Notorious Dutch “random-shitter” arrested

After a 2 year investigation of the police from Heerlen, the Netherlands, a notorious random-shitter has finally been arrested. This 47-year old Dutch man made a habit of shitting near the local lake instead of the toilet bowl.

The man would have at least done that 50 times. And there would be a large amount of toilet paper scattered around the area.

The motive of the random-shitter is unknown, but probably a psychic problem is the case. The man is also suspected of deflating the tires of the same car multiple times, with a sharp object. And he is also suspected of carving the linen roof of this car to pieces.

bron: www.spitsnieuws.nl [24-12-2009]

Chinese artisanal cheese

For all those Chinese farmers dumping their excess milk, one man offers a solution: turn it into a Dutch specialty cheese.

Marc de Ruiter is slowly increasing China’s dairy intake one Gouda Chinese artisanal cheese wheel at a time. Some call him a madman, producing cheese in a country still recovering from an infamous milk scandal and one’s that’s notoriously lactose intolerant.

Chinese artisanal cheese

But you have to admire his determination. And if it means that fresh artisanal cheeses are finally available here in Shanghai without an exorbitant import price tag, we’re only too happy to join the wagon.

Milky madness

Ruiter’s reasons for starting up his Shanxi-based, Gouda cheese company were simple: “There were no true natural or Chinese artisanal cheeses here.”

In addition, even before last year’s melamine milk scandal, Ruiter says that “small-scale farmers were dumping their milk as there was no good market in China for milk in 2003.”

With significant experience in agriculture, Ruiter understood the best way to help local farmers deal with an oversupply of milk was to produce cheese. Being a Dutchman, his first choice when it came to picking a type of cheese was, naturally, Gouda.

“Gouda is a cheese that ages well over time and doesn’t overpower when used with other ingredients. It’s an affordable substitute for grated parmesan,” he says.

As a table cheese, Gouda pairs well with several varieties of wines, from a bold glass of Shiraz to a lighter, more buttery Chardonnay.

Sustainable cheese

Ruiter understood the best way to help local farmers deal with an oversupply of milk was to produce cheese. Being a Dutchman, his first choice when it came to picking a type of cheese was naturally, Gouda.

Ruiter holds his Chinese artisanal cheese company to strict fair-trade principles, focusing on supporting small-scale farmers and environmental protection.

Yellow Valley uses milk that is free of antibiotics, growth hormones and pesticides. To encourage farmers to stick to better and safer farming practices, they are paid 10-30 percent above the market price.

The company does not call itself organic — an ambiguous term in China — preferring instead to be known as natural. Ruiter adds that the “procedure [to gain organic certification] is too expensive to be worthwhile” — an unfortunate dilemma that most organic-inclined farmers and suppliers find themselves facing today.

Ruiter is proud of the fact that Yellow Valley is “a unique company and may be the only company making artisanal, natural fair trade cheeses in the world.”

Getting your own Chinese artisanal cheese wheel

Ruiter does not foresee a bright future for specialist cheese stalls in China, hence the reason for not owning an outlet. Instead his cheese can be purchased through several different bakeries and select supermarkets.

Yellow Valley produces a variety of flavored Gouda cheeses that includes cumin, onion and garlic, Herb de Provence (thyme, basil, rosemary and tarragon) and spicy Italian. There are also plans to add truffle to the line-up very soon.

However, cheese connoisseurs should not forego the original variety. Made from full cream milk and a secret recipe that has been passed down for many generations, it should satisfy any cheese craving.

Yellow Valley cheese can be purchased in several stores in Shanghai: Bastiaan Bakery & Café (Hongmei Lu/Pudong), Slice and Feidan
bron: www.cnngo.com [11-12-2009]

A nation’s history of discrimination

The now infamous May 1998 riots in which Indonesian Chinese were the target of attacks and killings and their shops and houses looted, while their wives and daughters were subjected to gangrape, were not an isolated incident of ethnic conflict in Indonesian history.

The stories of a small Chinese community in West Kalimantan (also known as West Borneo) show that violence and discrimination against ethnic Chinese Indonesians have evolved throughout the history of modern Indonesia.

This historical evolution is the focus of a book titled Penambang Emas, Petani dan Pedagang di Distrik Tionghoa Kalimantan Barat (Gold Miners, Farmers and Traders in the “Chinese Districts” of West Kalimantan) by Mary Somers Heidhues, a lecturer in the Southeast Asia Department of Cornell University in the United States.

The book records the history of the Chinese community in West Kalimantan since the Dutch colonial era, through the Japanese occupation, into post-Independence Indonesia, the New Order and finally the present day Reform era.

The first Chinese settlers came to West Kalimantan at the request of Panembahan Mempawah and the Sultan of Sambas in early 1740. Malayan nobles invited the Chinese because they had more advanced mining technology than local people. At that time, the local people, the Dayaks and Malayan tribes, were mostly farmers.

In West Kalimantan, the Chinese people organized their workers in groups called kongsi. The members of each kongsi elected their own head and shared the profits from mining activities. Some kongsi united into federations.

There were three principal kongsi: Fosjoen/Thaikong in Monterado (1776-1854), Lanfang in Mandor (1777-1884) and Samtiaokioe, which separated from Fosjoen in either 1819 or 1822 and then fled in 1850 into Sarawak territory with disastrous results for the Brooke regime seven years later.

The office of kongsi had several roles, including as a center of public administration, residence of the chairmen, public hall and religious shrine.

Eventually, the existence of the independent and democratic kongsi became a threat to the local kingdoms and their ally, the Dutch colonial power. In September 1850, the Dutch colonial government began a military campaign to dismiss the kongsi.

This resulted in three kongsi wars (1822-1824, 1850-1854, 1884-1885), with a spillover in the 1857 Chinese uprising in Sarawak (in Malaysian Borneo). The first conflict was an attempt by the new Dutch regime to control the kongsi. The last kongsi, Lanfang, vanished in 1884-1885.

The kongsi wars were not simply an outcome of the Chinese resistance against the Dutch. There were complex ethnic and political alliances. After the demise of the kongsi, depopulation and impoverishment followed.

It was only at the end of the 19th century that Chinese people started to return to West Kalimantan in significant numbers. This time, it was not gold but agriculture that drove them to come. They dominated the trade of forest products (gutta-percha, rattan and lumber).

In the political field, the Dutch colonial government appointed Chinese officers to control the work and become the intermediaries between them and the Chinese settlers. Their tasks were to collect taxes, to organize forced labor and to collect the opium levy.

Burdened by the heavy taxes in 1912 and 1914 the Chinese, along with the Dayaks and Malayans, rebelled against the Dutch .The colonial government blamed the Chinese secret societies and nationalist movement – inspired by the 1911 Chinese revolution – for being behind the rebellion. But a small number of Dutch troops suppressed the rebellion.

During World War II, the Dutch colonial regime fell under Japanese occupation, including West Kalimantan. In early 1943, the Japanese military orchestrated a massacre of the locals. They accused the former West Kalimantan governor of collaborating with a multi-ethnic rebellion to fight against the Japanese colonial power.

Thousands of people, including the local sultan, nobles, ex-Dutch officers, journalists, doctors and Chinese businessmen, were killed. This incident was remembered as the Pontianak Affair; to commemorate it, the Indonesian government built a memorial monument at the scene in 1970.

After Indonesia gained independence, the Chinese community came under further pressure. Beginning in the 1950s, a set of regulations destabilized the local economy and cultural institutions of the Chinese in West Kalimantan as Jakarta extended its authority throughout the region.

The government of Indonesia issued a regulation in 1959 that limited various economic activities by non-citizens. As a consequence, thousands of Chinese people fled back to their motherland and overseas. Chinese schools were also closed.

Most devastating and traumatic was the event known as the “Dayak raids” in 1967, which took place after the failed coup by the Indonesian Communist Party in 1965.

In the name of the Dayak people, the Indonesian military ran a campaign against what they called the “communist element” in Indonesian society. All Chinese communities at the time were considered supporters of communist China.

Thousands of people were killed and others fled to refugee camps. The result of the raid was the expulsion of Chinese from rural areas.

The authoritarian New Order government banned every cultural expression of China including its languages (Mandarin, Hakka and Teochiu), the barongsai lion dance and the celebration of the Chinese Lunar New Year.

In the Reform era, all these bans were lifted by then president Abdurrahman Wahid.

This book, which is a complete study of the Chinese minority in West Kalimantan in the context of social, economic and political struggle, makes a huge contribution to local history in Indonesia.

Gold Miners, Farmers and Traders in the *Chinese Districts’ of West Borneo

bron: www.thejakartapost.com [meer informatie is toegevoegd aan dit artikel]

Half of the women love anal penetration

According to a poll held by a Dutch female magazine called Viva, half of its readers have done anal sex.

The research was participated by 514 women. 48 Percent admitted in doing anal sex. But it doesn’t happen often. A quarter of them do it once a month, and only half do it once every six months.

Women as well as men take the initiative to anal sex. The women did indicate that sometimes it hurts. Also the women considered it a bit dirty.

bron: www.telegraaf.nl [11-11-2009]

By inviting European minister; China looks at Dutch youth policies

As the only European minister, André Rouvoet is a conspicuous guest at a regional conference for sexual health in Beijing this week. The Dutch youth and family minister spoke before an audience of Asian family planning experts, abortion activists and gynaecologists. He was invited because China is looking to the Dutch youth policies for inspiration.

http://weblogs.nrc.nl/discussie/files/0801/rouvoet.jpg[Minister Rouvoet]

Jia Yug gets a couple of coins for carrying packages at the bus station. That will buy him noodles with tomato sauce. “It tastes much better than what I get at home, because grandma is too ill to cook.” His partially demented grandmother is the only family the 12-year-old boy has. “So I almost never used to go home. The teachers at school didn’t miss me either. They said they didn’t care whether or not I turned up to school.” The next logical step was to join other runways in a park.

Jia Yun is a Chinese street kid. His bravado is still endearing, but it won’t be long before a boy like him gets on the wrong path. Although he will probably be alright, now that volunteers have brought him to the Guangai home for runaways.

Criminal
“There is only one thing that is important to us: that is to give them a home and an education, so that they stay out of prison. Every child we take in is one less criminal later,” says the home’s deputy manager Wang Xianlong. He does this without government subsidies; the whole project is run on 100 percent charity. Minister André Rouvoet is visibly impressed:

“I think very good work is being done with very little means. And I take my hat off to the project.”

He has just had lunch with students and visited an international school, but the Guangai project has given him an insight into the severe problems faced by Deputy Minister of the Population and Family Planning Commission, Zhao Baige.

1.5 million runways

The 105 neglected children in the project are just the top of the iceberg; China is believed to have more than 1.5 million runaways, not to mention child labour, child trafficking, a high abortion rate among teenagers, and high divorce rates. And there is no government assistance for young people; projects like Guangai are set up by charitable private individuals.

“Our system does not have social services or youth welfare work. We have only just added women’s and children’s rights to our human  rights charter. It is a start, but now we are looking for suitable policies,”

says Zhao Baige. That’s why the Chinese have invited the Dutch youth and family minister, not because of Mr Rouvoet’s personal achievements, but because the Netherlands has a good track record in the area of youth work.

“They are interested in insights which can be included in their own policies and approach. Not just policies geared to helping children with problems, but also ones which improve child-rearing, education and training. They want to take a broader view of youth problems than they are used to traditionally. For instance by looking into how to involve the family or network in resolving problems.”

The minister has implicitly criticised China’s strict family policies, by saying parents in the Netherlands have the freedom to choose how many children they have and how they want to bring up their children.

From poverty to wealth
China is changing from a country of poverty to one of wealth. It used to be inward looking, but the country has now turned its attention to international issues. It has transformed from being a backward plan economy to a market economy. And all these changes have gone so swiftly that nobody pays attention to a little girl like Cai Huihui and her mother, who has psychiatric problems. Mother and daughter roamed the streets for many years, eating from rubbish bins and sleeping under bridges. Cai Huihui used to hate that life. “When I slept on the streets at night, I was always afraid of bad people.”

Cabbage plants
Volunteers took her off the streets. She can often be found in the project’s vegetable garden. “I like looking at the little cabbage plants.” Cai Huihui is recovering, laughs Mr Wang.

In recent years, more and more council officials from outside Beijing have come to him with children like Cai Huihui. They want him to build Guangai schools in other provinces.

“First we have to make sure we can take in more children here. Beijing’s city council has given us a piece of land to build a new school. Hopefully then I will be able to take in more children, because at the moment I have to turn away the less serious cases.”

bron: www.rnw.nl, Marije Vlaskamp/RNW, weblogs.nrc.nl

Germans top table of world’s worst lovers

German men have been voted the world’s worst lovers, narrowly ahead of the English.

A poll of 15,000 women found that Germans were the worst in bed because they were considered “too smelly”.

English lovers came second because they were too lazy, while men from Sweden were branded “too quick” and came third. Spanish men topped the table as the best lovers, followed by Brazilians and Italians.

The poll, carried out by www.OnePoll.com, asked women from 20 countries to rate nations on their ability in bed and give reasons for their answers. Other findings included that Dutch men were “too rough”, Americans were “too dominating” while Greek men were said to be a bit too soppy.

Other countries who didn’t fare well in the poll were Scotland (too loud), Turkey (too sweaty) and Wales (too selfish).

Russian men crept in at tenth place amid accusations they were too hairy for the average woman.

A spokesperson for www.OnePoll.com added: “These results are an eye-opener for thousands of men around the world and female travellers might judge potential new lovers by looking at these results.”

bron: www.ananova.com

Drunk Belgian guy tries to help Dutch police

A 19 year old young man from the Belgian town Evergem decided, while drunk, to help the Dutch police. The man tried to direct traffic at a busy intersection near the Efteling, a theme park in The Netherlands.

But unfortunately the police couldn’t appreciate the help. The Dutch officers pulled him away from the busy intersection because he caused “dangerous traffic situations”. The Belgian guy is being charged for this fact and for drunk driving. He admitted to have drank a few glasses of beer and a bottle of wine, before he arrived at Kaatsheuvel. (town where the the theme park is situated)

bron: www.gva.be

The Netherlands increasingly popular among Chinese students

The Netherlands increasingly popular among Chinese students.

In recent years, the Netherlands has made efforts to attract more foreign students, at the same time its immigration policy has been changed to increase the number of highly skilled professionals entering the country.

Both these factors have seen the Netherlands become one of the most popular destinations for foreign students, naturally including the Chinese.

In spite of the world economic downturn that has hit China hard, the number of new Chinese students coming to Dutch universities has increased steadily over the past two years, bringing the total number to around 7000.

For Chinese students, the most popular majors are those that can improve chances of employment, such as economics, finance, logistics and business studies, and also those subjects the Netherlands specialises in, such as agriculture, horticulture, environmental management and industrial design.

bron: www.eurogates.nl

Dutch people fart a lot

Dutch people fart a lot.

People of the Netherlands fart a lot. One out of four Dutch people suffer from flatulance. Farting itself causes bodily discomforts, for example nausea, bloated feeling and stomach cramps. This is according to a research by TNS NIPO published today.

Especially people who keep it in complain about pains (88 procent). On top of that a fart causes much embarassement. Almost 70 percent is ashamed for farting. Women are the most ashamed for farting. About a quarter of the respondents fart about 20 times per day.

bron: ANP [24-8-2009]

Dutch employee of the Tax Service fired because of porno

Dutch employee of the Tax Service fired because of porno.

Two employees of the Dutch Tax Service (Belastingdienst) have been fired. One for sending porno by e-mail in the company. And the other for purposely incorrectly processing of a Tax form of his inlaws. According to the Telegraph newspaper this Tuesday. The court has already announced both lay-offs to be valid.

The Tax Service have hightened their monitoring efforts on e-mails with a “pornographic character” and encountered an e-mail with such content sent by an employee to a female colleague.

The second employee purposely ignored to mention that his inlaws perform work activities at home.

bron: www.nu.nl