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orient express

The old Orient Express had many incarnations but is associated mostly with the journey from Paris to Istanbul. The time the journey took varied, but it was at all times the stuff of legend, luxury and romance. It was mentioned in the literary works of Bram Stoker, Agatha Christie, Graham Greene, George McDonald Fraser and Ian Fleming.


The old Orient Express made its first journey on October 12, 1882, from Paris to Vienna. The menu read: oysters, soup with Italian pasta, turbot with green sauce, chicken à la chasseur, fillet of beef with château potatoes, chaud-froid of game animals, lettuce, chocolate pudding and buffet of desserts. The first Paris-Istanbul all-train service was on June 1, 1889.

The service ran for the last time in 2007, when the name Orient Express disappeared from all European train timetables. It was a victim, they said, of high-speed trains and cut-rate airlines. It left the world a sadder place.

The new Orient Express has just been announced.

It will run from London to Beijing. It will pass through Paris, Berlin, Warsaw, Kiev, St Petersburg, Moscow, Astana in Kazakhstan and Khabarovsk in Russia's far east. It will travel at about 320 kilometres per hour, and it will make the journey in just two days. The service could start operating as early as 2020.

It is a business vision from the only economic power on Earth with the energy, momentum and financial muscle to make this work, China.


I should make some caveats here. This is a proposal rather than a firm plan, 2020 is the "earliest possible" completion date, and there is actually no suggestion that it will be called the Orient Express. But they have to call it that, don't they? Please call it that. The world is a sadder place without an Orient Express in it.
www.telegraph.co.uk

orient express



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Chinese embassy bombing

May 18th 1999 09:54
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.


Major cities in China have seen their biggest and angriest demonstrations for years in response to the destruction by Nato bombs of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade with the loss of four lives. Hundreds of students chanting anti-American and anti-Nato slogans marched in Shanghai, Chengdu and Guanghzou. In Beijing about 100,000 people invaded the embassy district, massing on streets littered with rocks and broken bottles from earlier protests. -- British Broadcasting Corporation, May 9, 1999

After two days of varied official accounts, the least credible explanation for Friday night's NATO bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade is that it was a pure accident. On Sunday, a US official in Washington told news agencies that the CIA had simply supplied inaccurate information, wrongly identifying the embassy as a Yugoslav weapons warehouse. It was the fourth version of events produced within several hours. -- www.wsws.org, May 10, 1999

Chinese protests Belgrade embassy bombing
A personal message for President Clinton in 1999 after the NATO bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade resulted in four dead
Picture: BBC

A few sage words for President Pickle

US President Bill Clinton called a top secret meeting in the White House steam room late last week where he told the assembled interns that he was gravely concerned at the recent lack of com­mentary from Red Inque.

Sorry about that, Bill. We’ve been very busy crying over the rise and rise of the stock market, which we missed, but we will now turn our attention to international affairs.

The leader of the world’s most power­ful nation has got himself into a pickle. Again. Although it is not clear at this stage whether public opinion rates a mention in Oval Office dialogue, we would point out that just about nobody any longer has a good word to say about American cartography.

We’re sorry to have to break this to you, Bill, but the people here in China are pretty upset with you. Some of them weren’t quite convinced by your explan­ation, and pictures of you writing a letter of apology didn’t really compete with pictures of the Chinese embassy dead arriving back home.

Meanwhile, you‘ve thrown the worms amongst Pandora’s pigeons when it comes to China’s entry to the WTO. It’s almost funny really – there are powerful factions within China lobbying both for and against WTO membership, and America’s double-bogey bombing has given both of them ammunition, so to speak. The conservatives in Beijing have become increasingly strident in their claims that China is selling its interests short in pushing for early WTO entry. Their outbursts are more often than not directed at Moftec, the senior govern­ment trade organisation which has overall responsibility for WTO negotiat­ions. It was perhaps therefore not surpris­ing that Moftec was amongst the first to get stuck into Nato, scoring some patriotic brownie points and thereby eas­ing the pressure of criticism.

We see you nodding. They might be burning your picture, Bill, but as a fellow professional we’re sure you respect a nifty bit of political dualism.

Try not to feel too guilty, but another consequence of your crappy mappies is that people around here are suddenly very nervous about China stocks. The biggest concern is the myriad companies which will receive no direct benefits from WTO entry but whose prices have risen recently on generally bullish WTO trading sentiment.

We are telling people, however, that these should not be confused with major players whose current share prices are well justified by their fundamentals, about which we remain positive and which represent good buying value on current weakness. These stocks include COSCO Pacific, China Mer­chants, Shanghai Ind­ustrial, Beijing Enter­prises, Zhejiang Expressway and Shen­zhen Expressway.

We suggest you target some of these, Bill. You can’t miss.
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Chill wind from Beijing

February 8th 1999 03:57
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

They dream in courtship, but in wedlock wake. -- Alexander Pope

One country ...

A few years ago some wit claimed Hong Kong was preparing a reverse takeover for China. That got ‘em laughing where expatriates gathered. It remained a good joke all the way up to the handover. What with Hong Kong’s economy growing at 10% and China in a deep freeze battling inflation, it was so easy to imagine more than a grain of truth in it. Then they took Queen Elizabeth’s portrait off the wall in the General Post Office.

Red Inque had a Welsh flat-mate at the time, all mid-20s rugby-playing muscle and perfect-pitch Taffy baritone. I can recall the disbelief in his voice when he came home one evening about a week after the handover and told me the Queen’s portrait had gone. He looked like a little boy and almost choked on the words. Something at the core of him had finally realised that Hong Kong wasn’t his any more.

If there is one thing that has been consistent since, it is the perception that little has changed in Hong Kong in terms of the freedom of doing business. After initial alarm when popular favourite Anson Chan was passed over as the SAR’s first chief executive for Bejing buddy Tung Chee-hwa, days and weeks turned into months after the handover, and the hand of China, heavy or otherwise, was not to be seen. Even the Chinese garrison here seems invisible. We’ve had protests and marches and Martin Lee taunting the PRC, and the most violent law-enforcement response has been to turn up the volume on Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony. It has been business as usual (recession notwithstanding), which means non-intervention from points political.

Today, we may be seeing a change. Today, more than at any time since Hong Kong was returned to Chinese sovereignty, people are looking north and wondering. Today, as reported in The South China Morning Post’s Page 1 banner heading, we have a potential constitutional crisis on our hands.

The issue to which Beijing has apparently taken exception is a Hong Kong court ruling 10 days ago which widened the interpretation of who qualifies for right of abode in the SAR. The ruling, which caught authorities on both sides of the border by surprise, threatens an inundation from the mainland, which will create undoubted problems. But the ruling was a victory for the little guy, it was a statement of the integrity of the Hong Kong judicial system, and it was a thunderous endorsement of the rule of law and of China’s one country, two systems promise.

The ruling, it has emerged over the weekend, has met with disfavour in Beijing. Mainland ‘legal experts’ have described it as a violation of the Basic Law, as an attempt by the Court of Final Appeal to extend its jurisdiction to Beijing and turn Hong Kong into an independent political entity, and, ominously, as a challenge to the National People’s Congress, the supreme state power, according to China’s constitution.

The reaction in Hong Kong has been heated. ‘If the central government over-rules or becomes angered by it, it will lead to a constitutional crisis,’ said Democratic Party chairman Martin Lee. ‘It will be a disaster if the rule of law turns out to be the rule of man,’ said Hong Kong Bar Association chairman Ronny Tong. ‘Do we throw the Court of Final Appeal’s reputation in the litter bin simply because of one ruling they dislike? If so, the price we have to pay will be extremely high,’ said James To Kun-sun, also of the Democratic Party. ‘They are putting our judicial independence in question. How can people be convinced there will not be political intervention in our judicial system?’ said Society for Community Organisation director Ho Hei-wah.

The action of Beijing so far amounts to no more than an expression of dissatisfaction, and it remains to be seen whether it follows up with stronger words or, indeed, action. Meanwhile, imagine you are a New York or Frankfurt business owner looking to move into Asia in anticipation of economic recovery. Rents are down and you are prepared to wait for the economic barometer to go up. There’s just one decision left, where to base your operation, and last week you were still tossing up between Hong Kong and Singapore. Now?
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