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Forums > Living in Kunming > Paying traffic tickets / accumulating points

I think the overhead cameras are simply "counting vehicles" to determine the number of vehicles traveling along a given stretch of road. Cameras located in the median strip are speed (radar) cameras.

I have no idea about the points system but I can't imagine it would be something you should worry about - or then again maybe you should. I think if you get any fines, pay them within the time limit and generally you should be fine.

I think tickets can take a while to appear in their system. After a trip to Sipsongbanna (Jinghong and Mengla) last year I received 4 speeding fines in 3 days and it took them 2 months to be sent out. I paid all the fines relatively soon after receiving notice of them.

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Forums > Living in Kunming > New visa/immigration regulations July 1, 2013

@yong fang, the criminal records check for many countries can be applied for online, payment made by credit card and the authorities may be able to mail you the documents directly to you or to your nearest consulate/embassy. No need to involve anyone else and can be done from the convenience of your own home. If mailed to your consulate (provided this service is allowed by your country) then you might have to travel to Beijing, Shanghai etc. to pick it up but most likely it could be sent to a local address.

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Forums > Living in Kunming > New visa/immigration regulations July 1, 2013

@Geezer, most countries can send you criminal records checks after making an online request. Even the Chinese authorities, including the alien employment office I was dealing with knows this and they assumed mine would be arriving in the mail, which it is - besides, how could I be allowed to leave the country on a single entry Z visa to get a criminal record check before my residence permit has even been processed? Also, criminal records in most countries are recorded on national registers and are handled by the national government, not individual states like in the states. So therefore you would really need to find a better way of obtaining these records - perhaps you should go online and contact the FBI to see if they can help you through their website. Anyway, I have no idea how these things are handled in the USA - it's not my problem but I do hope you find a reasonable way to meet the requirements the Chinese government requires.

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Salvadors Support It

@Long-dragon, Salvador's is not unsafe. Therefore your friends perceptions are wrong. If anything happens in China, the riot police are quick to respond and ensure that things don't go out of hand. There is no reason to fear going to Salvador's once they reopen, which will apparently be today.

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Last night's scuffle on Wenhua Xiang

I forgot to add - there is one legitimate place where both Chinese people and foreigners can go to practice English for free, which I have no problem with and it's a great place to meet new people. I am talking about English corners. People go there for the right reasons and with the right expectations. I also enjoy attending them, especially the main one in Kunming, which takes place every Thursday evening from 7pm on the shores of the Green Lake.

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Geogramatt, eventually it may cross into Myanmar. However, given how it will only be finished as far as Ruili in 2022, there's still many years before it ever makes it into Myanmar. Hopefully that will be enough time for Myanmar to end it's wars in the northern part of the country but that's wishful thinking at this point. After all, the Kachin Independence Army or KIA broke a 17-year ceasefire back around 2011 and fighting has actually increased in the meantime.

Myanmar didn't only open up for tourism in 2011. It has been open for years just that not many westerners went prior to 2011, even though there was little stopping them. The only thing you couldn't do prior to 2013 was travel overland unless you had a permit. I first went to Myanmar on a day trip to Tachilek in 2001 and flew into Yangon in 2004 and 2005. It was just as easy to get a visa back then as it is today, except that there were more restricted areas than there are now. Also, getting to Mu-se on the Chinese border seems to be OK. I went there in February. The adjacent areas where the Kokang conflict erupted are of course out of bounds. Chinese citizens generally aren't allowed to travel across to the Burmese side overland either, except to Mu-se for up to 7 days but that isn't always allowed either. Burmese who travel to China illegally risk arrest and those that travel overland from Mu-se can only travel to Ruili. To enter China properly and travel wherever they want, they either need a permit or must fly in, just like other foreigners.

To further add to Tom69's comments, I have recently heard that the go-ahead has been given for a railway from Kunming to near the Lao border, but as for continuing into Laos and beyond to Thailand, this is uncertain at the moment. In any case, overly optimistic Chinese journalism should be dismissed as reliable news sources as they have many times mentioned things that have yet to materialize.

Anyway, to get back on track a little bit can anyone tell me if there are now more services out of Mengzi (and in the reverse direction) than the one lone train? If coming from Vietnam it would be impossible to make the 9.03am train, since a bus journey would take 2 hours and then you would need to consider that the border only opens at 8am Chinese time I think, so only by staying in Hekou itself could you make it to Mengzi (possibly) if you departed Hekou around 6am by the time the train departs.

@Peter99, as you say, it's up to the individual countries concerned, not China, to allow entry to Myanmar/Vietnam overland from China. If a bomb attack occurs in Myanmar near the Chinese border (where I've been to just like you have been), that's something that should concern China but isn't enough to prevent the Chinese authorities from allowing foreigners to cross as foreign citizens are not of concern to China when they exit Chinese territory. Having said that I keep reading that the official opening of the Ruili-Muse crossing to passport and visa holders of all nationalities is scheduled to proceed as planned this year, but an exact date is not yet known. 4 border crossings with Thailand opened last August and I have travelled overland into the interior of Myanmar to/from Thailand 3 times since that time.

As others have said, a number of these crossings have always been open so I don't know what the authorities mean about being recently "re-opened". The Lao Cai-Hekou crossing is open to all who have valid documents to cross between China and Vietnam there (some nationalities don't need a visa to enter Vietnam and as such can just cross through without a visa). Only cars generally can't cross the border here, one must be a pedestrian to cross and there are no cross border bus services either.

@LaoQingwa and laoshi19, I just arrived back in Kunming today. Today the weather was partly cloudy with plenty of sunshine and comfortably warm temperatures. I was told the past 2 days have been similar. It seems that the weather forecast is not very accurate - my hunch is on partly cloudy skies, with some possibility of overcast skies and light rain being more likely over the next few days but probably nothing like Kunming experienced last week (well, at least, hopefully not).

There is no evidence left of the flooding which affected Kunming mainly last Friday. I too was worried as evidenced by my earlier post, but it seems that even the most low lying areas around Beijing Lu, which were most flooded and the rest of downtown are back to normal - I drove through there from the airport today and everything is business as usual.

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