China
Cab Drivers Strike Mostly Ends in Qinghai, China
Submitted by solidarity on Fri, 2009-06-19 16:55. -Taxi Cabs | China | Contract Fights | Contract Fights | Textshttp://en.chinagate.cn/top_news/2009-06/19/content_17977053.htm
Cab Drivers Strike Mostly Ends in Qinghai
Most striking taxi drivers in Qinghai Province were back at work on Thursday, ending a four-day protest over a reported policy change that would shorten their operation rights.
About 2,690 cabs were running in Xining, the provincial capital, on Wednesday evening, and more than 3,000 cabs were taking passengers on Thursday, according to the municipal communication bureau, the public security bureau, and many taxi drivers.
The city has 5,116 registered cabs that run on odd or even days according to the last number of their license plates.
The drivers stopped work on Saturday after a newspaper reported on Friday that the province would cut their license periods from 12 years to eight, meaning most of their licenses would expire now or in a year.
Yuan Fuyu, director in the transportation department of the provincial communication administration, on Monday called the report "incorrect and misleading." He said the shorter period would only apply to new licenses, and that existing drivers would have unspecified advantages in renewing their licenses.
The old regulation stipulated an 8-year operating period for drivers. The city extended the period to 12 years in 2002 to reflect the odd-even plate number system.
Zimbabwe arms ship 'on the move'
Submitted by webadmin on Sun, 2008-04-27 18:47. China | Docks | Repression | South Africa | ZimbabweBBC NEWS, Friday, 18 April 2008
A Chinese ship carrying arms destined for Zimbabwe is reported to have left the South African port of Durban four days after failing to unload.
Earlier, a South African judge ruled that the cargo of rocket-propelled grenades, mortar rounds and ammunition could not be transported overland.
Human rights groups had petitioned for a block on the arms and dockers had refused to unload the shipment.
Some fear Zimbabwe will use the arms to repress political opposition.
The country has yet to publish the results of its presidential election on 29 March, which the MDC opposition says was won outright by its candidate Morgan Tsvangirai.
President Robert Mugabe denounced the opposition on Friday in his first speech since the election, saying "thieves" were trying to steal the country.
Incommunicado
According to the South African news agency Sapa, the ship upped anchor between 1800 (1600 GMT) and 1900 (1700 GMT).
The ship's master, who earlier identified himself as Captain Sunaijun, could not be reached by telephone, the agency added, quoting anonymous sources.
Chinese Pilots Take Work Action
Submitted by webadmin on Sun, 2008-04-27 18:03. Airlines | China | Contract FightsChina Daily/Xinhua (4/7/08)
CAAC starts investigation on 'return flights'
The Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) launched its investigation Sunday into China Eastern Airlines' pilots, who turned back midway on flights to airports they had set off from.
Last Monday, 18 flights returned to their departure points in southwestern Yunnan province, affecting more than 1,000 passengers.
Media reports said that the pilots, who work for China Eastern Airlines' Yunnan branch, were protesting over their pay and working conditions, but the company insisted that poor weather was the reason.
A CAAC team will talk with the pilots, passengers, air traffic controllers, ground crew and airport staff to get the truth about the incident, Xinhua News Agency said.
A CAAC spokesman said earlier that the administration required its southwest bureau to deal with the issue last Monday. By Tuesday afternoon, the airline resumed normal operations.
The spokesman said the agency will ask the authorities to impose severe penalties on the pilots if they disrupted flights on purpose.
South African Dockers refuse to unload China arms shipment for Zimbabwe
Submitted by solidarity on Sat, 2008-04-19 05:10. China | Docks | Repression | South Africa | Texts | Workers Defense | ZimbabweBy Philippe Naughton, and Jane Macartney in Beijing - The Times (of London), April 18, 2008
South African dockers are refusing to unload a Chinese cargo ship carrying 77 tonnes of small arms destined for Zimbabwe
The arms, including three million rounds of ammunition suitable for AK47s and 1,500 rocket-propelled grenades, were ordered by the Zimbabwean military at the time of the March 29 election – which Britain and other Western powers have accused Robert Mugabe of trying to rig
The arms arrived at Durban, South Africa, on Wednesday aboard the Chinese-owned An Yue Jiang and must be taken by road to landlocked Zimbabwe, where the Government has been accused of arming rural militias before a possible run-off vote for the presidency. The opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) has even accused Mr Mugabe's Zanu (PF) of preparing for a "war" against the people
January Masilela, the South African Defence Secretary, said yesterday that the shipment had been approved this week by the National Conventional Arms Control Committee (NCACC), which he chairs. "This is a normal transaction between two sovereign states and we don't have to interfere," he said
