Chinese blogger charged with 'defaming martyrs' after border-clash posts by AFP Staff Writers Beijing (AFP) March 1, 2021 Chinese prosecutors formally charged a popular social media influencer with "defaming martyrs" on Monday, for suggesting the death toll of the China-India border clash was higher than the official count of four. The blogger, listed in the indictment by his surname Qiu, was charged under a newly added provision to China's criminal law that bans the "defamation of martyrs and heroes" and came into effect Monday. Qiu had more than 2.5 million followers on the Twitter-like platform Weibo under the pseudonym "Crayon Ball". He was initially detained February 19 on suspicion of "picking quarrels and causing trouble", a catch-all charge often levelled against dissidents. He "severely harmed the dignity of the national border garrison and the soldiers' image, and harmed the common interests of society," read the indictment from prosecutors in the eastern Chinese city of Nanjing, Jiangsu province. If convicted, Qiu faces up to three years in prison. Last month, China confirmed for the first time that four soldiers were "sacrificed" in a June brawl with Indian forces, which triggered an outpouring of grief and patriotism in state media and online. More than 20 Indian soldiers died in the same clash in the contested Galwan Valley border area, a conflict which China has repeatedly alleged India started. Crayon Ball wrote last month that, since the dead soldiers were honoured as "rescuers", "there were more who weren't saved, so there weren't only four dead". "This is why India dared to announce the names and cause of death of their casualties first. In India's view, they won at less cost," he wrote. His account has since been deleted. The hashtag "Crayon Ball has been arrested" had been viewed 360 million times on Weibo by late Monday. Since last month, China has arrested at least six for allegedly defaming the dead soldiers in online comments, highlighting the political sensitivity of the border clash. Beijing passed a law in 2018 that made a civil offence of "defamation of martyrs and heroes", including war-time heroes idolised in Communist Party history as well as modern-day figures such as fallen firefighters and soldiers. The new amendment makes it a criminal offence. Another 19-year-old Chinese citizen living overseas is under investigation by police in the southwestern city of Chongqing for making defamatory remarks about the dead soldiers on Weibo. Police said last month the man was under "online pursuit" and would be detained, without giving specifics of how they would reach him.
China bans harsh punishments in schools New rules issued by the Ministry of Education that take effect Monday forbid punishments at schools that humiliate students, as well as reinforcing the existing ban on corporal punishment. Banned practices include caning, making students stand or kneel on the floor for hours and verbal abuse. Students are now encouraged to write an apology letter or do classroom chores for minor offences such as forgetting to do their homework. Those who commit more severe offences like bullying may be suspended or advised to undergo counselling. China outlawed corporal punishment in 1986, but enforcement has been lax and parents often turn a blind eye to the practice. The ministry did not say how it plans to punish teachers who do not obey the rules. Chinese media regularly reports cases of children who have died after being beaten by teachers or have taken their own lives following public humiliation at school. A 10-year-old girl in the southwestern province of Sichuan died after her maths teacher pulled her ears and beat her head for getting two sums wrong, state news agency Xinhua reported in September. A fifth-grader in eastern Jiangsu province killed herself last June after her teacher allegedly criticized her essay for lacking "positive vibes", China Daily reported. The teacher had allegedly slapped her and humiliated her in front of the class. A new family education law prohibiting corporal punishment at home is also due to be taken up when China's top legislative body, the National People's Congress, meets later this week.
Xi boasts of Chinese 'miracle' in tackling poverty Beijing (AFP) Feb 25, 2021 Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday declared his country had achieved the "human miracle" of eliminating extreme poverty, though questions continue to surround the Communist Party's criteria for making the claim. In a glitzy ceremony in Beijing, Xi bestowed medals on officials from rural communities, some wearing traditional ethnic-minority attire, and promised to share this "Chinese example" with other developing nations. "No other country can lift hundreds of millions of people out of pov ... read more
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