Monthly Archives: 5 月 2014

China arrests man over ‘false stories’ on foreign news site

13 May 2014 Last updated at 03:14 ET

China arrests man over ‘false stories’ on foreign news site
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Xiang Nanfu (April 2004)

 
Xiang Nanfu, pictured here at an Easter meal in 2004, was accused of publishing

“numerous false stories”
Chinese authorities say they have detained a man who posted “fabricated information” on a foreign news site.

State-run Xinhua news agency said Xiang Nanfu, 62, had published “false stories” on the Boxun website that “seriously harmed” China’s image.

Boxun, a US-based Chinese news site, posts stories on protests and rights that would not appear in state media.

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An Open letter to Xi Jinping regarding illegal detention of Chinese scholars

 TIANANMEN INITIATIVE PROJECT

纪念”六四” 25周年倡议

An Open letter to Xi Jinping regarding illegal detention of Chinese scholars

05/13/2014

President Xi Jinping

Mr President:

We have learned that our fellow scholars Xu Youyu, Hao Jian, and Hu Shigen, and civil rights lawyer Pu Zhiqiang and writer Liu Di, were criminally detained for “creating a disturbance in a public place, causing serious disorder”. The alleged reason for their detention was that on 3 May they were among the fifteen participants in a “ 2014 Workshop on Beijing’s June Fourth” that took place in a private apartment in Beijing.

These detentions raise many disturbing questions. For example, how can a private meeting “create disturbance in a public place”? These citizens were detained because they discussed an event that took place twenty-five years ago and that had a profound impact on the course of Chinese history. How can a discussion among scholars, lawyers and writers at someone’s home be considered a “disturbance”? As you have often reminded your Japanese counterparts, to be strong, a nation must confront its past. As scholars who have devoted our lives to the study of China, we are convinced that this country will only benefit from a free exchange of ideas that helps to establish historical truth.

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The Open Letter About Gao Yu From the PEN INTERNATIONAL WOMEN WRITERS’ COMMITTEE

PEN INTERNATIONAL WOMEN WRITERS’ COMMITTEE

Chair: Ekbal Baraka
Egypt Pen
Tel.: 00202 330 37 037
mob.: 0020122 248 66 43
ekbalbaraka.blogspot.mx
twitter: @ekbal_ba
web: [email protected]
Human Rights: Lucina Kathmann

[email protected]

May 13, 2014

His Excellency Xi Jinping, President of the People’s Republic of China
Mr. Fu Zhenghua, Director, Beijing Public Security Bureau

re: Gao Yu

Your Excellency, Mr. Director,

The Women Writers Committee of PEN International, the largest worldwide association of writers, is concerned for our Chinese colleague, the veteran journalist Ms. Gao Yu, who has been detained since April 24 on the charge of “leaking state secrets abroad. “

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WE WILL NOT FORGET JUNE 4TH!-The 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre

TIANANMEN INITIATIVE PROJECT

WE WILL NOT FORGET JUNE 4TH!

June 4, 2014 will mark the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre. We call upon our colleagues around the world in schools and universities, civic organizations, foundations, research institutions, non-governmental organizations, and similar entities to sponsor and convene public events between April 15 and June 4, 2014, to mark the twenty-fifth anniversary of liu si in the form of teach-ins, lectures, memorial marches, press conferences, and other appropriate forms.

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Perry Link:China After Tiananmen: Money, Yes; Ideas, No

Perry Link:China After Tiananmen: Money, Yes; Ideas, No
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David Turnley/Corbis
Soldiers and demonstrators at Tiananmen Square, May, 1989

The June Fourth Massacre in Beijing has had remarkable longevity. What happened in and around Tiananmen Square twenty-five years ago this June not only haunts the memories of people who witnessed the events and of friends and families of the victims, but also persists in the minds of people who stood, and still stand, with the attacking side. Deng Xiaoping, the man who said “go” for the final assault on thousands of Chinese citizens protesting peacefully for democracy, has died. But people who today are inside or allied with the political regime responsible for the killing remain acutely aware of it.

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Ma Jian:The Dark Road from China

Ma Jian:The Dark Road from China

Amy Hawkins talks to the Chinese writer and exiled dissident about China’s one child policy, and how he still hopes to go home

by Amy Hawkins   

Thursday 30th January 2014, 18:05 GMT
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MA JIAN

Ma Jian has not been allowed to return to China since 2011
“I write for the weak and vulnerable, those who have no voice in China,” says Ma Jian, speaking through an interpreter. This is what drives him to write. Considering that his work has been banned in China for the last 25 years, and he
himself has been banned for nearly three, it would seem safe to say that he is the one who has been silenced. However, he does not see it this way. Although an unpopular figure with the Chinese Communist Party, he continues to write prolifically, having recently published his sixth novel, The Dark Road.

“Government is temporary, literature is forever,” he tells me, drawing an analogy between his works and the historically banned Soviet literature that is now freely available to Russian citizens. One day, he hopes, his words will reach those who inspired them.

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Tiananmen Exiles:Voices of the Struggle for Democracy in China Palgrave Studies in Oral History

Tiananmen Exiles:Voices of the Struggle for Democracy in China Palgrave Studies in Oral History

 

9781137438317

Rowena Xiaoqing He and Foreword By Perry Link

Palgrave Macmillan, April 2014

ISBN: 978-1-137-43831-7, ISBN10: 1-137-43831-2,

6.000 x 9.250 inches, 240 pages,
In the spring of 1989, millions of citizens across China took to the streets in a nationwide uprising against government corruption and authoritarian rule. What began with widespread hope for political reform ended with the People’s Liberation Army firing on unarmed citizens in the capital city of Beijing, and those leaders who survived the crackdown became wanted criminals overnight. Among the witnesses to this unprecedented popular movement was Rowena Xiaoqing He, who would later join former student leaders and other exiles in North America, where she has worked tirelessly for over a decade to keep the memory of the Tiananmen Movement alive.

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CHINA: Veteran journalist Gao Yu (f) charged with ‘leaking state secrets abroad’; fears for safety.

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RAPID ACTION NETWORK

9 May 2014

RAN 09/14

CHINA: Veteran journalist Gao Yu (f) charged with ‘leaking state secrets abroad’; fears for safety.

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Veteran journalist Gao Yu went missing on 24 April 2014 and there was no information concerning her fate until 8 May 2014 when the official Chinese news agency Xinhua confirmed that Gao Yu is being detained by Beijing police on the charge of ‘leaking state secrets abroad’. She is accused of leaking a secret document to editors of a foreign website in August 2013. Footage of her ‘confessing’, feared to have been taken under duress, was shown on state television. Her whereabouts remain unknown, and there are serious concerns for her well-being and integrity.

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