Showing posts with label chinese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chinese. Show all posts

Friday, September 6, 2013

Chinese chief of RBAP wants to change UNDP image and perception -- will he succeed ?

The new Director of the of the Regional Bureau for Asia and the Pacific at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) says it is time to have an honest dialogue with some of its government partners so that they see UNDP, not as a donor, but rather as a trusted development partner.
Mr Haoliang Xu assumed his role as the new director on September 2.
A Chinese national, Mr. Xu has held various leadership positions in UNDP, most recently as Deputy Director of the Regional Bureau for Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States.
I am very excited about my new role. I believe that the significant unfinished business of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) remains the defining challenge of our time. Accelerating MDG progress and meeting the original deadline of 2015 must remain a top priority. Over the years, UNDP has been playing a valuable role in the achievement of MDGs. My new assignment as head of UNDP operation in Asia-Pacific gives me an opportunity to work with our partners to bring together all the threads of MDGs in the region to build an inclusive, sustainable and resilient Asia-Pacific,” Mr. Xu said in his first meeting with the Regional Bureau for Asia and the Pacific staff at UNDP headquarters in New York.

Friday, July 13, 2012

National Review: - Tilting at the U.N. Windmill. Not everything the U.N. does is evil. Some of it is just incompetent.

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By Jonah Goldberg

Those of us who believe the United States would be best served by pulling out of the United Nations and starting up a more morally and politically serious clubhouse for morally and politically serious nations are often accused of tilting at windmills.

The phrase “tilting at windmills” was inspired by Cervantes’ novel Don Quixote, and it means to fight something that doesn’t really deserve to be fought. Quixote mistook the windmills of the Spanish countryside for ravenous giants and set out to vanquish them. (“Tilting” is a jousting expression, in case you didn’t know.)

Well, let’s review some recent evidence.

The U.N. has been working hand-in-glove with the Chinese government to make the Chinese one-child policy as efficient and ruthless as possible. “Our conclusion is that the [United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)] is directly responsible for forced abortions and forced sterilizations in China,” Steven Mosher, president of the Population Research Institute, recently told Congress in prepared testimony.

Of course, not everyone dislikes the one-child policy. Vice President Biden has supported it, and President Obama restored UNFPA’s funding when he took office. So let’s move on.

Lots of people like the Internet, right? Well, good news! The U.N. wants to take it over. The International Telecommunications Union, a U.N. organization, is secretly debating proposals to claim jurisdiction over the Web and take it out of America’s hands. The major forces behind this push: authoritarian regimes eager to censor their domestic Internet and monitor their citizens. Russia and some Arab countries, reports the Wall Street Journal’s Gordon Crovitz, want the power to read private e-mail. Others want to tax cross-border Web traffic. And countries like China are working hard to bribe, bully, or barter votes in favor of the U.N. takeover.
You see, that’s what dictatorships do at the U.N.: work to make the world safe for dictatorships. The most brutal regimes on the planet are constantly trying to get on or game the Human Rights Council so they can spend all of their time condemning Israel and blocking any attempts to censure their own regimes.

Not everything the U.N. does is evil. Some of it is just incompetent. The whole of what passes for the “international community” has been trying to enforce sanctions on Iran and North Korea. But nobody told the U.N.’s intellectual-property agency, it was revealed earlier this month, so they went ahead and gave North Korea and Iran computers and IT equipment.

A few days later, the invaluable human-rights group U.N. Watch reported that Iran was elected to the U.N. Conference on the Arms Trade Treaty, despite having just been declared guilty — in a U.N. Security Council report! — of illegally shipping guns and bombs to Syria.

Speaking of Syria, which is currently violating agreements to not murder its own people, it recently had a big victory at the Human Rights Council. Syria co-sponsored and passed a resolution pushed by Cuba (and supported by the usual Legion of Doom nations) to establish a “Right to Peace.” The document is a lot of boilerplate until you get to the part where it says “all peoples and individuals have the right to resist and oppose oppressive colonial, foreign occupation.” This is Middle East–speak for “It’s okay to blow up Israelis.”

Now these are all just recent news items. But you can play this game any time you want because the U.N. always provides fresh hells for us to marvel and laugh at.

For example, the United Nations website tells us that there is something called the Open-ended Ad Hoc Working Group of the General Assembly on the Integrated and Coordinated Implementation of and Follow-up to the Major United Nations Conferences and Summits in the Economic and Social Fields. Who among us doesn’t sleep better knowing the OAHWGGAICIFMUNCSESF is working for us?

Alas, the U.N. website notes, “The Ad Hoc Working Group was last active during the 57th session of the General Assembly in 2003.” In other words, the ad hoc open-ended working group is so open-ended it hasn’t met in nearly a decade.

But that’s the great thing about the U.N.: It never fails to surprise us with its predictability.

I’m beginning to think the U.N.’s defenders are the Don Quixotes, only in reverse. Where the critics see the reality of the ravenous giant, the U.N.’s defenders can only see a harmless windmill converting hot air for the good of all mankind.

— Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online, a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and the author of The Tyranny of Clichés. You can write to him by e-mail at JonahsColumn@aol.com, or via Twitter @JonahNRO. © 2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

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Wednesday, February 1, 2012

UNDP get's in the business of promoting Chinese Fluorescent Bulbs to "save energy"



UNDP Advocates Use Of Fluorecent Bulbs To Save Energy


Fluorecent Bulb











The UNDP Global Environmental Facility (GEF) says Nigeria’s energy consumption can be reduced drastically if households use energy efficient fluorescent bulbs.

This was contained in the 2011 GEF Project Report signed by Etiosa Uyigue, the National Coordinator, and made available to journalists on Wednesday in Abuja.

The report said households could save about 67 per cent of the energy they use if the use of fluorescent bulbs could be encouraged.

It said that globally, about 60 per cent carbon dioxide emission came from energy generation ``which contributes significantly to global warming leading to climate change’’.

GEF said that energy efficiency policy should be put in place to gradually phase out incandescent or yellow bulbs.

“Government policies can be directed to encourage the importation and local production of energy efficiency light bulbs and to reduce the cost of these bulbs.

“Awareness creation is also needed to change the attitude of Nigerians on the need to save energy by using the right technology,’’ it said.

The GEF report observed that many Nigerians do not put out their outdoor lighting during the day.

“This is very common in commercial and residential areas in many major towns, public institutions and government ministries.

“To influence behaviour in this direction, the government can come up with laws to penalise any defaulter or make policy and legislation to place tax on energy consumption.’’

It said that this would discourage energy wastage in public and private buildings.

The report said that the inability of the Nigerian government to provide potable drinking water for its citizens had encouraged the use of privately-owned water boreholes.

It noted that the machines used in pumping water from boreholes “is an energy intensive machine” and could consume up to 2,000w of electricity.

“These machines exert much pressure on the PHCN facilities, which are vulnerable to system failure,’’ the report said.

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Saturday, August 20, 2011

A bizarre project in Nepal

At Buddha’s birthplace

A Chinese development proposal causes disbelief

of The Economist

AFTER Prachanda, the leader of Nepal’s Maoists, stepped down as prime minister in 2009 he several times met representatives of the “Asia Pacific Exchange and Co-operation Foundation”. The Nepalese media speculated that this mysterious organisation was a front for either the Indian or the Chinese intelligence services, the two giant neighbours often accused of meddling in Nepal’s politics. The truth seems even stranger.

In July Chinese media reported that the Hong-Kong-based foundation—which is widely thought to have China’s backing—had signed an agreement with UNIDO, the UN’s industrial-development organisation, to invest $3 billion in Lumbini, a village in southern Nepal. Lumbini is the birthplace of the Buddha, which the project aimed to make a “Mecca for Buddhists”, with train links, an international airport, hotels and a Buddhist university.

The news caused uproar in Nepal. Neither the central government nor the local authorities responsible for Lumbini said they had been consulted about, or even heard of, the project. UNIDO’s officers say they will not comment on the affair while they try to discover how the organisation got involved. If this was an exercise in Chinese “soft power”, it was a disaster.

India is highly sensitive to Chinese activities in Nepal. It regards Nepal as part of the Indian sphere of influence, and it is easily Nepal’s biggest trading partner and source of investment. Nepal pegs its currency to the Indian rupee. Through close cultural and linguistic ties, and the machinations of its diplomats and spies, India has long exercised a strong influence on Nepal’s politics. It is widely believed that India helped topple Prachanda (whose real name is Pushpa Kamal Dahal) as prime minister in 2009 partly because he was thought to be too close to China.

Now the role of Nepal’s other giant neighbour is becoming more visible. Chinese interests were once limited to demanding support for their policies in Tibet. To that can now be added burgeoning commercial interests in hydro-electricity, construction and telecoms. This week China’s top security man, Zhou Yongkang, became the latest in a series of senior Chinese officials to visit Nepal, bearing loans and aid packages. Chinese diplomats have begun discreetly treating Nepalese journalists to whisky-fuelled dinners and offering them visits to China—blandishments that were once the preserve of India. Chinese hotels, restaurants and brothels have multiplied in Kathmandu.

How to interpret it all? Observers agree that security remains China’s top priority in Tibet, though it is undoubtedly looking to expand its economic influence, too. For Nepal, balancing India’s influence by engaging more with China is attractive. One of the poorest countries in Asia, Nepal should benefit greatly from improving economic ties with its booming neighbours. As for Lumbini, the Buddha scheme has been shot down, but attempts to revive it are already under way. If the would-be investors handle it better next time, such a huge project may prove irresistible.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

U.N. big money for Chinese Firms: - Suntech Power wins USD80 mln PV contract from UN

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BEIJING, Feb. 16, 2011 (Xinhua News Agency) -- China's Suntech Power Holdings (STP.NYSE), the world's largest producer of silicon solar modules, said on Wednesday that the company is to supply a solar energy generation system for the United Nations (UN) in the coming three years.

Teaming up with Peak International Trade (Tianjin), Suntech Power has just won the bidding for the 80 million US-dollar photovoltaic (PV) system program from the UN, Shi Zhengrong, Suntech's Chairman and CEO, announced.

Shi revealed that Suntech has developed a type of small-scale hybrid PV system which integrates diesel generators to ensure dependable power supply for environmentally-vulnerable areas.

The hybrid PV system will mainly serve the UN's peacekeeping forces and their subordinate bodies.

Founded in 2001, Suntech Power is the world's leading solar panel and PV modules manufacturer. The company's production capacity of silicon solar cell and modules reached 1.8 GW in 2010, with 1.5 GW of module shipments. (Edited by Wang Li, wangle1@xinhua.org)

(Source: )
(Source: Quotemedia)

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Shadowy N.Korean Heavyweight Steps into Limelight

A man in a brown overcoat who welcomed Chinese envoy Wang Jiarui on his arrival in North Korea on Feb. 6 is attracting the attention of the Chinese-speaking world. Kim Song-nam is apparently a China expert in the Workers Party's International Department, the Hong Kong-based weekly Yazhou Zhoukan weekly said.

Kim Song-nam is an official interpreter who speaks Chinese fluently, the weekly said. "He worked as the official interpreter for the late North Korean dictator Kim Il-sung and leader Kim Jong-il," it added. "He has attended every high-level talk between China and North Korea over the past two decades." The North's official broadcaster described Kim Song-nam as a deputy director of the Workers Party's International Department. That seems to have been the first time the official North Korean media introduced Kim, formerly a mere interpreter, by his official title, leading to speculation that an éminence grise is stepping cautiously into the limelight.

The party's International Department is in charge of external affairs and diplomacy. "The Workers Party attaches importance not only to relations with the Chinese Communist Party but also to exchanges between the two parties. Kim Song-nam is a prominent China expert in the Workers Party," the weekly added.

Kim reportedly played a key role during Wang's recent visit, leading efforts to cement ties with China at a dinner held for Wang on the day he arrived in Pyongyang. The Chinese press said party officials from the two countries discussed developing the traditional friendship between China and North Korea. Kim was also present at a meeting between Kim Jong-il and Wang at the North Korean leader's retreat in Hamhung, South Hamgyong Province on Feb. 8.

According to a Chinese Communist Party newsletter, Kim Song-nam also attended a New Year's party at the Koryo Hotel in Pyongyang on Jan. 14 hosted by the Chinese Embassy.

Until recently, the Chinese-language press were more interested in Kim Yong-il, the director of the Workers Party's International Department, as Wang's official counterpart.

Kim Yong-il was appointed to the post in January. He graduated from the French Department of Pyongyang University of Foreign Studies and served as the chief North Korean delegate in the first round of the six-party nuclear talks and as a vice foreign minister.

But Kim Song-nam had a far less visible career and is so obscure that even the South Korean Unification Ministry has no detailed information about him, including his exact age and position.