Saturday, May 7, 2016

Millions of Chinese workers go unpaid amid economic slowdown

Hong Kong (CNN)China's millions of migrant workers are bearing the brunt of the country's ongoing economic slowdown as strikes and worker protests reach record levels, new statistics reveal.
According to the most recent annual report from China's National Bureau of Statistics, more than 2.7 million migrant workers — around 1% of the total — weren't paid on time last year, the highest number in five years.
In the same period, China saw more than 2,700 strikes and protests, more than double the number the year before, according to China Labor Bulletin (CLB), a Hong Kong-based rights monitor.
As the country marks International Workers' Day on May 1, the number of strikes and protests this year has already passed a thousand, and looks set to climb much higher. The government has announced plans to cut more than 1.8 million jobs in state-run coal and steel industries.
Private employers have also been laying off workers as the country's economic growth slows to its lowest rate in years.

    Invisible workers

    "The basic trends have been clear for months now," says Eli Friedman, editor of the English-language edition of "China on Strike: Narratives of Worker Resistance."
    "No question that as this restructuring takes place that there's going to be more of this kind of protest."
    Despite there being 277 million migrant workers across the country, their stories are often ignored, says Friedman. "Many well-educated urban people in China know very little about migrant workers."
    Originally published by an underground press in Chinese in 2012, the book is a compilation of dozens of interviews with migrant factory workers in the manufacturing heartland of the Pearl River Delta, north of Hong Kong.
    "One of the great things about these narratives is that it humanizes (migrant workers)," Friedman says, showing them not as a faceless mass producing iPhones or taking American jobs, but as "just normal people."
    Labor protests and strikes are on the rise in China.

    100 years of unseen fashion photos from 'the morgue'

    Models stand beneath a theater marquee in 1954. "This frame, from a fashion shoot by photographer Sy Kattelson, never ended up running in Glamour magazine as originally intended," Ahern said. "Back in the day, the editors opted for a much more formulaic take with models fully posed and looking to the camera. But with a turn of a head and with a split-second of informality, this frame transgresses the fashion shoot and gives us an alternate moment of chic street-style elegance."A model poses in a snakeskin hood in 1965.In 1967, artist Georgia O'Keeffe examines an animal skull with a black feather in one of its eye sockets.A model holds a parasol in her hands as she leans against a wall in 1953.Fashion designer Coco Chanel reclines on a sofa in her home in 1960. "Horst first met Coco Chanel in New York in 1937 and would go on to shoot her along with her fashions for some 30 years," Ahern said. "This frame, discovered in a box that had not been touched for decades, reflects a longstanding friendship --- an informal portrait of the grand dame of fashion at home and at perfect ease."From left, dancers Hinton Battle, Gregory Hines and Gregg Burge promote their Broadway musical "Sophisticated Ladies" in 1981.First lady Nancy Reagan poses in the White House's Red Room in 1981. "In 1945, Horst P. Horst photographed Harry S. Truman and struck up a friendship which was to give him unprecedented access to the White House," Ahern said. Horst photographed every first lady in the postwar period.Model Chantal Dumont walks across the Pont Alexandre III, a Paris bridge, in 1969.Entertainer Sammy Davis Jr. laughs as model Jean Shrimpton, left, leans on his shoulder in 1965. The image of Maggi Eckardt, right, was later pasted onto the same shot. Ahern said it is "fascinating to see firsthand the techniques that preceded the digital era. This image of Sammy Davis Jr. and model Jean Shrimpton became something else entirely with a skillful and literal cut-and-paste job."Actresses Beth and Betty Dodge wear matching stage costumes as they take a publicity portrait in 1929. The twins wore sequined caps, tops and bloomers to go with ostrich-feather skirts and fans. A model wears a bulbous hat and a plaid, boatneck dress as she stands on a city street in 1962. Conde Nast teamed up with Getty Images to release the archival photos. "We'd been after their content for some time. It's beautiful," said Bob Ahern, Getty's archive director. "Fashion is cyclical, it draws so readily on inspiration of the past. To have these images available is amazing."Model and actress Anjelica Huston lights a cigarette in front of a large mirror in 1972. This is one of more than 30,000 unseen photos released by Conde Nast, the magazine house behind Vogue, GQ and Vanity Fair.

    History meets high fashion in Alexia Sinclair's stunning photographs

    The Feast, 2013 -- A Frozen Tale by Alexia SinclairShoes, 2014 -- The Art of Saving A Life by Alexia SinclairBlind Justice, 2012 -- Lay Justice by Alexia SinclairForget Me Not, 2014 -- The Art of Saving A life by Alexia SinclairThe Cabinets of Curiosity, 2013 -- A Frozen Tale by Alexia SinclairSkull, 2014 -- The Art of Saving A Life by Alexia SinclairLa Belle Poule, 2013 -- Les Antoinettes by Alexia SinclairThe Secret Garden, 2015 -- Rococo by Alexia SinclairElizabeth I, 2007 -- The Regal Twelve by Alexia Sinclair

    Historic photos from an extraordinary collection

    This photo was taken in 1857 at the Church of St. Ouen in Rouen, France. Photographer Louis-Auguste Bisson and his brother, Auguste-Rosalie, worked with large-format cameras using a wet-plate process that made glass negatives. When photographic postcards became popular, the Bissons refused to make small prints of their work and they were forced to close their studio.<a href="http://www.cnn.com/2015/11/24/us/cnnphotos-curtis-masterworks-native-americans/" target="_blank">Edward S. Curtis'</a> interest in photographing Native Americans began in 1895, when he photographed Princess Angeline. He spent most of the next 20 years documenting what remained of their culture in America. This image is called "The Eclipse Dance, 1910-14."Very little is known about Irish photographer John Robert Parsons, other than he created a series of portraits of Jane Morris, pictured, in 1865. Morris, who was married to writer and artist William Morris, frequently modeled for Parsons and the painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti, with whom she had an affair.During the Civil War, photographer Henry P. Moore traveled to South Carolina with the 3rd New Hampshire Regiment. These are the slaves of Confederate Brig. Gen. Thomas Fenwick Drayton.Photographer <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2015/10/08/entertainment/gallery/tbt-philippe-halsman-jump-book/" target="_blank">Philippe Halsman</a> met painter Salvador Dali, pictured, in 1941. After that, they worked together at least once a year. "An elating game," <a href="http://philippehalsman.com/halsman/halsman-dali-a-personal-history/" target="_blank">Halsman wrote</a> in 1972, "creating images that did not exist, except in our imaginations. Whenever I needed a striking protagonist for one of my wild ideas, Dali would graciously oblige. Whenever Dali thought of a photograph so strange that it seemed impossible to produce, I tried to find a solution."Arthur Mole became famous during World War I when he started making "living photographs," where tens of thousands of military personnel were arranged to form compositions. The "Human Statue of Liberty," made in 1918, involved 18,000 people from Camp Dodge in Des Moines, Iowa. It was created with the help of John D. Thomas.In 1854, pioneering photographer Roger Fenton left England to photograph the Crimean War, where he became one of the very first war photographers. He made this image, "Valley of the Shadow of Death," on April 23, 1855.The photographer of this photo, "Looking down Yosemite Valley," is unknown, but the Getty Museum guesses it was taken around 1872 by either Carleton Watkins, C.L. Weed or Eadweard J. Muybridge. In the late 1800s, many photographers traveled throughout the American West to record the landscape. Sometimes it was for the government. Sometimes it was for railroad companies looking for the best route. And sometimes it was just to make good photographs to sell once they returned home.U.S. President <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/18/us/gallery/tbt-abraham-lincoln-portraits/" target="_blank">Abraham Lincoln,</a> center, was photographed by Alexander Gardner on the Antietam battlefield in Maryland. The Scottish-born Gardner immigrated to the United States at the beginning of the Civil War. He became friends with Allan Pinkerton, left, who was a private investigator and head of the Union Intelligence Service.A man is seen at a printer in this photo taken by Lewis W. Hine. Hine is most known for photographing child labor in America in the early 1900s, and his photographs where used to help establish child-labor laws in the United States.This photo, taken by English photographer Francis Frith on his first visit to Egypt, is one of 26,000 images in the Sam Wagstaff Collection. Wagstaff was an important collector and curator of photography through the 1970s and '80s. He sold his collection to the J. Paul Getty Museum, which has just published a book about Wagstaff and his photographs called <a href="http://shop.getty.edu/products/the-thrill-of-the-chase-the-wagstaff-collection-of-photographs-at-the-j-paul-getty-museum-978-1606064672" target="_blank">"The Thrill of the Chase."</a> As a collector, Wagstaff reveled in championing photographers who were not being shown in establishment museums.

    Cambodian PM's website hacked


    Hun Sen greets journalists as he rides a train from Phnom Penh to Sihanoukville on April 30. The Cambodian prime minister said on Saturday that his website was hacked. (Reuters photo)



    PHNOM PENH - Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said Saturday his official website was hacked in the morning, with some photos and sound clips being altered.
    In a posting on his Facebook page, Hun Sen said his website was hacked at 4.12am and that his online reputation had suffered as a result of the attack.
    "This is an obvious cybercrime committed openly by the hackers against the official website of the prime minister of Cambodia. These acts are evidently and undeniably committed by dissident groups who always try to find insane and dirty means to attack the prime minister," he said.
    "No matter who those people are and where they are from, they must be held accountable in accordance with national and international laws," he added.
    The government's cybercrime experts are investigating the incident in a bid to track down the hackers and bring them to justice, he said.

    Kim Jong-un coronation under way



    A picture released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency shows leader Kim Jong-un, dressed uncharacteristically in a suit instead of his usual Mao-style uniform, making a speech during the 7th Workers Party Congress at the April 25 Palace in Pyongyang. (AFP Photo)


    PYONGYANG — North Korea's ruling party is preparing to bestow its top title on leader Kim Jong-un, another sign that the third heir to North Korea's dynasty of Kims is firmly in control despite his country's deepening international isolation over one of his key ambitions, to keep developing more and better nuclear weapons.
    The state-run Korean Central News Agency on Saturday said the agenda for the congress included reviewing the work of the party's Central Committee and Central Audit Commission, revising party rules, electing Kim to the top party post and electing a new central leadership for the party.
    The decision to formally install — or perhaps simply re-install — Kim at the top is a step along the lines of his late father and grandfather, who held the title of general secretary of the Workers' Party and is a mostly symbolic move to demonstrate the young leader is in full control and ready to begin a new era of his own.
    Kim is already head of the party, but with the title of first secretary. It wasn't immediately clear if he would be elected to the same post, or an unspecified new one. His father, Kim Jong-il, holds the posthumous title of "eternal general secretary" and his grandfather, national founder Kim Il-sung, is "eternal president".
    Kim opened the lavish congress with a brief speech on Friday that singled out North Korea's advances in developing nuclear weapons and rockets capable of putting satellites into orbit, as examples of the country's progress in the face of international criticism and tough sanctions that threaten to further stifle its struggling economy.

    Saturday, July 18, 2015

    10 Most Amazing Places On Earth, Must See Once in Life

    The world is beautiful. It is full of wonderful places that most of us do not know they really exist. From majestic waterfalls, and lost cities, to mysterious landmarks andnatural wonders, here is a collection of some breathtaking places to visit and to fill your soul with something beautiful that will never be forgotten.
    These are the ten most amazing places on earth, you definitely want to see before it’s all over. Everyone has their own opinion about the best places to visit in the world. This is my list of what I believe are the top ten gorgeous places to visit. Do share about your favorites destinations in comments!

    10. Four Seasons Resort Bora Bora

    Four Seasons Resort
    Four Seasons Resort Bora Bora is a luxury resort located at Motu Tehotu on the island of Bora Bora, in the Society Islands of French Polynesia. The Resort is a part of Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, a Toronto-based hotel management company.

    9. Paterswoldse Meer Lake, Groningen, Netherlands

    Paterswoldse Meer Lake
    Ice skating on Paterswoldse Meer, a lake just South of the city of Groningen in the Netherlands. The Paterswoldse Meer lake is one of those places where you could skate in a natural setting, under a breathtaking environment. As part of the Groningen-Drenthe lakes, this is a favorite among Netherlands visitors because of its unbelievable surroundings.

    8. Tian Tan Buddha on Lantau Island, Hong Kong

    Amazing Places On Earth
    Tian Tan Buddha is one of the top must-go destinations for visitors to Hong Kong. This statue, also known as the Big Buddha, is the world’s largest Buddha statue, by using bronze, it’s 34 metres tall and weighs 250 tonnes, completed in December 1993. It is a major centre of Buddhism in Hong Kong.

    7. Blue Caves, Zakynthos Island, Greece

    Blue Caves
    Blue caves villa is probably the best place to be in Zakynthos, the largest islands in the Ionian sea. On the West cost where Zakynthos offers one of its most stunning views: the blue caves. They are also known as the blue caves of Volimes, the picturesque village where they are located. The distinctive element of the blue caves is that they reflect the vibrating and striking blue colour of the waters in them, which at the same time capture and reflect the shine of the limpid sky reflected on their surface. It is a secluded part of the island that has everything you are looking for. It’s an absolutely beautiful location with breathtaking views over the turquoise Ionian sea.

    6. Pulpit Rock, Preikestolen, Norway

    Pulpit Rock
    Pulpit Rock is one of the most visited natural tourist attractions in Norway. It is a steep and massive cliff 604 metres above Lysefjorden, opposite the Kjerag plateau, in Forsand, Ryfylke, Norway. The top of the cliff is approximately 25 by 25 metres and almost flat. It was visited by 150,000 – 200,000 people every year. The visitors took the 3.8 km hike to Preikestolen.