Google Won’t Have Easy Return to China

65D9D77F-4132-4FBB-80A2-26617E163000_w640_r1_sFILE – Passengers look through windows on a bus painted with an advertisement for Google in Beijing, China.
Reuters

September 10, 2015 10:04 AM

SINGAPORE/BEIJING—Google Inc. CEO Sundar Pichai has made no secret that he wants to get back into China via Google Play, the app store for its Android mobile operating system.

But it’s unlikely to be a smooth ride.

Google largely pulled its services out of China Continue reading

177. GUO YUSHAN (released)

Guo YushanPen name              

Sex                               Male

Birth date                1977-08-02

Birth place               Xianyou County, Fujian Province

Resident place        Haidian District, Beijing Continue reading

191. HE ZHENGJUN (released)

He ZhengjunPenname                 HE Liren

Sex                               Male

Birth date                1981

Birth place               Bazhong City, Sichuan Province

Resident place        Tongzhou District, Beijing Continue reading

Partnership Boosts Users Over China’s Great Firewall

 

14CLOUDFLARE-master675By PAUL MOZURSEPT. 13, 2015

Joshua Motta, left, Carmen Chang and Matthew Prince in the San Francisco offices of the security start-up CloudFlare. Credit Jason Henry for The New York Times

HONG KONG — It is one of the best-guarded borders in the world, and one of the most time-consuming to cross. Yet in the past few months, a new agreement has let people speed over it billions of times.

The border is the digital one that divides Continue reading

Caijing Journalist’s Shaming Signals China’s Growing Control Over News Media

By AMIE TSANG SEPT. 6, 2015

07caijing-master180-v3A screen grab of CCTV footage of Wang Xiaolu, a journalist with the Caijing business magazine. He was compelled to confess that he had written a “sensational” and “irresponsible” article on the stock market. Credit Cctv/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
HONG KONG — When the Chinese Ministry of Public Security arrested nearly 200 people at the end of August for “spreading rumors,” one of the most prominent targets was Wang Xiaolu, a reporter for the respected business magazine Caijing.

Mr. Wang was compelled to confess on television before going to trial. Dressed in a green polo shirt and looking downcast, he told viewers of China Central Television, the main state network, Continue reading

Rights Groups Up Pressure on White House Ahead of Chinese Presidential Visit

2015-09-10

U.S.-based rights groups have called on President Barack Obama to invite activists, lawyers and other members of the country’s nascent civil society into the White House ahead of a visit by Chinese president Xi Jinping.

Efforts by Obama’s administration aren’t enough to change the behavior of the ruling Chinese Communist Party, which has stepped up its crackdown on lawyers, rights activists and peaceful critics of the regime since Xi took power in 2012, a letter signed by nine organizations said.

“In light of the high-level reception that will be given President Xi, Continue reading

Two Months On, Lawyers For China’s Detained Attorneys Still Don’t Know Where They Are

 

2015-09-09

image (68)Activists in Hong Kong demonstrate for the release of rights lawyers detained on the Chinese mainland, Aug. 25, 2015.
RFA

Two months after Chinese police carried out a midnight raid on the home of prominent human rights lawyer Wang Yu and her husband, sparking a nationwide police operation targeting hundreds of attorneys, her lawyers marched to a police station near where she is believed to be held to demand a meeting with Wang.

Li Weida and Lu Zhoubin, Continue reading

Guo Feixiong is a finalist for the 2015 Front Line Defenders Award for Human Rights Defenders at Risk

201509111151intl2 (1)

“We didn’t break the law in any way. We made no mistakes. We were simply and sincerely trying to push forward China’s democracy. This is a very persuasive argument.”

Guo Feixiong is the pen name of Yang Maodong, a well known figure in China’s rights defence movement who has previously spent five years in prison for his human rights activities. Continue reading