Citations:Qiqihaer

English citations of Qiqihaer

1979 1988 2000 2010s 2020s
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  • 1979, Frederic M. Kaplan, Julian M. Sobin, Stephen Andors, Encyclopedia of China Today[1], Eurasia Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 22:
    Farther west, the city of Qiqihaer—one of the oldest Chinese settlements in Manchuria—produces locomotives and rolling stock, heavy machine tools, mining and metallurgical equipment, and some steel.
  • 1988, Emily Honig, Gail Hershatter, “Divorce”, in Personal Voices: Chinese Women in the 1980's[2], Stanford, Cali.: Stanford University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 219:
    The case of a woman named Qu Hua from Qiqihaer, Heilongjiang, illustrates this possibility. She married a worker named Xu Baocheng in 1980, and they got along very well until she gave birth to a girl. Then Xu immediately began to beat Qu, and forced her and the baby to live in a small shack.
  • 2000, Rana Mitter, “Frontline Choices: The Resistance Fighters, Nationalism, and Locality, 1931-1932”, in The Manchurian Myth: Nationalism, Resistance, and Collaboration in Modern China[3], University of California Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 207:
    On 17 November Ma sent an urgent telegram to Zhang Xueliang in Beiping reporting that the Japanese had been attacking the Heilongjiang troops at Qiqihaer with both infantry and air raids.
  • 2013, Robert W. Cox, “The Emergence of China”, in Universal Foreigner: The Individual and the World[4], →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 284:
    From Daqing we took the train to the far north of China at Qiqihaer, described to me as a relatively small Chinese city of about six million people!
  • 2015 September 19, “Qiqihaer police cracks down on trafficking products made from wild animals (6)”, in People's Daily[5], archived from the original on 27 April 2022:
    Police officers check the seized illicit products of wild animals in Qiqihaer, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, Sept. 17, 2015. Qiqihaer forestry police station has cracked down on trafficking products made from wild animals and seized some 100 kilograms of products of bear paw and about 250 kilograms of products of pilose antlers, carcasses of pheasants and roe deers, briefed by the forestry police station of Heilongjiang Province on Sept. 18.
  • 2015 December 25, “Four prison guards sentenced for NE China prison scandal”, in Global Times[6], archived from the original on 13 November 2019:
    Four former prison guards in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province were handed jail terms from a year and four months to two and a half years on Friday for turning a blind eye to a prisoner who seduced and blackmailed a number of women while behind bars.
    The four defendants stood trial at Longjiang County People's Court in the city of Qiqihaer on Friday morning.
  • 2016 March 30, Mimi Lau, “The school of hard rocks: how protests by China’s miners shine a light on an industry in decline”, in South China Morning Post[7]:
    Thousands of workers from the Tonghua Iron and Steel Group in Jilin province, Qiqihaer in Heilongjiang, Kaiping in Heibei, and Pingxiang in Jiangxi, demonstrated over unpaid wages, in protests that took place between the end of February and the middle of March
  • 2017 January 25, Yao Yao, “Man rides wrong way for more than a month”, in China Daily[8], archived from the original on 2017-01-25, Society‎[9]:
    Asked what he was doing, the man told them he was heading home to Qiqihaer city, Northeast China's Heilongjiang province by bike, only to be informed by traffic police he was going the wrong way.
  • 2020 June 24, “Discover China: Kingdom of dreams and reality in eastern China”, in huaxia, editor, Xinhua News Agency[10], archived from the original on 10 August 2020:
    Just like Wang, Liu Yang's ambitions also brought him to Yiwu. He came from northeast China's city of Qiqihaer about three years ago but both his attempts at forging a self-owned business failed.
  • 2021, Yijia Yanga, Ge Song, “Human disturbance changes based on spatiotemporal heterogeneity of regional ecological vulnerability: A case study of Qiqihaer city, northwestern Songnen Plain, China”, in Journal of Cleaner Production[11], volume 291, →DOI, →ISSN, →OCLC:
    In this study, a framework that combines ecological sensitivity and ecological risk as the end point of EV assessment was established, and was used to investigate the spatiotemporal characteristics and major environmental issues of EV in Qiqihaer City, northwest of the Songnen Plain