Showing posts with label Global Times. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Global Times. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Chinese Answers

On the outside, China's answer to Silicon Valley doesn't look the part: It's a crowded mass of electronics malls, fast-food joints and office buildings in northwest Beijing, bisected by congested highways.

Inside China's Version of Silicon Valley, Wall Street Journal, Dec 4, 2013.



Large parts of eastern China, including its prosperous and cosmopolitan commercial capital Shanghai, have been covered in smog over the past week or so. The provincial government has cancelled flights, closed schools and forced cars off the road – and also warned children and the elderly to stay indoors. A cold front arriving yesterday saw the pollution start to clear.

Users of Sina Weibo, China’s answer to Twitter, also vented their outrage over the CCTV and Global Times’ comments.

Positive Spin on China's Smog Crisis Baackfires, The Scotsman, 11 Dec, 2013
Over 86,000 micro-credit practitioners, China's answer to Muhammad Yunus, the Bangladeshi banker credited with pioneering the concept of micro-finance, have been going door to door to visit small business owners and farmers to offer them financial advice and services.

Rags to Riches Tales Expected from Micro Financing Growth, Xinhua Insight, 14 Dec, 2013
China Telecom’s subsidiary Jiangsu Telecom, in Jiangsu province on the east coast of the country, posted the offer on its website. Translated details were scarce, but it appears customers have the chance to use bitcoin instead of yuan to pre-order Samsung’s 2014 clamshell form-factor Android phone.

Payments are processed through BitBill, China’s answer to BitPay.

China's Third Largest Mobile Network Now Accepts Bitcoin, Coindesk.com Nov 29, 2013.

58.com, China’s answer to Craigslist, surged nearly 42 per cent to $24.12 in its debut on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday, in a sign that sentiment towards US-listed Chinese companies could be turning after two years of accounting scandals and critical reports from short-sellers.

China's Answer to Craiglist Surges on US Debut, FT.com, Nov 1st, 2013

 
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Saturday, September 14, 2013

More Detentions as China Continues Big V Crackdown

As the sixth human rights conference in Beijing gets underway Chinese authorities continue to merrily roundup up high profile microbloggers.  The New Citizen Movement, which says it works within the Chinese constitution, such as it is, is slowly being dismantled amid a raft of arrests and detentions by the Beijing authorities.

Wang Gongquan, a billionaire venture capitalist was detained on Friday under suspicion "of gathering a crowd to disturb order in public places.".  The catch all accusation, along with "incitement to subvert state power" is used to cover a multitude of vague sins, no of which any officials are willing to fully explain to the press.  Shit like this just happens in China.  The Wall Street Journal reports that it took 20 police officers to remove the dangerous individual from his home in Beijing.

Clearly hellbent on the destruction of the Chinese State, Wang's connections to the New Citizen Movement haven't done him any favors.  The loosely connected group of wealthy white collar business men routinely speak out against the government online and call for officials to disclose their assets.  One of the movement's founders, Professor Teng told the Daily Telegraph
“Of course Wang Gongquan didn’t commit any crime under the current legal system.  Wang is a famous investor but he has [also] been supportive of civil society and human rights for many years.” “I don’t know what will happen to him [but] if Wang is not released within 24 hours it will be very worrying.".

Chen Min, a journalist who has championed Prof. Teng's movement in recent months said in the same interview that a "white terror" had descended on Beijing,

In an interview with the South China Morning Post, Wang had expressly said that he never posts calls to action on his Weibo account, because he already knows that protesting on the streets in China is illegal.  It obviously makes sense that he would be arrested for something that he'd already dismissed as a pointless course of action.
SCMP: Would you protest in front of any government agency?

Wang: I am against street actions. I have never encouraged street actions.

SCMP: Why is that?

Wang: Because the Communist Party doesn’t allow it. It's such a simple reason!

A statement was released early on Saturday morning saying
Free Wang Gongquan. Give a chance to goodness, to freedom and justice, and to a peaceful transformation. Fellow Chinese, when the nest is upset no egg is left intact. Do not let our country fall any deeper into the abyss in the opposite direction of modern civilization without doing anything. Take actions to defend the effort to build a civil society, for, by doing so, we are defending ourselves, each one of us.

The arrest of Wang follows the detention and subsequent charging - Chinese police tend to arrest first and then find something that the poor sap languishing in the cells is guilty of - of lawyer Xi Zhiyong, who last June managed to film a statement from his cell, the uploaded video immediately going viral on China's social networks.

Another prominent critic of the Chinese government was also taken into custody on Friday.  Microblogger (aren't there any megabloggers being arrested?) Dong Shiru was detained when it was discovered that he mis-registered the amount of capital available to his business.  The police acted swung into action only a week after Dong had openly admitted this "crime" to his 500,000 followers on Weibo.  That transgression alone shouldn't land him in much hot water, as the Global Times pointed out
It is common for private enterprises to exaggerate their registered capital to imply that they are powerful and credible, Wu Dong, a Shanghai-based lawyer from the M&A Law Firm, told the Global Times.

Owners of such companies can be charged with a crime only if they cause financial damages of more than 100,000 yuan to others or carry on illicit activities, Wu said

What's more likely to get him in trouble is the fact that he often posts about those inconvenient deaths in police custody.  One case that grabbed the headlines was a incident wherein an inmate had brutally and savagely beaten himself to death during a game of hide and seek.  Dong predicted his arrest when his offices were raided by the police and three computers were confiscated, he even went so far as to list the possible offenses that he might be charged with
"What crime will they bring against me? Prostituting, gambling, using and selling drugs, evading tax, causing trouble on purpose, fabricating rumors, running a mafia online?"

Even Dong's close friends don't hold out much hope that they'll be seeing him any time soon, "If they want to punish you, they can always find an excuse," Dong's friend Zheng Xiejian said. "They could not find any wrongdoing against Dong and had to settle on this obscure charge."


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Monday, August 26, 2013

Chinese Authorities Shoot At Least 15 Uyghurs Dead in Xinjiang

RFA is reporting that Chinese authorities have shot at and killed at least 15 Uyghurs in the restive Chinese province of Xinjiang.  The men were accused by local police of terrorism and illegal religious activity(?).
They were among a group of more than 20 Uyghurs surrounded and fired upon by police in a lightning raid last week in the Yilkiqi township in Kargilik (in Chinese, Yecheng) county in Kashgar prefecture, the sources said.

"We conducted an anti-terror operation on August 20th, successfully and completely destroying the terrorists," Yilkiqi township police chief Batur Osman told RFA's Uyghur Service.

Reports from eyewitnesses say that 26 men were surrounded as shot at as they prayed in the desert.  Their bodes were later dumped in a mass grave by a bulldozer.

As protests by ethnic minorities in the region intensify, the Chinese government has increased it's negative coverage of the plight of the oft persecuted Uyghurs.  Since siding with Assad in Syria's civil war, Beijing has painting the extremist Muslims in Xinjiang as terrorists, trained by the Syrian rebel forces, hellbent on bringing down the government.

Similar accusation of terrorism with brought against five men, with two of them receiving the death penalty for their involvement in rioting in the region in April this year.  State run media was quick to rush out editorials supporting the sentencing, with purported expert of terrorism Lei Wei telling The Global Times
"Upholding laws during our fight against terrorism helps people at home and abroad get a clearer understanding about terrorist threats in Xinjiang,"

The ethnic Uyghurs say that the massive influx of Han Chinese to the region has deprived them of job opportunities and that they suffer from religious oppression.  Escalating levels of violence, including stabbings and riots by knife wielding mobs have plagued the region this year, with the Chinese doing little in the way of addressing the issues raised by the Muslim minority.

 


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Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Bo's Conspiritors Still Surviving

Though Bo Xi Lai may be standing trial, and Wang Li Jun is incarcerated for 15 years, not much has been heard of the others that were involved in Bo's wheeling and dealing in Chongqing.  With some quick thinking and a lot of apologising, senior cadres in Chongqing are escaping trial, showing the uncertainty with which the Party is progressing with it's supposed crackdown on graft.

Wen Jia Bao was especially critical of the Chongqing party secretariat, reminding everyone who'd listen in one of his final speeches that a return to the more right-wing, Maoist era politicking that Bo was fond of would be a disaster for the country.  Ironically, it was a Mao era self-criticism that saved Huang's skin.  Part confession, part denouncement, it served to distance him from Bo's antics, and secure his future.

In the good old days, the mayor of the city, Huang Qi Fan described the relationship he was with his boss, Bo, as "like fish and water", neatly fitting in with Hu Jin Tao's "harmonious society" schtick.  Finding out exactly how fast your friends can forget you in Chinese politics,  and Huang wasted no time in denouncing Bo and his ilk, promising that the excesses of his reign will never be repeated.  Although a few junior heads have rolled, the Global Times take on corruption seems to be ringing truer than ever - corruption doesn't need to be eradicated, just brought down to a level that is acceptable to the people.

 


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Saturday, August 17, 2013

Forensic Officer in Heywood Case Resigns

Wang Xue Mei,  one of the most senior forensic experts at China's Supreme People's Procuratorate, has resigned.

Denouncing the evidence and final verdict that was passed in the investigation into the death of 22-year-old Ma Yue in 2010 she said that "the status quo of the forensic team is very disappointing, and even despairing."

The trial of Bo Xi Lai and the conviction of his wife, Gu Kai Lai for the murder of a British businessman, Neil Heywood isn't mentioned in the official statement that announces her departure, blame is placed on the electrocution Yue, whose case, officially, will not be considered for criminal prosecution for her resignation.  Ms. Wang described the verdict as "absurd and irresponsible."

For two years, Yue's mother had collected signatures for a petition asking the government to improve subway safety following the accident.  She was arrested by police in 2012 in Fuxingmen.  Speaking to the Global Times, Zi Xiangdong, the media officer of the Municipal Public Security Bureau said "Her son being electrocuted to death is one thing. The measure she used for gathering signatures and making an impact is another. It has disturbed the social order."

In 2012, she spoke out about Neil Heywoods death, saying that he was murdered to stop him from revealing a "unspeakable" and "complicated" secret, describing the official account of his death as "absurd".

Bo Xi Lai's wife Gu Kai Lai was officially convicted of Heywood's murder, and Bo himself is due to stand trial, accused of major disciplinary violations and corruption charges.


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Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Lost Chinese ID Cards Can't be Cancelled

The Global Times carries worrying news for anyone who's ever lost a Chinese ID card.
"There is no way to nullify the lost ID cards. People can only apply for a new card," an officer at the Xuanwu branch of the Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau, surnamed Duan, told the Global Times Tuesday, adding that lost ID cards will still be valid even when the new card is made, meaning that anyone who finds or steals the card can use it as usual.

If someone loses their ID card, they get issued a new one, but the old one isn't cancelled, potentially allowing a thief to commit crimes online.
"An ID card is sold at 200 yuan ($32.70). I have over 7,000 valid ID cards at hand, and most of them are from pickpockets at train stations who sell the ID cards directly to me, so they are 100 percent real. All you need to do is to pick out a card which looks like you the most and tell me, I'll deliver it to you," Zhang Tuan, an ID card trader in Beijing, told a Global Times reporter posing as a buyer, adding that most buyers bought them in order to apply for credit cards.

Reassuring everyone that "according to Chinese law", this type of identity theft is illegal (which probably works as well as the law that says child sex abuse is illegal), the Ministry of Public Affairs promises to take "strict actions" to fight ID card trafficking.  Without actually telling anyone what their plan might be, although it is pointed out that newer ID cards use fingerprinting technology that everyone is certain that all the banks check thoroughly.

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Thoughtful Global Times Editorial Provokes Unexpected Anger

The number one selling book in a Hong Kong store that specializes in selling book banned on the Chinese mainland is an apocalyptic novel entitled “2014: The Great Collapse”.  The story focuses on the fictionalized account of the downfall of the Chinese Communist Party.  It was something that hit a little too close to home when the CCP held meetings in April to discuss the problems facing the future of the Party.

Strengthening the Party has been a top priority of late, a task ideally suited to our good friends at The Global Times, who this week warned on “battles and bloodshed" should the Party ever collapse.  The hardy netizens on Sina Weibo didn't take too kindly to this kind of thing, The Global Times is usually more thoughtful when writing it's editorials after all.

 


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Friday, August 2, 2013

Global Times Promotes "Freedom of Speech"

News comes from Fei Chang Dao that the Global Times is working hard to promote freedom of speech on the Chinese mainland.  Previously, the Chinese government has been relucantant to answer qustions about Internet and civil freedoms in China, but now seems to take a different tack, openly reporting that the Japanese version of the Chinese search engine Baidu  was blocked because of pornographic content.

As Chine wrestles with it's position in the global economy, the whimsical nature of the Chinese censorship system throws up the occasional blip in reality for Chinese consumers.  This month, while  Despicable Me 2 has been receiving coverage in Chinese language entertainment magazines, and has been heavily promoted on the Beijing subway video feeds, the movie itself has been deemed illegal by SARFT and is unlikely to be screened to Chinese audiences.


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Friday, June 15, 2012

I'm Swiss. I live here now, but I'm actually a Swiss... nationally.

It's been kinda difficult to be British in Beijing lately- first there was the spectacular Youku implosion of a video of drunken/stoned/retarded/possibly-all-three Briton attempting to rape a Chinese woman in Xidan.  Now we're even more in hock with the CCP because David Cameron met up with His Holiness The Dalai Lama.

With panther-like reactions, the Global Times churned out an op-ed that lambasted the UK and Norway for their arrogance (yes, that's Chinese men calling other countries arrogant, just in case you didn't get it first time around.  Incredible I know).  Like a lot of Chinese tub thumping, the actual content is questionable, and the article is one of those paper-rattling nationalist things that Chinese people like so much.
The speculation is probably correct. In both cases China's core interests have been offended. Proper countermeasures are necessary for a big country. If China takes no action, it would be tantamount to tolerating a vicious provocation. This indifference would be despised at home and in the world.

Er.  No.  Just at home, as it happens.  No one else cares.  Ok, so the anonymous author doesn't really point out why China has the right not to be offended.  Lots of countries and lots of governments are attacked by media outlets everyday.  China's just going to have to grow up and learn to take it's knocks like everyone else.
Since its reform, China has accepted some political concepts of the West, but that is not the same as unconditionally following orders from the West. Studying the West has to take place under the condition of resisting its pressure, otherwise, it is to accept being conquered by the West.

As I commented on the story itself, China didn't really "reform and open up", the government just stopped interfering with people's lives so much after Mao died.  A classic CCP maneovre of waiting and seeing and then taking credit for what happens next.  As far as anyone knows, the political system that China did take from the west was one of the worst political ideologies created that China's inept leaders of the time thought they needed in a deperate bid to modernise the country.  Almost every country that embraced communism (and most have subsequently discarded it) ain't exactly the type of place that you'd want to retire in.  With the exception of Cuba, but they've actually got a decent health system.
The UK and Norway are developed countries with relatively small populations. China is aware of their political advantages. However, governing a country of 1.3 billion people is beyond their imagination. It is naïve and arrogant to try and teach China what to do. 

It was only a matter of time before one of the Holy Trinity of Chinese excuses was trotted out.  Chinese people are immensely proud of their immense population, and their apparent inability to manage it properly.  Corruption running rampant?  Well, China has a large population.  Poison in your milk?  Well, China is a developing country, you know. 1.3billion people isn't beyond our imagination, it's just that the systems that the corrupt morons that run China can't scale up beyond the neighbourhoods of the politicians that dream them up over a baijiu soaked dinner.
 They must pay the due price for their arrogance. This is also how China can build its authority in the international arena. China doesn't need to make a big fuss because of the Dalai or a dissident, but it has many options to make the UK and Norway regret their decision. 

The way to build authority in an international arena is to stop personalising every little slight and stop making overblown puff pieces about how sensitive you all are and how we should treat you all with respect.  If Chinese politicians actually just stopped brown-nosing the CCP machine for just five minutes, and started doing things for the good of the people, rather than saying that they're doing stuff for the good of the people, we might be able to make some progress.

Spending thousands of RMB on banners saying that Chinese people are 文明 doesn't actually do anything to change people's minds.  Becoming civilised and not acting like a dick in public is not something that people can osmotically achieve simply by being bombarded with thinly veiled propaganda day and night.

Oh, and by the way, outside of Bond villians, no one "must pay the price" for shit these days.
China-UK cooperation will have to be slowed down. Free trade agreement talks between China and Norway have also been upset. The ensuing loss is a small one for China. 

Free trade won't be upset, the sky will not fall, and the worst that would happen is that China goes a sulks in the corner for a while.  No one likes a cry baby and you have to stop playing the victim.
It's not easy to have Chinese society's sympathy on China's sovereignty issues. The West has presented various honors to Chinese dissidents, and Chinese people won't be fooled into believing it is a simple coincidence.

Shockingly, what happens in "the West" is that people that try and change things actually get recognised for trying to change things.  We don't give out random gongs to people just because we want their job when they retire (with the obviously exception of the British Civil Service, naturally).  To get a pat on the back, you need to do something other than get fat and smoke cigarettes and retire to go die of cancer, it's just doesn't work like that.  The Chinese government has to stop looking at everything as though governance is one long gaokao.  There are certain things that you can't be taught, and as long as current status quo exists, it never will be.

Monday, March 19, 2012

The Mystery of the Black Ferrari

For some reason best know unto themselves (or until CDT publishes a new version of it's Ministry of Truth Directives) all references to a car crash that killed it's driver and injured two female passengers are being scrubbed from Chinese language Internet sites.

Netease, Sohu, and Tencent have removed references to "black Ferrari" from their databases and the usual "in accordance with local laws" message is being displayed instead of search results.  According to the Global Times, the police "received the call around 4:24 Sunday morning. One injured woman, 31 years old, sustained a head injury and a fractured right leg, and she was sent to the [nearby] 306th Hospital of PLA for treatment."  And that's about all we know.  The PSB is refusing to comment on the case or on any progress that might be being made in the investigation, and thus online speculation is even more rampant, with many jumping to the right conclusion that the identity of the car's owner is the reason for the information clean-up.

The latest rumor is that  Jia Qing Lin's illigitimate son may have been in control of the car at the time of the crash.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

How Chinese Journalism Works

A news story on Global Times covered the kidnapping of 25 Chinese workers from a cement factory in Egypt had a curious map that, among other things, had renamed Isreal as "The Holyland".  The map was hastily taken down, but China watchers on Facebook quickly discovered that the map had been unceremoniously swiped from Atlas Tours and Tourism - a travel agent's based in Jordan. Sinocism was quick to take a helpful screenshot of the image to help readers come to their own conclusions, the original map can be viewed at http://www.atlastours.net/egypt/



Thursday, July 28, 2011

We Hope For a Miracle

A cartoon currently doing the rounds on Weibo (thanks to Emma Lau for the link and the translation) - the last frame says "we can only hope for a miracle!" showing Ministry of Railways spokesman Wang Yong Ping tied to the train tracks as an out of control train hurtles towards him.

 

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Wenzhou Crash Media Aftermath

The western and English language media in China is going into overdrive providing coverage and commentary on the aftermath of the Wenzhou Train Crash.

Xinhua is reporting that Wen Jia Bao has called for a “swift, open transparent investigation”, although Grandpa Wen has pretty much been calling for whatever he wants since he’s going to to be stepping down as Premier next year – he promised political reform when he was in England earlier in the summer.

Time Magazine has a piece on the “murmurs of dissent” in China following the crash – although almost every foreign reporter in China is probably playing up the idea that Chinese people are disagreeing with the government

The ever-excellent Ministry of Tofu (which I keep mistyping as the Ministry of Tudu for some reason) has a rundown and translation of the microblog surveys that have been run through the Chinese cyberscape.  Needless to say, people ain’t happy.

China Realtime Report has a slideshow of pictures from the crash site  and another Chinese language gallery shows how the newspapers on the mainland are reporting on the tragedy.

Both the Global Times and the China Daily have ripped the government a new one over the Ministry of Railways handling of the crash.  The Global Times has attacked the department’s officials, saying that their “arrogance results in bad PR(another brief tells of the total cost that the new rail system might total up to).  The Global Times editorial ominously ends with the lines that “the relationship between the government and the public is like that of a ship and water. Water can keep the ship afloat or sink it.”

Chinese Answers

On the outside, China's answer to Silicon Valley doesn't look the part: It's a crowded mass of electronics malls, fast-food join...