China Law Answers Answers to the legal questions related to china

October 9, 2005

Are the Iraqis so Angry with the US that they are offering Oil Contracts to China?

Filed under: China Law — Tags: , , — china @ 7:45 am
china law
ToYou,Too! asked:

Iraq revives Saddam oil deal with China
By Jamil Anderlini in Beijing and Steve Negus, Iraq, Correspondent
June 23 2007 03:00 – Financial Times http://tinyurl.com/2od2r6

Baghdad has revived a contract signed by the Saddam Hussein administration allowing a state-owned Chinese oil company to develop an Iraqi oil field, the Iraqi oil minister told the Financial Times in Beijing yesterday.

Hussein al-Shahristani also said Baghdad welcomed Chinese oil company bids for any other contract in the country through a “fair and transparent bidding process” to be laid out in the new oil law under discussion in Iraq’s parliament.

China National Petroleum Corporation, the country’s largest oil company and the parent of listed group Petrochina, signed a deal with Iraq in 1997 to develop the al-Ahdab oil field. The field is one of the first to be offered to foreign investors since the 2003 US-led invasion.

What else can Bush Neocons screw up?

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October 2, 2005

What to price china set? Need help haven’t been to garage sale in years

Filed under: China Law — Tags: , , — china @ 10:02 am
china law
Kathy A asked:

Sister-in-law is having garage sale tomorrow & I have a mid-expensive but practically brand new 8-piece china set including serving platter & large serving bowl & I have no idea what to price it Can anyone help with suggestions? Thanks!!

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September 29, 2005

I’m having serious second thoughts about law school. What are the chances I’m making a mistake?

Filed under: China Law — Tags: , , — china @ 6:21 am

Ian F asked:

I’m just about to go to Temple Law this fall, and I’m having serious second thoughts. I’m not sure that the sort of career I’d want is really realistic.

I want to focus on international law, maybe get an LLM in addition to a JD.

My aim in doing this would be to work in or in relation to Northeast Asia (I speak Japanese and Korean). If I were in the US I’d want to be in the northwest.

Money matters, of course, but I don’t care if I never make (inflation adjusted) 6 figures. But thinking about it…I like the free time I have now. A lot. I don’t think I’d really want to work more than about 50 hours a week.

I hear that’s feasible with a lot of civil service positions, but, I guess those would be pretty stationary.

To summarize, I’m after:
Low-Medium (for a lawyer) pay
40-50 hour week
Work from or travel to Japan, Korea, or China

Is my goal a realistic one? Or should I just forget it?
Part of this is also I’m not sure I want to commit to 3 years in a city I don’t know I’ll like.

(hey, I only get 1000 characters)

And then there’s the endless pages of bitching about hours from lawyers.

And there’s the fact that I…I sometimes see listings for jobs I’d like…sometimes a few at once. But then again there’ll be times where there’s nothing, nothing at all.

I have met one person who had a job something like what I’d be after (except in West Africa), but that was at a foreign service exam, so I’m guessing he didn’t like his job THAT much.

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September 27, 2005

Triple Salary in China?

Filed under: China Law — Tags: , , — china @ 8:41 pm
china law
chsriman asked:

China has a law that companies should pay triple salary to employees if they work on statuatory holidays. Does the law apply only to Chinese citizens working in China or does it also apply to expatriates working in China on work permits?
Also it would be great if anyone can give some reference link which authenticates the answer.

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September 26, 2005

By not granting China’s Imperial family. is President Bush in violation of US laws?

Filed under: China Law — Tags: , , — china @ 7:07 pm
china law
peacenegotiator asked:

THE QUESTION: “By not granting China’s Imperial family and Emperor, head of state in exile, official recognition, by denying them recognition and Secret Service protection and special privileges under the law, is President Bush guilty of violations of US laws and will he ever be indicted?”

Answer: The truth is that the President is above the law, as we, the people, can all see here and with respect to the Iraq War.

In issues of national security, the President and his people have violated many laws and have endangered our nation. Since he is above the law and Congress see fit not to prosecute him, he will never be indicted and his lies will continue on to the next President, whomever that may be with the exception of Ron Paul.

China’s royal family came here to America in 1871 to flee from Manchurian persecution and certain death. They have not gone back, due to a communist take over of mainland China.

The Imperial family are not communist!
.
=================================
LINKS:
http://chinatownhawaii.com Links at top of page.
http://www.myspace.com/centerkingdom

End

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September 25, 2005

China imprisons a social activist does anyone care?

Filed under: China Law — Tags: , , — china @ 7:14 pm
china law
Ilustrado ni Rizal asked:

http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2007/aug/25/yehey/top_stories/20070825top6.html

BEIJING: Chinese police on Friday stopped the wife of a blind activist who exposed government abuses of the one-child policy from going to the Philippines to receive the Magsaysay Award for her husband, colleagues said.

Yuan Weijing had been going to pick up the prize for her blind husband Chen Guangcheng, 35, imprisoned for unmasking abuses such as forced sterili­zations and women being made to have abortions eight months into term.

Yuan, Chen’s wife, has previously said that Chen had been severely beaten in prison. Human Rights Watch has called his case an example of the “significant deterioration” of rights in the country.

There is a one child policy in China but Communist Party officials and the rich often ignore the law themselves and avoid punishment by just paying fines.

CHINA is embarassing.

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September 19, 2005

Re-how can China kill dogs? How can they beat the to death?

Filed under: China Law — Tags: , , — china @ 6:59 pm
china law
jenny 98243 asked:

Chinese Hide Dogs to Escape Crackdown
By AUDRA ANG, AP

BEIJING (Nov. 16) – Elaine Loke is shutting down her dog boutique and will spirit her golden retrievers Hippy and Bally out of Beijing to escape the city’s sweeping anti-rabies campaign.

——————————————————————————–

Talk About It: Post Thoughts

Dog owners like Loke have been scrambling to hide their pets in the face of a new crackdown which allows only one dog per household and bans breeds taller than 14 inches. Fears have been fueled by graphic Internet pictures and witnesses who say police are beating to death strays and dogs that run afoul of regulations.

“I can’t believe this is happening,” said Loke, 33, who keeps the curtains in her first-floor apartment drawn to ward off prying neighbors and walks her dogs in an underground parking lot. “It’s so stressful. In the morning, I hear dogs barking and people talking outside my home and I think the police are coming.”

The pressure is so bad that Loke is returning to her native Hong Kong and closing a business she has had for two years.

In China, dogs have long been seen as a source of meat as much as companionship. But the current crackdown has touched a nerve in the rapidly modernizing capital, especially among its burgeoning middle class.

“What kind of rules are these? I don’t expect everybody to love animals. But I do want to have my rights to keep pets,” said Clare Xiao, an account manager at an advertising company. She sent her larger Brittany to a kennel run by a friend and kept her Pekinese, a stray she found on the street.

“What the government is doing is just disappointing, cold and emotionless,” said Xiao.

Many of the prohibitions have been on the books since 2003, but only sporadically enforced. The city of 13 million people has 1 million dogs, half of them unregistered, according to state media.

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A sharp increase in rabies cases nationwide has prompted the renewed vigilance. Only 3 percent of China’s dogs are vaccinated against rabies and the disease is nearly always fatal in humans once symptoms develop, though it can be warded off by a series of expensive and painful injections.

Officials have extended the 2003 rules to cover not only Beijing’s center but some outlying areas. The clampdown, announced Nov. 6, gave owners until Thursday to comply or the dogs would be seized and the owners fined.

One owner Zhu Qiao has moved three times since 2001 to find areas where her black-and-white dog, Gou Gou, could be raised safely and within the law.

“He’s part of my life, he’s my friend and family,” said Zhu, 30, a television producer. “If you want to impose a law, you have to get the opinion of dog owners and experts. You can’t just take them away.”

“I can’t move again. There’s no option but to hide him and if he gets taken, I’ll go with him.”

Another owner had his Labrador retriever taken away Wednesday because she was too big.

“She is a very amicable dog. She never barked,” said the owner, a businessman who would give only his surname Yang. “If they don’t allow me to raise her here, I will find another place. I will get her back.”

Witness accounts and photos on the Internet have shown dogs being captured in nets and pummeled with wooden and metal sticks. But authorities have vowed to carry out a “strict but civilized” campaign that police hoped would not anger dog owners, according to the official Xinhua News Agency.

“I have never heard of dogs being culled after they were caught by police. Dogs are a man’s best friend and we treat them as friends, even when we have to lock them up for the sake of public security,” Xinhua quoted a Ministry of Public Security official, Bao Suixian, as saying.

Many owners have sent their dogs to kennels outside the city. Some are handing them over to friends and family.

Joyce Wang gave one of her dogs to her sister and is keeping Ding Ding, her fox terrier, close by her side. She said she had heard that the government was offering $25 to people who reported on rule-breaking dog owners.

“I’m scared and worried. Now I don’t take him outside during the day,” Wang said. “Even in the evening, we will take a detour if we see people in the compound we live in.”

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Do you believe we should keep buying stuff from mainland China?

Filed under: China Law — Tags: , , — china @ 3:40 am
china law
Hand puppet pet asked:

They do not können erfà ¼ llen Qualitätsstandards of the world, as soon as the production giant that we America (the USA), and for demand a few simple Maà Ÿ at security. We have laws à ¼ more ber security, which are by Sue glà ¼ cklich Schwächlinge, and which keep shista Lawers it. I ask myself, how many good ideas went to Sà ¼ that, because these parasites, and its bösen self service of lähmender agenda? The total result becomes fà ¼ hren that the controversy with the Chinese economy and the Chinese subscribers of low incomes Missverständnisse of the material grass root Americans demands of imaginativeness. Bully Vu Sucker!

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September 18, 2005

Do we as Americans have he constitutional right to reproduce?

Filed under: China Law — Tags: , — china @ 10:55 am
china law
Lover07 asked:

And what are your views on the one child law in China?

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September 16, 2005

Does every single citizen of china has an identity card?

Filed under: China Law — Tags: , , — china @ 9:06 pm
china law
Brahmanda asked:

China’s Population is more than india. In india all citizens do not hold identity cards. Moreover the government does not know how to identify its citizens. it makes complex law’s which are not comprehensible to ordinary man. Instead of a person just reporting to the nearest police station for a change of address he has to go therough very many babus with bribe through a corporation office. any MLA will give a citizen certificate for substantial bribe. That is why Iam curious to kanow how it is done in china

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