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Chinese man who wrote online post given one-year prison sentence
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 8, 2016


China statistics chief says false economic data is a problem
Beijing (AFP) Dec 8, 2016 - China's top statistician has accused local officials of "falsifying" economic figures and warned offenders would be severely punished, reflecting growing concern about the reliability of government data.

"Currently, there have been occasional cases of local sectors falsifying statistics and practising fraud, which violate statistical laws and regulations," Ning Jizhe, director of the National Bureau of Statistics, wrote in the Communist Party mouthpiece People's Daily on Thursday.

He said Beijing had "zero tolerance" of fakers and violators would "pay a genuinely high cost" as authorities tried to "create an environment where they will not dare, not imagine, not think of breaking the law".

"A number of cases that involved the falsification of statistics were investigated and dealt with," he said, adding that "administrative punishments have been carried out".

Officials and analysts in China and abroad have long questioned the accuracy of Chinese economic figures, which many suspect are often manipulated to make the economy look more robust than it really is.

One of the problems has been that local bureaucrats' promotions are tied to economic performance, giving them an incentive to falsify data in hopes of improving their chances of career advancement.

Even Premier Li Keqiang has expressed doubts about the reliability of the country's statistics.

Leaked US diplomatic cables show that as the top official in Liaoning province in 2007, Li told the then-US ambassador that such data was "man-made".

In March, Chinese customs officials said a single exporter in the northeastern city of Dalian had been found to have over-reported the value of their fake eyelash exports by five times.

Ning's predecessor Wang Baoan was expelled from the Communist Party in January on suspicion of disciplinary violations.

A man who wrote a social media post critical of China's decades-old land reform policies was sentenced to a year in prison, reports said Tuesday, amid a tightening of civil liberties and free speech.

The man, surnamed Miao, ran the Twitter-like Weibo social media account for the traffic police of Zizhou county in northern Shaanxi province, the Global Times newspaper reported Thursday.

In June 2015 he wrote a post that criticised China's land reform policy of 1950, which abolished landowners' rights and saw the violent confiscation of property and its redistribution to peasants.

Since that law was enacted, "a vigorous land reform was carried out across China, a movement under which people were killed for money and property, leading to hatred and decay of traditional moral values," he wrote in the now-deleted post, according to the Global Times.

"The land reform was the start of the collapse of Chinese moral values!"

The post was quickly scrubbed and the traffic police posted an apology blaming the manager's irresponsible work attitude for the "inappropriate remarks, which deeply wounded the feelings of the mass of internet users".

Miao was sentenced to one year in prison with one year and six months' reprieve for dereliction of duty by the local court, it said.

China has seen a sprawling crackdown on dissent under President Xi Jinping, restricting citizens' speech online and jailing hundreds of lawyers who had taken on civil rights cases considered sensitive by the ruling party.

Communist authorities oversee a vast censorship system -- dubbed the Great Firewall -- that aggressively blocks sites or snuffs out internet content and commentary on topics considered sensitive, such as Beijing's human rights record and criticism of the government.

In November China passed a controversial cybersecurity bill that banned internet users from publishing a wide variety of information, including anything that damages "national honour", "disturbs economic or social order" or is aimed at "overthrowing the socialist system".


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