China protester sent to psychiatric hospital: group

From Reuters.com: A woman who protested against forced evictions in Shanghai, China’s rapidly modernising commercial hub, has been forcibly admitted to a psychiatric hospital, a New York-based rights group said. Another Chinese who irked the authorities, a man arrested when he tried to mourn purged Communist Party chief Zhao Ziyang, has lost an appeal against […]

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The Chinese Censors Are At Work Again – ESWN

From EastSouthWestNorth blog: The Chinese censors are at work again. But this is not your usual story. Here is a story from Xinhua in Chinese and in translation: “According to what our reporter learned from the National Development and Reform Committee on January 16, in the work on reorganizing the coal mines that were either […]

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A China-Size Travel Delay – Edward Cody

From The Washington Post: Heavy snowfall in central China disrupted rail traffic Friday just as millions of Chinese headed home for Spring Festival family reunions, stranding countless travelers in frigid northern train stations. The backup, although limited mainly to north-south travel, dramatized the huge volume of holiday travel during the festival, or Chinese New Year, […]

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In China, a warning on illegal land grabs – Joseph Kahn

From the International Herald Tribune: Land grabs by officials eager to cash in on China’s booming economy are provoking mass unrest in the countryside and amount to a “historic error” that could threaten national stability, Prime Minister Wen Jiabao said in comments published Friday. His message underscored the increasing urgency of the government’s campaign to […]

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Selling in China? Which one is it? – David Lague

From the International Herald Tribune: When Angela Feruglio, an advertising researcher, sat in last year on focus groups of young Chinese in Shanghai and Guangzhou as they were quizzed about consumer electronics, it was immediately clear that cities could be divided by desire. In Shanghai, Feruglio said, all the participants wanted iPods and were strongly […]

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Shanwei Crackdown Widow Says Her Husband Was Innocent – Ding Xiao

From Radio Free Asia: Since the shooting of unarmed villagers by police in Dongzhou village, Shanwei City, authorities in Guangdong province have strictly controlled the flow of information out of the village. Recently, a reporter successfully interviewed the wife of Jiang Guangge, who was the first to be killed in this incident and one of […]

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China Puts Journalist On Trial – Edward Cody

From the Washington Post: A veteran Fuzhou journalist stood trial Thursday in the final step in a retaliation campaign launched after a Communist Party official gained national fame by publicly denouncing his superiors for condoning and covering up corruption. The case, in southern Fujian province on the Taiwan Strait, opened a window on an important […]

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Beijing police to be equipped with 120,000 RMB super “rounding the corner” gun – Lian Yue

According to a piece in the Financial Times, “China announced late last year a significant strengthening of the People’s Armed Police, a paramiltary group used to quell disturbances. The PAP has also bolstered its firepower by acquiring what the local media calls ‘super-weapons’ from Israel, advanced guns bought at Rmb120,000 a piece.” One of these […]

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Q&A: China, Africa, and Oil – Esther Pan

From the Council on Foreign Relations, via the New York Times: As global demand for energy continues to rise, major players like the United States, European Union (EU), and Japan are facing a new competitor in the race to secure long-term energy supplies: China. The rapidly growing Asian nation has crafted its foreign policy goals […]

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Pace and Scope of Protest in China Accelerated in ’05 – Joseph Kahn

From The New York Times: Chinese took to the streets to protest land seizures, corruption, pollution and unpaid wages in record numbers in 2005, the national police said Thursday, with mass incidents that involved violent confrontations or attacks on government property surging at the fastest rate. The number of “public order disturbances” rose 6.6 percent […]

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China’s rivers to be dammed for evermore – Richard Spencer

From The Telegraph: High in the Himalayan foothills, the people the Chinese call Angry look down on the waters of the river that shares their name and ponder on the future. “When the dam gets built, the water will come right up to there,” said Asetei, an 84-year-old farmer pointing up the terraced hillside. “There […]

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A Serious Matter – Qige

From Shanghai-based Qitunshuijiao (气吞水饺) Blog on MSN Spaces: (translated by CDT, links embedded by CDT): After finishing my work as an entertainment journalist I finally have time to do something for those suffering...

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