Tuesday, May 3, 2011

ChinaWatch: Smoking Into Space

Welcome to ChinaWatch, WMB’s digest of news from the country with the world’s second largest economy and our chief rival to global dominance. Our aim is to keep you informed.



Smoking Stamped Out

A smoking ban is now in effect in most public places in China, a move that health experts say will help raise awareness of the dangers of smoking in a country where tobacco use is deeply ingrained.

There is a lack of public awareness of the health risks of smoking in China.

The World Health Organization says seven out of 10 non-smoking adults in the East Asian nation are exposed to second-hand smoke each week. Smokers light up in elevators and offices, and even in hospital waiting rooms.

With the new ban, the country’s estimated 300 million smokers will no longer be allowed to puff their cigarettes in what the Chinese government is calling “enclosed public places.”

These include hotels, restaurants, theaters and public transport waiting rooms. The ban does not cover offices or factories.

Hong Kong University School of Public Health Director Tai Hing Lam says the ban will be effective in informing the public about the dangers of smoking.

“With this new legislation, this will promote awareness, and that is a major step,” Lam says.

He says non-smoking Chinese, who make up the majority of the population, should understand second-hand smoke is harmful to their health. He hopes the new ban will help encourage them to ask for more smoke free places.

“Non smokers at the moment are too passive, let us put it that way, because they’re so used to being exposed,” he says. “So, they do not realize that they have the right to demand it (smoke free places). Now, the law actually empowers them.”

Stepping Into Space

China may fly a woman astronaut into space next year as it embarks on an ambitious program for the next decade which includes a mission to land a rover on the moon and setting up a space station with a cargo spaceship to transport supplies.

China plans to fly two more spacecraft next year to improve the rendezvous and docking technologies and one of it will be a manned one, says Yang Liwei, deputy director of the China Manned Space Engineering Office, hinting it could as well be a woman.

China plans to carry out its first space docking between two unmanned vehicles this year, followed by one manned and one unmanned space missions next year as part of its efforts to set up a space station.

“Two to three astronauts will be sent to space in that manned mission next year,” he was quoted by the state-run China Daily as saying.

Fei Junlong, leader of China's astronaut team, says the two women astronauts and five men astronauts – the second batch of Chinese astronauts, who were selected last year – have to take a three-year training course before carrying out space missions.

But Yang says there are possibilities for the women to join next year's mission.

The two women astronauts, both pilots from the People's Liberation Army Air Force, are the first women astronauts in China. The 14 astronauts in the first batch, who were recruited in 1997, are all men.

ChinaWatch

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