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Archive for the ‘Taiyuan’ Category

Central China city bans petitioners from seeking justice in Beijing

Posted by chinaview on December 25, 2008

Radio Free Asia, 2008-12-24 -

Human rights activists speak out against a new regulation in China’s Shanxi province that they say targets the rights of petitioners.

HONG KONG— New legislation against petitioning which blocks residents of Taiyuan, in China’s Shanxi province, from seeking justice in Beijing is without legal basis, according to leading human rights activists in the country.

The legislation is in conflict with existing law, Yao Lifa, a rights advocate from China’s central Hubei province, said.

“The ‘Regulation on Petitions’ issued by China’s State Council clearly states that petitioners may voice their grievances to higher-level government offices,” Yao said.

“Sending local police to detain petitioners in Beijing is simply a way to avoid resolution of the problem.”

The legal wing of the city Communist Party committee in Taiyuan, capital of northern China’s Shanxi province, announced the new measures against petitioners earlier this week, according to the official Taiyuan Daily.

Law enforcement officers “will punish various illegal petitioning activities in accordance with the law” in locations that include Tiananmen Square, Zhongnanhai—the Party leadership compound—foreign embassies, and government representative offices, the news agency reported.

Petitioners from Taiyuan are also banned from central government leaders’ residences and from provincial and municipal government offices that don’t handle petitions. They are also prohibited from organizing demonstrations in Beijing.

Sichuan-based rights activist Liu Zhengyou said all local authorities, including those in Taiyuan, have attempted to thwart petitioning in Beijing by sending local police to round up petitioners.

“Petitioners who are caught will be put in illegal prisons, in detention, placed under house arrest, or locked in mental hospitals. But to do this violates China’s law,” Liu said.

Petitioners punished

China maintains a “Letter and Visit Office” at various levels of the government to deal with petitions.

But Liu Zhengyou said local officials are often responsible for the problems petitioners seek to address. And after petitioners voice their grievances, it is the petitioners who are punished, rather than the officials who wronged them.

Analysts with the China Information Center rights group predict another wave of petitioning across the country next March during the People’s Congress national convention.

China’s current system of dealing with petitions is ineffective because it relies on the moral values of its many officials, Yao said.

“China has a huge army of petitioners. The government has spent so much money on stopping them, but they are still disappointed and hopeless. I call upon the Chinese government to end its system of ‘rule of person’ and to switch to one of ‘rule by law.’”

Liu Zhengyou said the current system goes beyond inefficiency and specifically targets petitioners.

“In our country there is no mechanism to rectify errors committed by officials. If you go to petition in Beijing, the person who receives you has a connection with the police from the place where you are from, and works with them to persecute you,” Liu said.

“The new Taiyuan regulation is an open campaign against petitioners, and has recently appeared in Sichuan and many other places,” he said.

“The space for petitioners is becoming even narrower and more dangerous. This is an illegal crackdown.”

- Radio Free Asia: Taiyuan Bans Petitioners from Beijing

Posted in Beijing, Central China, China, Human Rights, Law, News, People, Petitioner, Politics, Shanxi, Social, Taiyuan, World | Leave a Comment »

A second reporter arrested after investigating suspected corruption in China Shanxi province

Posted by chinaview on December 16, 2008

Reporters Without Borders, 15 December 2008 -

Reporters Without Borders strongly condemns the arrest of Guan Jian, a reporter with the Beijing-based weekly Wangluo Bao (Network News), while investigating allegedly corrupt real estate transactions in Taiyuan, the capital of the northern province of Shanxi. Guan was arrested on 1 December and has been held incommunicado ever since.

It is the second case this month of a journalist being arrested as a result of reporting on alleged abuse of authority and corruption in Shanxi. CCTV reporter Li Min has been held since 4 December.

“Abuse of authority by local officials is common in this region, which is biggest source of coal in China and is riddled with corruption,” Reporters Without Borders said. “It is becoming increasingly dangerous for journalists to investigate corruption allegations involving officials. We urge the central government to investigate these cases and punish those who are really guilty.”

Beijing News quoted Shanxi Public Security Department sources as saying Guan has himself been charged with corruption. He was arrested at a Taiyuan hotel by police officers from Zhangjiakou in the neighbouring province of Hebei. Video footage recorded by the hotel’s security camera shows him being forcibly taken away in a car by five men.

Guan, 49, went to Taiyuan at the end of November to investigate allegations of illegal land transactions involving a real estate company and local officials. Wangluo Bao has not named the company but it is reportedly headed by the deputy director of the Shanxi People’s Congress.

Wangluo Bao editor Ren Pengyu said to Beijing news he has had no contact with Guan since a call a few hours before he went missing in which he said he had just had a good interview.

Guan’s son Guan Yufei told the Reuters news agency he had not had news of his father since his abduction. “His friends couldn’t reach him, his colleagues couldn’t either,” he told Reuters. “At first we thought he had just gone on a reporting trip, but then after several days when he still wasn’t in touch, we got worried.”

Guan Yufei went to Taiyuan to look for his father but, aside from the hotel security camera footage, came back empty-handed.

CCTV reporter Li Min was arrested at her Beijing home on 4 December by four policemen who had been sent from Shanxi province by Shanxi prosecutor He Shusheng, whom Li had accused of abuse of authority in a report broadcast by CCTV. Like Guan, Li has herself been accused of corruption.

- Reporters Without Borders

Posted in Central China, China, Freedom of Speech, Human Rights, Journalist, Law, Media, News, People, Politics, Shanxi, Social, Speech, Taiyuan, World, corruption | Leave a Comment »

Quit the CCP Slogans Found Throughout China

Posted by chinaview on September 2, 2006

The Epoch Times, Sep 02, 2006- quit-ccp-slogan-Jinan
The Nine Commentaries On the Communist Party (the Nine Commentaries) has initiated a tidal wave of withdrawals from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) since it’s introduction on November 18, 2004. More than 13 million Chinese people have publicly announced their withdrawals from the CCP and it’s related organizations through The Epoch Times website over the past two years. Not even the internet blockade has been able to stop people from posting their withdrawal statements. Many go so far as to put them on bulletin boards, license plates, telephone poles, and advertisement columns.

Information on the Nine Commentaries and on withdrawing from the CCP can be found just about anywhere. Truth clarifying DVDs, booklets, pamphlets, posters, and even banners can be found frequently occupying space at governmental agencies, National People’s Congress, parks, tourist sites, work places, educational institutions, hospitals, stores, along the streets and in residential areas. Sometimes these materials last for several months to a year before they are removed.

(photo: The slogan, “Read the Nine Commentaries, The Heavens will exterminate the CCP”, has been written on several large stones near the Dafotou tourist site in Jinan City, Shandong Province. from www.minghui.org)

Gao Dawei, spokesperson for the Global Service Center for Quitting the CCP said, “The emergence of resignations and slogans in large quantities goes to show that quitting the CCP has become a reality, has broken free of the CCP’s information blockade and has removed the inner fears of the Chinese people. It is certain that the wave of resignations around China will help more Chinese people realize the vile nature of the CCP, reexamine their own pasts and futures and dare to envision a new China. Those who speak out against communism are the hope of China.”

Shanxi Provinceslogan-quit-ccp-shanxi-huguanxian

According to a Clearwisdom.net report on August 5, 2006, posters publicizing the Nine Commentaries as well as encouragement for people to quit the CCP were found at the Taihangshan Grand Canyon tourist site in Huguan County, Shanxi Province.

(phot at right: slogan “quit the CCP” at the Taihangshan Grand Canyon tourist site)slogan-quit-ccp-shanxi-huguanxian

On May 16, 2006, posters and truth clarification materials have been spotted in the residential areas, parks, shopping and daycare centers, etc., on Xinjian Street, Taoyuan Lane, North Taoyuan Street, and North Street near the Taiyuan City Council and city government buildings. (right)

On April 18, 2006, Clearwisdom.net slogan-quit-ccp-shanxi-huguan-streetreported that posters promoting the withdrawal from the CCP could be seen during the National People’s Congress and the Political Consultative Conference. Such posters can be seen frequently in government agencies, the National People’s Congress, parks, tourist sites, educational institutes, hospitals, stores, various workplaces, and residential areas.

(photo: slogan on street near the Taiyuan City Council and city government buildings)

(to be cont’d…)

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Related:

- How Global CCP Resignation Statistics Are Calculated, August 2nd, 2006

Posted in Central China, China, City resident, Communist Party, News, Party withdrawal, People, Politics, Rural, Shanxi, Social, Speech, Taiyuan, all Hot Topic, travel | Comments Off

Troubled Youth: China’s Student Suicide Crisis(2)

Posted by chinaview on August 21, 2006

rfa.org, HONG KONG— (cont’d) The poll also showed more than 16 percent of university students reported having experienced anxiety or panic attacks, depression, and symptoms of paranoia.

And a recent study conducted by the provincial education department in the central province of Hubei showed that at least one student in every university in the province committed suicide in any given year, and that this figure appeared to be on the rise.

The study also showed that every completed suicide was linked to psychological problems.

A doctor surnamed Kang at the Taiyuan Psychiatric Hospital in the northern province of Shanxi said growing social pressures were certainly a major factor in the sharp increase in student suicides as China’s economy continues to grow at breakneck speed.

“Part of the reason is growing social pressure. That’s a major factor,” Kang told RFA’s Mandarin service. “Another aspect is the higher incidence of psychological problems in society as a whole. Some people seek help, but others suffer from these problems without ever getting professional help. Those are the two main reasons.” (to be cont’d…)

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Posted in Central China, China, Education, Health, Hubei, Law, People, Shanxi, Social, Student, Taiyuan | 1 Comment »