China making armed drones; eyes Pak, Arab states for sales

WASHINGTON: China has ramped up its research in drone technology and is in the process of building armed, jet-propelled unmanned planes, which it plans to sell to countries like Pakistan.

Though much of this work remains secret, the large number of drones at recent exhibitions underlines not only China’s determination to catch up in that sector – by building equivalents to the leading US combat and surveillance models, the Predator and the Global Hawk – but also that its desire to sell this technology abroad, a media report has said.

“No country has ramped up its research in recent years faster than China. It displayed a drone model for the first time at the Zhuhai air show five years ago, but now every major manufacturer for the Chinese military has a research center devoted to drones,” the Washington Post recently said quoting Chinese analysts.

Not only the Chinese are trying to make state of the art armed drones, they are also eyeing the international market. “The United States doesn’t export many attack drones, so we’re taking advantage of that hole in the market,” said
Zhang Qiaoliang, a representative of the Chengdu Aircraft Design and Research Institute, which manufactures many of the most advanced military aircraft for the People’s Liberation Army.

“The main reason is the amazing demand in the market for drones after 9/11.”
According to the daily, Pakistan has said it plans to obtain armed drones from China, which has already sold the nation one for surveillance.

As per Aviation Industry Corp of China, it has begun offering international customers a combat and surveillance drone comparable to the Predator called the Yilong, or “pterodactyl” in English.

Zhang, of the Chengdu Aircraft Design and Research Institute, said the company anticipates sales in Pakistan, the Middle East and Africa.

Chinese mine flood relatives fear toll cover-up

* Officials refuse to publish list of names of trapped

* Survivors say fewer than 108 escaped, more trapped

* Possible indications of life heard on Friday morning

XIANGNING, China, April 2 (Reuters) – Families and survivors of a flood feared to be one of China’s worst mine accidents in recent years say officials are covering up the true number of people trapped underground and failing in rescue efforts.

The local government has not published the names of the 153 miners it says were unable to escape when water surged into the pit on Sunday afternoon, prompting Vice-Premier Zhang Dejiang to demand a list of potential victims, local media reported.

“Is 153 the exact number?” Zhang, sent to direct rescue efforts shortly after the accident, was quoted asking mine officials in a conference call.

“I don’t think the suspicion from the public is unreasonable,” he added, according to the Beijing News.

At the mine itself relatives waiting for news of their fathers, sons and brothers, and survivors keen to help out with rescue efforts all told Reuters the official toll was too low.

“We sent 10 tramcars down to the pit before the flooding and each car usually carries 44 miners and a driver,” a tramcar driver who was working on the day of the accident said.

“Only one car came back up the shaft, plus a few dozen miners who escaped on foot,” he said, suggesting nearly 450 people could have been underground at the time of the flood.

Officials say 261 people were working in the unfinished Wangjialing mine, in northern Shanxi province, and 108 escaped. Even those who do not question the total number underground say there may be more than 153 still trapped.

“At least 200 people are trapped,” said a mine worker surnamed Li, unwilling to give his full name because of official pressure not to speak to foreign media.

“I was working in the checkpoint at the entry of the pit, so I’m quite sure about how many people had gone underground.”

A Shanxi government official said they had heard there were a lot of suspicions, but insisted the number was accurate.

“We have checked this many times, so it should be the exact number,” said the official from the province’s foreign affairs office, who gave only his surname, Cao, and said he did not know why names were not being released.

SURVIVAL HOPES?

Some miners were working on platforms above current water levels and may have survived, the official Xinhua agency said.

Sounds from the pit, which may have been someone pounding on the pipelines, were heard on Friday morning, CCTV news reported. One of the rescue workers told Reuters they had found a piece of wire tied onto a pipeline sent into the flooded zone.

But five days of rescue efforts have reduced water levels barely a metre, the Xinhua report added.

“The pipelines are too thin to pump water fast enough,” the daughter of a trapped miner told Reuters, requesting anonymity.

“My father will not be killed by the flooding, but by these rescuers,” she added.

China has ordered the consolidation or takeover of many private mines in order to improve oversight and safety.

It credits the shutdown of many of the most dangerous private mines with helping to reduce the death toll in the coal industry to about 2,600 last year from over 3,000 the year before.

But the deadliest accidents are not limited to private firms. The Wangjialing mine was a high-profile project belonging to a joint venture between China National Coal Group and Shanxi Coking Coal Group, two of China’s larger state-owned firms.

Relatives and some Chinese media have blamed the firms for ignoring safety requirements in their push to start operations.

Miners found water in the pit as early as three days before the accident, but the managers just said: “How can you be afraid of a little bit of water?” the worker surnamed Li said.

“They did not treat migrant workers as human beings,” he added. (Writing by Yu Le and Emma Graham-Harrison; Editing by Benjamin Kang Lim and Jerry Norton)

Chinese couple married for 3 months sign 6-month trial separation agreement!

New Delhi, Sep 11 (ANI): A Chinese couple, who has been married for less than three months, has signed an agreement for a six-month trial separation to figure out what they wanted from their lives.

The woman, surnamed Zhang, 26, a resident of Xi’an, capital of Shaanxi province, said that she met Shi online last November and they got married in April this year, reports the China Daily.

Just a month after marriage, however, the couple started quarrelling frequently over trivial things and decided on a trial separation.

But it has barely been two weeks since Zhang moved out of her husband’s house, and she misses him already.

Her husband Shi, too, said once the trial separation period is over he’d like to start afresh with his wife. (ANI)

Three genes linked to Lou Gehrig’s disease identified

Washington, Sep 10 (ANI): Researchers at Michigan Technological University have identified three genes that play a major role in the most common type of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), generally known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.

The team of mathematicians, led by Shuanglin Zhang, isolated the genes from the many thousands scattered throughout human DNA.

Zhang noted that the discovery does not mean an end to ALS, but it could provide scientists with valuable clues as they search for a cure.

“I felt very urgent to find the genes for ALS,” Zhang said.

“This is very nice work. It’s very challenging to map genes for complex diseases, and while many statistical methods have been developed, most don’t work well in practice. Zhang’s group has developed a method to detect genes and gene-gene interaction in complex diseases and provided evidence that it works,” said Xiaofeng Zhu, an associate professor of epidemiology at Case Western Reserve University’s School of Medicine.

“Their findings will need to be confirmed by other researchers, but I think this will be very useful for the investigators who are trying to find genes underlying complex diseases such as ALS,” said Zhu.

According to the ALS Association, only about 10 percent of patients have familial ALS, a directly inherited form of the usually fatal neuromuscular disorder, while the remaining 90 percent are diagnosed with the sporadic form of the disease.

While everyone has the three genes in question, but in people with sporadic ALS, they differ from those in people who don’t have ALS.

The mathematicians were not surprised when they tracked down the location of the genes.

“Everybody has 23 chromosomes, and the three genes on chromosomes 2, 4, and 10 interact. If you have this combination of the three genes, you are at high risk of developing the disease. It’s really exciting, especially because my husband has sporadic ALS. Maybe they can find a cure by blocking the genes,” explained Zhang’s wife Qiuying Sha.

ALS destroys the nerves in the brain and spinal cord that control voluntary movement, eventually leading to paralysis.

Zhang’s team used a new statistical method to analyse the genetic codes of 547 individuals, 276 with sporadic ALS and 271 without.

The method, a two-locus interaction analysis approach, allows the researchers to identify multiple genes associated with a complex illness.

The data set they analyzed was provided by National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) Human Genetics Resource Center at the Coriell Institute, a publicly funded “bank” or repository for human cells, DNA samples, clinical data, and other information that aims to accelerate research on the genetics of nervous system disorders.

The study has been published in the open access journal BMC Medical Genetics. (ANI)

Scientists create world’s smallest semiconductor laser

Washington, August 31 (ANI): Researchers at the University of California (UC), Berkeley, have created the world’s smallest semiconductor laser, capable of generating visible light in a space smaller than a single protein molecule, an invention that breaks new ground in the field of optics.

The UC Berkeley team not only successfully squeezed light into such a tight space, but found a novel way to keep that light energy from dissipating as it moved along, thereby achieving laser action.

While it is traditionally accepted that an electromagnetic wave – including laser light – cannot be focused beyond the size of half its wavelength, research teams around the world have found a way to compress light down to dozens of nanometers by binding it to the electrons that oscillate collectively at the surface of metals.

This interaction between light and oscillating electrons is known as surface plasmons.

Scientists have been racing to construct surface plasmon lasers that can sustain and utilize these tiny optical excitations.

However, the resistance inherent in metals causes these surface plasmons to dissipate almost immediately after being generated, posing a critical challenge to achieving the buildup of the electromagnetic field necessary for lasing.

Zhang and his research team took a novel approach to stem the loss of light energy by pairing a cadmium sulfide nanowire – 1,000 times thinner than a human hair – with a silver surface separated by an insulating gap of only 5 nanometers, the size of a single protein molecule.

In this structure, the gap region stores light within an area 20 times smaller than its wavelength.

Because light energy is largely stored in this tiny non-metallic gap, loss is significantly diminished.

With the loss finally under control through this unique “hybrid” design, the researchers could then work on amplifying the light.

Trapping and sustaining light in radically tight quarters creates such extreme conditions that the very interaction of light and matter is strongly altered, the study authors explained.

“This work shatters traditional notions of laser limits, and makes a major advance toward applications in the biomedical, communications and computing fields,” said Xiang Zhang, professor of mechanical engineering and director of UC Berkeley’s Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center.

The achievement helps enable the development of such innovations as nanolasers that can probe, manipulate and characterize DNA molecules; optics-based telecommunications many times faster than current technology; and optical computing in which light replaces electronic circuitry with a corresponding leap in speed and processing power.

Scientists hope to eventually shrink light down to the size of an electron’s wavelength, which is about a nanometer. (ANI)

50yr-old Chinese woman planning to pull a plane with her pigtail!

New Delhi, Aug 24 (ANI): A Chinese woman, who is in her early 50s, has made plans to pull a plane using just her pigtail, after she used it to pull five cars, with a man sitting inside each, for a distance of 50 meters along a road.

Zhang Tingting, a native of Henan province, performed the feat on August 23 in Tongzhou district, Beijing, reports the China Daily.

Zhang, who will perform the airplane feat early next year, attributed her strength to the fact that she was well trained in Chinese Kungfu.

She says the art gave her mental and physical strength to pull off the stunt. (ANI)

Fire fighters rush to rescue hand stuck in toilet pot!

New Delhi, Aug 19 (ANI): Fire fighters in China were a little amused when they rushed in to rescue a woman’s hand, which was jammed in the sewer of a toilet in a hospital.

The woman, surnamed Zhang, was in the hospital visiting her sick husband, reports the China Daily.

She dropped 117 dollars in the pot after using the facility, which is why she put her hand in.

Fire fighters in Xi’an, capital of Shaanxi province, took an hour to free Zhang’s hand from the mess without causing any injury. (ANI)

Tourist sites in province free for foreigners, not for Chinese

Beijing, July 2 (ANI): All non-Chinese people will get free access to 12 major tourist sites in Anyang city, Henan province, under a new policy.

According to the China Daily, Chinese citizens will not be given the same privilege that is designed to attract more foreign tourists, who are smaller in number than domestic travelers to the city.

Overseas tourists will only have to show their passports to enter historical spots like Yinxu – the ruins of the last capital of China’s Shang Dynasty (1766 BC – 1050 BC) – one of the oldest and largest archaeological sites in China and a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The Chinese, however, will have to cough up 50 yuan (7.3 dollars) for a ticket.

“We are trying to spread the Chinese culture. We think Anyang should have tourists from all over the world,” said Zhang Jianguo, director of Anyang tourism bureau.

Many netizens expressed their anger at the policy, which was described as “fawning over foreigners” on popular portal Sina.com.

Also among the 12 tourist destinations is the Red Flag Channel, a man-made river constructed in the 1960s, and Yuefei Temple, built in honor of Yue Fei, a famous Chinese patriot and military general born in Anyang.

Zhang said some 12 million tourists visited Anyang last year, of which just 35,000 were foreigners.

Free tickets worth 10 million yuan have been given out to people across the country since last December, he added. (ANI)

Chinese netizens criticize their medical emergency hotline

Beijing, June 30 (ANI): The emergency call made by Michael Jackson’s doctor after finding him unconscious has unexpectedly prompted Chinese netizens to criticize their country’s emergency medical system.

Netizens praised the American 911 dispatcher who handled the Jackson emergency call and criticized differences between the Chinese and American emergency services on popular Internet portals.

“China’s emergency medical service is not as careful as its American counterpart. The Chinese emergency medical sector should learn from the American emergency medical experience to better serve its citizens,” China Daily quoted Zhang Han, a Beijing blogger, as writing on Sina.com.

In a transcript released of the 911 call, the cool-headed operator asks Jackson’s age, address and condition and then instructs the caller to put the singer on the floor and pump his chest.

“From their conversation, I can see American medical staffs’ devoted attitude to the job and their expertise,” a netizen said on club.kdnet.net.

Zhang Weihong, from central Shanxi province, said that she was dissatisfied with the emergency 120 service after calling an ambulance for her husband when he collapsed suddenly a few weeks ago.

“The ambulance came 10 minutes later but only a driver and a doctor were on board. I was forced to ask neighbours to help carry the stretcher to the ambulance,” she said.

Li Jianren, a doctor with Beijing Emergency Medical Center (BEMC), said that China should adopt the US system, in which non-professional emergency staff are on hand to assist the patient.

“North American countries have an emergency medical personnel accreditation system, which we don’t have,” Li said. (ANI)

Scientists create first acoustic metamaterial ‘superlens’

Washington, June 25 (ANI): A team of researchers at the University of Illinois (U. of I.) has created the world’s first acoustic “superlens,” an innovation that could have practical implications for high-resolution ultrasound imaging, non-destructive structural testing of buildings and bridges, and novel underwater stealth technology.

The team, led by Nicholas X. Fang, a professor of mechanical science and engineering at Illinois, successfully focused ultrasound waves through a flat metamaterial lens on a spot roughly half the width of a wavelength at 60.5 kHz using a network of fluid-filled Helmholtz resonators.

According to the results, the acoustic system is analogous to an inductor-capacitor circuit.

The transmission channels act as a series of inductors, and the Helmholtz resonators, which Fang describes as cavities that house resonating waves and oscillate at certain sonic frequencies almost as a musical instrument would, act as capacitors.

Fang said acoustic imaging is somewhat analogous to optical imaging in that bending sound is similar to bending light.

But, compared with optical and X-ray imaging, creating an image from sound is “a lot safer, which is why we use sonography on pregnant women,” said Shu Zhang, a U. of I. graduate student who along with Leilei Yin, a microscopist at the Beckman Institute, are co-authors of the research paper.

Acoustic imaging can be used for tumor detection.

“In the body, tumors are often surrounded by hard tissues with high contrast, so you can’t see them clearly, and acoustic imaging may provide more details than optical imaging methods,” said Fang.Fang said that the application of acoustic imaging technology goes beyond medicine.

Eventually, the technology could lead to “a completely new suite of data that previously wasn’t available to us using just natural materials,” he said.

In the field of non-destructive testing, the structural soundness of a building or a bridge could be checked for hairline cracks with acoustic imaging, as could other deeply embedded flaws invisible to the eye or unable to be detected by optical imaging.

“Acoustic imaging is a different means of detecting and probing things, beyond optical imaging,” Fang said.

Fang said acoustic imaging could also lead to better underwater stealth technology, possibly even an “acoustic cloak” that would act as camouflage for submarines.

“Right now, the goal is to bring this ‘lab science’ out of the lab and create a practical device or system that will allow us to use acoustic imaging in a variety of situations,” he said. (ANI)

Chinese anger may help in imposing UN sanctions on North Korea

Beijing, May 28 (ANI): China’s leaders have shown sufficient anger over North Korea’s nuclear and missile tests this week, and now, U.S. officials hope Beijing’s sharp rhetoric will translate into support in the U.N. Security Council for new sanctions on North Korea.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry has admonished North Korea, saying it is “resolutely opposed” to the tests.

Official news reports have proclaimed that China is “shocked” by its neighbor’s defiance and that it “demands” an end to “any activity that might worsen the situation.”

Since North Korea conducted a second underground nuclear test on Monday and fired five short-range missiles into the waters off its east coast on Monday and Tuesday, academics at Chinese think tanks and other research centers affiliated with the Chinese government have begun to discuss publicly what had previously been unthinkable: cutting off food or fuel aid to North Korea and supporting other harsh sanctions at the United Nations.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Il has “gone too far,” said Zhang Liangui, a professor at the Institute of Strategy at the Central Party School in Beijing.

“The nuclear test conducted by North Korea offended the core interests of China,” Zhang said in an interview.

The United States has long sought help from China, North Korea’s largest trading partner, in pressuring North Korea’s reclusive leaders to give up their nuclear ambitions.

U.S. officials say they sense a different tone in China’s response this time. But China has not yet made clear what position it will take in the U.N. Security Council, where negotiations are underway on a possible resolution against North Korea.

“The Chinese are deeply exasperated, but we have to see what they are prepared to do,” an Obama administration official said. (ANI)

Man cures stomachaches by secretly eating gunpowder

New Delhi, May 20 (ANI): A Chinese man is said to have been curing his stomachaches by secretly eating gunpowder from bullets for the past 30 years.

The 60-year-old man, surnamed Zhang, is from the Hechuan district in Chongqing municipality, reports the China Daily.

Zhang has revealed that he has been suffering from such aches since 1972, and that he was told his ailment could be cured by gunpowder.

He obtained 28 military bullets from his friend over the years.

His secret was revealed when a boy tried to steal his bullets from his house. (ANI)

Harry Potter’s invisibility cloak comes closer to reality

London, May 1 (ANI): Scientists have made yet another advancement in bringing invisibility cloak closer to reality by developing a material that renders objects invisible to near-infrared light.

Previous “cloaks” had metals in their structure, which resulted in imperfect cloaking due to loss of light.

In the new study, researchers from New York’s Cornell University and the University of California at Berkeley have developed a carpet-based cloak using a dielectric – or insulating material – which absorbs far less light.

This “carpet” design was based on a theory first described by John Pendry, from Imperial College London, in 2008.

Michal Lipson and her team at Cornell University demonstrated a cloak based on the concept.

Xiang Zhang, professor of mechanical engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, led the other team.

“Essentially, we are transforming a straight line of light into a curved line around the cloak, so you don’t perceive any change in its pathway,” The BBC quoted Zang as saying.

The new material negates the distortion produced by the bulge of the object under it, bending light around it, and giving the illusion of a flattened surface.

According to Zhang, the cloak “changes the local density” of the object it is covering.

“When light passes from air into water it will be bent, because the optical density, or refraction index, of the glass is different to air.

“So by manipulating the optical density of an object, you can transform the light path from a straight line to to any path you want,” the expert said.

The new material does this via a series of minuscule holes – which are strategically “drilled” into a sheet of silicon.

“Where the holes are more dense, there is more air than silicon, so the optical density of the object is reduced,” Zhang said. (ANI)

Chinese envoy arrives in Taiwan to prepare for cross-strait summit

Taipei – China’s senior envoy to Taiwan, Zheng Lizhong, led a group of negotiators to the island Friday for preparatory talks to set the stage for the third cross-strait summit planned later this month.

Zheng, vice chairman of the Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Strait (ARATS) and his 20-member delegation were whisked to Taipei from Taoyuan International Airport amid a protest by a small group of pro-independence activists.

Shouting “Long live Taiwan independence,” the protesters said the Chinese group was not welcome in Taiwan because the Chinese government treated Taiwan as its subordinate. They were later dispersed by police.

Later in Taipei, Zhang said the major purpose of the group’s visit was to put the final touches on preparations for the upcoming cross-striat summit.

“We are here to attend the preparatory talks to facilitate the signing of three agreements in the third summit between the two sides of the Taiwan Strait,” he said in a welcoming ceremony at a plush Taipei hotel.

Taiwan and China, rivals since they split at the end of a civil war in 1949, are expected to hold their third summit in the Chinese city of Nanjing for five days from April 25. The one-day preparatory meeting will be held in Taipei Saturday to finalise details ahead of the summit. Zheng and his group will leave Taipei Sunday. (dpa)

Craze for English tattoos increasing among the Chinese

London, April 18 (ANI): While westerners once used to be crazy about having Chinese characters tattooed on their bodies, ink parlours have observed a reversal of the trend off late.

Chinese tattoo makers have revealed that craze about tattoos in English is gradually increasing among their clients.

“Around 30 per cent to 40 per cent of our customers are choosing tattoos in English letters now. This has happened really suddenly, since the beginning of this year,” the Telegraph quoted Zhang Aiping, a tattooist at Tattoo 108 in Shanghai, as saying.

“I just did one a few days ago for a footballer at Shanghai Shenhua club. It said: ‘I miss u forever,’” Aiping added.

Chinese clients are said to be deriving inspiration from footballers like David Beckham and American basketball stars.

The reason why they are get motivated to choose English letters is simple – any foreign language is mysterious and exotic.

“We get 20 to 30 customers a month, and import our paint and needles from Europe,” said Zhu Jian of ‘Tattoo 007′, who charges an average of 100 pounds per tattoo, the equivalent of a factory worker’s monthly salary.

“We get mostly college students, but we have also had doctors, professors and bankers. Tattoos of letters have become very popular since last year, with around three out of ten people going for them. They are simple and graceful. Quite a few just copy the tattoo of their favourite stars, like Beckham or Angelina Jolie,” he added.

Yang Enna, a 22-year-old television producer in Shanghai, said:

“English tattoos are just more special. They are very trendy and they say something about my personality.

She added: “They are much simpler compared to Chinese characters and can hold deep meanings. English letters can be used as acronyms so your privacy is protected and people are curious about what you have written on your arms. If I had tattoos in Chinese, everyone would immediately know what they meant.” (ANI)

Scientists transform CO2 into clean-burning biofuel

Washington, April 17 (ANI): Scientists at Singapore’s Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology (IBN) have become the first to transform the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2) into methanol, which is a widely used industrial feedstock and clean-burning biofuel.

The IBN researchers report that by using organocatalysts, they activated CO2 in a mild and non-toxic process to produce methanol, a widely used industrial feedstock and clean-burning biofuel.

Organocatalysts are catalysts that are comprised of non-metallic elements found in organic compounds.

NHCs such as IMes (1,3-bis- (2,4,6 trimethylphenyl)imidazolylidene) are a form of organocatalysts that are stable and easily stored.

They do not contain toxic heavy metals and can be produced easily without high costs.

The scientists made carbon dioxide react by using N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs), a novel organocatalyst.

In contrast to heavy metal catalysts that contain toxic and unstable components, NHCs are stable, even in the presence of oxygen.

Hence, the reaction with NHCs and carbon dioxide can take place under mild conditions in dry air.

The IBN scientists showed that only a small amount of NHC is required to induce carbon dioxide activity in a reaction.

According to Siti Nurhanna Riduan, IBN Senior Lab Officer, “NHCs have shown tremendous potential for activating and fixing carbon dioxide. Our work can contribute towards transforming excess carbon dioxide in the environment into useful products such as methanol.”

Hydrosilane, a combination of silica and hydrogen, is added to the NHC-activated carbon dioxide, and the product of this reaction is transformed into methanol by adding water through hydrolysis.

“Hydrosilane provides hydrogen, which bonds with carbon dioxide in a reduction reaction. This carbon dioxide reduction is efficiently catalyzed by NHCs even at room temperature. Methanol can be easily obtained from the product of the carbon dioxide reaction,” explained Yugen Zhang, IBN Team Leader and Principal Research Scientist.

“We have now shown that NHCs can also be applied successfully to the conversion of carbon dioxide into methanol, helping to unleash the potential of this highly abundant gas,” he added. (ANI)

Scorpion venom-nanoparticle combo slows brain cancer’s spread

Washington, April 17 (ANI): Scorpion venom has shown some promise to slow the spread of brain cancer, say researchers.

Scientists at the University of Washington have revealed that combining nanoparticles with chlorotoxin, a small peptide isolated from scorpion venom, they could halt the spread of cancerous cells by 98 per cent, compared to 45 per cent for the scorpion venom alone.

“People talk about the treatment being more effective with nanoparticles but they don’t know how much, maybe 5 percent or 10 percent. This was quite a surprise to us,” said Miqin Zhang, professor of Materials Science and Engineering.

She revealed that the study involved mouse brain-cancer cells that were grown in the lab.

Her team observed that the cells containing nanoparticle-chlorotoxin combo were unable to elongate, whereas those containing only nanoparticles or only chlorotoxin could stretch out.

Based on their observations, the researchers came to the conclusion that the nanoparticle-chlorotoxin combo disabled the machinery on the cell’s surface that allows cells to change shape, yet another step required for a tumour cell to slip through the body.

“We hypothesized the mechanism and we have all the data to prove our hypothesis,” Zhang said.

She revealed that her team’s future experiments would involve testing on mice.

A report describing the study has been published in the journal Small. (ANI)

China says UN response to N. Korea rocket launch should be cautious

United Nations, Apr.14 (ANI): China’s UN envoy Zhang Yesui has urged the UN Security Council to give a cautious and proportionate response to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) recent rocket launch.

“Our position on the reaction from the Security Council has been very clear and consistent. That is, the reaction from the Security Council has to be cautious and proportionate,” Xinhua quoted Zhang Yesui as telling reporters after the council adopted a presidential statement on the DPRK launch.

The UN Security Council on April 13, 2009 adopted a presidential statement on the recent launch by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

In the statement, the 15-member council “condemns” the April 5 launch by the DPRK and calls on all member states to “comply fully with their obligations under resolution 1718,” adopted by the council in October 2006.

The statement also called for the early resumption of the six-party talks, which gather China, the DPRK, Japan, South Korea, Russia and the United States.

“The reaction from the Security Council should be conducive to maintaining peace and stability in the Korean Peninsula and Northeast Asia, and conducive to the six-party talks and also to the process of de-nuclearisation in the Korean Peninsula, and it should be also conducive to afeguarding the international non-proliferation regime,” Yesui said.

“That’s why we had been consistent in the Security Council adopting a presidential statement instead of a resolution with new sanctions,” he said.

In Beijing, the government said it disapproved of the United Nations adopting any new resolution on the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) rocket launch, and is opposed to any new sanction against the DPRK.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said here on Tuesday that China maintains that the reaction from the Security Council should be conducive to safeguarding peace and stability in the Korean Peninsula and Northeast Asia, and conducive to the six-party talks and also to the process of a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula, and it should also be conducive to safeguarding the international non-proliferation regime.

She added that China disapproves of the UN Security Council’s adoption of any new resolution on the rocket launch, and is opposed any new sanction against the DPRK.

Jiang said China hopes relevant parties would view the overall situation and long-term development, keep calm and show restraint, jointly safeguard peace and stability in the region and promote the process of a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula. (ANI)

No job crisis for China’s Hindi class

They are baffled when they go from China to Chandni Chowk and encounter Delhi’s Hindi. Why do people say mereko, they asked this correspondent in a room stacked with the Manusmriti and Bhagavada Gita at Peking University.

“Saying mereko instead of mujhe and #8230;theek nahin (not right),” said Jiang Jingkui, chairman of the Hindi department that opened in 1949. This classroom in the communist nation’s top campus has job offers even during the recession, while seven million graduates in China are desperate to find work.

Its elite batch of Chinese students – with alternate identities like Ajay, Sagar and Vishnu – study Indian culture and Hindi, watch Doordarshan and even the Mahabharata series. Trade between India and China – the two economies more resilient through the recession than the US – grew 34 per cent last year.

But on both sides of the border, businessmen barely understand each other’s language and culture. The demand for the few Hindi speakers of Peking University – China’s first national university – is growing with this rise in trade.

“My students even refuse job offers,” Jiang told HT. The Amitabh fan said he is saddened India does not project Hindi as an international language. He pointed to management graduate Ajay, or Lu Xiaoliang, 27, who pursued an MA in South Asian culture and Hindi to chase career opportunities from India-China bilateral ties.

“Several companies are after him. He may go to India next year,” said Jiang.

Currently, about 200 students study Hindi in seven departments in China, with a new centre set to open this year in the Chongqing. “Only 10 Chinese were studying Hindi when I learnt it in 1985,” said Jiang, who is sifting through resumes of English and management students among the 60 applications he received this year.

“This year, there are more job positions than Hindi graduates available,” said BA final-year student Vishnu or Zhang Mingyu, who decided it wouldn’t be hard to learn the language after he read in a Chinese magazine that Sonia Gandhi had mastered Hindi. “My classmates were astonished.

They asked me, Hindi, what’s that?” said Vishnu, who will join the MA course this year. Sagar or Chao Wei is studying MA after four years as a business manager for China’s Haier in Delhi.

“I want to help people understand India. I love India!” he said.

Loving India is a criterion in his class, Jiang tells students. The department plans to introduce Punjabi and Tamil language training as well.

Be cautious over North Korea, China asks UNSC

New York, April 6 (Xinhua) China has called on the UN Security Council (UNSC) to be ‘cautious and proportionate’ in its reaction to North Korea’s rocket launch.

Ambassador Zhang Yesui, China’s permanent representative to the UN, told a press conference here Sunday that the reaction of Security Council, which held an emergency session on the missile launch by Pyongyang, should be ‘cautious and proportionate’.

‘It served the common interests of the international community to continue to promote the Six-Party Talks, achieve denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula and maintain peace and stability on the Peninsula and in Northeast Asia,’ he said.

The 15-nation Council kicked off an emergency session Sunday afternoon at the request of the Japanese mission to the UN over the alleged long-range missile test by North Korea, which says it has launched a communications satellite into orbit.

US Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice told reporters shortly before the beginning of the UNSC meeting that Washington calls for ‘a strong collective action’ from the Security Council.

‘We have been in consultation with our allies in the region, and other partners in the Security Council,’ Rice said before she entered the Security Council chamber.

French UN Ambassador Jean- Maurice Ripert also told reporters that the Security Council ‘should act in an unanimous way’ after the rocket launch by Pyongyang.