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30 వేల ప్రపంచ పటాలను ధ్వంసం చేసిన చైనా

తైవాన్​ను ప్రత్యేక దేశంగా, అరుణాచల్​ప్రదేశ్​ను భారత్​లో భాగంగా ముద్రించిన 30 వేల ప్రపంచపటాలను చైనా ధ్వంసం చేసింది. అరుణాచల్​ ప్రదేశ్​ తమ దేశంలో భాగమనే వాదన వినిపిస్తోంది.

30 వేల ప్రపంచ పటాలను ధ్వంసం చేసిన చైనా
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Published : Mar 26, 2019, 11:45 PM IST

అరుణాచల్​ ప్రదేశ్​ను భారత్​లో భాగంగా చూపిస్తోన్న 30 వేల ప్రపంచ పటాలను చైనా ధ్వంసం చేసింది. ఇతర దేశాలకు ఎగుమతి చేసేందుకు స్థానిక సంస్థలు ముద్రించిన ఈ ప్రపంచ పటాలను చైనా ప్రభుత్వం రద్దుచేసింది. తైవాన్​ను ప్రత్యేక దేశంగా, అరుణాచల్​ ప్రదేశ్​ను భారత్​లో భాగంగా ముద్రించంపై డ్రాగన్​ దేశాధినేతలు ఆగ్రహం వ్యక్తం చేశారు.

చైనా వాదన

భారత ఈశాన్య రాష్ట్రాల్లో ఒకటైన అరుణాచల్​ ప్రదేశ్​ దక్షిణ టిబెట్​లో భాగమని చైనా వాదిస్తోంది. భారత రాజకీయ నేతలు అరుణాచల్​ ప్రదేశ్​లో పర్యటిస్తున్న ప్రతిసారీ డ్రాగన్​ దేశం అభ్యంతరం వ్యక్తం చేస్తోంది.

భారత్​ వాదన

అరుణాచల్​ప్రదేశ్​ భారత్​లో అంతర్గత భాగం. రాజకీయ నేతలు దేశంలోని ఇతర ప్రాంతాలకు వెళ్లిన విధంగానే అరుణాచల్​ప్రదేశ్​కు కూడా వెళ్తారనేది భారత్​ వాదన.

ఇరుదేశాల మధ్య 21 సార్లు చర్చలు

భారత్​-చైనా మధ్య 3,488 కిలోమీటర్ల వాస్తవాధీన రేఖ(ఎల్​ఏసీ) ఉంది. వివాదాస్పదమైన అరుణాచల్​ప్రదేశ్​ అంశంపై ఇరుదేశాల నేతలు ఇప్పటికే 21 సార్లు చర్చించారు.

అరుణాచల్​ ప్రదేశ్​ను భారత్​లో భాగంగా చూపిస్తోన్న 30 వేల ప్రపంచ పటాలను చైనా ధ్వంసం చేసింది. ఇతర దేశాలకు ఎగుమతి చేసేందుకు స్థానిక సంస్థలు ముద్రించిన ఈ ప్రపంచ పటాలను చైనా ప్రభుత్వం రద్దుచేసింది. తైవాన్​ను ప్రత్యేక దేశంగా, అరుణాచల్​ ప్రదేశ్​ను భారత్​లో భాగంగా ముద్రించంపై డ్రాగన్​ దేశాధినేతలు ఆగ్రహం వ్యక్తం చేశారు.

చైనా వాదన

భారత ఈశాన్య రాష్ట్రాల్లో ఒకటైన అరుణాచల్​ ప్రదేశ్​ దక్షిణ టిబెట్​లో భాగమని చైనా వాదిస్తోంది. భారత రాజకీయ నేతలు అరుణాచల్​ ప్రదేశ్​లో పర్యటిస్తున్న ప్రతిసారీ డ్రాగన్​ దేశం అభ్యంతరం వ్యక్తం చేస్తోంది.

భారత్​ వాదన

అరుణాచల్​ప్రదేశ్​ భారత్​లో అంతర్గత భాగం. రాజకీయ నేతలు దేశంలోని ఇతర ప్రాంతాలకు వెళ్లిన విధంగానే అరుణాచల్​ప్రదేశ్​కు కూడా వెళ్తారనేది భారత్​ వాదన.

ఇరుదేశాల మధ్య 21 సార్లు చర్చలు

భారత్​-చైనా మధ్య 3,488 కిలోమీటర్ల వాస్తవాధీన రేఖ(ఎల్​ఏసీ) ఉంది. వివాదాస్పదమైన అరుణాచల్​ప్రదేశ్​ అంశంపై ఇరుదేశాల నేతలు ఇప్పటికే 21 సార్లు చర్చించారు.

RESTRICTION SUMMARY:  AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Los Teques - 26 March 2019
1. Los Teques city skyline
2. Various of road where shops are shuttered and closed because of a blackout, with no traffic on the street and a few pedestrians walking on the sidewalks
3. Shop door shuttered and locked
4. Johnny Vargas, a restaurant worker and two friends standing in the doorway of a restaurant he works in that has been closed due to the blackout
5. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Johnny Vargas, restaurant worker and resident:
"What do I think?  Well, that what one wants to do is go abroad, find another destiny, road. Venezuela doesn't stand a chance anymore.  There is no life here. People can't work anymore.  We can't do anything."
6. Vargas closing the shop
7. Various of the main entrance to the Independencia metro station shuttered closed
8. Various of gates to a PDVSA (Petroleos de Venezuela) gas station shut and locked
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Caracas - 26 March 2019
9. Deserted city square with few people walking and the metro station shuttered
10. Woman sitting alone in the square, surrounded by trash
11. Shuttered metro station
12. Various of people walking
13. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Luis Hernandez, Petrol union leader, and resident:
"This is a total collapse and (it remains) until today, until this moment, because there have been blackouts (yesterday), the electricity came back, and they said (the government) that it was normalised. It went away again and until this morning we do not have electric service. We are waiting because the same collapse will happen, that is what we are saying. The electricity comes for a while and then they go out to say that everything is normalised. It's a lie. This is populism that they have invented to manipulate us."
14. Flashlight lighting fruits and vegetables at a grocery shop
15. Grocery shop open for customers but it is dark inside because of the blackout
16. Light bulb in the store not working due to no electricity
17. Nirca Tiamo, local resident, and others outside grocery shop
18. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Nirca Tiamo, local resident:
"We want peace and tranquility, to fix situations that have to be fixed.  Of course we have to fix them for us to take the course that we really want, but with peace, with tranquility and rationality, that things are resolved but in peace, in tranquility.  We are not blind.  We are not going to tell you that we don't go through bad situations. We do, but we can take care of them peacefully."
19. People walking in and out a darkened bakery
20. Various of pedestrians
STORYLINE:
Much of Venezuela remained without electricity Tuesday as a new power outage spread across the country in what many feared will be a repeat of the chaos during the nation's largest-ever blackout earlier this month.
The outage began around midday Monday and appeared to have affected the majority of Venezuela's 23 states.
The city of Los Teques, some 32 kilometres (20 miles) outside Caracas, awoke to the sound of birds chirping and roosters crowing on what should have been a normally, noisy, bustling morning.
All shops, gas stations and metro stops were closed and shuttered due to the lack of electricity.
"What do I think?  Well, that what one wants to do is go abroad," said Johnny Vargas, a restaurant employee who was closing the doors to that establishment after checking it to make sure it was secure.
"There is no life here. People can't work anymore.  We can't do anything."  
In Caracas, the scene was similar with people doing some shopping for food at the few stores that were open some lighting the way inside their businesses with flashlights.
"The electricity comes for a while and then they go out to say that everything is normalised," said resident Luis Hernandez.  "It's a lie."
While the lights did flicker back on in many parts after officials declared service would be restored within hours, the grid collapsed again in the late evening, knocking out communications and leaving much of the South American country bracing for the worst.
As with the previous outage, President Nicolas Maduro's government blamed US-backed opponents, accusing them of sabotaging the Guri dam, which supplies the bulk of Venezuela's electricity.
Officials said the "attack" had been controlled, but their assurances, similar to ones the last time around, did little to calm the anger of residents in Caracas who filled traffic-clogged streets as they walked home after subway service in the capital was suspended.
Their patience grew increasingly thin when a second outage struck late into the night, with residents in some neighbourhoods banging on pots and pans in pitch black to express their growing frustration.
Netblocks, a non-government group based in Europe that monitors internet censorship, said the late evening outage had knocked offline nearly 90 percent of Venezuela's telecommunications infrastructure.
Even the powerful state TV apparatus was down.
The outages come as Maduro is fighting to keep his grip on power amid a revived opposition movement and punishing economic sanctions from the US.
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