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Saturday, February 6, 2010

An Imperfect World


Boy in chain

I'm not happy act this way

And I strong enough

Life is hurt sometimes

Food of Love




Cute and sweet

Photo of Happy Family

Nilai Kasih Sayang.
Bimbang anak kedua diculik maka kasihnya ayah kepada anaknya sehingga sanggup merantai anak sendiri demi keselamatan anak kecil itu semasa beliau menjalankan tugasan harian sebagai Penarik Beca disekitar bandaraya Beijing. Atas dasar kemiskinan dan kemampuan maka beliau terpaksa merantai anaknya kerana kedua-dua mereka sibuk berkerja bagi menyara kehidupan. Mereka telah kehilangan anak sulung (perempuan) baru-baru ini kerana diculik dan tidak mahu kejadian berulang kembali maka terpaksa merantai anak kecil itu. Itulah yang nilai kasih sayang yang tak ternilai. Ia tampak kasar diluaran namun halus dari dalaman - BBYDKM

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A two-year-old chinese boy is chained to a lamp post outside Huaguan shopping mall in Beijing while his father Chen Chuanliu works nearby. Chuanliu, a pedicab driver who says he is unable to afford to pay for childcare, chains his son up to prevent him from being abducted. It was a picture that shocked viewers around the world: a Chinese toddler chained to a post outside a shopping centre in the freezing Beijing winter. However, behind the image of two-year-old Jingdan lies a tale not of intentional cruelty but, it seems, one of misplaced love and fear: his sister disappeared from the same spot just two weeks ago. "I was afraid I would lose him too," their father, Chen Chuanliu.

Four-year-old Jinghong has not been seen since 22 January, when Chen left her playing with friends while he worked. Although Beijing is generally regarded as safe, he, like nearby residents, believes she has been abducted. Tens of thousands of children go missing each year in China; most are the offspring of impoverished migrant workers like Chen, snatched and then sold on for anywhere between a few hundred and a few thousand pounds. Officials have warned that the problem is on the rise. Boys are often sold to families desperate for an heir; girls can be reared as future brides for rural men. Both sexes are taken for labour or to beg for gangs, say experts. The problem has grown so acute that authorities have launched a campaign to crack down on child trafficking.

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