations with Beijing and Seoul turned icy under Abe's predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, largely due to his annual visits to Yasukuni.

Abe will visit India from Aug. 21 as part of an Asian tour that also takes him to Indonesia and Malaysia.

[Read More....]

Tory strategist calls Games boycott 'silly talk'

Surprising comments from a hard line Conservative. Harper and Kenney (and perhaps Kilgour too) should also see and believe themselves. I remember seeing CTV covering the three activists who came back from hanging a large banner on the Great Wall of China demanding a "Free Tibet". The reporter asked one of them if she had ever been to Tibet and witnessed the human rights abuse there. The lady honestly answered she'd never been to Tibet but she just knew... So, uh um, everything she learnt about Tibet was second-hand information? Interesting argument.

------------------

CanWest News Service - Canada is unlikely to get behind a "silly" attempt to organize a boycott of the Beijing Olympics over human-rights concerns, says a senior Conservative strategist.

Former Conservative MP John Reynolds, who on Tuesday returned from a business trip to Beijing, says those lobbying for a boycott don't understand how far China has come in its transition from developing nation status. "It's the up-and-coming superpower of the world," he said "Is it perfect? No, but is Canada perfect or is the U.S. perfect?"

Some human-rights advocates are pushing for a boycott of the 2008 Games in protest of China's support from the government of Sudan in the Darfur crisis, the treatment of Falun Gong practitioners and other concerns.

Some U.S. lawmakers last week introduced legislation in Congress calling on a boycott of the Games and a British Conservative member of the European Parliament called on Britain to also pull out, saying: "the civilized world must seriously consider shunning China."

Last week, former Canadian MP David Kilgour was among a group of international representatives in Athens to kick-off a global torch relay in support of a boycott.

Kilgour last year co-wrote a report alleging the Chinese government harvests organs from Falun Gong practitioners for resale to wealthy foreigners. The Chinese government dismissed much of the report as propaganda and rumour spread by the Falun Gong, which it considers a cult.

In calling for a boycott, Kilgour evoked the 1936 Olympics in Berlin as one that, in hindsight, all governments should have pulled out from.

China has called attempts to organize a boycott of next summer's Games a "politicization" that violates the spirit of the Olympic movement.

Reynolds, who ran the 2006 Conservative election campaign after retiring from the House of Commons, said those calling for a boycott should look closer to home.

"We have problems in our own homeland. We can't solve the treaties with our First Nations people," he said. "People who do those sorts of things should look at their own backyard. Look at the homeless people in Vancouver and try and do something about that."

The economic boom has been "absolutely phenomenal" for the Chinese people, he said. "I never got hit on once for money and I walked a lot of streets in Shanghai. The progression there is absolutely spectacular."

Reynolds was in China to attend to business interests. He is involved in a forest company and a clothing manufacturer in Pudong, a suburb of Shanghai.

Under a Progressive Conservative government, Canada participated in a U.S.-led boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympics to protest the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

The Soviets retaliated by sitting out the 1984 Games in Los Angeles.

There are typically calls for boycotts at virtually every Olympic Games, but Canadian athletes have attended every one after Moscow.

Canada's diplomatic relations with China have chilled since the Conservatives came to power in 2006, but Reynolds says Chinese trade officials tell him the relationship is healthy today.

He called the boycott "silly talk" from "people who don't know any better."

The federal government has expressed no indication it would consider keeping Canada's athletes home.

Helena Guergis, the secretary of state for Foreign Affairs and International Trade and secretary of state for sport, did not return calls requesting comment.

Guergis' predecessor in the job, Conservative MP Michael Chong, said he supports a policy of reciprocal engagement with China, but wouldn't explain his own position on a boycott. "A country like China, being the size it is and the player it is in Asia-Pacific, needs to be engaged."

[Read More....]

Harper's 'best PM' scores vapourize: poll

SES Research release - Today's federal cabinet shuffle is another attempt by the Harper Tories to break away from what has been a neck-and-neck race with the Liberals over the past year.

The federal Tories and Grits are still close but the NDP numbers have slid in the past 90 days to 13% nationally - the lowest level of support for the NDP recorded by SES in almost three years. NDP support has slid in both Quebec (13% to 7%) and Ontario (19% to 12%). The Tories are ahead of the Grits by 17 points in the West, but trail the Grits by 7 points in Ontario and by 14 points in Atlantic Canada.

Some very interesting movement on the best PM front. The Harper 18 point best PM advantage over Dion has melted away to an 8 point advantage in 90 days. The noticeable gains for Dion have been in Ontario.

Even with Harper's diluted leadership advantage, Tory support moved up albeit just outside of the accuracy for the survey.


Methodology

Polling between July 28th and August 4th, 2007 (Random Telephone Survey of 1001 Canadians, 18 years of age and older). The SES Research Survey of 1,001 Canadians is accurate to within 3.1 percentage points, plus or minus, 19 times out of 20. The subset of committed voters is accurate to within 3.3 percentage points, plus or minus, 19 times out of 20. Percentages may not add up to 100 due to rounding. The change in parenthesis is from the SES National Survey completed on May 1st, 2007

Canada (N=884, MoE ± 3.3%, 19 times out of 20)

For those parties you would consider voting for federally, could you please rank your top two current local preferences? (Committed Voters Only - First Choice) The change from the previous wave completed May 1st is in parenthesis.

National
Conservative Party 36% (+4)
Liberal 33% (0)
NDP 13% (-4)
BQ 10%(+1)
Green Party 8% (-2)

Of the following individuals, who do you think would make the best Prime Minister? [ROTATE] (N=1,001, MoE ±3.1, 19 times out of 20)
Stephen Harper 31% (-2)
Stephane Dion 23% (+8)
None/unsure 19% (0)
Jack Layton 18% (-1)
Gilles Duceppe 6% (+1)
Elizabeth May 5% (-3)

[Read More....]

B.C. government offers online auctions

I have to applaud this innovative idea of the BC government. Fun read. :)

----------

CP - Want to buy a bridge? How about an ambulance? You say you might be interested in a spectrophotometer?

The B.C. government might have one for sale. And shopping is as easy as clicking a mouse.

Since 2004, the provincial government has operated B.C. Auction, its own version of online auction giant eBay. The website is used to sell off surplus goods from the province, lower levels of government, Canada Customs, police departments and health authorities.

As of Monday, 189 items were listed for sale.

The top bid for an 11-metre speedboat was $57,000, while 1,296 urinal pucks had fetched a high bid of $61. A set of five slightly used pickup truck tires had a top bid of $160.99.

Thirty separate pieces of jewellery were also available, likely offered up by customs or police.

Full story here.

[Read More....]

Canadian veteran holds Japan to account

Really glad to see more Canadian MSM reporting on Japan's war time atrocities. It's getting more real that decades of hard work of history preservation activists might be paying off soon. :D

---------------

"As long as I live I can serve as a reminder that everybody, including nations, has to be accountable."
Apologies are light, but accountability for wartime atrocities holds weight

Ottawa Citizen - The venerable crusader, now 85, has been coming to Ottawa for 12 years to try to exorcise his demons, collected in the Second World War during 1,288 brutal days as a prisoner/slave of the Japanese. During those 12 years, I've written annually about his crusade. It's about accountability.

Yesterday, he was at the Westboro War Memorial, having chosen that day because it was in the middle, between the Aug. 9, 1945, Nagasaki atom bomb, and VJ Day on Aug. 15. This time he wore a medal. Four months ago, he received at the Embassy of the Netherlands, Holland's Knight of the Order of Orange Nassau, an honour granted by Queen Beatrix.

Born in Java, he was 18 when war broke out. After his capture, he worked as slave labour in the East Indies before being shipped to Japan. One of the experiences that haunts him is his duties at "comfort stations," brothels set up to service Japanese soldiers. The women were picked up off the streets and forced into sexual slavery. "Some of them were children, maybe 14. I can still hear their screams."

Mr. Franken isn't alone. In 1999, after many years of hearing the cries from some 200,000 "comfort women," the Japanese government admitted they existed. Reparations were offered, but the money was coming from Japanese citizens, not the government, and most refused compensation. More recently, the Japanese government went back to the old position -- it never happened.

Mr. Franken (Sir John?) says the Nagasaki bomb saved his life. He had survived years of working in the shipyards of Nagasaki, but was sent to work the nearby coal mines. It was considered an assignment one

didn't return from. He was 350 metres underground and 15 kilometres from the city when the bomb exploded. He didn't hear or feel it. But when the miners were brought to the surface and he saw the desolation, he knew the war was over and he might survive -- if he could find food. He was 23.

Over the years, I met and wrote the stories of many former prisoners of the Japanese. Most survived because of a determination that they live to see their tormenters called to account. Among them was one of Canada's most decorated warriors, Air Commodore Len Birchall, who died in 2004. He risked his life when, as a prisoner, he kept written records. He buried them, and after the war collected them to become one of the best witnesses to many atrocities.

For the rest of the article, please read here.

[Read More....]

Japan's history denial trashes hope to become Asian hub

A very well written analysis on Japan's current political atmosphere. Really worth reading.

-------------

Japan unable, and unwilling, to assert power

TheRecord.com - Opinions, Washington Post

Just a few weeks ago, the George W. Bush administration seemed convinced that it could rely on a newly assertive Japan to contain China's rise and help prosecute the global fight against terrorism. Then last weekend, Japan's voters just said "No." The stinging electoral rebuke to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his ruling Liberal Democratic Party (which lost control of the upper house of the Diet for the first time since the party was founded in 1955) does more than usher in a new era of drift and unpredictability in Japanese politics. Abe's drubbing should also dispel some dangerous misperceptions about today's Japan.

1. Japan is a strong, rising power, ready to assert new influence across Asia.

Even before the Bush administration came to power in 2001, many members of its kitchen cabinet were arguing that an assertive new Japan was ready to become the United States' chief surrogate in checking Chinese expansion. Japan would no longer be a "free rider," they said, in contrast with its behaviour in the 1991 Persian Gulf War, when Tokyo merely wrote a $9 billon check to help protect its oil supply.

Sure enough, after the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, former prime minister Junichiro Koizumi dispatched peacekeeping soldiers to southern Iraq, ostensibly to conduct "humanitarian relief," in defiance of Japan's pacifist constitution. Koizumi's hand-picked successor, Abe, went further still, pledging to revise the constitution to eliminate the clause renouncing Japan's willingness to wage war. He also promised to work ever more closely with the Pentagon on missile defense and logistical support for U.S. combat troops, and he toed a more strident line against North Korea.

But Abe's eagerness to draw closer to Washington and rewrite the constitution clashed with the will of the people. While most Japanese citizens tell pollsters they believe the pacifist post-Second World War constitution (written by U.S. occupation forces in 1946) ought to be updated, most also reject expanding the nation's military muscle. And a majority of voters older than 60 -- the aging nation's most important voting bloc -- say that the constitution's pacifist Article 9 remains the most important legacy from the debacle of the Second World War.

So, while U.S. military planners want Tokyo to seize more responsibility as the U.S. military is stretched thin, Japan now seems likelier to back away. A counterterrorism measure that permits ships from the Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force to refuel U.S. naval convoys is up for renewal this fall and may not pass. Don't be surprised if Ichiro Ozawa, the leader of the newly emboldened opposition Democratic Party of Japan, uses this as a lever to break up the Diet and force new elections.

2. Japan has shed its economic blues.

More than 15 years after its bubble economy burst, Japan may be groping its way back toward sustainable growth. But despite the stunning export success of carmakers such as Toyota and electronics firms such as Canon, the nation's domestic consumption remains anemic.

In fact, anxious voters rebelled against the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in part because they believed Abe had put economic reforms on the back burner. (The fact that his government apparently lost 50 million pension records, and that three of his ministers faced campaign funding scandals, didn't help.)

Today, most Japanese seek economic renewal, not military revival. The nation's giant banks still generate tiny profits, consumer prices continue to fall, domestic demand remains feeble, and real interest rates are nearly zero. The yen is weaker than even the U.S. dollar, and that's saying something. The nation's accumulated government debt tops 170% of gross domestic product, while the population is shrinking because women won't marry and bear children. That translates into a nation that will soon make South Florida look like a youth hostel.

Japan should be welcoming immigrants to nurse its elderly and wooing foreign investors to restructure its service economy, but it still can't muster the courage to see its culture altered by globalization.

In fact, as a result of Abe's stumbles, Japan can no longer even be counted on to support a bilateral free trade agreement with the United States or help revive the Doha round of global trade talks; the weak domestic economy forces politicians to pander to local concerns.

3. Japan has reconciled with its neighbours.

Not quite.

Just a decade ago, economists and political theorists assumed Japan would become the central hub of "the Asian Century." But that assumed Japan and its neighbours could finally address the issues still festering from the Second World War.

Japan has failed to emerge as Asia's main power, in no small part because it has yet to transcend the "history question." Japanese textbooks still do not adequately teach new generations such wartime horrors as the 1937 Nanking Massacre, the occupation of Korea, or the forced recruitment of women to "service" Imperial soldiers.

Last Monday, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a symbolic resolution urging the Japanese government to officially apologize for conscripting those "comfort women." The resolution barely merited notice in the U.S., but it dominated the front pages in Japan, where even some members of Abe's own party think Japan has already done too much apologizing. That doesn't bode well for a stable Asia.

For the rest of the article, please read here.

Michael Zielenziger, a visiting scholar at the University of California, Berkeley, is the author of Shutting Out the Sun: How Japan Created Its Own Lost Generation.

[Read More....]

In Japan, teachers are punished for not being 'nationalistic'

Just noticed a small piece of article in the USA Today, titled "Nationalism gains strength in Japan", writing about the resurrection of Japan's nationalism. Once again, this shows us how extreme Japanese right wingers can be.

Hundreds of Japanese teachers have refused to cooperate with what they see as coercive attempts to instill patriotism in youngsters and with the revision of Japan's history.

In Tokyo alone, 320 teachers have been punished — some docked pay or suspended — for refusing to salute the flag or stand for the national anthem, according to the Tokyo school board. Akira Suzuki of the school system's personnel department says the board is enforcing the rules, not political orthodoxy.

Tokyo middle school teacher Kimiko Nezu has been suspended so often that she expects to earn less than $17,000 of her $58,000 salary this year.

She says she's been punished for refusing to stand for the national anthem and for teaching her students about comfort women, despite repeated warnings to stay away from the taboo topic.

Nezu, 56, says nationalist pressure began in 1994 and intensified after Ishihara became governor of Tokyo in 1999. "I never imagined it would get this bad so quickly," she says. She was transferred this year to a school for the disabled in what she views as punishment. She expects to lose her job before her lawsuit against the school board is decided next year. "This is my way of being a patriot," she says.

[Read More....]

English media have spoken up, Kenney has no excuse!

(caption: Joseph Wong displays recent reports by Canada's mainstream media on the comfort women issue. Photo Ming Pao.)

CIV - Dr Joseph Wong was excited reading a Toronto Star editorial urging Ottawa to speak up against Japan's denial of war history. Perhaps now Conservative politician like Jason Kenney would have one less reason to shirk standing up for real human rights.

Wong, co-chair of ALPHA in Toronto, spoke with the Chinese media yesterday, commenting on recent interests of the mainstream media on the 'comfort women' issue. He described the mainstream media's jumping on board "is a very important development" in the campaign to uphold history.

According to Wong, when Jason Kenney met with a group of multi-ethnic activists in Toronto in a community round table discussing the Canada's very own comfort women motion (Motion 291) last week, Kenney explained that the lack of media reports on the issue and Motion 291 was the main reason why the Tories didn't talk much about the motion. Without the media attention, Kenney said, the MPs weren't interested.

Kenney was quoted stressing: "This is not an excuse. This is fact."

Not only TorStar wrote an editorial urging "Ottawa must end silence", the Globe and Mail did three articles on the comfort women issue last month. One of the Globe's articles discussed the rise of ultra right wing nationalism in Japan.

Wong said with the media speaking up, and with both the Liberals and the NDP are supporting Motion 291, it's high time that the Tories clarify their position.

ALPHA is planning a series of activities in November including airing a Nanjing Massacre movie based on Iris Chang's "The Rape of Nanking", and bringing several former comfort women to testify in Ottawa. ALPHA hopes that by creating a favourable atmosphere for Motion 291 which is expected to be discussed in the parliament in December.

[Read More....]

Now one is dead, will many more follow?

When the Western media are playing politics to demonize China's communist regime, the casualty is that of the civilian. Have they thought of that before they so happily make a big fuss on "made in China" goods?

-------------------

CBC - The head of a Chinese toy manufacturing company whose products were the target of a massive recall in the U.S. because they contained lead-tainted paint has committed suicide.

Zhang Shuhong, who ran the Lee Der Industrial Co. Ltd., was found hanged in his warehouse Monday morning. The financial loss of the recall was believed to be approximately at 30m yuan.

His death comes days after the Chinese government announced a temporary ban on exports by the company.

Earlier this month, Mattel subsidiary Fisher-Price said it was recalling 967,000 toys — including the popular Big Bird, Elmo, Dora and Diego characters — because their paint contained excessive amounts of lead. The Fisher-Price recall involved 83 types of plastic preschool toys made by the Chinese vendor and sold in the United States between May and August.

A supplier, Zhang's best friend, sold Lee Der fake paint that was used in the toys, the Southern Metropolis Daily, a state-run newspaper, reported.

"The boss and the company were harmed by the paint supplier, the closest friend of our boss," a manager surnamed Liu was quoted as saying.

The recall by Mattel came just two months after RC2 Corp., a New York company, recalled 1.5 million Chinese-made wooden railroad toys and set parts from its Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway product line because of lead paint.

CBC's Michel Cormier said China has acknowledged the export of potentially dangerous products is a massive problem that will take years to solve.

Millions of manufacturers export products around the world that are not properly monitored or inspected. Chinese authorities have promised tighter controls. Along with banning two toy manufacturers from exporting toys, China has recently banned 18 food products for export.

But Cormier said Chinese officials also say the Western media is making too much of the scandal. They argue that exporting unsafe products is a worldwide problem and that some may be trying to embarrass Beijing before the Olympics.

[Read More....]

Philippine resolution on Japan apology to ‘comfort women’ filed

INQUIRER.net - A resolution urging the Japanese government to formally acknowledge, apologize, and accept its responsibility for sexual slavery in World War II and compensate the victims was filed at the House of Representatives on Monday.

Representatives Liza Maza and Luzviminda Ilagan of the Gabriela Women’s party-list, Satur Ocampo and Teodoro Casiño of Bayan Muna (People First), Crispin Beltran of Anakpawis (Toiling Masses), Eduardo Zialcita of Parañaque, and Neil Tupas of Iloilo filed Resolution 124 following the US House of Representatives’ adoption of a similar measure.

Last July 31, the US House approved Resolution 121 expressing its sense that the government of Japan “should formally acknowledge, apologize and accept historical responsibility in a clear and unequivocal manner for its Imperial Armed Forces’ coercion of young women into sexual slavery, known to the world as comfort women,” during World War II.

“Following the step of the US House of Representatives in passing Resolution 121, the Philippine government is demonstrating its earnest interest to help the Filipino comfort women achieve the justice they deserve and reclaim their dignity and that one of the Filipino people,” Resolution 124 said.

It has been more than a decade now, it noted, since the victims started clamoring for an official apology and legal redress from the Japanese government for the “unimaginable suffering they experienced in the hands of the Japanese Imperial Army.”

And while the Japanese government recognizes the issues concerning comfort women, the resolution lamented that it continued to assert that it had no obligation to compensate the victims since the matter had already been settled by the signing of the San Francisco Treaty and other bilateral treaties.

[Read More....]

Dutch MP to table 'comfort women' motion in fall

Expatica – The Liberal VVD in Parliament wants Japan to formally apologise to all the women who were used as sex slaves by Japanese soldiers during World War II.

"The history of the 'comfort women' is known and has been proven. It is scandalous that the Japanese government still denies this history," MP Hans van Baalen said on Wednesday on the television programme Netwerk.

During the budget discussion this autumn Van Baalen will submit a motion demanding that Japan acknowledge and apologise for the abuse of the women.

Earlier this week a large majority in the US Congress adopted a non-binding resolution demanding that Japan "acknowledge, apologise for and take historical responsibility" for the fate of the 'comfort women' forced into servitude to the Japanese army.

Earlier this year Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen summoned the Japanese ambassador after Japan's prime minister Shinzo Abe had said that there was no evidence that women were forced into prostitution. The ambassador assured the Dutch minister that his country still stood behind the official declaration from 1993 in which Japan apologised to the women.

[Read More....]

TorStar: Ottawa must stand by 'comfort women'

Ottawa must end silence
Toronto Star editorial, August 12, 2007

For more than 60 years, the euphemistically called Asian "comfort women" have lived with the anger and shame of being forced into prostitution and savagely beaten and raped by the Japanese military in the 1930s and '40s. As many as 200,000 women and girls, mainly from Korea, China, Indonesia and the Philippines were kidnapped and made sex slaves for the invading army in military brothels.

But despite ongoing demands for an official and unequivocal apology and compensation for the surviving women, now in their 70s and 80s, Japan's only response was to issue a carefully worded apology in 1993, never approved by Parliament, after military documents were uncovered showing the army was involved in establishing these brothels. It also set up an Asian Women's Fund to provide "atonement money" to the women but it was financed only with private donations.

Even that limited acceptance of responsibility was largely undone earlier this year when Prime Minister Shinzo Abe shamelessly stated there was no proof the comfort women were forced into sexual slavery, prompting an international outcry.

In response, the United States House of Representatives recently adopted a unanimous resolution calling on the Japanese government to issue an "unambiguous apology" for the treatment of these women. It also said Japan must refute any claims the episode never happened and future generations must be told of "this horrible crime."

The House of Commons should do the same by supporting a motion introduced earlier this year by New Democrat Olivia Chow, which publicly condemns Abe's comments, urges Japan to issue a formal apology and offer compensation to the surviving victims. But while the NDP and the Liberals support it, the motion needs unanimity and the Conservatives have remained shamefully silent on this issue.

A petition campaign led by Joseph Wong, co-founder and president of the Canada Association for Learning and Preserving the History of WWII in Asia, is also urging Parliament to insist Japan formally apologize to the comfort women and provide compensation because as Wong told the Star, "The issue has not been resolved. There has been no formal apology or anything close to an apology. Japan has not learned from history or admitted responsibility."

Canada is home to millions of people from parts of Asia invaded by the Japanese army and has a reputation "as a fair and just country few others in the world can compare with," Wong said in a recent letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper, urging passage of the resolution.

A statement by Parliament would send an important message that Japan needs to make further amends over an episode that still scars generations later and marks a shameful period in its history.

A formal apology from Japan to the surviving comfort women and those who died in despair is long overdue. The Conservative government must join the growing community mounting pressure on this valued ally to do so. As Wong said: "A core Canadian value is to protect human rights anywhere. We Canadians cannot just sit on the sidelines and do nothing."

[Read More....]

Foreign students love Vancouver; temp workers turn away

CIV - Vancouver is the favoured destination for foreign students to BC while the city is no longer magnet to foreign temporary workers, BC Stats reports.

Non-permanent residents are individuals who are residing within Canada under one of several visas or permits, including: temporary workers, foreign students, permit or minister's permit holders and those residing here for humanitarian reasons. Many of these individuals eventually apply for and obtain permanent residency status.

In 1980, there were 14,885 non-PRs in BC, with 36% temporary workers and 27.6% foreign students. In 2005, the total number of non-PRs jumped to 97,300, with foreign students accounted for 47.5% and temp workers for 34.9%.

Over the last decade, the favoured destinations of temp workers has shifted. In 1996, 74.5% of temp workers stated an intention to reside in Vancouver. By 2005, it has fallen to 61.7%.

Besides Vancouver, the most popular urban areas for temp workers in BC are Victoria, Kelowna, Abbotsford, Kamloops, Nanaimo and Prince George.

The top source country of temp workers in 2005 was Australia, at 4,972. Japan and the US were second and third at 13.3% and 11.8% respectively.

Top source countries for temp workers in BC (2005)

Australia 14.6%
Japan 13.3%
US 11.8%
Philippines 10.6%
UK 9.2%
S. Korea 4.7%
China 4.2%
New Zealand 3.3%
India 3.0%
Mexico 2.3%
Other 23.0%

Vancouver was the most popular destination for foreign students. In 2005, 70.8% of total foreign students of BC resided in Vancouver, followed by Victoria and Nanaimo.

The top source country for foreign students in 2005 was South Korea, China and Japan follow.

Top source countries for foreign students in BC (2005)
S. Korea 27.6%
China 21.6%
Japan 10.4%
US 7.0%
Taiwan 6.6%
Hong Kong 3.6%
Mexico 2.2%
India 1.7%
Other 19.4%

Source: BC Stats

[Read More....]

Korea to build memorial hall for 'comfort women'

Korea Times - A memorial hall for comfort women, who were forced to serve for the Japanese army as a sexual slaves during World War II, will be built in the Independence Hall in Cheonan, North Chungcheong Province.

Chang Ha-jin, minister of gender equality and family, said Thursday, "The basic outline of the construction was made. It is expected to cost around 10 billion won."

The minister said the construction will take about two years, and the hall will be used for education as well as for exhibitions. It is currently running an online history hall that exhibits records of the comfort women.

The Korean Council for the Women Drafted for Military Sexual Slavery by Japan, however, said it will not join in the project. The civic organization has long worked for the comfort women's rights and has been working towards constructing a museum under the same theme since 2003.

Seoul city government has donated 100 pyong (330 square meters) of land next to Seodaemun Prison in downtown Seoul to the council, and many citizens raised 450 million won to build a three-story building.

However, the ministry rejected the council's call for financial aid saying the land is too small to build such important building. It instead pushed for construction in Cheonan.

Kim Dong-hee, director of the council, said the major reason for the separation was the difference between two fundamental concepts. The ministry wanted to include female descendents of freedom fighters so as to include it in the independence hall, but the council wanted to limit the theme to sexual slavery in wartime.

``We are trying to show how disastrous it was for the women abused as sexual slaves in the era. In the museum there will be some visual and audio facilities to deliver the testimonies of victims,'' she said. The government's idea is good, but it may bring down the cohesiveness, she said.

Kim said that the organization is still thankful to the government for showing interest in the issue. She said the civic group will provide the hall with relevant information if needed.

[Read More....]

Picture - Filipino comfort woman


Aguida Tongkol, 89, an alleged Filipino comfort woman, forced into sexual slavery by Japan during World War II, listens attentively to the on-going discussions during a press conference Saturday, Aug. 11, 2007, in Manila, Philippines. The alleged comfort women voiced their support of the U.S. House of Representatives Resolution 121 calling for the Japanese government to formally acknowledge and apologize for its alleged wartime atrocities. (AP Photo/Pat Roque)

[Read More....]

Phillippine senate to ponder demanding Japanese apology over sex slaves

Japan News Review - A resolution, calling for the Philippines to demand an official apology from Japan for the Filipino sex slaves the Japanese army held during World War II, has been presented in the Philippine senate, while a similar bill is expected to be presented in the Philippine House of Representatives, the Mainichi Shimbun reported Saturday.

The suggested resolution calls for an official apology from Japan and monetary compensation for the surviving victims, as well as medical aid to the Philippines. The resolution was prestened by the opposition in the end of July, while a similar proposition is expected to be presented in the middle of this month.

Read also:





[Read More....]

Abe, cabinet won't visit Yasukuni on WWII anniversary

Japan Times - None of the 16 ministers in the Cabinet of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe plans to visit the war-related Yasukuni Shrine next Wednesday, the anniversary of Japan's surrender in World War II, the ministers said Friday.

It is believed to be the first time that no Cabinet members will pay tribute at the Tokyo Shinto shrine on Aug. 15 since the mid-1950s, when it became customary for Cabinet members to do so to mark the anniversary.

Abe, too, is expected to forgo visiting Yasukuni, which enshrines Japan's war dead, as well as Class-A war criminals, on Wednesday, sources said.

A visit by Abe to the shrine would mar relations with China and South Korea, ties that have shown some signs of improvement since he took office last September.

The surrender-day Yasukuni visit by Abe's predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, sparked outrage at home and overseas, especially from China and South Korea, which suffered under Japanese wartime occupation.

Giving his reason for not visiting the shrine, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki told a news conference Friday, "It is my belief."

Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Minister Bunmei Ibuki said in a separate news conference, "I aim to be fair, as I am the Cabinet minister in charge of religion."

Land, Infrastructure and Transport Minister Tetsuzo Fuyushiba, who belongs to the Buddhist-backed New Komeito, said, "It is because I have a different religion."

Kensei Mizote, state minister in charge of disaster management, said, "I have never been there."


Read also:





[Read More....]

ALPHA 'encouraged' by Dion's statement

CIV - With the leader of Canada's biggest opposition party, Stephane Dion of the Liberals, jumped on board in supporting the 'comfort women' motion, (motion details here, here.) Thekla Lit of ALPHA was "encouraged" by the good news.

"While both the Liberal and the NDP are supporting the motion, we still haven't heard from the Tories," Lit said. "If the Conservative Party didn't choose to do the right thing on a clearly black-or-white important issue like this (the comfort women issue), they will eventually be abandoned by the people, leaving a stinky mark in history."

Jason Kenney, PM's right hand man and secretary of state for multiculturalism, remains ambiguous about where his party stands. This came after even the US Congress had unanimously passed a similar motion in July pressuring Japan to use unambiguous language to issue a formal apology.

Kenney met with a group of multi-ethnic activists in Toronto on Wednesday in a community roundtable that discussed the comfort women motion, or Motion 291. In the meeting included Dr. Joseph Wong, co-chair of ALPHA in Toronto. It was hoped that the Tories might have a clearer position on the motion after the party held a caucus meeting last week which aimed at formulating policy directions for the fall session.

However, Kenney's responses were both disappointing and surprising. First of all, he brought nothing new to the meeting. He only reiterated that Canada was the first in G8 to call up Japan to express concern over Shinzo Abe's denial of comfort women history in March.

Secondly, he surprised everybody by saying that he believed the Kono Statement of 1993 was enough to serve as Japan's formal apology.

Lit was outraged by Kenney's statement.

Today, Kenney was at a photo-op in Vancouver when he was questioned heavily by the local Chinese media about the Tory stance on Motion 291.

Kenney shirked away talking about details. He explained that the motion was handed back to a subcommittee by the foreign affairs parliamentary committee earlier, and the government "has no right to intervene" in committee decisions agreed by representatives from all four parties.

ALPHA has been organizing a couple of former comfort women to "testify" in Canada. It has hoped that the women could testify officially to the Canadian lawmakers in a way similar to what the US foreign affairs committee had listened earlier this year.

Again, Kenney refused to give his or his party's insight into whether that's a viable option. He said, rather, as a minister, he wouldn't know whether the committee would want to have the women testifying or not.

Lit said if the Tories refuse to hear the women in an official capacity, ALPHA will host its own public testimony in Ottawa, perhaps right in front of the house.

Read also:






[Read More....]

Picture of the Day - Where's my head?

Kit, a border collie owned by Maria Mick of New York, runs right under the back end of one of the sheep being herded during the first day of the annual sheepdog trials in Grass Creek Park, east of Kingston, Ont. on Fri., Aug. 10, 2007. The event continues through Sunday. (CP PHOTO/The Kingston Whig-Standard/ Michael Lea)

[Read More....]

Dion supports 'comfort women' motion

Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion Supports Canadian House of Commons Calling for Japanese Apology to World War II Comfort Women

Japan must provide an unambiguous apology for the suffering of the women forced to work as "comfort women" during World War II, said Liberal Party Leader Stéphane Dion.

"We regret the Japanese Prime Minister's recent comments trivializing the issue of World War II "comfort women" and our Foreign Affairs Critic for Asia Pacific Affairs, Raymond Chan, issued a statement on behalf of the Liberal Opposition condemning the statements immediately after they were made," said Mr. Dion. "We were the first party in Canada to do so."

In 1993, the Government of Japan formally apologized and admitted that it made a grave error in previously denying the fact that Chinese, Filipino and Korean women were forced to serve as prostitutes for the Imperial Army during World War II. In early March of 2007 Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe made comments which essentially amounted to a denial of the very existence of these military brothels and the women who were forced to serve as "comfort women."

At that time, Mr. Chan issued a press release of behalf of the Liberal Opposition calling upon the government of Canada to denounce the Japanese Prime Minister's denial.

There is now a private members' bill on the order paper in the House of Commons calling on the Japanese Diet to formally apologize to the women who were coerced into military sexual slavery during the Second World War as "comfort women."

"As for the private member's bill on the matter, the Liberal Party treats private members' bills as free votes and all Liberal parliamentarians will be encouraged to vote their conscience on the bill," said Mr. Dion. "That being said, I do personally support the spirit of the motion.

"The Liberal Party of Canada condemns Prime Minister Shinzo Abe for his March comments regarding Japanese military brothels and acknowledges the suffering of those women who were forced to serve as "comfort women" during the Second World War," said Dion.

Read also:





[Read More....]

Two killed in Vancouver restaurant shooting; police suspect gangs

(caption: Investigators talk in the entrance of a restaurant which was the stage of an overnight shooting, on Thursday Aug. 9, 2007 in Vancouver, B.C.. Eight people have been shot in what police are calling an apparent targeted incident in an east-end Vancouver restaurant. Two people are dead and six people are in hospital with gunshot wounds after two masked men burst into the restaurant and sprayed it with bullets. CP PHOTO/Sam Leung)


CP - Two masked men burst into a Chinese restaurant in Vancouver early Thursday morning and gunned down eight people in a shooting police described as a heinous crime ranking among the worst ever in the city.

Two people were killed and six wounded - one critically - before the gunmen fled, leaving spent shell casings littering the floor amidst overturned chairs and tables.

Police are hoping six frantic witnesses in the restaurant at the time will shed some light on what officers believe was a targeted assault.

“We have had shootings in restaurants like this a couple of other times but not one that I can recall where as many people were hit like this,” said Deputy Chief Bob Rich.

“So this is one of the worst shootings that we've had in Vancouver.”

Fortune Happiness restaurant, in a section of Vancouver stubbornly resisting the gentrification consuming businesses along the same major corridor, wasn't on police radar as a hot spot for rising levels of gang and gun activity.

A gun a day is seized from city streets, Rich said.

“We are very concerned that Vancouver is dealing with situations where there is a lot more handguns, high-quality handguns, a lot more automatic weapons,” said Rich.

“Machine pistols, other kinds of guns like that that would allow for this kind of a shooting where this amount of rounds were fired quickly by two gunmen - it is extremely concerning for us.”

However, Rich also added Vancouver remains a safe city and said the number of reported shots fired has declined 60 per cent since last year.

Several people had phoned 911 around 4:30 a.m., but by the time officers arrived at the scene, the gunmen had escaped.

Police said it was too early to know whether all four men and four women hit by the gunfire were intended targets.

They were all sitting at the same table and police believe another man was sitting at the table but wasn't injured.

Police did not release the names or gender of the two people who were killed.

The busy street in front of the east-end restaurant had been closed for several hours but was reopened in time for morning rush-hour traffic.

Neighbouring businesses were closed and the lane behind the restaurant was cordoned off.

“Obviously senseless shootings like this are devastating for families, friends of victims and also for the community, for the fear that it raises,” Rich said.

“Likely an event like this will turn out to be targeted and really shouldn't cause concerns for people who are going about their business and aren't involved in criminal activities.”

Late-night Vancouver restaurants and clubs and the streets around them have been deadly in recent years with incidents police often link to gang violence.

A patron at the Kwong Chow Congee and Noodle House in east Vancouver was shot dead last year when he confronted a gun-toting robber around 1:30 a.m.

In November 2005, as many as six men stormed into a suburban Burnaby nightclub, pulled handguns and wounded two young men in what police believe was an attack related to Indo-Canadian gangs.

A month before, two suspected Indo-Canadian gangsters were shot and wounded at a Vietnamese noodle restaurant in east Vancouver.

And in 2004, an Indo-Canadian man was killed execution-style in a 5 a.m. shooting at an east Vancouver restaurant.

A January 2004 dispute in a nightclub that erupted onto the street led to the shooting death of one man and a young woman who tried to intervene. Four other people were wounded.

Police said there was had been a stabbing outside Fortune Happiness in the past but didn't believe it wasn't connected to Thursday's shooting.

“We are part of a cosmopolitan city that is going to have restaurants open 24 hours a day everywhere,” Rich said.

“A lot of the people who are legitimately engaged in sort of normal affairs of life and business tend to go home . . . What you've got left on the street is often people who are more involved in other kinds of activities who don't have legitimate pursuits to go after.”

Rich said the police would be submitting a report to Vancouver city council calling for more officers to be added to the gang squad to be able to beef up police presence around all-night restaurants and clubs.

Speaking with reporters in Yellowknife, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said legislation is also the answer.

“Frankly, this constant increase we've seen in the major centres - not just major centres but particularly the major centres - in gun, gang and drug crime is a big concern to this government,” he said.

“We have two important pieces of legislation before Parliament. One bill, Bill C-10, would establish mandatory prison sentences for serious gun crimes. And another, Bill C-35, would end the revolving door for bail, it would reverse the onus on bail for those charged with gun crimes.”

Naomi Gallagher, who lives in a second-floor apartment two doors down from the restaurant, said she slept through the entire incident.

“I didn't hear anything, which is weird,” she said as she walked her dog by the taped-off sidewalk.

“My friend called me. She just got to work and wanted to make sure I was all right. I just thought there was a movie being filmed.”

Police say the area has a reputation for drug-dealing and another resident, who gave only her first name, said she often sees police dealing with people in the back alleys.

“It can be a little rough,” said Kelly, who lives a block from the shooting scene. “I don't go out in this area. I drive. I don't usually walk around.”

Gallagher said she's seen drug addicts and prostitutes working the corners, but the neighbourhood appears to have cleaned up in the last few months.

“I work nights and I'm not nervous,” she said.

Gallagher said she has been in the Fortune Happiness restaurant once before around 2 a.m. but she didn't stay.

“It's a moderately busy place.”

[Read More....]

Japan's radical nationalists getting more violent, influential

Mr. Kato, one of the most senior members of the governing Liberal Democratic Party, said he is concerned about the growing threat to freedom of speech in Japan. "Ten years ago, I would have said that this is an exaggerated concern," he said. "But people are less and less willing to talk about nationalist issues or the Yasukuni Shrine. Our society has become more nationalistic, and there is less freedom of speech."
Tolerance and dissent lose out to nationalist radicals' rise

Globe and Mail — Three months after a shocking arson attack on a leading politician, about 800 nationalists gathered at a rally in Tokyo to give their vocal support to the arsonist.

The rally went almost without mention in the Japanese media. In the growing climate of fear and intimidation, the rising power of the nationalists has become a taboo subject.

The arsonist, a 66-year-old nationalist named Masahiro Horigome, has become a hero to many right-wingers in Japan. After his dramatic attack last summer, he was flooded with letters of support from fellow nationalists.

Although he was given an eight-year jail sentence, he has remained unrepentant and even boastful. "I feel the greatest sense of accomplishment at this point in my life," he later wrote to a newspaper.

Violent nationalist groups are still a relatively small minority of the political spectrum in Japan, but their influence is far greater than their numbers would warrant.

They have succeeded in silencing many scholars, discouraging debate on sensitive subjects and helping shift the political mainstream toward more radical views.

Their growing influence is a symptom of a Japanese political culture that has become less tolerant of dissent on key issues of patriotism, national symbols and wartime history.

Mr. Horigome, a member of a right-wing group in Tokyo, launched his attack last Aug. 15, the anniversary of the end of the Second World War and the day when many Japanese politicians pay homage at the Yasukuni Shrine, where 14 convicted war criminals are among the millions of war dead honoured.

Mr. Horigome planned to attack a business leader who had criticized the prime minister's visits to the war shrine. He bought a large kitchen knife for the attack. But then he decided that he could not penetrate the business leader's bodyguards. So he chose another target: Koichi Kato, a senior parliament member who had also criticized the visits.

He travelled to Mr. Kato's family home and poured eight litres of gasoline inside the house, then ignited it with a lighter. The politician was not at home, but his house and adjoining office were destroyed in the blaze. His 97-year-old mother narrowly escaped death because she had gone out for a walk at the time.

The arsonist tried to commit hara-kiri, the ritual form of suicide favoured by samurai and military men, but botched the job. Police found him bleeding and arrested him.

Japan's political leaders were largely silent. The prime minister at the time, Junichiro Koizumi, took two weeks to condemn the attack. The current Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, was equally slow to show any disapproval.

An estimated 10,000 people belong to Japan's hard-line right-wing nationalist groups, and their penchant for violence is increasing, according to Japanese police reports.

The militants have issued death threats and other warnings to politicians and scholars who criticize the governing authorities on nationalist issues. The left-leaning Asahi Shimbun, a major Tokyo newspaper that has criticized the Yasukuni Shrine visits, received death threats in mailed postcards this spring. Another newspaper was attacked last year by a right-wing nationalist who threw a Molotov cocktail at its head office because of its reports on the shrine issue.

Another nationalist severed the tip of his little finger and sent it to the office of a Korean group in Japan because he was unhappy with North Korea's test-firing of missiles last year.

In April this year, a yakuza gangster shot and killed the left-leaning mayor of Nagasaki. Although the incident was reportedly inspired by a personal grudge, there are close connections between the yakuza (a Japanese organized crime gang) and the right-wing nationalist groups.

Mr. Kato, the victim of the arson attack, is now living with a police guard at his home. He still worries about the risk of an ambush as he enters his home at night. "Every time I go back home, I take special care," he said in an interview. "The most dangerous point is the final 30 metres, so I change my pace quite often and I zigzag."

Read the rest of the story here.

Read also:





[Read More....]

Harper blames public servants for failed China policy

After a year and a half of arrogance and grandstanding on China's human rights record, our prime minister, under increasing pressure from the business community to mend a defacto broken Sino-Canadian relationship, is now blaming the public servant for not putting more emphasis on China.

What a hypocrite! In fact, this is such an irresponsible and despicable way of shifting blame. When will Harper act like a grown-up?

The Vancouver Sun reports yesterday:

Prime Minister Stephen Harper is reported to be critical of the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade for failing to put more emphasis on China and India, as well as on Canada's mission in Afghanistan.
And the Toronto Star has an article today:
Prime Minister Stephen Harper is reported to be frustrated with the Department of Foreign Affairs for dragging its feet in implementing his foreign policy. Some foreign diplomats in Ottawa are openly asking why Canada's professional foreign service would obstruct the policy direction of the government. The reason is fairly straightforward and was entirely predictable.
....

It has long been understood in Ottawa that Canada has its greatest influence over this enormously complex country when our leaders express themselves firmly behind closed doors, away from the glare of the media. It is an approach that reflects an understanding of and respect for the Chinese culture, not to mention the power differential between Canada and China.

No one, least of all the Chinese, would have predicted that Canada would abandon four decades of quiet diplomacy with China in favour of a public diplomacy resembling that of one superpower talking to another. Yet that has been the Harper government's approach in recent months, with public criticisms of China's human rights record.It should come as no surprise that the foreign service has resisted this approach to Sino-Canadian relations, breaking as it does with long-standing consensus on how to influence Beijing effectively. Again, the resistance may be unjustifiable, but it was entirely predictable.
The Liberal international trade critic Navdeep Bains made some very good arguments in a press release today:
Prime Minster Stephen Harper’s criticism of the Department of Foreign Affairs for failing to place more emphasis on China is a dishonest attempt to shift the growing criticism of the Conservative government’s own mishandling of Canada-China relations.

“Mr. Harper's antagonistic approach towards Chinese officials and the reluctance of several Conservative ministers to pursue closer ties with China has been particularly damaging to our traditionally positive relationship with China,” said Mr. Bains.

“Mr. Harper’s most recent attempt to blame public servants for the cooling relationship between China and Canada is clearly a political ploy to shift attention away from his own mismanagement and the numerous mistakes made by several of his key ministers.”

The Conservative government unfortunately sees China as a competitor to the North American market rather than as a tremendous opportunity for trade expansion and diversification.

In August of 2006, International Trade Minister David Emerson delivered one of his first major trade speeches stating, “If you think we’re going to have trouble taking on China by ourselves you’re right, we are…We have cross border clusters and cross border supply chains, which create tremendous efficiency for our industries and allows us to take on some of the most competitive economies in the world from a North American platform.”

China is Canada’s second largest two-way trading partner and a country on pace to be the largest economy in the world by 2025.
It is so clear that if anyone should be blamed for a failed China policy, it must be Harper and only Harper but no one else -- and definitely not our foreign affairs professional diplomats. Harper should only blame his ignorance, stubbornness and self-supremacy. A good example is the Canadian effort in negotiating the release of alleged terrorist Huseyin Celil.
PM Stephan Harper's high profile criticism of China's handling of the Huseyin Celil case during APEC meeting last year has virtually pushed Celil to jail, according to NDP MP Wayne Marston. Marston is the MP for the riding in which Celil's family lives. He was among the first to mobilize effort to rescue Celil soon after his arrest. He had partnered up with a few diplomatic experts and were prepared to lobby the Chinese government from behind the scene.

Marston said this method had proved effective when dealing with the Chinese government. China is more willing to cooperate if the lobbying is done behind the scene, Marston told a Ming Pao reporter.
And, is Harper serious about upholding human rights? The clear answer is NO.

The Edmonton Journal reports that when Harper visited South America, embracing Columbia and other Andean countries, he tried to justify his alignment with South American countries that have poor human rights records:
"We're not going to say, 'Fix all your social and political and human rights problems and only then will we engage in trade relations.' That's ridiculous," Harper told reporters who questioned whether Canada was sending the wrong signals by supporting Colombia's embattled hardline president, Alvaro Uribe, whose extended family is now linked directly to right-wing death squads. "Colombia is a country that has made tremendous progress on shared values. We want to encourage them."
The Journal asks a very legitimate question that Harper still doesn't dare to answer now:
At the same time, perhaps he would be good enough to clear up why he is willing to accept a double standard in how Canada views human rights in Colombia compared with China.
Before Harper is able to come up with some reasonable answer, he should not - and has no authority and in no position - to blame our public servants who know the world a lot better than our rookie PM.

[Read More....]

Canada backs Taiwan's push for role in WHO

Globe and Mail - The Harper government has quietly provided a high-level boost to Taiwan's campaign for a role in the World Health Organization in a move that some experts say will place another burr under its relationship with China.

In May, Health Minister Tony Clement spoke in favour of allowing Taiwan to take part in meaningful technical meetings of the WHO, of which it is not a member. China opposes such membership, as well as giving Taiwan observer status at the World Health Authority, which is the WHO's supreme decision-making body.

While the Canadian move is less than the full support for the WHO membership Taiwan seeks, Taiwanese officials say the remarks are significant because they come from a cabinet minister.

Canada has joined Japan and the United States as chief sympathizers for Taiwan's increased participation in the WHO, although the latter two countries support full membership. "This is definitely a very positive sign," said David Ta-Wei Lee, Taiwan's representative to Canada.

"We have been frustrated since 1971, when we lost UN membership, and we have been deprived of participation in all the UN-related agencies ... and a major country like Canada says something like that carries some weight."

Taiwan says that membership in the WHO is critical, saying it is currently cut off from information concerning global health policy discussions, technology exchanges and the monitoring and prevention of epidemic diseases. Taiwan was hard hit in 2003 by severe acute respiratory syndrome, a disease that also affected Canada.

In his remarks at a meeting of the WHO, Mr. Clement said the government supports Taiwanese participation because it would "yield benefits to an international community that is grappling with challenging issues of infectious disease control, including pandemic influenza."

Meaningful participation in technical meetings of the WHO "need not require membership in the WHO. We believe these two issues need not be linked. Rather, we would urge critical partners such as the WHO secretariat and China to continue working on Taiwan's meaningful participation."

In a statement released yesterday, the Chinese embassy warned about efforts to create international momentum for increased recognition of Taiwan.

"It is hoped Canada will be able to see through such political motives on the part of the Taiwan authorities," the statement reads.

One expert said the Chinese would be worried about any movement giving Taiwan official international recognition.

"They are concerned about any movement towards recognizing Taiwan's status as a sovereign entity, even in areas where, for functional reasons, its participation would be really helpful," said Wade Huntley, an expert on Taiwan-China affairs at the University of British Columbia.

Another expert said yesterday that he didn't see increased WHO participation for Taiwan as anything more than the status Taiwan enjoys in some other international organizations.

Charles Burton of Brock University in St. Catharines, Ont., suggested that the Chinese may even find it in their self-interest to have Taiwan a member of the WHO.

[Read More....]

Profit-squeezing habit of US box stores should share bad rep for cheap Chinese goods

I came across a very interesting post on the China Briefing Blog today. The article talks about the "glass ceiling" in China re manufacturing and its relationship to the recent rounds of "bad made-in-China product" scandals. Instead of blaming China ONLY for all the bad quality goods, the article examines the role of US box stores such as Wal Mart in creating such a bad reputation for Chinese goods. And these are points of view of people doing business in China (whom I assume should know more than an average American or Canadian about what and how China really is).

Here are some of the points made in the article:

“I suspected, as you do, that the mark up rate for goods imported to the United States is very large, but I’ve only been able to confirm that to be the case with box stores (such as WalMart, et al). They have a nasty habit of gouging both ends.
  1. They come to a Chinese manufacturer asking to have a product copied (with enough variations to stave off fair trade suits), at rock bottom prices, which gives the Chinese a significantly thin margin.
  2. They also negotiate a 90 to 120 day credit line, where the manufacturer will wait a long time to get his money.
  3. They also negotiate that for next year’s production, the price will be reduced by about 5 percent, and again the year following that.
  4. The difference from the factory price to retail is about 10 times.
  5. By the second year, or third year, the Chinese manufacturer can’t even cover its cost with the decreasing margins; however, some will go ahead, in the hope of having some solution down the line. When WalMart (et al) are finished with the manufacturer, they’re [the manufacturer] broke.
  6. They [Walmart, et al] move on to find another sitting duck manufacturer, and start the cycle all over (I’ve met enough Chinese factory bosses who have been squeezed this way, and some have never recovered, and the ones that didn’t close, had a slow recovery of several years).
“When this happens with a large company, as it did with Kelon, it becomes noticeable. A regional sales manager friend of mine in Kelon told me they were negotiating with WalMart, and it was very difficult negotiation because of the 90 day payment delay, plus the price squeeze they were pushing. I told him that if Kelon accepted that deal, they would be hard pressed to deliver, never mind cover their own costs, and they would go under in about six months. Well, the Mr. Gu stuff happen to coincide with the demise of Kelon, about six months later; but running up toward the sixth month, there were some serious local problems between Kelon and its suppliers when Kelon tried to impose the same 90 days on them, and the noise hit the press… and the rest is history.

..... Nick’s comments seem to bear out that a lot of the current problems with shoddy or defective goods - and the larger responsibility for the trade imbalance - actually lies with the United States rather than China. China is merely selling to demand. But if U.S. traders are pushing the limits of volume purchasing to such extremes that margins are just way too low - then the temptation for Chinese manufacturers to cut corners is going to be immense.

A deal has to be fair for both sides. But if American buyers are squeezing Chinese manufacturers too hard - quality can become compromised. An audit of buying practices and purchasing ethics in the United States may well reveal a lot about the circumstantial behavior that is now leading to product failures with imported goods to the United States. But the consumer can’t have his cake and eat it to, even in Washington. If you want sustainable quality, you have to pay for it.
Full story: Does responsibility for defective Chinese goods, growing trade imbalance lie with America?

[Read More....]

Cervical cancer vaccine promotes promiscuity?

I can't believe my ears.

At this hour, Chinese radio AM1470 is discussing whether the government should provide free HPV vaccination to all young girls in its phone-in show (CIV has reported this in May). The host and her guests are hinting that although the New England Journal of Medicine has established that the vaccine is 100% effective in preventing cervical cancer, they maintain that the drug is still young and its long term effect remains to be seen.

What's striking is that many callers (Cantonese speaking, obviously those from HK) object universal vaccination because "it will promote promiscuity." In summary, these are the points most callers argue against the vaccination:

  • the vaccine promotes promiscuity
  • we should "teach" our children not having sex or not being promiscuious
  • if there was a vaccine for AIDS, wouldn't that telling kids that they could practice homosexual sex? (!)
  • why did the study study girls at so young ages?
  • women should be encouraged to do regular PAP tests, not having worry-free sex lives
  • the study is so new, do we have to force an universal vaccination at this stage, given the drug is so expensive (about $400 for 3 shots)? aren't they say our medical system is under so much strain?
  • if my kid asks me why she should take the shot, should I tell her that "it's to prevent you from getting sick because of high risk sex behaviour?" wouldn't that be a hint for my child to get into sex ASAP?
  • grade 9, 10 children are still naive, they might not know what the shot (or sex) is about. why should we "remind" them they can get into sex early?
  • vaccination against diseases such as rubella is good; but anything about sex life shouldn't be promoted
Sad, sad, sad. The ultra-conservativeness of the Chinese Canadian community really makes me sweat. They think telling kids not to have sex should be above protecting them against accidents or chances that they might fall victim to sexual predators?

That's a big contrast in opinion about the vaccine by most Canadian parents:
Parents favour HPV vaccine: poll

Ottawa Sun - A poll has confirmed parents’ approval of mass human papilloma virus immunization for young women less than a week after the Ontario government announced it would fund vaccinations this fall.

An Ipsos-Reid poll found that nearly eight in 10 (77%) parents of teenaged girls surveyed were strongly in favour of a government-sponsored free vaccine program against HPV, which causes cervical cancer.

The study found that one in six (17%) were somewhat in favour of this course of action and 5% of respondents were either somewhat (3%) or strongly against (2%).

The HPV virus is transmitted through sexual activity and causes genital warts and cervical cancer. Annually, about 500 women in Ontario are diagnosed with cervical cancer and 140 die from the disease.

The Ontario government announced last week that it will offer free HPV vaccines to Grade 8 girls beginning this fall at a cost of $117 million over three years.

Public health nurses will administer the vaccine to girls on a voluntary basis.

The poll was conducted for Merck Frosst Canada, a pharmaceutical company that makes the drug used to vaccinate against HPV.

A sample of 3,686 parents of teenage girls aged 9-17 in British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario and Quebec were interviewed online between June 27 and July 9. The results are considered accurate to within plus or minus 1.6 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

[Read More....]

Hate crimes investigated on assault against Chinese man

I'm having a feeling that there seems to be a stronger anti-China/Chinese sentiments in Canada these days. I'd bet one of the reasons must be the anti-China attitude expressed by our federal government, plus a series of recent tainted food scandals. Too bad things have to go this way.

-----------------------

NEWS1130, CBC - A brutal attack on a transit bus over the weekend sent an elderly Chinese man to hospital, and the Vancouver Police Hate Crime Squad is now investigating.

According to Constable Howard Chow, an 87 year old Chinese man riding a bus on Main Street in Chinatown Sunday afternoon was punched in the face several times, while the attacker was issuing racial slurs. The victim was taken to hospital, treated and released.

"For some inexplicable reason he starts to make racial slurs against this 87-year-old man," said Chow, "And then he punches him in the face, gets off the bus and then runs away."

The bus driver and some passengers chased the attacker, and Chow says police arrested a 40 year old suspect in a bar not far away.

"Fortunately, there were some witnesses around," said Chow. "Our members got on the scene quickly. A 40-year-old man has been taken into custody. He is likely going to be facing a number of charges."

"We're looking at assault charges, possibly hate crime charges. If the evidence supports it, you better believe we'll be pressing hate crime charges."

Hate crimes in Vancouver doubles this year so far

Vancouver Police have already investigated twice as many hate crime complaints this year compared to last year. The number has skyrocketed from around 60 complaints in 2006, to 120 this year alone.

Tung Chan, the CEO of S.U.C.C.E.S.S., a group which helps immigrants to Vancouver with settlement information, is shaking his head at the latest investigation. "The first thing that comes to my mind is 'I feel sorry for the coward who did this kind of thing', because it would be someone who is really, really uneducated and ignorant."

Both Chan and Mira Oreck with the Canadian Jewish Congress believe education is extremely important in creating tolerance, but Oreck is mulling over the sudden jump.

"It's certainly a concern to our community, but it's important to remember that people may be more comfortable reporting more, if there were more services for people to report to."


See also:
'We don't need Chinamen in this country!'
Hate crime charge pending

[Read More....]

India to overtake US, Japan by 2050

It'd be interesting to see if the West would react with an "India Threat" theory.

--------------

Economic Times - Emerging economies, including India, will overtake the developed countries in economic growth by 2050. With the popularity of India and China as investment destination is rising while the attractiveness Europe and North America is slipping, says a study.

“The seven new global powers by 2050 will comprise the so-called BRIC economies together with Indonesia, Mexico and Turkey,” says the Ernst and Young European Attractiveness Survey 2007.

These seven emerging countries would overtake the economies of the G7 countries — Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, US — in terms of GDP, but whether India can develop its infrastructure at pace with that of global investment remains to be seen, the survey added. The developing economies will outdo the G7 if it manages to mend the loopholes regarding transparency, fairness and infrastructure development.

[Read More....]

Canada wins!

CANADA:



SPAIN:



Credit: Tony Au

[Read More....]

Toronto area home prices July 2007

(<--- click to enlarge)

TREB release - Toronto Real Estate Board members reported 8,912 total sales in July, 26% ahead of the 7,082 sales recorded in July of 2006, and an all time record for the month.

Furthermore, July makes the fourth month in a row that sales have broken monthly records. "The local resale market is as healthy as it has ever been," said TREB President Donald Bentley. "Not only are we running 13% ahead of last year's January - July total of 52,682, we are running 14% ahead of the seven month total for 2005, which became our best year ever."

While sales have set a blistering pace, prices eased in July, down 2% to $366,012 from June's average of $373,719. "This decline is seasonal in nature," said the President. "Prices tend to ease in July/August as potential home-buyers and sellers go on holiday." He went on to note that the year-to-date average, at $373,326, was up 5% over the same time-frame in 2006.

Breaking down the total, 3,424 sales were reported in TREB’s 28 West districts and averaged $347,978; 1,590 sales were reported in the 14 Central districts and averaged $470,464; 1,797 sales were reported in the 23 North districts and averaged $392,360; and 2,101 sales were reported in TREB’s 21 East districts and averaged $293,819.

North York

There were 5,115 sales in the North York area (C04,C06,C07, and C12 through C15) during the first seven months of 2007, up 12% over the 4,583 sales recorded during the same time-frame in '06. The average price came in at $488,663, a five% increase over last year.

Full report here.

[Read More....]

Vancouver mayor signs 'comfort women' petitition

CIV - To Thekla Lit, Vancouver mayor Sam Sullivan's visit to the 'comfort women' exhibition was a surprise. A nice surprise, indeed, when Sullivan agreed to put his name on a petition urging parliamentarians in Ottawa to support the 'Comfort Women Motion 291', Ming Pao reports.

Motion 291, tabled by NDP MP Olivia Chow, reads:

"That, in the opinion of the House, the government should urge the Prime Minister and the Parliament of Japan to: (a) pass a resolution in the Diet to formally apologize to the women who were coerced into military sexual slavery during the Second World War and were euphemized as "comfort women" by the Japanese Imperial Army; and (b) to provide just and honorable compensation to these victims."
Vancouver Save the Article 9 Group (VSA9), a Japanese Canadian peace organization, is hosting the exhibit of the A-Bomb and “comfort women” during the Powell Street Festival held this weekend. The photos and drawings which were donated by Nihon Hidankyo (the organization of A-bomb survivors in Hiroshima and Nagasaki) will be displayed, showing the terrible aftermath of the atomic bombing and telling survivors' suffering. Besides these panels, there will be displays that focus on issues about Japan’s military sexual slavery, the so-called “comfort women”. These display materials are on loan from B.C. ALPHA (Association for Learning & Preserving the History of WWII in Asia).

ALPHA's co-chair Thekla Lit and other volunteers were at the exhibition collecting signatures to support Motion 291. Olivia Chow also helped out.

Sam Sullivan attended the A-bomb exhibition, initially making proclamation marking Aug 6 the "Hiroshima Day". Aug 6 is the anniversary of A-bombing the Japanese city by the Americans towards the end of WWII.

After he finished touring the A-bomb exhibit, he was greeted by Lit, who introduced Sullivan to the history of "comfort women".

Lit then urged Sullivan to sign the petition.

At first, Sullivan refused to sign, quoting his lawyer has warned him not to sign any petitions such as this. His assistant said the mayor could take the information and studied in more details.

However, Lit successfully persuaded Sullivan to put his name on the petition. Sullivan joked that he hoped Lit wouldn't tell his lawyer about this. Lit was overjoyed.

He added that "comfort women" was a serious history issue that needed our action in correcting historical wrongs.

Read also:






[Read More....]

Report: Japan's late emperor against Yasukuni's honouring of war criminals

AP - Japan's wartime Emperor Hirohito was against including convicted war criminals at a Tokyo shrine because he worried the move would damage relations with the country's Asian neighbours, according to new documents published Saturday.

Hirohito also believed that honoring Class-A war criminals at Yasukuni Shrine would change the nature of the shrine as a war memorial, the emperor's chamberlain was quoted as saying in a recently published book of Hirohito's poetry, according to the Asahi newspaper. Several other newspapers carried a similar report.

"(The emperor) believes it alters the nature of the enshrined deities, because (Yasukuni) is supposed to honor only the souls of the people who went to war and died for the nation," Yoshihiro Tokugawa says in the book, compiled by poet Hirohiko Okano, 83.

The book is an anthology of Hirohito's traditional "waka" poems, including one he wrote for the 41st anniversary of Japan's World War II defeat in 1986 and which reflected his anxieties over the inclusion of executed war criminals at Yasukuni, Okano says, citing conversations with the late chamberlain.

Hirohito believed "it would leave serious problems for the future with countries engaged in war" with Japan, Okano wrote, according to the Asahi.

Hirohito wrote:

"On this day of the year again

"Sorrow is deep

"Over the matter of the Yasukuni shrine."

Hirohito, under whose name Japan waged war in the first half of the 21st century, died in 1989.

Hirohito stopped visiting Yasukuni after his eighth visit three years before its 1978 decision to begin honouring the Class-A war criminals including executed war leader Hideki Tojo. Hirohito's son, Akihito, has never visited Yasukuni.

Visits by Japanese leaders and lawmakers to Yasukuni have long been a source of friction between Japan and its neighbours because the shrine is seen by many as a symbol of Japan's pre-1945 militarism.

Earlier findings from private memorandums and the diary of a former imperial aide have indicated that Hirohito stopped visiting Yasukuni after expressing his displeasure to including war criminals on the list of some 2.5 million war dead honored there. But details of his views have not previously been known.

Hirohito's reign continues to be a sensitive issue, and journals and accounts by aides to the emperor are published usually after their death.

See also:
Hirohito quit Yasukuni Shrine visits over concerns about war criminals: diary

[Read More....]

Japan's denial of history causes international backlash

Claims of justice
August 02, 2007

People's Daily opinion - By voice votes, the United States House of Representatives on July 30 unanimously approved a bill on the condemnation of the Japanese during the Second World War for forcing women of other Asian countries as "comfort women." House of Representatives believe that the Japanese government should formally and explicitly admit the "comfort women" issue, apologize for this issue, and bear historical responsibility accordingly.

As a claim of justice and conscience, the bill was originally proposed by California Democratic Congressman Mike Honda, an ethnic Japanese himself. This shows that claims and demands for justice and conscience even can transcend national, ethnic and racial boundaries.

However, the Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary said: "The adoption of the bill is regrettable." In fact, it is "very regrettable" that a country like Japan lacks moral courage and cannot face the historical facts and the "darkest chapter" in its history.

If Japan feels ashamed for these dishonors and does not have the courage to face the facts of history, it at least can keep the silence. However, some Japanese people are even below this bottom line. June 14 this year, some Japanese published advertising in the "Washington Post" and defamed the "comfort women" survivors. This extremely stupid move has provoked widespread fury. Just like Chairman of Foreign Affairs Committee of House of Representatives Tom Lantos said, "Trying to shift the blame to the victims is really disgusting." As a response to these shameless acts, House of Representatives passed the bill in merely 35 minutes.

German Chancellor Willy Brandt fell to his knees at the commemoration to the Jewish victims in Poland. As a matter of fact, Germany has sincerely faced the history and shouldered the historical responsibility. As a result, it acquired recognition and forgiveness of the international community. Japan, however, dares not face the historical facts. Moreover, from time to time it repeats the "amnesia" and hurts the feelings of the victims by giving shameless acts. Thus in a long time, it is in a passive position in both historical and moral court.

The bill passed by the US House of Representatives serves as a strong signal indicating that Japan's erroneous view of history is causing more international rebound. This is only a beginning. Japan is facing an unavoidable moral choice, as well as a choice for deciding the future path of the country.

Read also:






[Read More....]

Philippines support US sex-slave resolution

August 04, 2007

The Manila Times editorial - The Democratic Party-dominated US House of Representatives has passed a resolution pressing the Japanese government to apologize officially to Asian women forced to become sex slaves by the Japanese military during World War II. These are the so-called comfort women.

The United Nations, recognizing the claims of Asian NGOs, accepts the fact that some 200,000 young women—13 years old and older—from mainland China, Taiwan, Korea, the Philippines, Malaysia and other East Asian countries were abducted or forced to serve in officially sanctioned, established and managed houses where they were systematically abused by Japanese soldiers in need of sexual release.

In the post-WWII war-crimes trials of the Tokyo tribunal, forcing women to perform sexual congress with Japanese soldiers was not among the charges against the Japanese. As a result, the “comfort women” issue never came up. It was not until the 1990s when the complaints of the, by then, dwindling group of Japanese military victims, became widely known.

Silence on the issue allowed the Japanese government to ignore the comfort women’s call for justice and demands for compensation.

The Japanese authorities argued that rape was not a war crime until the 1949 when the Fourth Geneva Convention was adopted.

They also tried to deflect the complaints against the Japanese military authorities by claiming that it was civilians, not military officers, who had gathered the women to serve in the soldiers’ bordellos.

Korea was Japan’s colony from 1910 to 1945. The 1965 Japan-Korea agreement required a payment of US$800 million to the Korean government in loans and grants. In return the Korean government agreed not to demand further reparations.

Japan claims that the agreement disallows private claims because the Korean government has been paid. The Korean government denies that claim and has declassified the agreement to prove to Koreans that the Japanese statement is false.

But in Japan, no private WWII Korean victim is allowed to sue the Japanese government unless Tokyo declassifies the agreement. In March lawyers of Korean victims went to court petitioning for the declassification of the agreement.

Also last March, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had obscenely stood firm on the protestation that the World War II Japanese military authorities were not guilty of forcibly using Filipino and other Asian women in official sex houses. “There was no coercion such as kidnappings by the Japanese authorities. There is no reliable testimony that proves kidnapping,” Abe said. He even added that economic reasons and the persuasiveness of pimps made these Asian women choose to become whores to Japanese soldiers.

That Japan’s military authorities were involved in putting up and managing these brothels for soldiers was substantiated by six official documents from Japan’s National Institute for Defense Studies. These were found and then published by Prof. Yoshiaki Yashimi of Chuo University.

In 1993 the Japanese government at last began to admit that sex slavery had happened in the Second World War. And in 1994, Japanese Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama announced that the private Peace and Friendship Exchanges Foundation had been founded to deal with the comfort-women issue.

International, including Philippine, associations of victims refused to cooperate with the organization. They knew it was again an effort of the Japanese government to avoid responsibility and liability. The victims declared: “We want our honor back, not charity.”

UNCHR’s recommendations

THE UN Commission on Human Rights has recommended a list of measures the Japanese government should take to solve the problem:

It should acknowledge that the Japanese military violated international law; it should make a public apology to all the women; it should pay each victim a cash compensation; it should change the Japanese schoolbooks and curricula so that the true facts of history are taught; it should publish all the documents relevant to this issue and ferret out and punish those involved in this crime.

It was only in 1996 when the Chinese delegate to the UN officially spoke of the need for Japan to pay compensation to the comfort women or sex slaves.

Preparing for the 60th anniversary of the end of WWII, women’s groups in Asia, Europe and North America formed a united front in publicizing the demands that the Japanese government apologize and pay compensation to the sex slaves.

The Japanese authorities had tried to prevent the US House of Representatives from passing its resolution. Tokyo instructed the Japanese ambassador in Washington to say that the resolution would not be beneficial to Japanese-American relations.

Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki also made his displeasure publicly known when he said that, “The Prime Minister personally informed the United States of our position during his visit to that country in April. We regret to say that the resolution was approved despite that.”

Meanwhile, human rights and women’s organizations in Japan are launching a campaign to demand apologies and payment to the comfort women from their government.

We Filipinos should support these movements in every way we can.

Read also:





[Read More....]

The People Behind the 'Comfort Women' Resolution

Aug 2, 2007

Chosunilbo editorial - The person who played the biggest role in the passage Tuesday of the “comfort women” resolution by the U.S. House of Representatives is Mike Honda, a third-generation Japanese American. In January, Honda submitted a proposal for the resolution, which calls on the Japanese government to acknowledge and formally apologize for the forced mobilization of women to serve as sex slaves to Japanese soldiers during World War II. At that time, he was bombarded by criticism from Japanese people who accused him of trying to shame Japan on U.S. soil. A moderator of one Japanese TV program questioned how he could have done such a thing considering his Japanese lineage. But Honda was unfazed, replying that an apology and reconciliation by Tokyo would not diminish its stature. It would actually strengthen relations with Korea and China, should they be satisfied with Japan’s efforts.

After succeeding in the passage of the resolution, Honda gave credit to former Representative Lane Evans and to Korean Americans. Since 1999, Evans had proposed the comfort women resolution three times, but failed each time due to Japanese government lobbying. He retired last year. Even as he was battling Parkinson’s disease, he encouraged Koreans by vowing to continue efforts to pass the resolution. The Korean American community also played a key role. A group fighting for the rights of the former sex slaves, the Korean American Voter’s Council in New York and New Jersey and other groups visited the House of Representatives to convince lawmakers and their aides, while Korean-American junior and senior high school students sent donations.

Honda spent 14 months in an internment camp for Japanese Americans during World War II. Following a Senate resolution in 1988, then U.S. President Ronald Reagan made a public apology for their internment. Honda said true reconciliation can only happen after repentance. He added that the passage of the resolution was not an end but a beginning. Honda is teaching the people of his ancestral home that the atrocities involving sex slaves cannot be resolved unless Japan accepts its responsibility.

Read also:





[Read More....]

Canadian group seeks formal apology from Japan for use of 'comfort women'

Inside Toronto - The Japanese government must formally apologize to the thousands of Asian women who were coerced into sex slavery by Japan's Imperial Army during the Second World War, a press conference heard Wednesday at the Korean Cultural Centre in North York.

The conference, hosted by The Coalition of Communities in support of the 'Comfort Women' Motion, was held in support of Motion 291 which is before the House of Commons and the International Human Rights Committee asking Japan to formally apologize to the women - dubbed comfort women - forced into sexual slavery during the war, and to provide just and honourable compensation to the victims.

The motion is similar to the United States' House Resolution 121, calling for Japan to "formally acknowledge, apologize and accept historical responsibility in a clear and unequivocal manner for its Imperial Armed Force's coercion of young women into sexual slavery, known to the world as comfort women, during its colonial and wartime occupation of Asia and the Pacific Islands from the 1930s through the duration of the Second World War."

"The United States and Japan are close, but even friends have to point out when you did something wrong," said Dr. Joseph Wong, chair of the Canada Association for Learning and Preserving the History of WWII in Asia (ALPHA). "Twenty thousand of these young women were forced into sex slavery. Many people have said Japan has apologized many times. Do we accept this? No."

During the Second World War, thousands of Asian women from Korea, China, the Philippines and other occupied territories were forced to work as sex slaves in Japanese military-run brothels.

Last April, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said his government continues to stand by the 1993 apology by then-chief of cabinet secretary Yohei Kono, in which it "acknowledges the involvement of the military authorities of the day and extends its sincere apologies and remorse to all those, irrespective of place of origin, who suffered immeasurable pain and incurable physical and psychological wounds as comfort women."

But a month before Abe said the government stood by Kono's apology, he denied the military had forced women into sex slavery and that there was a lack of evidence to prove coercion, making his statement regarding the 1993 apology meaningless and deceptive, critics said.

"Canada as a nation, as a people, has to take a positive stand," Wong said. "We have to salute the American politicians on taking a very firm stand with an ally."

Hamilton East-Stoney Creek MP Wayne Marston said Wednesday he introduced a motion at the sub-committee on International Human Rights asking the Conservative government to urge Japan to officially apologize and provide compensation. Although the sub-committee passed that motion, the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs sent it back for further study.

Speaking at the press conference, Scarborough-Rouge River MP Derek Lee said he would support the initiative accompanied by a report.

Read also:





[Read More....]

Asahi: Defending 'comfort women' issue = justifying violations of human rights, freedoms

EDITORIAL: 'Comfort women' issue
08/02/2007

The Asahi Shimbun editorial - The U.S. House on Monday passed a resolution demanding an official apology from the Japanese government for the sexual exploitation of Asian women, known euphemistically in this country as "comfort women," by the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II. The resolution denounces the "comfort women system" as one of the worst cases of human trafficking in the 20th century that is "considered unprecedented in its cruelty and magnitude."

In 1993, the Japanese government acknowledged the involvement of the wartime military and apologized in a statement issued by Yohei Kono in his capacity as chief Cabinet secretary. The public and private sectors jointly established the Asian Women's Fund to pay compensation to former "comfort women" and deliver letters of apology to them signed by a succession of prime ministers. It is unfortunate that the House has not fully appreciated these efforts.

But Japan is partly responsible for the passage of this resolution that condemns in the most severe terms this country's past deeds. Hard as it may be, we must face this fact.

Based on a thorough examination of testimonies and evidence, the Kono statement acknowledged the involvement of the Japanese military and concluded that overall, "coercion" was used in the recruitment, transport and management of the women. The statement and the government's official stand were one and the same.

Later, however, some politicians, academics and members of the media began to deny and attack the Kono statement. One of the most vocal leaders of that group was Shinzo Abe, who had yet to become prime minister.

Americans are worried that Japan may still be attached to its prewar values. One case in point was a letter sent by a high-ranking U.S. congressman to the Japanese ambassador to the United States, voicing his concerns about then Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's repeated visits to Yasukuni Shrine, where Class-A Japanese war criminals are honored along with the nation's war dead. Abe's rise to the top leadership post heightened America's sense of unease.

As prime minister, Abe said his government would stand by the Kono statement. But then, he quibbled over the definition of "coercion," arguing that the women were not "forced" in the sense of being seized by the military authorities. To Americans, it seemed that he couldn't see the forest for the trees, so to speak, thereby heightening the House's resolve that the resolution must be passed.

But more decisive in impact was the taking out of a full-page ad in The Washington Post by some Diet members and Abe's foreign policy advisers to challenge the content of the resolution.

Referring to the ad during the House debate on the resolution, Tom Lantos, a Democrat from California and chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, said continued efforts by some in Japan to distort and deny history are "nauseating."

Abe, who stresses the sharing of values in diplomacy, has reiterated time and again that Japan and the United States are "allies sharing the same values." He insists that the two nations see eye-to-eye on such values as freedom and democracy.

But for that to be entirely true, Japan must shed itself completely of the vestiges of prewar militarism that suppressed personal freedoms and abused human rights.

Persisting in defending the wartime military on the "comfort women" issue will only be perceived as an attempt to justify violations of freedoms and human rights. Abe ought to know that this contradicts the values Japan and the United States supposedly share today.

The House resolution demands an apology from the prime minister. Abe's silence on the matter will only prove to be counterproductive. If the Americans are suspicious that the Abe administration no longer stands by the Kono statement, then we suggest that Abe issue a similar statement at home and abroad in his own name. This is probably the best thing he could do in the circumstances.

Read also:





[Read More....]

US not necessary accepts Abe's superificial 'apology', despite Bush does

U.S. House urges clear apology
August 2, 2007

Japan Times editorial - The U.S. House of Representatives on Monday passed by voice vote a resolution urging Japan to "formally acknowledge, apologize and accept historical responsibility in a clear and unequivocal manner for its Imperial Armed Forces' coercion of young (Asian) women into sexual slavery."

Passage follows approval by the House Foreign Affairs Committee on June 26. The nonbinding resolution says in part that "the United States-Japan alliance is the cornerstone of U.S. security interests in Asia and the Pacific and is fundamental to regional stability and prosperity."

But the fact that the full House approved the resolution carries great weight and is a political blow to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Similar resolutions on the issue of the Japanese military's use of "comfort women" were submitted four times from 2001 to 2006. This is the first time that the full House has passed such a resolution.

In his April visit to the U.S., Mr. Abe said he sympathizes from the bottom of his heart with former comfort women who went through extreme hardships, and President George W. Bush accepted his apology. Mr. Abe should seriously consider that the full House approved the resolution despite Mr. Bush's acceptance of his apology. He should realize that his own attempt in early March to dilute Japan's responsibility for instituting sexual servitude prompted the resolution. At that time, he said testimonies had not proven the existence of coercion in a "narrow sense" — in which "government authorities" intruded into homes and took women away by force.

The resolution in part says that the U.S.-Japan alliance is based on shared vital values such as the preservation and promotion of political and economic freedoms, support for human rights and democratic institutions. But the approval of the resolution shows that many U.S. lawmakers distrust Mr. Abe's attitude toward Japan's human rights violations of the past. Mr. Abe should realize that the problem of perception of history exists not only with Japan's neighbours in Asia but also with the U.S. and could undermine Japan-U.S. ties.

Read also:





[Read More....]

Japan regrets over US resolution, not over war crimes

...it was interesting to see the Japanese government immediately express its regret - over the resolution, not over the use of comfort women.
Gentlemen of Japan
August 1, 2007

Baltimore Sun editorial - Japanese voters repudiated Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Sunday - and in no uncertain terms - over economic mismanagement. But if it slows down his desire to remilitarize Japan, that can only be a good consequence.

The ruling Liberal Democratic Party lost control of the upper house of parliament, and the opposition Democratic Party of Japan is foursquare against Mr. Abe's nationalist tendencies.

An immediate result may be the withdrawal of Japanese ships from the Indian Ocean once their authorization expires in November. They are there ostensibly to help combat terrorism, but critics see them as token gestures of support for the U.S. war in Iraq.

Mr. Abe and his allies - including many in the Bush administration - believe that 60 years after the end of World War II, it is time for Japan to take on the normal burdens of defense, much as Germany has. And they would be right, except for one important condition: Unlike Germany, Japan has refused to come to terms with its wartime history. That must come first.

On Monday, the U.S. House of Representatives called on Japan to apologize for its treatment of an estimated 200,000 "comfort women," or sex slaves, during the war. As skeptical as we are of congressional resolutions regarding other countries' histories, it was interesting to see the Japanese government immediately express its regret - over the resolution, not over the use of comfort women.

In fact, over the years, various Japanese leaders have offered pro forma apologies to those abused by imperial forces, but they were marked by their evident insincerity. Mr. Abe himself apologized, grumpily, to the comfort women last spring - and then immediately went on to say he doubted that they had been coerced into the army's brothels.

To some Americans, this may all seem somewhat academic and beside the point - but in the Philippines and China and Korea, the refusal of Japan to own up to its war crimes is still a very real issue.

An unrepentant and remilitarized Japan would create nothing but bad feelings and trouble in East Asia. Of course Japan should one day conduct itself as a normal country would. The place to begin is in coming to terms with its history - as a normal country would.

Read also:





[Read More....]

Events over this weekend on the issue of 'comfort women'

August 3 (today) 8 - 8:30 p.m. A Mandarin TV current affairs program on “Comfort Women” at Channel 109 (Multicultural Channel)

August 4 & 5 10 – 5 pm Exhibit on “Comfort Women” during Powell Street Festival at Vancouver Japanese Language School 4th floor, 487 Alexander Street, Vancouver. Please invite your friends to visit.

August 5 8 – 9 pm Mandarin Interactive TV Program at Channel M (Channel 8) on “Comfort Women”. Please call in to express you view point.

----
Exhibit on issue of “Comfort Women” at Powell Street Festival

10:00 am - 5:00 pm Saturday August 4th
10:00 am - 4:30 pm Sunday August 5th
Vancouver Japanese Language School 4th floor
( 487 Alexander Street, Vancouver)
One block north from Oppenheimer Park, where the Powell Street festival is held.

Organizer: Vancouver Save the Article 9 Group (VSA9) – a Japanese Canadian peace organization

VSA9 is going to host the exhibit of the A-Bomb and “comfort women” during the Powell Street Festival. The photos and drawings which were donated by Nihon Hidankyo (the organization of A-bomb survivors in Hiroshima and Nagasaki) will be displayed, showing the terrible aftermath of the atomic bombing and telling survivors' suffering. Besides these panels, there will be displays that focus on issues about Japan’s military sexual slavery, the so-called “comfort women”. These display materials are on loan from B.C. ALPHA (Association for Learning & Preserving the History of WWII in Asia).

In addition, VSA9 is going to tell the current situations in Japan: the Japanese government has approved important bills without listening to the public voice to revise the Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution, the so-called “Peace Constitution”. The revision would allow Japan to re-militarize. The aim of the exhibit is to provide an opportunity to learn the past, to know the current situations, and to take action to create peace not only in Japan but also all over the world.

During the Exhibition, signatures will be collected to petition to Canadian MPs to support Motion 291 tabled in the House of Commons by MP Olivia Chow. Motion 291 reads:

"That, in the opinion of the House, the government should urge the Prime Minister and the Parliament of Japan to: (a) pass a resolution in the Diet to formally apologize to the women who were coerced into military sexual slavery during the Second World War and were euphemized as "comfort women" by the Japanese Imperial Army; and (b) to provide just and honorable compensation to these victims."
MP Olivia Chow will also visit the exhibits and help collect signature at site. She will be there on August 4 (Saturday) at around 1 p.m.

[Read More....]

Vancouver area July 2007 housing prices jump another 10% month-on-month

Click:
REBGV release – The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver reports that total residential sales reached 3,873 units in July 2007, a thermometer-breaking 41.8% increase when compared to 2,732 sales in July 2006 and an increase of 5.0% when compared to 3,687 sales in July 2005.

This figure represents the second highest number of sales during the month of July in the Board’s history. The highest number of sales for that month was recorded in July 2003, when 4,023 sales were reported.

"At the beginning of the year, most experts predicted a slower market than what we’ve experienced for the past five years in the Greater Vancouver area," says REBGV president Brian Naphtali. "To date, REALTORS® are reporting the exact opposite as the housing market continues to exceed market forecasts."

During this period, new listings for detached, attached and apartment properties increased by 12.7% to 4,924 units compared to the 4,370 units listed in July 2006. The total number of active listings increased by 7.6% to 11,215 units when compared to July 2006’s 10,424 units.

"We saw a lot of movement this July in the sales of detached and apartment properties in almost every area of our Board. Some of this movement could be the result of the recent increase in interest rates as consumers who are locked into mortgages at a good rate move up in the market," explains Naphtali. "With the average amount of days a property stays on the market holding steady at a brisk 38 days, consumers should contact their REALTOR® to find out how this will affect the sale or purchase of a home."

According to Multiple Listings Service® (MLS®) data, sales of apartment properties increased by 40.9% to 1,674 sales in June 2007 compared to 1,188 sales in June 2006. The benchmark price of an apartment property in Greater Vancouver, calculated by the MLSLink® Housing Price Index, is $364,510, up 10.8% from one year ago.

Sales of attached properties increased by 39.6% in July 2007 to 716 sales, compared to 513 sales in July 2006. The benchmark price of an attached unit is $448,383, up 10.8% from a year ago.

Sales of detached properties increased by 43.8% in July 2007 to 1,483 sales, compared to 1,031 sales in July 2006. The benchmark price of a detached unit is $714,810, up 10.9% from last year.

Bright spots in Greater Vancouver in July 2007 compared to July 2006:

DETACHED:
Richmond up 80.4%............... (175 units sold, up from 97)
West Vancouver/Howe Sound up 88.6%.... (83 units sold, up from 44)
Vancouver East up 72.0%............ (227 units sold, up from 132)
Sunshine Coast up 70.2%.................. (80 units sold, up from 47)
Port Coquitlam up 55.0%............... (62 units sold, up from 40)
Burnaby up 47.2%...................... (131 units sold, up from 89)

ATTACHED:
Port Moody/Belcarra up 158.8%.... (44 units sold, up from 17)
Port Coquitlam up 125.0% …………. (45 units sold, up from 20)
Burnaby up 68.2%...................... (106 units sold, up from 63)
North Vancouver up 39.4%.................. (46 units sold, up from 33)
Whistler/Pemberton up 340.0%........ (22 units sold, up from 5)

APARTMENTS:
Port Moody/Belcarra up 152.9%.... (43 units sold, up from 17)
New Wesminster up 69.0%................. (98 units sold, up from 58)
Port Coquitlam up 60.6% …………. (53 units sold, up from 33)
Burnaby up 43.6%........ (237 units sold, up from 165)
Richmond up 52.6%........ (203 units sold, up from 133)
Vancouver West up 27.9%........ (578 units sold, up from 452)

[Read More....]

Microsoft BC begins hiring; immigrants excited

CIV - Microsoft Canada's Richmond branch has begun hiring! On July 31, four new Vancouver positions have been put up on Microsoft's career website. A hiring spree is expected after more senior positions are filled.

The four new positions for Microsoft's Richmond branch are: software design engineer in test, software design engineer, program manager and facilities manager. John Thibodeau, a spokesperson for Microsoft Canada, said the company is busy preparing for the opening of the Richmond branch and he cannot release too much details at this point.

However, he said a recruitment email has been opened to deal with inquiries about employment opportunities: mcdcinq@microsoft.com. Resumes can also be sent through this email, Thibodeau told Ming Pao.

The hiring ads also lists some of the benefits Microsoft offers to their staff that would only make many envy:

  • Stock Awards & Employee Stock Purchase Plan
  • Registered Retirement Savings Plan
  • Tuition Reimbursement
  • Employee Software Purchase Program
  • Fitness Membership & Subsidy
  • I Volunteer (5 Paid Volunteer Days)
  • Employee Assistance Program
The news have excited many immigrants from China who have been eyeing Microsoft's career opportunities closely ever since it announced its plan to set up an office in BC.

Job details here.

Miss Zheng said she will wait until Microsoft begins hiring lower level programmers before she submits her application. "The positions they are hiring now look like more senior ones. I'd expect these four positions will be filled by people who will be interviewing me in the future."

Mrs Chen was a software engineer when she was in China. She's been in Canada for two years. She said she would apply right away.

In fact, Mrs Chen has been preparing herself since Microsoft announces its move to BC. She immediately enrolled herself in a $2000 professional training, saying she has to refresh her knowledge after not being in the IT field over the last two years.

Ms Jin and her husband are both computer professionals when they were in China. They even hold Microsoft certificates. However, they failed to find the right jobs for the last two years in Canada. The husband has returned to China with the son, leaving Ms Jin behind to wait until she gets the citizenship. Jin is working as a temporary cashier in a local supermarket. She has plan to return to China after she got the Canadian passport.

However, the good news from Microsoft has her decided to put the plan on hold and proactively tries to win a position in Microsoft's 80,000-sq-ft office in Richmond. She has thus enrolled in an ESL class, hoping to brush up her English.

Non-IT people are also eyeing on spin-off opportunities Microsoft might bring to Richmond. Ms Gong loves to invest in property and has 3 houses under her name. She is convinced that Microsoft will bring huge economic benefits to BC and especially Richmond, which will in turn drive up property prices further. She urges those who are waiting for the market to cool down before they buy their homes to buy RIGHT NOW. She herself also put on hold a plan to sell one of her property. She said she'll now wait for her property to appreciate further.

[Read More....]

After 18 months as Canada's 'New Government', Tories fail to impress Canadians

Ipsos Reid release – Despite controlling the government benches and federal agenda for the past 18 months, Stephen Harper’s Conservative government has failed to improve its support among the electorate.

A new Ipsos Reid poll finds that the Conservatives, at 34% support nationally, are down slightly from the results of the General Election in January of 2006 (36%), and have continued to hover around that level of support since taking office a year and a half ago.

As the federal Conservative caucus meets in Charlottetown this week to reflect on the past 18 months and to plan the government’s agenda for the fall session of parliament, some Tories may be scratching their heads to figure out what they have to do to pull away from the Liberal Party that follows closely at 32% support nationally.

With Harper’s government still some distance away from majority territory—which typically requires a minimum of 40% support across the country—it appears that Canadians might have to brace for many more sessions of minority government politics.

The New Democratic Party, under the leadership of Jack Layton, has also settled in at 17% support, which is the same level of support it has received since the middle of May. While the Green Party under Elizabeth May continues to enjoy nearly twice the level of support that they received in the 2006 Federal Election, it appears that their growth has levelled off at 8% support nationally.

The Bloc Quebecois has dropped 2% points nationally, receiving the support of 8% of Canadians, or 33% of Quebecers, which represents a decline of 4% points within that province. However, the Liberals and the Conservatives still trail the Bloc in Quebec, but are tied at 23% support—a 5% point gain for the Liberals, and a modest rebound of 2% for the Tories.

Regionally, Conservatives support remains highest in Alberta, although it has dropped significantly from 74 percent on May 31 to 56 percent this week. Since June, the conservatives have rebounded by only 1 percentage point. In British Columbia, the Conservatives have pulled slightly ahead of the Grits, but the Conservatives continue to trail the Liberals in vote-rich Ontario, with the Liberals receiving 40%, and the Conservatives 35% support.

Perhaps falling victim to the recent campaign against the Harper Government regarding the Atlantic Accord, the Conservatives weakest support is in fact in Atlantic Canada, receiving the support of 31% Atlantic Canadians, which is 10% points behind the Liberals. The Conservatives have dropped substantially in Saskatchewan/Manitoba, receiving only 35% support compared to the 50% support that they were receiving in June.

Although rebounding slightly from the dip in support that was likely caused by the recent campaign against the Harper Government regarding the Atlantic Accord in June, the Conservatives weakest support (aside from Quebec) is still in Atlantic Canada, whey they have the support of 31% of Atlantic Canadians, which is 10% points behind the Liberals.

The Liberals continue to enjoy a marked lead over the Conservatives in Atlantic Canada, but have slipped from 45% support in June to 41% currently. They have increased their support in Quebec by 5% points, now claiming the same amount of support among Quebecers as the Conservatives—23%. Aside from these slight differences, Liberal support across Canada has remained stagnant.

The NDP are the strongest in Saskatchewan/Manitoba, receiving 33% support, and only trailing the Conservatives by 2% points. This represents an increase for the NDP of 11% points since June, and suggests that no one party dominates the Prairie Provinces in terms of levels of support. The NDP fares the worst in Alberta (12% support) and Quebec (13%). These numbers represent a 4% point increase of support within Alberta, and a 5% dip in support within Quebec.

By gender, men favour the Conservatives (39%) over the Liberals (29%) by a 10% point margin, while women prefer the Liberals (36%) over the Conservatives (28%) by an eight-point margin. The NDP draws relatively equal support among men (16%) and women (17%), as does the Green Party (men: 8%; women: 8%). The Bloc Quebecois draws higher support among women (10%) than men (7%).

The Green Party at 8% support is consistently ahead of the 5% they received nationally in the 2006 General Election, but their increased support appears to have levelled off. Regionally, they are strongest in British Columbia and Alberta (each at 11% support), however, they have dipped 7% points in British Columbia, and 2% points in Alberta. In Ontario, the Green Party is at 8% support, a dip of only 1% point since June of this year. They have failed to break through in Saskatchewan/Manitoba, receiving just 4% support from residents in those provinces.

By age, Conservatives continue enjoy an advantage among respondents 55 years and older (38%) as compared to the 18-to-34-year-old cohort (25%). The Liberals enjoy comparable amounts of support from among all age categories. The NDP draws higher support among those 18 to 34 years of age (21%) than among those aged 35 or older (15%). Support for the Green Party is higher among those 18 to 34 years of age (10%) and 35 to 54 years (9%) than among those 55 years and older (5%). Support for the Bloc is highest among those 18 to 34 years of age (10%), while lower among those aged 35 and older (8%).

These are the findings of an Ipsos Reid poll conducted for CanWest News Service/Global News and fielded from July 24 -27, 2007. For this survey, a representative randomly selected sample of 1,000 adult Canadians was interviewed by telephone. With a sample of this size, the aggregate results are considered accurate to within ±3.1 percentage points, 19 times out of 20, of what they would have been had the entire adult Canadian population been polled. The margin of error will be larger within each sub-grouping of the survey population. These data were weighted to ensure the sample's regional and age/sex composition reflects that of the actual Canadian population according to Census data.

[Read More....]

Who are more "Chinese"?

I was strolling down Chinatown the other day when I suddenly realized why local born Chinese have so many disappointment towards newer Chinese immigrants.

When I walked pass Dr Sun Yatsen Garden, images of events being held there all these years just kept coming up. I remember the lantern festival when the Garden was host to many many handmade lanterns by kids of all ethnicities. One year, I sent our photographer to get some pictures of the festival. He came back saying the lanterns looked weird and didn't look very "Chinese". And we were joking: "no wonder, it was hosted by a group of CBCs".

The I asked myself: "Why would we say that?"

They are CBCs, yes, but they are trying hard to retain their Chinese roots by hosting events like the lantern festival. We should respect their effort at the very least. But we ended up teasing them for not understanding the real Chinese culture.

Is that fair?

Honestly, I have become more sensitive to the feelings of CBCs re Chinese culture only recently, through inspirations from my newly made friends Todd Wong and David Wong.

They are Canadians with a proud Chinese root. They are trying to keep maintain some of the cultural traditions but then they are blasted "not Chinese." If that was me, how would I react?

I might say "yea, I'm not a Chinese. I'm a Canadian!" Then somebody might say "see? They don't know how to be a Chinese."

It is this kind of useless, meaningless race to claim who are more "Chinese" that is splitting our community: Immigrants saying CBCs aren't Chinese; PRC immigrants say HK immigrants are destroying Chinese culture.

Why would I say that?


Some heated discussions in the world of online forum have been going on for some time about how Cantonese are killing the Chinese language. We all know that the majority of the earliest Chinese pioneers came from Guangdong province - villages like Toi Shan, Hoi Ping etc, who hardly knew any English. They used their own unique way of transliterating English words into Chinese characters. For instance, "insurance" was transliterated as "yin saw", which literally combines two Chinese characters: swallow and comb. The term is purely phonetic and doesn't mean to have its literal meaning taken seriously.

However, these words have been pain in as* to some recent PRC immigrants. Some say by transliterating English words using Cantonese pronunciation, the Cantonese are killing the Chinese language and civilization. The argument itself is ridiculous. Had northern Chinese come as pioneers a century ago, they would have done the same thing - only to have English words transliterated into Mandarin phonetic terms.

Sad. Self-important attitude like this has prevented Chinese to be united as one group like the Japanese or the Jews.

[Read More....]

Vancouver for vacation, Toronto for doing business, Montreal for arts and culture, poll says

RATING CANADA’S CITIES

VACATION IN VANCOUVER,
DO BUSINESS IN TORONTO,
& SHOP IN MONTREAL
_______________

Toronto rated:
best to do business in (37%),
best for sports and recreation (23%),
best for arts & culture (23%)

Montreal is:

best for nightlife (41%),
best city to eat out in (31%),
best city to shop in (30%)

Vancouver voted:

best city to vacation in (23%),
best city to live in (14%),
and best city in Canada (13%)

Calgary best city to find a job in (36%)

Charlottetown is safest city (18%), and has best sense of community (11%)

-------------------------------

Angus Reid release – With an upcoming August holiday to reflect on Canadian heritage and provincial pride, a new Angus Reid Strategies poll asks Canadians to think about which cities in their country are the best in 12 categories.

The results from the online survey of a representative national sample show that Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver register prominently in the minds of Canadians.

One of these three cities is picked as the best in nine of the 12 areas, despite the fact that most provinces tend to pick cities in their region as top for each category.

Toronto shows strong numbers in three areas: best city to do business in (37%), best city for sports and recreation (23%), and best city for arts and culture (23%).

Montreal is also a clear favourite in three leisure-related categories: best city for nightlife (41%), best city to eat out in (31%), and best city to shop in (30%).

And while Vancouver is certainly Canada’s favourite city to vacation in (23%), the city is a tentative first place in two key areas—best city to live in (14%) and best city in Canada (13%).

Both these categories had a high number from each province selecting a city in their region as their top choice, which kept any one city from emerging as a clear favourite.

Nonetheless, across the country Vancouver still remains in first place, with Montreal a close second for best city to live in (11%) and for best city in Canada (12%).

In the area of employment, Calgary is definitely the place to be. 36% of Canadians feel Calgary is the best city to find a job in, and the city is top for this category across all regions but Quebec.

And Charlottetown is top in the category of safest city (18%) and tied with Quebec City for best sense of community (both 11%). These two categories again had a strong regional split, with each province picking a local city as their top candidate.

Among political party supporters, the Conservatives, Liberals and NDP have similar tastes for each category. However, for best city, Conservative voters pick Calgary (15%), Liberals choose Ottawa (15%) and Vancouver (15%), and NDP supporters select Vancouver (19%).

[Read More....]

Continue to explain Japan's position fully: Abe

Reading between the lines = Japan will not swallow the guilt and will continue to persuade the world to believe in the right wingers' version of history.

-------------------------------

Asahi - Embattled Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, reacting to a U.S. Congress resolution urging a full apology to wartime "comfort women," said Tuesday that Japan must more clearly explain its position on this highly charged issue.

The U.S. House of Representatives on Monday adopted the nonbinding resolution by acclamation, with no dissenters.

It urged Japan to "formally acknowledge, apologize, and accept historical responsibility" for the Imperial Japanese Army's "coercion of young women into sexual slavery."

It called on the prime minister to apologize "in his official capacity."

Abe, still reeling from his Liberal Democratic Party's crushing defeat in Sunday's Upper House election, called the resolution "regrettable," a commonplace term used in widely varying contexts to mask the speaker's feelings on the subject.

"I think it important to continue explaining (Japan's position) fully," Abe said.

Support for the resolution was fueled abroad when Abe in March suggested there was no proof that the Japanese military had "coerced" women to work in wartime brothels.

In April, Abe met with Congressional leaders during his visit to Washington and said he had gained their "understanding" of his stance on the issue. He also offered apologies to the "comfort women."

The resolution was submitted in January by Congressman Mike Honda, a California Democrat of Japanese descent.

In Seoul, South Korea's Foreign Affairs and Trade Ministry welcomed the resolution in a statement Tuesday.

Reactions in Japan on Tuesday were mixed.

Citizens groups visited the Cabinet Office to hand in a statement urging the government to apologize.

Meanwhile, Satoru Mizushima, president of Channel Sakura, a satellite broadcasting company, expressed disappointment his and other people's efforts had failed to stop the resolution from being adopted.

"We were defeated by forces that are trying to push apart Japan and the United States," Mizushima said.

After the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed the resolution 39-2 on June 26, Mizushima and like-minded lawmakers presented a letter of protest to the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo.

Other groups have urged the government to rethink its position.

Masaaki Noda, a professor of psychopathology at Kwansei Gakuin University, said the government must heed similar resolutions adopted in Asian countries.

Noda examined six former "comfort women" now living in China in June. The elderly women still experience severe post-traumatic stress, Noda said.

"The former 'comfort women' are still suffering," he said. "Japan has a responsibility to support their treatment."

Akihiko Reizei, a writer who lives in the United States, noted that Japanese-Americans like Honda pushed for the resolution apparently out of concern Abe's remarks would mar the trust they have built with Chinese- and Korean-Americans.

"The (Japanese-Americans) firmly believe that, as people with roots in Japan, they must call for Japan's reconciliation with China and South Korea," he said.

Four similar resolutions have been presented to Congress, but none was adopted. The tide turned after Abe's remarks in March, which were seen as an attempt to back away from Japan's official 1993 government statement that admitted the military's involvement and apologized.

A full-page ad June 14 in the Washington Post by a group of Japanese critical of the resolution added fuel to the fire.

Read also:





[Read More....]

'Truth survives and lies never win,' former sex slave says

Japan expresses regret over U.S. call for apology in WWII sex slavery

July 31, 2007

IHT - Prime Minister Shinzo Abe described as "regrettable" on Tuesday the approval of a resolution by the U.S. House of Representatives calling on Japan to acknowledge its wartime sex slavery, indicating strongly that the Japanese government would not offer surviving victims an official apology.

"The resolution's approval was regrettable," said Abe, who provoked anger in Asia and the United States in March by denying that the Japanese military had directly coerced women into sex slavery during World War II.

News of the resolution's approval, which had been expected, came as Abe faced more calls to resign after his governing Liberal Democratic Party's crushing defeat in the election on Sunday for the upper house of Parliament.

Asked whether he would comply with the resolution's call for an official apology, Abe said: "The 20th century was an era in which human rights were violated. I would like to make the 21st century into an era with no human rights violations."

On Monday, the House unanimously passed a nonbinding resolution demanding that the Japanese government "formally acknowledge" and "apologize" for its military's "coercion of women into sexual slavery."

The Japanese government had lobbied hard against the resolution in Washington, warning that it could harm relations between the two countries.

Abe has expressed sympathy for the former sex slaves. But he has consistently refused to acknowledge the military's role in directly forcing women into sex slavery despite historical evidence and the testimony of many of the women.

Some of the aging former sex slaves, known euphemistically as "comfort women" in Japan, and their advocates welcomed the resolution. But they reacted angrily to Abe's response.

"Abe denies that they were the ones who violated the women," said Jan Ruff O'Herne, 84, a Dutch woman who was forced into sex slavery in Indonesia. "I didn't expect anything better from him than that."

"But this resolution puts enormous pressure on the Japanese government," Ruff added, speaking by phone from her home in Adelaide, Australia. "I'm still hoping that something will happen, because the women are getting old, and we deserve a proper apology."

Gil Won Ok, 78, a South Korean woman who was forced into sex slavery in northeastern China, said that "truth survives and lies never win."

"I think that's why America passed this resolution," said Gil, speaking from Seoul. "I was worried that Japan's active lobbying would not make this happen."

The Japanese Parliament has never endorsed an official apology or acknowledgement of past sex slavery, the central demand in the House resolution, though previous prime ministers have issued letters of apology to some of the former sex slaves.

Last spring, Abe bluntly rejected any demand for an apology. But since then he has avoided talking in detail about the issue. He has repeated instead that many human rights violations occurred last century, angering former sex slaves and their supporters who say his comments were meant to play down Japan's crimes.

"Abe really does not know his history," said Nelia Sancho, leader of Lolas Kampanyera, a group supporting former sex slaves in Manila. "In order to create a world without human rights violations, each state has to learn from its past mistakes and, most importantly, it has to redress its past violations. Until that is done, the 21st century will not become an era with no human rights violations."

Read also:







[Read More....]

ALPHA's response to final passing of 'comfort women' resolution

Really hope Stephen Harper would follow US's foot steps on this one.

------------------------

News release from the Global Alliance for Preserving the History of WWII in Asia:

H.Res.121 Passed in the House with Uninamous Bipartisan Support

The vote today in the House of Representative on H. Res. 121, the so called "Comfort Women" resolution, is a milestone in the pursuit of justice of the more than 200,000 Asian and Western women who suffered sexual and physical abuse, death and humiliation at the hands of hundreds of thousands of Japanese troops during the Second World War in Asia from 1931-1945.

The systematic violation, exploitative, and degradation of women by the Japanese military in the Asia Pacific region is one of the most horrific crimes committed against humanity during WWII. The hundreds of thousands of victims consisted of Korean, Chinese, Taiwanese, Japanese, Malaysian, Filipina, Indonesian and Dutch women. They were kept in so-called "comfort stations as sexual slaves and subjected to constant abuse, physical and verbal, and routinely forced to service from 10 to 40 men daily.

H. Res. 121, introduced by Mike Honda (D-CA15), calls for the government of Japan to, in a clear and unequivocal manner, 1) formally acknowledge, apologize, and accept historical responsibility for the systematic exploitative of the "comfort women"; 2) apologize in a public statement by the Prime Minister of Japan in his official capacity; 3) clearly and publicly refute any claims the sexual enslavement and
trafficking of "comfort women" never occurred; and 4) educate current and future generations about this horrible war crime in conformity with recommendations of the international community regarding the "comfort women."

The passage of this resolution with unanimous bipartisan support in the House sends a clear message to the Japanese government that the international community will no longer tolerate Japan's continual denial of this travesty against the women of Asia and of the world and that Japan must bear the responsibility for this crime against humanity. It is the first step toward addressing the injustice done to the many victims of Japan's imperialistic ambitions in Asia during the Asia Pacific War.

For the surviving women, it is the first step toward receiving the justice which is their due. We solute the brave women who have bravely come forward to testify in the House of Congress before the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee a couple of months ago.

Furthermore, the passage of this resolution also signals that the time is ripe for our Asian American community organizations to work together to achieve our common objectives. It is through unity that we have the strength to address the injustices that our communities have suffered for the past 70 years and have not yet been resolved.


See more stories here.

[Read More....]

Japan regrets US 'comfort women' demand

Independent Online - Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Tuesday expressed regret at a US resolution demanding an "unambiguous apology" for Japan's use of sex slaves in World War II, saying he hoped to look to the future instead.

The conservative leader, who has stirred controversy with his past remarks on so-called "comfort women," said he had already made his views clear when he visited Washington earlier this year.

"It is regrettable that this resolution was passed," Abe told reporters a day after the resolution in the US House of Representatives.

"The 20th century was an era of human rights abuses. We want to make the 21st century a bright time for the people in the world with no human rights abuses."

Click here!

'The resolution is not based on facts'
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki said earlier Tuesday that "the government had addressed the comfort women issue sincerely".

Jiji Press news agency said Japan would not protest the resolution but would wait in hope that the issue calmed down.

Abe's government does not want to ruffle relations with the United States, Japan's closest ally, after suffering a crushing defeat in Sunday's elections, the news agency said.

Abe earlier this year triggered outrage when he said there was no evidence that Japan's imperial army directly forced comfort women into wartime brothels.

But he has said that he stands by Japan's past apology to comfort women. The US congressional resolution passed Monday called for Japan to make an "unambiguous apology" and make amends.

The Japanese government earlier set up a fund to compensate former comfort women, but most shunned it as an insult because the money came from private donations - not the state.

Senior Japanese lawmakers voiced particular outrage over the bill's sponsor, Mike Honda, a Japanese-American who was interned as a child during World War II and has called compensation for comfort women a human rights issue.

Japan's former farm minister Yoshinobu Shimamura accused the Democratic congressman of trying to "score political points" among Asian-American voters in his California constituency.

"The resolution is not based on facts," Shimamura said, as quoted by Jiji Press.

"It is feared that people who aren't familiar with those days will believe it (that sex slaves existed)," he said. "As a Japanese lawmaker, I have the responsibility to assert that it is not true."

Shimamura was among dozens of Japanese lawmakers who took out a full-page advertisement in The Washington Post in June denying Japan's military forced the women into sexual slavery.


See more stories here.

[Read More....]

Symbolic, landmark 'comfort women' resolution passed by US lawmakers

BBC - US lawmakers have called on Japan's government to formally apologise for its role in forcing thousands of women to work as sex slaves in World War II.

The symbolic and non-binding resolution was passed during a vote in the House of Representatives.

Up to 200,000 "comfort women" from across the Far East were part of Japan's military brothel programme.

Japan says it has shown sufficient remorse over the issue. A spokesman said the resolution was "regrettable".

Chief Cabinet Spokesman Yasuhisa Shiozaki told a news conference that Japan had "handled the comfort women issue with sincerity".

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had "clearly explained his views" on the subject during a visit to Washington in April, he said.

'Nauseating' denials

The resolution calls on Japan - one of the strongest US allies in Asia - to "formally acknowledge, apologise and accept historical responsibility in a clear and unequivocal manner" for the suffering of the women.

Those who posit that all of the comfort women were happily complicit and acting of their own accord simply do not understand the meaning of the word rape
Tom Lantos
House Committee on Foreign Affairs chairman

Earlier this month, a group of Japanese lawmakers demanded the US government retract the resolution, saying it was based on "wrong information that is totally different from the historical fact".

Tom Lantos, chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs, described attempts to deny the use of sex slaves as "nauseating".

"There can be no denying the Japanese imperial military coerced thousands upon thousands of Asian women," Mr Lantos said.

"Those who posit that all of the comfort women were happily complicit and acting of their own accord simply do not understand the meaning of the word rape."

In 1993 Japan issued an official apology for the suffering of comfort women, acknowledging its involvement managing the brothels. But it was never approved by parliament and Japan has rejected most compensation claims, saying they were settled by treaties.

Mr Abe caused an uproar in March when he said there was no proof that the government or the military had forced the women into sexual servitude.

He later apologised, saying he felt sympathy for those affected.

The resolution comes at a difficult time for Mr Abe. On Sunday his ruling coalition suffered a crushing defeat in upper house polls, losing its majority and handing control of the house to the opposition.

He is facing pressure from the public and the media to step down, but the premier says he plans to remain in office and continue with an agenda of reform.


See more stories here.

[Read More....]

Japan rejects US calls for apology over 'comfort women'

The Guardian - Japan today said it regretted a US congressional resolution demanding that it formally apologise for the use of tens of thousands of Asian women as sex slaves during the second world war, and insisted it had already made amends to the victims.

The US House of Representatives passed a nonbinding resolution calling on the Japanese government to "formally acknowledge, apologise and accept historical responsibility in a clear and unequivocal manner" for the sexual enslavement of as many as 200,000 "comfort women" in the 30s and 40s.

The victims, mostly from Korea, China and the Philippines, were taken from their homes and sent to an estimated 2,000 frontline brothels across Asia, according to some historians.

"The resolution is regrettable," the Japanese prime minister, Shinzo Abe, told reporters. "I explained my views and the government's response on this matter during my visit to the US in April."

Then, Mr Abe said he stood by an unofficial 1993 apology made by the then chief cabinet secretary that acknowledged the military had coerced the women.

Previously, however, he had claimed there was no evidence of coercion and aligned himself with nationalist Japanese MPs who insist the women were procured by private contractors.

The resolution, proposed by the California Democrat Mike Honda, had threatened to damage relations between Japan and its closest military ally.

In June the US ambassador to Washington, Ryozo Kato, warned that passage of the resolution would "almost certainly have lasting and harmful effects on the deep friendship, close trust and wide-ranging cooperation our two nations now enjoy".

But today officials in Tokyo, apparently chastened by the governing coalition's heavy defeat in upper house elections on Sunday, offered only a muted protest.

"[Mr Abe] went to America in April and explained his thinking on this problem again," the chief cabinet secretary, Yasuhisa Shiozaki, said. "It is unfortunate that the US House of Representatives nonetheless passed this resolution. Our government has dealt sincerely with the problem of the comfort women."

That contrasted with the rhetoric in Washington, where Tom Lantos, the Democrat chairman of the House foreign affairs committee, described attempts to play down the comfort women's plight as "nauseating". Japan, he said, had tried to "distort and deny history and play a game of blame the victim. The world awaits a full reckoning of history from the Japanese government".

Japan says it has already apologised and that any compensation claims were settled in postwar treaties with its former enemies. It set up a private find for the women in 1995, but only 300 of them accepted the one-time payments of $20,000 (£9,800) each. The fund was closed earlier this year.

Read also:





[Read More....]

Unions essential, but strike too much, too political: poll

I think services provided by garbage collectors, teachers, nurses should all be mandated as "essential service" and they shouldn't be allowed to strike. I have had enough of such once every few years... mainly because reporting on strike news is sooooooo boring and tiring.

Public servants are providing "public" service and we the taxpayers are paying them, not their "employers". They should be held more accountable to us the taxpayers. They cannot just apologize to the public and blame everything onto the other side.

Or, they can strike, but residents who have been inconvenienced and whose normal lives are disrupted should be compensated. Compensation - or penalty - must bee written as laws - either the unions or the city/provincial/fed governments will have to pay. Then either side wouldn't take strike too easily.

----------------

  • 59% say labour unions are necessary and important in society
  • 72% say unions effectively improve workers’ salaries and working conditions
But…
  • Most Canadians want strikes used sparingly; emergency and health workers should never strike, city employees and telecom workers get more leeway
  • Half (50%) do not want Canada to amend its labour code to prevent the hiring of strikebreakers
  • 70% say unions are too involved in political activities
Angus Reid release - Canadians believe in the concept of labour unions, but do not seem to support their core methods of exercising power and gaining influence, a new Angus Reid Strategies poll has found.

In the online survey of a representative national sample, about three-in-five Canadians (59%) say labour unions are a necessary and important entity in our society, while almost three-in-four (72%) agree that unions effectively improve salaries and working conditions of workers.

But seven-in-ten Canadians (70%) think labour unions are too involved in political activities, and almost half (48%) think unions have too much influence in Canadian life. Two-thirds (65%) also believe that Canada has adequate labour laws to protect federal and provincial workers, suggesting that unions have done a good job in pushing their interests through in the past, but may not be as useful now.

And most Canadians seem to want unionized workers to only strike on a very limited basis. In the poll, respondents were given a list of eight types of unionized worker, and asked how freely each type should be able to exercise its right to strike.

For every type of worker, only about 20% say they should be able to strike always or most of the time, but seven-in-ten respondents say they believe they should strike either sometimes or never.

Concern for losing life-or-death public services is likely key, as emergency workers and health workers provoke the strongest “don’t strike” response from Canadians. For emergency workers, 68% think they should never strike, and 14% say they should strike only some of the time. For health workers, 58% say they should never strike, while 21% think they should be able to strike some of the time.

A high number also never want strikes from public transit employees (44%) or public school teachers (43%), and slightly fewer never want strikes from provincial civil servants (37%) or federal civil servants (37%). But Canadians give slightly more flexibility to other workers—a relatively high number believe that city and municipal employees (39%) and telecommunications workers (41%) can sometimes strike rather than never being allowed to strike.

As well, half of Canadians (50%) also do not support amending the Canada Labour Code to prevent employers from hiring strikebreakers.

Those from Atlantic Canada are generally more supportive of labour unions and the tactics they engage in: three-in-four (78%) believe unions effectively improve salaries and working conditions for workers, a relatively high number (41%) support amending the Canada Labour Code to prevent employers from hiring strikebreakers, and in general, a higher number believe all workers should strike always or most of the time.

Canadians 55 and over, those with university education, and those in households earning less than $50,000 a year are more likely to believe that labour unions are necessary to society and improve working conditions for workers.

But Canadians 55 and over, those with university education, and those in households earning $50,000 to $99,000 a year are more likely to say that unionized workers should only sometimes strike or never strike, for all eight types of worker.

As well, Conservative supporters are more likely to feel that unions have too much influence in Canadian life (72%), highly disagree with the idea that unions are necessary and important in society (52%), and are more likely to say unionized workers should only sometimes or never strike.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, NDP voters are more likely to believe that unions effectively improve salaries and working conditions of workers (83%), that unions are important to society (80%), and think that unions wield too little influence in Canadian life (32%). They are much more likely to believe that unions should be able to strike always or most of the time.

[Read More....]

Car plunges 500ft off cliff near Vancouver's nude beach


UPDATE 10 PM

The man has been rescued. The 45-year-old New Westminster man was naked when he drove off the cliff! We were joking at the office tonight that perhaps he mistakenly pulled the wrong "stick shift" while driving at an excessive speed.... hor hor hor

Anyway, this story is amazing. The van plunged approx. 500 ft down the cliff and landed on a bunch of trees. The man managed to get out of the van, found a trail and walked for another 100 metres or so to a beach. He was found alive on the beach by rescuers. It's not only a miracle that this man survived, but he suffered only scratches and bruises -- not even a single broken bone!


UPDATE 3:45 PM
One person has now been rescued after a strange crash over an embankment above Wreck Beach. A van missed a corner along Northwest Marine Drive and flew over a fence and down the cliff.

The man was found by police down on the beach with scrapes and bruises and had to be rescued by hovercraft because the ambulance couldn't reach him where he landed. Police say he told them he was the only person in the van at the time of the crash.

At this time, it is not known whether alcohol was involved or if the van was stolen.

-----
CP, 1130, CTV - A rescue mission is underway at Vancouver's wreck beach, after a vehicle went off a cliff in the area.

The Canadian Coast Guard has sent in a hover craft to help with the rescue.

Andy Howell with the Coast Guard says the vehicle is currently 500 ft off the side of a cliff.

He says it's not known how many people are in the vehicle or if there are any injuries.

People on the beach say they have one person down at beach level and they can hear other people trapped in the vehicle entangled in the bush about 100 ft above the beach.

There may be as many as five people in the vehicle. A coast guard vessel has also been dispatched to the scene.


[Read More....]

Microsoft Canada calls Richmond home!

City release - The City of Richmond, British Columbia is pleased to announce it has been chosen as the home for the new Microsoft Canada Development Centre.

Scheduled to open in the early fall, the Microsoft Canada Development Centre will focus on software development and will eventually employ hundreds of highly-skilled workers from around the world. Earlier this month, Microsoft Corp. announced its intentions to establish a centre in the Greater Vancouver area. Microsoft has now reached an agreement to lease two buildings totalling 80,000 square feet located in the Crestwood Corporate Centre, which is owned and operated by Bentall Capital, and is acknowledged as one of the leading business parks in the Greater Vancouver area.

"We are extremely pleased to welcome Microsoft to Richmond," said Mayor Malcolm Brodie. "Microsoft is recognized as a worldwide leader and they are a perfect match with Richmond's vision and own commitment to excellence."

"This is an exciting opportunity for the Crestwood Corporate Centre," said Doug Reid, Senior Vice President, Bentall Capital L.P. "We have a world-class facility in Richmond, and we are very proud to be working with Microsoft to establish a Canadian software development centre and support its growth in the coming years."

Richmond is already home to some of Canada's leading international technology firms including MDA, Sierra Wireless, Sage Software, Ventyx and McKeeson Medical Imaging. The addition of Microsoft will ensure Richmond continues to develop as a nexus for technology industries in Western Canada and the Pacific Northwest.

"The new Microsoft Canada Development Centre in Richmond will be one of only a handful of development centres outside the company's Redmond, Wash., headquarters," said Phil Sorgen, President of Microsoft Canada. "Richmond and the Greater Vancouver area are a global gateway with a diverse population. In addition, the close proximity to Microsoft's corporate offices in Redmond will allow for close collaboration with other development efforts. We are tremendously excited about this new facility and look forward to setting up our new office in Richmond."

In addition to location and access to global markets, Microsoft cited quality of life for its employees as an important consideration in its selection of Richmond. A modern city with a full array of recreational, cultural and commercial amenities, Richmond was recently named as "Canada's Healthiest City" by Canadian Living magazine and is one of Canada's most culturally diverse cities.

The City quickly assembled a team to work with Microsoft throughout its process of choosing a location within the Greater Vancouver area for the new facility. City staff will now focus on working with Microsoft to ensure the new facility is in operation as soon as possible.

[Read More....]

Canadians love BBQ, but no neighbours please: poll

  • 71% of Canadians say they own a barbecue or outdoor grill
  • 92% do not feel obligated to invite their neighbours over when hosting a barbecue
  • 59% say they are intermediate barbecuers
  • 11% rate themselves as professionals
  • 52% think any guest should work the grill at a barbecue, rather than solely the host/hostess
  • 58% say beef is their favourite food to grill, followed by chicken (21%)
  • High grill ownership in Manitoba & Saskatchewan, lower in Quebec
Angus Reid release – Most Canadians own a barbecue or outdoor grill, and hardly any of them feel they should invite their neighbours over when hosting a barbecue, a new Angus Reid Strategies poll has found.

In the online survey of a representative national sample, 71% of Canadians say they own a barbecue or outdoor grill, and nine-in-ten (92%) say they do not feel obligated to invite their neighbours when hosting a barbecue. The nine-in-ten figure carries across every demographic category available.

Grill ownership is especially high in Manitoba and Saskatchewan (81%) and relatively low in Quebec (65%). More women (73%) report owning a grill than men (69%), and Conservative supporters (82%) are more likely to own a barbecue than Liberal (69%) or NDP voters (69%.)

Rating their own barbecue skills, 59% peg themselves as intermediate chefs, while 5% identify as beginners and 11% say they are professionals.

Four-in-five from Manitoba and Saskatchewan (82%) and Atlantic Canada (79%) rate themselves as intermediates, and a relatively high percentage of men (15%), Ontarians (15%) and Albertans (13%) say they barbecue at a professional level.

Just over half of Canadians (52%) say that any guest can work the grill at a barbecue if he or she wants to, while 42% say only the host or hostess should take on chief grilling responsibility. Conservative voters (52%), Atlantic Canadians (54%) and Albertans (51%) are more inclined to believe the host or hostess should handle grilling duties, while those from Quebec (60%), Manitoba (55%), and British Columbia (54%) feel anyone can barbecue.

And finally, 58% of Canadians pick beef as their favourite food to barbecue, with chicken a distant second (21%). But in Atlantic Canada, pork (17%) rivals chicken (18%) for second place, and in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, the second most popular food is “other” (15%), whatever that may be. As well, Manitoba and Saskatchewan shows a distinct distaste for fish (0%), and grilling vegetables does not stand out for Albertans (0%).

By political party, Conservative supporters highly favour beef (69%) compared to the other parties. Liberal voters like beef too but enjoy pork (10%) and fish (8%) slightly more than the other parties, and NDP voters like chicken (28%) slightly more than the rest.

[Read More....]

Mummified baby may be clue to 80-year-old murder

WOWOWOWOWOW! Sounds like a scary movie...

-------------------

CTV - Toronto homicides detectives are investigating what could be an 80-year-old murder mystery after a mummified infant wrapped in a 1925 newspaper was found in the attic floor of an east-end home.

Renovator Bob Kinghorn made the grisly discovery Tuesday night at the home on Kintyre Avenue, near Broadview Avenue and Queen Street East.

Kinghorn, who lives two doors away from the three-storey, semi-detached home, was about to drill a hole through a ceiling joist for wiring when he noticed a bundle of newspaper in the attic floor of the home.

He first thought it was insulation in the empty home.

"I pushed on it, just trying to guess what was in the package before I opened it and I felt the bones," Kinghorn told reporters outside the home.

The 37-year-old, and a co-worker, had noticed a strange smell in the room, but didn't realize what it was until he removed the package from the wall and sliced it open with a knife.

The infant, who he guessed was about four months of age, was in a fetal position wrapped in a bundle of newsprint dated Sept. 12, 1925. The baby's toes were sticking out.

"It was disbelief, I didn't believe it. I thought it was a cat, dog, or something.''

Kinghorn said he started to cry when he realized what he found because the remains reminded him of his own 4-month-old child.

He told reporters he hopes the child will receive a proper burial.

"I have three kids and for a child to be put in a hole with no burying, it's wrong; 83 years stuck in the wall," Kinghorn said.

Kinghorn's wife phoned the police, who arrived on the scene shortly after 8 p.m.

After obtaining a search warrant, a police forensic team and body removal crew entered the home.

Kinghorn said paramedics who came to the scene said it looked like the infant had a crushed hip.

The mummified infant's remains will be examined at the Centre for Forensic Science in Toronto and an autopsy will be performed on Wednesday.

The case is being investigated by the homicide squad.

Sgt. Robert Whalen said the current homeowners are not suspects in the case.

[Read More....]

China to curb exports of cheap products; pointing to Hong Kong investors for cheapies

So the blaming game begins...

"Hong Kong-invested producers will probably be the hardest-hit by this move," Wang, the industry director, said. The Trade Ministry made the move "due to the changing international and domestic environment and China's promise to upgrade its industries," she said, adding that the government would provide some aid and incentives to help Hong Kong manufacturers with the transition.
--------------

IHT - China said Wednesday that it would curb exports of cheap, labor-intensive products to force manufacturers into making higher-quality goods, in a move to smooth relations with its major trading partners and mitigate the country's worsening environmental crisis.

The Ministry of Commerce will expand a catalogue of goods subject to mandatory export limits in the second half of 2007, following a move Monday to increase a tax on exporters, Wang Qinhua, the ministry's industry director, said.

"The new policy will add cost and affect the cash flow of exporters, especially those engaged in the labor-intensive part of the industry," she said.

China's record $112.5b first-half trade surplus has fanned tensions with the United States and the European Union, flooding the economy with more than $1.3 trillion in foreign currency reserves.

Low wages and lax enforcement of environmental rules have attracted manufacturers - 50% of them invested by Hong Kong companies - to produce leather goods, electronics, metal products, toys and other goods for sales abroad.

"Every nation wants to upgrade its technology, especially at a time of increasing global competition and rising raw material costs," Huang Yiping of Citigroup said. "Many companies in China already have been moving up the technology ladder and value chain, and this new policy will only accelerate this process."

The new limit may add about 8b yuan, or $1.06b, to costs for Chinese exporters, the ministry's trade director, Wang Jian, said.

"Hong Kong-invested producers will probably be the hardest-hit by this move," Wang, the industry director, said. The Trade Ministry made the move "due to the changing international and domestic environment and China's promise to upgrade its industries," she said, adding that the government would provide some aid and incentives to help Hong Kong manufacturers with the transition.

China said Monday that it would implement a tax on companies that import metals, plastic and textiles into China for use in products that will in turn be shipped abroad. Some goods that include copper, lead, zinc and cloth will be added to the restricted category.

[Read More....]

Burnaby oil spill turns into crude geyser, what a scene!


Note: Copyright Spirit Media (captured from TV)

A car sits in the middle of the road covered in oil after construction crew punctured a pipeline causing
an oil spill in Burnaby, B.C., Tuesday July 24, 2007. The oil from the pipeline has spilt
throughout the neighbourhood. (CP PHOTO/Richard Lam)



Pipeline rupture coats Vancouver suburb in black slick, forces evacuations

CP - Thick, black oil dripped from lampposts, splattered across suburban lawns and crept into the Burrard Inlet after a geyser of crude spewed from a burst pipeline Tuesday.

Work crews ripped into the TransMountain pipeline about 12:30 p.m., causing the oil to “explode,” as one witness put it, from the ground and burble up from manholes, pouring down streets toward the ocean, according to witnesses.

Officials knocked on about 100 doors to tell residents they may have to evacuate. As of late Tuesday afternoon, fewer than two dozen were considering leaving.

The growing slick in Burrard Inlet prompted Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan to assure residents the city will take “urgent action” to protect the Vancouver Port and Stanley Park.

Both sites are about 17 kilometres down the inlet toward the ocean, but it was unclear whether tides could hasten the spill's spread.

A heavy sickening odour hung in the air hours after the rupture.

One man, who didn't want to be named, said his red Honda suddenly became chocolate brown as he was driving.

“I don't know where it came from, it just hit the vehicle and there's oil all over. I had to stop, I couldn't see,” he said.

The pipeline is owned by Kinder Morgan Canada, said company spokesman Philippe Reicher.

He said the TransMountain pipeline carries crude oil from Edmonton to the Burnaby area, where it is stored before being piped onto ocean tankers for distribution.

He said the pipeline was hit by a contractor not employed by Kinder Morgan.

“Obviously we have no idea of the spill size at this time because we need to be able to do that investigation right now and figure out exactly how much,” Reicher said.

“I think the key for us is obviously to take all the necessary measures to protect the public and the environment.”

Burnaby Mayor Derik Corrigan confirmed the pipeline was ruptured by city crews working on a road upgrade.

Burnaby fire officials, a hazardous materials team and Environment Ministry officials were on the scene.

One man told CKNW Radio that oil gushed from the damaged line for almost half an hour.

Reicher said his company was alerted to the rupture at about 12:30 p.m. local time and immediately shut down the line.

Kathleen Dean lives half a block away from the rupture.

“All I can see is fire trucks, police cars, environmental people, lots of different authorities from all over the place are down there,” Dean said.

She said she can't get close to the area to see any effects of the oil rupture.

“They've got it pretty well all sealed off so that you cannot go down there.”

Brian Sterling, who lives down the street from the pipeline rupture, said he ran out to see what was happening when he heard sirens blaring.

“I thought there was a holdup going on at the gas station because I heard sirens and sirens and siren after siren and I thought, `What the hell's going on?'”

[Read More....]

Chinese outperform Americans in reading others' minds: study

(caption: The grid on the left represents what a participant could see, while that on the right represents the director’s view Image: Keysar and Wu/Psychological Science)

NewScientist - When it comes to putting yourself in the shoes of others, cultures that emphasize interdependence over individualism may have the upper hand.

In a new psychological experiment, Chinese students outperformed their US counterparts when ask to infer another person's perspective. The researchers say the findings help explain how misunderstandings can occur in cross-cultural communication.

In the experiment, psychologists Boaz Keysar and Shali Wu at the University of Chicago, Illinois, US, recruited 40 students. Half of the volunteers were non-Asians who had grown up in the US, and the other half were native Mandarin speakers who had very recently emigrated from various parts of China.

The volunteers played a game in which they had to follow the instructions of a person sitting across the table from them, an individual known as the 'director'.

Researchers placed a grid structure between the two people consisting of small compartments, some of which contained objects such as wood blocks, toy bunnies and sunglasses (see image, right). Some of the individual compartments were covered on one side with cardboard so that they were blocked from the view of the director - only the study subjects could see the objects inside.

The volunteers had to follow the instructions of the director and move named objects from one compartment to another. But – as a sneaky trick – the researchers sometimes placed two objects of the same kind in the grid. In this case, the subjects would have to consider the director’s view to know which object she was referring to.

For example, the grid sometimes contained two wooden blocks, one of which sat in a compartment hidden to the director. The director would then ask the subject to "move the wooden block to a higher square in the grid".

Chinese students would immediately understand which wooden block to move – the one visible to both them and the director. Their US counterparts, however, did not always catch on.

"They would ask 'Which block?' or 'You mean the one on the right?", explains Keysar. "For me it was really stunning because all of the information is there. You don't need to ask," he adds.

While 65% of the American participants asked this type of question, only one of the 20 Chinese subjects did so, equating to just 5%.

"That's a huge difference – it's off the charts," says Richard Nisbett, a psychologist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan, US, who studies differences between Western and Asian cultures.

The US volunteers were also slower in reacting when asked to move an object when there was a duplicate in the grid that only they could see. They generally took about 30% longer to complete such instructions from the director.

In contrast, such duplicate objects did not slow the speed at which Chinese participants responded.

Keysar believes the Chinese students had an easier time understanding the director’s perspective because they come from a more collectivist society than their US counterparts. He speculates, for example, that compared with children in China, youngsters in the US are more likely to feel that it is "all about them".

In another example, he describes how a Texas corporation "aiming to improve productivity, told its employees to look in the mirror and say 'I am beautiful' 100 times before coming to work. In contrast, a Japanese supermarket instructed its employees to begin their day by telling each other 'you are beautiful'."

Nisbett adds that in some Asian cultures people use less blunt language, making it necessary for them to read between the lines, and imagine the perspective of the individual with whom they are speaking.

He also says that the new findings could help us head off misunderstandings between people from Asian and Western societies: "We are less likely to step on each other's toes if we are aware of one another's cultural differences.”

Previous research has shown that culture can influence very basic behaviours, such as how we see objects.

Journal reference: Psychological Science (vol 18, p 600-606)

[Read More....]

Picture of the Day - Mommy tummy


In this photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency, pregnant ladies stand in line to show the cartoon figures on their abdomens during a contest of colored drawing for pregnant mothers at a hospital in Haikou, capital of south China's Hainan province, Monday, July 23, 2007. (AP Photo/Xinhua, Zhao Yingquan)

[Read More....]

Bomb by bomb, Japan sheds military restraints

Japan should admit to its historical wrongdoing before being allowed to be armed!

-----------
New York Times - ANDERSEN AIR FORCE BASE, Guam — To take part in its annual exercises with the United States Air Force here last month, Japan practiced dropping 500-pound live bombs on Farallon de Medinilla, a tiny island in the western Pacific’s turquoise waters more than 150 miles north of here.

The pilots described dropping a live bomb for the first time — shouting “shack!” to signal a direct hit — and seeing the fireball from aloft.

“The level of tension was just different,” said Capt. Tetsuya Nagata, 35, stepping down from his cockpit onto the sunbaked tarmac.

The exercise would have been unremarkable for almost any other military, but it was highly significant for Japan, a country still restrained by a Constitution that renounces war and allows forces only for its defense. Dropping live bombs on land had long been considered too offensive, so much so that Japan does not have a single live-bombing range.

Flying directly from Japan and practicing live-bombing runs on distant foreign soil would have been regarded as unacceptably provocative because the implicit message was clear: these fighter jets could perhaps fly to North Korea and take out some targets before returning home safely.

But from here in Micronesia to Iraq, Japan’s military has been rapidly crossing out items from its list of can’t-dos. The incremental changes, especially since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, amount to the most significant transformation in Japan’s military since World War II, one that has brought it ever closer operationally to America’s military while rattling nerves throughout northeast Asia.

In a little over half a decade, Japan’s military has carried out changes considered unthinkable a few years back. In the Indian Ocean, Japanese destroyers and refueling ships are helping American and other militaries fight in Afghanistan. In Iraq, Japanese planes are transporting cargo and American troops to Baghdad from Kuwait.

Japan is acquiring weapons that blur the lines between defensive and offensive. For the Guam bombing run, Japan deployed its newest fighter jets, the F-2’s, the first developed jointly by Japan and the United States, on their maiden trip here. Unlike its older jets, the F-2’s were able to fly the 1,700 miles from northern Japan to Guam without refueling — a “straight shot,” as the Japanese said with unconcealed pride.

Japan recently indicated strongly its desire to buy the F-22 Raptor, a stealth fighter known mainly for its offensive abilities such as penetrating contested airspace and destroying enemy targets, whose export is prohibited by United States law.

At home, the Defense Agency, whose profile had been intentionally kept low, became a full ministry this year. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe used the parliamentary majority he inherited from his wildly popular predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, to ram through a law that could lead to a revision of the pacifist Constitution.

Japan’s 241,000-member military, though smaller than those of its neighbors, is considered Asia’s most sophisticated. Though flat, its $40 billion military budget has ranked among the world’s top five in recent years. Japan has also tapped nonmilitary budgets to launch spy satellites and strengthen its coast guard recently.

Japanese politicians like Mr. Abe have justified the military’s transformation by seizing on the threat from North Korea; the rise of China, whose annual military budget has been growing by double digits; and the Sept. 11 attacks — even fanning those threats, critics say. At the same time, Mr. Abe has tried to rehabilitate the reputation of Japan’s imperial forces by whitewashing their crimes, including wartime sexual slavery.

Japanese critics say the changes under way — whose details the government has tried to hide from public view, especially the missions in Iraq — have already violated the Constitution and other defense restrictions.

“The reality has already moved ahead, so they will now talk about the need to catch up and revise the Constitution,” said Yukio Hatoyama, the secretary general of the main opposition Democratic Party.

Richard J. Samuels, a Japan expert at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said that revisionist politicians like Mr. Abe and Mr. Koizumi, once on the fringes of Japan’s political world, succeeded in grabbing the mainstream in a time of uncertainty. They shared the view “that the statute of limitations on Japan’s misbehavior during the Pacific War had expired” and that Japan, like any normal country, should have a military.

Their predecessors feared getting entangled in an American-led war. But the new leaders feared that Japan would be abandoned by the United States unless it contributed to its wars, said Mr. Samuels, whose book on Japan’s changing military, “Securing Japan,” will be published in August.

“So what do you do?” he said. “You step up. And that is consistent with what they’ve long wanted to do anyway. So there was a convergence of preferences.”

Today, Japan is America’s biggest partner in developing and financing a missile defense shield in Asia. Some Japanese ground and air force commands are also moving inside American bases in Japan so that the two forces will become, in military jargon, “interoperable.”

“I think the Japan-U.S. security relationship should be as unified as possible, and our different roles need to be made clear,” said Shigeru Ishiba, a defense chief under Mr. Koizumi and now a leader in a Liberal Democratic Party committee looking at loosening defense restrictions.

In Iraq, in accordance with a special law to aid in reconstruction, a symbolic ground force was first deployed to a relatively peaceful, noncombat area in southern Iraq to engage in relief activities. After the troops left last year, though, three Japanese planes began regularly transporting American troops and cargo from Kuwait to Baghdad.

The Japanese authorities refuse to say whether the planes have transported weapons besides those carried by soldiers. Concerned about public opposition, defense officers have spied on antiwar activists and journalists perceived as critical, the Defense Ministry acknowledged after incriminating documents were recently obtained by the Communist Party in Japan.

Mr. Hatoyama of the Democratic Party said that transporting armed American troops contravened Japan’s pacifist Constitution.

“Instead of engaging in humanitarian assistance, they are basically assisting American troops,” he said. “American troops and the Air Self-Defense Forces are working as one, just as they are training as one in Guam.”

In Parliament, Mr. Abe denied that the activities violated the Constitution, saying Japanese troops were restricted to noncombat zones and did not operate under a joint command with any other force.

Here in Guam, American and Japanese pilots simulated intercepts and air-to-air combat for two weeks. In the final days, each side took turns pummeling the tiny island with bombs.

Col. Tatsuya Arima, the commander of the Japanese squadron, said such bombing could protect Japanese grounds troops or vessels from encroaching enemies.

“Bombing does not always mean offensive weapons,” Colonel Arima said. “They can also be used for defense, which, put another way, is what we mostly train for.”

Lt. Col. Tod Fingal, the commander of the American squadron, said the exercise helped build confidence among pilots by exposing them to a new environment.

“I would equate it to an away game in sports,” Colonel Fingal said.

Japan’s military has become less shy in projecting its power away from home. Japan lacks the nuclear submarines, long-range missiles or large aircraft carriers that amount to real power projection.

But it is acquiring four Boeing 767 air tankers that will allow its planes to refuel in midair and travel farther, as well as two aircraft carriers that will transport helicopters and, with some adjustments, planes capable of taking off vertically. The United States has welcomed the changes while pressing for more.

“The restrictions that Japan has lived under, which I would say Japan has maintained on its own or imposed on itself, are quite unique,” said a Pentagon official who requested anonymity so that he could speak candidly. “The changes that you’re seeing in Japan are very unique changes in the context of those restrictions. In the context of everything else that is going on around the world, or in the context of Japan’s potential to contribute to the region and the world in security areas, the changes are fairly small.”

Small or not, they are causing anxieties in a region where distrust of Japan has deepened in direct proportion to Japanese tendencies to revise the past. South Korea reacted sharply to Japan’s desire to buy the F-22 Raptor. Also, in a recent ceremony unveiling South Korea’s first destroyer equipped with the advanced Aegis weapons system, President Roh Moo-hyun said, “Northeast Asia is still in an arms race, and we cannot just sit back and watch.”

Mr. Ishiba, the former defense chief, said the region’s distrust was softened by Japan’s alliance with the United States. But he acknowledged that Japan’s inability to come to terms with its wartime past restricted its ability to project power positively.

“Unless everyone understands why we weren’t able to avoid that war,” Mr. Ishiba said, referring to World War II, “and what Japan did to Asia, it could be dangerous if we get power-projection capability.”

[Read More....]

And now China is king of 'cultural goods' exports too

Asia Pacific Foundation release - China’s economic surge has captured the attention of much of the world. Its export goods from cotton undershirts to computers have flooded Western markets. It has become, in common wisdom, the “workshop of the world.”

Less noticed has been the rapid rise of China as a supplier to the US$60 billion-plus world market for cultural products. From a position of relative insignificance a decade ago, China has risen to become the third-largest exporter of cultural goods in the world and clearly the largest in Asia.

It is a major force in all but one of the five major areas of cultural products recognized by UNESCO -- recorded media, printed media, visual arts, audiovisual media and heritage goods.

It dominates global exports of audiovisual products, notably video games. It is second only to the US in exports of the visual arts. And in recorded media, by far the largest and most competitive cultural goods export category, China has made a phenomenal gain, achieving an average annual growth rate of 40% between 1994 and 2002 to become No. 7 globally.

And China is not only an exporter. It has emerged as a major and growing import market, especially for books, magazines and other printed media.

The lack of comparable statistics has always presented a problem in analyzing trade flows in cultural products and services. However, a UNESCO study1 in 2005, based on balance of payments figures in the United Nations’ Commodity Trade Statistics database, presents a comprehensive and somewhat surprising picture of the flows involved. It is used as the statistical basis for a commissioned report by Ron Drews just released by the Asia Pacific Foundation.

As expected, high-income economies are the largest producers of cultural goods. But these goods are now flowing to and from Asia Pacific at a rate that is increasing faster than anywhere else.

In 2002, UK was the biggest exporter of cultural goods with US$8.5 billion, followed by the US with US$7.6 billion, then China with US$5.9 billion. Asia as a whole had surpassed North America as the second-largest cultural goods exporting region, with a 20.6% market share compared to North America’s 16.9% share, down from 25% in 1994.

The 15 largest European Union nations accounted for over 51.8% of the world’s exports of cultural goods in 2002, only a small decrease from the 54.3% share held in 1994.

The emergence of Asia is due to phenomenal increases in shipments from Southeast Asia of recorded media and from East Asia of video games. These are significant gains, since recorded media surpassed printed media as the leading cultural good traded in the world and audiovisual media had the highest proportional increases during the period.

Canada has a significant role in world trade in cultural goods, ranking number eight as an exporter and fifth as an importer. In 2005, this country’s total trade in these products reached C$6.8 billion. But Canada is predominantly an importer rather than an exporter.

In fact, our cultural goods trade deficit is second only to that of the US. Canada’s strength as an exporter is in printed (US$800 million in 2002) and recorded media (US$360 million in 2002): it is ranked among the top ten in these two categories. But imports in the same two categories in the same year were US$2 billion and US$1.71 billion respectively.

In recent years, this country’s export performance has not been impressive, even in absolute terms. Between 2003 and 2005, exports of cultural goods and services virtually stagnated. But trade in these products between Canada and China grew at a double digit pace every year from 1996 to 2003. China had become the fifth-largest market for Canada’s exports of cultural goods by 2005 and second-largest source of imports.

Overall, China is Canada’s No. 2 trading partner in cultural goods, accounting for about 5% of all of Canada’s international transactions in the field. Still, there is a huge imbalance in trade in with China -- while Canada is a substantial buyer of Chinese cultural products, it sells relatively little in return.

Drews argues that Canada’s industry will have to raise its competitiveness if it is to deal with the growing contest for market share, not just from China, but from countries in Southeast Asia as well.

It suggests Canada is well positioned to become a competitor in the rapidly growing audiovisual market, which is already dominated by China, but must develop a sustained growth strategy. China’s dramatic rise as an economic power is due in large measure to its ability to bring government together with big business and to use a planned approach to direct and build areas of its economy.

Drews argues that Canada will have to take a leaf out of China’s playbook by adopting a more planned and strategic approach to market development. He suggests a three-stage approach.

First, Ottawa needs to undertake a Culture Export Competitiveness Review, focusing on each sector of cultural trade. The review would examine how government policies and funding can be better deployed and utilized by Canadian culture industries and organized in a more strategic manner.

Next, there should be an assessment of Canada’s co-production treaties to determine how these can evolve to strengthen Canada’s ability to be a more competitive culture exporter.

Finally, Ottawa and the provinces should develop Regional Media and Entertainment Industry Cluster Strategies by giving more autonomy to the provinces in organizing their media and entertainment industries.

The regional cluster reviews should look at what strengths the regional markets possess and how these can be strategically leveraged and better funded, to make Canada more export competitive.

This is alien to the way cultural industries have been treated by Canada in the past. But exports by cultural industries will become increasingly necessary to the nation’s competitiveness in the global economy, Drews concludes.

[Read More....]

Bill Gates: Software piracy helps grow my business in China

This may sound surreal. But Bill Gates really said so. Is it time that the police/customs officers stop prosecuting bootleggers? :)

Back in Hong Kong many years ago, bootlegged music CDs were a measure of popularity of a singer. If bootlegged CD wasn't made for an album, that was a strong indication that the marketing was bad or something's gone wrong with the singer. Then it's time for the CD publishers to review what their CDs weren't copied. :)

-------------

Times - Bill Gates has unveiled Microsoft’s unlikely secret weapon in China, a territory he is adamant will turn out to be the software giant's largest market: piracy.

"It's easier for our software to compete with Linux when there's piracy than when there's not," the Microsoft co-founder and chairman told Fortune magazine.

The idea that bootlegged software can create demand for its legitimate cousin in the longer term is not new.

But Mr Gates's admission that pirated software can help rather than hinder Microsoft jars violently with the party line.


The company, for instance, is a key member of the Business Software Alliance, the industry group that recently fined an unnamed British business £250,000 for using pirated software.

That action was part of a drive to cut a UK piracy rate running at about 26 per cent and costing more than an estimated £1 billion a year.

In the US it is offering a bounty of up to $1 million (£500,000) to workers who inform on employers who use counterfeit programmes.

In China, piracy is an even hotter topic: a recent global software piracy study by the BSA revealed that China's piracy rate had retreated by 10 per cent in the past three years — but only to 82 per cent from 92 per cent.

Losses from bootlegging there are estimated to have cost the software industry $5.43 billion last year — more than four times the value of the legitimate market, despite a near-90 per cent annual increase in sales.

Mr Gates’s comments also conflict with the attitudes of software rivals such as Adobe, the developer behind the widely used Photoshop application, which said today that it was cranking up measures designed to stamp out rampant Chinese software piracy.

Indeed, such has been the group’s frustration, Adobe once gave warning that it would pull the plug on its production of software in Chinese and other Asian languages if Beijing did not make headway on piracy.

Mr Gates's fondness for China and its potential looks as if it were being reciprocated.

His latest remarks came as he visited the country on a tour on which he met the kind of adulation more usually reserved for Hollywood’s glitterati.

On his trip he was made an honorary trustee of Peking University and awarded an honorary doctorate from Tsinghua University in Beijing.

That visit followed a trip by Hu Jintao, the Chinese President, to the Gates home for dinner last spring.

"You are a friend to the Chinese people, and I am a friend of Microsoft," Mr Hu apparently told his host. "Every morning I go to my office and use your software."

Beijing was not always so open to Microsoft.

For years after entering the Chinese market in 1992, the group’s Windows operating system struggled to make its mark in the Middle Kingdom, in large part because of an uncompetitive pricing system and the authorities’ decision to adopt the rival Linux system — and, of course, the ease with which pirates could produce counterfeits.

However, there are signs that Microsoft is gaining traction in China — a feat that Mr Gates suggested was aided by the vast volume of the company’s software that has been bootlegged by Chinese pirates, making Windows the nation’s de facto standard.

Cutting prices for Windows — to as low as £1.50 for students — has also helped.

Microsoft does not break out figures, but sales in China this year are expected to hit about $700 million.

That is still less than the group’s earnings in California, but up threefold from 2004.

[Read More....]

Democracy Is A Good Thing

I urge every one who's interested to learn what China thinks about democracy to read an article written by Yu Keping (俞可平), deputy director of the Central Translation Bureau and is a member of the think-tank for the Hu-Wen administration. As always, I see hope in China's political future. :)

The following essay, "Democracy is a good thing", was excerpted from the foreword to the book of the same name and published in Beijing Daily News on October 23, 2006. The essay has since then been discussed widely inside and outside of China. The translated copy is published here.

--------------

Democracy is a good thing, and this is not just for specific persons or certain officials; this is for the entire nation and its broad masses of people. Simply put, for those officials who care more about their own interests, democracy is not only not a good thing; in fact, it is a troublesome thing, even a bad thing. Just think, under conditions of democratic rule, officials must be elected by the citizens and they must gain the endorsement and support of the majority of the people; their powers will be curtailed by the citizens, they cannot do whatever they want, they have to sit down across the people and negotiate. Just these two points alone already make many people dislike it. Therefore, democratic politics will not operate on its own; it requires the people themselves and the government officials who represent the interests of the people to promote and implement.

Democracy is a good thing, but that does not mean that everything about democracy is good. Democracy is definitely not 100% perfect; it has many internal inadequacies. Democracy can make the citizens go into the streets, hold assemblies and then cause political instability; democracy can make certain very simple matters become complicated and frivolous under undemocratic conditions, thereby increasing the political and administrative costs; democracy often involves repeated negotiations and discussions, causing certain decisions that should have been made in a time manner become suspended without resolution, thereby decreasing administrative efficiency; democracy often affords opportunities for certain sweet-talking political fraudsters to mislead the people, and so on. But among all the political systems that have been invented and implemented, democracy is the one with the least number of flaws. That is to say, relatively speaking, democracy is the best political system for humankind.

Democracy is a good thing, but that does not mean that democracy can do everything and solve every problem. Democracy is a political system that guarantees that sovereignty belonged to the people, but it is only one of many systems that people have; it mainly regulates the political lives of people and it cannot replace the other systems and it cannot regulate everything in people's lives. Democracy has its internal limitations, it is not a cure-all miracle medicine and it cannot solve all of humankind's problems. But democracy guarantees basic human rights, it offers equal opportunity to people and it is a basic human value. Democracy is not only a means to solve people's livelihood issues, but it is a goal of human development; it is not only a tool to achieve other goals, but it is in accord with human nature. Even if there is the best food and housing available, the human character is incomplete without democratic rights.

Democracy is a good thing, but that does not mean that democracy does not come with a painful price. Democracy can destroy the legal system, cause the social and political order to go out of control occasionally and even prevent economic development during certain periods; democracy can also disrupt international peace and cause political divisions within the nation; the democratic process can also propel certain dictators onto the political stage. All of these have already occurred in actual human life, and they will likely continue to recur. Therefore, the price of democracy is sometimes high to the point of unacceptability. But at the root, this is not the fault of democracy; it is the fault of the politicians and statesmen. Certain politicians do not understand the objective rules of democratic government, they ignore the social and historical conditions, they go beyond the stage of historical development and promote democracy in an impractical manner, and therefore they end up with the opposite consequences. Certain politicians treat democracy as their tool for seizing power, they use the name of "democracy" to clamor for popularity and mislead the people. With them, democracy is the name and dictatorship is the truth; democracy is the façade and power is the substance.

Democracy is a good thing, but that is not to say that democracy comes unconditionally. Implementing democracy requires the corresponding economic, cultural and political conditions; to promote democracy unconditionally will bring disastrous consequences to the nation and its people. Political democracy is the wave of history; it is the inevitable trend for all nations of the world to move towards democracy. But the timing and speed of the development of democracy and the choice of the form and system of democracy are conditional. An ideal democratic system must not only be related to the economic state and level of development of society, the regional politics and international environment, it must also be intimately related to the national tradition of political culture, the quality of the politicians and the people, and the daily customs of the people. It requires the wisdom of the politicians and the people to determine how to pay the minimum political and social price in order the attain the maximum democratic effects. In that sense, democratic politics is a political art. To promote democratic politics, it is necessary to have an elaborate system design and excellent political techniques.

Democracy is a good thing, but that does not mean that democracy can force the people to do things. The most concrete meaning of democracy is that it is government by the people who get to make choices. Even though democracy is a good thing, no person or political organization has the right to regard themselves as the embodiment of democracy itself and therefore force the people to do this but not that in the name of democracy. Democracy requires enlightenment, it requires the rule of law, it requires authority and it also requires violence to maintain the normal social order. The basic approach to developing democracy is not a forceful imposition by the government but the people should give consent. Since democracy is rule by the people, it should respect the people's own choice. In terms of national politics, if the government employs forceful means to make the people accept a system that they did not choose, then this is national autocracy and this is national tyranny; when one country uses mostly violent methods to force the people in other countries to accept their so-called democratic system, then this is international autocracy and this is international tyranny. National tyranny and international tyranny are both contrary to the nature of democracy.

We are presently building a modernized strong socialist nation with unique Chinese characteristics. For us, democracy is all the more so a good thing, and it is all the more so essential. The classical authors of Marxism said: "There is no socialism without democracy." Recently, Chairman Hu Jintao pointed out further: "There is no modernization without democracy." Of course, we are building a socialist democracy with unique Chinese characteristics. On one hand, we want to absorb all the excellent results from the political culture of all mankind, including all the excellent results of democratic politics; but on the other hand, we will not import an overseas political model. Our construction of political democracy must be closely integrated with the history, culture, tradition and existing social conditions in our nation. Only in this way can the people of China truly enjoy the sweet fruits of political democracy.

Besides, according to Danwei, "democracy" is no longer a taboo word and it's been all over China's state media lately.
The most recent issue of The Economist noted a June vote by residents of a Beijing community as to whether they should accept a developer's buyout offer:

For the first reported time in the fractious history of China's recent urban makeover, residents on June 9th had a chance to vote on the offer. A month later state-owned newspapers are still poring over that event.

Democracy is all over the Chinese media these days. Pictured here is the latest issue of China Newsweek, which ran a lengthy cover feature about the sensitive word. Earlier this year, two theory-based articles, Yu Keping's "Democracy is a Good Thing" and Xie Tao's "The Democratic Socialism Model and China's Future," spearheaded a major academic discussion on the topic.



[Read More....]

Made in China

An analysis published in the July/August issue of The Atlantic magazine has an interesting article named "China Makes, The World Takes". This is China! blog picked up the story and shared some of the content on his blog. The article tells the anti-ChinaThreatTheory side of the story of a rising China.

  • MNCs operating in Asia have found it difficult to do business in Japan and South Korea because of the government-backed cartels in the countries; in China, the challenge is that there are so many small companies nipping at their ankles at every turn. Much of that has to do with China's anxiety about attracting capital to finance its fledgling industries; its entry into the WTO had a great deal to do with that as well: the Japanese and South Koreans did not place themselves under the yoke of WTO strictures under after they had become industrialized. Hence, the Korean chaebol and Japanese keiretsu still have a choke-hold on the domestic markets the Chinese government can only dream of.
  • the main character the author interviews in the article makes the point, "People think China is cheap; but really, it's fast." An American industrial designer that lives in China adds, "People are the most adaptable machines... Machines need to be reprogrammed. You can have people doing something entirely differnt next week."
  • "American complaints about the rmb, about subsidies, and about other Chinese practices have this in common: they assume that the solution to long-term tensions in the trading relationship lies in changes on China's side. I think that assumption is naive. If the United States is unhappy with the effects of its interaction with China, that's America's problem, not China's. To imagine that the United States can stop China from pursuing its own economic ambitions through nagging, threats, or enticement is to fool ourselves. If a country does not like the terms of its business dealings with the world, it needs to change its own policies, not expect the world to change. China has done just that, to its own benefit - and, up until now, to America's."
On other points regarding the poor quality of tires made in China, the Time's China blog notes some interesting observation:
The American importer, Foreign Tires Sales Inc. of Union, NJ, is suing the Hangzhou based tire producer.The most astonishing statement to date in this saga, however, comes from a spokesman from Foreign Tire Sales, who told the WSJ the following:

"We have always stated that the tests for the tires exceeded the minimal standards," Mr. Frank said. "But that doesn't mean that the tires aren't defective. There is a difference between quality and safety."

There's a difference between quality and safety—in the TIRE business?? What in the world is this guy talking about? `Our tires are of the highest quality, they're just not safe’?? Yikes.
What are even more interesting are comments left by readers followed the blog entry:
What about Americans selling sub-standard medicine (which is disqualifies in America itself) to 3rd world countries.

What about American using poor nations as gini-pigs for drug testing. Before medicine perfects and only after complete success sold in West.

American media, including these bloggers here, are preaching moral absolutism on China, the Middle East, Russia and South America everyday.

Mr. Elegant, Ramzy and Powell may not want to face their own moral dilemma about the US. But until you start to declare your daily moral apprehension of legalized gun sale, abortion, corporate looting, human right violation on undocumented immigrants, and many, many other "immoral" behaviors in America, how do you expect Chinese to take you seriously about your daily indignation of Chinese immorality?

The last thing you want to compromise as an intellectual is your morality. Every time you do that, you are making a deal with the devil. Please take some of that enthuiasm you have on criticizing China and use it on problems in the United States. Exercise your intellectual honesty or you will forget about it soon, if you haven't already.

If you look back the current bad labor praticing and bad product qualities occured in South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Japan before. You probably will not see this kind of intensity in Western media to go after those places. Why? Because US hold the military powers that it always able to exert economic benefits from those governments. China is different, for getting concessions out of China is not like such easy thing as Japan by a phone call to Tokyo. It has to really put on military power to do the work, but need the popular support from the society. What is the best way to do it? Demonaze China and Chinese in the media, so the "brainwashed" folks will support a hardline policy toward China to get the economic concessions out of China.
In another post, the Time's China blog notes how different points of view one could have on China if he/she has visited or lived/been living in China.
... an OP ED page of today’s Wall Street Journal writes:

Polls show a majority of Americans believe China has mastered basic manufacturing -- and it's now barreling into our high-tech backyard. That's false. As the product recalls demonstrate, China can barely make low-value goods reliably, much less higher-value ones. The problems are structural, not the result of a few bad apples.

That’s "false”?? My neighbors out here in suburban Shanghai, industrial designers who are working on the brand spanking new Intel factory going up in Dalian (the chip maker already has a plant on the Pudong side here) would be surprised to hear that China can “barely make low value goods reliably.” The fact is, both propositions are true: China has mastered basic manufacturing and IS moving into our high tech backyard, but there are also a huge number of small and medium sized companies who compete solely on cost, and which therefore cut corners like crazy.

[Read More....]

New chapter: FOOD

Summer's here. The house's in recess. And I'm getting a bit fatigue writing about Stephan Harper and the Tories. So I'd like to add some new elements to the Chinese in Vancouver blog: FOOD.

Being a Chinese living in Vancouver, how can we not talk about food? I will occasionally write about my favourite restaurants, some of them may be relatively less known to the mainstream audience. Suggestions/comments welcome. :D

The first restaurant I've picked to write about is the Pho Lan Vietnamese Restaurant on No.3 Road, just opposite Richmond's City Hall.

The restaurant itself is not particularly special but the food it offers is SOOOOO authentic. Unlike many Vietnamese restaurants that have altered the taste of their food to accommodate non-Asian patrons, Pho Lan's insistence on "original Vietnamese tastes" should be applauded.

My favourite dish is their Vietnamese spring rolls. Vietnamese spring rolls are supposed to be made differently from Cantonese style spring rolls (like those for dim sum lunch). The wrap is different. The content is different.

Vietnamese spring rolls contain rice vermicelli noodle, carrot, shredded pork and mushroom. Vietnamese spring rolls as yummy as Pho Lan's are hardly found today.

My other "must-have" dish from Pho Lan is lemon grass chicken on dry vermicelli noodle. The chicken is deliciously barbecued, sprinkled with shredded nuts and other herbs. The reason I like it is because the noodle is dry and eaten cold. No boiling soup. A very good summer bowl.

[Read More....]

Itchy, itchy, Chairman Jiang


I was going through my old stored photos and found this one. I might have posted it somewhere in another post. But who cares, this is such a classic!

Have a good day. :D

[Read More....]