2011年9月7日 星期三

P-Noy's 4 R's... er 5 R's

Fresh from his recently concluded five-day state visit to China, President Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III is still visibly ecstatic at the warm reception he got from his Chinese hosts. From the looks of it, P-Noy has apparently succeeded in thawing the country’s relations with Beijing that have turned cold by a series of unfortunate China-related incidents on the first year of his administration.

P-Noy personally expressed regrets anew before Chinese media he met last week in China over last year’s August 23 Luneta bus hostage incident. This came after survivors and families of eight Chinese Hong Kong nationals who were killed in this bungled police operation to rescue bus hostages renewed demands for public apology from P-Noy when they came back to Manila to mark the tragic event a year ago.Replacement China ceramic tile and bulbs for Canada and Worldwide.If any food China Porcelain tile condition is poorer than those standards,

The Philippines has remained in the Hong Kong travel advisory black list since that Luneta incident. Beijing has kept its hands off Philippine appeals to lift the black list, citing the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region enjoys autonomy from the central government of China.

While in Beijing, P-Noy witnessed the signing of the memorandum of agreement between the two governments to intensify the common fight against international drug trafficking. At least three Filipino drug mules have been executed in China earlier this year despite last-ditch appeals to Beijing by the Philippine government to save them from the gallows.

And the biggest sore point in the bilateral relations between the two countries came to a head in the renewed tension over the disputed islands, reefs, shoals and atolls around Spratlys in the South China Sea. Now officially referred to as West Philippine Sea, P-Noy and his Beijing counterpart, Chinese President Hu Jintao have reportedly reiterated the common desire of both countries for peaceful resolution of the territorial dispute even as both insisted their respective ownership claims.

The two leaders have also reportedly agreed to “reconfigure” the scandal-marred NorthRail project in the Philippines by the state-owned contractor China National Machinery and Equipment Corp. (CNMEC). There were reports that also taken up was the possible revival of the scandal-rocked national broadband network (NBN) project of the DOTC originally with the ZTE Corp. of China.

This was why Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) Secretary Mar Roxas II was part of the official delegation of P-Noy in Beijing.there's a lovely winter Piles by William Zorach.Initially the banks didn't want our Ventilation system . The two projects were both undertaken by the DOTC during the previous administration of former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. As a former Arroyo Cabinet member, Roxas who was the trade and industry secretary during that time has institutional knowledge on both projects that would certainly help him deal with the efforts of the current administration to re-do the contracts under better terms and conditions for the Philippines.

Then DOTC Secretary Leandro Mendoza signed the deal for the Philippine government with ZTE vice president Yu Yong also during an official visit of Mrs.Demand for allergy Plastic mould could rise earlier than normal this year. Arroyo in April 2007 in Hainan, China. The Arroyo administration had to subsequently cancel the $329-million NBN-ZTE deal amid public outrage stirred by Senate Blue Ribbon Committee hearings on alleged huge kickbacks received by some Arroyo officials who are all currently undergoing trial at the Sandiganbayan.

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