Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Beijing's Tattoo Convention - a design, which ranges from around $78 to $235 (US)

The often painful art of tattooing is drawing an increasing number of young Chinese. Even the cost of a design, which ranges from around $78 to $235 U.S. dollars didn't diminish the number of enthusiasts at Beijing's Tattoo Convention. And not only does sporting a tattoo enhance one's cool factor -- fans are creating their own unique patterns or finding a design that best matches their personality. 
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SOUNDBITE: Zhou Min, 26-year-old tattoo fan, saying (Mandarin): "This pattern is very colourful. It symbolizes the great power of the female leaders in African tribes. That's why I chose it. It's very special. I like it very much." In China, tattooing emerged more than two thousand years ago when words were pierced into prisoner's faces as a form of punishment, and so linked to depravity. And during the Cultural Revolution, Mao Zedong banned tattoos calling them a manifestation of impurity and antisocial activities. But tattoo artist Yang Qingwen disagrees and says the skin etching is an art form. 
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SOUNDBITE: Yang Qingwen, 25-year-old tattoo artist, saying (Mandarin): "The old generations can't accept tattoos. Generally, it's easier for young people to accept and embrace them. It's hard to convince the older generations that the tattoo is an art form." 60 artists were kept busy creating intricate and colourful skin designs. And for this art form, it really is a case of no pain, no gain. Tara Cleary, Reuters.

Gene discovery brings new hope for asthmatics. 235 million + people worldwide have asthma

Maryanne Venables has chronic asthma. SOUNDBITE: ASTHMA PATIENT, MARYANNE VENABLES (ENGLISH) "I can't go anywhere without my little gray friend, my little Ventolin inhaler." Like many asthmatics, she has long hoped for a drug breakthrough that makes managing the condition easier. Now, there may be one. In "The Lancet" medical journal, Australian researchers say they have found that asthmatics share a common gene with sufferers of rheumatoid arthritis. And there's already a drug on the market, Tocilizumab (TOE-si-LIZ-oo-mab), to treat rheumatoid arthritis. The hope is that the drug, which reduces arthritis inflammation, can also reduce inflammation in asthmatics. Dr. Manuel Ferreira is one of the scientists. 
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SOUNDBITE: RESEARCHER, DR. MANUEL FERREIRA (ENGLISH) "It's a drug that reduces the activity of the gene that we've now found has something to do with asthma. SOUNDBITE: ASTHMA PATIENT, MARYANNE VENABLES (ENGLISH) "I think it certainly uncovers ground that doesn't seem to have been addressed before." More than 235 million people worldwide have asthma and the World Health Organization says it's the most common chronic disease among children. 
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SOUNDBITE: ASTHMA PATIENT, MARYANNE VENABLES (ENGLISH) "I use a preventer, and I use an inhaler. If there are clinical trials in the future, if I was eligible for them I'd be very interested in participating." The researchers say more study needs to be conducted to asses the drug's effectiveness in treating asthma. Andrew Schmertz, Reuters

France yesterday - Blast kills one at the Centraco French nuclear waste facility

Police patrol a nuclear waste treatment plant in southern France where an explosion killed one person and left four injured. The blast happened on Monday in a furnace at the Centraco site, where waste with low to very low radioactivity is melted down. A plant spokesman says no radioactive material leaked from the site. 

(SOUNDBITE) (French) SPOKESMAN FOR THE WASTE TREATMENT PLANT ROLAND VIERNE SAYING: "The incident has been contained in the room where the oven is. There is no impact either around this room nor outside the site. I want to reassure the population that there is absolutely no consequence linked to any discharge, whether radiological or chemical." Owned by France's main power utility, Centraco is adjacent to the Marcoule nuclear research center. The blast comes as stress tests continue at France's 58 nuclear reactors in response to Japan's Fukushima disaster in March. France relies more on nuclear power than any other country in the world. Katharine Jackson, Reuters.

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