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China Hongyang Group, is an integrated enterprise with the research & development, production and marketing of Fuel Dispenser and related accessories as well as service station concerning equipments. It concentrates on the relative manufacture & services of filling station such as Hongyang tax control Fuel dispenser, IC Card fuel dispenser, manage system of network for stations, submerge pump and liquid level devise. China Hongyang Group, designed supplier of SinoPec and PetrolChina, our HONGYANG products have been sold to over 50 countries in South-east Asia, Mid-east, Africa, Europe and well received in their markets.
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
anada fuel dispenser s most populous province. And they even picked up ten seats in French-speaking Quebec,
their best result there since 1988. Mr Harper s victory also signalled the e fuel dispenser mergence of a third
centre of political power—in western Canada, whose resource-based economy is booming. His
political roots lie in the small-government social conservatism of the Alberta-based Reform Party.
In 2003 he merged its successor with the eastern-based, “Red Tory�Progressive Conservatives.
Having long felt marginalised in federal politics, “the West is now in� Mr Harper proclaimed in
triumph in Calgary. The big cities, however, are out. The Conservatives failed to win a single seat
in Toronto, Montreal or Vancouver.
The election produced some surprises. Paul Martin, the outgoing prime minister, ran an ill-starred
campaign, but his dogged efforts prevented the Liberal debacle that many had predicted. The
leftish New Democrats (NDP) did well, picking up seats in Ontario and British Columbia. But Jack
Layton, the NDP leader, will not hold the balance of power as he did in the outgoing parliament.
In another surprise, the separatist Bloc Québécois fared relatively poorly. Its share of the vote in
Quebec fell to 42%, down seven points from the 2004 election and well short of the majority that
its leader, Gilles Duceppe, had sought. That was mainly because of the Conservative revival in the
province. This cheered federalists by giving Quebeckers the option—which they have recently
lacked—of being able to vote against the government without backing the separatists.
A last-minute recovery in Liberal support may have
deprived Mr Harper of 20-30 extra seats. That has made
the task of governing harder. But he has scope to strike
fuel dispenser
deals, issue by issue. He will focus on five main policy
pledges. These include cutting the sales (ie, value-
added) tax, initially by one point to 6% and later to 5%,
and giving all parents of under-fives C$1,200 ($1,025) a
year for childcare. Both these giveaways are pop