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A year after Nobel, China rejects Norway's peace offering
by Staff Writers
Oslo (AFP) Oct 17, 2011


China on Monday rejected the Norwegian foreign minister's call to restore the political dialogue Beijing put on ice after the Nobel Peace Prize went to jailed Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo a year ago.

In a statement published in Norwegian financial daily Dagens Naeringsliv (DN) Monday, China's embassy in Oslo blamed the Norwegian government for supporting the Norwegian Nobel Committee's decision to give the prestigious prize to "a Chinese criminal."

This, the embassy insisted, "constitutes contempt for China's judiciary independence and interference in China's internal affairs, thus causing great damages to the bilateral relations."

"We expect that the Norwegian side will make tangible efforts to restore and develop the bilateral relations," it added.

When contacted by AFP, the embassy confirmed the statement was authentic.

On October 11, Norwegian Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere had insisted it was "unnatural and untenable" that political dialogue between the two countries remained halted, calling on Beijing to turn the page.

"We now have to use our energy to look to the future. The road forward should be that we resume political dialogue" between the two countries, he told DN at the time.

China halted all high-level political relations with Norway after the Norwegian Nobel Committee on October 8, 2010 announced the Peace Prize would go to Chinese dissident and democracy activist Liu Xiaobo, whom Beijing considers a criminal and who is currently serving an 11-year prison sentence for "subversion".

Beijing also suspended talks with Oslo on a free trade pact and has ordered such strict and time-consuming veterinary controls on Norwegian salmon that fresh fish has ended up rotting in Chinese warehouses, plunging exports to the Asian giant into freefall.

Norwegian business leaders have also reported running into increased difficulties on the massive Chinese market.

Stoere's peace offering was met with criticism by a section of the right-leaning opposition that claimed it contained an element of misplaced apology, as human rights abuses continue in China and the Nobel Committee's prize decisions are completely independent of Norway's government and parliament.

While political dialogue has been halted, bilateral trade -- excluding salmon -- has meanwhile soared, with Chinese imports from Norway rising 16 percent in the first half of the year and its exports to the Scandinavian country leaping 43 percent in the same period.

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Outrage as bleeding China toddler left on street
Beijing (AFP) Oct 17, 2011 - More than a dozen passers-by ignored a two-year-old girl as she lay critically injured on a street in southern China after being run over twice, the official Xinhua news agency said Monday.

The incident has sparked outrage on China's hugely popular social media sites.

Surveillance cameras showed a series of people walk past the girl, named Yue Yue, after she was hit first by a van and then a truck outside her family's shop in the southern Chinese city of Foshan.

Xinhua said a rubbish collector who finally came to the girl's aid, moving her to the curb and shouting for help, was ignored by several shopkeepers before he finally tracked down her mother who took her to hospital.

In response, one netizen on Sina Weibo, a Chinese micro-blog similar to Twitter, wrote: "This society is seriously ill. Even cats and dogs shouldn't be treated so heartlessly."

But others linked the incident to an earlier case in which a man who tried to help an elderly woman after she fell over was prosecuted, apparently because his intervention broke government rules on dealing with accident victims.

Doctors said Yue Yue was in a coma and unlikely to survive the ordeal.

"She would not be able to survive any operations. She's very close to brain death," a spokesman for the hospital treating her told AFP.

Police have detained the drivers of both vehicles involved in the incident, Xinhua said.



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SINO DAILY
Ten killed in China bus accident: state media
Beijing (AFP) Oct 17, 2011
A packed tourist bus overturned in a rural area of south-central China, killing 10 people and injuring 33, state media reported early Monday. The accident occurred on Sunday afternoon near a village in Yongshun County in Hunan province when the bus carrying almost 50 passengers overturned, the Xinhua report said, citing the county government. Thirty-three passengers were injured and take ... read more


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