Links » Cream » Protests Over Chemical Plant in Ningbo Continue
Links » Cream » Protests Over Chemical Plant in Ningbo Continue |
- Protests Over Chemical Plant in Ningbo Continue
- Photo: Labrang Monastery, Xiahe, Gansu, by Seba Della y Sole Bossio
- Seventh Self-Immolation This Week Brings Total to More Than 60
- Sensitive Words: Ningbo Protests and More
- Weibo Blocks Photo Uploading in Ningbo
- New York Times Wen Exposé Makes Waves
Protests Over Chemical Plant in Ningbo Continue Posted: 27 Oct 2012 11:14 PM PDT Residents of Ningbo have been protesting a proposed expansion of a petrochemical plant, citing environmental concerns. From the New York Times:
The Washington Post reports that the protests are continuing on Sunday:
Censors are quickly deleting references to the protests and have banned photo saving and uploading in Ningbo on Sina Weibo. Read about a similar incident in which residents of Xiamen successfully stopped the bid for a paraxylen plant, the same kind that is proposed in Ningbo. © Sophie Beach for China Digital Times (CDT), 2012. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us |
Photo: Labrang Monastery, Xiahe, Gansu, by Seba Della y Sole Bossio Posted: 27 Oct 2012 10:41 PM PDT Labrang Monastery, Xiahe, Gansu © Sophie Beach for China Digital Times (CDT), 2012. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us |
Seventh Self-Immolation This Week Brings Total to More Than 60 Posted: 27 Oct 2012 03:32 PM PDT Four self-immolations by Tibetans in the past three days brings the total to seven this week and at least 62 since 2009. According to the scant details available about the most recent cases, three of the four self-immolators have died. Since February 2009, Tibetans in various regions have set themselves on fire as a form of protest against Beijing's policies in Tibet. Radio Free Asia reports on two men who set themselves on fire in Sangchu (Xiahe) county, near Labrang Monastery in Gansu, on Friday. Both died:
Earlier this week, two men, Dorjee Rinchen and Dhondup, died after setting themselves on fire in the same region while another man, Lhamo Kyeb, died elsewhere in Sangchu (Xiahe) County. Over the weekend, reports came in about an earlier incident on Thursday in which twins both self-immolated; one of them reportedly died. From AP:
Stephanie Brigden, the director of Free Tibet, a London-based exile organization, explains the difficulty in obtaining information about the incidents:
High Peaks Pure Earth blog tweeted about the apparent silence from websites inside Tibet:
In an effort to end the deaths and to gather information about the planning of the self-immolations, the government in some regions has offered reward money for information about planned incidents, Voice of America reports. Robert Barnett, a Tibet expert at Columbia University, weighs in on the potential impact of this move:
Meanwhile, in the New York Times, Didi Kirsten Tatlow links the recent self-immolations to government propaganda, including a song performed by famous folk singer and incoming First Lady Peng Liyuan:
For a full list of and details about protesters who have self-immolated, see Free Tibet or the International Campaign for Tibet [as of this posting, these lists had not yet been updated to include the three most recent incidents.] Both these organizations report 59 cases, not including the most recent three. Tibetan writer Woeser reports a slightly different number due to two cases whose circumstances are not clear. Read more about self-immolations via CDT. © Sophie Beach for China Digital Times (CDT), 2012. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us |
Sensitive Words: Ningbo Protests and More Posted: 27 Oct 2012 09:24 AM PDT As of October 27, the following search terms are blocked on Sina Weibo (not including the "search for user" function): Protests in Ningbo: Thousands in the coastal city are demonstrating against the expansion of a petrochemical plant. Other: Note: All Chinese-language words are tested using simplified characters. The same terms in traditional characters occasionally return different results. CDT Chinese runs a project that crowd-sources filtered keywords on Sina Weibo search. CDT independently tests the keywords before posting them, but some searches later become accessible again. We welcome readers to contribute to this project so that we can include the most up-to-date information. To add words, check out the form at the bottom of CDT Chinese's latest sensitive words post. © Anne.Henochowicz for China Digital Times (CDT), 2012. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us |
Weibo Blocks Photo Uploading in Ningbo Posted: 27 Oct 2012 08:43 AM PDT Among ongoing protests in Ningbo against the expansion of a petrochemical plant, Sina Weibo users report they are unable to upload photos to the site from local IP addresses. Attempts are met with this message: "20021 transmitted contents is illegal." Netizens recommend the following workarounds: 1. Change your location on your Weibo profile to another province. 2. Turn off the wifi connection on your phone. 3. Turn off Weibo geotagging. View images of the protests at Tea Leaf Nation. Via CDT Chinese. © Anne.Henochowicz for China Digital Times (CDT), 2012. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us |
New York Times Wen Exposé Makes Waves Posted: 27 Oct 2012 01:18 AM PDT David Barboza's investigation of the wealth built by Wen Jiabao's extended family has dominated China news since its publication by The New York Times early on Friday. While the basic fact that wealth and power go hand in hand may surprise few—China Daily Show joked that anthropologists had discovered one man in a remote Chinese village who was shocked by the revelation—the sheer scale of the family's business dealings has taken some aback. Besides, as Bloomberg's Mike Forsythe tweeted, "there is a HUGE difference between 'knowing' and DOCUMENTING which NYT did!" In a short follow-up article at The New York Times, Barboza explained how he had obtained these documents:
More details on the year-long investigation came from the Times' public editor, Margaret Sullivan, who revealed that the newspaper had discussed the article with Chinese officials. The warning this provided may have contributed to the unusual speed with which censors pounced in the early hours of Friday morning.
From some angles, this case must have looked persuasive. As Sullivan noted, the Times is now exiled from China just months after investing heavily in a Chinese-language site. It faces irate advertisers—who were not forewarned of the article and its likely consequences—at a time when ad revenues are already dropping sharply. But at The Guardian, Michael Wolff argued that the moral victory is well worth the immediate financial cost:
Reactions were not uniformly rapturous, however. The Chinese government voiced its displeasure through both heavy online censorship and its Foreign Ministry spokesman. From the BBC:
Regarding this censorship, Graham Webster explained on his Transpacifica blog "what it means when we say NYT is 'blocked in China'", while Max Fisher at The Washington Post discussed the risk that restricting access to such a prominent site might simply draw attention to Barboza's report: 此地无银三百两. Tea Leaf Nation's Rachel Lu reported suggestions on Sina Weibo—similar to one source's suspicion expressed in the article itself—that the Times had recently been fed its information by Wen's enemies, and become a "puppet" in the political manoeuvring ahead of the 18th Congress in November. (Bear in mind Barboza and Sullivan's statements that work on the article began in late 2011.)
At Reuters' Breaking Views, John Foley anticipated gentler repercussions for Wen, arguing that the explosive details would be dampened by the familiarity of the general theme.
Isabel Hilton elaborated at The Guardian:
The extent of the NPC members' combined wealth was originally dug out of Hurun's figures by Michael Forsythe at Bloomberg in February. This enormous accumulation of wealth threatens the view that, as The Financial Times' Jamil Anderlini put it early this month, "while there may be corruption and wrongdoing at lower levels, the system is governed by clean and selfless elites who live only to serve the masses." Barboza's article does not implicate Wen himself of corruption, but any discussion of the wealth surrounding the pinnacle of Chinese power is deeply sensitive, particularly before a leadership transition already shaken by the fall of the now scapegoated Bo Xilai. From The Economist:
While the authorities scuttled to cover up the New York Times exposé, The New Yorker's Evan Osnos diagnosed transparency:
© Samuel Wade for China Digital Times (CDT), 2012. | Permalink | One comment | Add to del.icio.us |
You are subscribed to email updates from Update » Links » China 优文 Cream To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |
Comments