I went to CCB this morning, they'd never heard of it, said no problem. Good, because that's where my salary ends up.
Then I went to CMB and they seemed to know about "二代身份证明". They said my account didn't need it but they put my driver's licence on file anyway because it would make matters more convenient for me in the future.
I guess that foreigners may lose/change their passports some time and then get locked out of their accounts for good, and this is a way to mitigate this. But freezing their accounts if they fail to provide secondary ID is a bit harsh. I'm curious to find out more about this whole thing.
Kunming-based think tank fighting Myanmar forest loss
Posted byPeter, interesting point of view but while monoculture plantations may still come at the expense of forests, the project in the first place aims to solidify and boost the livelihoods of rural dwellers in Myanmar, hence also the support of the LIFT fund (Livelihoods and Food Security).
Now when that proves viable, villagers may be less tempted to replace their land by monoculture plantations or indeed sell it to investors.
Kunming-based think tank fighting Myanmar forest loss
Posted byThe organization has the support of the government, and that's a pretty strong ally to have.
Of course, in a democratic country, governments change every so often, in the case of Myanmar in November, and everything may yet go down the drain if Aung San Suu Kyi wins - or it may not.
Or do you compare it to Borneo because you think corruption will prevail and big investors will win the day with monoculture plantations? Maybe, but showing in time that you can have high harvest yields _and_ keep healthy ecosystems could change public and industry opinions.
Around Town: Biking the trails of Changchong Mountain
Posted byThread here: www.gokunming.com/[...]
Map here:
www.google.com/[...]
Around Town: Wanda Twin Towers
Posted byneeds a bridge in between :)
who paid for it? Wanda is supposedly an integer development company but it is a little hard to believe.
The Petronas towers were built by tycoons with public money, then sold back to the city, after which the tycoons still occupy the building and are now charging the public to visit it.
* source: Asian Godfathers by Joe Studwell. Bit of a must-read that makes you question any of these gigantic projects.
Around Town: Biking the trails of Changchong Mountain
Posted bycheck out the Mountain Bike Thread, last post has a link to a Google map with 1-day routes around KMG. Feel free to add.