Archive for ‘jiangsu province’

08/05/2019

Fake degree scandal prompts China-wide fraud check

  • Investigation follows violent protest at Nanjing school
  • Students discovered nursing qualification was actually a home economics degree
An investigation into enrolment practices at eastern China’s Nanjing Institute of Applied Technology has been widened into a country-wide check for similar frauds. Photo: Handout
An investigation into enrolment practices at eastern China’s Nanjing Institute of Applied Technology has been widened into a country-wide check for similar frauds. Photo: Handout
A protest by technical school students over fake degrees that led to a

clash with police

in eastern China last month has prompted the Ministry of Education to order local governments across the country to check for similar frauds in their regions.

Wang Jiping, director of the ministry’s vocational education department, said the authorities had been cracking down on fraudulent promotions in student enrolment – cause of the disturbance at Nanjing School of Applied Technology – for a long time.
“But some schools still irresponsibly cheated parents and students,” Wang said at a press conference on Wednesday.
“For this kind of phenomenon, our attitude is one of firmly stopping and seriously punishing.”
Dozens of students clashed with police and security staff at the Nanjing School of Applied Technology in eastern China last month after the discovery that their nursing course only provided a degree in home economics. Photo: Weibo
Dozens of students clashed with police and security staff at the Nanjing School of Applied Technology in eastern China last month after the discovery that their nursing course only provided a degree in home economics. Photo: Weibo

In a statement on Weibo, China’s Twitter-like microblogging service, the city government in Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu province, said on Tuesday the rally by students and parents at the school had attracted the attention of city and provincial authorities.

Investigations showed that when the school enrolled new students for its home economics major in 2016, it promised they would receive associate degrees and a nursing certificate upon graduation. The students were also guaranteed jobs.

Students about to graduate this summer were angry when they learned the school could not fulfil any of its promises.

At the end of last month, some parents started petitioning the local government. On the evening of April 26, dozens of students clashed with police and security staff, with two students sustaining leg injuries. Police took several people away for “stirring up trouble among students”, the police said on Weibo.

The city government said that, with the intervention of its education and human resources departments, 405 out of the 409 affected students had been transferred to higher level institutions, and the students and their parents had accepted that arrangement.

The investigation is continuing and school officials will be held accountable, it said.

The Nanjing government said some people had spread rumours online after the incident. The government statement said two people, both surnamed Wang, had falsely claimed a female student was beaten to death by school staff and her parents knocked unconscious by police in the incident.

The pair also claimed in their article, published on Monday, that the school’s security guards were armed during the confrontation with students.

The article went viral and the authors – one from Wuhan, Hubei province, and the other in Changsha, Hunan province, both in central China – were detained for causing trouble.

According to the government statement, they confessed to cooking up the rumour to attract online traffic and solicit rewards from readers.

They made 32,000 yuan (US$4,700) from the article.

Source: SCMP

31/03/2019

China plant explosion kills seven; second blast in Jiangsu province this month

BEIJING (Reuters) – A plant explosion in China’s Jiangsu province has killed seven people, state media reported on Sunday, 10 days after a blast at a pesticide plant killed 78 people in the province and triggered a nationwide safety inspection campaign.

Sunday’s blast involved a container of scrap metal that caught fire in a metal-molding plant in a bonded area in the city of Kunshan, state news agency Xinhua said.

The cause of the blast which killed seven people and injured five others was under investigation, Xinhua said.

The plant is owned by Kunshan Waffer Technology Corp Ltd., a Taiwan-based manufacturer of magnesium alloy injection molding products and aluminium alloy die castings.

Kunshan, about 70 km (43 miles) west of Shanghai, is home to more than 1,000 technology companies and manufacturers, including many Taiwanese firms.

The incident follows a deadly blast on March 21 at a chemical park in the city of Yancheng, also in Jiangsu province, that killed 78 people and focused attention on safety at small chemical firms.

China last week launched a month-long, nationwide inspection campaign into hazardous chemicals, mines, transportation and fire safety, saying authorities needed to absorb lessons from the Yancheng disaster.

China has clamped down on scrap metal imports as part of an environmental campaign against “foreign garbage”, tightening supply sources for metal producers, as it aims to cut solid waste imports by the end of 2020.

The country has a history of major work safety accidents which often trigger inspection campaigns aimed at rooting out violations and punishing officials for cutting corners or shirking their supervisory duties.

Source: Reuters

13/03/2019

China’s Yuanwang-3 departs for monitoring missions

NANJING, March 13 (Xinhua) — The space-tracking ship Yuanwang-3 is sailing to the Pacific Ocean from a port in east China’s Jiangsu Province Wednesday for upcoming monitoring missions.

This year, the ship will carry out two maritime space monitoring missions, which will last about two months.

The mission members have conducted a series of training programs and tests before the voyage, to increase emergency response.

Yuanwang-3, which entered service in the mid-1990s, is China’s second-generation space tracking ship. Sailing more than 650,000 nautical miles, it has completed 80 missions, including maritime tracking of the Shenzhou spacecraft, Chang’e lunar probe and BeiDou satellites.

Source: Xinhua

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