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Beijing 'pollution is right in your face'

Posted: Monday, July 28, 2008 2:42 PM
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By Adrienne Mong, NBC News Producer

In the countdown to the Beijing Olympics, NBC News' Adrienne Mong spoke with a number of people who know Beijing intimately about how their city has changed and the challenges it faces going forward.

From pollution to the rapid pursuit of progress, below are a series of links where an environmentalist, a businessman, and a Fulbright scholar describe Beijing "In their own words."

Environmental activist
Lo Sze Ping is the Greenpeace Campaign Director in China. A Hong Kong native, he studied and lived in the U.S. for several years before moving to Beijing in 2001.

Lo describes his experience in the Chinese capital, where he says people are aware of environmental issues -- not in the abstract but in the concrete day-to-day sense. He also reminds us that "that China cannot be not part of the picture" when it comes to battling for a cleaner planet."

VIDEO: Greenpeace: 'The acute pollution in China is right in your face.'

Coming home to change
Gong Li is a Beijing native who left his homeland in 1987 after graduating from Tsinghua University (known as China’s MIT) to pursue graduate studies in the U.K. and then a career in the information technology industry in the U.S.

In 2001, he finally returned to a radically changed Chinese capital and told NBC News Producer Adrienne Mong how it took him a couple of years to readjust to being home.

VIDEO: Coming home to Beijing

Rapid transformation
Susan Brownell first came to China in 1985 to study at Beijing University, also known as Beida and described as China’s Harvard. A national level track athlete in the U.S., she joined the track team at Beida and began competing in national college competitions across China.

Brownell is now an anthropologist at the University of Missouri-St. Louis and is back in the Chinese capital on a Fulbright fellowship. She discussed China's transformation in sports and society.

VIDEO: China's transformation

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From our experience through The Tibetan Photo Project, we lecture at colleges and universities. It is easy to understand the nature of China's leadership by knowing the modern history of Tibet and China, and that does not paint a pretty  or hopeful picture.
I went to China just 3 weeks ago and visited many big cities such as Beijing, Shanghai and Suzhou. I did not see pollution as bad as how western media describes. In fact for 4 days (random selected) in Beijing, we had beautiful blue skies and weather throughout.
The New Zealand team's chef de mission, Dave Currie, said the Games village and sporting facilities were all superb. Beijing's air pollution was nothing like the issue it had been built up to be in the international media.

"It's not a pollutant. When you breathe, you don't get a sore throat ... now there's only cars on the road every second day, there must have been 1000 building sites closed down, and they have closed down the worst polluting factories."

from http://msn.nzherald.co.nz/event/story.cfm?c_id=502&objectid=10524878


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