Anger over 'accidental' death of Chinese activist Beijing (AFP) Feb 1, 2011 A Chinese court ruled Tuesday that the death of a village chief crushed by a truck in December was accidental, sparking outrage from those who suspect he was murdered for campaigning over land seizures. The gruesome December 25 death of 53-year-old Qian Yunhui has rattled authorities at a time when the government is trying to tamp down public anger over a range of hot-button issues including official abuses and rising prices. Qian had demanded compensation for farmers whose land was seized to make way for a power station, and his death stirred passions after doubt was cast on the official version of events. Explicit photos posted online appeared to show Qian, who had been leader of Zhaiqiao village in the eastern province of Zhejiang, crushed under the wheels of a truck. A court sentenced the unlicensed driver, Fei Liangyu, to three-and-a-half years in prison on Tuesday for "accidentally" running over Qian, China Central Television (CCTV) said in an in-depth live report. Police and the courts said it was a simple hit-and-run, basing their conclusions in part on video footage supposedly recorded by Qian's wristwatch during the incident -- images dismissed by some as a total fabrication. "Looking at this videotape, I think you must say that it is not a traffic accident -- this is murder," said one chatroom posting on the popular web portal Netease.com. "Why is he the only one to wear a wristwatch video camera -- why does he need to videotape? Do judges wear wristwatch video cameras?" CCTV on Tuesday repeatedly broadcast the shaky footage -- apparently shot by a figure walking down a road and which ends with the image being severely jarred and, finally, a shot of a truck's wheel. The reports appeared aimed at underlining the official version that it was a simple traffic accident. Another Netease user said: "We've seen these inferior (government) tactics before and it is unclear whether they think the people are dumb, easily fooled or downright stupid. "This is a tragedy, an out-and-out naked lie." Chatrooms hosting discussions of the case on Netease and other major Chinese portals were later shut down, apparently to stifle anti-government comments, but discussion continued on Sina.com's popular Twitter-like microblog service. Court officials refused comment when contacted by AFP. Qian had been detained three times since 2005 for repeatedly demanding compensation for farmers after nearly 150 hectares (370 acres) of land was seized by Zhejiang Provincial Energy Group Company, earlier reports said. The village was entitled to up to 65 million yuan ($10 million) in compensation but none had been disbursed, reports said. Fei fled the scene of the accident but subsequently confessed to the crime and paid Qian's family 1.05 million yuan in compensation, which helped mitigate the sentence, a court official said in the CCTV footage. Government-backed land requisitions, often in collusion with real estate developers, remain one of China's most controversial issues, with authorities routinely accused of enriching themselves through arbitrary land grabs. The government has recently indicated mounting concern over that and other key controversial issues such as corruption and massive environmental degradation that are blamed for thousands of public protests each year. In another celebrated case, a Chinese court on Sunday sentenced a man to six years after he attempted to exploit the rank of his father -- a local police official -- to flee a fatal road accident in October. Li Qiming, 23, who pleaded guilty to driving drunk and vehicular manslaughter, had reportedly shouted after the accident in the city of Baoding "My father is Li Gang!", as he dared bystanders to take action against him. The phrase quickly went viral on the Chinese Internet as a symbol of the high-handedness of some government officials and their relatives, reports of which regularly provoke public anger. Rights groups said the government last month ordered official media to restrict coverage of such controversial issues this year, while Premier Wen Jiabao recently made a rare recent visit to an office handling public complaints, vowing the government would address those and other concerns.
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China orders pro-party reporting: rights groups Beijing (AFP) Jan 21, 2011 China's Communist Party has issued directives to the nation's media for 2011 ordering them to downplay controversial issues and ensure reporting casts the party in a favourable light, rights groups say. The 10-point list of orders was issued earlier this month by propaganda chief Li Changchun, according to a report on Boxun.com, an overseas-based website focussing on China human rights issue ... read more |
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