Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. China News .




SINO DAILY
Chinese bloggers press Kerry on Internet freedom
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Feb 15, 2014


China province admits unlawful detention centres
Beijing (AFP) Feb 14, 2014 - A Chinese province admitted on Friday running unlawful "discipline centres" to detain petitioners -- months after the country abolished labour camps often used to lock them up.

For generations ordinary Chinese people unable to find redress for grievances have petitioned higher-level governments, all the way up to Beijing.

But their complaining embarrassed local authorities, which often bundled such individuals home and sometimes sentenced repeat petitioners to up to four years of "re-education through labour", known as laojiao.

Last November the ruling Communist Party announced the abolition of the controversial laojiao camps. Some provinces shut their sites completely while others converted them into drug rehabilitation centres, domestic media have since reported.

But overseas rights groups cast doubt over the promises, questioning what system might replace the camps.

Authorities in the central province of Henan have been running "discipline centres" in various areas, said a report by the official news agency Xinhua posted on the website of the province's Communist Party committee overseeing law and politics.

They had been set up to fulfil province-wide instructions issued in 2008 "to adopt various methods of education and discipline to deal with local abnormal petitioners headed to Beijing", the report said.

Many were shut in recent years, it added. "But certain areas maintained them and even took it upon themselves to hang up 'discipline centre' signs. This behaviour did not comply with legal regulations."

A woman aged about 70 was held for five days at one site in Henan's Nanyang city in a room with a bucket for a toilet and several officials watching over her, said the Beijing News, which first exposed the centres' existence.

A month earlier she had been locked up for 10 days after petitioning in the capital, the paper cited her son as saying.

It quoted other Henan petitioners saying they had been held at discipline centres for two to six months.

A few local governments in the province described operating such centres on their websites, the Beijing News said in a separate report on Thursday.

Those references could not be found online on Friday.

Chinese bloggers urged US Secretary of State John Kerry to push for greater freedom online in China during a rare meeting in Beijing Saturday, asking for help to "tear down the great Internet firewall".

The US embassy-organised discussion was an opportunity for the top diplomat to hear directly from China's bloggers amid reports that Beijing is stepping up efforts to clamp down on political dissent.

Chinese microblogs similar to Twitter have become key drivers of public opinion in recent years, with bloggers calling attention to issues such as official corruption and pollution that challenge the ruling Communist Party.

But the rising popularity of sites such as Sina Weibo has triggered a sweeping government-backed crackdown on online dissent in the past year, with several prominent commentators silenced and others arrested.

The meeting with four leading bloggers came a day after Kerry used talks with President Xi Jinping and Foreign Minister Wang Yi to call for Communist Party authorities to improve their human rights record.

In the roundtable Saturday, Kerry told bloggers that he had raised the issues of press and Internet freedom in his discussions with Chinese leaders.

"Obviously, we think that Chinese economy will be stronger with greater freedom of the Internet," he said.

- 'Tear down the firewall' -

In the 40-minute meeting, Zhang Jialong, who frequently comments on China's social conditions to his 110,000 microblog followers, urged the United States to support "Chinese who aspire for freedom" and help "tear down the great Internet firewall".

The finance reporter, who was detained for three days in 2011 for his postings on artist Ai Weiwei, also accused US companies of helping China block access to some Internet sites such as Twitter.

Kerry said he had no knowledge of such a practice but promised to investigate.

Wang Keqin, an investigative reporter who was fired from his job at the Economic Observer last year for his reports on flash floods that hit Beijing in 2012, told Kerry that Internet freedom "was going backward, there is less of it".

Kerry told reporters Friday that he had a "frank discussion" about human rights issues in his meeting with Chinese leaders, including the free flow of information online.

"I emphasised that respect for human rights and for the exchange of information in a free manner contributes to the strength of a society in a country," he said after the meetings in Beijing.

China's ruling party has long been engaged in a "cat and mouse" game with Internet users, tightening restrictions in periodic crackdowns before new forums emerge to challenge such restraints.

In August, Xi called on propaganda officials to "build a strong army... to seize the ground of new media", while China's press regulator has ordered journalists to undergo Marxist training classes, state media reported.

- Jail for online 'slander' -

China's Supreme Court in September said Internet users could face three years in jail if "slanderous" information spread online was viewed more than 5,000 times or forwarded more than 500 times.

The rising influence of microblogs has been accompanied by the emergence of celebrity users with verified accounts, known as "Big Vs".

Last year Chinese-American investor Charles Xue, who had more than 12 million followers on his microblog which was heavily critical of the government, was arrested on charges of soliciting prostitutes.

State media insisted at the time that his arrest had no connection with his online presence, but government-run broadcaster CCTV showed him in prison clothes while under detention, confessing that he had used microblogging to "gratify my vanity".

Microsoft's Bing search engine came under scrutiny this week following reports that Chinese-language searches for topics deemed politically sensitive by Beijing return a drastically different set of results than English-language searches -- both inside and outside of China.

Bing has denied censoring its Chinese-language search results outside China.

Kerry also visited a joint venture between Indiana-based Cummins and China's Foton company in Beijing producing low emissions diesel engines, before heading to Jakarta on the next leg of his Asia trip.

.


Related Links
China News from SinoDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SINO DAILY
Daredevils scale world's second tallest building in China
Shanghai (AFP) Feb 13, 2014
A pair of Russian daredevil climbers ascended to the top of the world's second tallest building in China's commercial hub Shanghai, posting a stomach-turning video which has received more than a million views. The duo, who identified themselves as Vadim Makhorov and Vitaliy Raskalov, said they scaled the Shanghai Tower, which will reach over 630 metres (2,067 feet) when it is finished this y ... read more


SINO DAILY
China trade surplus rebounds in January

US names 'notorious markets' for piracy, counterfeiting

Venezuela businesses up in arms over moves to limit profits

Australian tycoon's tirade against Chinese firm

SINO DAILY
EU plans more tests for horsemeat in food

Making biodiverse agriculture part of a food-secure future

Worldwide study finds that fertilizer destabilizes grasslands

Top-down and bottom-up approach needed to conserve potato agrobiodiversity

SINO DAILY
Africans get a kick out of Shaolin kung fu

Poaching threatens savannah ecosystems

DRC president declares amnesty for former M23 rebels

French defence chief urges crackdown on C.Africa militias

SINO DAILY
Renault reports profit plunge, radar on China, shares rise

Nissan profit jumps as North America, China sales rise

Nissan caps buoyant earnings for Japanese auto giants

Bicycle manufacturing increases in Indian state of Punjab

SINO DAILY
Iran seeks new Russia reactor in exchange for oil

Fukushima should eye 'controlled discharges' in sea: IAEA

Japan to abandon troubled fast breeder reactor: report

Abe hails election of pro-nuclear Tokyo governor

SINO DAILY
Espionage malware may be state-sponsored: researchers

DARPA awards R and D contract for cyber mission execution to Raytheon

Virtual protest targets US Internet snooping

Internet titans shine light on secret US requests

SINO DAILY
Chinese state media slam Japan PM's 'gangster logic'

Obama hails French mettle as he welcomes Hollande

China anger over Spanish arrest warrant for Jiang Zemin

Spain judge orders arrest of former China president Jiang Zemin

SINO DAILY
Britain wind farm proposal scaled back in face of opposition

Climate risk from wind farms is minimal: study

Moventas CMaS gaining a strong foothold in Australia

Residents oppose new grid link needed for German energy transition




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement All images and articles appearing on Space Media Network have been edited or digitally altered in some way. Any requests to remove copyright material will be acted upon in a timely and appropriate manner. Any attempt to extort money from Space Media Network will be ignored and reported to Australian Law Enforcement Agencies as a potential case of financial fraud involving the use of a telephonic carriage device or postal service.