Exhibit 99.1

                       CHINA CABLE AND COMMUNICATION SIGNS
                              AGREEMENT TO ACQUIRE
                 A FIBER OPTIC BACKBONE NETWORK THROUGHOUT CHINA


Acquisition Includes a Two Core Fiber Optic Backbone Network Covering 410 Cities
         Nationwide with a Total Physical Length of 34,800 Km in China



Beijing, June 14, 2004 - China Cable and Communication, Inc. (OTCBB: CCCI), a
leading China-based cable TV company, today announced it has entered into an
agreement to acquire, in a number of phases, from Beijing Zhongminjing
Technology Development Co., Ltd., through an arms length commercial transaction,
a two core fiber optic backbone network covering 410 cities nationwide with a
total physical length of 34,800 Km (approx. 20,880 mile) in China. This backbone
network covers all 23 provinces, 5 autonomous regions, and 4 centrally
administrative municipalities. Completion of this transaction is subject to due
diligence and third party determination of the values upon which the purchase
price will be based.

The total physical length of 34,800 Km optical fiber was laid and passed the
acceptance tests set out by the Ministry of Information Industry ("MII") of the
People's Republic of China in November 2000. The acceptance license was issued
by MII in the same year. This fiber optics backbone network is not yet equipped
with a transmission and switching system. China Cable and Communication will
undertake, or will provide leases to service providers, to fully equip systems
for this backbone network in order to provide support to a wide range of
communication protocols and services capabilities. The construction cost of the
Network is estimated at RMB 2 billion (approx. US$235 million). The final
contract purchase price of this fiber optic backbone network will be based on
the appraised value determined by internationally renowned valuation experts.

Kaijun Yang, Chairman of the Board of China Cable Communication said, "While the
undertakings in this transaction are extensive, the fact is that upon
consummation we are going to be a fiber optics backbone provider in China. This
is a significant deal because we believe that we are talking about becoming one
of the largest and most important communication companies in China. That makes
the challenge road ahead of us in completing this transaction very worthwhile,"
explained Mr. Yang.

China Cable and Communication has also been selling "Set Top" cable boxes in
China. The fiber optic backbone, added to the current business model, is
intended to put China Cable and Communication in a new league of convergent
players.

"We believe that we will not only be able to offer our current service offerings
through these channels, but that we will be able to offer a host of emerging,
future technologies," explained Mr. Yang. "We also intend to lease the use of
this backbone to a wide range of content providers, including Voice over IP
(VoIP) companies, traditional telecommunication companies, broadcast video
companies, and high speed Internet companies. Ultimately our goal will not to
only lease out a portion of the backbone bandwidth, but to work it out so our
current subscriber base can have access to these leased services as well."



With most of the population of China spread out, and phone and cable services
not readily available to every citizen, it is critical that a
cable/communication company finish what has been started. While the Company is
at its infancy in market penetration, we believe that it is already being viewed
as a true pioneer of the convergent communications and content delivery
infrastructure of China.

"It's critical for our shareholders to understand what it means to own a
backbone network like this. Content providers will have to lease bandwidth like
ours if they want to use a high speed pipe. We think it's like being AT&T in the
United States. At one point in time they weren't the largest telecommunications
company either, but now everyone knows who they are. We're not the largest
company either, but we don't think it's too bold of us to use AT&T as an example
of where we set our goals in terms of size and importance of our role in the
development in the 9 billion dollar telecommunications industry in China," said
Mr. Yang. "It is with this relationship we hope to begin to make China feel like
a much smaller country by giving all of our citizens the ability to instantly
connect with the rest of the country, and the world. It appears to us that we're
talking about nothing less than the connectivity of China and the beginning of a
massive technology convergence in what we think is the most dynamic growth
economy in the world."

As an indication of what's going on in the world of broadband convergence, TiVO
recently announced it has plans to bring streaming media from the internet to
the house using its set top box and technology, which is nearly ready for
market. This will give the consumer a broader choice of programming and will
open up the portals of convergence, using your TV as a form of communication.

"This is the fourth electronic video service, and it is an alternative to cable,
satellite and broadcast television," said Tom Wolzien, an analyst at Bernstein
Investment Research and Management, in speaking about broadband convergence in
general. Those traditional services, Mr. Wolzien said, "have been the monster
gatekeepers, but this is a way for content providers to get past them", added in
Wolzien in again referring to broadband convergence.

Giants like Microsoft are also getting in the game. They recently announced the
formation of Microsoft TV as a new company at the CES show in January 2004.

"We believe that Microsoft TV's vision of this future is the same," stated Mr.
Yang. "Converge all of today's broadcasted video and audio content with all of
today's communications and delivery mechanisms, and pipe it right into any type
of set top receiver. Let the consumers decide where and how they want to be
entertained and informed. This is no longer video-on-demand, or audio-on-demand.
This is content-on-demand. China Cable Communications is committed to bringing
this future to China. We intend to be the content-on-demand backbone for China."

Microsoft TV is running two small trials of the technology in Canada and
Switzerland, and sees a broad range of potential.



Whether Internet delivery of programming will be a serious threat in the near
future to traditional broadcasters remains a matter for debate among industry
executives. In any event, they also expect to capitalize on the new technology.
As Steve Burke, president of Comcast Cable, the largest cable operator in the
United States, said recently in a phone interview, "We're big believers that the
Internet is the future."

"It's obvious what's happening in our industry," pointed out Mr. Yang, "It
appears to us that Microsoft and Comcast and other pace-setting corporations
believe that it is possible to deliver broadcast quality television capable of
rivaling today's cable and satellite programming by using commonly available
standard telephone lines, as part of what are called digital subscriber line, or
DSL services, as well as with the superior speed and bandwidth of fiber optic
networks. It's important to not lose sight of the names and types of companies
that are diligently researching and developing this technology sector. Keep on
eye on the players. We intend that our backbone will be delivering their
content," concluded Mr. Yang.

About China International Telecommunication Construction Corporation

China International Telecommunication Construction Corporation (CITCC), enjoying
Class A qualification of prime-contract on Telecom projects, is the largest and
most comprehensive enterprise with powerful engineering and hi-tech capability
in the field of Telecom engineering and constructions in China. It is one of the
nineteen largest construction enterprises nationwide, and also one of the
hundred strongest enterprises in the construction industry across the country.

About China Cable and Communication

China Cable and Communication, Inc. is a China-based cable TV company. Through
its British Virgin Island subsidiary, the Company is the first foreign company
to own and operate a cable television network in China.

Located 85 miles south of Beijing, the network currently offers 39 channels
within the Baoding city limits and eight additional channels to outer areas in
the Baoding metropolitan area. It transmits in both analog and digital over its
fiber optic network and through 22 substations. With its fiber optic network,
Baoding network is capable of transmitting 37 analog television programs, six
digital signals and one FM music program. In addition to its cable television
transmission services, Baoding network offers Internet access and value added
services, such as broadband Internet access and on-demand services through its
proprietary set-top boxes.

China Cable and Communication is well positioned as a foreign investor approved
by The State Administration of Radio, Film and Television ("SARFT"), China's
national regulatory authority for the broadcasting industry, to own interests in
and provide operational management support to cable television networks in the
People's Republic of China (PRC). The SARFT approval together with the trading
of CCCI's common stock in the US, provide CCCI with a favorable advantage in
access to foreign capital. China Cable and Communication, Inc. trades in the
United States, under the ticker symbol CCCI, in order to provide U.S. investors
with the opportunity to invest in a company that owns interests in a PRC cable
television network. For more information, please visit www.chinacable.us.




CONTACTS:

George Raney, Executive Director of China Cable & Communication, Inc.
310-301-0082


The forward-looking statements contained herein are subject to certain risks and
uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those
reflected in the forward-looking statements. Some of these include, but are not
limited to, our availability of capital, political occurrences and events in
China, the terms of our 8% convertible preferred stock, operations of the
Baoding joint venture, demand for the products of the Baoding joint venture, the
economy of China, and other factors. Readers are cautioned not to place undue
reliance on these forward-looking statements, which reflect management's
analysis only as of the date hereof. The Company undertakes no obligation to
publicly revise these forward-looking statements to reflect events or
circumstances that arise after the date hereof. Readers should carefully review
the risks described in other documents the Company files from time to time with
the Securities and Exchange Commission, including Amendment No. 1 to the Form
SB-2 registration statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on
December 8, 2003, the Annual Report on Form 10-KSB for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2003, as well as the Quarterly Reports and Current Reports on Form
8-K by the Company.