2011年3月18日星期五

Yahoo! News: World - China

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: World - China


China raises bank reserves to cool lending (AP)

Posted: 18 Mar 2011 04:08 AM PDT

AP - China on Friday ordered its banks to raise the amount of money they hold in reserves in another move to curb lending and cool a spike in inflation.

China suspends officials over tainted pork scandal (AP)

Posted: 18 Mar 2011 01:26 AM PDT

AP - A state news agency says three senior officials in central China have been suspended and more than two dozen others punished after pigs in farms there tested positive for a banned chemical that is dangerous to humans.

WHO: Radiation risk from Japan remains localized (AP)

Posted: 17 Mar 2011 11:41 PM PDT

A Chinese looks at a mini bus transporting salt from a distribution center after salt were sold out in Beijing, China, Friday, March 18, 2011. Shoppers in Beijing, Shanghai and other parts of China have stripped supermarket shelves empty of table salt in recent days in the false belief that it either wards off radiation injuries or that the nation's supply would be contaminated by fallout from the crippled Japanese nuclear power plant. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)AP - The World Health Organization offered reassurances Friday that the radiation risk from Japan's nuclear crisis remains highly localized, with no sign it threatens anywhere else in Asia.


China: 'serious reservations' about UN resolution (AP)

Posted: 17 Mar 2011 11:11 PM PDT

AP - China says it has "serious reservations" about a United Nations resolution authorizing a no-fly zone over Libya and military action to protect civilians against Moammar Gadhafi's forces.

Japan radiation localized, no immediate threat: WHO (Reuters)

Posted: 17 Mar 2011 10:20 PM PDT

This GeoEye's IKONOS satellite image was taken over the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan at 10:19 am (Tokyo time) on March 17, 2011 and released to Reuters on March 17. REUTERS/GeoEye Satellite Image/HandoutReuters - The World Health Organization believes the spread of radiation from a quake-crippled nuclear plant in Japan remains limited and appears to pose no immediate risk to health, the WHO's China representative said on Friday.


bnzv