Hourly News 每日新闻 2013-11-29
时间:2014-03-19 07:26:01
搜索关注在线英语听力室公众号:tingroom,领取免费英语资料大礼包。
(单词翻译)
China rejects criticism on ADIZ
China's foreign and
defense1 ministries2 have released a new set of statements, rebuffing international criticism of China's new
maritime3 Air Defense Identification Zone in the East China Sea.
This comes as the Chinese airforce has confirmed it plans to conduct regular patrols of the new zone.
The Air Force says the patrols are
defensive4 only, and comply with international norms.
The Chinese defense
ministry5 released details of the new Air Defense Identification Zone this past weekend.
The new zone covers areas in the East China Sea, including the Diaoyu Islands.
Chinese President stresses reform confidence
Chinese President Xi Jinping has called for confidence in realizing further reform and determination to overcome difficulties.
The President made the remark during an
inspection6 tour of east China's Shandong Province.
A key reform plan, listing more than 300 measures, has been adopted at a key Party session earlier this month.
Xi Jinping notes it will be a tough and complicated road for the Communist Party of China to deepen reform.
He cautions local governments against blindly pushing forward the reform, and asks officials to be flexible and consider local conditions.
The President calls on the whole CPC and Chinese society to unite together under the
consensus7 of pushing forward reform, as well as to understand, support and take part in reform efforts.
Chinese
premier8 calls for deeper ties with Uzbekistan
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has met with Uzbekistan's President as part of the final leg of his latest international trip.
Li Keqiang has told Islam Karimov his government is ready to look for new areas of cooperation with Uzbekistan.
Neither the Chinese Premier or the Uzbek President have elaborated on what areas that cooperation could
entail9.
Uzbekistan is the last stop on Li Keqiang's current trip, which also saw him take part in a summit involving China and countries in central and eastern Europe.
That portion of the trip in Romania saw the Chinese side ink a number of deals connected to trade and
infrastructure10 construction.
UN
inspectors11 to visit Arak heavy-water plant in Iran: IAEA
The IAEA has agreed to a deal with Iran which will allow inspectors to visit the Arak heavy-water production plant.
The tour by international nuclear inspectors will take place in just over a week's time.
The agreement to allow
inspections12 of the Arak facility comes following the deal reached among Iran and the P5+1 earlier this month.
That agreement will see Iran stop enrichment of uranium above 5-percent and
neutralize13 its stockpiles of 20-percent enriched uranium in exchange for the loosening of international sanctions.
Uranium enriched to 20-percent levels can be used to produce nuclear weapons.
The Arak facility produces so-called heavy water which is used to cool a nearby nuclear plant still under construction, which Iran says it wants to use to create medical-grade
isotopes14.
Israel has long-held the facility is being built to create weapons-grade plutonium.
Tehran has consistently denied this.
DPRK nuclear
reactor15 may be in use again, warns IAEA
The International Atomic Energy Agency is warning North Korea's nuclear complex may be operational again.
IAEA chief Yukio Amano has told a Board of Governors meeting satellite imagry has detected suspicious activity at the Yongbyon facility north of Pyongyang.
However, Amano has admitted the IAEA's experts can't confirm this, given they don't have access to the site.
North Korean authorities haven't allowed IAEA inspectors access to Yongbyon since 2009.
Yongbyon generates the nuclear materials North Korea has used to create its nuclear weapons.
Yukio Amano says the IAEA is "seriously concerned" about the possible restart of the Yongbyon facility.
The North Korean government is on-record this week saying that while it wants a negotiated solution to create a nuclear-free Korean peninsula, it will continue to develop its "nuclear
deterrent16."
8 killed in Iran's earthquake
At least 8-people are dead following a moderate earthquake in southern Iran.
The 5.7-magnitude quake hit shortly after 5pm local time on Thursday about 60-kilometers northeast of the country's Bushehr nuclear power plant.
While moderate, the quake hit at a shallow depth of just 5-kilometers,
intensifying17 the shaking.
At least 45 others have been hurt in the earthquake, which was epicentered under the city of Borazjan.
It's unclear at this point whether the quake has caused any damage to the Bushehr nuclear power plant, which is the first nuclear power generation facility in the Middle East.
It's been reported the plant was damaged by a pair of stronger earthquakes which hit the region in April and May.
However, Iranian officials have never confirmed these reports.
The Bushehr nuclear facility, built with help from Russia, was designed to withstand an earthquake of magnitude-8 or higher.
At least 10 people are dead following an explosion at an ammo dump in Libya.
The blast took place in a
relatively20 remote area in southern Libya, about 500-kilometers south of the capital, Tripoli.
At least 15 others have been hurt in the blast.
Authorities say an unknown group tried to break into the weapons storage facility, setting off the blast.
Southern Libya
remains21 relatively unsecured.
Libya's wide-ranging borders in the south with Chad, Niger and Sudan are frequently used as crossing points for
militants22 and drug smugglers.
The Libyan authorities have rolled out a wide-ranging plan to try to secure the country's borders with the help of the European Union.
Libya and Italy on Thursday signed an agreement to use Italian drones to monitor Libya's vast southern expanse in the Sahara region of north Africa.
分享到: