This weekend Kunming will celebrate the
Duanwu Festival (端午节) on Sunday, during which people all over the city will be munching on gooey zongzi (粽子 - see image above). The weekend will be followed by the arrival of the Olympic Torch on Monday - see
this forum thread for details on the torch's route through Kunming.
Friday-Tuesday: Kunming Fair
The 16th annual Kunming International Import and Export Commodities Fair - aka the
Kunming Fair (昆交会) - will take place again this year at the
Kunming International Convention and Exhibition Center (昆明国际会展中心) from today through Tuesday, June 10. Vendors from around China and the world will be hawking their wares from 8 am to 6 pm daily.
Friday-Saturday: Yunnan Art Institute Cartoon Design Show
Yunnan Art Institute's Cartoon Design Show at
Yunnan Provincial Science and Technology Hall will continue for another two days. The show highlights a range of works and media by students from Yunnan Art Institute, one of China's most influential art schools.
Friday: Modern dance performance at TC/G Nordica
TCG/Nordica will host a performance of homegrown modern dance tonight, beginning at 8:00. Admission to the performance is five yuan.
Friday: Happy Avenue at Laowo Bar
Laowo Bar will be host to the pop stylings of
Happy Avenue tonight at 9:30. Admission to the show is 30 yuan, which includes a coupon for 5 yuan towards drinks. The show will begin with an opening band to be determined.
Saturday: Yeyang Guantou at Speakeasy Bar
Metal band
Yeyang Guantou will play at
Speakeasy Bar Saturday night with local band Heiyu opening. The show starts at 9:30, admission is 30 yuan.
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The 16th annual Kunming International Import and Export Commodities Fair - aka the
Kunming Fair (昆交会) - will take place again this year at the
Kunming International Convention and Exhibition Center (昆明国际会展中心) from June 6 to June 10.
The Kunming Fair is a regional trade fair jointly sponsored by the governments of Sichuan, Yunnan, Guizhou, Guangxi, Tibet, Chongqing and Chengdu. Last year's Kunming Fair saw 162 companies exhibit their products and more than US$158.5 million in completed deals over five days. The total reported value of contracts and agreements signed at the event exceeded 68.1 billion yuan (US$8.9 billion).
According to
Kunming media reports, this year China's Ministry of Commerce will participate in hosting the fair for the first time with the stated goal of increasing the scale and quality of the fair.
Yunnan Commerce Bureau Director Sun Xiaohong (孙小虹) said this year the fair will feature 2,318 exhibits, adding that 2,148 exhibitors were already confirmed for the event. Sun said that exhibits by Burmese and Sichuanese enterprises will be slightly fewer in number than last year due to the recent Myanmar cyclone and Wenchuan earthquake, respectively.
Under orders from Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, the Kunming Fair will include a "Greater Mekong Subregion Economic Corridor Forum" (GMS经济走廊论坛) for the first time. The Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) includes Yunnan Province, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia.
For the third consecutive year the fair will also feature a 'China-South Asia Commerce Forum',(中国-南亚商务论坛) as well as the clumsily named 'ASEAN Chinese Business Investment Southwest Promotion Meeting and Asia-Pacific Chinese Business Forum' (东盟华商投资西南项目推介会 暨亚太华商论坛).
A preview of some of the products on offer can be found on the fair's
official website. The website also features other information of less obvious value, including '
Britney Spears loses custody of children', '
Goal-driven achievers less prone to Alzheimers' and '
Abdul says she's straight up ready for a baby'.
The Kunming Fair runs from Friday, June 6 through Tuesday, June 10 from 8 am to 6 pm. GoKunming called the fair's office, which told us the admission fee had yet to be announced (last year tickets to the fair cost 30 yuan/day). For more information, call the fair at (0871) 6269886 or 3155519.
Image:
finance.sina.com
Related articles:
Yunnan-ASEAN trade continues to boom
Kunming hosting Asia-Pacific trade meeting
Kunming Fair breaks US$150 million mark
GMS agreement to facilitate regional transport
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The end of the year is a special time in which editors and writers around the world recycle content from the previous twelve months and repackage it as new content. We at GoKunming are not above this practice, so here's our look at the people and events that shaped 2007 in Kunming and Yunnan.
January
Internet access in Kunming and around Asia was
severely limited after a late-December earthquake in Taiwan severed some rather important undersea cables to North America. Normal or near-normal access was quickly restored to China's coast and elsewhere around Asia, but more remote places such as Yunnan province were forced to wait until February for normal internet access to be restored.
Kunming native Jin Feibao
hiked to the South Pole, only to discover that it was already an American city.
Yunnan First People's Provincial Hospital and the Xishan Public Security Bureau opened
China's first drunk tank for foreigners, citing increased numbers of 'drunken incidents' involving foreigners.
February
The popular American pseudo-Chinese restaurant chain PF Chang's Chinese Bistro launched a special '
Flavors of Yunnan' menu that ran from Chinese New Year to September at more than 130 locations across the US. Although it was difficult to not be critical of the menu's lack of authenticity, it seemed to be a promising indicator that the unique dishes and cooking styles found in Yunnan were beginning to be noticed by the outside world.
A down-on-his-luck businessman in Fumin County near Kunming got his 15 minutes of fame for
painting a mountain green in order to improve the mountain's fengshui with the hope of improving his personal fortunes as well. The mountain which had been quarried for 20 years was covered with nearly half a billion yuan's worth of bright green paint over 45 days.
Yunnan province was
singled out for praise by UK medical journal
The Lancet for its efforts in combating the spread of HIV/AIDS. In terms of HIV/AIDS infections, Yunnan has been one of the more harder-hit regions of China and is where China's first case of HIV/AIDS was reported in 1985. The Lancet said that Yunnan "has shown strong support for implementation and advocacy of harm-reduction strategies that reduce HIV transmission in its many drug users".
March
A great place for hiking, biking and navel gazing, the sleepy town of Dali inched a little bit closer to Kunming with the
completion of the new Kunming-Dali highway. The new road reduced travel time between Kunming and Dali to around four hours – not much longer than the total time required for someone living in downtown Kunming to fly to Dali.
Following in the footsteps of the town of Zhongdian in northwest Yunnan – which was officially renamed 'Shangri-la',
the city of Simao was renamed Pu'er with the hope of cashing in on the boom in interest in pu'er tea. Unfortunately, Pu'er was
hit by a major earthquake a few months later.
April
The Mekong River, which flows out of China via Yunnan,
was drying up in its lower reaches in Southeast Asia. Water levels as low as one meter on the border of Laos and Thailand made river travel or transport all but impossible for much of April. The low levels were attributed to a combination of an intense dry season and the completion of two dams – Manwan and Dachaoshan – on the Lancang River, as the Mekong is known in Yunnan.
Yunfest 2007, perhaps the best documentary festival in China,
was cancelled under a shroud of rumor and confusion. GoKunming hopes to see the festival back in Kunming in 2009.
Kunming's re-emergence as the center of Asia made progress as
India began rebuilding its section of the Stilwell Road and overland transport agreements between China and Vietnam
streamlined the movement of goods and people between Yunnan and Vietnam. Border wars with India in 1962 and Vietnam in 1979 led to long periods of icy relations between the two countries and China. With the return of relative political and economic stability to most of East Asia, Southeast Asia and South Asia, Yunnan appears poised to become a hub for commerce, politics and transport between the three dynamic regions.
May
Kunming hosted China's 7th National Disabled Games, a major test for the city, which is keen to host more international events. In general the games were well-managed and inspiring to disabled and non-disabled attendees alike. One of the more popular events was blind soccer (football) -
check out this video clip to see how they do it.
June
June was both a good and bad month for Kunming's image as the
Kunming Fair totaled US$150 million in completed deals and Kunming was named China's '
Solar City' as well as one of China's '
rising urban stars'. Slightly less positive, nearby Dianchi Lake made an appearance in domestic and international media as its waters
turned bright green from an algae outbreak.
July
Kunming became one of the first Chinese cities with a
'drive-thru' McDonald's. The old town of Lijiang
began charging an 80 yuan entry fee as
UNESCO warned China that some of its World heritage sites in Yunnan were designated for 'examination' due to concerns regarding development and tourism (Lijiang) and damming (Three Parallel Rivers Protected Areas).
Yunnan's rainy season inflicted heavy damage provincewide as dozens of people died and thousands were displaced by heavy rains and flooding.
August
Former Kunming Deputy Mayor Hu Xing was sentenced to life in prison for bribery after being extradited from Singapore to Kunming. Hu, who allegedly took more than 40 million yuan in bribes while in office, was in charge of Kunming's roads and highways for several years, which may partially explain the dismal state of Kunming traffic.
Food prices in Yunnan were rising quickly, causing concern for workers and business owners around the province, and
pu'er tea was leading all luxury goods in China in terms of price growth.
September
Kunming held its first
no-car day in which only buses and taxes were allowed to operate within the city center. The city later became China's first city with regular no-car days - although the no-car day on December 29 was apparently forgotten.
Starbucks announced that it would begin
sourcing coffee beans from Yunnan amid rumors that Starbucks outlets would come to challenge Kunming's homegrown café scene in 2008.
October
China's rock godfather Cui Jian headlined the
Lijiang Snow Mountain Music Festival just weeks before the first Kunming Outdoor Music Festival was held in Anning.
Yunnan announced major changes to its resident registration system, during 2008 it will be seen what impact the changes will have upon rural migrants moving to cities around the province.
November
While
much of northwestern Yunnan was snowed under, Kunming hosted
its first-ever international film festival as well as
China's largest travel expo, and it was announced that Kunming would be the site of
the first war games between the Chinese and Indian armies.
December
Kunming was hit by a
major gasoline shortage which disrupted life for many city residents and companies. GoKunming readers selected their favorite places to eat, drink and play in Kunming in the
Best of Kunming 2007 awards.
And as a nice year-end gesture, the Chinese government officially scrapped its plans to dam Tiger Leaping Gorge… more about that next year.
The GoKunming team thanks everyone who visited the site in 2007 and wishes all of its readers a happy, healthy and bountiful 2008.
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