A policeman parked illegaly on a street in Chian’s Beijing. Now, we don’t know for sure if he was on duty, it it was an emergency or a regular check-up or if policemen in China also spend half of their lives near doughnut cribs too… but one thing is for sure: the long arm of the law is long indeed in China!
I mean, honestly, can you help laugh at this? I wish I’d see this happen to a local proud knight-in-shiny-armour cop back here. We can just hope that, on the other hand, fate won’t be as ironic as usual: being “made in China”, that locker just might snap at one or two kicks. Kidding, actually this is a positive example of blind law. And a damn funny one two. Nice police cars by the way… special Chery packs of course.
Always park legally! Even if you feel you won’t hinder
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Chery
Chery has fit perfectly into the Turkish automotive market by offering quality vehicles at a lower price.
Chery Automobile is owned by the local government of Wuhu, Anhui province (but is scheduled to be privatized), and sold about 381,000 vehicles in 2007. It is the largest independent Chinese auto manufacturer and one of the fastest growing automakers in the world.
The company is planning to invest $550 million to start a production line in Turkey. This could mean a big move and the start of a Chinese conquest of Europe. No, I don’t mean any medieval wars here just cars. Chery was one of the few entities in the automotive world whose sales increased amidst this so-called crisis.
“There is a significant prejudice against Chinese products,” said Sedat Piroğlu, executive board member of Mermerler Otomotiv, the Turkey distributor of Chery. “However, with Chery, consumers learned that those prejudices are not always well-grounded,”
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