Give voice to the voiceless

Yes, bloggers can do this. Lalaoshi wrote “Meet the new protest point man before he disappears” on his blog, and did just that. Here are some paragraphs from his post: “Lao Zhao, 46, of Shanxi province, shown here preparing a petition for the State Council complaints office in March, is yelling into the wind because […]

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China develops its first 3G chip

“China’s first 3G cell phone chip with independent intellectual property rights has been developed in Shanghai and is expected to be commercialised before the end of this year. Industry experts believe that the development marks a breakthrough in China’s research of wireless telecom chips and software technologies and the and of the monopoly of foreign […]

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AIDS doctors dispatched to China’s countryside (Asia Times)

from Asia Times: “In a health campaign harking back to Maoist mass mobilizations and the era of “barefoot doctors”, China is dispatching droves of young medics to work in rural areas in an effort to rectify the shortcomings of economic reforms that have left the vast countryside poor and vulnerable to health crises, like HIV/AIDS. […]

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At golf, China swings – and misses (Asia Times)

China now ranks fifth in the world for number of golf courses, but the country’s golfing craze is causing a myriad of problems, including destruction of crucial farmland, lost revenue, and encouragement of a corrupt lifestyle. Some even call golf “green opium”. Asia Times writes: Many investors jumped into the market in search of cheap […]

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Journalist gets a taste of the prison dramas he loves (SCMP)

The South China Morning Post ran a profile of Southern Metropolis News editor Cheng Yizhong, who just spent his 39th birthday in prison: “In an interview late last year with a men’s magazine, Southern Metropolis Daily editor-in-chief Cheng Yi- zhong said his favourite movies were prison dramas. He cited The Shawshank Redemption – a story […]

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Sewage spill causes massive fish losses (China Daily)

Read this article on China Daily today. It begins: “Sewage allegedly discharged by local plants have killed huge amounts of aquatic life- an estimated 60,000 kilograms of fish – in the Wenjiang section of the Tuojiang River in Zizhong County in Southwest China’s Sichuan Province, local environmental officials said. ”

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Let’s stop abetting dictatorship in Beijing (IHT)

In today’s International Herald Tribune, Bruce Gilley writes in an op-ed: “The Bush administration should be commended for bringing the cause of democracy back into focus in its international relations in general and its China policy in particular. But it cannot lead where others will not follow. And it is the failure of the domestic […]

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Detained newsman may escape trial (SCMP)

The South China Morning Post reports that the deadline has passed for charges to be filed against Southern Metropolis News editor Cheng Yizhong – indicating that he may be treated with leniency. The story also quotes “reports” that high level Guangdong officials may have intervened on his behalf. But Cheng’s lawyer says officials have six […]

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Message in a bottle

Last Saturday, Financial Times ran a hugely entertaining article called “Message in a bottle.” (The website requires registration! 🙁 ) The author is Tim Clissold. As professor Rudolf Wagner puts it: it is an “exceedingly interesting extensive insider article on the establishment, quandaries, and eventual demise of a joint venture with a Peking beer brewer. […]

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Translation of Jiao Guobiao’s essay (ZonaEuropa)

A rough translation of Jiao Guobiao’s essay about the Propaganda Department is now available here on the ZonaEuropa site. Thanks to the person at that site who did the translation and sent us the link. Jiao Guobiao, a journalism professor at Beijing University„ÄÇ (Doug Kanter/ Polaris for The New York Times)

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U.S. blunders with keyword blacklist

Jonathan Zittrain talked about this at the China’s Digital Future conference on Friday. Here is CNET’s new article on this ironical subject. Although, there is no need to be too ironical about this. All we need is common sense of proportion to see that U.S. blunder in this story is not really comparable with the […]

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