Monthly Archives: 12 月 2014

Books of the Year:Page turners

The best books of 2014 were about the South China Sea, the fall of the Berlin Wall, Kaiser Wilhelm II, the publishing of “Ulysses” and capitalism in the 21st century

Dec 6th 2014 | From the print edition Continue reading

China: Release writers Gao Yu and Ilham Tohti

 

Gao-Yu-Ilham1(London, 21 November, 2014) – Chinese authorities should immediately and unconditionally release veteran journalist Gao Yu and writer and academic Ilham Tohti, a member of China’s Uyghur minority, PEN International said today. Continue reading

Humanitarian China: A public appeal for humanitarian donation for Ilham Tohti

We are extremely shocked to learn that a moderate and rational Uighur academic, Ilham Tohti, had been sentenced to life imprisonment and confiscation of all personal property on September 23 on charges of “separatism”. We strongly protest such political persecution.

As a response to the urge of netizens, we launch a donation campaign for Ilham Tohti and ask for public support. Continue reading

Take Action for Uyghur writer and PEN member Ilham Tohti

PEN International is seriously concerned for the well-being of Uyghur writer, academic and Uyghur PEN member, Ilham Tohti, who was formally charged with “splittism” on 20 February 2014, amid a crackdown on Chinese Uyghurs critical of the government. His wife received formal notification of the charges on 25 February. Dozens of writers have joined American PEN in calling for his release. Continue reading

China:Freedom on the Net 2014 by Freedom House

May 2013 – May 2014

President and CCP General Secretary Xi Jinping framed the internet as a battlefield for ideological control and appointed himself the head of a top-level internet security committee (see Introduction).

The State Internet Information Office consolidated content restrictions with a harsh crackdown on rumors under newly appointed “Internet Tsar” Lu Wei (see Limits on Content and Violations of User Rights).

A September 2013 judicial interpretation criminalized a range of online content viewed more than 5,000 times or shared by 500 internet users (see Violations of User Rights).

High-profile businessmen were among hundreds detained or interrogated for supposedly abusing their online influence as controls on microblogs tightened (see Violations of User Rights).

Legal activist Xu Zhiyong was jailed for four years for disturbing order and “public spaces on the internet” in April 2014 (see Violations of User Rights).

Telecommunications were shut off in a restive area of Xinjiang; and Uighur academic Ilham Tohti was charged with antistate activity via his website (see Obstacles to Access and Violations of User Rights).

A court in Hainan jailed an internet police officer for accepting bribes to issue takedown notices via instant message to web platforms in his jurisdiction (see Limits on Content).

 

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China’s Artists to Be Taught ‘Correct View’ in New Plan

02sino-ARTISTS2-articleLargeUnder a new program, artists would be sent to rural communities or revolutionary sites to absorb socialist values. In Yan’an, the Communist base where Mao Zedong delivered his talks on the arts in 1942, a tourist in Red Army garb has her photo taken in front of an image of Mao.GILLES SABRIE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
By AMY QIN

DECEMBER 2, 2014

In a project that echoes the Cultural Revolution, Continue reading

Former Police Arrested After Washington Post Interviews

On Monday, The Washington Post’s William Wan profiled a number of former police officers, court officials and others who had turned to petitioning after losing their positions. Among these was Liu Ming, “a towering former station chief who was purged after offending superiors.” Continue reading

Editorial:The Guardian view on the continuing protests in Hong Kong

Small-paper-umbrellas-sym-012Rule that is simultaneously timid, fearful, and harsh: China’s problem is that it cannot free itself of a mind set that values control above all else

Small paper umbrellas, symbols of the pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, on display last month. Photograph: Alex Ogle/AFP/Getty Images

Monday 1 December 2014 14.44 EST

China’s obsession with control is the enemy of sensible policy. If nothing that comes from outside the ranks Continue reading