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Australian PM calls for public trials in China

17 jailed over fire that killed 44 in China: state media
Beijing (AFP) March 31, 2010 - Seventeen people were jailed on Wednesday in southern China over a 2008 nightclub blaze that killed 44 people, state-run Xinhua news agency said. More than 80 other people were injured in the September 20, 2008 fire at the King of Dancers nightclub in the city of Shenzhen, which was sparked by a fireworks show that ignited flammable ceiling materials. Wang Jing, chairman of the nightclub company, and Zhang Wei, the club owner, were each sentenced to 15-and-a-half years in prison for "illegally operating a business and negligence leading to a serious accident," the report said.

It quoted a statement from a court in the city, which is near Hong Kong. The remaining 15 defendants, all involved in the club's ownership or management, received jail terms of up to six years. Last year, six police and local officials were jailed for terms ranging from one to 13 years for taking bribes and dereliction of duty. Deadly fires are common in China due to routine flouting or ignorance of fire and safety measures.
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) March 31, 2010
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd on Wednesday urged China to hold trials in public, after four Rio Tinto executives were handed lengthy jail terms in proceedings held largely behind closed doors.

Rudd said there was always going to be "bumps in the road in our relationship with China", after Beijing expressed concerns about Australia's criticisms of the trial.

"I would say to our friends in Beijing, however, that the responsible course of action is to ensure that your judiciary process is transparent, that when people are brought before your courts, that those trials are held publicly," Rudd told reporters.

"I believe that's the responsible course of action for the future, and I would say that with great respect to our friends in Beijing."

Australian businessman Stern Hu was sentenced to 10 years in jail after being convicted of accepting bribes and stealing trade secrets following a three-day trial in Shanghai.

Three Chinese colleagues were sentenced to between seven and 14 years.

The part of the trial concerned with trade secrets was held in a closed court to which Australian consular officials were also excluded, something Australian officials have criticised since the verdicts were given on Monday.

Rudd, a Mandarin speaker who was previously posted to Beijing as a diplomat, had warned China that the world would be watching the case, and he repeated his message on Wednesday.

"China is an emerging power, but I think the world is also watching the way in which China evolves its judicial system, including the importance of ensuring that all trials, particularly those of a criminal nature, are held in a public and transparent manner," he said.

In his first comments following the verdicts, Rudd said Tuesday that China's handling of the corruption trial, which centred on fraught iron ore negotiations which later collapsed, had left "serious unanswered questions".

That prompted a call from Australia's major trading partner to stop its criticism of the Chinese legal system, which Canberra has acknowledged is very different to Australia's.



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SINO DAILY
China corruption museum seeks nominations
Beijing (AFP) March 27, 2010
A planned anti-graft museum in southwest China is asking the public to nominate the 100 most corrupt officials of the past century, state media reported Saturday. Fan Jianchuan, who operates a private museum in Chengdu, said he started collecting artifacts for his "Traitors Museum" after Internet users suggested the idea, Xinhua news agency said, citing a local newspaper. "Starting now, ... read more







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