01. China executes three times as many people as the rest of  the world
China carries out almost three  times as many executions as the rest of the world put together,  according to the most conservative estimate by Amnesty International. In  2008, the group confirmed 1,718 executions through news reports and  public documents, but many others are not reported. Some analysts say  the figure may be above 6,000. The exact number is a state secret. Many  executions are done on the road using vehicles called the death vans  designed by Jinguan Motors. The makers of these vans say the vehicles  and injections are a civilized alternative to the firing squad, ending  the life of the condemned more quickly, clinically and safely. According  to them, the switch from gunshots to injections is a sign thatChina  "promotes" human rights now. (Link 1 | Link 2) More ....after the break...
   
02. There are already more Christians in China than Italy, and it's on track to become the largest center of Christianity in the world
 Due to the extremely rapid expansion of Christianity in  China, there are now an estimated 54 million Christians in the country,  comprised of about 40 million Protestants and 14 million Catholics.  Meanwhile, Italy has just 60 million people in total, of which 79% are  Christian these days, which means Italy has 47.4 million Christians,  that's 12% less thanChina. (Photo by Robert Reinlund) (Via Link | Photo)
03. Over 4000 babies in China  were named "Olympic Games" while the country was getting ready for  Beijing 2008
The Beijing Olympics was more than just a point of pride for  China — it was such an important part of the national consciousness that  over 4,000 children have been named for the event. Most of the 4,104  people with the name "Aoyun," meaningOlympics , were born around the  year 2000, as Beijing was bidding to host the 2008 Summer Games. The  vast majority of people named Aoyun are male. Names related to  theOlympics don't just stop with "Olympics ." More than 4,000 Chinese  share their names with the Beijing Games mascots, the "Five Friendlies."  Chinese have increasingly turned to unique names as a way to express a  child's individuality.
In a country with a population  of 1.3 billion, 87 percent share the same family names. (Link 1 |  Link 2)
04. China uses 45 billion  chopsticks per year.
In  China, an estimated 45 billion pairs of disposable chopsticks are used  and thrown away annually. This adds up to 1.7 million cubic metres of  timber or 25 million fully grown trees every year. (Link)
05. 200 million people in  China live on less than $1 a day.
 Poverty in China refers to people whose income is less  than a poverty line of $1.25 per day. The poverty rate in China in 1981  was 64% of the population. Fortunately, this rate declined to 10% in  2004, indicating that about 500 million people have climbed out of  poverty during this period. (Link)
06 Over 700 million Chinese  people drink polluted water
 China has 20% of the world's population but only 7% of  global water resources. To make matters worse, 90% of cities'  groundwater and 75% of rivers and lakes are polluted according to the  World Bank. This means that 700 million people drink contaminated water  every day. (Link)
07. Ice Cream and Pasta may  have been created in China.
A frozen mixture of milk and  rice was invented in China around 200 BC, giving birth to ice cream.  Also, a 4,000-year-old bowl of noodles was discovered at an  archaeological site in westernChina, possible demonstrating that China  invented pasta before Italy. (Link 1  | Link 2)
08. Over 50% of counterfeit  goods in the EU come from China.
In Europe, China was the main  source country for intellectual property rights infringing articles with  54% of the total amount.CD/DVD was the top category of articles  detained with a total amount of 79 million, which accounted for 44% of  the entire amount, followed by cigarettes (23%) and clothing and  accessories (10%). (Link)
09. China is not free from Europe's medieval plague yet.
In 2009 China ended a quarantine  blockade around a remote northwestern town hit by pneumonic plague. The  outbreak of the highly infectious disease killed three villagers around  Ziketan Town in Qinghai province. But with no new infections reported  for over a week, authorities decided to lift the blockade on the remote  town of 10,000 in a heavily ethnic Tibetan area.China experiences  sporadic outbreaks of the plague, which is typically spread by rodents  and fleas and can pass easily between people. (Link) 
10. By 2025, China will build  TEN New York-sized cities.
The scale and pace of China's  urbanization promises to continue at an unprecedented rate. If current  trends hold, China's urban population will expand from 572 million in  2005 to 926 million in 2025 and hit the one billion mark by 2030. In 20  years,China's cities will have added 350 million people—more than the  entire population of the United States today. By 2025, China will have  219 cities with more than one million inhabitants—compared with 35 in  Europe today—and 24 cities with more than five million people. Also, 40  billion square meters of floor space will be built - in five million  buildings. 50,000 of these buildings could be skyscrapers - the  equivalent of ten New York Cities. (Link)









