Showing posts with label New York Times. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York Times. Show all posts

Monday, November 11, 2013

Bloomberg Accused of Killing China Report

Making money in China ultimately means that at some point, you're going to have to kiss some serious ass.  If you're a news site you really have to knuckle under.  Get down on all fours and seriously lick boot.  The CCP are in charge around here, and they're used to getting all their own way.  Putting the frighteners on the foreign reporting community by administering a few sound beatings (back in the good old days) has given way to denied visa applications and the occasional website block as a surefire way of making sure that hacks think twice before following up a lead.

China rattles it's visa sabre just to remind all the foreign devils who write nasty stories about all those Mao-fearing politicians.  If you really piss someone off, your website gets blocked.  Pavlovian system of punishment and reward has meant that ISPs and websites do a lot of self-censorship to keep the Politburo happy.  Occasionally bulletins from the Ministry remind journos who exactly is in charge, but by and large, the censorship machine hums along quite nicely all by itself.

The problem is getting foreigners on board.  Foreign journalists have all sorts of righteous beliefs concerning the freedom of the press and serving the public interest, and other related nonsensica.  The New York Times and Bloomberg have paid the price for publishing non too flattering pieces about the upper echelons of Chinese government.

In an effort to get it's groove back in China, and prevent it's Beijing bureau from being forced to close, accusations have surfaced that senior editors at Bloomberg quashed a story that linked Wang Jianlin with the relatives of top government officials in Beijing.  Bloomberg have flat out denied that the story was dropped because of it's already precarious position in China.  Editor-in-Chief Matthew Winkler was adamant that there was no threat from the Chinese government that they would kick Bloomberg out of China if they ran the piece.  
“The reporting as presented to me was not ready for publication,” Mr Winkler told the Financial Times, adding that Laurie Hays, a senior editor, and other top editors agreed with that assessment.

The person familiar with the discussions dismissed Bloomberg’s comments that the story was not ready for publication, saying it had been approved and just needed a Chinese government response. “We had crossed the Rubicon,” the person said. “The story was fully edited, fact checked and vetted by the lawyers.”

Kowtowing through gritted teeth has become par for the course in Hollywood, who are more that happy to insert a couple of ingratiating yet completely irrelevant pro-China scenes in their movies.  If the allegations are true that the Bloomberg killed a report purely based purely on speculation that the Chinese wouldn't like it, they may as well just shut up shop anyway.


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Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Chinese Official Drowned During Corruption Interrogation

It seems that the even though the Chinese government have been trumpeting the anti-corruption trials and investigations as shining examples of truth, justice and fairness, not everyone has been listening.


In an attempt to extort a confession from Yu Qiyithe chief engineer of a state-owned company in the eastern city of Wenzhou, investigators held his head underwater in a bath of icy water.  They only stopped the torture when he stopped struggling.  He was rushed to a local hosipital where he later died.  The five investgators from the Party's disciplinary committee and one local prosecutor have been charged with intentional injury, although that allegation might be the least of their worries.


Held for questioning over a 38 day period, Yu's wife alleges that  "Yu Qiyi was a strong man before he was detained... but was skinny when he died," she said in an interview in a local newspaper, "He was bruised internally and externally during the 38 days (in detention). He must have been tortured in other ways besides the drowning exposed by the prosecution," she added.


A post-mortem showed he had been made to "imbibe liquids" that caused pulmonary dysfunction and eventually his death, according to a photograph of a forensic document carried by the newspaper.


It's not the first time that overzealous crusaders have been caught beating the life out of officials suspected of graft.  In June, Qian Guoliang, was killed during interrogation.  After convulsions and losing consciousness, he was taken to hospital where he too died after attempts to save him failed.


In both cases, these lower level officials have not been important enough to warranty the somewhat more comfortable treatment afforded to Bo Xi Lai, with investigators using the shady system of shanggui(double regulations) to question the "flies" accused of graft.  Speaking to the New York Times on the matter, Mr. Qian's lawyer, Shi Weijiang said


“The practice of shuanggui is above and outside the law, yet it is so commonly used.  It is highly dangerous. I’m afraid this death won’t be the last if this practice continues.”


It seems that even if you are going after tigers and flies, the tigers still manage to get to have their say in the dock more often than the flies.


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Monday, August 26, 2013

Document 9: Stop Calling Them Western Values

Doug Saunders of The Globe and Mail examines the use and promotion of "western values" in Chinese propaganda.
This sort of language has long been a familiar part of the Chinese state-controlled media, whose opinion articles frequently contrast these dangerous “Western” values with the “Confucian values” of deference to authority, social order, harmonious co-operation, common endeavour and unquestioning loyalty. Eastern and Western values, in this popular formula, are fire and ice.

Pointing out that the core tenents of Chinese communism is taken, lock, stock and barrel from a western idea determined by Western values in the first place, the arguement that the CCP is pursuing "Confucian values", like most ideologies that emanate from the Party these days, doesn't hold much water.  Saunders cites the now infamous "Document 9", a top secret memo that was leaked to the New York Times as an example of the short sighted attitude taken by the CCP in it's "anti-Western" stance.
A copy of Document No. 9 seen and verified by The New York Times places “Western constitutional democracy” at the top of its list of perils, then follows with more “subversive currents” to guard against: “promoting ‘universal values’ of human rights, Western-inspired notions of media independence and civic participation (and) ardently pro-market ‘neo-liberalism.’” Across the country, cadres and mandarins are taking part in education sessions to fight against these threats.

 


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Sunday, August 25, 2013

Bo Xi Lai: Optimism on Trial

Cynics get a bad press, and nowhere is cynicism more prevalent than in China.

Almost daily, stories of some government official or other taking backhanders in a property development, giving his son or daughter a job they’re woefully underqualfied to do, endless tales of sexual abuse, impropriety and an assortment of other scandals could wear down even the sunniest of optimists.

The brazen twofacedness of Chinese politicians could break the spirit of Lei Feng himself, the passive aggressiveness of Chinese foreign policy apparently does more to contribute to Chinese development that global development and does nothing to secure China as a the world power that it pretends it is.

China is a country with problems, it's very true, and the Party has done much to make sure that the idea that the Communist Party and only the Communist Party can solve these problems (given enough time) has become firmly ingrained in the psyche of the average Zhou.

Thus the message of the leadership is that Chinese people should be optimistic about their future, and the future of their country, because the Chinese Communist Party is doing everything it can to improve the country, raise the people out of poverty, and put them on the right path to a socialist Shangri-La. And it’s the mindless optimism is exactly what China's problem is.

During The Cultural Revolution, everyone was paid a set amount of money regardless of the work that they did, and farmers dutifully went out into the fields and did absolutely no work, leaving the crops to fail and being paid for the privilege. These days the Chinese have more food than they can stomach, but it’s a famine of innovation that is plaguing the country. Copyright laws are flaunted, and opportunistic snake oilers copy Western ideas and products, knocking them out under substandard quality control, selling them for half the price of their western counterparts, and running off with the cash.

Confident that things will improve by themselves, the optimist contributes little, relies on the status-quo, and retires, happy that a days work has meant a days pay, and that the family has been provided for. The cynic recognizes the problems, the delays and the obstacles and work hard to overcome them, confident that at the end of it, there’ll be a bigger pay off that the optimist could ever dream of.

Writing in The Guardian, Julian Bagnini espoused the virtues of the cynical,
Perhaps the greatest slur against cynicism is that it nurtures a fatalistic pessimism, a belief that nothing can ever be improved. There are lazy forms of cynicism of which this is certainly true. But at its best, cynicism is a greater force for progress than optimism. The optimist underestimates how difficult it is to achieve real change, believing that anything is possible and it's possible now. Only by confronting head-on the reality that all progress is going to be obstructed by vested interests and corrupted by human venality can we create realistic programmes that actually have a chance of success. Progress is more of a challenge for the cynic but also more important and urgent, since for the optimist things aren't that bad and are bound to get better anyway.

China watchers have gotten a bad press during the trial of Bo Xi Lai, dismissing the whole thing as a scripted show trial that nothing good will come off.  It's easy to take the side of cynic with this one.  After writing a few self-criticisms and saying that they were really quite sorry for what happened, many of them have been let off the hook.  A few token sackings have been issued to keep the junior officials on their toes, but, by and large, the scandal has been limited to a few key players, with nothing of the reform that many believed would take place under Xi Jin Ping's governance.

One of the key factors in this almost universal dismissal is that the trial really isn't aimed at Chinese people.  To a certain degree, the whole thing is a PR event, you would be something of an optimist to believe that anyone is getting a fair trial in China, one just has to look at the ongoing debacle surrounding Li Tianyi's rape case to see that.

Bo's trial serves the Party in two ways.  In the first, it is intended to show-off the transparent nature of the usually opaque Chinese legal system to the outside world.  News coverage has been to tightly controlled to allow anything beyond the terse courtroom transcripts being published in the Chinese media.  Even though the proceedings were being tweeted via the Jinan court's Weibo account, no discussion was allowed, and comments on the news feed have been disabled.  Rule of law has been notoriously difficult to come by in China, and foreign companies love complaining about how difficult it is to do business.

By showing that not even high level officials like Bo are above the law (although when news broke of Wen Jia Bao's wealth in the New York Times, the newspapers website was promptly blocked in the mainland) the Chinese government seeks to placate investors wary of ploughing money into something that might get spirited away in some dodgy pyramid scheme involving property in Monaco.  Venture capitalists take risks for a living, but in a place that seems to offer no legal protection, not a penny will be spent on expanding a western brand into China.

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Secondly, the trial is intended to send the message to party cadres that corruption is a problem, and if you're in the wrong place at the right time, then you could end up in the dock.

Editorials from state-run media in China have been suggesting that eradicating graft entirely isn't possible, promoting the idea that the "level of corruption" should be brought down to a level acceptable to the public.  The Global Times editorial that drew most fire from China watchers was called (after a couple of revision by QQ.com to sex it up a little) The Public Should Understand that China Must Permit Moderate Corruption:
There is no way in any country to “root out” corruption. Most critical is containing it to a level acceptable to the public. And to do this is, for China, especially difficult.…  The public must also understand … the objective fact and reality that China has no way of entirely suppressing corruption without sending the whole country into pain and confusion. Fighting corruption is a difficult task in China’s social development. But its victory relies at the same time on the elimination of other obstructions in other areas of battle. China can’t conceivably be in a situation where it is a country behind in all other areas, but where its officials are really clean. Even if that were possible, it would not be sustainable.

Threatening the general public with the idea that graft is the lifeblood of China, and without it a return to the bad old days of civil war, famine and rule by warlords didn't win any popularity competitions with the Chinese people on Weibo either. Some users wryly noted that after moderate corruption receives the stamp of approval from the Politburo, moderate murder will be next.

Shanghai based journalist Adam Minter ended his analysis of the furor that followed the publication of the editorial by pointing out that no one had actually defined what "moderate corruption" was, leaving plenty of wiggle room for any politicians unfortunate enough to have people like Wang Li Jun as friends.

That the trial has apparently drawn so much in the way of cynical coverage is a testament to the international misfires of the Chinese government when it comes to promoting itself overseas.  While they've had plenty of practice selling the idea of Communist leadership pretty successfully to the Chinese, by their nature, western journalists are cynical.

Given enough prodding, some politicians will end up in front of a judge, there are a myriad other failings that the Chinese government is yet to even admit to.  Getting a politician like Bo Xi Lai to admit to taking backhanders while parents in Sichaun and still trying to get a straight answer out of officials who sanctioned the tofu building that so quickly collapsed with a massive earthquake hit the province in 2008 is quite simply too little, too late.  The failures of leadership and and the repeated lack of accountability by the CCP, accompanied by Soviet-era references to Marxism, Maoism and Socialism with Chinese Characteristics has done little to engender trust between foreign journalists and Chinese officials, and even less to bolster the image of the Chinese abroad.

The Chinese are past masters as manipulating fears and propagating their own noble crusades against unseen enemies that, according to them, seek to destroy the core values that every patriotic Chinese person holds dear.

Previously, the CCP has sought legitimacy by reminding people that things are much better these days than they were before.  Exploiting the bitter memories many have of the invasion by the Japanese and other foreign powers, while at the same time, making sure that everyone knows who it was that lifted the Chinese people out of abject poverty to become the world's second largest economy.  Embracing propaganda campaigns that are more borrowed from George Bush and his neoconservatives than from Mao, represent a more cynical move forward than the pessimistic step backward that many of Bo Xi Lai's supporters would've approved of.

 
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Monday, August 19, 2013

NYT: Misrule of Law

The New York Times Opinion pages has a contribution from film maker Hua Ze, who tells the story of  lawyer Xu Zhi Yong.  Earlier this year, a video he recorded from his cell, where he has been detained, charged with having "gathered crowds to disrupt public order".

Human rights watchers in China condemned the arrest, mostly because he was already under house arrest when the charge was made against him.

On the evening of July 16, Mr. Xu’s wife, Cui Zheng, came home from work to find her husband, who had already been under house arrest for three months, missing. The police officers who had stood outside the door, enforcing the house arrest, were also gone. Their home had been searched: books were in disarray, computers seized, the lunch she’d prepared for her husband untouched.


At midnight, two police officers delivered a notice: Mr. Xu had been detained on suspicion of “assembling a crowd to create disorder in a public place.” For more than 90 days of his house arrest, no one except Mr. Xu’s family had been allowed to pass through the door of their home. So how could he have committed the crime he was accused of?



His arrest was one of the first in a wave of arrests, detentions and other miscellaneous harassment of human right activists in China.  That Mr. Xu is one of the more moderate lawyers who have called for more government transparency was a telling portent of the hard line the new CCP administration would take against those who speak out against it.


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Thursday, August 15, 2013

Chinese Hackers Upping Their Game

A paper published by security firm FireEye examines the changing techniques that hackers based in China are using to launch fresh attacks on foreign websites.
The new campaigns mark the first significant stirrings from the group since it went silent in January in the wake of a detailed expose of the group and its exploits — and a retooling of what security researchers believe is a massive spying operation based in China.

Delving into the mechanics of the most recent attacks, malicious code uses updated version of malware Aumlib and Ixeshe to execute their hacks.  According to FireEye,  the software hadn't significantly evolved since 2011, but has drawn attention to what many suspect to be a government backed attempt to hack secure networks outside China.

The hacker crew APT12 was exposed in January, but these new hack attacks come courtesy of the quieter, but more active APT1.  “We see them targeting hundreds of organizations, but don’t attract attention or leave much of a footprint,” Mandiant CISO Richard Bejtlich said in January.

“These subtle changes may be enough to circumvent existing IDS signatures designed to detect older variants of the Aumlib family,” FireEye said, “That additional degree of understanding can help organizations forecast when and how a threat actor might change their behavior — because if you successfully foil their attacks, they probably will.”


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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...