Asia

Cold City

Last weekend in the northeastern Chinese city of Harbin police beat to death a recent college graduate. The fight between six officers and 22-year-old victim Lin Songling and three of his friends apparently started over an argument about a parking space. The news has prompted outrage both in Harbin and on the Internet (there are …

China Says a Little Melamine is OK

From Jessie Jiang, a look at China’s new standards for melamine in milk:

Since the Chinese government announced its limits on dairy melamine Wednesday, it’s been gaining little but more embarrassment on the PR front.

At a press conference aimed at appeasing public anxiety, Health Ministry official Wang Xuening announced the levels of

Protest and Politics in Chinese Soccer

From my colleague Jessie Jiang:

Like the long-suffering supporters of the Chicago Cubs, China’s soccer fans know all about disappointment. But their steadfastness is being put to yet a new test, this time involving a fading star and the withdrawal of a top-tier domestic league club.

After a scuffle between two players in a Sept. 28

The Long, Sad Saga of the Guantanamo Uighurs

On Tuesday a U.S. federal judge ordered the release of a group of Uighurs who have been held in Guantanamo since 2001. The 17 Chinese citizens were picked up in the months following the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan. Three years ago the government determined that most of them were no longer enemy combatants, but has refused to …

More on Rural Reform and the Third Plenum

Here are further indicatons of what might happen at the upcoming Third Communist Party Plenum regarding rural reform. Interesting that “radical reform” is now being presaged even though real radical reform would mean granting peasants full rights to buy and sell land, something that for reasons discussed below is highly unlikley. The …

A Policeman Hero for China’s Netizens

In the “something you don’t see everyday in China” category, a new (to me at least) site called chinasmack (www.chinasmack.com) features pictures of a Nanjing traffic policeman stopping (gasp!) a car with military plates for running a red light (you can actually see the light is green in the other direction in the photos). The occupants …

Pollution Deaths: The Numbers

Posting this recent study in relation to the air pollution posts below and the premature deaths figure I was a bit lazy about (“hundreds of thousands”). This is chillingly precise about the number:

Smoking, coal set to claim tens of millions of lives in China

PARIS (AFP) — Tobacco use and smoke from coal and wood are likely to

Rural Reform in China: Walking on Eggshells

The Communist Party’s big meeting (Third Plenum) for the year takes place in Beijing over the coming weekend. There have been strong hints that something will be done about land reform, a very hot issue for China’s 700 million peasants who have no right to sell their land and must depend on 30 year leases issued by the state. As we have

Cleaning Up China’s Air: Easier Than You Think

A very interesting –and more to the point surprising– report by three professors at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who have devoted a great deal of time and energy to studying air pollution in China.
(Download the pfd file of the report here)

Money graf (I know I keep using this. It’s a habit I picked up from my former …

Hu Jia: Six Months and Counting

It is exactly six months ago today that dissident Hu Jia was sentenced to three years in jail. His case has received much internaional attention and there is even speculation that he could be in line to get a Nobel Peace Prize, as Austin wrote earlier here.

Sadly the reality is that even if he gets the prize, which will be announced in …

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