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| Shenyang Government --> Special Zones |
Shenyang New & High-Tech Agricultural Development Zone
( Founded In 2002 )
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Dec
Inc
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Shenyang New & High-Tech Agricultural Development Zone was found in 2002 approved by the Communist Party Shenyang Committee and Shenyang Municipal Government. The zone claims equal authority as that of the city government in terms of economic management. The zone is located in the east suburbs of Shenyang and is 12 kilometres away from the city centre. Natural resources are rich covering an area of cultivated land of 2,347 hectares, forest land of 1,300 hectares, forest land of 1,300 hectares, water land of 213 hectares, orchard land 160 hectares. The River Pu flows through the zone, connecting which with the Qipanshan Reservoir high quality water.
With 28% forest coverage rate, high standard air quality and a nice environment protection index of water and soil, the zone could be an ideal place for Shenyang to development its green ecological agriculture. Transportation is convenient in the zone with a distance of 20 minutes drive from the Taoxian International airport and multiple tele-communication and other services are all provided by the complete set of infrastructure facilities.
Shenyang Committee of CPC and Shenyang Municipal Government are attaching great importance to the development of Shenyang New and High-Tech Agricultural Development Zone, offering various preferential policies, such as establishing seed funds for investment enterprises and providing allowance and reward, setting up a credit guarantee centre for enterprises to tackle problems of shortage of working capital, and establishing technological incubator and enterprises technical innovation funds.
The objective of the zone is to develop into a center for high-tech agricultural talents home and abroad a base for new and high-tech agricultural projects and a foundation for industrializing new and high-tech agricultural achievements, becoming agricultural Silicon Valley of China in the end. |
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| COMMENTS ( The Latest 6 Comments): |
| [1] ORLANDO ESTOYA [2009-11-13 4:07:43] Commented: | Rating: 3 | | Overview of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) 01 Sep 2008
For anyone raised in the developed west, it can be hard to believe that a persecution of this scale—and against a group of peaceful citizens—could occur in the 21st century. All the more since many today see China as a nation that has long-since shed the ideological fanaticism and violent tendencies that gave rise to the Cultural Revolution and the crushing of democracy activists on Tiananmen Square. The assumption, perhaps, is that the more liberal economic practices embraced in recent decades are simultaneously giving rise to greater political and civil rights, and that as China plays an increasingly prominent role in the international community, it is bound to become more open, democratic and the rule of law will inevitably take hold. This view, however, is belied by the Chinese regime’s treatment of the Falun Gong spiritual discipline. Since being banned in 1999, adherents of Falun Gong have been subjected to draconian torture methods in reeducation-through-labor camps, where they are held without trial or conviction. Hundreds of thousands, if not millions of Falun Gong adherents have suffered this fate, and thousands have been tortured to death under orders from China’s central government. And in a grisly revelation that brings to mind the Nazi practice of harvesting human hair for pillow stuffing, there is also damning evidence that the communist party has also been forcibly harvesting and selling the organs of Falun Gong prisoners, killing them in the process. For those with business or political investments in China, it may be preferable to see the persecution of Falun Gong as a rare exception to the rule ��?a growing pain, of sorts, on the long march to democratic liberalism. It is convenient to ignore, as well, for anyone unwilling to believe that such actions could occur in the 21st century. But what if the treatment of Falun Gong, rather than being a historical aberration, is instead the fairest exposition of the true nature of China’s leaders, and the CCP more broadly?
Orlando Cruz Estoya
Philippine Passport No. PP0523873
Issued 03 dec 2005, Expiry 03 dec 2009
13840050169,13889314797
310 Qing Nian Da Jie
Shenyang, China
110004
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