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 2008 in Kunming and Yunnan.
January
The year began with the Yunnan government
shelving its plans to dam Tiger Leaping Gorge, while not necessarily sparing the Jinsha River – the headwaters of the Yangtze – from several new hydropower projects. Kunming
banned the use of car horns and the city seemed to be getting a little less horn-heavy for about two weeks. A few days later the city – which is adding an average of
560 automobiles per day to its streets – issued its 900,000th license plate.
Pretty much all of southern China except for Kunming was at the mercy of a winter storm that paralyzed domestic travel and left thousands of travelers stranded in Kunming. Shangri-la (Zhongdian)
was hit by heavy snowfalls that destroyed much of the area's livestock and crops plus telecommunications and power networks.
February
Yunnan was hit by a rash of
sulfuric acid spills in late January and mid-February with more than 70 tons of the toxic chemical spilling near rivers and most likely entering local water supplies.
Kunming Municipal Party Secretary Qiu He was making waves a few months into his new post, ordering local newspapers to publish the
names, titles, responsibilities and phone numbers of local officials in early February and
firing a Chenggong investment official who fell asleep during a meeting.
Hong Kong director Stanley Tong signed an agreement with Dianchi National Tourist Resort to build a 3 billion yuan (US$418 million) television and film base that would become '
China's Hollywood'.
Yunnan's first international highway opened, connecting it with Vietnam's Lao Cai province.
March
Construction of the 'turtleback' flyover at Xiao Ximen commenced, throwing Kunming traffic into chaos. Work on the flyover – which is mockingly referred to as 'the newly added slope' (
新加坡), or 'Singapore' in Chinese - was finished four months later.
Tens of thousands of bottles of
counterfeit beer were found in Kunming's Majie area. The beers are expected to be the tip of the iceberg in terms of the amount of fake booze being sold around the city.
China played Australia's Socceroos in a World Cup qualifying match in Kunming that ended in a 0:0 draw. The match looked like a sure victory for China when it was awarded a late penalty kick, only for kicker Shao Jiayi to kick a slow roller into Oz goalie Mark Schwarzer's waiting hands. Team China went on to fail to qualify for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.
April
The old standby F visa option
disappeared for foreigners living in China as visa restrictions tightened in the runup to the Beijing Olympics, while protestors
vented nationalist anger at Kunming's Carrefour outlets.
May
The International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences World Congress, originally scheduled to be held in Kunming in July,
was canceled - apparently due to Olympic-related security concerns.
On May 12, an earthquake measuring 8.0 in magnitude centered in Wenchuan
devastated much of Sichuan province and killed at least 69,000 people. Yunnan did what it could to help its neighbor to the north by
treating victims from the disaster zone, taking children into its schools and
raising money for the relief effort.
The Yunnan white-handed gibbon was
declared extinct.
June
Free plastic bags at retail outlets were
banned in China.
The Olympic torch
passed through Kunming. The torch was originally scheduled to pass through areas including Beijing Lu, Wenlin Jie and Yuantong Jie, but its route was altered at the last minute, keeping it out of the view of most Kunming residents. The torch
continued through Yunnan to the cities of Lijiang and Shangri-la before heading to earthquake-battered Sichuan.
The third hydropower station on the Lancang River – as the upper reaches of the Mekong River in Yunnan are known –
went online.
July
Yunnan announced a
total ban on the production, sale and use of plastic bags across the province, beginning on January 1, 2009.
Jackie Chan announced that he would open a '
Jackie Chan Peace Garden' outside Kunming in the city of Anning. Meanwhile, Kunming was in the middle of
planting 800,000 trees throughout the city.
Two people were killed and 14 injured in
double bus bombings that took place on public buses on Renmin Xi Lu. A militant Islamic group
took credit for the bombings, a claim which was refuted by local police. The bombings were not declared solved until the suspected bomber blew himself up while trying to plant a bomb in Salvador's Coffee House almost half a year later.
August
After an unprecedented buildup,
China hosted the 2008 Olympics in Beijing and several other cities, winning 51 gold medals, more than second-place US (36) and third-place Russian Federation (23).
Kunming unveiled its
12-year development plan, detailing how the city intends to handle a major influx in residents and an increasingly important role in regional trade and transport.
September
It was announced that Yangzonghai Lake, one of the largest lakes in Yunnan, was suffering from
heavy arsenic pollution, with the bulk of the blame placed upon Yunnan Chengjiang Jinye Industrial and Trade Company, which allegedly found it easier to pay the relatively low fines for not treating wastewater than to purchase and install the equipment necessary for cleaning wastewater. Shortly afterward, Yunnan established a
special court for handling crimes against the environment.
October
A government study of HIV/AIDS infections in Yunnan revealed that that
women and gay men had emerged as the fastest-growing demographics for new infections, replacing intravenous drug users. It was also noted that new infections were moving away from ethnic minorities in rural areas to Han Chinese in urban centers throughout the province.
A group of fossilized crustaceans from 525 million years ago found near Chengjiang were said to display
the first example of collective behavior among animals.
Citing difficulties with the local business environment, Hong Kong-listed property giant Shui On Land
pulled out of its Yunnan development projects.
November
Starbucks announced that it would market Yunnan coffee via its hundreds of mainland outlets.
Kunming Airlines announced that it would launch operations in January 2009, the first step in its quest to become a dominant regional airline.
A delegation of Yunnan officials and businesspeople visiting India
asked the Indian government to establish a consulate in Kunming to facilitate the visa application process for Yunnan residents wishing to take advantage of the direct flights between Kunming and the eastern Indian city of Kolkata.
The famed Shaolin Temple announced that it would
take over management of four Kunming temples for 20 years, during which time it would receive all of the temples' revenue. Shaolin Temple's abbot was accused of being a 'CEO monk'.
December
A man stabbed three women and took a nurse hostage at the Carrefour on Longquan Lu, before being lured to a door where some rice noodles had been placed for him and getting
shot in the head by a police sniper, ending the five-hour standoff.
Ground was broken on the '
South Asian Gate', a 72-story, 316-meter tall building that will be completed in four to five years and will be the tallest man-made structure in Yunnan province. It is expected to serve as a hub for business between China, Southeast Asia and South Asia.
A bomb exploded in popular foreign-owned cafe and restaurant Salvador's Coffee House, killing the man who was wearing a backpack with an ammonium nitrate bomb in it near the rear bathroom. Nobody else was hurt. Police concluded that the man, 30-year-old Li Yan of Xuanwei, had also been behind the unsolved bombing of two buses in Kunming in July.
Direct flights opened between Kunming and Taipei.
The GoKunming team thanks everyone who visited the site in 2008 and wishes all of its readers a happy, healthy and prosperous 2009.
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Yunnan white-handed gibbon
Following the chilling announcement by the World Wildlife Fund that
world animal populations have dropped by roughly 25 percent since 1970, another animal native to China has been declared extinct.
A research team of anthropologists from Zurich University working in conjunction with the Kunming Institute of Zoology
declared the Yunnan white-handed gibbon to be extinct. The ape was last seen in 1988 in Yunnan's Nangunhe Nature Reserve. Its loud, melodious calls were last heard by humans in 1992.
The Yunnan white-handed gibbon, aka
Hylobates lar, is the most notable Chinese animal to go extinct since the Yangtze River's baiji dolphin, which was declared extinct by experts last year, only to have a
Baiji dolphin spotted in the river shortly thereafter.
"This loss is particularly tragic", said anthropologist Thomas Geissmann, "because the extinct Chinese population was described as a distinct subspecies, the so-called Yunnan white-handed gibbon." Geissmann now hopes that the subspecies may have survived in neighbouring Myanmar, but so far, he has no evidence for this.
The loss of the Yunnan white-handed gibbon is being viewed by experts as a potential harbinger of doom for other Chinese apes. China is home to a unique diversity of apes, but most of them are currently endangered. China's native ape populations are disappearing at an alarming rate, primarily due to forest destruction, fragmentation and deterioration – as well as hunting.
Chinese ape species that are currently endangered include the white-cheeked crested gibbon (Nomascus leucogenys), which has not been sighted in China since the 1980s. The Cao-Vit crested gibbon (N nasutus) exists in Guangxi, China and Cao Bang, Vietnam and is down to less than 50 individuals. The Hainan crested gibbon (N hainanus) of Hainan province has less than 20 individuals.
"We hope that our research results will alarm the Chinese government as well as international conservation agencies and encourage them to initiate immediate efforts to save China's last surviving apes", says Geissmann.
Related article:
Yunnan's Buddhist temples preventing fish extinction