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Rotterdam: Architecture highlight and museum of migration  – DW – 05/24/2025

Rotterdam: Architecture highlight and museum of migration – DW – 05/24/2025

DW24-05-2025

A spectacular new museum building, the Fenix, has just opened in Rotterdam. The Fenix Warehouse, which was the world's largest when it opened in 1923, has been converted into a museum of migration by the Chinese MAD Architects studio. The highlight is a gigantic, gleaming spiral staircase on the roof, complete with a viewing platform. Inside, the focus is on migration. This fittingly reflects the museum's location in Rotterdam's port, from where millions of people once set sail for new lives in new places. It was also where many people from other parts of the world arrived in Europe for the first time. Our reporter Lucia Schulten (link) reports from the Netherlands.

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Rotterdam: Architecture highlight and museum of migration  – DW – 05/24/2025
Rotterdam: Architecture highlight and museum of migration  – DW – 05/24/2025

DW

time24-05-2025

  • DW

Rotterdam: Architecture highlight and museum of migration – DW – 05/24/2025

A spectacular new museum building, the Fenix, has just opened in Rotterdam. The Fenix Warehouse, which was the world's largest when it opened in 1923, has been converted into a museum of migration by the Chinese MAD Architects studio. The highlight is a gigantic, gleaming spiral staircase on the roof, complete with a viewing platform. Inside, the focus is on migration. This fittingly reflects the museum's location in Rotterdam's port, from where millions of people once set sail for new lives in new places. It was also where many people from other parts of the world arrived in Europe for the first time. Our reporter Lucia Schulten (link) reports from the Netherlands.

Tobacco Town Thrives As China Struggles To Kick The Habit
Tobacco Town Thrives As China Struggles To Kick The Habit

Int'l Business Times

time07-05-2025

  • Int'l Business Times

Tobacco Town Thrives As China Struggles To Kick The Habit

Visitors mill around a bright red hilltop pagoda in southwestern China, gazing down at a sprawling cigarette factory whose deadly output has put an otherwise unremarkable city on the map. China is home to a third of the world's smokers and tobacco-related diseases are a major cause of death in the country -- a trend likely to worsen as its population rapidly ages. Beijing hopes to dramatically reduce that by the end of the decade, but even the government machine is struggling to achieve that as it clashes with a powerful state tobacco monopoly and local economies reliant on the crop. That contradiction smoulders in Yuxi, Yunnan province, whose nascent tourism businesses and local farmers thrive on its history of cigarette production. A mostly agricultural area where incomes lag behind the national average, the city has firmly hitched its fortunes to tobacco, which accounted for almost a third of its gross domestic product in the first quarter of last year, according to official figures. That income helps "pay for our children's schooling or to build a house", farmer Li told AFP as her husband ploughed furrows into a hilltop field. She said her family can earn up to 60,000 yuan ($8,300) annually from the tobacco harvest, far exceeding other crops with more variable prices. Tobacco also brings tourists to Yuxi -- local firm Hongta, or "red tower", is one of China's most prominent cigarette brands. Named for a centuries-old pagoda painted scarlet after the country's communist takeover, it is owned by state-run monopoly the China National Tobacco Corporation and offers visitors factory tours, a museum and a tobacco-themed cultural park. "Yuxi's cigarettes are quite famous, so we've always wanted to come and have a look," said a tourist surnamed Dong from the northeastern city of Dalian. Foreign cigarettes, he claimed, "don't put the same demand on quality". China is the world's largest producer and consumer of tobacco and has more than 300 million smokers, according to the World Health Organization. As trains pull into stations across China, passengers frequently jump off for a quick cigarette on the platform before continuing their journey. Indoor smoking bans are loosely enforced and the stench of tobacco smoke is commonplace, from public toilets to taxis and late-night eateries. Beijing says it aims to reduce the number of smokers from around a quarter of the population to a fifth by 2030. Progress has been slow. The number of smokers fell just 14 percent between 2010 and 2022, well below the average for richer nations, a study by a Chinese think tank found last year. Policymakers must also navigate the interests of China Tobacco, which controls virtually all of the domestic production, processing and distribution. The company has a chokehold on a domestic tobacco sector that last year generated a record 1.6 trillion yuan ($220 billion) in taxes and profits. The State Tobacco Monopoly Administration, responsible for industry oversight, has been criticised by researchers for being essentially the same organisation under a different name. This means the country's largest cigarette manufacturer is its own regulator, in what has been decried by public health advocates as a clear conflict of interest and an impediment to effective tobacco controls. The firm touts its contribution to the economy, but researchers into China's tobacco market argue that the revenue does not outweigh the health costs. A recent study found that the annual economic cost of cigarette smoking in China -- estimated at 2.43 trillion yuan in 2020 -- was approximately 1.6 times greater than the gains from the industry. "Stronger tobacco control policies can reduce smoking prevalence without severely harming government revenue," Qinghua Nian at the Institute for Global Tobacco Control at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health told AFP. Efforts to curb cigarette consumption at home have coincided with an overseas push from Hongta and other tobacco brands. The country exported more than $9 billion in tobacco and tobacco products in 2023, up from less than $1.5 billion five years prior, according to the United Nations. Beneath Yuxi's looming red pagoda, tourist Dong said smoking was slowly losing its appeal among younger generations. "As society develops, some things are progressing and it's better to smoke less," he said. "My children and grandchildren don't smoke at all." But nearby, a worker surnamed Long watching over tobacco seedlings in a greenhouse at a plant nursery said the crop was still a good way to earn a living. "Tobacco used to be a couple of yuan per pound, but now it's a couple of dozen yuan," the 54-year-old said. "This critical industry is still a good source of income for farmers." China is home to a third of the world's smokers and tobacco-related diseases are a major cause of death in the country AFP Visitors pose for photos in front of the Hongta, or red pagoda, outside the Tobacco Cultural Center in China's Yuxi AFP Students walk past a mural of workers at a cigarette factory in Yuxi, China AFP

Traditional Culture, Fancy Dress Meet At Hong Kong's Raucous Bun Festival
Traditional Culture, Fancy Dress Meet At Hong Kong's Raucous Bun Festival

Int'l Business Times

time05-05-2025

  • Int'l Business Times

Traditional Culture, Fancy Dress Meet At Hong Kong's Raucous Bun Festival

Kids dressed as real and fantasy heroes, drummers pounding a beat and sweet treats offered to powerful gods -- thousands of visitors poured onto a small island in Hong Kong for its annual Bun Festival on Monday. Held on the Chinese city's outlying Cheung Chau, the raucous five-day festival transforms the usually quiet fishing community into an explosion of colour and noise that blends Cantonese traditions with modern culture and draws locals and tourists alike. Monday's three-hour parade -- known as "Piu Sik", meaning floating colours -- traditionally saw locals march through town with statues of local gods. These days, local children dress up as both real and imaginary figures, including Olympic fencing champion Cheung Ka Long, Ne Zha from a recent Chinese blockbuster animation, and the legendary Monkey King, Sun Wukong. The five-day Bun Festival is said to date back to the 1800s, when fisherfolk drove away pirates and the plague by parading a statue of Taoist sea deity Pak Tai. "It's my first time to visit the island and this showed me a new Hong Kong, completely different from downtown," Cedric Linet, a 49-year-old French banker, told AFP. The buns represent good fortune, holding sweet bean paste in a crumbly pastry marked with Chinese characters for "peace" and "safety". Crowds queued all day to get hold of the buns, used to make offerings to traditional deities and sacrifices to the souls of the dead. The climax of the festival comes at midnight, when contestants climb a 14-metre high tower covered in buns -- hoping to be crowned "King of Kings" or "Queen of Queens". Among those gathered were tourists from Communist Party-ruled mainland China, keen to get a glimpse of traditional Chinese culture not often seen back home. Chinese students studying in Hong Kong, Gao Yidan and Cheng Qi, said they learnt about the festival on Xiaohongshu, an app similar to Instagram. "The atmosphere of traditional culture is very strong here," Gao told AFP. Another visitor from China's southwestern Sichuan province said she appreciated Hong Kong's celebrations of Buddha's birthday, which fell on Monday. "We love the crowded atmosphere here, even though today's very hot," Huang Dan, a 42-year-old housewife, told AFP. A child participates in the "Piu Sik" parade on the island of Cheung Chau during its annual Bun festival in Hong Kong AFP Tourists from Communist Party-ruled mainland China visited Hong Kong to experience traditional Chinese culture not often seen back home AFP

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