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Beijing orders microbloggers to register real names
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 16, 2011


Beijing city authorities on Friday issued new rules requiring microbloggers to register their real names before posting online, as the Chinese government tightens its grip on the Internet.

The city government now requires users of weibos -- the Chinese version of Twitter -- to give their real names to website administrators, its official news portal said.

The new rules will apply to weibo operators based in Beijing, which include Sina -- owner of China's most popular microblogging service which has more than 200 million users -- as well as users living in the Chinese capital.

Weibo users reacted angrily to the new rules, saying this was an attempt to muzzle online criticism and debate.

"It is good to be responsible for one's own comments but it shouldn't be used as a tool to suppress people's rights," a blogger called Yuyue Yuanfei Ilu said in a posting.

Another web user called V Luoluo said: "The rules are always set against people. Do you dare to tell the truth after the real-name system is implemented? Do you dare to offend someone?"

Weibo operators "must establish and improve a system of content censorship", according to the new rules, while users will have a legal duty to use their true identity to register.

With more than half a billion Chinese now online, authorities in Beijing are concerned about the power of the Internet to influence public opinion in a country that maintains tight controls on its traditional media outlets.

Ordinary Chinese are increasingly using weibos to vent their anger and frustration over official corruption, scandals and disasters.

A weibo user is believed to have broken the news of a deadly high-speed rail crash in China in July that provoked widespread condemnation of the government -- much of it online.

This week, despite attempts to censor the web and a virtual blackout in China's state-run media, weibos have buzzed with news of a protest involving thousands of villagers in the southern province of Guangdong.

Residents in Wukan, which has been under police blockade, have posted information and photos online of their daily rallies to demand justice over land seizures and a local leader's death.

"It's about enhancing control on the weibos. In all likelihood, this registration could make people more cautious," David Bandurski of the China Media Project at the University of Hong Kong, told AFP.

Leading Internet and technology firms have already been pressured to tighten their grip on the web as Chinese leaders try to keep a lid on social unrest in the lead up to a once-in-a-decade leadership transition that begins next year.

Last month the heads of 40 companies, including e-commerce giant Alibaba, search engine Baidu and Sina, vowed to stop the "spread of harmful information" on the web after attending a three-day government workshop.

The seminar was held after propaganda chief Li Changchun, fifth in the Communist Party hierarchy, met the heads of China's main search engine Baidu in September.

That same month, the head of Sina said the web giant had set up "rumour-curbing teams", apparently in response to government pressure. Authorities already have the means to track down web users they believe have broken the law.

Earlier this month two men were detained in the central province of Hunan for "spreading a rumour" that thousands of police officers were deployed to guard a wedding convoy.

State media said the two men posted a video clip online showing scores of police officers and a wedding convoy on a street, which later went viral.

Officials said that judicial police officers were actually training at a base in Hunan, and happened to pass a wedding convoy on their way out.

The Internet has posed a huge challenge to government attempts to block content it deems politically sensitive through a censorship system known as the "Great Firewall".

The number of weibo users has more than trebled since the end of 2010, according to government data, and the speed with which they have taken off has made it impossible for censors to keep up.

AFP calls to Sina, Netease and Sohu -- two other Beijing-based weibo operators -- went unanswered.

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Seething anger led to China village stand-off
Wukan, China (AFP) Dec 17, 2011 - The villagers of Wukan in southern China say officials have been stealing their land for decades. So when a major deal involving yet more land was announced in September, their anger boiled over.

The villagers marched to a nearby police post and violent clashes ensued. Since then, Wukan has driven out local Communist leaders who residents say have ruled the village as despots.

Local party secretary Xue Chang, who villagers say ran the fishing and farming village as a private fiefdom for over 40 years, fled following the September protests along with other Communist officials.

For more than a week now, Wukan's 13,000 residents have been living in open revolt against officialdom, blockaded by large numbers of riot police who stand outside the village perimeter.

The September riots followed the announcement of a lucrative housing project on more Wukan farmland. Villagers tried to block workers from the construction site, and the following day truck-loads of police arrived.

Dramatic footage seen by AFP shows police kicking and beating villagers, who fought back, driving them away.

The current stand-off was triggered when Xue Jinbo, who was elected as a community leader after the Party figures were driven out, was arrested along with four other villagers.

"We have raised the land issue for years, we have petitioned the governments in Lufeng and in (provincial capital) Guangzhou many times. They only ignore us," said a villager surnamed Zhang, 44, who told AFP his family's plot of farmland was taken from him in 1995.

"When they sold my land, I didn't get any compensation, they didn't even tell me they sold it. When I raised the issue, they told me my property deed was invalid," he said, holding up the 1953 document his grandfather handed down to him.

Xue Chang, who is believed to be in his early seventies, ran a property development company with fellow leaders, which villagers said colluded with other real estate firms to benefit from requisitioned land.

They said more than half their traditional farmlands were requisitioned for Xue's projects -- which included flooding some 46 hectares of rice paddy with salt water in a failed attempt to build a crab and shrimp farm.

"Xue Chang is a dictator who has ruled with an iron fist. He has good connections with the higher-ups," said a villager surnamed Chen.

"He has instilled fear in everyone. If you even showed dissatisfaction in front of him, he would send thugs to beat you up. That was how he was able to rule for 42 years."

Local government officials refused to discuss Xue's situation when contacted by AFP Saturday, but earlier said "a few" officials were under investigation.

Last Sunday, events took an ugly turn when Xue Jinbo -- it is not clear whether he and Xue Chang were related -- died in police custody.

Authorities say the 42-year-old man suffered a heart attack, while family members who saw the body said they believed he had been beaten to death.

As cordons of police and riot squads blocked the main roads in and out of Wukan this week, villagers appealed to the national government to come to their aid, saying this was their only hope.

"Premier Wen Jiabao is the only one who can solve this problem, everyone hopes he will come and resolve this," an unemployed women surnamed Lu, who said her farmland had been seized, told AFP.

"The local government is no good, they are liars and thieves. When Chairman Mao was around we were all poor but at least we could depend on our land. Now we have no land."



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SINO DAILY
China puts rights lawyer back in jail: Xinhua
Beijing (AFP) Dec 16, 2011
Prominent Chinese human rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng has been sent back to prison after a court ruled he had violated the terms of his probation, the official Xinhua news agency said Friday. The move was criticised by the United States who urged China to immediately release Gao and to clarify his whereabouts, which have been unknown for months. Gao - who defended some of China's most vuln ... read more


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