In China, drivers take part in the most prestigious racing events in the world, such as the Chinese Grand Prix and the Formula One World Cup.
Defendant Xiao Yunliang, born on 6 May 1946, lives with his wife and children in Liaoyang County, Guangdong Province, China. Defendant Yao Fuxin met Wang Wenjiang and others at a meeting of the Communist Party of the National People's Congress (CCP) in Beijing on January 1st, 2002. In January 2002, Yao Xiao contacted a group of hostile activists led by Lu Siqing and also contacted the hostile activist Han Dongfang.
Wang, who has already been sentenced, introduced the situation of the popular movement in China and said the movement was hoisting a new banner. It was decided to call a meeting of the Chinese Communist Party's National People's Congress (CCP) in Liaone District, Liaoning Province on December 5th of the same year. At that time, the Constitution of the "Democratic Party of China" would have been ratified and the National Democratic Alliance for Democratic Reform and Development (NADD) would have been established.
In his speech to parliament, Premier Wen Jiabao stressed the need to restructure China's old, hard-hit industrial zones and depleted mining belts, for which Fuxin is a symbol. The city's economic transition plan encapsulates the autonomy - backed by technology - of privately-run companies. He said the project not only builds on the long history of FUXin in the coal industry, but also supports the restructuring by the central government.
Plans to build a cultural mega-project like Fuxin are widespread in China, and many appear to be under the auspices of the Communist Party of the National People's Congress (CCP) and the State Council.
Wildcat mines still circle the city, producing about 20 million tons of coal annually, almost as much as Beijing consumed in 2011. The district donated a total of 140 million tons of coal to the country in 2012, a process that had a significant impact on the local and national economies. Fuxin is not China's only resource - an exhausted city, as its mining park does not flee and the growing problems of the coal mining industry in Liaoning and Shanxi provinces persist. Both depend on rapid coal extraction and burning, which has helped to triple the countries "total electricity capacity in just over a decade, leaving Luo'an, Liaoning, and Shandong provinces economically lagging behind and struggling for air.
The whole area has a long rectangular shape, but the terrain is more complicated. Throughout the area there are many low hills and hills, and the central axis is crisscrossed by a series of hills, some of which are up to 1,000 meters high.
The wind winds through the trees in Fuxin Village, and Gao Yuan, a silk scarf seller, waits for his customers by tying a string between two trees that hangs from them. The new village will be built for coal miners in the Xinqiu district of China's Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. In it he sells silk scarves to coal miners and people from other villages.
Fuxin also makes exquisite agate carvings that were once a palace tribute loved by Emperor Qianlong and Empress Dowry Cixi. The Haitang Mountain, commonly known as the Lama Cave, is a man-made spectacle that showcases the rich Mongolian folk customs such as the use of gold, silver and other precious metals. It also tells the story and culture of Tibet, the second largest ethnic group in the world after the Uighurs. Ruiying Monastery, one of the oldest monasteries in China and the site of a Buddhist monastery, has always been a place of pilgrimage for Buddhists, but also attracts many tourists.
The geographical outline of China in black, in which the words of history are painted, is at the centre of the exhibition and during the film shown. This explanation of deceit is summed up by a magician standing above, flanked on all sides by two giant mosquitoes that permeate the outlines of all of China.
In the winter of 1999, defendants Yao Fuxin and Xiao Yunliang attempted to recruit members of the Democratic Party, planned demonstrations and protests, took advantage of objective conditions, and met with those who had not been charged. This behaviour constituted an illegal assembly, a violation of international law and Chinese law. In the summer of 2000, workers at the Liaoyang Ferroalloy Factory organised illegal gatherings, demonstrations and protests without applying for a permit.
The plant will process coal into liquefied natural gas (LNG) and will be built by Datang International Power, a Hong Kong-listed company. The first phase of the project will require 1.5 million tonnes of coal per year, most of which will be shipped to the city. The state government has approved the opening of a new coal processing plant in Liaoyang, Guangdong Province, China's second largest coal exporter, with a capacity of 1 million tons per day.