2015年12月28日 星期一

week-six Paris terror attack

Father's Talk With Son About Paris Terror Attack Goes Viral

A heart-wrenching video of a French father reassuring his young son about the Paris terror massacre has been shared more than 11 million times on Facebook.
In the clip, which aired on Canal+ television show "Le Petit Journal," a reporter asks the boy if he understands why extremists killed people in Paris on Friday.
The father, later identified as Angel Le, tries to explain the floral tributes outside the Bataclan theatre, where the majority of the victims of Friday's attacks were killed.
"What about the baddies, Dad?" asks his son, Brandon. "They've got guns."
"They've got guns but we have flowers," Le replies.
In a comment posted on the Facebook clip, Le wrote: "I'm the dad with the little boy, thank you all for the great comments that you have posting for us. When when I see all this support it tells me one thing: I'm proud to be French and proud of my fellow countrymen!"
Here is the interview in full:
Journalist: Do you understand what's happened? Do you understand why these people have done this?
Boy: Yes, because they are very, very, very bad. Bad people aren't very nice. And you have to be very careful because you need to move house.
Father: No, don't worry, we don't have to move. France is our home.
Boy: But what about the baddies, Dad?
Father: There are baddies everywhere. There are bad guys everywhere.
Boy: They've got guns. They can shoot us because they're very, very bad, Daddy.
Father: They've got guns but we have flowers.
Boy: But flowers don't do anything. They're for... they're for... they're for...
Father: Look, everyone is laying flowers here.
Boy: Yes.
Father: It's to fight against the guns.
Boy: Is it for protection?
Father: That's right.
Boy: And the candles too?
Father: They're so we don't forget the people who have gone.
Boy: Oh. The flowers and candles are there to protect us?
Father: Yes.
Journalist: Do you feel better now?
Boy: Yes, I feel better.
http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/paris-terror-attacks/fathers-talk-son-about-paris-terror-attack-goes-viral-n464981


Structure of the Lead
     WHO-a French father and his son
     WHEN-Nov,17,2015
     WHAT-there was a conversation of them.
     WHY- because of the terror attack in Paris
     WHERE-in Paris
     HOW-The father told his son that they had flowers and candles to fight against the guns. 

keywords
     1. heart-wrenching 打動人心的
    2. reassuring 安慰
    3. massacre 殘殺
    4. clip 剪輯
    5. extremists 極端份子
    6. floral tributes 獻花
    7. majority 大多數
    8. baddies 壞人 
    9. fellow 同類

  

      
   




2015年12月17日 星期四

week-five Singles’ Day

Alibaba's Singles' Day sales surge 60 percent to $14.3 billion


Alibaba Group Holding Ltd's total value of goods transacted during its Singles' Day shopping festival was 91.2 billion yuan ($14.32 billion), the Chinese e-commerce giant said in Beijing on Thursday.

The numbers got a boost this year from adding the sales from various new channels, including its affiliates and investees. In all, the figure for this year's Singles' Day is up 60 percent from 2014.
The results are preliminary and unaudited, Alibaba said. Of the total value of transactions, 68 percent was through orders from mobile devices.

Six years ago, Alibaba turned Nov. 11 into China's equivalent of United States shopping event Cyber Monday. It has now become larger than both Cyber Monday and Black Friday combined, and a closely watched barometer of the company's performance.
"Alibaba is positioned as the number one player in the Chinese e-commerce market, so it has to be seen to be maintaining, or gaining ground really," said Duncan Clark, chairman of Beijing-based tech consultancy BDA.

The company shares were trading down 2.1 percent at $79.71 in New York at 1713 GMT (12:13 p.m. ET) on Wednesday, after the shopping festival's results were announced.
Singles' Day was originally a mock celebration in China for people not in relationships. But Alibaba in 2009 co-opted the event into a consumption-fest for all, featuring steep discounts and other promotions aimed at attracting droves of customers online. Alibaba's sales data have been closely watched as a gauge of Chinese consumption as economic growth slows.
One of the new sales channel pumping Alibaba's Singles' Day sales was Suning Commerce Group Co, in which it bought a 20 percent stake in August. Suning's in-store sales will count toward Alibaba's total gross merchandise volume, as long as they go through final processing online, an Alibaba spokesman said.

Alibaba has stressed its focus on international e-commerce this Singles' Day. "Within the next five years, we expect China will become the world's largest e-commerce market for imported products," President Michael Evans told reporters on Wednesday.
However, the event could be risky for brands, said Brian Buchwald, CEO of consumer intelligence firm Bomoda.

"If you're a new brand to the market, you don't want to train your consumer to wait for a sale but you also need to use this holiday to break in with a top spending consumer," Buchwald said.
"In the end, you want the consumer to come back and pay full price."

Speaking at the company's Singles' Day celebration in Beijing, Jack Ma, the company's eccentric founder and executive chairman, told reporters the event's annual growth in the future should be over 50 percent.
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-alibaba-singles-day-idUSKCN0SZ34J20151112

Structure of the Lead
     WHO-Alibaba Group
     WHEN-Nov,11,2015
     WHAT-It earned much money during the Singles' Day shopping festival.
     WHY-Because of there were many discounts.  
     WHERE-in Beijing
     HOW-It used many promotion activities to attract customers.

keywords
     1. affiliates 子公司
     2. investees 接受投資者
     3. preliminary 初步的
     4. unaudited 未經審核的
     5. mock 虛擬
     6. gauge 標準
     7. stake 利害關係
     8. merchandise 商品
     9. brand 品牌
     


  

2015年12月3日 星期四

week-four Yangtze River shipwreck

Chinese ship death toll up to nearly 400

‘SECURITY’:Victims’ family members told reporters that they were concerned about the significant numbers of police parked outside of the hotels they are staying in

Reuters, JIANLI, China

The death toll from a Chinese cruise ship that capsized during a storm on the Yangtze River jumped to 396 yesterday, leaving less than 50 still missing, as the boat operator apologized and said it would cooperate with investigators.
Only 14 survivors, one of them the captain, have been found after the ship carrying 456 overturned in a freak tornado on Monday night.
Rescuers are searching the cabin of the ship, which was righted and raised on Friday, looking for more bodies.
The top and bottom floors of the four-level ship are the current focus of the search, but, due to the level of damage, it might take some time to complete the search, state TV said.
Jiang Zhao (姜曌), general manager of the company which operated the Eastern Star, bowed in apology for the disaster during an interview with state media reported late on Friday, saying the company would “fully” cooperate with the investigation.
Beijing has pledged there would be “no cover-up” in the probe.
Police have detained the captain and chief engineer for questioning as part of the investigation. An initial probe found the ship was not overloaded and had enough life vests on board at the time of the incident.
The disaster has now caused a higher toll than the sinking of a ferry in South Korea in April last year that killed 304 people, most of them children on a school trip. It is also China’s worst shipping disaster in seven decades.
More than 1,400 family members have arrived in Jianli in central Hubei Province, where the ship went down, with many expressing frustration at the lack of information from the government.
The government said that it is doing everything possible to help the relatives, including providing free accommodation and medical services, and state TV yesterday ran an interview with a tearful family member saying how happy she was with all their help.
However, relatives speaking to reporters have expressed concern about security apparently being focused on them, including the number of police cars parked outside of hotels where they are staying.
Yesterday morning, a daily government briefing for family members was cut short after an argument broke out with a representative of the local government. One woman was carried out of the briefing after she fainted.
“There is no information at all. Every day we’re here procrastinating, wasting time. There’s no clear-cut answers, there’s no progress to inform us of,” said Wang Shuang, 24, whose mother and uncle were on the Eastern Star.
Aware of the sensitivity of the disaster, the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s Politburo Standing Committee, China’s apex of power, this week called on local authorities to “earnestly safeguard social stability.”

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2015/06/07/2003620138


Structure of the Lead
     WHO-shipwreck victims in china
     WHEN-Jun 07,2015
     WHAT-There were 400 people died in the disaster,and only 14 survived.
     WHY- because of the tornado
     WHERE-on the Yangtze River
     HOW-The general manager of the company apologized  and they  cooperated with investigation.

keywords
    1. cruise ship 遊船
    2. capsize 傾覆
    3. pledge 發誓
    4. cover-up 掩飾
    5. accommodation 住處
    6. fainted 昏厥
    7. clear-cut 清晰的
    8.  earnestly 認真的 


2015年11月16日 星期一

week-three MERS

South Korea says MERS outbreak over

ATTRACTIONS:The government plans to spend billions to help restart its battered tourism industry, with free promotional tours and large K-pop concerts in the works

South Korea yesterday declared the effective end to a deadly outbreak of Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) that killed 36 people, triggered widespread panic and stymied growth in Asia’s fourth-largest economy.
Addressing a meeting of government officials in Seoul, South Korean Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn said the danger posed by what was the biggest outbreak of the virus outside Saudi Arabia was over.
“After weighing various circumstances, the medical personnel and the government judge that the people can now be free from worry,” Hwang said.
“I ask the public to shake off all concerns over MERS and to resume normal daily activities, including economic, cultural, leisure and school activities,” he added.
Thousands of schools were closed at the peak of the outbreak, as anxious parents kept their children home.
The outbreak took a heavy toll on the national economy, stifling consumer spending and devastating the tourist sector.
Local businesses including shopping malls, restaurants and movie theaters reported a sharp drop in sales as people shunned public venues with large crowds.
The government recently announced a 22 trillion won (US$18.9 billion) stimulus package, much of which was aimed at supporting businesses hurt by the MERS crisis.
Earlier this month, the Bank of Korea cut this year’s economic growth forecast for the third time this year, from 3.1 percent growth to 2.8 percent.
Citing sluggish exports and weak domestic consumption — exacerbated by the MERS outbreak — the central bank has kept its benchmark interest rate unchanged at a record low of 1.5 percent.
The virus is considered a deadlier, but less infectious, cousin of SARS, which killed hundreds of people when it appeared in Asia in 2003.
Criticized for its initial response to the outbreak, the government introduced sweeping quarantine measures that saw nearly 17,000 people confined to their homes.
The policy was effective in restricting the spread of the disease to medical facilities, with no infections reported in the wider community.
With one patient still hospitalized for treatment, yesterday’s announcement by the prime minister stopped short of formally declaring South Korea MERS free.
WHO standards call for a four-week waiting period after the last MERS patient fully recovers, before declaring the outbreak definitively over.
“We will continue to carry out remaining measures and responses until the situation comes to a formal end,” South Korean Ministry of Health and Welfare senior official Kwon Duk-cheol told reporters.
“We still have many arrivals from the Middle East, so there is always a possibility that new patients can come in,” Kwon said, adding that screening stations in airports would continue to operate.
While no additional MERS infections have been reported since July 4, central bank governor Lee Ju-yeol said the economic impact of the deadly disease would last through next month.
Tourism was hit particularly hard, with the number of foreign visitors plunging by more than 40 percent last month compared with a year ago, and a further 60 percent in the first two weeks of this month.
Seoul plans to spend up to 30 billion won on campaigns to lure back travelers, including free promotional tours and large concerts by big-name K-pop stars.
“We are particularly eager to bring back Chinese tourists,” South Korean Vice Minister of Tourism Kim Chong told foreign reporters last week.



Structure of the Lead
     WHO-The Government of South Korea
     WHEN-July,29,2015
     WHAT-The government wanted to restart tourism industry.
     WHY-MERS caused many people died. 
     WHERE-In South Korea
     HOW-It spent much money.

Keywords
     1. outbreak 爆發
     2. circumstance 形勢
     3. resume 恢復
     4. toll 損失
     5. stimulus 刺激
     6. forecast 預測
     7. quarantine 隔離
     8. confined 被限制的
     9. campaign 活動
     10. lure 引誘
   



2015年11月5日 星期四

week-two Aung San Suu Kyi

                Profile: Aung San Suu Kyi


Aung San Suu Kyi, opposition leader in Myanmar, became an international symbol of peaceful resistance in the face of oppression as a result of her 15 years under house arrest.
The 70-year-old spent much of her time between 1989 and 2010 in some form of detention because of her efforts to bring democracy to military-ruled Myanmar (Burma).
In 1991, a year after her National League for Democracy (NLD) won an overwhelming victory in an election the junta later nullified, she was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
The committee chairman called her "an outstanding example of the power of the powerless".
She was sidelined for Myanmar's first elections in two decades on 7 November 2010 but released from house arrest six days later.
As the new government embarked on a process of reform, Aung San Suu Kyi - known to many as "The Lady" - and her party rejoined the political process.
On 1 April 2012 she stood for parliament in a by-election, arguing it was what her supporters wanted even if the country's reforms were "not irreversible".
She and her fellow NLD candidates won a landslide victory and weeks later the former political prisoner was sworn into parliament, a move unimaginable before the 2010 polls.

Barred from running

However, Ms Suu Kyi has since been frustrated with the pace of democratic development.
In November 2014, she warned that Myanmar had not made any real reforms in the past two years and warned that the US - which dropped most of its sanctions against the country in 2012 - had been "overly optimistic" in the past.
And in June, a vote in Myanmar's parliament failed to remove the army's veto over constitutional change. Ms Suu Kyi is also barred from running for president because her two sons hold British not Burmese passports - a ruling she says is unfair.
Although her party is popular, Ms Suu Kyi has come in for criticism since her election by some rights groups for what they say has been a failure to speak up for Myanmar's minority groups during a time of ethnic violence in parts of the country.

Political pedigree

Aung San Suu Kyi is the daughter of Myanmar's independence hero, General Aung San.
He was assassinated during the transition period in July 1947, just six months before independence, when Ms Suu Kyi was only two.
In 1960 she went to India with her mother Daw Khin Kyi, who had been appointed Myanmar's ambassador in Delhi.
Four years later she went to Oxford University in the UK, where she studied philosophy, politics and economics. There she met her future husband, academic Michael Aris.
After stints of living and working in Japan and Bhutan, she settled in the UK to raise their two children, Alexander and Kim, but Myanmar was never far from her thoughts.
When she arrived back in Rangoon (Yangon) in 1988 - to look after her critically ill mother - Myanmar was in the midst of major political upheaval.
Thousands of students, office workers and monks took to the streets demanding democratic reform.
"I could not as my father's daughter remain indifferent to all that was going on," she said in a speech in Rangoon on 26 August 1988, and was propelled into leading the revolt against the then-dictator, General Ne Win.
Inspired by the non-violent campaigns of US civil rights leader Martin Luther King and India's Mahatma Gandhi, she organised rallies and travelled around the country, calling for peaceful democratic reform and free elections.
But the demonstrations were brutally suppressed by the army, who seized power in a coup on 18 September 1988. Ms Suu Kyi was placed under house arrest the following year.
The military government called national elections in May 1990 which Aung San Suu Kyi's NLD convincingly won - however, the junta refused to hand over control.

House arrest

Ms Suu Kyi remained under house arrest in Rangoon for six years, until she was released in July 1995.
She was again put under house arrest in September 2000, when she tried to travel to the city of Mandalay in defiance of travel restrictions.
She was released unconditionally in May 2002, but just over a year later she was put in prison following a clash between her supporters and a government-backed mob.
She was later allowed to return home - but again under effective house arrest.
During periods of confinement, Ms Suu Kyi busied herself studying and exercising. She meditated, worked on her French and Japanese language skills, and relaxed by playing Bach on the piano.
At times she was able to meet other NLD officials and selected diplomats.
But during her early years of detention she was often in solitary confinement. She was not allowed to see her two sons or her husband, who died of cancer in March 1999.
The military authorities offered to allow her to travel to the UK to see him when he was gravely ill, but she felt compelled to refuse for fear she would not be allowed back into the country.
Her last period of house arrest ended in November 2010 and her son Kim Aris was allowed to visit her for the first time in a decade.
When by-elections were held in April 2012, to fill seats vacated by politicians who had taken government posts, she and her party contested seats, despite reservations.
"Some are a little bit too optimistic about the situation," she said in an interview before the vote. "We are cautiously optimistic. We are at the beginning of a road."
She and the NLD won 43 of the 45 seats contested, in an emphatic statement of support. Weeks later, Ms Suu Kyi took the oath in parliament and became the leader of the opposition.
And the following May, she embarked on a visit outside Myanmar for the first time in 24 years, in a sign of apparent confidence that its new leaders would allow her to return.


 Structure of the Lead
     WHO-Aung San Suu Kyi
     WHEN-September,8,2015
     WHAT-She was under house arrest for fifteen years.
     WHY-She fought for democracy.
     WHERE-In Myanmar
     HOW-She was the opposition leader in Myanmar and she won a  victory in an election.

keywords:
     1. oppression:壓迫
     2. irreversible:不可逆的
     3. parliament:議會
     4. constitutional:憲法的
     5. ambassador:大使
     6. upheaval:劇變
     7. reform:改革
     8. propel: 推進
     9. defiance:反抗
     10.restriction:限制
 






2015年10月29日 星期四

week-one Mediterranean Sea migrant shipwreck

Survivors Say Hundreds Of Migrants Drowned When Their Boat Sunk In The Mediterranean

By Stephanie Nebehay

GENEVA, April 15 (Reuters) - Hundreds of people desperate to be rescued from a packed migrant boat in the Mediterranean pushed to one side when they saw a ship approach, capsizing the craft and pitching everyone into the sea where hundreds died, an official said on Wednesday.

Survivors' accounts suggested at least 500 people were on the boat when it sank on Monday evening, some 120 km (75 miles) off the Italian island of Lampedusa. With 145 people rescued that leaves at least 350 unaccounted for, probably drowned.

Joel Millman, spokesman for the International Organization for Migration (IOM), said: "According to testimonies, at least one-third of the passengers were women and children. At the time of the shipwreck, they were staying in the hull of the boat to be better protected from the cold.

"When the men on the deck became restless and started moving about because a rescue boat was beginning to approach them, the boat capsized and water flooded the hull. Women and children died immediately."

Monday's incident would bring the total number of dead on migrant boats in the Mediterranean since January to around 900 amid a surge in would-be immigrants to Europe after the breakdown of order in Libya created fertile conditions for human traffickers.

With fine weather encouraging more boats to leave, the Italian Coast Guard said almost 10,000 boat people had been rescued since the weekend, with 1,511 picked up in 12 separate operations on Tuesday alone.

Italy ended its "Mare Nostrum" maritime rescue mission last year following heavy pressure from anti-immigrant parties. A smaller European Union border protection operation, Triton, that replaced it has struggled to cope.

"Unfortunately Mare Nostrum was never replaced by an equivalent capacity to rescue people," said UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres, calling for a more robust search-and-rescue mission to be set up in the Mediterranean.

The number of migrants and deaths could exceed even last year's total when 219,000 people crossed the Mediterranean and at least 3,500 lives were lost, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

So far in 2015, around 31,500 people are known to have made crossings to Italy and Greece, the number one and number two countries of arrival but numbers usually peak in the summer months when sailing conditions are easier. (Writing by James Mackenzie in Rome; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/04/15/migrants-drowned-mediterranean_n_7069442.html

Structure of the Lead
     WHO-hundreds of  migrants
     WHEN-April,15,2015
     WHAT- hundreds of people died from the shipwreck
     WHY-A ship approached them,and capsized the boat.   
     WHERE-In The Mediterranean
     HOW-not given

keywords:
     1. desperate: 極渴望的
     2. capsize: 翻覆
     3. testimony: 聲明
     4.  hull:船殼
     5. shipwreck: 船難
     6. incident: 事件
     7. trafficker: 從事非法勾當者
     8. anti-immigrant party: 反移民政黨
     9. robust: 堅定的
     10. peak:高峰