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	<title>RockFu.Net - Rock my life! &#187; News</title>
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	<description>八十不後</description>
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		<title>海地地震 2010: 緊急呼籲</title>
		<link>http://www.rockfu.net/blog/2010/01/diary/news/donate-to-haiti-earthquake/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rockfu.net/blog/2010/01/diary/news/donate-to-haiti-earthquake/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 Jan 2010 15:32:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>rockfu</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[haiti earthquake]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[捐款]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[海地地震]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.rockfu.net/blog/?p=2305</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<br/>災情 位於加勒比海的島國海地，在星期二當地時間下午五時發生黎克特制7.3級大地震。首都太子港及附近城市家樂福 (Carrefour) 及雅克梅勒 (Jacmel) 均受到嚴重影響。此呼籲發放時，仍未有官方的傷亡及損毀情況報告，但據初步資料顯示，是次地震的受災人數將多達三百萬人。地震後，主要設施如電力、食水及通訊服務中斷，多座建築物倒塌或損毀，包括總統府和醫院。現時，當地最迫切需要的是搜救服務、設立災區醫院、緊急醫療及心理支援予受影響的災民、清潔的食水、緊急帳篷、物流處理及通訊設施。 紅十字會行動 國際紅十字會已撥出三百七十五萬港元緊急救災金支援是次救災行動，並派出由國際專家組成的災情評估隊和賑災隊到海地，隊員具有不同的專業經驗，如組織賑濟工作、建立臨時居所、組織後勤和物流，提供食水衛生及醫療保健服務、裝置緊急通訊設施、重建家庭聯繫，以至處理遺體。另外，國際紅十字會已準備了三千套家庭用品包 (內有衛生用品、煮食用具、毛毯、蚊帳及水桶等物資)，隨時可派發給災民。海地國家紅十字會倖存的義工與國際紅十字會正共同努力，協助受地震影響的災民。 在香港時間一月十四日，國際紅十字會發出初步緊急募捐呼籲，籌募約七千五百萬港元，以支持為期九個月的賑災工作，預計此筆款項可為海地十萬名災民提供個人衛生清潔用品包、家庭用品包、淨水劑、臨時帳篷及緊急醫療服務等救災物資。 捐款途徑 香港紅十字會正呼籲港人慷慨解囊支持今次海地地震的賑災行動。捐款途徑如下: 1.網上捐款 2.將捐款直接存入以下香港紅十字會戶口 「香港紅十字會賑災及發展專戶」: 匯豐銀行 002-205490-006 請將存款收條正本連同捐款表格寄回本會，以便發出捐款收據。 3.劃線支票抬頭請寫「香港紅十字會賑災及發展專戶」，請將劃線支票連同捐款表格寄回香港夏愨道33號 香港紅十字會 國際及賑災服務部 收。 4.信用咭捐款：請填妥捐款表格並郵寄至本會或傳真至2824-3693。 5.透過全港逾960間7-11分店以現金直接捐款，每次最低捐款為港幣一百元。請將現金收據正本連同捐款表格寄回本會。 6.透過繳費靈: 商戶編號9167。如未有捐助者編號，請致電本會(2802-0021)索取。請填妥捐款表格並郵寄至本會，以便發出捐款收據。 查詢 請致電 2802-0021 或 電郵 international@redcross.org.hk 來源：http://www.redcross.org.hk/tc/disasterrelief_prepard/appeal_update_detail.html?year=2010&#38;id=671]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<br/><p><br class="spacer_" /></p>
<div id="_mcePaste"><strong><span style="color: #ff0000;">災情</span></strong></div>
<div id="_mcePaste">位於加勒比海的島國海地，在星期二當地時間下午五時發生黎克特制7.3級大地震。首都太子港及附近城市家樂福 (Carrefour) 及雅克梅勒 (Jacmel) 均受到嚴重影響。此呼籲發放時，仍未有官方的傷亡及損毀情況報告，但據初步資料顯示，是次地震的受災人數將多達三百萬人。地震後，主要設施如電力、食水及通訊服務中斷，多座建築物倒塌或損毀，包括總統府和醫院。現時，當地最迫切需要的是搜救服務、設立災區醫院、緊急醫療及心理支援予受影響的災民、清潔的食水、緊急帳篷、物流處理及通訊設施。</div>
<div id="_mcePaste"><strong><span style="color: #ff0000;">紅十字會行動</span></strong></div>
<div id="_mcePaste">國際紅十字會已撥出三百七十五萬港元緊急救災金支援是次救災行動，並派出由國際專家組成的災情評估隊和賑災隊到海地，隊員具有不同的專業經驗，如組織賑濟工作、建立臨時居所、組織後勤和物流，提供食水衛生及醫療保健服務、裝置緊急通訊設施、重建家庭聯繫，以至處理遺體。另外，國際紅十字會已準備了三千套家庭用品包 (內有衛生用品、煮食用具、毛毯、蚊帳及水桶等物資)，隨時可派發給災民。海地國家紅十字會倖存的義工與國際紅十字會正共同努力，協助受地震影響的災民。</div>
<div id="_mcePaste">在香港時間一月十四日，國際紅十字會發出初步緊急募捐呼籲，籌募約七千五百萬港元，以支持為期九個月的賑災工作，預計此筆款項可為海地十萬名災民提供個人衛生清潔用品包、家庭用品包、淨水劑、臨時帳篷及緊急醫療服務等救災物資。</div>
<div id="_mcePaste"><strong><span style="color: #ff0000;">捐款途徑</span></strong></div>
<div id="_mcePaste">香港紅十字會正呼籲港人慷慨解囊支持今次海地地震的賑災行動。捐款途徑如下:</div>
<div id="_mcePaste"><span style="color: #ff0000;">1.<a href="https://donation.redcross.org.hk/onlinedonation/user_donation.asp" target="_blank">網上捐款</a></span></div>
<div id="_mcePaste">2.將捐款直接存入以下香港紅十字會戶口</div>
<div id="_mcePaste">「香港紅十字會賑災及發展專戶」:</div>
<div id="_mcePaste">匯豐銀行 <span style="color: #ff0000;">002-205490-006</span></div>
<div id="_mcePaste">請將<span style="color: #ff0000;">存款收條正本</span>連同<a href="http://www.redcross.org.hk/irsd_files/International_Projects/HaitiEarthquake2010/DonationForm_Haiti2010.pdf" target="_blank">捐款表格</a>寄回本會，以便發出捐款收據。</div>
<div id="_mcePaste">3.劃線支票抬頭請寫「<span style="color: #ff0000;">香港紅十字會賑災及發展專戶</span>」，請將劃線支票連同<a href="http://www.redcross.org.hk/irsd_files/International_Projects/HaitiEarthquake2010/DonationForm_Haiti2010.pdf" target="_blank">捐款表格</a>寄回香港夏愨道33號 香港紅十字會 國際及賑災服務部 收。</div>
<div id="_mcePaste">4.信用咭捐款：請填妥<a href="http://www.redcross.org.hk/irsd_files/International_Projects/HaitiEarthquake2010/DonationForm_Haiti2010.pdf" target="_blank">捐款表格</a>並郵寄至本會或傳真至2824-3693。</div>
<div id="_mcePaste">5.透過全港逾960間7-11分店以現金直接捐款，每次最低捐款為港幣一百元。請將<span style="color: #ff0000;">現金收據正本</span>連同<a href="http://www.redcross.org.hk/irsd_files/International_Projects/HaitiEarthquake2010/DonationForm_Haiti2010.pdf" target="_blank">捐款表格</a>寄回本會。</div>
<div id="_mcePaste">6.透過繳費靈: 商戶編號9167。如未有捐助者編號，請致電本會(2802-0021)索取。請填妥<a href="http://www.redcross.org.hk/irsd_files/International_Projects/HaitiEarthquake2010/DonationForm_Haiti2010.pdf" target="_blank">捐款表格</a>並郵寄至本會，以便發出捐款收據。</div>
<div id="_mcePaste"><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>查詢</strong></span></div>
<div id="_mcePaste">請致電 2802-0021 或 電郵 <span style="color: #ff0000;">international@redcross.org.hk</span></div>
<p>來源：<a href="http://www.redcross.org.hk/tc/disasterrelief_prepard/appeal_update_detail.html?year=2010&amp;id=671">http://www.redcross.org.hk/tc/disasterrelief_prepard/appeal_update_detail.html?year=2010&amp;id=671</a></p>
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		<title>English news of HongKong High Speed Rail</title>
		<link>http://www.rockfu.net/blog/2010/01/diary/news/english-news-of-hongkong-high-speed-rail/</link>
		<comments>http://www.rockfu.net/blog/2010/01/diary/news/english-news-of-hongkong-high-speed-rail/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Jan 2010 22:40:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>rockfu</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[express rail]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[high speed rail]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hongkong]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.rockfu.net/blog/?p=2303</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<br/>收集一些關於香港高鐵報道的英文新聞： HONG KONG &#8212; Legislators here approved US$8.6 billion ($66.9 billion Hong Kong dollars) in funding for a new high-speed railway to mainland China in a contentious vote that has stoked a rare wave of populist anger against the local government. Hundreds of protesters surrounded the legislature after the vote Saturday night, scuffling with riot [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<br/><p>收集一些關於香港高鐵報道的英文新聞：</p>
<p>HONG KONG &#8212; Legislators here approved US$8.6 billion ($66.9 billion Hong Kong dollars) in funding for a new high-speed railway to mainland China in a contentious vote that has stoked a rare wave of populist anger against the local government.</p>
<p>Hundreds of protesters surrounded the legislature after the vote Saturday night, scuffling with riot police and blocking traffic in much of the city&#8217;s main downtown district for several hours.</p>
<p>Protesters here say the railway is too costly and was approved without proper consultation, in part to benefit private interests.<span id="more-2303"></span></p>
<p>Government officials say the railway, which will link Hong Kong to the southern Chinese cities of Shenzhen and Guangzhou by 2015, will more closely integrate Hong Kong with the mainland economy.</p>
<p>The vote was approved by a 31-21 vote after a two-day marathon session.</p>
<p>Saturday night&#8217;s vote removes the last remaining procedural obstacle to the railway. But the opposition sparked by the project underscores the challenges facing chief executive Donald Tsang&#8217;s administration, which is currently trying to push through politically sensitive electoral reforms that critics decry as falling short of public aspirations for greater democracy.</p>
<p>On Saturday night, protesters beat drums, cried &#8220;Long Live People Power&#8221; and lay down in mass groups on major streets to block government officials from leaving after the vote.</p>
<p>The railway vote was approved along largely partisan lines, with the opposition minority losing out to the pro-establishment lawmakers that dominate the legislature.</p>
<p>Eva Cheng, Hong Kong&#8217;s secretary for transport and housing, said the railway project &#8220;is in the best long-term interests of all of Hong Kong.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Write to </strong>Jonathan Cheng at <a href="mailto:jonathan.cheng@wsj.com">jonathan.cheng@wsj.com</a></p>
<p><a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703959804575006541603227112.html#articleTabs%3Darticle" target="_blank">From:the wall street journal</a></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">By Wing-Gar Cheng and Wendy Leung</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">Jan. 16 (Bloomberg) &#8212; Hong Kong lawmakers approved funding for a HK$66.9 billion ($8.6 billion) train line linking the city with China’s high-speed rail network.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">Lawmakers voted 31 to 21 to ratify the project, which had been delayed twice amid objections about the cost and homes that will be destroyed in the rural New Territories, said Emily Lau, chairwoman of the finance committee.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">The train line will plug Hong Kong into China’s network by 2015, cutting travel times and deepening Hong Kong’s links with the world’s fastest-growing major economy. The railway is one of the 10 infrastructure projects that Hong Kong’s government plans to help boost its economy.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">“We support this project because the economic benefits it can bring are very important to Hong Kong,” lawmaker Paul Tse said in a legislative council meeting today. “Hong Kong needs to look into the future and consider the jobs that the project would create, the tourism opportunities with more people traveling between Hong Kong and China.”</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">Hong Kong’s government plans to construct an underground terminal in the city’s West Kowloon district, across Victoria Harbor from Hong Kong Island. Hong Kong-based MTR Corp. will construct the link at a cost of HK$2.57 billion per kilometer.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">Demonstrators chanted slogans and waved banners outside the council building, demanding that the government review the project as it will cost too much and destroy village homes in the rural New Territories.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">Protests, Clashes</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">Radio Television Hong Kong said as many as 10,000 demonstrators had gathered outside the building. Some protestors clashed with the police as they tried to break through metal barriers to get into the building, local television footage showed.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">The police’s public relations branch wasn’t able to immediately comment on the protest, or give an estimate on the number of demonstrators.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">The train will travel at speeds of up to 350 kilometers per hour (217 miles an hour), cutting the travel time from Hong Kong to Beijing by two-thirds to eight hours, the government said in a paper presented to lawmakers.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">The high-speed railway will save the Hong Kong public 40 million hours per year, generating an annual economic rate of return of 9 percent annually, according to the government’s paper to the Legislative Council.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">Hong Kong’s government believes the project will generate a profit and it won’t need to rely on bank loans for funding, Eva Cheng, secretary for transport and housing, told lawmakers today.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">Start Construction</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">“We’re looking to start construction as soon as possible and this is also the wish of the majority of the Hong Kong people,” Cheng said at a press briefing after the meeting. “We will monitor work on the project very closely.”</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">The railway is one of 10 infrastructure projects that Hong Kong’s government plans to help boost its economy. It also intends to construct a bridge linking Hong Kong with the gambling enclave of Macau and the city of Zhuhai across the border from Macau.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">“The government still hasn’t yet given any details on how it will ensure the project will generate profit,” lawmaker Cyd Ho, who voted against the funding, said. “I hope that the government won’t return to the legislative council again to seek additional funding.”</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">To contact the reporter on this story: Wing-Gar Cheng in Hong Kong at </cite><a href="mailto:wgcheng@bloomberg.net"><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">wgcheng@bloomberg.net</cite></a><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">; Wendy Leung in Hong Kong at </cite><a href="mailto:wleung12@bloomberg.net"><cite title="Hong Kong Accepts $8.6 Billion China Rail Link Budget ">wleung12@bloomberg.net</cite></a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601080&amp;sid=acSQjC6nssgo" target="_blank">From :bloomberg.com</a></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">HONG KONG — More than 1,000 protesters staged a sit-in outside Hong Kong&#8217;s Legislative Council late Saturday after lawmakers approved a controversial 8.6-billion-dollar high-speed railway project.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">The group surrounded the council building and refused to let transport chief Eva Cheng and other government officials leave after lawmakers voted in favour of the project at the end of an eight-hour meeting.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">&#8220;Withdraw the proposal. Eva Cheng, shame on you!&#8221; the protesters, mostly students and young professionals, chanted as hundreds of policemen looked on.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">Cheng was in her car in the council&#8217;s carpark for about an hour before she was forced to return to the building, with protesters refusing to leave.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">&#8220;Nobody can represent our voice. So we came here tonight to make our voice heard,&#8221; Henry Lam, 24, told AFP.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">Police earlier used pepper spray on some of the protesters as they tried to break through a barricade.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">The council meeting was the third held to discuss funding approval for the project, which will link Hong Kong and Guangzhou, capital of neighbouring Guangdong province.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">The Guangzhou-Shenzhen-Hong Kong Rail Link will form part of China&#8217;s national high-speed rail network and allow people to travel from Hong Kong to Guangzhou in 48 minutes, just under half the current duration of the journey.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">Officials say the project is important for fostering economic ties between Hong Kong and major cities on the Chinese mainland and hope construction will be completed by around 2015.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">&#8220;The project has been through a 10-year consultation&#8230; It is an important investment,&#8221; Cheng said after the meeting.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">Pro-democracy legislators tried to delay the decision, saying the public had not been properly consulted and that the scheme was over-priced.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">They also said it would benefit only developers while forcing villagers along the route to relocate.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">Protesters said the project received the green light only because the election system allows the majority of the Legislative Council seats to be filled by pro-government politicians.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">At present, only half of Hong Kong&#8217;s legislature is directly elected while a largely pro-Beijing committee effectively controls the selection of the remainder and appoints the city&#8217;s chief executive.</cite></p>
<p><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">More than 1,000 protesters staged a sit-in outside the official residence of Hong Kong&#8217;s Chief Executive Donald Tsang late Friday to urge the government to drop the project.</cite></p>
<p><a href="http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iwTZArioK09KOYbl8amEqKt4J2mg"><cite title="Activists scuffle with police over Hong Kong rail project">From:AFP @ Google</cite></a></p>
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