Censorship Vault: Black Kilns, Democracy Stimulation, Suicide Games
In partnership with the China Copyright and Media blog, CDT is adding the “Beijing Internet...
Jan 7, 2013
In partnership with the China Copyright and Media blog, CDT is adding the “Beijing Internet...
Jan 7, 2013
In partnership with the China Copyright and Media blog, CDT is adding the “Beijing Internet...
Oct 25, 2010
The Wall Street Journal’s Real Time China blog reports that environmental activist Wu Lihong is out of jail and back to his work raising awareness of the pollution in Lake Tai: Mr. Wu’s biggest crime appears to be what...
May 11, 2010
Environmentalist Wu Lihong has described his treatment while serving a three-year sentence for speaking out again pollution in Taihu Lake. He spoke with AFP after his release: Wu was arrested in April 2007 and sentenced to three...
Nov 17, 2009
Li Xiaorong, a research scholar at the Institute for Philosophy & Public Policy, University of Maryland, College Park, who does consultant work for Chinese NGOs, published in the Baltimore Sun the speech she wishes...
May 10, 2008
From The Economist: Polluted, poisonous and immune to popular efforts to enforce a clean-up: Tai Lake is a metaphor for the state of China’s politics. The plain-clothes police are always there, watching Xu Jiehua. When she...
Nov 5, 2007
The New York Times gives an update on the legal case of environmental activist Wu Lihong: A court in Wuxi, in eastern Jiangsu Province, upheld the conviction of Wu Lihong, who became well known around China for seeking to prevent chemical companies from dumping untreated waste in Lake Tai, China’s third-largest freshwater lake. The ruling […]
Oct 13, 2007
Third of the New York Times’s environmental series this year, and multimedia package along with this installment: Lake Tai, the center of China’s ancient “land of fish and rice,” succumbed this year to floods of industrial and agricultural waste. The outbreak confirmed the claims of a crusading peasant, Wu Lihong, who protested for more than […]
Aug 14, 2007
The Christian Science Monitor has a report on environmental activist Wu Lihong, who was recently sentenced to three years in prison for his attempts to clean up the polluted Lake Tai: Becoming a political or social activist has long been a solitary, sometimes dangerous path in China. The treatment of Wu and other whistle-blowers who […]
Jun 18, 2007
This article is from Southern Metropolitan News. Thanks to Hegel Chong’s translation on his Reading China blog: Over th past 15 years, Wu Lihong has been complaining about the pollution of Tai Lake. In 2005, he was selected as the outstanding environmentalist of China. But he was arrested for fraudulent recently. He was accused of […]
Jun 7, 2007
From the International Herald Tribune: Fetid blue-green algae has appeared in an eastern Chinese lake but does not threaten water supplies, state media reported, a week after similar algae contaminated millions of people’s drinking water in a neighboring province. Environmental officials in Anhui province were closely monitoring the potentially poisonous algae bloom in Lake Chao, […]
Jun 7, 2007
More about jailed environmentalist Wu Lihong and his fight to save Lake Tai: Wu Lihong warned for years that pollution was strangling his beloved Lake Tai. Yet when a disastrous algae bloom, fed in part by pollution, forced a lakeside city to shut off its drinking water two weeks ago, the salesman-turned-environmental campaigner had little […]
Jun 6, 2007
From The Times of India: Wu Lihong, a Chinese environmentalist who shook the bureaucracy in the prosperous south China province of Jiangsu is being prosecuted for blackmailing industries. He has been accused by Yixing city administration of extorting $6,875 by threatening companies to expose their activities resulting in environmental pollution. Wu, once nominated as one […]
Apr 23, 2007
The Time China Blog has posted a Wall Street Journal article about the detention of a prominent environmental activist: An environmental activist famous for battling to clean up one of China’s most polluted lakes has been detained, his family and lawyers said. Wu Lihong, 39 years old, was detained last week by police in his […]