时间:2019-02-05 作者:英语课 分类:cctv9英语新闻2016年


英语课


In fact, the internet has been playing a vital role in finding missing children here in China. Through viral sharing of information on social networks and online campaigns launched by volunteers, the internet has served as a powerful tool for both police and relatives to track down missing children and hunt child traffickers.


 


You can't put a price on a life, but there's a market for human beings in China.


 


The families of missing children are desperate for any bit of information and they go online.


 


On Weibo, China's Twitter-like service, there are many accounts which post missing children information and campaigns launched by volunteers. There are also websites, like "Babies Come Home". They've gathered 150 thousand volunteers and helped over 11-hundred people get back home.


 


And such efforts have gone mobile。


 


Zhongxun, an app dedicated to finding missing children, was developed by Li Xiuquan's team.


 


“We developed an app for parents to post information of missing children and for the public to post new leads if they find children unattended or begging in the streets,” Li said.


 


It took this team of six IT professionals less than 24 hours to launch the first edition. They posted the QR code on Weibo and got nearly 80 million hits.


 


And within a week, their first success.


 


"Six days after the launch, we helped find 2 missing children the first was a boy in Taizhou city in eastern Jiangsu Province. And another was a girl. Unfortunately, she was already dead by the time local police found her," Li said. 


 


It's been only about 20 days since the launch, but more children have been found.


 


Xiuquan's team is small, but they are dreaming big... They want to build the AMBER Alert, a child abduction alert system, in China.


 


And they are not alone... China's top internet companies are also taking concrete actions. Tencent is getting the word out through its 800 million user-base. And 360 is developing a wearable tracking device.


 


Such efforts can help both parents and police find the children and bring the traffickers to justice.


 


China has established one of the world's largest networks to combat human trafficking, with thousands of police officers across the country. But more efforts are needed to rescue missing children. By harnessing the power of the internet to mobilize the public, there is clear hope that fewer children will go missing and more will be reunited with their families.








学英语单词
-um
a stitch of
air suction valve
anode sputtering
appendices epiploicae
automatic aluminium cap fitting machine
biosynthesized
boesak
brobactam
by a long way
capillareneurysm
carbuncle on the external malleolus
cask stave broken
cobain
corn-master
Costcop
CPDS
crest of bands
cronicle
cyclodehydratase
dam slope
deciduous canine
Desert Rat
digital pen
drain way
Emmelshausen
erythratidine
family Ginkgoaceae
flat top piston
floropipeton
fortificate
give him the boot
grill rat
haymes
high-level road
individual inhabitant tax
isohyetal line chart
jongewaard
jumpstarted
laricifolia
light-textured soil
linear meristem
lingual gingiva
liquid-deficient regime
long range navigation (loran)
Mangyangjeong
milk-whites
monsoon rains
mukluks
na-more
new-found-land
nitrazepate
non mutable
o'dog
oilseed drying
Opalene
organic residue
orletons
outpitched
over-priced
Ozark Mountains
paraffin immersion method
peridinium volzii
placodine
pool tube
Pottiaceae
pressurization by steam cushion in boiler drum
pressurizing system
Prismatomeris tetrandra
protargentum
quakka
quintic curve
rayse
reason with sb
reinforced concrete beds
repeated signal
retaining time
rig ... out
Roudouallec
rugulose
safety frequency
sections
sensorimotor period
setting against
sharn
Shunudag, Gora
single-stage extraction
slewing ring
slowerest
St Kitts-Nevis
suction cap
support weight
tai chi stance
temperature record and control
the grey mare
thoracoabdominal combined war injury
thread cutting
three-chip
truck changing point
underfucked
vol/open interest
Wolline