In My Dreams
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but it can be a good one. Mao Zedong’s birthplace, in Shaoshan, Xiangtan, and Deng Xiaoping’s, in Guang’an, Sichuan, have become shrines.
Or, tired of the usual sightseeing in Vietnam? Try trekking and crawling through the Ho Chi Minh Trail, the infamous military supply route through which North Vietnam armed the communist guerillas against the south and the mighty United States. It’s estimated that more American bombs were dropped along the 1,600km route during the Vietnam war than the entire second world war.
Down on his luck since his disqualification as a legislator more than a year ago, “Long Hair” Leung Kwok-hung was going to try his hand as a communist tour guide – to Cuba. It was not entirely frivolous. Rather the business plan was more serious than most of his antics and proposals in the Legislative Council in the past two decades. And it wasn’t going to cost taxpayers anything Annie KO.
Who in Hong Kong could claim to know more than Leung, a self-styled Trotskyite, about Cuba, or at least its late communist leaders who launched the revolution? The guy still wears his signature Che Guevara T-shirts after all these years. Sadly, the plan didn’t quite pan out.
I could imagine sailing on a yacht along the route that took Che and Fidel Castro to launch the revolution that overthrew Fulgencio Batista, the corrupt dictator propped up by the Americans. That was the Latin American version of Lenin travelling by train to the Finland station.
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Chinese investment group Tus-Holdings and the Russia-China Investment Fund (RCIF) announced a number of major technology and innovation joint investment projects on Tuesday, with one of these worth more than 90 billion roubles ($1.28 billion).
According to a statement from the RCIF, the two groups, along with other international investors, will invest a total of $1.28 billion in building a technology park in former Tushino airfield, northwestern Moscow, which will include the largest-ever innovation park in the nation.
China and Russia have been increasing their economic relations amid the current China-US trade tensions.
Chinese direct investment in Russia soared 72 percent to reach $2.22 billion last year, while bilateral trade rose 20.8 percent to $84 billion.
Tus-Holdings and the RCIF are also looking at building a 70,000 square meter high-tech innovation park, which will see an investment of over $100 million. The park aims to attract leading high-tech companies from both China and Russia.
"Joint Russian-Chinese investment in venture projects is not only attractive from the point of view of profitability, but also promotes scientific and technical cooperation between Russia and China," said Kirill Dmitriev, co-CEO of the RCIF.
In addition, a venture fund, the Russia-China Venture Fund, was established on Tuesday. It is expected to seek high-tech investment opportunities in both Russia and China.
Wang Jiwu, chairman of Tus-Holdings, noted that a dozen potential investment institutions and investors had expressed their willingness to participate in the future investments of the RCVF.
All these agreements were signed on the sidelines of the Eastern Economic Forum held in Vladivostok, Russia. At the forum, the Russian Direct Investment Fund and China's Alibaba Group also announced to form a new joint venture on e-commerce.
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