2016年3月28日 星期一

Week 4 書商失蹤

The Causeway Bay bookseller whose disappearance last year set off a storm over Hong Kong’s autonomy said yesterday he was putting the past behind him, quitting the business, and making a fresh start after returning home on Thursday.

Then, without answering lingering questions about the circumstances under which he vanished, Lee Po returned to the mainland, accompanied by an unidentified man in a vehicle with cross-border licence plates.

Mobbed by the media outside his North Point home yesterday morning, Lee pleaded for space.

“I have already said what I wanted to say. Today I just want to tell everyone that I hope you can leave me and my family alone. Don’t push me that much,” he said, smiling the whole time.

Missing Hong Kong bookseller Lee Po returns home from mainland China after disappearing last December

“I want to forget the past and start afresh. I am starting another page in my life.”

He said he was allowed to travel freely between Hong Kong and the mainland, and was crossing the border again for tomb sweeping with his wife, Sophie Choi Ka-ping, in the next few days.

“I did not dare to go to the mainland for a while previously. I heard that people had got into trouble for their [banned books] business. I was afraid. But after I went and solved all the problems this time, I can finally feel at ease now,” he said.

He left the scene with a man in sunglasses who refused to identify himself. Their car was seen crossing the border via the Lok Ma Chau control point.

Lee and four associates linked to the Mighty Current publishing house and Causeway Bay Books store who went missing last year surfaced on the mainland, all claiming they had gone there voluntarily to help with an investigation into the sale of banned books. All of them dismissed concerns that they might have been kidnapped by mainland agents operating outside their jurisdiction.

Chinese journalist who disappeared on way to Hong Kong ‘taken away by police at Beijing airport’: lawyer

Human rights activist Richard Tsoi Yiu-cheong found it difficult to believe that Lee was not reading a script prepared by Beijing. “I also doubt if he can move freely between Hong Kong and the mainland,” Tsoi said.

Lee’s publishing colleague, Gui Minhai, is accused of ordering his associates to deliver about 4,000 banned books across the border since October 2014. They specialised in books criticising China’s leaders and speculating on their private lives.

The Immigration Department was said to have no grounds to stop Lee from leaving the city again, as it had no evidence of any immigration offence, even though he left last year without necessary travel documents or going through proper channels.

In an interview with Beijing-friendly media on Thursday, Lee said he would never run a bookstore business again. He asked police to drop their investigation into his missing-person case.

Additional reporting by Oliver Chou

Resources:


http://m.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/law-crime/article/1930513/ill-never-publish-banned-books-again-hong-kong-bookseller

Structure of the lead:


What: The Causeway Bay Bookseller (Lee Po) said that he didnt want to sell books anymore.


When: March 25th 2016


Where: Hong Kong and China mainland


Why: Mr. Lee sold banned books in HK


Who:Lee Po


How:Mr. Lee was taken away by an unidentified men in black

Key words:


escorted 護送


lingering 拖延的


autonomy 自治權

2016年3月13日 星期日

week 1- 福斯排氣造假醜聞

In the ongoing diesel emissions fiasco, developments have been coming somewhat slowly, leaving plenty of room for rhetoric while we wait for a resolution. Volkswagen faces serious fines for the cheat, as the investigation continues in hopes of pinning down responsibility. In the meantime, the US Justice Department is suing the German automaker for up to $46 billion (a staggering number for nearly any human to comprehend, admittedly, and one that appears to have the automaker shaken) for violating US law by intentionally selling vehicles with emissions "cheat device" software. As the situation drags on, the rhetoric is becoming more and more pointed.

Now, a warning comes out of Germany directed at the US. In front of 20,000 workers atVolkswagen's Wolfsburg headquarters, works council chairman Bernd Osterloh said, "Should the future viability of Volkswagen be endangered by an unprecedented financial penalty, this will have dramatic social consequences, not only in our US plants, but also in Europe and elsewhere." Osterloh, who sits on a VW advisory board, added, "We very much hope that the US authorities also have an eye for this social and employment-political dimension."

The US jobs he refers to include the some 2,200 workers at Volkswagen's plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee. That facility produces the Passat, and is slated to build a large SUV to be revealed later this year.

Depending on how long this situation drags on, it will likely become increasingly political. We can probably expect more strong language, and more veiled and overt threats from all parties as they try to make their case, garner support and sympathy for their side and portray one another as villains. Still, there are cooler heads in the fray who aren't resorting to scare tactics.

Lower Saxony Prime Minister Stephan Weil, who sits on the same VW supervisory board as Osterloh, says, "The damage will, on balance, not be minor, that much can already be said today, but Volkswagen luckily has a strong economic base." Weil says the German state, which owns a 20-percent stake in VW, has every expectation to continue its financial commitment to the manufacturer.

In such a high-profile and wide-reaching scandal, we shouldn't be surprised by scare tactics, as unpleasant as they are. Let's just hope that cooler heads prevail, and that there can be a fair resolution before things get even more emotional.

Resources:

Structure of the lead:
What: Volkswagen faked the emission
Where: in the US and Germany
When: not given
Who: Volkswagen, the us justice department
Why: Volkswagen faked the emission 
How: install a cheat software in the vehicles

Key words:
emission 排放
supervisory 監督 管理的

2016年3月12日 星期六

Week3 牛津字典年度字

It's a historic moment of recognition for little images that have been gaining popularity since 1999
Oxford Dictionaries made history on Monday by announcing that their “Word of the Year” would not be one of those old-fashioned, string-of-letters-type words at all. The flag their editors are planting to sum up who we were in 2015 is this pictograph, an acknowledgement of just how popular these pictures have become in our (digital) daily lives:
“Although emoji have been a staple of texting teens for some time, emoji culture exploded into the global mainstream over the past year,” the company’s team wrote in a press release. “Emoji have come to embody a core aspect of living in a digital world that is visually driven, emotionally expressive, and obsessively immediate.”
Oxford University Press—which publishes both the august Oxford English Dictionary and the lower-brow, more-modern Oxford Dictionaries Online—partnered with keyboard-app company SwiftKey to determine which emoji was getting the most play this past year. According to their data, the “Face With Tears of Joy” emoji, also known as LOL Emoji or Laughing Emoji, comprised nearly 20% of all emoji use in the U.S. and the U.K., where Oxford is based. The runner-up in the U.S., with 9% of usage, was this number:
Caspar Grathwohl, the president of Oxford Dictionaries, explained that their choice reflects the walls-down world that we live in. “Emoji are becoming an increasingly rich form of communication, one that transcends linguistic borders,” he said in a statement. And their choice for the word of the year, he added, embodies the “playfulness and intimacy” that characterizes emoji-using culture.
Though this marks a historic moment of recognition for the pictures plastered throughout tweets and texts, Oxford has not added or defined any emoji in their actual databases. Nor, says a spokesperson for the publisher, do they have plans to do so at this point. The word emoji, however, has been in both the OED and Oxford Dictionaries Online since 2013.
Japanese telecommunications planner Shigetaka Kurita is credited with inventing these little images in 1999, taking the emoticons that had been gaining steam on the Internet to an iconic level. Inspired by comics and street signs, the name for the alphanumeric images comes from combining the Japanese words for picture (e-) and character (moji). “It’s easy to write them off as just silly little smiley faces or thumbs-up,” sociolinguist Ben Zimmer told TIME for a story on how emoji fit into humans’ long history of using pictures to communicate. “But there’s an awful lot of people who are very interested in treating them seriously.”


Structure of the lead:
What: word of the year of 2015 is a emoji
Where: England
Why: not given
When: December 2015
Who: Oxford dictionary
How: not given

Key words:
emoji 表情符號

2016年3月3日 星期四

Week2 深圳土石流

Authorities in China have arrested 11 people in connection with a landslide of construction waste that killed 12 people and left 62 others missing and presumed dead.

Prosecutors in the southern city of Shenzhen said in a statement on Thursday that a dispatcher and supervisor of the landfill, and the chief and deputy manager of a company in charge of the landfill were arrested, along with seven others.

On 20 December, a mountain of construction waste that was piled up against a hill collapsed during heavy rain on to an industrial park. Prosecutors said the 11 people were charged with negligently causing a serious accident.

An official in Shenzhen jumped to his death about a week after the disaster. It was not clear if the man, identified only by his surname, Xu, was under investigation over the landslide. As head of the district urban management bureau, his responsibilities typically would include regulating businesses and construction sites.

Officials have called the landslide a man-made disaster, raising the possibility of harsh penalties for those held responsible.

Despite the threat of prison time over major industrial accidents, a lack of regulatory oversight and management cost-cutting often lead to deadly disasters in China.

Resources:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jan/01/shenzhen-landslide-11-arrested-in-china-over-man-made-disaster

Key words:
negligently 粗心大意地
collapsed 坍塌

Structure of the lead:
What: construction waste mountain collapsed
Where: Shenzen
Why: not given
When: December 20th 2015
Who:not given
How:not given