ASIAN CANADIAN

A quirky blog that features news from Canada and around the world with an Asian twist. Send Asian Canadian News, Events, and Stories to webmaster@asiancanadian.net

Sunday, December 31, 2006

China expects Lunar New Year tourists to take more than 2 billion trips

BEIJING (AP) - Chinese authorities expect tourists to take 2.2 billion trips over the Lunar New Year holiday in February, a news report said Wednesday. Tourists are expected to take nearly two billion trips by road during the 40-day travel season that begins Feb. 3, the Xinhua News Agency said, citing the National Development and Reform Commission, the country's main planning agency.

Travellers will take 155 million trips by train and more than 19 million by air, Xinhua said.

The Lunar New Year holiday is China's most important annual family event. Hundreds of millions of city dwellers travel to their traditional hometowns, while a growing number of Chinese are taking advantage of the holiday to visit tourist spots.

The government has extended the length of the official holiday to one week in recent years in order to encourage tourism as an economic development measure.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Free TVs handed out to voters in India, heralding surge of election populism

SUMATHUVAPURAM, India (AP) - These days, it seems, the huddled masses are yearning to get free TVs. Declaring colour television a basic necessity, an Indian political party promised free sets to the poor and swept to power in May in the southern state of Tamil Nadu. So far, the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam party, or DMK, has handed out 60,000 sets and plans to give away 30,000 more in coming months.

As far as political platforms go, this one clearly has been a winner.

"I will always vote for DMK," said Parimala, 51, a widow who like many in these parts uses only one name.

Peeling onions on the bare floor of her tiny living room, her eyes hardly wavered from the soap opera playing at full volume on the 14-inch box adorned with a purple sticker reading: "Government of Tamil Nadu Colour TV 2006."

An electoral stunt for sure, but one that illustrates how populism has emerged as the default position of parties across India's political spectrum as they contend with the fading of once-dominant ideologies.

The Congress party, which has dominated India for much of post-independence history, is struggling to find a new path since abandoning the socialism espoused by the country's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. Hindu nationalism also is not the force it was just a decade ago.

Many areas have seen the rise of populism, with politicians offering a mishmash of social programs and other promises to the masses.

But no one has gone as far as Tamil Nadu's DMK. Part of the reason is money: Tamil Nadu is one of India's wealthiest states, giving its government full tax coffers.

"In other states the populism is mainly rhetoric, but in Tamil Nadu they can afford to give out so much," said Kamal Mitra Chenoy, a political scientist in New Delhi. "The kind of material benefits to the voters in Tamil Nadu are unprecedented."

The state's two main political parties, the DMK and the All India Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, face the problem of not being very different from one another.

Both push regional Tamil rights and champion the poor. And both are led by film industry celebrities. DMK has M. Karunanidhi, a flamboyant former screenwriter, while its rival has former Tamil star actress J. Jayalalithaa.

The two parties have traded leadership of the state for three decades, and "since the battle is so tight they resort to these kind of promises," Chenoy said.

Thus, the free TVs, and houses and stoves and whatever else can be used to lure voters.

Paramila's tiny house in Sumathuvapuram, a village on the outskirts of Kanchipuram, a city famed for its temples and silks, is one of about 100 homes built here by DMK for supporters in a key election district after the party came to power in 1996.

DMK was voted out in 2001 but staged a comeback in last May's elections, and now voters like Paramila are eager for the goodies they were promised during the campaign.

"In January, they are giving us gas stoves," she said with a grin.

Politicians wrap such giveaways in the justifying language of social welfare.

Television, "nowadays, it is not just entertainment, it is more, it informs about health, politics and public awareness issues," said DMK's party secretary, T.K.S. Elangovam,

Farm workers could not afford to buy a TV set on their daily earnings of about C$1.50, he noted. Besides, the sets are no burden to state coffers, bought at bulk for about $70 each, he said.

Not everyone sees the giveaways in such altruistic terms.

"The problem is that the bulk of the money goes to freebies instead of to development," said S. Viswanathan, editor of Tamil Nadu's Industrial Economist magazine.

Critics also note that relatives of Karunanidhi, the party leader, own the region's main cable company, Sumangali Cable Vision, and the free TVs have helped boost subscriptions.

The cost, an initial payment of about $12.75 plus a monthly charge of $2.55, is steep for the poor, but 30 of the 100 households that got TV sets in this village have signed up.

Perhaps that will provide the party with a new opportunity to make promises.

"Tell the government they must reduce the rate," said Alamelu, 35, a housewife, waving her TV remote control in the air. "I had to take out a loan for the deposit."

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Friday, December 29, 2006

Asia recovering from earthquake telecom blackout

(CBC) - Telecommunications firms in Asia scrambled Thursday to restore service to millions of Chinese affected by an internet blackout after an earthquake snapped six undersea cables.

Less than two days after powerful tremors rattled the southern tip of Taiwan, killing two residents and injuring dozens, companies from South Korea to Singapore managed to reroute traffic through satellites and undamaged cables to restore partial service to millions of customers.

Telecommunications between China, Taiwan, North America and Europe were seriously disrupted because of Tuesday's earthquake, a spokesperson with China Telecom said.

Although Chinese websites are still available, it could take at least three weeks for the entire tech-savvy region to access popular U.S. or European websites such as eBay, Google and Hotmail.

Repair ships will have to sail into the quake zone and haul the severed cables above water for a two-week repair process, at a cost of about $1.53 million US.

Lin Jen-hung, vice-general manager of Taiwan's largest phone company, Chunghwa Telecom Co., said four ships were on the way, but were not expected to arrive until Tuesday.

Lose chance to 'make fast money'

The inconvenience could prove costly for Asia's economy, as many Chinese rely on Western websites for fast stock tips and news on the latest trends. International phone calls were also affected.

While banks and other financial institutions were spared from major problems because they run on independent systems, "many lost the opportunity to make fast money," said Francis Lun, manager of a Hong Kong securities firm.

"We've become too dependent on these optic fibres - a few of them get damaged, and everything collapses," Lun said.

Online gamers across Hong Kong also complained about the damaged undersea cables cutting into their entertainment.

"Most online games are routed through Taiwan, and now I can't play any of them," said gamer Daniel Lee, 28. "I can't contact a lot of people because my e-mail is down. It's a hassle and it's depressing, but I can't do anything about it."

With files from the Associated Press

© the CBC, 2006

South Korean defence report calls North Korea serious threat

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - South Korea's Defense Ministry called North Korea a serious threat in a new report Friday, saying it is believed to have about 50 kilograms of plutonium, enough for up to seven nuclear weapons. The report also said the North is believed to be capable of producing biological weapons, including anthrax, and possesses up to 5,000 tons of toxic agents at many facilities.

The report described North Korea "as a serious threat, considering the serious nature of its nuclear test and threat of weapons of mass destruction," the ministry said in a statement.

North Korea stoked regional tensions in October by conducting its first nuclear weapons test, drawing U.N. sanctions and global condemnation.

Last year, North Korea pledged to dismantle its nuclear program in exchange for security guarantees and aid, but no progress has been made in implementing the agreement because of U.S. financial restrictions imposed on the communist regime for its alleged money laundering and counterfeiting.

During nuclear talks last week, North Korean renewed its insistence that the U.S. lift the sanctions before it would move ahead on nuclear disarmament.

The report said North Korea has the capability of launching a surprise attack against South Korea without repositioning its troops because it deploys about 70 per cent of its ground forces south of Pyongyang, its capital.

About 29,500 American troops are stationed in South Korea as a deterrent against the North, the legacy of the 1950-53 Korean War, which ended in a cease-fire, not a peace treaty.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Thursday, December 28, 2006

Report: Ford, Toyota chiefs met last week, purpose of meeting not given

DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) - Japanese automaker Toyota Motor Corp. confirmed that Chairman Fujio Cho met with Ford Motor Co. President and Chief Executive Officer Alan Mulhally in the wake of media reports of talks last week in Tokyo, a company spokeswoman said Wednesday. Toyota spokeswoman Yasue Kato said Cho and Mulhally "met and exchanged greetings," but refused to offer any further details, including when and where the talks took place. She added that Toyota "regularly holds meetings with other automakers when the opportunity presents itself."

"We meet regularly with other automakers on a variety of topics of mutual interest," Ford spokesman Tom Hoyt told The Associated Press. "We don't discuss the content of these meetings."

The comments came in response to an overnight report on the Wall Street Journal's website and in the Wednesday morning edition of Japan's Nihon Keizai business daily that the two executives met last week. The meeting took place in Tokyo, the Nihon Keizai said.

The meeting was held at Ford's request, Kyodo News agency said Wednesday, citing an unidentified Toyota official. The talks appear to have focused on how the two companies can strengthen co-operation in environmental technology, Kyodo and the Nihon Keizai said.

The struggling U.S. automaker has acknowledged that it lags behind rivals in offering the right mix of fuel-efficient models to consumers, who have been placing an increasing emphasis on fuel economy. Susan Cischke, a Ford vice-president overseeing environmental and safety engineering, told reporters in Tokyo this October that the company sees ecological technology as crucial.

Toyota, meanwhile, has been a leader in the field. The company licensed a number of hybrid system patents to Ford in March 2004 for use in Ford's own hybrid system, and its hybrid-electric Toyota Prius topped the U.S. government's annual top-10 fuel economy list for 2007 vehicles released this past October.

The troubles in the U.S. auto industry in the face of their Japanese rivals' success have led to major restructuring efforts by U.S. automakers.

For the latest quarter, Toyota, Japan's No. 1 automaker, earned US$3.44 billion, while Ford lost $5.8 billion. Toyota passed up Ford as the world's No. 2 automaker in 2003.

The world's No. 1 automaker, General Motors Corp., said in October that it had called off discussions with Japan's Nissan Motor Co. and France's Renault SA on creating an auto-making alliance. Nissan and Renault already are allied.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Indonesia struggles to prepare amid warnings of second massive tsunami

PADANG, Indonesia (AP) - Two years after an earthquake off western Indonesia unleashed a monster tsunami, scientists expect the same fault to rupture again within the next few decades - and this town stands to take the full force of the waves. They predict a large swath of Sumatra island's densely populated coast just south of the tsunami-hit area will be pounded by a giant wall of water.

"All this area in red will disappear," Padang Mayor Fauzi Bahar said, pointing at a satellite map on his office wall showing the likely reach of the waves into the town.

The low-lying town of 900,000 people has started mapping out evacuation routes and educating the public, but all the same, authorities fear up to 60,000 will die, unable to outrun the waves even if they get a speedy warning and flee.

"The people will be washed away," Bahar said.

On the morning of Dec. 26, 2004, the most powerful earthquake in four decades lifted the seabed west of Sumatra by several metres, propelling waves up to two stories high at jetliner speeds across the Indian Ocean to smash into coastal communities, beach resorts and towns in 12 countries.

In hardest-hit Indonesia, Thailand, Sri Lanka and India, the waves surged kilometres inland, tossing ships, swallowing entire villages and leaving behind a blasted landscape of concrete foundations and rubble littered with tens of thousands of bodies.

On Sumatra island - home to more than half the tsunami's nearly 230,000 dead and missing - volunteers and emergency workers took three months to recover all the corpses and bury them in mass graves.

Warnings of another tsunami-spawning quake are adding urgency to efforts to establish a warning system covering the Indian Ocean rim like the network of high-tech buoys in the Pacific that alerts Japan, the United States and other countries of sudden tidal changes.

The worst-affected countries have begun installing sirens on threatened coasts and three buoys with sensors capable of detecting waves generated by seismic activity are in the water, but the network is several years from completion, officials say.

Making sure the system works from end-to-end is a "daunting task," said Curt Barrett at the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which is helping set it up.

"Once the warning goes out, people have to know what to do," he said. "All of this information is useless if it doesn't get to the person down on the beach."

The warnings of another tsunami are based on more than a decade of research by respected U.S. geologist Kerry Sieh and a team of scientists on a section of the fault just south of the part that ruptured in 2004.

His conclusions are shared by scientists at other universities and government research institutions.

The fault, which runs the length of the west coast of Sumatra about 200 kilometres offshore, is the meeting point of the Eurasian and Pacific tectonic plates that have been pushing against each other for millions of years, causing huge stresses to build up.

Using historical accounts of earlier quakes, measurements of coral uplift and data from a network of Global Positioning System transmitters on nearby islands, Sieh, from the California Institute of Technology, has found a pattern of large earthquakes about every 230 years, with the last major ones in 1797 and in 1833.

The 2004 jolt, as well as another strong quake on the same fault three months later that killed 1,000 people on nearby Nias island, has loaded even more stress, Sieh said.

"We are not saying the quake is going to happen tomorrow or next week, but on the other hand we don't want people to forget about it and be lax," he said. "I'd be surprised if it were delayed much beyond 30 years."

A small non-governmental agency funded by foreign donors is spreading the message in Padang and surrounding districts. The group has met with hundreds of village heads and religious leaders and sends volunteers to schools along the threatened coast with a simple warning:

"If the quake lasts longer than a minute, knocks you to your feet or collapses buildings, run to the nearest hills," volunteer Riska told a class recently.

"If you can't make it, then climb a tree. Start learning now," she said, her voice hoarse from trying to hold the giggling children's attention.

The group says residents and local government officials are receptive to its message, especially since a second tsunami on Indonesia's main island of Java last July killed 600 people.

Coastal residents say land prices have fallen, a sign that people are moving inland.

But simply raising awareness isn't enough, experts say.

The tsunami will likely crash into the shore within 20 minutes because the fault line is so close, meaning the town must make expensive infrastructure changes to enable people to flee.

Evacuation roads need widening and bridges crossing the town's many rivers need reinforcement. Some experts say tsunami-proof towers should be built in coastal areas and emergency services and government agencies moved inland.

Sieh says Indonesia would be better off spending more money on those projects and educating people than on installing and maintaining an expensive warning system of buoys.

"You have an earthquake and it lasts for five minutes. It is shaking so heavily you can't walk. Why do you need a warning? Haven't you got one already?" he asks. "It is not just a waste of money, it is a distraction: It gives people a false sense of security."

Australian Chris Scurrah and his wife manage a small hotel in Padang's seaside colonial quarter and run a thriving business organizing surfing trips. After five good years, they have no plans to leave.

"It's an awesome place to be, but it's just scary it's going to get smashed," Scurrah said before setting out with a boatload of surfers. "That's just the way it works here."

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Powerful earthquake strikes off Taiwan; official says tsunami danger over

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) - Maintenance crews began clearing the rubble from a southern Taiwanese town Wednesday, hours after a powerful earthquake struck the area, killing two and triggering a regional tsunami alert. The quake, which hit late Tuesday just offshore from the Pingtung County township of Hengchun, came on the second anniversary of the devastating tsunami that took more than 200,000 lives in southern Asia.

Two members of one family were killed in the town when their four-storey home collapsed. Six other members of the family were rescued from under the rubble early Wednesday, the National Fire Agency said in a statement.

One member of the family - an 89-year old man - escaped from the building unharmed.

A total of 42 people were injured in southern Taiwan, the fire agency said. Three houses collapsed, and 12 fires broke out.

The power supply to 3,000 homes was disrupted, but was later restored, according to the agency.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake, which hit at 8:26 p.m., local time, registered magnitude 7.1, while Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau measured it at 6.7. It was followed eight minutes later by an aftershock registering 7.0, the USGS said.

Aftershocks of more than magnitude 5.0 were still likely within a week, said Lu Pei-ling, a spokeswoman for the weather bureau.

Japan's Meteorological Bureau said a one-metre tsunami might be headed toward the eastern coast of the Philippines, but later lifted the warning.

"The expected waves did not materialize . . . the danger has passed," said Hiroshi Koide of the agency's earthquake section. "We predicted a tsunami based on the depth and magnitude of the earthquake. But ultimately, it appears no large tsunami was triggered."

Philippine police said coastal areas had been alerted.

The warning underscored the higher level of caution about tsunami waves in the region since a massive earthquake off Indonesia exactly two years earlier triggered a powerful tsunami in the Indian Ocean that killed 230,000 people in a dozen countries.

Tuesday's quake was felt throughout Taiwan. It swayed buildings and knocked objects off the shelves in the capital, Taipei, in the northern part of the island.

Several high-rise hotels swayed violently in the southern city of Kaohsiung, the CTI Cable News reported.

The tremor was centred at sea about 23 kilometres southwest of Hengchun on Taiwan's southern tip, the bureau said. Hengchun is about 450 kilometres south of Taipei.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Used right-hand-drive cars from Japan raise concerns in B.C.

(CBC) - They are in excellent mechanical shape with low mileage, but used right-hand-drive vehicles from Japan are raising safety concerns in British Columbia.

Provincial officials are concerned the vehicles might be dangerous in passing situations and have asked Transport Canada to step in.

Mike Woods, manager for vehicle inspections in the province, said that while there's no evidence of accidents caused by right-hand-drive vehicles, officials need more time to determine their safety record.

"There is some concern, and the Insurance Corp. of B.C. is probably looking at that quite closely, and I'm certain that the Insurance Bureau of Canada is also looking into it," Woods said.

Some officials worry the cars may be dangerous when passing because the driver's range of vision is limited on the outside of the road.

All cars imported from Japan - where motorists drive on the left-hand side of the road - are at least 15 years old because federal laws place restrictions on newer cars.

However, B.C. officials have asked Transport Canada to extend that to 25 years in an attempt to reduce the number of right-hand-drive cars entering the province.

About 175 Japanese right-hand-drive cars are registered in B.C. every month - a number that has grown steadily, provincial officials say.

One of them is owned by Thomas Nottelman, who imported his 16-year-old Toyota Corolla and several other cars from Japan. Because Japan has tough mechanical regulations and regular inspections, he said, its second-hand cars are prized.

Many of them have "never seen an accident, they've never seen dirt, they certainly don't have any rust, and they're exceptionally low mileage," Nottelman said.

"So you can't buy anything comparable here, unless you happen to find a little old lady's car."

© the CBC, 2006

Giant panda gives birth to twins at zoo in Japan; all in good condition

TOKYO (AP) - Mei Mei, a giant panda from China, gave birth to twins at a zoo in western Japan, and the mother and babies were in good condition, a zoo official said Sunday. The baby pandas were born on Saturday at Adventure World in Wakayama, 450 kilometres southwest of Tokyo. Officials have yet to confirm their sex, spokesman Tadashi Ishikawa said.

Although one of the twins weighs just 85 grams, considered to be premature, both babies and Mei Mei were in good health, Ishikawa said.

Mei Mei, 12, and partner Eimei, 14, are both on loan from China.

China's Xinhua News Agency said that their birth raised the number of artificially bred pandas born this year to a record 30.

Ishikawa said, however, that officials could not confirm if the twins were born as a result of natural mating or artificial insemination because both methods were tried on the couple.

The panda is one of the world's rarest animals, with about 1,590 living in the wild in China, mostly in Sichuan and the western province of Shaanxi. Another 180 have been bred in captivity.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Monday, December 25, 2006

Cathay Pacific adds five cities to Asia pass

VANCOUVER (CP) - Cathay Pacific Airways says its annual "all-Asia pass" will cover 23 cities in 2007, up from 18 this year. Destinations added are Cebu and Manila in the Philippines; Phuket, Thailand; Phnom Penh, Cambodia; and Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia, said airline spokesperson Jennifer Pearson.

Other destinations covered by the pass: Nagoya, Osaka, Fukuoka, Sapporo and Tokyo in Japan; Bali, Jakarta and Surabaya in Indonesia; Kuala Lumpur and Penang in Malaysia; Hong Kong; Bangkok, Thailand; Colombo, Sri Lanka; Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; Karachi, Pakistan; Seoul, South Korea; Singapore; and Taipei, Taiwan.

Travellers can visit up to 23 cities in 21 days, the airline says.

The fare starts at C$1,599, plus taxes. Summer travel costs more.

The pass includes roundtrip travel between Toronto or Vancouver and Hong Kong, and must be booked through a travel agent.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Sunday, December 24, 2006

U.S. airline, Chinese partner to launch new domestic Chinese airline

BEIJING (AP) - U.S. regional airline Mesa Air Group Inc. and a Chinese carrier said they signed a deal Friday to create the first joint-venture airline to fly domestically within China's booming travel market. The new carrier will start service ahead of the 2008 Beijing Olympics, flying to 11 Chinese cities with 50-seat regional jets, Mesa and its partner, Shenzhen Airlines Ltd., said in a joint statement.

Shenzhen Airlines will have majority control of the new carrier, the airlines said. They did not disclose financial details and said they have not decided on a name for the venture.

Chinese companies in a growing number of industries are taking on foreign companies as strategic investors or joint-venture partners to get access to capital and skills to modernize their operations.

Government rules limit foreign investors to holding a minority stake in companies in industries deemed strategic, such as air travel.

Phoenix-based Mesa operates 199 aircraft with more than 1,300 daily flights to 173 cities in the United States, Canada, Mexico and the Bahamas. It operates under its own name and as America West Express, Delta Connection, US Airways Express and United Express.

Mesa will provide the new Chinese airline with pilot and maintenance support, aircraft sourcing and training, the companies said.

Shenzhen Airlines, headquartered in the southern Chinese business centre of Shenzhen, operates 45 A320 and B737 aircraft on 100 routes in China and Southeast Asia.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Friday, December 22, 2006

Fallen Japanese dot-com star Takafumi Horie feels targeted, looks to space

TOKYO (AP) - Former dot-com star Takafumi Horie, who is fighting charges of cooking the books at his startup Livedoor Co., says the old-style bureaucratic power elite is targeting him for rocking the boat. "I stood out too much," he said in an interview at his lawyer's Tokyo office. "Tackling something new means doing what's not considered yet by the legal system."

Once a media darling who was admired for his bold business deals, Horie is now on trial in Tokyo District Court on charges of violating securities laws. During the interview, he reiterated his innocence as he's done repeatedly in the courtroom.

Horie, 34, accused prosecutors of concocting a false story in their determination to find defiant outsiders like him as "evil."

During the trial, which began in September, prosecutors have outlined a complex scheme allegedly orchestrated by Horie of using "dummy" companies to buy up shares to inflate the earnings of Livedoor, the Internet services company he founded in 1997.

But Horie and his lawyers say the evidence, such as e-mail exchanges and testimony from former Livedoor officials, doesn't directly point to Horie as the mastermind. They also say any irregularities that may have happened deserve a fine at most.

Horie was arrested in January after a surprise raid by prosecutors - televised live on nationwide TV - and was kept in a detention centre for three months.

Yoshimi Sato, a spokeswoman for the prosecution, declined to comment Thursday on Horie's interview or his trial. She said the office does not reply to questions from the media about ongoing cases.

But the prosecution will make a statement Friday and announce what sentence is being sought, as is the standard procedure in Japanese trials. The defence team is expected to give closing arguments in January. The judge hands down the verdict and sentencing, usually a few months later.

If convicted, Horie faces up to five years in prison and five million yen (US$42,000) in fines, or both. But a jail term in such a case would be harsh by Japanese standards. Defendants can speak to reporters during their trials because there is no jury trial in Japan.

Still looking boyish but a bit more pensive than before his arrest, Horie said Wednesday he has no regrets about his past. Already planning for the future, he is now looking to build a new business for consumer space travel and is working with several people to develop a rocket.

"If the American space shuttle is a giant truck, what we're working on is a motorcycle," he said.

Horie, a millionaire, rose to stardom in 2004 for his attempts to buy a professional baseball team. He appeared often on TV, ran unsuccessfully for a seat in Parliament and tried to take over a radio broadcaster to gain managerial influence over media group Fuji Television Network Inc.

But the Japanese media have turned against Horie, depicting him as misguided, greedy and brash.

"Bureaucrats just want people to keep working by the sweat of their brow, without thinking and putting their savings in the bank," he said. "That's the way they think, and there's not much anyone can do about it."

Horie also said his big goal in life had been taking over Sony Corp.

In fact, while he was still at Livedoor he had concocted a vague plan to do just that as quickly as possible to take advantage of its brand power before Sony's faltering profits and other problems grew worse, he said.

If he were in charge of the company, he said he would have quickly sold off its electronics division, but kept its financial and entertainment operations, including banking, insurance, music and films, he said.

Horie denied he had changed or had been hurt by his run-in with the law.

He hated being cooped up in his jail cell, unable to talk to anyone. And all he could do was read and do push-ups. But he insisted he hadn't lost anything, except maybe for one thing.

"I lost weight," he said with a smile.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Edward Norton impressed with professionalism of Chinese movie crews

HONG KONG (AP) - American actor Edward Norton says he was impressed with the professionalism of Chinese movie crews when he made "The Painted Veil" in China.
"I've been to some other countries where you make a film and you can tell the local film crews are not so experienced but here you go to make a film and Chinese film crews are very, very professional, so the tradition of making films you feel it, even when you work here, because the crews really know what they're doing," Norton said in an interview with the Chinese news website Sina.com.

Footage of the interview was posted on Sina.com Friday.

"The Painted Veil," also featuring Naomi Watts, Chinese actor Xia Yu and Hong Kong's Anthony Wong, is about a love triangle in 1920s China adapted from the novel by W. Somerset Maugham. The movie is now showing in the U.S. and China.

Norton said he also admired the ability of Xia and Wong to juggle Chinese and English dialogue.

"I was very impressed by Anthony (Wong) and Xia Yu both working in two languages. I thought it was amazing," he said.

Norton described himself as a Chinese film fan who enjoys the work of directors John Woo, Wong Kar-wai, Ang Lee, Chen Kaige and Zhang Yimou.

Of Chen's and Zhang's movies set in mainland China, Norton called them "masterful," adding, "They seemed very exotic, but they were so well made."

Norton said after making "The Painted Veil," he shot "Pride and Glory," about police corruption in New York City, and that he hopes to direct a mystery set in the 1950s next.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

China has a strong presence at the 2007 Rotterdam film festival

HONG KONG (AP) - The 2007 Rotterdam film festival will have a strong Chinese presence, with organizers honouring Hong Kong director Johnnie To and naming mainland filmmaker Lou Ye a member of the jury. To has been named "filmmaker in focus," and the festival will show his recent gangster film series "Election" and "Election 2," as well as "Heroic Trio" - a movie that festival organizers say in a statement on their website "cemented To's reputation in the West."

Meanwhile, Chinese director Lou will serve on the jury for the Tiger Awards, as the Rotterdam Festival's prizes are known. Lou won a Tiger in 2000 with his feature debut "Suzhou River."

Lou has recently drawn attention because China's Film Bureau banned him from making movies for five years after he screened his new film, "Summer Palace," at the Cannes Film Festival in May without approval.

The movie uses as a backdrop China's 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown on pro-democracy protesters, which killed at least hundreds of people.

"Suzhou River," a quirky tale about a courier's obsession with a young girl, also failed to clear Chinese censors.

Lou has said he plans to defy the ban.

The 36th International Film Festival Rotterdam will take place Jan. 24 to Feb. 4.

Two Chinese-language films - Tan Chui Mui's "Love Conquers All" and Guo Xiaolu's "How Is Your Fish Today?" - have been shortlisted for the Tiger Awards. Both are feature debuts for their directors.

"Love Conquers All," about a woman who's confused about her feelings after moving to the big city, won the award for best new Asian filmmaker at South Korea's Pusan International Film Festival in October.

The movie was backed by Rotterdam's Hubert Bals Fund.

Festival organizers said Guo's "How Is Your Fish Today?" portrays "the dreamlike voyage of a scriptwriter to the snow-covered Chinese-Russian border region."

Asian filmmakers were major recipients of the Hubert Bals Fund's digital production grant this year.

Filipino Khavn De La Cruz received funding for "Mondomanila: How I Fixed My Hair After a Rather Long Journey," a movie set in Manila. Malaysian Ho Yu Hang won for "At The End of the Daybreak," about an Internet romance gone bad.

Ho's countryman Liew Sang Tat will be backed for "In What City Does It Live?" The film tackles superstition and racism in a small Muslim village.

Chinese director Wang Liren is another grant winner for "Weed," about a shy young man's courtship of a prostitute.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Canada cracks down on high-tech trash dumped in China

(CBC) - Canada is getting tough on the illegal export of discarded lead acid batteries, computer monitors and other hazardous wastes from Vancouver to plants in China and Hong Kong.

A joint investigation by Environment Canada and the Canada Border Services Agency since last year seized 50 containers loaded with about 500,000 kilograms of "E-waste" - discarded parts valuable to foreign junk merchants who extract recyclable material from the goods.

One container of scrap metal and used parts such as motherboards can be worth up to $10,000. The federal government has signed an international treaty making it illegal to move hazardous waste out of Canada without a permit, and the initiative is designed to protect the environments in developing countries.

The used electronic equipment often contains toxic chemicals called polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs.

'A very large industry'

Environment Canada inspector Emmanuel Mendoza said investigators realize the size of the industry they're taking on. "What we have been finding is that we are dealing with a very large industry. It's really unknown to us ... and it is a fast-growing and profitable business," he said.

Vancouver's port serves as a major hub for the industry, taking in shipments from across the country. From Vancouver, it is then sold to the illegal scrap dealers in Hong Kong and mainland China.

Whether Canada's laws are strong enough to slow a shady multimillion- dollar industry is up for debate, said Seattle environmentalist Jim Puckett.

"It's laudable that Canadians are doing this enforcement action in Vancouver. It's never too late to enforce the law, but it may prove to be too little," Puckett said in an interview with CBC Newsworld.

"There are many ways to exploit the law and it appears that those will probably be exploited pretty soon." He noted that since there are no such restrictions in the U.S., Canadian exporters could circumvent the laws but redirecting their shipments through American dealers.

Since November 2005, the joint investigations have caught 27 companies illegally shipping E-waste out of the port of Vancouver, and Canada Border Services issued more than $50,000 in fines.

© the CBC, 2006

Edmonton liquor store rakes in Canadian Tire money in exchange for booze

EDMONTON (CP) - Those who need a little liquid fortification this Christmas are finding a new source of financing it - in their junk drawers and glove compartments.
A west Edmonton liquor store is accepting Canadian Tire money at par as a form of payment, and its owners say the program is a hit with shoppers. "There's a liquor store on every corner nowadays, so you need to have a bit of an edge to get someone to stop by your liquor store," said Don Calder, a part owner of Liquor International.

"A lot of times, (people) just stop by to say, 'Do you really take Canadian Tire money?' " he said with a laugh.

Canadian Tire uses the pastel green, red, blue and brown bills as a loyalty rewards program. Each year the company gives out more that $100 million worth, in denominations ranging from five cents to $2.

Calder, whose store takes in about $5 worth of the stuff on a slow day and up to $200 when things are hopping, put the policy in place about a year and a half ago.

It was supposed to be a short-term gimmick but proved so popular that he's kept it up.

"We do have a fair amount starting to stock up," he said. "And, I assure you, we actually look for items now to go to Canadian Tire and buy."

There are a few rules. Customers can only pay up to $50 with Canadian Tire bills. Oh, and none of those pesky five-or 10-cent ones.

"We used to take them, but it just got too cumbersome at the tills," Calder said.

Most people come in with a couple of dollars' worth.

"It's whatever they've got in their glove box, it seems."

Chris Sillito stopped by the store Thursday to pick up a couple of bottles of vodka with $50 worth of $2 coupons.

"I've got lots stored up from the Canadian Tire and buying my fuel at the Canadian Tire gas bar," he said.

"Now that I know about this place, I come here to buy my liquor."

There are no legal problems with the store accepting Canadian Tire money, said Robyn Cochrane, a spokeswoman for the Alberta Gaming and Liquor Commission, which oversees the province's private liquor stores.

Calder said everyone wants to know what a liquor store could possibly use from the retail giant. Well, he also co-owns a property management business, which buys a lot of the coupons from the liquor store. And liquor store workers who want to shop at Canadian Tire also buy them.

"I kept saying I was going to buy all my Christmas presents there," said Calder.

Canadian Tire officials could not immediately be reached for comment.

Often jokingly called Canada's second currency, Canadian Tire bills are also accepted on ebay.ca and in some small-town bars. Some were even accidentally dispensed by a bank machine in New Brunswick in 2004.

Calder said a friend of his was on an Internet chat room when someone else brought up his store's exchange program. It wasn't long before the jokes started flying "about Canadian Tire money being stronger than the Canadian currency and more stable."

The bills were introduced in 1958 and since then the company has issued 21 different series. Older versions have featured a picture of a happy tire and a dollar sign running hand in hand, but the best recognized mascot is the Scottish man Sandy McTire.

The bills were originally printed by the same company that printed legitimate Canadian currency and have sophisticated anti-counterfeiting technology. Over time, they have developed a fast following.

Groups such as the Canadian Tire Collectors Club collect them just like any coin or stamp collector.

Jerome Fourre, who edits the group's newsletter and co-wrote a guide to the "currency," has a caution for people who might want to cash all of their wayward Canadian Tire money in for some liquid Christmas cheer: some of the rarer bills can go for as much as $1,500.

That's a lot of beer.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

NKorea nuclear talks end without breakthrough, no new meeting scheduled

BEIJING (AP) - The first talks on North Korea's nuclear program since the communist country tested an atomic device ended Friday without an agreement to move ahead on disarmament or schedule further negotiations. The delegates reaffirmed a September 2005 agreement in which the North pledged to disarm in exchange for security guarantees and aid, Chinese envoy Wu Dawei said in a statement.

Wu said the parties had "useful discussions" about how to implement the agreement in "candid and in-depth exchanges of views," but he did not provide details.

The countries - China, Japan, Russia, the United States and the two Koreas - agreed to return home and "reconvene at the earliest opportunity," Wu said.

During five days of meetings in Beijing, negotiators said Pyongyang refused to talk about its nuclear weapons program, and instead stuck to its demand that the United States remove financial restrictions it has imposed on the regime.

Earlier, Japan's top envoy questioned whether the disarmament talks would continue after this round if no breakthrough was achieved. In more than three years of meetings, the North has only committed in principle to disarm but has taken no concrete steps to do so, instead conducting its first nuclear test on Oct. 9. Until this week, the North had boycotted the talks for 13 months.

"There will be opinions questioning the credibility of the six-party talks," Kenichiro Sasae said, without elaborating. He did not say what the alternative to the multinational dialogue might be.

Ahead of Friday's meetings, the U.S. envoy accused North Korea of not addressing the actual issue of its atomic programs.

"When the (North) raises problems, one day it's financial issues, another day it's something they want but they know they can't have, another day it's something we said about them that hurt their feelings," U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill said. "What they need to do is to get serious about the issue that made them such a problem ... their nuclear activities."

Pyongyang says the United States is waging a campaign to isolate North Korea from the international financial system and has insisted that it end. The United States accuses North Korea of involvement in counterfeiting US$100 bills and of money laundering, and has blacklisted a Macau bank that it alleges the North used to launder money to fund its weapons program.

Negotiators say North Koreans have refused to even talk about their nuclear weapons program until the financial restrictions are dropped.

American and North Korean experts had separate talks on the issue this week in Beijing, but made no breakthroughs and were tentatively set to meet in the United States next month.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Thursday, December 21, 2006

ACTRA 'days away' from strike

By LAUREN KRUGEL

TORONTO (CP) - The union representing 21,000 film, television and radio workers across Canada said early Thursday a major labour disruption could be a few days away.

Talks between the Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists, or ACTRA, and the producers' organization broke down late Wednesday, said Stephen Waddell, the organization's national executive director and chief negotiator. "I very much regret that Canadian producers have decided to provoke a dispute in which they will be the principal victims," Waddell said.

"But given the conduct of their trade associations, we appear to be a few days away from a major disruption in Canada's film and television industry."

ACTRA is in a legal strike position as of January 1, 2007 in most of Canada.

No new negotiations are scheduled.

The union's main contentions centre around wage increases and the use of performances on the internet.

ACTRA characterized as "outrageous" the producers' offer of a 0 per cent, 0 per cent and one per cent wage increase for people working on Canadian productions.

The union also said the producers maintained contract requirements that "amount to demanding work from Canadian performers on the Internet for free."

In earlier negotiations, ACTRA said it offered flexibility in the use of performances on the Internet, major wage concessions for low-budget independent Canadian producers and new flexible rules for reality television.

"We're not going to give away the future for free. And we are not going to let our members' pay continue to erode compared to other performers in North America," Waddell said, adding he'd be willing to speak to producers any time, but is not optimistic a settlement can be reached.

Last Friday ACTRA voted 97.6 in favour of going on strike if its demands aren't met.

Canadian stars such as Sarah Polley, Maria Del Mar, Wendy Crewson and Gordon Pinsent turned out to support the ACTRA's negotiating team late Wednesday and early Thursday.

The strike would cover virtually all television and film work in Canada.

ACTRA averted a strike in the fall of 2001 after it reached an agreement with the association that represents the country's film and TV producers.

The prospect of a strike led to a lull in work in the industry, then worth $4 billion. U.S. producers rushed to complete several projects being shot in Canada in the event of a threatened summer writers and actors strike in Hollywood, which never materialized. A looming Canadian strike compounded U.S. producers worries.

Between 75 and 80 per cent of the film and TV work in Canada is American-financed.

Japanese man in virtual 'hibernation' survives 3 weeks without food or water

TOKYO (AP) - A man who went missing in western Japan survived in near-freezing weather without food and water for over three weeks by falling into a state similar to hibernation, doctors said. Mitsutaka Uchikoshi had almost no pulse, his organs had all but shut down and his body temperature was 71 degrees Fahrenheit or about 21.6 Celsius when he was discovered on Rokko mountain in late October, said doctors who treated him at the nearby Kobe City General Hospital. He had been missing for 24 days.

"On the second day, the sun was out, I was in a field, and I felt very comfortable. That's my last memory," Uchikoshi, 35, told reporters Tuesday before returning home from hospital. "I must have fallen asleep after that."

Doctors believe Uchikoshi, a city official from neighbouring Nishinomiya who was visiting the mountain for a barbecue party, tripped and later lost consciousness in a remote mountainous area.

His body temperature soon plunged as he lay in 10-degree Celsius weather, greatly slowing down his metabolism.

"(Uchikoshi) fell into a state similar to hibernation and many of his organs slowed, but his brain was protected," said Dr. Shinichi Sato, head of the hospital's emergency unit. "I believe his brain capacity has recovered 100 per cent. "

Uchikoshi was treated for severe hypothermia, multiple organ failure and blood loss from his fall, but was unlikely to experience any lasting ill effects, Sato said.

Doctors were still uncertain how exactly Uchikoshi survived for weeks with his metabolism almost at a standstill.

In animals like squirrels or bears, hibernation reduces the amount of oxygen that cells need to survive, protecting the brain and other organs from damage.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Feeding machine, cuddly seals honoured in Japan robotics prize

TOKYO (AP) - An automated feeding machine and a cuddly, therapeutic seal - both designed to improve the quality of life of older people - were among robots honoured Thursday at a government-sponsored awards ceremony. The My Spoon feeding robot, which won a prize in the service category at Robot Award 2006, helps elderly or disabled people eat with a joystick-controlled swivelling arm.

My Spoon, which is already sold in Japan and Europe, doesn't force feed: the spoon-fitted arm stops at a preprogrammed position in front of the mouth so users can bite and swallow at their leisure, according to developer Secom Co. It sells for as much as US$3,454.

Another robot receiving an award in the service category was Paro, a furry seal fitted with sensors beneath its fur and whiskers. It responds to petting by opening and closing its eyes and moving its flippers.

About 800 of the seal robots, developed by Japan's National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science, are used for therapy in Japanese nursing homes and by autistic and handicapped children, according to the award's website.

Another winning robot at the lavish Tokyo ceremony was a mammoth, automated vacuum cleaner that uses elevators to travel between floors. The wheeled robot, designed by Fuji Heavy Industries, already cleans floors at several skyscrapers in central Tokyo, the website said.

Robots are seen in Japan as a way to deal with a rapidly aging population and combat an impending labour shortage. The country's population of 127 million is expected to shrink by 30 per cent by 2055, with those aged 65 or older making up 40 per cent of that figure, according to government forecasts released earlier this week.

The Robot Award was set up earlier this year by the Japanese government to promote research and development in the robotics industry. Ten robots won prizes out of a total of 152 entries from across Japan.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Automaker Toyota launches new up-market hatchback in Japan

TOKYO (AP) - Toyota Motor Corp. on Thursday launched an up-market hatchback in Japan targeting aging baby boomers, as the carmaker's president said domestic sales for 2006 "were slightly behind" sales for the previous year. The Blade hatchback, powered by a 2.4-litre engine, is its highest-class hatchback to date and carries a price tag of 2.2 million yen (US$19,000) to 2.8 million yen (US$23,460).

The world's second-biggest automaker said the main targets of the Blade are those who have already finished raising their children - a rapidly growing consumer group in aging Japan. The model will be available only in Japan, according to the company.

At the launch, Toyota President Katsuaki Watanabe said domestic sales "were slightly behind" last year's unit sales. He said he would speak in more detail at a press conference scheduled for Friday.

Analysts say Toyota is on track to surpass General Motors Corp. in the coming years to become the world's No. 1 automaker.

Last month, Toyota announced plans to boost global sales to 9.8 million vehicles in 2008. GM sold 9.2 million vehicles worldwide in 2005, the second-largest volume it that company's history.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Federal government commits $526M to homelessness

(CBC) - The federal government will spend the same amount annually to combat homelessness in the next two years as the previous Liberal government did.

Over two years, the new Homelessness Partnering Strategy will provide $270 million ($135 million a year) to help people who are already homeless, and $256 million to aid those at risk of being on the streets, said Diane Finley, minister of human resources and social development.

But a spokeswoman for agencies that run such programs says that while Tuesday's announcement is a good start, the funding may not save all current programs.

Mary-Martha Hale of the Ottawa-based Alliance to End Homelessness also said agencies may still cut some jobs of people running the programs starting in December.

"In the past, when there has been an announcement, it's taken a significant length of time to get the dollars to the agencies to support the individuals," Hale said.

The new federal strategy is to go into effect on April 1, but there were no details about when the funding will reach programs for the homeless.

The agencies expected an end to their federal funding on March 31, when the National Homelessness Initiative started by the previous Liberal government expires. That program also provided $135 million per year for programs for the homeless and funded the same program for those at risk of homelessness.

Hale said she is disappointed that the new funding is for only two years instead of the five years that agencies have lobbied for, and does not include an explicit strategy to help the homeless find permanent homes.

"If we don't have housing for people to move into, then it's very hard to move them out of homelessness," she said.

The government says it will decide in the new year how it will partner with the provinces to allocate the money. It also plans to consult with private and non-profit stakeholders.

In the meantime, the federal money aimed at people who are already homeless has been earmarked for transitional and supportive housing offering temporary help. The 2001 census counted 14,150 people in temporary shelters on May 15.

Some of the new federal homelessness money will go towards programs that did not receive funding under the previous Liberal funding, including rural programs and non-housing services such as skills training and drug abuse treatment. However, no additional money has been committed.

The funding for those at risk of homelessness will extend a Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation program that helps pay for needed repairs by low-income homeowners such as pensioners, and by landlords who provide affordable housing and housing for the disabled.

© the CBC, 2006

Calgary too costly for some family physicians

(CBC) - Some Calgary doctors are closing their doors because they say it's too expensive to maintain a practice in the city.

Dr. Norma Spence, a family physician, told CBC News she's shutting down her practice at the end of January for several reasons.

A deteriorating health-care system and overcrowded hospitals mean that family clinics are busier than ever, she said, adding that skyrocketing overhead costs are a major factor in her decision to close.

She said she knows of at least 12 other family doctors in Calgary who also plan to shut down their practices.

The Alberta Medical Association says overhead costs for family doctors have risen by between 12 and 15 per cent recently, adding that doctors have not had a corresponding raise in fees.

"Our wage has not increased accordingly, and we've been forced to see more and more patients per day, and this is promoting poor health care for the patients," Spence said. "In fact, there already are some dangerous things occurring." People with life-threatening conditions are leaving overcrowded emergency rooms and showing up at her clinic the next day, she explained.

Spence's decision to close means that patients like Roma Franklin will be searching for a new doctor in a city where there is already a serious shortage.

"She's seen me through a number of illnesses which, without her expertise, would have been a lot worse," said Franklin, a patient of 15 years. "I think it's really sad that we're losing competent experienced family doctors."

According to the Calgary Health Region, over 300 family doctors are needed in the city.

Spence worries the problem will only get worse unless family doctors switch from a fee-for-service pay scheme to a salary system that keeps up with their increasing costs.

© the CBC, 2006

Only healthy, married foreigners can adopt from China

(CBC) - People who are obese, single or on antidepressants will soon have no chance of adopting a Chinese child, foreign adoption agencies are reporting.

Starting May 1, China is imposing new restrictions on foreign adoptions. The move comes as China is inundated with adoption requests from North America and Europe.

"They have the right to make rules," Marie-Claire Gagnon, president of the Federation of Adoptive Parents of Quebec, said Wednesday.

"There will be a lot of possibilities to adopt for the rest of the people, but they will have to get married and they will have to respect the rules."

Under the new rules, prospective parents must be between the ages of 30 and 50 and must have a body mass index - a measure of body fatness - of no more than 40.

Only couples who have been married for two years or more will be considered, even though Beijing used to allow unmarried foreigners to adopt.

The rules bar parents who take medication for psychiatric conditions, including depression and anxiety.

Those with a "severe facial deformity" are also excluded, although one agency wonders if Chinese officials are not explaining this restriction properly in English.

"I'm not sure that was translated correctly. A lot of things get lost in translation," said Keith Wallace of the U.S. Families Thru International Adoption Inc.

The new rules are in place to ensure that only the most "qualified families" are adopting Chinese children, explains one agency, the Texas-based Harrah's Adoption International Mission.

Wallace said he doesn't criticize China for the move.

"A lot of people are trying to portray this as a negative thing," he said. "But I don't see it that way.

"All states have criteria. China is not doing anything out of the ordinary. Their criteria is well thought out ... very fair and consistent."

The agencies said Chinese officials told them about the rules at a Dec. 8 meeting in Beijing.

An employee of the government-run China Centre of Adoption Affairs, the agency that oversees foreign adoptions, said it has issued new guidelines but refused to confirm the details released by the American agencies. He wouldn't give his name.

Wait times for adoption rise

A sharp increase in foreign applications for adoption has led to a backlog in approvals, with waiting times rising from six months in early 2005 to as long as 15 months now, according to adoption agencies.

Canadians adopted 6,245 children from China between 1993 and 2002, according to the federal government. American parents have adopted a record 48,000 Chinese children since 1989.

Wallace said the new rules will likely narrow the pool of applicants for adopting Chinese babies, but because demand already far outstrips supply, this would only shorten the 14- to 15-month waiting period.

"I don't think it will necessarily have a major impact because there are still a lot of people wanting to adopt," he said. "There is a positive aspect - the wait will not be as long for families who do meet the criteria."

Wallace said those already in the process of adopting should be exempt from the new rules.

Timothy Sutfin, executive director of the U.S. New Beginnings Family and Children's Services Inc., is advising applicants to look to Vietnam and other countries if the new rules make adopting in China too difficult.

With files from the Associated Press

© the CBC, 2006

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Review: 'Letters' a powerful look at WWII battle from the Japanese side

(AP) - They've been described as bookends or even mirror images of each other - "Flags of Our Fathers" and "Letters From Iwo Jima" - two different perspectives on the same Second World War battle. But this second picture is so different from the first, and such a rare, remarkable achievement in itself, it could have stood squarely on its own.

Comparisons are inevitable between the films, which director Clint Eastwood shot back-to-back and has released within a couple months of each other (how the man did it is unfathomable - he's a machine, with a mind and a heart). Whereas "Flags" was a cynical, skeptical, pointed view of war from the American side, "Letters" offers a pure, almost poetic vision through the eyes and language of the Japanese - an idealistic depiction of duty and dying for one's country.

If it had been made about American forces, it would seem like an incredibly traditional war picture, except that it has as much respect, dignity and humanity for the other side as for our own. (Told in linear fashion, it's also more straightforward in its narrative than "Flags," which jumped around in time to place us in the same confused state as the characters trying to determine who really appeared in that famous flag-raising photo during the Battle of Iwo Jima and who didn't.)

None of that depletes the power of its message or imagery, however - like the striking, olive-and-brown colour scheme that's so bleached out it looks as if Eastwood shot the film in black and white, making the explosions on the beach burst with even brighter flashes of orange and red. (The cinematography is the work of longtime Eastwood collaborator Tom Stern.)

And the director doesn't shy away from showing the lengths to which some of the Japanese soldiers will go to maintain honour when their prospects of survival look bleakest.

But of course the ultimate point is that, despite being an ocean apart, the men fighting and giving their lives on both sides of the battle weren't so different after all.

That's hinted at from the start in the script from Iris Yamashita (with Paul Haggis, who wrote Eastwood's "Million Dollar Baby" and co-wrote "Flags," receiving a story-by credit). Present-day Japanese archaeologists investigating the elaborate cave system devised specifically for the Battle of Iwo Jima stumble upon a buried sack of letters from soldiers to their mothers, wives, children, etc.

Among the most heartfelt writers is the man in charge: Lt. General Tadamichi Kuribayashi, whose real-life letters helped inspire the film. Played with unflagging confidence by Ken Watanabe, Kuribayashi functions as the kind of figure Eastwood himself made a career of on-screen: efficient, dryly funny, and unquestionably in command.

Kuribayashi also was the architect of the plan that placed Japanese soldiers in hidden tunnels, trenches and bunkers to allow U.S. marines to creep closer to the enemy - and make themselves more vulnerable - without realizing it.

The men fighting under him come from a wide variety of backgrounds, just like those in the United States military.

Among those we get to know are the well-bred Baron Niche (Tsuyoshi Ihara), a suave equestrian champion during the 1932 Olympics in Los Angeles; Shimizu (Ryo Kase), whose experience as a former military policeman makes everyone distrust him, until they find out the reason he was expelled from the force; and the humble Saigo (Kazunari Ninomiya), a baker whose wife has just given birth to a girl back home, a baby he has yet to meet.

Brief flashbacks give us just enough of a glimpse into their lives to establish them as prisms through which to view the experience of war.

As one commander tells them in laying out the game plan, "Americans are weak because they let their emotions get in the way." "Letters" dispels the long-held depiction of Japanese soldiers as exclusively cold and rigid, and reveals these men for their fears and hopes.

It's probably a little too long and the pacing can be a bit languid, but these are minor complaints about a film that is otherwise a major accomplishment.

Three and a half stars out of four.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

5 U.S. movie studios win piracy court case against Beijing DVD store

BEIJING (AP) - Five U.S. movie studios have won a court case against a Beijing shop accused of selling pirated copies of "Mr. & Mrs. Smith," "War of the Worlds" and other titles, the Motion Picture Association said Tuesday. The Beijing No. 2 Intermediate People's Court ruled the Yu Hao Qing DVD store and its parent company, Beijing Century Hai Hong Trading Co. Ltd, were guilty of copyright infringement. It ordered them to stop selling pirated moves and pay US$20,100 in compensation.

The association said the case brought by Sony Corp.'s Columbia Pictures Industries Inc., Walt Disney Co.'s Disney Enterprises Inc., Viacom Inc.'s Paramount Pictures Corp., News Corp.'s Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. and Universal City Studios LLP also highlighted the need for China to open market access to foreign movies.

"It is a small step up a very big mountain," Roberto De Vido, a spokesman with the MPA, told The Associated Press.

Phones were not answered at the court Tuesday and representatives of the Chinese company could not be reached for comment.

Beijing is awash in pirated videos - costing as little as $1 - which often go on sale shortly after they appear in theatres in North America or Europe.

Good quality, pirated versions of the hit movie "Borat" went on sale on Beijing streets earlier this week.

Frank Rittman, an MPA vice-president and Asian legal counsel, said the court victory also highlighted the problem of lack of access to China's market for foreign moviemakers, with only 20 of the movies allowed to be released a year, creating huge demand that is filled by pirated videos.

"The maintenance of the theatrical exhibition quota, combined with the frequent imposition of blackouts on the theatrical release of foreign films ... gives movie pirates a tremendous market advantage," Rittman said in a statement.

China restricts film imports in an effort to protect its state-run studios, which have had little success competing with popular Hollywood titles. Foreign films are barred from theatres during holidays and other periods when movie audiences are biggest.

The Los Angeles-based MPA, which represents U.S. studios in international markets, says it filed 10 lawsuits in 2002-03 against manufacturers or retailers accused of film piracy, and all were decided or settled in favour of the group's member companies.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

'Crouching Tiger' composer Tan Dun taking another great leap forward with new opera

NEW YORK (AP) - He collected folk songs in villages in his native China, then planted rice during the Cultural Revolution. Later, he played music on the streets of New York to buy food. Now, composer Tan Dun is making his Metropolitan Opera debut. "The First Emperor," starring Placido Domingo in the title role of a production with a reported cost of up to US$3 million, has its world premiere Thursday night - on stage and in cyberspace.

No stranger to success, Tan won an Oscar in 2001 for the music for the martial arts fantasy "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon." His other compositions include "The Map," a cello concerto written for Yo-Yo Ma; and the score for the 2002 movie "Hero," with violin solos by Itzhak Perlman.

Still, "The First Emperor" - the story of betrayal involving a conqueror, his daughter and a court composer two millennia ago - should be a great leap forward for the 49-year-old Tan, who will conduct all nine performances through Jan. 25.

After a long day of conducting the dress rehearsal Monday for the three-hour opera, Tan spoke with The Associated Press.

AP: Did you ever think while growing up in Hunan province that you would be here?

Tan: No. It's a huge distance. I just cannot imagine. Thirty years ago, you know, I was planting the rice. ... It's a dream. To me, this distance is not just 30 years. It just seems like a few hundred years. ... It's not just distance. ... I came from a completely different tradition and now I end up with another tradition. From this tradition I take it back, to let the two traditions meet - to embrace.

AP: So you feel like Marco Polo?

Tan: Upside-down Marco Polo.

AP: How did you get involved in music?

Tan: I was growing up in my grandma's village. My grandma was a vegetable farmer. So basically all the farmers and people always are gathering together in the evening for ritual opera, for chanting for funeral(s) or wedding(s). My childhood life I remember every night is musical activities - lessons that go to stories, through chantings. ...

AP: How did you get to New York?

Tan: I always wanted to get into the Hunan Opera but I was not allowed because at that time it was the Cultural Revolution. Mao Zedong (said of high school and college graduates): "They're all poisoned and you have to (be) re-educated by farmers, workers, to teach you how to plant the rice, how to feed pigs, how to clean the bathroom. Then your spirit is clean. Otherwise you would be just poisoned by all this academic knowledge." So before I was re-educated, of course I wasn't allowed to be a musician. ... That's why I planted rice. ... I also cooked for 200 people. Meanwhile, my real re-education was I got a chance to collect all this dialect and folk songs. I start to organize the local farmers to play the old ghost operas, which were ritualistic music. ... I teach them how to write, how to read. And they teach me all this old music.

AP: You then applied for the Beijing conservatory?

Tan: They thought I could be a wonderful pianist, a wonderful violinist, or a wonderful composer. I said I am a wonderful composer but I can't play piano but I can play fiddle. ... They said can you fiddle some Mozart or some Beethoven? I said I even don't know who is Mozart, who is Beethoven. ... Then he said, what could you do for us? I said I can do improvising. I can sing 500 folk songs. I can show you all my research on oldest music, my collections for all those disappearing old stuff. ...

I ... stayed about eight years in the conservatory to learn all the tradition of western music because ... all our teachers were graduates of the Moscow Conservatory. ... After that, the country opened and I started to be influence(d) by western avant-garde - John Cage, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Elliott Carter, ... (Toru) Takemitsu. I start to be very hungry for new music. ... So I applied for Columbia University.

AP: While at Columbia, you used to fiddle on the streets of New York to get money?

Tan: Yeah. ... My scholarship just covered tuition. I didn't have any money for my living expenses, even the rent, the food.

AP: What about the politics of "The First Emperor" story? On the one hand Qin Shi Huang was a brutal autocrat who conquered warring fiefdoms. On the other, he had great economic, social and artistic accomplishments. The libretto depicts him searching for a musical anthem to unite the hearts of the people. Are you trying to say something politically?

Tan: No. I'm interested in putting an artist and a politician together - to have a contrast of their mind. ... Qin Shi Huang (was) pretty much like Mao Zedong. ... He was great. He unified China. He made the language, made the measuring system, made the currency. ... But on the other hand, imagine how many other kingdoms' tribes he wiped out, how many other languages he destroyed, and the culture and books burned by him. ...

AP: During the decade the opera has been in the works, you have done much research on the music of Qin's time. With your percussive music, were you trying to recreate what he may have heard?

Tan: It's kind of a dream processing.

AP: What about your dream with Placido Domingo? You have said you had long dreamed of writing an opera for him. And this is his first world premiere at the Met in his 38 years with the company.

Tan: When I was a student at Columbia I ... (saw) every single opera of his and always said: ... "If in my lifetime someday I could work with him, write for him, then it's nice. It's the word from God, it's wonderful." Of course I always say ... it's too high to dream it.

AP: So here it is?

Tan: It's wonderful feeling when you see the dream become real. Especially to (a) composer, every piece is a dream. You always start from zero. You imagine what kind of sound, timing, space. You imagine the sounds of opera. But this dream is more specific. I had a lot of dreams. I had (a) dream once when I was little, if I could work with Yo-Yo Ma! And it became true. And once I thought, if I could have a chance to write something for Itzhak Perlman, and I did! So now it's Domingo. I felt on the one hand I learned so much from them. ... On the other hand I felt like a makeup artist, like a tailor, to make them more beautiful in my way. It seems like they enjoy it. They feel they are more beautiful in a certain way, in my way.

Thursday's performance at 8 p.m. EST will be presented live by Webcast at www.metopera.org and on Sirius Satellite Radio. The Jan. 13 matinee will be transmitted live in high definition into movie theatres around the world and broadcast on the Met's terrestrial radio network.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Indian silver medallist in women's race at Asian Games fails gender test

NEW DELHI, India (AP) - An Indian runner who won a silver medal in the women's 800 metres at the Asian Games failed a gender test and was stripped of the medal.
Shanti Sounderajan, 25, took the gender test in Doha, Qatar, after placing second. The Indian Olympic Association said Monday it has been told by the Olympic Council of Asia that the 25-year-old runner was disqualified.

"IOA has asked the Athletic Federation of India to return the medal as desired by the Olympic Council of Asia," the Indian Olympic group said.

The IOA also asked its medical commission to inquire into Sounderajan's case and report within 10 days.

There are no compulsory gender tests during events sanctioned by the International Association of Athletics Federations, but athletes may be asked to take a gender test. The medical evaluation panel usually includes a gynecologist, endocrinologist, psychologist and internal medicine specialist.

An Indian athletics official who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media said Sounderajan almost certainly never had sex-change surgery.

Instead, the official said Sounderajan appeared to have "abnormal chromosomes." The official also said the test revealed more Y chromosomes than allowed.

Sounderajan was not immediately available for comment.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Korean scientists create three more cloned dogs

(CBC) - A team of scientists once led by a disgraced stem-cell researcher said on Monday they have made three clones of a female Afghan hound.

Lee Byeong-chun and researchers from Seoul National University said the first of three Afghan hounds, named Bona, was born on June 18 of this year.

Two other clones, named Hope and Peace were born later in the summer.

Earlier this year the researchers from the university were credited with creating the world's first cloned dog, an Afghan hound named Snuppy.

International experts confirmed the authenticity of the cloned dog, but lead scientist Hwang Woo-suk was later discredited for fabricating data in a paper outlining breakthroughs in creating human stem cells through cloning.

The remaining researchers were suspended by the university but continued their work in cloning without Hwang after their suspensions ended.

A total of 167 reconstructed embryos were implanted into 12 surrogate mothers to produce the three living clones, Lee said.

Dogs are said to be one of the most difficult animals to clone because of their complex reproductive cycle. The researchers now have both a male and females of the same breed and hope the created clones will be capable of reproducing.

If the dogs are able to reproduce it could help produce cell treatment drugs and also be used to help repopulate species on the verge of extinction.

With files from the Associated Press

© the CBC, 2006

Japan rocket launch a success

(CBC) - Japan's space agency launched a domestically developed rocket carrying the country's largest satellite on Monday.

The Kiku No. 8 satellite successfully separated from the H2-A rocket about 30 minutes into the flight, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency spokesman Kiyotaka Yashido said.

The satellite, scheduled to enter orbit on Tuesday morning, will be used mainly for telecommunications.

Poor weather conditions delayed the rocket launch, originally slated for Saturday.

Japan's budding space program has launched 11 rockets, mostly of the H2-A type.

The successful launch is welcome news for a once-troubled program striving to regain public confidence.

In November 2003 a rocket carrying satellites strayed off course and had to be destroyed. A month later a probe designed to orbit Mars was abandoned after it strayed off course.

Japan recently renewed its commitment to its space program, announcing earlier this year ambitious plans to attempt manned space flight and establish a moon base by 2025.

Monday's rocket was Tokyo's fifth launched this year and the first since an intelligence-gathering satellite was sent into orbit in September.

With files from the Associated Press

© the CBC, 2006

Ombudsman launches B.C. lottery probe

(CBC) - The B.C. Ombudsman has launched an investigation into reports that retailers are winning lotteries at about six times the rate of the public.

The initial response from the B.C. Lottery Corporation last week was that the retailers are likely just playing more.

But Kim Carter said there are questions that need investigating, to ensure continued public confidence in the fairness of the system.

"I believe that having an independent and an impartial look at this issue would be beneficial for everybody," she said.

"Confidence in the lottery system is important not just to the people that play and the causes that benefit from the distribution of funds, but to the vendors themselves."

Carter says her investigation will focus on the process the B.C. Lottery Corporation has in place to monitor retailers' ticket purchases, and to ensure that people presenting winning tickets are the valid purchasers. Last month, an inquiry by CBC News showed retailers in Ontario claimed one in 10 scratch-and-win prizes.

The president of the B.C. Lottery Corporation says he's confident the right prizes are being paid to the rightful winners.

Vic Poleschuk adds he's looks forward to working with the Ombudsman to reassure the security and integrity of the lottery games.

© the CBC, 2006

U.S., NKorean envoys meet one-on-one to discuss nuclear, financial issues

BEIJING (AP) - Financial experts from the United States and North Korea met Tuesday to address Washington's campaign to isolate the North from the international banking system, the key stumbling block blamed for Pyongyang's 13-month boycott of nuclear talks. The meeting came on the sidelines of six-nation arms talks that entered a second day Tuesday with discussions focused on the implementation of a disarmament pledge signed by the North last year.

The North Korean and U.S. delegations also held their first one-on-one meeting at the nuclear talks Tuesday afternoon, the Chinese press centre said. The atmosphere there "was not so harsh," a Japanese official said on condition of anonymity due to the ongoing diplomacy, adding that the two countries outlined their positions.

North Korea had stayed away from the nuclear talks since November 2005, claiming Washington hadn't altered its hostile attitude to the communist nation because it had blacklisted a Macau bank where the North deposited some US$24 million.

The U.S. alleged the bank was complicit in the North's counterfeiting of US$100 bills and money laundering to sell weapons of mass destruction. American officials have urged other countries to bar any North Korean accounts, saying all the country's transactions are suspect.

However, the North agreed to return to the nuclear talks weeks after its Oct. 9 nuclear test because the United States said it could discuss the financial issue in separate meetings.

Daniel Glaser, the U.S. Treasury Department's deputy assistant secretary for terrorist financing and financial crimes, was in Beijing for the financial meeting. The North Korean delegation that arrived Tuesday was led by O Kwang Chol, president of the North's Foreign Trade Bank of Korea.

The talks were being held at the U.S. Embassy, an embassy official said on customary condition of anonymity. The North Korean delegation departed after more than three hours of meetings.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said at a regular news briefing that Beijing hopes the two sides can "solve the issue properly."

"We wish to see them make positive achievements that we believe will facilitate the process of the (nuclear) talks," he said.

It is unlikely that the United States would simply remove the restrictions as the North demands, since it views them as a legal matter against criminal activity that it wants halted.

Earlier Tuesday, all six chief nuclear envoys met in a closed session at a Chinese state guesthouse for less than two hours.

"The first step for us is to map out the measures that help realize the joint statement and to decide what moves we will take," said Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei, according to the Chinese press centre.

The "joint statement" refers to a September 2005 agreement at the talks - the only one ever reached - in which the North said it would abandon its nuclear programs in exchange for aid and security guarantees.

Tuesday's meetings "were held in a much more serious atmosphere," a South Korean official said on condition of anonymity due to their sensitivity.

Some countries have proposed forming working-level groups to implement the 2005 agreement and "there have been many opinions on the issue," the official said. "But no consensus has been reached and the issue is still in discussion."

U.S. envoy Christopher Hill told reporters Tuesday morning that