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CONTACT US AT: 8351-9427, [email protected] Monday June 19, 2017 02 shenzhen At a Glance Han Ximin [email protected] THE education foundation of SUSTech received a donation of 20 million yuan (US$2.94 mil- lion) from Broad Link Group on Friday, the largest single donation that the university has received so far this year. The fund will be used as the start-up fund for HelloKongzi Foundation of SUSTech Experi- mental Education Group, a basic education group, which was established Thursday and consists of three primary schools and one nine-year school in the Shenzhen University Town area of Xili, Nanshan District. “The donation marks a further step in SUSTech’s effort for basic education and will provide better culture-based education, infor- mation sharing and research systems for students,” said Guo Yurong, Party chief of SUSTech, at a donation ceremony Friday. The fund will be used for teaching reform, featuring the informati- zation and internationalization of education. In 2016, SUSTech received 400 million yuan in donations from enterprises. HelloKongzi is a cultural brand of Broad Link Group. Kongzi is the Chinese pinyin for Chinese philosopher Confucius (551-479 BC), whose teachings were the code of ethics adopted by most Chinese dynasties (206 BC – 1912 AD). The ideas of Confucius, Men- cius and Xun Zi were codified and adapted over millennia into a doc- trine known as Confucianism. In 2014, Broad Link initiated the Culture Rejuvenation project to promote and introduce tradi- tional Chinese culture to the world through the branding of its HelloKongzi animated character. The traveling HelloKongzi Global Cultural Exhibition has been held in Taiwan, Pakistan, the United States and Canada. Chen Xiaochun [email protected] AROUND 30 people from dif- ferent industries, mostly the manufacturing and service industries, joined a factory tour Thursday organized by the European Chamber to Siemens Shenzhen Magnetic Resonance Ltd. (SSMR), Siemens’ biggest research and manufacturing center outside Siemens Health- ineers MR Headquarters in Germany. “Every one out of three Siemens Healthineers MRI systems has been delivered from SSMR since 2012,” said Pan Huaiyu, general manager of SSMR. SSMR has sent thousands of MRI systems to over 100 coun- tries around the globe. According to Pan, Shenzhen’s favorable investment environ- ment for foreigners and enter- prises, as well as its adjacent location to Hong Kong, were the main reasons that Siemens Healthineers set up SSMR in Shenzhen in 2002. “Shenzhen has gathered an abundance of high-tech human resources. And there are plenty of industrial material resources for MRI manufacturing in Guangdong and the nearby areas,” added Pan. THE Shenzhen Criminal Inves- tigation Department (Shenzhen CID) said over the weekend that it had busted five Hong Kong drug dealers in the city March 9, cutting off a chain through which drugs has been trafficked from Vietnam to Hong Kong via Guangxi and Guangdong. Three of the suspects are alleg- edly from a Hong Kong gang. The operation seized 16.09 kilograms of all sorts of drugs, of which 12.6 kilograms were high-purity heroin worth nearly 70 million yuan (US$10.28 million). The CID detected that a group of Hong Kongers were frequently dealing drugs in Shenzhen at the beginning of this year. Through an investi- gation, the CID identified the five suspects. One of the suspects, a 48- year-old surnamed Lam, was a member of a Hong Kong gang. He was released from prison in September 2000 after being jailed for six years for a rob- bery in Hong Kong. Lam was in charge of receiving, unpacking and blending the drugs before having them delivered to Hong Kong. The other four suspects were identified as Biaoge, Bozi, Q- Zi and Ah-Feng. They formed an international drug traf- ficking chain from Vietnam to Hong Kong. Most of the drugs were smuggled to Hong Kong, except a small portion that was sold in Shenzhen. Biaoge and Bozi were respon- sible for picking up the drugs in Guangxi. They normally would drive overnight for eight or nine hours from Shenzhen to a place called Dongxi to collect the goods and return to Shenzhen the next day. On March 7, the CID learned that they had left Shenzhen for Guangxi to pick up heroine at midnight and presumed they would arrive in Shenzhen on March 8 or 9 with the drugs. Thirty police officers in five teams were sent out to moni- tor Biaoge and Bozi. At around 2 p.m. March 9, Bozi entered a supermarket in Luohu District with a paper bag. He put the bag inside a locker at the entrance of the supermarket and walked into the supermarket with the deposit receipt that would open the locker. Police officers followed Bozi to the bathroom on the fourth floor of the supermarket and saw him place the receipt under a rubbish bin. Ten minutes later, Ah-Feng got the receipt and opened the locker to get the paper bag. The officers busted Ah-Feng, who was holding the 3.5 kilograms of heroin in his hand. Meanwhile, the other opera- tion teams busted Bozi with another 3.5 kilograms of heroin, and the others at their homes in Longgang, Luohu and Futian districts. (Zhang Qian) SF employee jailed AN employee of SF Express in Changsha, Hunan Province, was recently sentenced to 15 months in jail by Nanshan People’s Court for leaking the personal information of customers. The employee of the IT department of SF in Changsha took 38,000 yuan (US$5,580) from an employee of an e-commerce company surnamed Ye in May 2015, in exchange for his account number and password, causing a leak of 200,000 pieces of customer information. Ye was jailed for two years by a Guangzhou court. Ye and his two colleagues profited 60,000 yuan by selling the information. The two colleagues were jailed for 11 months and eight months with an 18-month suspension, respectively. Ex-official on trial A FORMER deputy head of Guangming Public Security Bureau, surnamed Leng, stood trial at Luohu People’s Court for allegedly taking 340,000 yuan in bribes to harbor massage clubs between 2012 and 2013. The alleged crimes of Leng along with five other police officers were exposed in March last year when police raided and closed four clubs that were involved in prostitu- tion services. Gold smuggling SHATOUJIAO Customs recently stopped a man car- rying 17 kg of undeclared gold on his electric bike through Zhong-ying Street in Shatou- jiao. The man looked nervous and started to accelerate as he crossed the checkpoint June 12. Officers found 17 ingots, each weighing 1 kg, wrapped in three pieces of paper inside the battery pack of the electric bike. The case has been handed to theanti-smugglingdepartment for further investigation. 5 HK drug traffi ckers busted in SZ Foundation of SUSTech supports basic education 1/3 of Siemens MRI systems produced in SZ Mu Zi [email protected] THERE is a growing but worri- some tendency nowadays that Chinese parents are sacrificing time with their children to make enough money to be able to provide high-quality living con- ditions, which is getting them away from supervising their children, said Donald Cohn, an American who teaches literature at Shenzhen Yaohua Experimen- tal School in Futian District. “From my experience [of teaching], the influence of lack of parental link for a child could last a lifetime and even spread to the third- generation,” the 50-year- old who hails from Washington D.C. said. “Parents need to make the best use of their time to stay with their children because they need day-to-day inspiration in growth.” “Chinese children are very intel- ligent. That’s great, but I have to say, generally, they are more adept at answering questions than figur- ing out questions,” he said. “What I want them to learn is the ability of free thinking.” In his opinion, the ability to think independently is very important for a student. Chinese and Asian history was one of Cohn’s majors during his college years in the United States, making him grow close to the ancient country. In search of a solution to the mystery that had perplexed him for years — what has kept China working for thousands of years — he decided to see the country with his own eyes in the early 1990s. Shenzhen was the first city Cohn visited on his maiden trip to China in 1993, and he has come to the city frequently ever since. A witness to the city’s take- off, he said he was thrilled by the improvements in the social status of Chinese women in the past years. “I’m happy to see that Chinese women are well respected,” he said. US teacher values child-parent link Donald Cohn Residents look at dog leashes at the Third Shenzhen International Pet Show at Shenzhen Convention and Exhibition Center yesterday. The pet show, which closes today, features a variety of pet food and other products, as well as a pet beauty contest. Sun Yuchen Pet show

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Page 1: shenzhen Monday June 19, 2017 5 HK drug traffi ckers busted in SZ Foundation …szdaily.sznews.com/attachment/pdf/201706/19/87eeff34-bc... · 2017-06-18 · the Chinese pinyin for

CONTACT US AT: 8351-9427, [email protected]

Monday June 19, 2017 02 x shenzhen

At a Glance

Han [email protected]

THE education foundation of SUSTech received a donation of 20 million yuan (US$2.94 mil-lion) from Broad Link Group on Friday, the largest single donation that the university has received so far this year.

The fund will be used as the start-up fund for HelloKongzi Foundation of SUSTech Experi-mental Education Group, a basic education group, which was established Thursday and consists of three primary schools and one nine-year school in the Shenzhen University Town area of Xili, Nanshan District.

“The donation marks a further step in SUSTech’s effort for basic education and will provide better culture-based education, infor-mation sharing and research systems for students,” said Guo Yurong, Party chief of SUSTech, at a donation ceremony Friday. The fund will be used for teaching reform, featuring the informati-zation and internationalization of education.

In 2016, SUSTech received 400 million yuan in donations from enterprises.

HelloKongzi is a cultural brand of Broad Link Group. Kongzi is the Chinese pinyin for Chinese philosopher Confucius (551-479 BC), whose teachings were the code of ethics adopted by most Chinese dynasties (206 BC – 1912 AD). The ideas of Confucius, Men-cius and Xun Zi were codifi ed and adapted over millennia into a doc-trine known as Confucianism.

In 2014, Broad Link initiated the Culture Rejuvenation project to promote and introduce tradi-tional Chinese culture to the world through the branding of its HelloKongzi animated character. The traveling HelloKongzi Global Cultural Exhibition has been held in Taiwan, Pakistan, the United States and Canada.

Chen [email protected]

AROUND 30 people from dif-ferent industries, mostly the manufacturing and service industries, joined a factory tour Thursday organized by the European Chamber to Siemens Shenzhen Magnetic Resonance Ltd. (SSMR), Siemens’ biggest research and manufacturing center outside Siemens Health-

ineers MR Headquarters in Germany.

“Every one out of three Siemens Healthineers MRI systems has been delivered from SSMR since 2012,” said Pan Huaiyu, general manager of SSMR.

SSMR has sent thousands of MRI systems to over 100 coun-tries around the globe.

According to Pan, Shenzhen’s favorable investment environ-

ment for foreigners and enter-prises, as well as its adjacent location to Hong Kong, were the main reasons that Siemens Healthineers set up SSMR in Shenzhen in 2002.

“Shenzhen has gathered an abundance of high-tech human resources. And there are plenty of industrial material resources for MRI manufacturing in Guangdong and the nearby areas,” added Pan.

THE Shenzhen Criminal Inves-tigation Department (Shenzhen CID) said over the weekend that it had busted fi ve Hong Kong drug dealers in the city March 9, cutting off a chain through which drugs has been traffi cked from Vietnam to Hong Kong via Guangxi and Guangdong.

Three of the suspects are alleg-edly from a Hong Kong gang. The operation seized 16.09 kilograms of all sorts of drugs, of which 12.6 kilograms were high-purity heroin worth nearly 70 million yuan (US$10.28 million).

The CID detected that a group of Hong Kongers were frequently dealing drugs in Shenzhen at the beginning of this year. Through an investi-

gation, the CID identifi ed the fi ve suspects.

One of the suspects, a 48-year-old surnamed Lam, was a member of a Hong Kong gang. He was released from prison in September 2000 after being jailed for six years for a rob-bery in Hong Kong. Lam was in charge of receiving, unpacking and blending the drugs before having them delivered to Hong Kong.

The other four suspects were identifi ed as Biaoge, Bozi, Q-Zi and Ah-Feng. They formed an international drug traf-fi cking chain from Vietnam to Hong Kong. Most of the drugs were smuggled to Hong Kong, except a small portion

that was sold in Shenzhen.Biaoge and Bozi were respon-

sible for picking up the drugs in Guangxi. They normally would drive overnight for eight or nine hours from Shenzhen to a place called Dongxi to collect the goods and return to Shenzhen the next day.

On March 7, the CID learned that they had left Shenzhen for Guangxi to pick up heroine at midnight and presumed they would arrive in Shenzhen on March 8 or 9 with the drugs.

Thirty police offi cers in fi ve teams were sent out to moni-tor Biaoge and Bozi. At around 2 p.m. March 9, Bozi entered a supermarket in Luohu District with a paper bag. He put the bag

inside a locker at the entrance of the supermarket and walked into the supermarket with the deposit receipt that would open the locker.

Police offi cers followed Bozi to the bathroom on the fourth fl oor of the supermarket and saw him place the receipt under a rubbish bin. Ten minutes later, Ah-Feng got the receipt and opened the locker to get the paper bag. The offi cers busted Ah-Feng, who was holding the 3.5 kilograms of heroin in his hand.

Meanwhile, the other opera-tion teams busted Bozi with another 3.5 kilograms of heroin, and the others at their homes in Longgang, Luohu and Futian districts. (Zhang Qian)

SF employee jailedAN employee of SF Express in Changsha, Hunan Province, was recently sentenced to 15 months in jail by Nanshan People’s Court for leaking the personal information of customers.

The employee of the IT department of SF in Changsha took 38,000 yuan (US$5,580) from an employee of an e-commerce company surnamed Ye in May 2015, in exchange for his account number and password, causing a leak of 200,000 pieces of customer information.

Ye was jailed for two years by a Guangzhou court. Ye and his two colleagues profi ted 60,000 yuan by selling the information.

The two colleagues were jailed for 11 months and eight months with an 18-month suspension, respectively.Ex-offi cial on trialA FORMER deputy head of Guangming Public Security Bureau, surnamed Leng, stood trial at Luohu People’s Court for allegedly taking 340,000 yuan in bribes to harbor massage clubs between 2012 and 2013.

The alleged crimes of Leng along with fi ve other police offi cers were exposed in March last year when police raided and closed four clubs that were involved in prostitu-tion services.Gold smugglingSHATOUJIAO Customs recently stopped a man car-rying 17 kg of undeclared gold on his electric bike through Zhong-ying Street in Shatou-jiao. The man looked nervous and started to accelerate as he crossed the checkpoint June 12. Offi cers found 17 ingots, each weighing 1 kg, wrapped in three pieces of paper inside the battery pack of the electric bike.

The case has been handed to the anti-smuggling department for further investigation.

5 HK drug traffi ckers busted in SZ Foundation of SUSTech supports basic education

1/3 of Siemens MRI systems produced in SZ

Mu [email protected]

THERE is a growing but worri-some tendency nowadays that Chinese parents are sacrifi cing time with their children to make enough money to be able to provide high-quality living con-ditions, which is getting them away from supervising their children, said Donald Cohn, an American who teaches literature at Shenzhen Yaohua Experimen-tal School in Futian District.

“From my experience [of teaching], the infl uence of lack of

parental link for a child could last a lifetime and even spread to the third-generation,” the 50-year-old who hails from Washington

D.C. said. “Parents need to make the best use of their time to stay with their children because they need day-to-day inspiration in growth.”

“Chinese children are very intel-

ligent. That’s great, but I have to say, generally, they are more adept at answering questions than fi gur-ing out questions,” he said. “What I want them to learn is the ability of free thinking.”

In his opinion, the ability to think independently is very important for a student.

Chinese and Asian history was one of Cohn’s majors during his college years in the United States, making him grow close to the ancient country.

In search of a solution to the mystery that had perplexed him for years — what has kept China

working for thousands of years — he decided to see the country with his own eyes in the early 1990s. Shenzhen was the fi rst city Cohn visited on his maiden trip to China in 1993, and he has come to the city frequently ever since.

A witness to the city’s take-off, he said he was thrilled by the improvements in the social status of Chinese women in the past years.

“I’m happy to see that Chinese women are well respected,” he said.

US teacher values child-parent link

Donald Cohn

Residents look at dog leashes at the Third Shenzhen International Pet Show at Shenzhen Convention and Exhibition Center yesterday. The pet show, which closes today, features a variety of pet food and other products, as well as a pet beauty contest. Sun Yuchen

Pet show