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Two Canadians On Trial In China For Stealing Military Secrets

Posted: 08/5/2014 10:31 am

kevin garrattTwo Canadians are currently on trial in China for stealing military secrets and national defense research from the country. Kevin Garratt and Julia Dawn Garratt are currently being tried by a Chinese court overseen by the National Defense Department, reports the China Daily. Both have been called ”Canadian spies”.

Kevin Garratt, 53, and his wife Julia Dawn are originally from Vancouver. They first came to China in 1984 when they taught English in the country’s south before opening a coffee shop called Peter’s Coffee House in Dandong, Liaoning Province in 2008. As Dandong is near the North Korean border, the pair helped arrange tours for people traveling along the Yalu River.

According to Canada’s national newspaper, the Garratts are now missing, and all attempts to contact them at their coffee shop have failed.

The arrests come at a critical time when accusations of spying are flying between the two countries. Just last week, the Canadian Treasury Board said the Canadian National Research Council’s computer infrastructure was hacked into by a “Chinese state-sponsored actor”.

Related:

Photo: The Globe and Mail

Haohao

International Beverage Expo wraps up in Shenzhen with a focus on wine

Posted: 09/1/2013 2:28 pm

The International Beverage Exposition and Competition (IBEC) 2013 was held over the weekend at the Shenzhen Convention and Exhibition Center in Futian District.

The IBEC is “quickly becoming one of Asia’s premier beverage events,” according to the official website. The event showcased wines, spirits, beers, and even non-alcoholic beverages such as coffee from international producers, importers and distributors. The website lists Carrefour and Wal-Mart among the large retailers taking part in the forum.

“Wine consumption in China is clearly on the rise, with the younger generation leading the way with increased knowledge and sophistication. Cocktails and spirits are becoming more popular drinks of choice. Shenzhen is an ideal location for the IBEC due to the age demographic and fast-paced growth of the city,” IBEC says on its website.

IBEC is certainly correct when it says wine consumption in China is on the rise. It is already the world’s largest market for fine wine, and locations such as Yinchuan City are being hailed by many as China’s future wine capital.

However, President Xi Jinping’s crackdown on extravagance among officials may be having unintentional consequences for the country’s wine industry, with a recent report by the South China Morning Post on Tuesday claiming that sales in Hong Kong are down, and that “Value of re-exports to the mainland has dropped 27 per cent since [the] president ordered cadres to curb their lavish lifestyle.”

Photo credit: Shenzhen Daily

Haohao

Popular Oz coffee shop opens first outlet in China — in GZ

Posted: 08/15/2011 9:03 am

The Coffee Club opens in Guangzhou

Who knew Australians were such coffee buffs?

The land of koala bears, beaches, and snow white boomers has another export to add to the list: specialty coffees. For those unaware, Australia seems to be one of the few regions of the world which has successfully rebelled against the spreading domination of Starbucks. In fact, back in 2008, Starbucks largely pulled out of the country by closing 61 stores with the exception of a few in major east coast cities. Of course, Starbucks contracted in the United States and Canada at that time, too, but coffee aficionados in Australia aren’t blaming Starbucks’ problems on economics, according to The Australian:

Bean Bar master franchiser Ron Basset yesterday said Starbucks failed because Australians did not take to American-style coffee. “Their coffee is more like a milkshake, we probably have three times the coffee in ours than they do,” Mr Basset said. “We don’t offer vanilla shots or caramel shots because we believe our coffee is good as it is.”

Australasian Specialty Coffee Association representative Brian Raslan, who is one of only two accredited world barista judges in Australia, said Starbucks excelled in making “gimmicky drinks”, but failed to make “proper” coffee. “I think here in Australia we have quite a mature coffee culture and a lot of discerning taste and people understand here what coffee is about,” Mr Raslan said. “Our coffee culture has been Europeanised for a number of years and in America some of the success is because they had all of the lounges and you could lounge around.”

There are a few local coffee chains in Australia, and one that takes credit for Starbucks’ woes, the Coffee Club, has now decided to take its self-proclaimed superior coffee to the world’s largest tea-drinking market: China.

The Coffee Club has just opened in Guangzhou (address details here) in what the company hopes is the first of many outlets in the country. The Coffee Club website has a feature on the Guangzhou opening, and why the company decided to show up on China’s shores:

John Lazarou, Director of The Coffee Club, said now is the perfect time for the business to enter China, with a strong coffee culture growing in the country despite most Chinese traditionally drinking tea.

“With over 1.3 billion people, a growing middle class and general elevation of living standards, many tea drinkers are starting to switch to coffee to feel more cultured,” Mr Lazarou said.

“Coffee drinking is seen by Chinese as a sign of western sophistication and therefore a luxurious commodity — with aspirant young professionals seeking it as part of a modern lifestyle.

The place offers the usual specialty coffees, sandwiches, salads, and western-style breakfasts. Check it out, and let us know what you think.

Haohao
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