Censuring China’s censors – Seth Faison

From Los Angeles Times (link): LAST FALL, a magazine editor in Beijing named Li Datong decided to feature a historical article about Taiwan in his weekly, Freezing Point. It was a straightforward account of Taiwan’s harsh political repression in the 1950s and how democratically elected legislators are coping with that history. In China, where Taiwan […]

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Dalai Lama ‘wants to visit China’ – BBC

From BBC (link): Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama has repeated his wish to visit China, on the anniversary of the 1959 uprising against China’s takeover. The Dalai Lama has made several such calls before, but China has always refused, accusing him of separatism. The Dalai Lama said he wanted to see for himself […]

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China’s ‘New Deal’ faces big challenges – Elaine Kurtenbach

From AP, via seattle pi.com (link): Communist leaders have launched China’s most ambitious initiative in decades, promising billions of dollars in social spending and farm aid to help the 800 million people in its neglected countryside catch up with its booming cities. The blueprint unveiled at this week’s parliament meeting echoes President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s […]

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Political advisory system can help China avoid “color revolution”: advisor – People’s Daily

From People’s Daily (link): China’s political consultative system can help the country avoid “color revolution” — a turmoil that troubled some central Asian nations launched by foreign hostile forces, a senior advisor said Friday. The deliberative democracy mechanism under the framework of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) serves as a major channel for […]

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Hawkish US warns of ‘negative’ China – Geoff Elliott

From The Australian (link): On the eve of her visit to Australia, the US Secretary of State struck a surprisingly hawkish tone on China, saying the US, Japan and Australia had to watch the pace and reach of Beijing’s military build-up. “I think that is something that is concerning, particularly for those of us that […]

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Inland provinces ‘suffer funding shortfall’-Andrew Yeh

From the Finantial Times (link) China’s inland provinces are suffering serious funding shortfalls because of administrative problems and big regional variations in public spending, according to a study by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Margit Molnar, the author of a 100-page OECD report on China’s public spending, said there was a worrying disparity […]

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Angel by Day, Devil by Night – Fu Jianfeng & Ma Xiaoliu

From The Southern Weekend (in Chinese), via Press Interpreter, translated by Ramsi Woodcock: On New Year’s eve 2006, 23 year old Xu Ping, a female village school teacher, looked around the table full of family members. Xu Enhuai looked at the unusually mature face of his daughter and said something of deep significance to his […]

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Marlboro Country’s borderline with China – Matt Young

From Asia Times (link): The largest tobacco producer in the world is the Chinese government, and despite loosening trade barriers, it appears it wants to stay that way by mastering the game of Monopoly at home and blowing more local smoke abroad. The tobacco trade in China has opened up to some extent since the […]

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China’s “New Socialist Countryside” – Stephen Green

From The Business Week (link): Standard Chartered Senior Economist Stephen Green explores how China should proceed to raise rural residents out of a cycle of poverty The rest of the world hasn’t really taken notice yet, but in recent months, there has been a marked shift in the domestic political priorities of official Beijing. During […]

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Exporting Censorship – Xeni Jardin

From the New York Times (link): AMERICAN technology firms are taking heat from the public and Congress for helping China’s government police the Internet. But this controversy extends well beyond China and the so-called Internet Gang of Four: Google, Yahoo, Cisco and Microsoft. Just how many American companies are complicit hit home for me last […]

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China keeps them down on the farm – Philip Bowring

From the International Herald Tribune (link): Necessity as well as good sense lies behind China’s decision in its latest five year plan, revealed at the National People’s Congress, to play down numerical growth goals and target instead the wealth gap and social and environmental issues. But the new goals look likely to be out of […]

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China delays property law amid rights dispute – Mure Dickie

From the Financial Times (link): China is revising a draft Property Law after delaying passage of the long-awaited legislation because of fierce ideological debate among officials and academics over its balancing of state and private rights. The dispute over the Property Law highlights political sensitivities that continue to surround Communist-ruled China’s embrace of the market […]

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