Month: October 2012

  • Ai Wei Wei’s Interview With the Chinese Digital Thought Police

    Ai Wei Wei’s Interview With the Chinese Digital Thought Police

    By Brian Fung

    Share Oct 26 2012, 12:49 PM ET 1

    What it is like being a member of the government’s “50-Cent Gang”?

    RTR2CACZ-615.jpgWeb users log on at an Internet cafe in Shanxi province. (Reuters)

    China’s Web censorship machine is in full swing again after The New York Times published a story Thursday on Premier Wen Jiabao’s massive family fortune that stretches into the billions of dollars. Within hours of the report, the Times’ English- and Chinese-language websites had become unreachable from inside the People’s Republic.

    But even before China’s Great Firewall had lumbered into motion, anonymous digital cheerleaders for the government were probably already hard at work spinning Beijing’s response to the news. Members of the so-called “50-Cent Gang” are paid by the state to sway public opinion on Internet forums andchatrooms. These individuals portray themselves online as ordinary Chinese with a point of view, but in an environment where talk is cheap and nobody knows you’re a dog, much less a paid government agent, the 50-Cent Gang generally enjoys free rein.

    Ai Wei Wei, the artist and critic, sat down earlier this month with one of these semi-official public relations officers in Beijing’s employ. Their conversation reveals a surprisingly structured approach to what others might liken to Western Internet trolling:

    Can you describe your work in detail?
    The process has three steps – receive task, search for topic, post comments to guide public opinion. Receiving a task mainly involves ensuring you open your email box every day. Usually after an event has happened, or even before the news has come out, we’ll receive an email telling us what the event is, then instructions on which direction to guide the netizens’ thoughts, to blur their focus, or to fan their enthusiasm for certain ideas. After we’ve found the relevant articles or news on a website, according to the overall direction given by our superiors we start to write articles, post or reply to comments. This requires a lot of skill. You can’t write in a very official manner, you must conceal your identity, write articles in many dif­ferent styles, sometimes even have a dialogue with yourself, argue, debate. In sum, you want to create illusions to attract the attention and comments of netizens.

    The work often borders on psycho-social analysis:

    In a forum, there are three roles for you to play: the leader, the follower, the onlooker or unsuspecting member of the public. The leader is the relatively authoritative speaker, who usually appears after a controversy and speaks with powerful evidence. The public usually finds such users very convincing. There are two opposing groups of followers. The role they play is to continuously debate, argue, or even swear on the forum. This will attract attention from observers. At the end of the argument, the leader appears, brings out some powerful evidence, makes public opinion align with him and the objective is achieved. The third type is the onlookers, the netizens. They are our true target “clients”. We influence the third group mainly through role-playing between the other two kinds of identity. You could say we’re like directors, influencing the audience through our own writing, directing and acting. Sometimes I feel like I have a split personality.

    What the 50-Cent Gang does is no easy task. But its members earn little more than $100 a month for their toil:

    It’s calculated on a monthly basis, according to quantity and quality. It’s basically calculated at 50 yuan per 100 comments. When there’s an unexpected event, the compensation might be higher. If you work together to guide public opinion on a hot topic and several dozen people are posting, the compensation for those days counts for more. Basically, the compensation is very low. I work part-time. On average, the monthly pay is about 500-600 yuan. There are people who work full-time on this. It’s possible they could earn thousands of yuan a month.

    On whether the commenter’s personal convictions clash with his employer’s:

    Do you think the government has the right to guide public opinion?
    Personally, I think absolutely not. But in China, the government absolutely must interfere and guide public opinion. The majority of Chinese netizens are incited too easily, don’t think for themselves and are deceived and incited too easily by false news.

    Do you have to believe in the viewpoints you express? Are you concerned about politics and the future?
    I don’t have to believe in them. Sometimes you know well that what you say is false or untrue. But you still have to say it, because it’s your job. I’m not too concerned about Chinese politics. There’s nothing to be concerned about in Chinese politics.

    The full interview is worth a read.

    http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/10/ai-wei-weis-interview-with-the-chinese-digital-thought-police/264163/

  • China’s Paid Trolls: Meet the 50-Cent Party

    China’s Paid Trolls: Meet the 50-Cent Party
    The Chinese government hires people to distort or deflect conversations on the web. Ai Weiwei persuades an “online commentator” to tell all.

    New Statesman

    (PHOTO: Marcus Bleasdale VII)

    In February 2011, Ai Weiwei tweeted that he would like to conduct an interview with an “online commentator”. Commentators are hired by the Chinese government or the Communist Party of China to post comments favourable towards party policies and to shape public opinion on internet message boards and forums. The commentators are known as the 50-Cent Party, as they are said to be paid 50 cents for every post that steers a discussion away from anti-party content or that advances the Communist Party line.

    Below is the transcript of Ai’s interview with an online commentator. As requested, an iPad was given as compensation for the interview. To protect the interviewee, relevant personal information has been concealed in this script.

    Question: What’s your name, age, city of residence and online username?

    Answer: I cannot make my name public. I’m 26. I have too many usernames. If I want to use one, I just register it. I won’t mention them here.

    What do you call the work you do now?

    It doesn’t matter what you call it: online commentator, public opinion guide, or even “the 50-Cent Party” that everyone’s heard of.

    What is your level of education and work experience? How did you begin the work of guiding public opinion?

    I graduated from university and studied media. I once worked for a TV channel, then in online media. I’ve always been in the news media industry, for four or five years now.Over a year ago, a friend asked me if I wanted to be an online commentator, to earn some extra money. I said I’d give it a try. Later, I discovered it was very easy.

    When and from where will you receive directives for work?

    Almost every morning at 9am I receive an email from my superiors – the internet publicity office of the local government – telling me about the news we’re to comment on for the day. Sometimes it specifies the website to comment on, but most of the time it’s not limited to certain websites: you just find relevant news and comment on it.

    Can you describe your work in detail?

    The process has three steps – receive task, search for topic, post comments to guide public opinion. Receiving a task mainly involves ensuring you open your email box every day. Usually after an event has happened, or even before the news has come out, we’ll receive an email telling us what the event is, then instructions on which direction to guide the netizens’ thoughts, to blur their focus, or to fan their enthusiasm for certain ideas. After we’ve found the relevant articles or news on a website, according to the overall direction given by our superiors we start to write articles, post or reply to comments. This requires a lot of skill. You can’t write in a very official manner, you must conceal your identity, write articles in many dif­ferent styles, sometimes even have a dialogue with yourself, argue, debate. In sum, you want to create illusions to attract the attention and comments of netizens.

    In a forum, there are three roles for you to play: the leader, the follower, the onlooker or unsuspecting member of the public. The leader is the relatively authoritative speaker, who usually appears after a controversy and speaks with powerful evidence. The public usually finds such users very convincing. There are two opposing groups of followers. The role they play is to continuously debate, argue, or even swear on the forum. This will attract attention from observers. At the end of the argument, the leader appears, brings out some powerful evidence, makes public opinion align with him and the objective is achieved. The third type is the onlookers, the netizens. They are our true target “clients”. We influence the third group mainly through role-playing between the other two kinds of identity. You could say we’re like directors, influencing the audience through our own writing, directing and acting. Sometimes I feel like I have a split personality.

    Regarding the three roles that you play, is that a common tactic? Or are there other ways?

    There are too many ways. It’s kind of psychological. Netizens nowadays are more thoughtful than before. We have many ways. You can make a bad thing sound even worse, make an elaborate account, and make people think it’s nonsense when they see it. In fact, it’s like two negatives make a positive. When it’s reached a certain degree of mediocrity, they’ll think it might not be all that bad.

    What is the guiding principle of your work?

    The principle is to understand the guiding thought of superiors, the direction of public opinion desired, then to start your own work.

    Can you reveal the content of a “task” email?

    For example, “Don’t spread rumours, don’t believe in rumours”, or “Influence public understanding of X event”, “Promote the correct direction of public opinion on XXXX”, “Explain and clarify XX event; avoid the appearance of untrue or illegal remarks”, “For the detrimental social effect created by the recent XX event, focus on guiding the thoughts of netizens in the correct direction of XXXX”.

    What are the categories of information that you usually receive?

    They are mainly local events. They cover over 60 to 70 per cent of local instructions – for example, people who are filing complaints or petitioning.

    For countrywide events, such as the Jasmine Revolution [the pro-democracy protests that took place across the country in 2011], do you get involved?

    For popular online events like the Jasmine Revolution, we have never received a related task. I also thought it was quite strange. Perhaps we aren’t senior enough.

    Can you tell us the content of the commentary you usually write?

    The netizens are used to seeing unskilled comments that simply say the government is great or so and so is a traitor. They know what is behind it at a glance. The principle I observe is: don’t directly praise the government or criticise negative news. Moreover, the tone of speech, identity and stance of speech must look as if it’s an unsuspecting member of public; only then can it resonate with netizens. To sum up, you want to guide netizens obliquely and let them change their focus without realising it.

    Can you go off the topic?

    Of course you can go off the topic. When transferring the attention of netizens and

    blurring the public focus, going off the topic is very effective. For example, during the census, everyone will be talking about its truthfulness or necessity; then I’ll post jokes that appeared in the census. Or, in other instances, I would publish adverts to take up space on political news reports.

    Can you tell us a specific, typical process of “guiding public opinion”?

    For example, each time the oil price is about to go up, we’ll receive a notification to “stabilise the emotions of netizens and divert public attention”. The next day, when news of the rise comes out, netizens will definitely be condemning the state, CNPC and Sinopec. At this point, I register an ID and post a comment: “Rise, rise however you want, I don’t care. Best if it rises to 50 yuan per litre: it serves you right if you’re too poor to drive. Only those with money should be allowed to drive on the roads . . .”

    This sounds like I’m inviting attacks but the aim is to anger netizens and divert the anger and attention on oil prices to me. I would then change my identity several times and start to condemn myself. This will attract more attention. After many people have seen it, they start to attack me directly. Slowly, the content of the whole page has also changed from oil price to what I’ve said. It is very effective.

    What’s your area of work? Which websites do you comment on? Which netizens do you target?

    There’s no limit on which websites I visit. I mainly deal with local websites, or work on Tencent. There are too many commentators on Sohu, Sina, etc. As far as I know, these websites have dedicated internal departments for commenting.

    Can you tell which online comments are by online commentators?

    Because I do this, I can tell at a glance that about 10 to 20 per cent out of the tens of thousands of comments posted on a forum are made by online commentators.

    Will you debate with other people online? What sorts of conflicts do you have? How do you control and disperse emotion?

    Most of the time we’re debating with ourselves. I usually never debate with netizens and I’ll never say I’ve been angered by a netizen or an event. You could say that usually when I’m working, I stay rational.

    When the government says, “Don’t believe in rumours, don’t spread rumours,” it achieves the opposite effect. For example, when Sars and the melamine in milk case broke out, people tended to choose not to trust the government when faced with the choices of “Don’t trust rumours” and “Don’t trust the government”.

    I think this country and government have got into a rather embarrassing situation. No matter what happens – for example, if a person commits a crime, or there’s a traffic accident – as long as it’s a bad event and it’s publicised online, there will be people who condemn the government. I think this is very strange.

    This is inevitable, because the government encompasses all. When all honour is attributed to you, all mistakes are also attributed to you. Apart from targeted events, are individuals targeted? Would there be this kind of directive?

    There should be. I think for the Dalai Lama, there must be guidance throughout the country. All people in China hate the Dalai Lama and Falun Gong somewhat. According to my understanding, the government has truly gone a bit over the top. Before I got involved in this circle, I didn’t know anything. So I believe that wherever public opinion has been controlled relatively well, there will always have been commentators involved.

    How do your superiors inspect and assess your work?

    The superiors will arrange dedicated auditors who do random checks according to the links we provide. Auditors usually don’t assess, because they always make work requirements very clear. We just have to do as they say and there won’t be any mistakes.

    How is your compensation decided?

    It’s calculated on a monthly basis, according to quantity and quality. It’s basically calculated at 50 yuan per 100 comments. When there’s an unexpected event, the compensation might be higher. If you work together to guide public opinion on a hot topic and several dozen people are posting, the compensation for those days counts for more. Basically, the compensation is very low. I work part-time. On average, the monthly pay is about 500-600 yuan. There are people who work full-time on this. It’s possible they could earn thousands of yuan a month.

    Do you like your work?

    I wouldn’t say I like it or hate it. It’s just a bit more to do each day. A bit more pocket money each month, that’s all.

    What’s the biggest difficulty in the work?

    Perhaps it’s that you have to guess the psychology of netizens. You have to learn a lot of writing skills. You have to know how to imitate another person’s writing style. You need to understand how to gain the trust of the public and influence their thoughts.

    Why can’t you reveal your identity? Why do you think it’s sensitive?

    Do you want me to lose my job? Whatever form or name we use to post on any forums or blogs is absolutely confidential. We can’t reveal our identity, and I definitely wouldn’t reveal that I’m a professional online commentator.

    If we do, what would be the purpose of our existence? Exposure would affect not just me, it would create an even greater negative effect on our “superiors”.

    What do you mean by “superiors”?

    Our superior leaders – above that should be the propaganda department.

    Is your identity known to your family? Your friends?

    No. I haven’t revealed it to my family or friends. If people knew I was doing this, it might have a negative effect on my reputation.

    You say: “If I reveal inside information, without exaggeration this could lead to fatality.” Do you think that the consequence would be so serious?

    With my identity, I’m involved in the media and also the internet. If I really reveal my identity or let something slip, it could have an incalculable effect on me.

    If you say you want to quit, will there be resistance? Are there any strings attached?

    Not at all. This industry is already very transparent. For me, it’s just a part-time job. It’s like any other job. It’s not as dark as you think.

    How many hours do you go online each day and on which sites? Do you rest at the weekend?

    I go online for six to eight hours nearly every day. I’m mainly active on our local BBS and some large mainstream internet media and microblogs. I don’t work over weekends, but I’ll sign in to my email account and see if there’s any important instruction.

    In daily life, will you still be thinking about your online work?

    Now and then. For example, when I see a piece of news, I’ll think about which direction the superiors will request it to be guided in and how I would go about it. It’s a bit of an occupational hazard.

    Do you watch CCTV News and read the People’s Daily?

    I usually follow all the news, particularly the local news. But I generally don’t watch CCTV News, because it’s too much about harmony.

    Do you go on Twitter? Who do you follow?

    Yes. I follow a few interesting people, including Ai Weiwei. But I don’t speak on Twitter, just read and learn.

    How big a role do you think this industry plays in guiding public opinion in China?

    Truthfully speaking, I think the role is quite big. The majority of netizens in China are actually very stupid. Sometimes, if you don’t guide them, they really will believe in rumours.

    Because their information is limited to begin with. So, with limited information, it’s very difficult for them to express a political view.

    I think they can be incited very easily. I can control them very easily. Depending on how I want them to be, I use a little bit of thought and that’s enough. It’s very easy. So I think the effect should be quite significant.

    Do you think the government has the right to guide public opinion?

    Personally, I think absolutely not. But in China, the government absolutely must interfere and guide public opinion. The majority of Chinese netizens are incited too easily, don’t think for themselves and are deceived and incited too easily by false news.

    Do you have to believe in the viewpoints you express? Are you concerned about politics and the future?

    I don’t have to believe in them. Sometimes you know well that what you say is false or untrue. But you still have to say it, because it’s your job. I’m not too concerned about Chinese politics. There’s nothing to be concerned about in Chinese politics.

    http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/politics/2012/10/china%E2%80%99s-paid-trolls-meet-50-cent-party

  • Explosive New Video Details Organ Transplant Abuses in China

    Explosive New Video Details Organ Transplant Abuses in China

    Doctors, independent experts call for end to crimes against humanity

    New video details mass killings to supply multi-million dollar organ transplant industry.

    New video details mass killings to supply multi-million dollar organ transplant industry.

    NEW YORK—A new online video details how, for the past ten years, Chinese military hospitals have operated a multi-million dollar human trafficking business that murders Chinese citizens to sell their organs (video). Experts cited in the video estimate that tens of thousands of prisoners of conscience, mostly Falun Gong practitioners, have been killed so that their organs could be sold for profit. 

    Renowned Canadian human rights lawyer David Matas dubbed such abuses “a new form of evil on this planet.” Dr. Gabriel Danovitch, a leading transplant surgeon from the University of California in Los Angeles, calls such practices “abhorrent” and a “crime against humanity” that must stop.

    The video, produced by New York-based New Tang Dynasty Television (ntdtv.org), comes at a particularly salient time. Almost immediately after its release, Forbes contributor Eamonn Fingleton cited the video as one of two on China that the U.S. presidential candidates must watch (report).

    The Bo Xilai Connection

    As the Communist Party’s changing of the guard and the trial for former Chongqing Party-chief Bo Xilai approach, the organ harvesting issue is particularly relevant given Bo and his deputy Wang Lijun’s apparent involvement in organ transplant abuses (see factsheet). 

    “Despite the mounting evidence of these crimes, mainstream media have been largely silent on this issue, but as this video shows, credible voices from the medical and policymaking communities are raising the alarm that horrific things are happening in China that can no longer be ignored,” says Levi Browde, Executive Director of the Falun Dafa Information Center. 

    “These abuses are not just Chinese people’s problem. They tear at the very fabric of our humanity,” says Browde. “Worse yet, in a transnational industry like organ transplants, people around the world—be they patients or doctors or pharmaceutical companies—are, unwittingly or not, complicit. We can’t just turn a blind eye.”

    * To view the video, see here.
    * To sign a petition urging an end to organ harvesting from prisoners in China and calling for further independent investigations, see here.
    * For a Falun Dafa Information Center Fact Sheet on organ harvesting, including the connection to Bo Xilai and Wang Lijun, see here.

    http://faluninfo.net/article/1260/

  • Ahead of Tonight’s China Debate: Two Must-See Videos for the Candidates

    Ahead of Tonight’s China Debate: Two Must-See Videos for the Candidates

    Supporters of the Falungong spiritual movement...

    Supporters of the Falungong spiritual movement protest the opening by  China’s Vice President Xi Jinpingof Australia’s first Chinese Medicine Confucius Institute in Melbourne in  2010. Falungong is banned in China and it alleges that under former Chinese president Jiang Zemin a program was launched to “harvest” organs from its supporters. Image credit: AFP via @daylife)

    Chinese leaders and their surrogates in the United States have been working hard this political season to calm American concerns about the rise of China. But predictions of China’s impending “implosion” are just that —  predictions. And many of them come from people who consciously want to deflect the attention of the American electorate from the real issue: as the United States becomes increasingly dependent on Chinese finance, it is rapidly losing its economic sovereignty. Worse, it  is falling under the shadow of  a nation — China — whose values  are about as remote as those of any major modern nation.  As it happens,  two YouTube videos have just been released that underline the extent of America’s   failure to understand the real China. We can only hope Barack Obama and Mitt  Romney have time to take a look ahead of their encounter tonight, in which they are expected to spend much time discussing China.

    The first clip  is entitled, “Killed For Organs: China’s Secret State Transplant Business,” and it gives a horrific account of the Chinese state’s forced “harvesting” of human kidneys, livers, and other vital organs. In most cases, the “donors” are prisoners and many of them — perhaps a majority — are  prisoners of conscience. Their organs are sold to a booming domestic and global organ  transplant industry, with hearts, for instance, fetching well over $100,000 each. There have been allegations that supporters of the Falungong spiritual movement have been particularly targeted. In many cases organs fitting a recipient’s physiology can be made available within a week and the removal of the “donor’s” organs constitutes his or her execution. The clip includes a particularly graphic comment from the Canadian political campaigner  David Kilgour: “It makes you think of some grotesque restaurant where you pick your lobster — except that these are human beings we are talking about.” If this clip does not focus American attention on the ethical  implications of China’s rise, nothing will.

    The second clip is a commentary by the prominent management writer Richard D’Aveni describing the extent of China’s challenge to the American economy. His contribution is, I believe, of historic significance in that he is the first top American scholar to  speak so clearly about the crisis now facing American capitalism. (D’Aveni’s comments are a complete break from a pattern of self-censorship which has long restrained the East Asian studies field in American universities. The problem has been scholars’ increasing dependence on funding from politically motivated donors — not least many  American corporations that profit from shipping jobs to  China). D’Aveni comes to the subject as an established and highly respected expert on management and his authority is bolstered by the fact that he enjoys tenure at Tuck,  one of America’s top management schools.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvAOOwvJMZs&feature=youtu.be

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4L0WSSefHU

    —————————————————

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/eamonnfingleton/2012/10/22/ahead-of-tonights-china-debate-two-must-see-videos-for-the-candidates/

  • Man sent to labor camp for subversive comments and T-shirt files lawsuit

    Man sent to labor camp for subversive comments and T-shirt files lawsuit

    October 15, 2012Jing GaoNo Comments, , , , , , , , , , ,

    A college graduate detained and sent to a labor camp for forwarding ‘subversive’ content on a microblogging site sued the labor camp in Chongqing Wednesday. On the web, he has garnered immense support for his fight for freedom of speech. His lawyer, also a human rights activist, defended him fervently in court and publicly indicted China’s notorious forced labor camp system that is often used to jail dissidents without a public trial.

    Ren Jianyu

    Ren Jianyu, 25, had been serving as a village officer of Pengshui county under Chongqing for two years since graduating from college in 2009. Last September, when he was waiting for his temporary ad hoc job to be turned official, the authorities in Chongqing determined that he had copied, forwarded and commented on “over 100 negative pieces of information” and therefore needed to be reeducated through labor for two years.

    His father brought the case to Chongqing No.3 People’s Intermediate Court and asked that the decision to re-educate him through labor be rescinded. The case was heard in court Wednesday.

    The case has been the latest in a series of incidents where local authorities took flak for incarcerating dissidents without the law even entering the equation. In August, Tang Hui, whose 11-year-old daughter was raped and forced into prostitution by seven men, petitioned the authorities in her hometown in Hunan province repeatedly to hand out death penalty, only to be sentenced to 18 months in a labor camp, which outraged Chinese netizens and prompted them into online activism.

    Pu Zhuqiang, the attorney for Ren Jianyu, revealed on Sina Weibo that the Chongqing police applied for an arrest warrant despite that there was an absence of evidence against him that pointed to his subversive intent. After the prosecution disapproved the arrest warrant application on the grounds of lack of evidence, the Chongqing Public Security Bureau made the decision to sentence him to two years in labor camp. To incriminate Ren, the police submitted as evidence to court a T-shirt he bought over the Internet that reads “Giver Me Liberty or Give Me Death”.

    The “Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death T-shirt” the Chongqing police seized from Ren’s home as evidence against him.

    A majority of the 100 plus “negative” messages Ren Jianyu was accused of are forwarded web posts written by others, including one by law professor He Weifang, one by Chinese-Australian political blogger Yang Hengjun, and one by legal expert Xiao Han. Ironically, none of the original authors of the posts that Ren forwarded has been punished for what they have written. Some of them are evening teaching government officials at party schools.

    A female friend of Ren said, “Ren Jianyu is a straight arrow. He does not pander.”

    Ren’s attorney, Pu Zhiqiang (left) and Ren’s father in front of the courthouse on October 10.

    Ren Jianyu’s father, Ren Shiliu, is a brick mason. He received only two months of formal education in his life. When Ren  Jr. was first arrested, he comforted his father by saying, “Don’t worry. It will take at most 20 years for charges against me to be cleared.”

    As the pressure from the public mounted, the local authorities approached Ren’s family and wanted to settle the case in private, only to be turned down by Ren’s father, who insisted that Ren be exonerated in public, “How he got in will be how he gets out!”

    Many comments Ren left on the web are critical of Bo Xilai, the former party boss of Chongqing, who had been a zealous advocate for revolutionary singing and dancing and Mao cult until he fell from disgrace amid a highly publicized scandal earlier this year. A college graduate in the city, Ren got a civil service position in a rural village administered by Chongqing as part of the scheme promoted by  Chinese civil service administration that encourage college grads to bring their skill sets and vision to rural China.

    “Chongqing has held high the banner of the second Cultural Revolution in China. Singing red songs, Great Leap Forward, Flamboyance, personality cult, contempt for the law. Everything looks so familiar. What can I save you, the people that are suffering from difficulties and hardships?”

    “Our government now has this problem: it doesn’t manage what it should have managed, and when it does manage, it manages foolishly,” he wrote in another post.

    In court, Pu Zhiqiang, accused Bo Xilai and his police chief Wang Lijun, who unleashed extrajudicial crackdown on organized crimes as well as dissent, of “Fascist reign of terror.” He said Ren got punished solely for his speech. “Ren was dissatisfied with the current system. Deng Xiaoping was also dissatisfied, hence the reform.”

    In his closing argument, he said, “As for a bad political system, we won’t stomach it long,” which has been retweeted on Sina Weibo, one of China’s most vibrant social media, over 18,000 times.

    The state-run media have also voiced their support for Ren on Sina Weibo. Beijing News, a daily newspaper based in the nation’s capital, wrote, “Who, among the 500 million net users in China, has never forwarded a web post that strikes the chord?…If you really want to frame someone, you can always find a charge.”

    Hu Xijin, the editor-in-chief of Global Times, a Communist tabloid well-known for its nationalist editorials and pro-government slant, wrote, “I believe he (Ren) can win (the lawsuit). Because the era of getting punished for pure speech that does not bring personal harm or social impact – no matter how ‘anti-party’ or ‘anti-socialism’ they are – should be over. Truly hope redress of his case can be the last straw on the thousand-year-old political tradition of punishment someone for his speech.”

    http://www.ministryoftofu.com/2012/10/man-sent-to-labor-camp-for-subversive-comments-and-t-shirt-files-lawsuit/

  • Hundreds of thousands of newspapers ordered to be destroyed in cover-up of corruption claim

    Hundreds of thousands of newspapers ordered to be destroyed in cover-up of corruption claim

    October 10, 2012Jing GaoOne Comment, , , , , , , ,

    A government official in Fujian province used his political clout to prevent hundreds of thousands of copies of a newspaper that portrays him in a bad light from hitting the market a thousand miles away. The magnitude of the censorship effort has been exposed on Chinese social media by renowned investigative journalists and astounded netizens who have long held aversion for corruption.

    On the evening of October 8, Zhou Zhichen, the editor-in-chief of Yunnan-based Metropolis Times, wrote on his Sina Weibo without going into details that “As a media practitioner from Fujian province, I’ve never felt so indignant and ashamed.” On October 9, investigative reporter Wang Keqing from the Economic Observer confirmed that a story titled “Here Comes the Watch Uncle Bureau Chief from Fujian”, which would make public the fact that Li Dejin, the transportation bureau chief of Fujian province, sports a 50,000-yuan diamond-studded wristwatch and a 13,000 waist belt, was going to be published on page A30 of the newspaper that day. Hundreds of thousands of copies had been printed. But early in the morning, they were destroyed due to relentless pressure exerted several provinces away.

    scandal01

    Top: The story “Here Comes the Watch Uncle Bureau Chief from Fujian” due for Tuesday’s Metropolis Times.
    Bottom: Li Dejin, Chief of Fujian Provincial Transportation Bureau.

    Zhou Zhichen, the chief editor, denounced the coverup in his weibo:

    As a media practitioner from Fujian, I’ve never felt so indignant and ashamed. I abhor and despise the black hand coming all the way down from a thousand miles away. When I am looking at the blood and tears settling upon hundreds of thousands of newspapers, I consoled myself that only survivors can be constructors. I also believe that that leather belt tainted with a sugar daddy’s vibe and that timepiece with crazy parts are only the beginning of dark spirits’ karma. I firmly believe.

    Deng Fei, reporter with Phoenix Weekly and organizer of China’s Free Lunch program, wrote:

    While Chinese media have been subject to castration for years, this day is particularly a shame. After this defeat, how are we going to face the public? How are we going to muster up the courage and exercise our right of supervision?

    Later, Global Times, a Communist tabloid, also confirmed that the copies that had been recalled were not reduced to pulp yet and were still at the printing house after being sealed off.

    An insider with knowledge revealed that at 3 a.m. on October 9, just three hours before the newspaper copies would reach the distribution centers, the president of the media group that owns the paper received seven telephone calls from Yunnan Provincial Party Committee, from the Provincial Propaganda Department, the Municipal Propaganda Department of Kunming, all claiming that the Fujian Provincial Party Committee and government requested that the article be taken down. By the time, the newspapers had already been printed. The printing house had to replace the page with advertisements and reprint it.

    The Chinese public and the media have been increasingly sensitive about the attire of public servants. It is almost a consensus that public servants, whose incomes look miserable on paper, must have received bribe or made ill-gotten gains if they wear a luxury watch or a belt. Several officials had come under intense public scrutiny because of timepieces they wear and were even fired due to mounting pressure.

    Cross-province hot pursuit (kua sheng):  A black hand extended from Fujian to prevent the publication of a story in Yunnan

    Cross-province hot pursuit, (kua sheng zhui bu, or in short, kua sheng) is a recent phenomenon: local authorities in China send police forces in defiance of geographic distance and jurisdictional hurdles to arrest and detain petitioners, whistle-blowers and dissident authors who criticize the local government and law enforcement on the web but are based in another province. The term kua sheng is formidable in that it demonstrates the reality that the authorities can always reach you and punish you for what you say against it as long as you are within China. Kua-sheng is now often used as a verb by Chinese netizens before they leave a comment critical of the authorities, as in “Please do not kua-sheng me,”

    Fear of Li Dejin, the Watch Uncle, that the story about his 50,000 yuan Rado and 13,000 Hermes belt may dent his political career is legitimate. But his knee-jerk reaction to kill the story at all costs, with his cross-province efforts, proved counterproductive in the age of social media. It only piqued media and netizens’ curiosity as to why his sphere of influence is big enough to employ the amount of manpower and pressure the authorities a thousand miles away into action. Just as media commentator Yao Bo puts it on his Weibo:

    “The Watch Uncle stopped in his kua sheng action only hundreds of thousands of newspaper copies that report his luxury watch and Hermes belt, but followers of the big potatoes that shared this on Weibo total at least a 10 million. A gust of wind lifted his fig leaf, and his first reaction is to keep his hair in shape. How dumb is that…”

    The editorial blog of the state-run Xinhua News Agency also commented, “If the lessons (officials) learned (from watch-spotting) is turn a deaf ear to censure or even single-handedly gag it, it will be a real tragedy. China has already become the number one country in microblogging. Officials in media maelstrom, please face questions directly.”

    http://www.ministryoftofu.com/2012/10/hundreds-of-thousands-of-newspapers-ordered-to-be-destroyed-in-cover-up-of-corruption-claim/

  • Picture of the day: Smile of a dead river porpoise indigenous to China

    Picture of the day: Smile of a dead river porpoise indigenous to China

    April 25, 2011
    Jing Gao2 Comments, , , , , , , , , , , ,

    A finless porpoise died with a gentle smile on its face. A heartbroken staff member at an animal rescue center wept at the sad sight.

    Yangtze finless porpoise, or locally known as river pig (jiang tun 江豚), is on the verge of extinction. Human activities, such as industrial wastewater discharge, fishing, transportation, and dam construction, are threatening the ecosystem of Yangtze River, the species’ natural habitat, and decimating the mammal. A recent census turned up just 1,800 Yangtze finless porpoises, and the  porpoise will become extinct within 24 to 94 years if no protective measures are taken, according to National Geographic. (Picture picked from Sina Microblog)


    http://www.ministryoftofu.com/2011/04/picture-of-the-day-smile-of-a-dead-river-porpoise-indigenous-to-china/


  • 中联办藉驻港部队搞统战 港

    中联办藉驻港部队搞统战 港九院校学代全说“不”

    33度高温下的中大校园,8,000大专生走出课室齐为下一代发声,要求政府彻底撤回国民教育。(摄影:宋祥龙/大纪元)

    【大纪元2012年10月14日讯】中共收回香港十五年,统战这个被称为“反共基地”的香港就成为特首梁振英的首要政治任务。从上台短短三个月梁政府的表现及政策看,令港人愈发感到“煮青蛙的温水已经沸腾”,其一意孤行欲强推的“国民教育洗脑科”的举措,也令学界不得不为此抗争,反国教一役更有数以千计大学生打着抗议大陆“殖民”香港口号,多次游行中打出英制时期港旗,这些都极其触动北京神经,并绞尽脑汁予以渗透,统战。中联办为压抑学界反共情绪升温,将统战行动升级。

    据《苹果》报道,日前中联办藉联谊为名,广邀全港大专院校学生会到昂船洲解放军军营,在中联办、特区高官及大学校长陪同下进行交流。不过中共万万没想到的是,此举不但无获得学生们的领情,代表九大院校学生会的学联还发出公开信,拒绝接受中共统战,表明绝不与屡次干预“一国两制”的中共官员同席而坐。

    中联办青年工作部上月尾向香港八间大学及教育学院学生会领袖发信,信中称为增进学生对国家的了解、促进驻港解放军与大学生之间的交流,邀请他们今日到昂船洲军营进行“互访联谊”,信中介绍的“联谊”活动规格之高,可算前所未见,届时驻港部队首长、中联办领导、特区司局长及十二间院校校长均会出席。联谊活动由早上九时至下午三时,包括安排应邀的700名学生与出席官员见面、吃自助餐、参观驻港部队武器展,以及与解放军进行足球友谊赛等等。

    学联代表明言:不要分化我们

    面对中联办招手,学联日前发出公开信,表明不接受中共政权统战,而获邀的九大院校学生会代表全部“Say No”,不会出席“统战联谊”。信中指中联办近年一再干预香港“一国两制”,包括利用传媒机器打压香港学者、肆无忌惮地操控特首选举等,做法令人感到心寒及愤怒。学联表示渴望认识中国,但不会从歌颂唱好的活动中认识,会直至“六.四”平反、军队归于人民,才会与子弟兵谈笑风生。

    学联秘书长李成康称,今次活动有多名中港官员出席,相信中联办想从中拉拢学生,“学联不会同中共政权接触,今次院校一齐拒绝,讯息更加清楚,不要以为可以统战或分化我们。”


    逾8,000名大专生罢课集会,在中文大学的百万大道举行誓师仪式,批评政府是假让步,要求政府撤回国民教育科。(摄影:宋祥龙/大纪元)

    《苹果》引述亲北京政界人士透露,今次的大规模联谊活动,显示中央担心香港学界的反共情绪继续升温,有意作出拉拢,“特别反国教事件上,中大百万大道八千名师生罢课,高喊‘抗殖’口号,触动中央神经。”该人士估计中央担心香港掀起一场由大学生领头的学运,驻港官员会加强统战。

    另外,中大学生会会长杨政贤表示,近年学界对社会事务的意识提高,不少议题上都有表达立场,每次更可组织及动员一定人数,相信是引起中联办注意的原因,又重申学联抗拒的是中国如英国般“要港人跟剧本做”,又无惧中央加大力度统战,“大力也好、不大力也好,我们都准备好要去抗拒。”

    为洗掉“六.四”刽子手形象 搞统战

    连续23年香港举行的有关纪念“六.四”学生游行集会,已经成为香港的特色,很多参与“六.四”活动的义工或游行人士,不但包括当年的60后,更包括大批跟着“六.四”活动一起成长的80后,90后的学生们。他们接过“六.四”之旗,继续抗争。

    而中共为洗脱“六.四”血腥镇压民运、屠杀学生的形象,驻港中共机构明里暗地的统战工程一直没有停息过,与大专学界拉关系,更是其中一项重点。中共为血腥镇压“六.四”民运事件“洗底”,当年有份屠杀学生的解放军,更是重点“洗底”机构,现时驻港解放军除了每年举办军营开放日让公众参观,安排枪械、文艺表演等,希望减低港人对驻港解放军负面印象。

    据《苹果》透露,驻港解放军一直有低调而积极做统战工作。由2007年开始,解放军开始以参观为名踩入各大学校园,他们每年到访一间院校,参观之余会大显亲民一面,例如与学生一同上课、午膳、进行球类比赛等,令不少学生对解放军的印象改观。

    此外,中联办近年还积极透过打压、渗透等手段拉拢大学学生会,甚至出钱、出力为他们筹办内地交流团,利诱大学学生会“归边”。

    有港大前学生会成员向媒体透露,其在学生会就职典礼后便接到中联办来电,表示可以为他们安排北上交流及探访团,“问你想看什么?中联办可以出钱资助,又可以安排其他团体同大学交流”。该名前成员表示,过去确有学生会“中招”,接受中联办利诱,“有学生认为玩一下无所谓,不会被洗脑,亦有人是贪小便宜”。

    学联公开信中,五点拒绝中共统战

    而今次中共力邀学生进行统战的规格可谓前所未有,中共为统战香港已经“相当赏面”,不过这些却令亲身经历十五年回归日子的香港学生一眼识破中共的统战目的,九间大学院校齐声并公开向中共“Say No!”

    1)学联渴望认识内地但并非从只有歌颂唱好的活动中认识

    2)对中联办近年一再干预香港高度自治感心寒及愤怒

    3)中共政权阻挠香港实行双普选、肆无忌惮地操控特首选举、侮辱港人智慧

    4)毋忘八九历史伤痛、军队屠杀人民、维护贪腐政权

    5)待“六.四”平反、军队归于人民,才与子弟兵谈笑风生

    http://www.epochtimes.com/gb/12/10/14/n3705453.htm%E4%B8%AD%E8%81%94%E5%8A%9E%E8%97%89%E9%A9%BB%E6%B8%AF%E9%83%A8%E9%98%9F%E6%90%9E%E7%BB%9F%E6%88%98-%E6%B8%AF%E4%B9%9D%E9%99%A2%E6%A0%A1%E5%AD%A6%E4%BB%A3%E5%85%A8%E8%AF%B4%E2%80%9C%E4%B8%8D%E2%80%9D.html?p=all

  • Hong Kong Students Say No to Chinese United Front

    Hong Kong Students Say No to Chinese United Front

    Open letter says no trust, no friendship until Tiananmen massacre is redressed.

    By Mary Silver & Ariel Tian
    Epoch Times Staff
    Created: October 16, 2012 Last Updated: October 16, 2012
    Related articles: China » Regime
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    Student protests in Hong Kong in September this year rejected an education program devised in communist China for Hong Kong students. The students have again rebuffed an attempted friendship, or united front, overture, from China's communist cadres. (Song Xianglong/The Epoch Times)

    Student protests in Hong Kong in September this year rejected an education program devised in communist China for Hong Kong students. The students have again rebuffed an attempted friendship, or united front, overture, from China’s communist cadres. (Song Xianglong/The Epoch Times)

    Student leaders in Hong Kong rebuffed a late September invitation to visit a naval base on a nearby island, Apple Daily reported, in what was a large-scale demonstration of disapproval of the Chinese Communist Party and a possibly embarrassing episode for mainland China’s cadres.

    The Youth Department of the Liaison Office of the Central People’s Government in the Hong Kong asked student leaders at eight colleges to attend a “friendship visit” to help students and military personnel understand each other. It was a high profile event. The chief of the Hong Kong-based military, leaders of the Liaison Office, the Chief Secretary for Administration, heads of 12 colleges, and 700 students attended.

    The Hong Kong Federation of Students responded with an open letter on Oct. 11, which said in part: “We don’t accept the united front of the Chinese communist regime. We will not attend this event, and we want to explain the reason publicly.”

    The term united front refers to efforts by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to bring independent groups or people under its sphere of influence.

    According to the letter, students cannot be friends with the Chinese military until the student victims of the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989 are redressed. “An exchange is to promote friendship, but friendship should be built on mutual trust. The question is, can we believe in the People’s Liberation Army? We once made a promise never to forget the pain of the summer of 1989,” the open letter said.

    The students also wrote that the people of Hong Kong are angry that the mainland is not honoring its one country, two systems promise made when it regained Hong Kong. The Chinese regime has suppressed scholars and interfered with Hong Kong elections. Though the students are eager to learn about China, they are not willing to praise the Chinese Communist Party as a precondition for learning about China, the letter said.

    A pro-Beijing politician told Apple Daily that the large-scale friendship visit was meant to win over Hong Kong students, and that it showed that Party leaders are concerned with student’s anti-communist sentiments. 

    “Particularly Hong Kong’s anti-national education protest, and the students’ strike at the University Mall of Chinese University of Hong Kong, attended by eight thousand students and teachers shouting ‘anti-colonization’ slogans, got on the nerves of the central leadership,” Apple Daily reported. 

    He said party leaders are worried about a potential students’ movement and therefore they want Hong Kong-based officials to try harder to change student’s ideas. 

    The Central People’s Government Liaison Office is the parent agency of the Xinhua News Agency, Hong Kong Branch. Established in May 1947, the Liaison Office represents the Chinese Communist Party in Hong Kong, according to its official website.

    http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/china-news/hong-kong-students-say-no-to-chinese-united-front-304001.html

  • Wonder Woman – Mencius’ Mother

    October 13, 2012, 16:42
    By: SERON CHAU
    Seron dances with Shen Yun’s New York Company, touring Asia this year.

    Meng Mu 570

    While cleaningout old notes from my locker the other day, I found an old article I wrote titled:“Mencius’ Mother.”

    You know thesaying, “Behind every great man there’s a great woman,” right? Mencius’ motheris the perfect example.

    I rememberreading about her back in my Chinese Civilization class and thinking: “Whoa,finally, amongst the abundance of men recorded in Chinese history, we have anoutstanding woman!” And perhaps this is just one example of how the women ofChina’s history weren’t as insignificant as they’re sometimes made out to be,and deserve a bit more credit for their contributions.

    And so I wouldlike to use this blog entry to praise Mencius’s mum and tell everyone why she’sso awesome.

    Her name wasZhang. She became a widow when Mencius was young, and legend has it she movedhomes three times in search for a location suitable for raising her son.

    When Menciuswas a child, he came home early one day, obviously cutting class. He walked into find his mother weaving at her loom. Surprised to see him back, she asked ifschool was out early. “I left because I felt like it,” he said. This usuallycalm mother suddenly took a knife and slashed her finished cloth, shaking theliving daylights out of Mencius. After recovering, he asked her why she didthat. She then replied that his skipping school was like her destroying hercloth—all the hard work put in comes to naught if you become slack just because“you feel like it.”

    Her advice hitthe spot. Mencius became responsible in his studies and, with his mother’s nurture and wisdom, eventually emerged as one of the greatest philosophersin China and beyond. He was one of the most notable men in Chinese history, butnot without the help of a special woman.

    http://www.shenyunperformingarts.org/blog/_xgjxti83iSU/mencius-mother-chinese-wonder-woman.html