French Newspaper Takes Chinese Line on Tibet?
State news site Tibet.cn celebrates a French newspaper’s departure from the Western “double standards”, “biased reports” and “Cold War mentality” often lamented by Chinese officials,...
Read MorePosted by Samuel Wade | Feb 17, 2012
State news site Tibet.cn celebrates a French newspaper’s departure from the Western “double standards”, “biased reports” and “Cold War mentality” often lamented by Chinese officials,...
Read MorePosted by Samuel Wade | Jun 28, 2011
The Australian examines a Chinese mining company’s “land grab” in New South Wales, following purchases of coal-rich farmland amounting to AU$213 million. Michael Clift is a sixth-generation Liverpool Plains...
Read MorePosted by Xiao Qiang | Aug 4, 2009
The following article was published by the Hong Kong-based Ta Kung Pao, translated by CDT. The Information Office of the State Council recently issued a notice requiring all domestic news websites to implement a real-name...
Read MorePosted by Xiao Qiang | Apr 17, 2009
Baidu Post Bar 百度贴吧, operated by the China’s leading search engine company, Baidu, is one of the country’s most popular online communities, where individual discussion communities (“post bars”) are generated by Baidu...
Read MorePosted by Xiao Qiang | May 6, 2008
Rowan Callick writes in the Australian: Last weekend a Chinese blogger posted the following comment on the website sina.com: “When a country gets the right to host the Olympic Games, it makes other countries jealous. China...
Read MorePosted by Kate Zhao | Mar 28, 2008
From The Los Angeles Times: It wasn’t supposed to be this way. When China seven years ago won the right to hold this summer’s Olympics, the nation erupted in joy, confident it would finally receive the accolades it...
Read MorePosted by Xiao Qiang | Mar 18, 2008
“Photos and footage of the bloody riots and protests in Tibet continue to make their way onto the web, despite the Chinese authorities’ best efforts to both spin the news and stifle reports emerging from the...
Read MorePosted by Xiao Qiang | Oct 10, 2006
From The Guardian: Yahoo! goes further than any of its rivals in blocking information on Tibet, the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and the Falun Gong spiritual movement. Ma says it is as much of a philosophical choice as a...
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