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Chinese professor calls Hong Kong people 'dogs'
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Jan 23, 2012


A controversial Chinese professor has sparked an outcry by calling Hong Kong people "bastards", "dogs" and "cheats" after a spat between mainlanders and locals in the southern city went viral online.

Kong Qingdong -- famous for his public use of profanities -- made the comments after the video showed a mainland girl being rebuked by locals angry that she was flouting rules against eating aboard Hong Kong subway trains.

The incident has been described as an example of the culture clash between mainland China and Hong Kong, with many pointing to what they see as a prevalent sense of superiority among residents in the former British colony.

"Everybody should have a duty to speak Mandarin," Kong, a professor of Chinese studies at the prestigious Peking University who says he is a descendent of the philosopher Confucius, said in an interview posted on online video website v1.cn last week.

"What type of people are those who deliberately don't speak Mandarin? Bastards!" he said, referring to the Hong Kong people involved in the row, who spoke in their native Cantonese language.

"As far as I know, many Hong Kong people don't regard themselves as Chinese. Those kinds of people are used to being the dogs of British colonialists -- they are dogs, not humans."

Kong also says the British dealt with "Hong Kong dogs by spanking them" before they handed the territory back to China in 1997, and accuses many Hong Kong people of swindling and cheating.

Furious netizens in Hong Kong have vented their anger, with many attacking mainland China in sometimes vicious comments.

"I see a fat dog barking, all I can say is, please take a look at your own country before u comment on other people," one online user wrote, before listing perceptions about what is wrong with mainland China.

The video of the subway train incident can be seen at www.youtube.com/watch?v=wEComrx76uY and the professor's response is at www.youtube.com/watch?v=_nUkiaDS3g4.

Around 150 people protested at Kong's comments on Sunday evening outside Beijing's liaison office in Hong Kong, police in the territory said.

Hong Kong trade union lawmaker Lee Cheuk-yan said the outcry was evidence of growing tensions between people in the territory and on the mainland.

"This is a ticking time bomb," he said.

"Hong Kong people are unhappy with the central government, we are disgruntled about the lack of democracy. On a more day-to-day level, you see that Hong Kong people often have clashes with mainlanders."

While mainlanders have long complained about the perceived arrogance of wealthy Hong Kongers, Lee pointed to two recent episodes that have fostered a sense of resentment among locals in the city.

Last week, Italian clothing chain Dolce & Gabbana apologised to the people of Hong Kong for allegedly discriminating against them in favour of newly wealthy mainland shoppers.

And with the auspicious Year of the Dragon starting on Monday, mothers-to-be in Hong Kong complain they have been shut out of maternity wards because so many pregnant mainland women have come to the city to give birth.

Kong himself has reportedly backtracked from the controversy, claiming in a subsequent interview that he did not mean all Hong Kong people were "dogs" but said some people who kowtowed to colonialism were dogs.

The professor is no stranger to controversy. He was reportedly involved in a shadowy "Confucius Peace Prize" that awarded its annual award to Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin last year.

The furore has highlighted the wide gap that still exists between mainland China and Hong Kong, which since the handover from British rule has been run as a "special administrative region" with its own legal and economic systems.

A survey published last month by the University of Hong Kong revealed that only 17 percent of people in the territory identified themselves as Chinese, the lowest percentage since 2000, Beijing's China Daily newspaper said.

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At least 34 Chinese reporters jailed in 2011: HRW
Beijing (AFP) Jan 22, 2012 - At least 34 Chinese journalists were jailed last year for charges ranging from "inciting subversion" to "revealing state secrets", a rights group said Sunday, as Beijing tightened media restrictions.

Investigative journalism in China has gained strength in recent years, despite a strict censorship system aimed at rooting out information deemed a threat to the ruling Communist Party.

But in its annual report, the US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) said "censorship restrictions continue to pose a threat to journalists whose reporting oversteps official guidelines."

"Ambiguous 'inciting subversion' and 'revealing state secrets' laws contributed to the imprisonment of at least 34 Chinese journalists," the group said.

It cited the example of Qi Chonghuai, whose original four-year jail sentence in 2008 for "extortion and blackmail" after he exposed government corruption in the eastern province of Shandong was extended by eight years last year.

The state-run All-China Journalists Association was not available for comment when contacted by AFP.

The report comes a day after an international journalists' association said China had tightened restrictions on the media in 2011 in response to domestic calls for greater openness and popular uprisings in the Middle East.

Authorities last year were spooked by anonymous online calls for people to take part in Arab-style protests in China in a so-called Jasmine Revolution, and are also jittery about an upcoming leadership transition in 2012.

In a move that sparked huge concern in the media world in July, the China Economic Times -- one of China's leading newspapers -- shut down its respected investigative unit.

Later that year, China's propaganda authorities placed two of Beijing's most popular and colourful newspapers -- the Beijing News and the Beijing Times -- under new management, in what critics said was a bid to censor the news.

HRW said in its report that physical violence against journalists who reported on sensitive topics also remained a problem last year.

In September, Li Xiang, a 30-year-old reporter in the central province of Henan, was murdered in a crime widely believed to be linked to him exposing a scandal involving the sale of tainted cooking oil.



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China villagers win quick concessions after protest
Beijing (AFP) Jan 19, 2012
Villagers in Guangdong province who protested against their leader have won unusually speedy official concessions, a resident said Thursday, amid fears of more unrest in China's manufacturing heartland. The protest erupted Tuesday in Guangdong, which has experienced several bouts of violence, including a rare revolt in Wukan village last month that saw residents drive out local officials and ... read more


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