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India, China plan to hold Navy, Air Force exercises

Brahmos_2

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NEW DELHI: Seeking to strengthen mutual trust between their armed forces, India and China are planning to hold exercises between their navies and air forces also in the near future.

The armies of the two countries already hold exercises between them code named Hand-to-Hand. Its third edition would be held in Chengdu military region of China in October.

During the recent discussions, the two sides have agreed that there should be exercises between the Navies and the Air Forces also, sources told here.

The initial exercises would be elementary in nature but later on, their level can be increased, they said.

The schedule of the exercises and their time-frame would be decided in the meetings between the armed forces of the two countries, they said.

Both sides have also agreed that the navies and air forces of both countries will undertake enhanced professional exchanges, the defence ministry had recently said during the visit of defence minister AK Antony there.

The two sides have also agreed to enhance ties between the military headquarters and exchange more number of young officers to enhance mutual trust.

Armies of India and China held their first exercises in 2007 at Belgaum in Karnataka with plans to hold such events annually. Similar exercises were held in 2008 at China's Kunming city.

The drills were later disrupted over China's new policy of granting visas on piece of paper to residents of Jammu and Kashmir. China also denied visa to a top General of J&K-based northern command after which India called off military contacts.

India, China plan to hold Navy, Air Force exercises - The Times of India
 
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It will be an interesting thing to see the Air Foces of two countries...We should do this exercise at some neutral no-men-land place to avoid casualties that might cause due to crashing of junk china copied frighter jet! :rofl:
 
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They make our babus look like gandhi.

A sand scandal is brewing in China, with concerns that low-quality concrete has been used in the construction of many of the country’s largest buildings — putting them at risk of collapse.

The recipe to make concrete is pretty simple — cement, aggregate and water — but the strength of the final batch can vary wildly depending on the kinds of aggregate and cement used and the proportions they’re mixed in. Commonly the aggregate used in many modern building projects consists of crushed gravel or other rock, including sand, and that’s the cause of so much distress in the Chinese construction industry at the moment. Inspections by state officials have found raw, unprocessed sea sand in at least 15 buildings under construction in Shenzhen, including a building which, when finished, was set to become China’s tallest.

Wired U.K.The Ping’an Finance Center is planned to top out at 660m, making it not only China’s tallest building but the second-tallest building in the world after the Burj Dubai. 80m has been built so far, but construction has been halted in the wake of the revelation from Shenzhen’s Housing and Construction Bureau that substandard sea sand concrete had been used in its construction. According to a notice on the Bureau’s website posted on March 16, 31 companies had had their licenses to work revoked for at least six months.
Many of the companies named in the notice took heavy hits to their share prices on the Hong Kong stock exchange. Bloomberg reports that the financial incentive to use illegal sea sand, which is far cheaper than legal river sand, is the likely reason for the problem. Untreated sea sand is unsuitable for construction because it still contains chlorine and salt, which corrodes steel — river sand from freshwater channels doesn’t have that problem.

It can take only a few decades for a building to become dangerously unsafe if untreated sea sand is used in its concrete — including the possibility of collapse. While this scandal has been confined only to Shenzhen thus far, the possibility of it spreading to other Chinese cities is cause for concern. The country currently has nine of the 20 tallest buildings in the world under construction, while there were reportedly so many skyscrapers under construction in 2011 that it worked out as a new one being topped out every five days right through into 2014.

The Ping’An Finance Center is one of several very tall skyscrapers under construction in China, but it might not have the title of the country’s tallest for too long even if construction resumes. The highly publicized plan by Broad Sustainable Building to build the world’s tallest building, Sky City One, in only 90 days in Changsha, attracted skeptical responses from engineers who felt it was completely unrealistic — the head of the company behind construction of London’s Shard even joked that he’d retire if Broad pulled off the stunt. However, he can rest easy, as the skyscraper has yet to break ground, as it continues to be delayed.
 
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