Why a nervous China aims to shield citizens from Egypt news

BlackWolf

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
By Peter Ford Peter Ford – Tue Feb 1, 6:25 am ET
Beijing – Like governments around the world, China’s rulers are watching the unrest in Egypt with bated breath – nervous about the outcome, but powerless to affect it.

“China is worried about chaos, because that is bad for Egypt and for other countries,” says Yin Gang, a Middle East expert at the China Academy of Social Sciences. “China’s concern is the same as America’s … but China has very little influence in the Middle East.”

Beijing has been studiously neutral in the face of mass demonstrations in Cairo and other Egyptian cities calling for President Hosni Mubarak’s resignation.


Asked on Tuesday for China’s views on the new Egyptian government that has promised economic and political reforms, Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei would say only that “we hope that Egypt will return to stability and normal order as soon as possible.”

The Chinese authorities are even more concerned about preserving stability and normal order at home. Apparently fearing that Chinese citizens be inspired by Egyptian protesters, the government has issued strict orders limiting press coverage of the unrest.

“All media nationwide must use Xinhua’s reporting on the Egyptian riots,” read a directive issued last Friday, referring to the state run Xinhua news agency. “It is strictly forbidden to translate foreign media coverage,” the order said, warning that websites that did not censor comments about Egypt would be “shut down by force.”

Think you know the Middle East? Take our geography quiz.

“One major reason for the censorship is that Chinese officials do not know the direction of the protests,” says Russell Leigh Moses, a political analyst in Beijing. “Reporting depends almost entirely on direction from the leadership and uncertainty never produces consensus in Beijing.”

“You can see from the media that China is keeping a very low-key tone on this issue, and not giving it a lot of coverage,” says Prof. Yin. “That shows the government’s intentions.”

“They are nervous,” says Xiao Qiang, who monitors the Chinese Internet at the University of California at Berkeley. “They are more than usually tight, to ensure that only the Xinhua version is there.”

One Twitter-like microblog site did not return results for a search of “Egypt” on Tuesday, but otherwise the government order appeared to be only erratically imposed. The Hong Kong based Phoenix TV network, for example, which can be seen on the mainland but which is not subject to Beijing’s censorship, has been broadcasting live from Cairo without interference.

Almost all of the news reports on Internet news portals is coming from Xinhua, which provides straightforward and neutral news stories, often focusing on the plight of hundreds of Chinese citizens trapped at Cairo airport. But reader comments on those stories were not being deleted.


Many of those comments seemed directed as much at the political situation in China as at events in Egypt. “Don’t look down at ordinary people: history is written by them,” read one comment on the popular Netease portal. “Even though a struggle does some damage for a while, it can make the government cleaner and more transparent in the long run and push democratization,” suggested another.

Though China does not consider that it has any strategic interests in the Middle East to match US concerns, it does depend on the region for nearly half of its imported oil and is thus anxious that the political upheaval in Tunisia and Egypt should not spread to oil producing nations.

At the same time, China’s trade with Egypt has increased threefold over the past five years to reach $6.96 billion in 2010, making Egypt China’s second-largest trading partner in Africa and the Middle East, excluding its oil suppliers.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/csm/360243;...Ec2VjA3luX3RvcF9zdG9yeQRzbGsDd2h5YW5lcnZvdXNj
 
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I find it interesting they keep implying Egypt is in the Middle East...

not in Africa.

They would not say Saudi Arabia is in Africa but call Egypt a part of the Middle East.
 
I find it interesting they keep implying Egypt is in the Middle East...

not in Africa.

They would not say Saudi Arabia is in Africa but call Egypt a part of the Middle East.


Agreed! They don't speak Arabic and "Middle East" is a European description.
 
China will cut the internet, block all outside news coverage and dont giv ea fuck because we will still buy their goods
 
By Peter Ford Peter Ford


<font size="3">“China is worried about chaos, because that is bad for Egypt and for other countries,”

Beijing has been studiously neutral in the face of mass demonstrations in Cairo and other Egyptian cities . . .

[because]

The Chinese authorities are even more concerned about preserving stability and normal order at home. Apparently fearing that Chinese citizens be inspired by Egyptian protesters, the government has issued strict orders limiting press coverage of the unrest.

Why does it appear that posters are reluctant to comment on these repressive bastards :confused:

QueEx
 
China moves to squelch dissent; requesting patience

<font size="5"><center>
China moves to squelch dissent
while requesting patience</font size></center>




APTOPIX_China_Jasmine_Nost.wide_photo.prod_affiliate.91.jpg

A police officer, right, urges people to leave Sunday as they gather in front
of a cinema that was a planned protest site in Shanghai, China. | AP Photo/
Eugene Hoshiko



McClatchy Newspapers
By Tom Lasseter
Monday, February 21, 2011


BEIJING — China's authoritarian government pushed back Monday against the specter of political dissent, warning citizens that any transition to a modern democratic system is still decades away.

The pronouncement came on the heels of activist gatherings Sunday inspired by the "Jasmine Revolution" in Tunisia — public meetings in Beijing and Shanghai that were very small and very quickly disbanded by police.

Although it isn't possible to know exactly what's happening in the corridors of power of the notoriously opaque Chinese Communist Party, there have been several indications that China's leadership is trying to manage lingering domestic social problems while avoiding the sort of turmoil that's plagued hard-line Arab governments.

Comments by senior Chinese leadership that were made public, combined with opinions aired Monday in state media, seemed to reflect a two-pronged approach of seeking to get a handle on hot-button issues such as corruption and income inequality while dealing harshly with any emerging challenges to the Communist Party.

An editorial in Monday's state Global Times newspaper urged Chinese intellectuals in particular to be more patient with the government’s goal of becoming "a modern country governed by political democracy. It just needs several more decades to realize this ambition."

For now, the essay said, everyone should toe the official line because "in theory, it is not totally unfeasible that the nation could fall into social turmoil should its public governance fail."

There was little doubt left about how the government views those who don't comply.

A second piece, carried only in the English-language edition of the Global Times, compared participants in Sunday’s lapsed protests to "beggars in the streets." The fact that the incidents happened in the first place was censored from Chinese-language publications and the Internet.

Prominent Beijing human rights lawyer Mo Shaoping said state security officers had come to his home Sunday and asked him about his "opinions on Egypt and Tunisia," two nations in which large protests have deposed leaders recently.

"I said if we don’t speed up political reform, it'll be very dangerous," said Mo, whose law firm represented Liu Xiaobo, the dissident writer and Nobel Peace Prize laureate who's serving an 11-year prison sentence on charges of trying to subvert state power.

Several lawyers and activists reportedly have been detained in the past week.

President Hu Jintao and a top Communist Party official, Zhou Yongkang, spoke to senior leadership at a "seminar" over the weekend, telling the audience to pay attention to public concerns and make certain that they don't get out of hand.

The Xinhua state news wire paraphrased Zhou, who oversees legal issues, as emphasizing the need to "safeguard people's fundamental interests" and at the same time "consolidate the ruling status of the Communist Party of China."

There've been recent reports that several members of China's ruling politburo held a meeting Feb. 12, a day after Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak resigned, to discuss what was happening in the Middle East and how to strengthen Chinese propaganda efforts. Among the measures reportedly on the table were stopping independent commentary from spreading, overseeing Websites more closely and preparing for "the possibility that part of the Internet will be shut down."

A summary of the reported gathering was posted on Boxun, a Chinese-language Website based in the United States, and written about on The New York Review of Books website by Perry Link, a professor at the University of California-Riverside and noted China analyst.

Link, who previously edited a set of Chinese government documents on the 1989 crackdown at Tiananmen Square, wrote that the summary was obtained by a democracy activist in Beijing who is "well positioned to judge" its authenticity.

It wasn't possible to verify the document's veracity independently.

Some China observers cautioned against viewing recent news items as a sign of deep concern in Chinese ruling circles about what's happened in places such as Cairo.

"The government here has been fairly consistent. … They tighten when they believe that public opinion has to be guided," said Russell Leigh Moses, a Beijing-based analyst who closely tracks official publications and reports. "The tightening is a reminder that they are in charge; it's not a product of anxiety on their part."

Bo Zhiyue, an expert on Chinese leadership, agreed.

"If you read (Hu's) speech, he recognizes that China really is faced with a lot of social issues and you have to deal with them," said Bo, a senior research fellow at the National University of Singapore. "“But he's not an alarmist. He's not saying, 'If we don’t do something the whole thing might collapse.' "



http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/02/21/109098/china-moves-quickly-to-squelch.html
 
Re: China moves to squelch dissent; requesting patience

I think some of these protest are fake, if I dont see a lot of youth, I think its manipulated by the west.
 
Re: China moves to squelch dissent; requesting patience

<font size="5"><center>
China again cracks down on
planned protests across country</font size></center>




McClatchy Newspapers
By Tom Lasseter
February 27, 2011


BEIJING — Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on Sunday held an online forum in which he promised to focus on making the lives of ordinary people in China more comfortable and secure.

Just a few hours later, Chinese police unleashed a show of force in Beijing, Shanghai and other cities to clamp down on public gatherings after a second week of overseas Internet-based calls for protests across the country.

The combination of Wen's comments about government efforts to raise living standards, accompanied by a display of China's police state tactics aimed at squelching dissent, neatly laid out in one day's time the Chinese Communist Party's approach to avoiding the kind of unrest seen across the Arab world.

In the morning, Wen pushed the official position of more stability and prosperity through one party rule. And in the afternoon, security personnel swarmed public spaces to be sure nobody suggested otherwise.

While a small band of protestors came together in Shanghai on Sunday, they were quickly dispersed by police. Authorities in Beijing went to extraordinary lengths to make sure that not only did no crowds form, but that journalists stayed away from the non-event.



There were more police present in uniform and undercover, some with canine units, than are called to handle bomb scares in many countries. Foreigners at the Wangfujing Street shopping area in central Beijing, the announced meeting site, were stopped at every turn and asked for their passports. Police or their surrogates took several Western journalists away for questioning, turned back TV camera crews and reportedly shoved or assaulted at least three photographers.

In addition, water trucks rode up and down Wangfujing, spraying the road and sidewalk to keep people moving. Even street sweepers had evidently been told to discourage groups from forming; they hit bystanders' feet with brooms and said "move" repeatedly.

During the week or so after postings began to appear on a U.S.-based Chinese language website, boxun.com, urging protests inspired by the "Jasmine Revolution" that unseated Tunisia's president, Chinese security bureaus rounded up more than 100 activists.

The Hong Kong-based Chinese Human Rights Defenders, which documents such cases, released a statement Friday saying that "signs are emerging to indicate that the current crackdown may be one of the most severe actions taken by the government against Chinese activists in recent years."


Wen, the premier, did not mention those events during his two-hour session of responding to carefully screened questions from the Chinese public on Sunday morning.

But he did make a series of remarks that seemed designed to address growing frustration among many in China about the gap between the nation's haves and have-nots — a distinction often determined by relationships with those in power.

He announced that the government is lowering its economic growth goals slightly during the next five years as part of a shift to better focus on helping citizens.

Wen also pledged to fight against inflation, real estate speculation and corruption, all points of contention for everyday Chinese.

It wasn't clear, however, how aggressive the government intends to be in addressing those issues. For instance, Wen said that China would aim for 7 percent economic growth in its next five-year plan instead of the previous 7.5 percent — but that prior figure was itself all but disregarded during a period of relentless infrastructure construction across the nation.

"We should change the criteria for evaluating officials' work," Wen said. "The supreme criterion for assessing their performance is whether the people feel happy and satisfied, rather than skyscrapers."

State media noted that Wen emphasized "to enhance the people's living standards is 'our work's starting point as well as the final aim.'"


http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/02/27/109494/china-again-cracks-down-on-planned.html
 
Re: China moves to squelch dissent; requesting patience


Google: China hacked Gmail


Once again, Google says China has tampered with Gmail
in an attempt to squash Chinese political dissidents

google-china-logo-gmail-300x200.jpg



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