Tag Archives: Global Times

'Dirty' GSK inflated China prices with bribes: paper

A Chinese state newspaper on Wednesday called GlaxoSmithKline, which is under investigation for bribery in China, “dirty and devious”, accusing the British drug firm of inflating its prices.

Chinese authorities say GSK staff bribed government officials, pharmaceutical industry groups, hospitals and doctors to promote sales.

An editorial in the China Daily newspaper said the company passed on the cost of hundreds of millions of dollars in bribes directly to consumers.

“The bribery case involving GlaxoSmithKline… points to another conduit that pushes up the prices of medicine,” the editorial said.

“The money used to lubricate drug sales and prescriptions contributes 20 to 30 percent to the prices patients pay for their medicine.”

The Chinese government, in another investigation, is currently checking 60 pharmaceutical companies over their prices, a move analysts say is aimed at cutting healthcare costs for ordinary Chinese.

Foreign baby formula companies have also been targeted recently.

GSK gave the bribes directly a nd through travel agencies and project sponsorship, the ministry of public security said last week.

Police have detained more than 20 people, including four top executives of GSK and pharmaceutical and travel industry officials.

“It is a shame that such a well-known transnational pharmaceutical firm has promoted its sales in such a dirty and devious way,” said the China Daily, a state-run English-language paper.

“These bad apples should receive the punishment they deserve for what they have done,” it said.

Chinese state television on Tuesday aired an interview with one of the four detained GSK executives, vice president and operations manager Liang Hong, who gave details of how the bribes were made.

“In terms of getting (drugs) into hospitals, there are tendering offices throughout the country, heads and directors of pharmacies in different hospitals that we need to contact,” he said.

GSK said Monday it was “deeply concerned and disappointed by these serious allegations of fraudulent behaviour and ethical misconduct by certain individuals at the company and third-party agencies”.

An editorial in another state-backed newspaper, the Global Times, said the GSK case provided a “lesson” for those engaged in bribery.

“It’s notable that some foreign-invested companies have engaged in very serious, brazen bribery in China,” said the newspaper, known for its nationalistic editorial stance.

“If China strengthens its crackdown on both bribers and corrupt officials at the same time, the effects of the anti-corruption campaign will be doubled.”

China’s new leadership, led by President Xi Jinping, has vowed to tackle corruption but analysts say such campaigns are often short-lived and rooting out graft will require fundamental reforms.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

China shuts museum with 'fake' exhibits: reports

Chinese authorities have closed a museum which contained scores of fake exhibits, including a vase decorated with cartoon characters billed as a Qing dynasty artefact, state-run media reported Tuesday.

The facility, built in northern China’s Hebei province at a cost of 540 million yuan ($88 million), has “no qualification to be a museum as its collections are fake”, a local official told the Global Times newspaper.

It had been closed, the paper said, while its founders have been placed “under investigation” after local residents accused them of wasting money.

Pictures posted by the state-run China Radio International (CRI) showed a vase decorated with bright green cartoon animals, including a creature resembling a laughing squid, which the museum displayed as a Qing dynasty relic.

Several items lining the museum’s 12 exhibition halls were supposedly signed by the Yellow Emperor, who according to tradition reigned in the 27th century BC, the Shanghai Daily reported.

But the signatures used the simplified Chinese characters brought in by the Communist Party after it took over in 1949, it pointed out.

The museum’s owner, top local Communist Party official Wang Zongquan, developed a reputation for agreeing to “buy everything brought to him”, the Global Times quoted a resident as saying.

Locals living near the museum in Erpu village told the Beijing News that Wang bought more than 40,000 fake exhibits at prices ranging from 100 yuan to 2,000 yuan.

They accused him of misusing village resources by funnelling money from land sales into building the ill-fated museum, which took up a four-hectare site.

China’s antiques market is said to be rife with fakes, and the country has come under fire from multinational companies for its freewheeling attitude to copyright enforcement.

“Similar fake museums are found in many places in China in search of monetary gain,” CRI quoted Chinese antiques expert Ma Weidu as saying.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

U.S. Drone Policy: Obama Seeking To Influence Global Guidelines

By The Huffington Post News Editors

(Repeats with no change)
By Tabassum Zakaria
WASHINGTON, March 17 (Reuters) – President Barack Obama, who vastly expanded U.S. drone strikes against terrorism suspects overseas under the cloak of secrecy, is now openly seeking to influence global guidelines for their use as China and other countries pursue their own drone programs.
The United States was the first to use unmanned aircraft fitted with missiles to kill militant suspects in the years after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington.
But other countries are catching up. China‘s interest in unmanned aerial vehicles was displayed in November at an air show. According to state-run newspaper Global Times, China had considered conducting its first drone strike to kill a suspect in the 2011 murder of 13 Chinese sailors, but authorities decided they wanted the man alive so they could put him on trial.
“People say what’s going to happen when the Chinese and the Russians get this technology? The president is well aware of those concerns and wants to set the standard for the international community on these tools,” said Tommy Vietor, until earlier this month a White House spokesman.
As U.S. ground wars end – over in Iraq, drawing to a close in Afghanistan – surgical counterterrorism targeting has become “the new normal,” Vietor said.
Amid a debate within the U.S. government, it is not yet clear what new standards governing targeted killings and drone strikes the White House will develop for U.S. operations or propose for global rules of the road.
Obama‘s new position is not without irony. The White House kept details of drone operations – which remain largely classified – out of public view for years when the U.S. monopoly was airtight.
That stance is just now beginning to change, in part under pressure from growing public and Congressional discomfort with the drone program. U.S. lawmakers have demanded to see White House legal justifications for targeting U.S. citizens abroad, and to know whether Obama thinks he has the authority to use drones …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Leaner New Year: China tones down the celebrations

Chinese New Year is traditionally a time for colorful and noisy displays of fireworks and generous-portioned banquets. This year, the festivities are likely to be a little more austere.

Authorities have asked the public to set off fewer fireworks in Beijing to reduce pollution, a new anti-extravagance drive has prompted government officials and state-owned companies to cancel their banquets at high-end hotels and a campaign against food waste is leading to half-portions in restaurants. Even ads for luxury goods were pulled ahead of Saturday’s opening of the seven-day holiday.

All in all, China‘s Lunar New Year is shaping up to be a Leaner New Year.

Following a call by China‘s new leader Xi Jinping to oppose waste, a village just outside of Beijing has canceled its mass dumpling festival that has been taking place for the past 30 years, involves hundreds of people and draws television cameras.

“We planned to make about 50,000 dumplings and now the plan has been canceled,” said a woman surnamed Wang from the Liuminying village committee’s tourist office. “The flour bought for the festival will be distributed to the villagers and we haven’t bought the meat yet. Villagers will make dumplings at home with their own families and they may feel like this is a new experience for them since they haven’t done it that way for such a long time.”

Xi recently called for people to be more frugal and oppose waste following a “Clear the Plate” campaign by netizens calling on restaurants to cut down food waste. His words sparked off an anti-food waste campaign in state media.

He had already launched a crackdown against government extravagance, aimed at cutting corruption by officials, which angers the general public and threatens the party’s hold on power.

Capsulizing the new mood, the website of the Global Times newspaper on Wednesday displayed a photo of workers at a power supply company in eastern Anhui province writing “cut down waste” slogans on balloons.

The Beijing city government together with catering associations announced that the restaurant industry should reduce food waste. Ten companies with a total of 749 branches have responded with a plan to offer half-portions and encourage people to take away their leftovers, according to the Beijing News.

A lot of people are already asking for the half portions, …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pollution highlights the price China is paying for rapid development

By David Piper

Beijing has developed into an impressive modern city over the past two decades. But a tourist visiting the Chinese capital over the past four days would have difficulty seeing many of its ancient and modern landmarks because of the horrendous pollution hanging over the city.

China‘s capital has been notorious for its smog over the past few years, as have most northern Chinese cities.

In Beijing, the smog unexpectedly appears and is likely to be when there is no wind to blow away the pollution, as is the case at the moment.

At first you believe, charitably, it’s just morning mist. But it doesn’t disappear and just lingers all day.

More than 20 years ago, when I first visited, Beijing, like many Chinese cities, was a very different place.

There was only the odd skyscraper and factory. Most people used bicycles to get around rather than the car.

With the current levels of pollution, it might be healthier to sit in your car for hours in a traffic jam and let the air filters do their work rather than breathe in the polluted air as you cycle around Beijing.

The smog seems to have just enveloped the city, making it dangerous for people to even go outdoors.

The Beijing Municipal Environmental Monitoring Center is recommending that children and the elderly stay indoors.

Local media has reported a sharp rise in people seeking treatment at hospitals in the capital for respiratory problems.

Despite the danger, Beijing‘s streets have remained fairly busy.

People, of course, get used to the smog, but I know friends who live there and when the smog arrives they try to stay home and switch on the air purifiers.

The pollution figures at the moment are staggering.

Pollution is measured in the amount of small particulates in the atmosphere.

According to the Beijing authorities, measurements show the air containing more than 700 micrograms per cubic meter in many parts of the city over the weekend.

To put that into context, the World Health Organization considers it safe to only have as much just 25 micrograms per cubic meter.

There has been some controversy recently over whether the local readings were accurate or if officials were trying to understate the problem by giving lower readings.

Last year, U.S. diplomatic missions in China were giving their own air quality readings, and they were very different from the official Chinese accounts.

In response, China announced it was illegal for foreign embassies to issues their own readings.

But the U.S. has said it would continue tweeting air pollution levels in China, as they were helpful for US nationals living and traveling abroad.

The U.S. Embassy in Beijing tweeted over the weekend that its hourly readings were “beyond index.”

The highest number it got on its data was the equivalent of a massive 886 micrograms per cubic meter.

“This is really the worst on record, not only from the official data but also from the monitoring data from the U.S. Embassy — some areas in (neighboring) Hebei province are even worse than Beijing,” said Zhou Rong, climate and energy campaigner at Greenpeace.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency‘s air quality index would easily categorize pollution readings taken by the U.S. Embassy as “emergency conditions” with the whole population at risk.

If these levels were reached in any U.S. city, there is likely to be uproar and perhaps even some panic because of the danger to health.

And the people of Beijing, and in other Chinese cities affected by pollution, have increasingly voiced their anger over air quality.

China‘s growing middle classes have been gaining a voice in recent years over improving the quality of life, but it’s often been difficult to organize when the communist authorities view any form of opposition as a criticism of its rule.

The Chinese authorities do seem to have listened to the recent criticism. The biggest cities now release hourly pollution data.

And the state-controlled Chinese media seems to have been given the “green” light to voice criticisms over pollution levels.

An editorial in The China Daily warned the country had to balance development with quality of life.

“In the middle of a rapid urbanization process, it is urgent for China to think about how such a process can press forward without compromising the quality of urban life with an increasingly worse living environment,” said the editorial.

The state-controlled Global Times even urged the government to “publish truthful environmental data to the public” and take measures to solve the pollution problem in China, which it called the “biggest construction site in the world.”

China‘s leaders do seem to increasingly understand the problem, and during his address to the Communist Party Congress last November outgoing President Hu Jintao warned that the country needed to “reverse the trend of ecological deterioration and build a beautiful China.”

They, of course, only need to look to Chinese philosophy and the concept of Yin and Yang, which highlights the seemingly opposite but interdependent forces in the natural world, to find a solution.

The difficulty China has is that it wants to continue its rapid economic expansion.

But the cost seems to be growing as quickly.

A study by Beijing University and Greenpeace showed that the premature deaths of 8,600 people in four Chinese cities in 2012 cost $1 billion in economic losses.

China has to decide if the cost of economic progress is just too high.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News