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China tax department's yacht sparks outcry
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Sept 27, 2011

Officials in eastern China have triggered public outrage by claiming that a $425,000 yacht bought with government money was intended for collecting taxes.

Images of the 32-metre (100-foot) yacht appeared on social media sites in China, sparking a furious reaction from bloggers who called for an investigation ino the tax bureau in Zhejiang province.

The zjol.com.cn news website, which is run by authorities in Zhejiang, quoted tax official Fang Yongjun as saying the yacht's two decks had been converted for use as a tax collection office.

The tax bureau needs the yacht because many local businesses operate on the Thousand Island Lake, a national tourist area, the report said.

It quoted the yacht's builder Ma Xiaochun as saying the 2.71 million yuan ($425,000) price tag was low compared with other boats on the lake.

But netizens were unconvinced. "Do they need a helicopter for tax collection in the mountains?" asked one web user on Netease.com, a popular Chinese portal.

Public spending has come under growing scrutiny this year after Beijing ordered central government departments to publish details of their expenditure on cars, foreign trips and receptions.

Spending on those three areas by the State Administration of Taxation amounted to 2.17 billion yuan, the highest of all the 95 departments that have released figures to date, previous Chinese media reports have said.

"Taxpayers were not even consulted about the purchase," columnist Wang Shichuan wrote Monday in the Zhujiang Evening News, a newspaper in southern China.

"Supervision and auditing authorities should investigate the purchase of the yacht and make sure the use of the boat will be transparent... it would be a waste of taxpayer's hard-earned money if the yacht is used for fun."

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China says police investigating fatal train brawl
Beijing (AFP) Sept 27, 2011 - Police are investigating the beating to death of a train passenger in east China, officials said Tuesday, as the industry struggles to repair its reputation after a number of crashes and scandals.

Three train staff seized the middle-aged man by the throat and savagely beat him after he intervened in an argument involving another passenger, Jiangxi Television, a local station, reported on Monday.

Doctors were summoned from an emergency centre near the station in Jiangxi province where the train stopped, but the man died before they arrived, the report said, citing witnesses and the hospital.

The television report showed a document signed by 20 passengers who had witnessed the alleged beating.

"We all feel very angry about the violent beating of the passenger by the train staff," said a woman surnamed Lai who said she was in the same carriage as the man.

A spokesman for the railway ministry told AFP that railway police would handle the investigation.

The incident is the latest scandal to hit the country's railway system, which is struggling to rebuild public trust after a train crash near the eastern city of Wenzhou in July that killed at least 40 people.

On Tuesday, two subway trains in Shanghai crashed in an accident that reportedly injured more than 240, mostly lightly, and was caused by a signal failure.

In February, then railways minister Liu Zhijun was sacked over graft charges, after he allegedly took more than 800 million yuan ($125 million) in kickbacks over several years on contracts linked to China's high-speed network.





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SINO DAILY
Successor chosen by Dalai Lama 'illegal': China
Beijing (AFP) Sept 26, 2011
China said Monday any successor chosen by the Dalai Lama would be "illegal" after the Tibetan spiritual leader announced that he, and not Beijing, would decide whether he should be reincarnated. The Dalai Lama, who is 76, said on Saturday he would decide when he was "about 90" whether he should be reincarnated, in consultation with other monks, and that China should have no say in the matter ... read more


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