A Chinese worker hammers together a stool for display ahead of Wednesday's grand opening of the newly completed IKEA Siyuanqiao store in Beijing, China, Monday, April 10, 2006. IKEA on Monday unveiled its new outlet in Beijing that will be its biggest in Asia - a seven-story, US$100 million behemoth that the Swedish furniture maker hopes will put it ahead in China's thriving but crowded market. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
Protesters gather around burning debris in the streets of Lhasa, Tibet, Friday March 14, 2008. Protests led by Buddhist monks against Chinese rule in Tibet turned violent Friday, with shops and vehicles torched and gunshots echoing through the streets of the ancient capital, Lhasa. (AP Photo)
A man walks past as paramilitary police march in a street in Zhongdian, in an area known as Shangri-La, in China's southwest Yunnan province Friday March 21, 2008. Thousands of troops converged on foot, in trucks and helicopters in Tibetan areas of western China on Friday as the government stepped up its manhunt for protesters in last weeks anti-government riots in Tibet's capital. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)
Rescue workers search collapsed buildings in Beichuan, China's southwest Sichuan province, Sunday May 18, 2008. China announced three days of national mourning for earthquake victims and ordered a suspension of the Olympic torch relay, as the search for survivors of the disaster grew bleak Sunday. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)
In this photo distributed by the official Xinhua news agency, rescuers try to save wounded students at Juyuan Middle School in Juyuan Township of Dujiangyan City, about 100 kilometers from the epicenter in Wenchuan county of southwest China's Sichuan province, on Monday May 12, 2008. Nearly 900 students here were feared buried when a high school building collapsed in the earthquake, Xinhua said. (AP Photo/Xinhua, Chen Xie)
In this photo distributed by the official Chinese news agency, people try to find their property among the debris of collapsed buildings in Dujiangyan, in southwest China's Sichuan Province, on Monday May 12, 2008. A major earthquake measuring 7.8 on the Richter scale jolted Wenchuan County of Sichuan Province on Monday, leading to the collapse of many buildings in the neighbouring city of Dujiangyan, Xinhua said. (AP Photo/Xinhua, Chen Xie)
Rescue workers pull out a young girl from under the rubble of a collapsed school in Juyuan, southwestern China's Sichuan province, Tuesday, May 13, 2008. The death toll from a powerful earthquake in China that toppled buildings, schools and chemical plants climbed Tuesday to about 10,000, while untold numbers remained trapped after the country's worst quake in three decades. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
The hands of dead students are seen among the rubble of a collapsed school in Dujiangyan, a close city to the epicenter of the earthquake, in southwest China's Sichuan province Tuesday May 13, 2008. The death toll from a powerful earthquake in China that toppled buildings, schools and chemical plants climbed Tuesday to about 10,000, while untold numbers remained trapped after the country's worst quake in three decades. (AP Photo) ** CHINA OUT **
Rescue workers labor to pull a pregnant woman from a portion of a building where the entire second storey has collapsed trapping the woman and others in Dujiangyan, southwestern China's Sichuan province, Wednesday, May 14, 2008. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
Rescue workers pull out 8-month pregnant Zhang Xiaoyan, 34, alive from an apartment that partially collapsed following Monday's powerful 7.9 magnitude earthquake in Dujiangyan, southwestern China's Sichuan province, Wednesday, May 14, 2008. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
Relatives mourn for the dead students at the collapsed Xiang'e Middle School in the earthquake-affected Dujiangyan of southwest China's Sichuan province Wednesday, May 14, 2008. Soldiers have rushed to shore up a dam cracked by this week's powerful earthquake, and rescuers came by helicopter and ship into the isolated epicenter but still were forced to dig for survivors with their bare hands. (AP Photo/Color China Photo)**CHINA OUT**
In this photo provided by Xinhua news agency, rescuers search for survivors in the earthquake-hit region of Beichuan County, about 160 kilometers northeast of the epicenter in southwest China's Sichuan Province, Tuesday May 13, 2008. Rescue workers sifted through tangled debris of toppled schools and homes Tuesday for thousands of victims buried or missing after China's worst earthquake in three decades, as the death toll soared to more than 12,000 people in the hardest-hit province alone. (AP Photo / Li Gang, Xinhua)
In this photo distributed by the official Chinese news agency, people try to find their property among the debris of collapsed buildings in Dujiangyan, in southwest China's Sichuan Province, on Monday May 12, 2008. A major earthquake measuring 7.8 on the Richter scale jolted Wenchuan County of Sichuan Province on Monday, leading to the collapse of many buildings in the neighbouring city of Dujiangyan, Xinhua said. (AP Photo/Xinhua, Chen Xie)
**FILE** In this July 21, 2005 file photo, a Delta Airlines jet parks at Sea-Tac International Airport in Seattle. Delta Air Lines Inc., announced Friday, June 20, 2008, starting this fall will cut the number of flights it offers between the U.S. and China _ a route it fought to get for years. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, file)
Performers wait to go on stage during a cultural and sports show to celebrate the upcoming Beijing Olympic Games, in Beijing's Tiananmen Square Friday Aug 1, 2008. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)
In this photo distributed by the official Chinese news agency, Xinhua, the Shenzhou 7 manned space craft launches from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China's Gansu province on Thursday Sept. 25, 2008. China launched the space craft that will put a crew of three men into space, including one who will make the country's first spacewalk (AP Photo/Xinhua, Li Gang)
Villagers look through buildings damaged by a rain-triggered mud slide at Xiangfen County in Linfen of north China's Shanxi province Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2008. Rescuers shoveled and hammered at debris Wednesday searching for survivors buried under sludge, mud and mining waste in northern China after a landslide that killed at least 128 people, but hopes of finding anybody alive were fading. (AP Photo/Color China Photo) ** CHINA OUT **
Chinese women use tape to perfectly line up teacups for Chinese leaders in Beijing's Great Hall of the People before the opening session of China's parliament, the National People's Congress, Monday March 5, 2007. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)
** ADVANCE FOR SUNDAY, JAN. 6 ** Angela Im at right looks over as her husband, William T. Gillespie , left talks about her treatment to repair damage to her brain stem caused initially by lupus at the Tiantan Puhua Hospital in Beijing, China, Thursday, May 24, 2007. Tiantan Puhua, a joint venture between Asia's largest neurological hospital and American Pacific Medical Group, specializes in using stem cells injections to treat diseases ranging from stroke and spinal cord injuries to cerebral palsy and ataxia. Since opening its treatment to foreigners last year, the hospital has been attracting increasing interest from overseas patients, the latest breed of medical tourists.(AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
In this photo released by China's official Xinhua news agency, a saleswoman shows off a pair of souvenir badges named "Commemorative Coin for Olympic Regatta" at a store in Beijing on Friday January 4, 2008. The China Gold Coin Inc. issued the commemorative coins for Olympic Regatta recently, including three types of gold coins and two types of silver coins, Xinhua said. (AP Photo/Xinhua, Zhao Jing)
A researcher holds up two piglets born from a cloned pig under ultraviolet light to show the fluorescent green glow from their snout, trotters, and tongue at the Northeast Agricultural University in Harbin, northeastern China' Heilongjiang province, Monday, Jan 7, 2008. The cloned pig whose genes were altered to make it glow fluorescent green has passed on the trait to its young, a development that could lead to the future breeding of pigs for human transplant organs, the university reported. (AP Photo) ** CHINA OUT **
City workers clean up snow from a street Thursday Jan. 31, 2008, in Nanjing, China. Two weeks of near continuous snow and ice storms have paralyzed much of central and eastern China, stopping traffic, wrecking crops and killing dozens in road accidents and collapsed buildings. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)
Tibetan monks stand on the road above the Dongzhuling Monastery in the mountains about 50 kilometers (31 miles) east of the border with Tibet, in southwestern China's Yunnan province, Sunday, March 23, 2008. Tibetan areas in Yunnan appear to be quiet since anti-government protests broke out in Tibet earlier this month, but China has sent thousands of paramilitary troops to the Tibetan area in Yunnan as an apparent precaution. Originally built in 1667, the monastery was later destroyed after China's communist takeover, then rebuilt in its new location. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)
A Uighur man and woman are seen through the torn portion of an official propaganda banner, reading in Chinese: "Motherland and people appreciate you" in Hotan, northwest China's Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, Saturday, April 5, 2008. While police presence is light one week after a protest in this Silk Road oasis, animosity between Muslims and Chinese runs deep. Aside from continuing unrest in Tibet, China faces simmering resentment in its traditionally Muslim Central Asian frontier. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)
Jin Jing, a Chinese Paralympic fencer, who was one of the Paris torchbearers, answers questions from journalists Thursday, April 17, 2008 in Shanghai, China. Jin, who became a national hero for defending the Olympic torch in Paris from a pro-Tibet protester, was invited Monday, April 21, 2008, by French President Nicolas Sarkozy to visit France again. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)
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