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SINO DAILY
China philanthropist hires gymnast-turned-beggar
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 26, 2011

In a spectacular reversal of fortune, a champion Chinese gymnast who was forced into stealing and begging after an injury ended his career has landed a job with one of the nation's richest men.

The case of Zhang Shangwu -- who was recently discovered performing stunts for money in Beijing -- has caused outrage in China, where athletes who have devoted their lives to sport are often discarded once their careers are over.

The 27-year-old told AFP on Tuesday that Chen Guangbiao, a wealthy recycling magnate and philanthropist, had offered him a position as a fitness instructor at his company.

"I'm leaving for (the eastern city of) Nanjing on Thursday. The salary is more than 10,000 yuan ($1,550) a month," he said, adding he would continue to appeal for retired athletes to be "resettled, educated and given medical care".

The salary is above average in China, where the minimum wage in Beijing, for example, is just 1,160 yuan.

Like many athletes in China -- known for its sporting prowess on the international scene -- Zhang was taken from his home when he was five to be trained in a special school and he received little formal education.

Years later, he won two gold medals at the 2001 Universiade, a global sports event for university athletes that took place in Beijing, but sustained a tendon injury soon after which brought his promising career to an end.

He then took jobs as a waiter and a care worker, but his injuries hampered his ability to work and he was eventually forced to turn to theft, spending nearly five years in jail before being released in April.

But earlier this month his luck changed when he was recognised on the streets of Beijing by a fan. His story was picked up by dozens of media outlets, went viral on the Internet, and attracted the attention of Chen.

"I will also hire a tutor for Comrade Shangwu to teach him presenting skills and how to sing," Chen said on a video posted on his Twitter-like Sina Weibo page.

Chen added he planned for Zhang to be the main presenter at one of his charity concerts in the southwestern province of Guizhou in September, and also hoped he would sing "a few songs".

Chen, whose wealth was estimated last year at five billion yuan, has been named the country's top philanthropist in terms of donation levels. He has pledged to give all his fortune away when he dies.




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Catholic priest says denied entry to China
Hong Kong (AFP) July 26, 2011 - An outspoken Hong Kong Catholic priest said Tuesday he has been denied entry into China due to an escalating row between the Vatican and Beijing over the ordination of bishops.

Italian-born Franco Mella said Chinese immigration officials barred him on July 19 after he tried to enter the mainland through a checkpoint between Hong Kong and the mainland Chinese city of Shenzhen.

Mella, who has joined recent Hong Kong protests against China's controversial ordinations, said he had a valid Chinese visa and no previous problems travelling to the mainland over the past two decades.

"They kept me in a room for one hour and asked me to watch the TV. They later came back and told me that my Chinese visa has been cancelled," the 62-year-old activist-priest told AFP.

"They didn't tell me the reasons why I was barred. Three officials then escorted me back to the Hong Kong side of the checkpoint," said Mella, who splits his time between the semi-autonomous territory and mainland China.

Calls to Chinese immigration officials went unanswered.

Mella, who said he had planned to visit the eastern province of Henan, had taken a problem-free trip to the Chinese capital less than a month ago.

The Vatican has been locked in a bitter struggle with Beijing in recent months over control of the Catholic church in China.

China's 5.7 million Catholics are increasingly caught between showing allegiance to the state-controlled Catholic church or to the Pope as part of an "underground" church.

The Holy See says recent ordinations of bishops by the state-run church were carried out without papal approval and are illegitimate.

On Monday Beijing described the Vatican's bid to excommunicate two such bishops as "extremely unreasonable and rude", according to Chinese state media.

"It is clearer and clearer that this is due to the ordinations of the bishops and the excommunication of the two (Chinese) bishops," Mella said of his treatment by immigration officials.

"It is unfair. I am very upset after 20 years I can't enter China now," said the priest.





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SINO DAILY
Uighur leader fears for China detainees after clashes
Washington (AFP) July 25, 2011
An exiled leader of China's Uighur minority said Monday she feared for the safety of dozens of people she said were injured in recent clashes with police in the country's Xinjiang region and then detained. Rebiya Kadeer, the US-based president of the World Uighur Congress, said that about 70 injured Uighurs were transferred from a civilian to a military prison hospital after the violence on ... read more


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