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SINO DAILY
New contraceptive rule in China sparks outrage
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 30, 2011


A new regulation that requires women buying emergency contraceptives in at least one Chinese city to register their real names and ID card numbers has triggered an outcry on the Internet.

The food and drug watchdog in Fuzhou city, capital of the southeastern province of Fujian, announced this week that pharmacies must register their customers' details in a bid to step up control of medicine for pregnant women.

"This amounts to asking Chinese people to register before they make love," one netizen named Ding Zhengyu said on Sina's popular Twitter-like weibo on Friday.

"To make love you now need to get the agreement from relevant departments and only then can you make love, without approval you have no right to make love."

Other online posts said the rule would backfire and result in people refusing to buy contraceptives and instead risk unwanted pregnancies.

The Fuzhou watchdog said it had also issued the new requirement -- made public Monday -- to increase understanding of how contraceptives work.

An official at the watchdog surnamed Zhang told AFP that "further regulations" would be coming out "soon."

He refused to comment on why authorities have mandated buyers of emergency contraceptives to register with pharmacies.

The new rule is also expected to be implemented in Xiamen -- Fujian's second-largest city -- according to media reports.

It comes after authorities in Shanghai, Beijing and the southern province of Guangdong have starting asking microblog (weibo) users to register under their real names, as they tighten their grip on the Internet.

"You have to register your real name on weibos, you have to register your real name for contraceptives, soon you'll have to register your name to buy bicycles," one netizen said Friday.

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Berlin 'concerned' at China's crackdown on dissidents
Berlin (AFP) Dec 30, 2011 - Germany is "deeply concerned" at long jail sentences handed down to two Chinese activists and the way the trial of a third was conducted, a government spokesman said Friday.

"The government is deeply concerned about the Chinese justice system's proceedings against dissidents," Georg Streiter told a regular news conference.

"The chancellor calls on the Chinese government to release all persons held in custody for peacefully exercising their constitutional right to free expression," he added.

The judgements against veteran activist Chen Xi on Monday and Chen Wei last Friday came in the context of proceedings against China's human rights movement, he said, also referring to the case of rights activist Ni Yulan.

Amid a spreading crackdown on dissent, a Beijing court failed to reach a verdict Thursday after the trial of Ni and her husband, who have long helped victims of land grabs.

Chen Xi, who was involved in the 1989 Tiananmen democracy protest movement, was sentenced to 10 years in jail for subversion. Chen Wei was jailed for nine years on the same charge.



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SINO DAILY
Chinese police kill seven in restive Xinjiang
Beijing (AFP) Dec 29, 2011
China said Thursday a police operation to free hostages in the restive Xinjiang region had left seven "terrorists" dead, but an exile group described the incident as a protest by local Uighurs. The incident is the latest reported violent confrontation in the region - home to roughly nine million mostly Muslim Uighurs who have long bristled under Chinese rule - since three deadly attacks in ... read more


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