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  • Insecurity Checks II: Leave it Home or Lose it

    Jonathan Ansfield | May 9, 2008 11:25
    March 15 was the day many foreign media scrambled to try to reach Tibetan communities in Western China in the wake of Lhasa's ferment. It also happened to be the day that stricter no-liquids-allowed airport security checks came into force. The pileup... More
  • Everest Torch: The Price of the Peak

    Mary Hennock | May 8, 2008 10:49

    So they've done it. Chinese mountaineers finally raised the Olympic torch on top of Everest this morning. To get there they overcame difficulties that threatened to derail the ascent, or delay it beyond China's weather-related May 10 deadline. They sat out high winds and snowstorms that buried or destroyed their camps and rope-routes. Then they dug through fresh snow to repair equipment. This morning, they headed for the summit against a backdrop of steely clouds and blowing snow, though mercifully the wind had dropped.

    Once they reached the peak, they behaved like any other summit party, though perhaps a little more solemnly, as they slapped each other on the back, and passed the torch from hand to hand. Official congratulations on state television all emphasized how they'd conquered their difficulties.

    They deserve their success, but in one sense they were beaten before they started. Olympic organizers had visualized the Everest ascent as the high point of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Torch Relay. It was meant to provide the most dramatic images in a relay chock-full of superlatives--the longest, the highest, the largest number of countries, runners etc.

    This hasn't happened. The defining moments of the Beijing 2008 Torch Relay will forever be from London and Paris, where 'Free Tibet' protesters jostled torch bearers and police tackled demonstrators to the ground. Those pictures triggered an international online slanging match about China's place in the world. Angry young Chinese netizens bubbled with fury at what they saw as a deliberate slight to newly-confident China, while Western human rights activists jabbed away at China's short-comings.

    The sight of the torch on top of Everest cannot override these events.

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  • Insecurity Checks

    Jonathan Ansfield | May 7, 2008 03:28 PM
    China’s so tough on terrorism, we often question its claims thereof. Events earlier this week were symptomatic of the government's credibility gap on that score. On Monday, flames engulfed a public bus in Shanghai on Monday, killing three people and injuring... More
  • Why China-based Journalists Carry Diamox

    Melinda Liu | May 7, 2008 12:04
    Reading my colleague Mary's blog posting yesterday made me wonder: how many media assembled on Everest to cover the Olympic torch relay to the top are taking Diamox? On more than one occasion those little white pills have allowed me to hit the ground... More
  • Everest Torch: Battling against Peak of Embarrassment

    Mary Hennock | May 5, 2008 05:19 PM
    The Olympic flame returned to mainland China over the weekend amid the sort of carnival mood that Beijing has been longing for. Although the globe-trotting torch was borne aloft in the seaside resort of Sanya by athletes, celebrities, and the CEO of trendy... More
  • Chinese Youth Not all Strident

    Melinda Liu | Apr 30, 2008 06:44 PM
    In recent weeks, shrill voices of Chinese youth criticizing the West have dominated headlines. But more moderate, thoughtful young Chinese are beginning to speak up. Here are some insights into a number of quieter -- but arguably just as important --... More
  • Western Media Getting Death Threats

    Melinda Liu | Apr 30, 2008 12:25

    I just heard about another journalist colleague who received an anonymous warning online which threatened not just him but also his kids. Creepy.  With just 100 days to go before the 2008 Games, some Western journalists don't exactly feel welcome in the face of death threats, shrill and sometimes obscene name-calling, and criticisms of purported "bias" in Western media reporting of Tibet.

    The interesting thing is this: when I tell Chinese friends that foreign reporters are getting death threats, some don't believe it and others just shrug as if to say "what can anyone do?"  Even if I point out that issuing a death threat violates Chinese law, few seem to think this law needs to be enforced.

    Don't get me wrong: China remains a relatively safe country to work in as a foreign reporter. That's precisely what makes the present nastiness so noticeable.  

    he Foreign Correspondents Club of China -- of which I'm president --  released a statement about such concerns. Here's the text:

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  • Pilgrims Progress: Khotan's New Game

    Jonathan Ansfield | Apr 25, 2008 09:03

    Before tensions imploded in Tibetan areas, Chinese officials thought the chief domestic security threat to the 2008 Summer Games would come from Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang. Many officials still think that. My recent journey to one traditional redoubt of Uighur unrest revealed growing polarization of the religious and cultural landscape, as both the economy and Islam begin to flourish. Whether the situation might devolve into the extremism Beijing evokes is another question however. Herewith some field notes I made while reporting an earlier magazine piece:

    Sunday’s “big bazaar” day in Khotan, on China’s northwest frontier, where the big money’s tied up in Khotanese jade. Prices for pure nephrite from the local “White Jade River” have shot up ten-fold in just two to three years, helping this desert junction on the storied Silk Road – in the late 1990’s, a poor, dusty seedbed of violent outbursts by Muslim Uighur separatists – recoup some of its ancient luster as a nexus of trade. On a recent Sunday in April, along an arcade lined by dozens of jade shops and a vast mosque, Uighur men in skullcaps shuffled about in scrums, palms extended like beggars. They held pebbles with black beauty marks, sunbursts of orange, and creme de mint-colored ripples. The precious stones fetched offers in the hundreds of dollars from Han Chinese collectors from as far east as Suzhou.

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  • Hello, Dalai: Talking Again

    Melinda Liu | Apr 25, 2008 06:16

    Chinese authorities and representatives of the exiled Dalai Lama will meet in "coming days," says the state-run Xinhua News Agency. This is a potential breakthrough. Chinese officials blame the "splittist Dalai clique" for violent riots that erupted in Lhasa March 14, followed by brushfire protests in other Tibetan communities, and have demonized the Tibetan spiritual leader as a "jackal wrapped in monk's robes," as one put it.  

    But the Dalai Lama denied Beijing's accusations, and has kept the door open to high-level negotiations. Such contacts have taken place sporadically since 1980 -- I remember making my first trip to Lhasa, in July 1980, and being startled to see dozens of emotional Tibetans crying and prostrating on the ground in a courtyard beside the guesthouse where I was staying (as part of a government-organized media tour.)  Turns out an envoy of the Dalai Lama was staying in the next-door guesthouse. We foreign correspondents on that trip got our story simply by interviewing people across the courtyard wall.

    But institutionalized talks between the two sides broke down in 2006. When my colleague Sudip Mazumdar and I interviewed the Dalai Lama in Dharmsala on March 20, he said he'd received private messages of sympathy from ordinary citizens, and even some officials, in China. And he expressed his extreme willingness to talk with President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao, for whom he professed "great respect".

    Just before our interview, we glimpsed the Dalai Lama through a window saying farewell to a delegation of Buddhist believers of Asian descent.  One of his aides said that they were from mainland China, and that if their identities were made public they "could be executed" just for visiting Dharmsala. The Dalai Lama said "thousands" of ordinary Buddhist devotees from China had requested audiences with him over the years (he fled from Lhasa into exile in 1959, after an abortive Tibetan uprising) and that even some officials considered to be upright communist party loyalists had sent him private expressions of support.

    Xinhua quoted an anonymous Chinese official saying that authorities had taken into account "requests repeatedly made by the Dalai side for resuming talks",  and that "the relevant department of the central government will have contact and consultation with Dalai's private representative in the coming days."

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  • Beijing Rock Fest 'Harmonized'

    Jonathan Ansfield | Apr 22, 2008 05:16 PM


    Greg Baker / AP

    The Party's Over: Chinese music fans rocked out last year's Midi festival, but authorities have canceled the 2008 event

    To Chinese authorities, the prospect of a cheeky European rocker yelling "Free Tibet!" must be frightening enough right now  -- and that of thousands of Chinese rock kids reacting emotionally to it, scarier still. No shocker, then, that Beijing police are scuttling the May installment of the Midi Fest, China's only legitimate annual Rock festival, out of concerns over "security". Police won't provide it, and without them the show can't go on.

    Now nine years old, this year's Midi was supposed to be the biggest on record, comprising 100 local bands and 30 visiting acts. Just last week, all 30 got their performance permits from the local culture bureau. But on Tuesday, Midi came unraveled. Several of the headline acts from Europe, just having processed their visas, got word that the upcoming Midi is off for now, according to two Beijing-based promoters working with them.

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  • India passes the Olympic torch

    Newsweek | Apr 17, 2008 03:38 PM

    By Jeremy Kahn

    Demonstrators arrested
    Indian police were ready for protesters

    As the day drew near for the Olympic torch to be carried through the heart of India's capital, New Delhi, Indian government officials had grown apprehensive. India is home to the world’s largest number of Tibetan exiles, including Tibetan Buddhism’s most revered figure, the Dalai Lama, and it has also sought to avoid antagonizing its big neighbor to the north.  Indian officials feared the worst--including the prospect that Tibetan monks might immolate themselves in protest on the city’s streets. In the end, however, the torch relay here went off without disruption, thanks to the extraordinary security measures the Indian government laid on for the event.
    Officials left nothing to chance.
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  • Online Call to Boycott Carrefours

    Melinda Liu | Apr 14, 2008 09:07 PM
    It was probably just a matter of time before anti-Western protests materialized. Such is the intensity of Chinese resentment -- over perceived "bias" in Western media coverage of Tibet, over humiliating protest scenes during the Olympic torch relay in... More
  • Games and Leadership Politics

    Melinda Liu | Apr 11, 2008 12:21 PM
    As the title of the Olympic torch relay, “the Journey of Harmony” now somewhat ironically reminds us, one of China’s prime aims for the Olympic Games was to show the world an image of a modern, harmonious communist society.  President Hu Jintao has adopted as his mantra the development of a "harmonious society". And o ver the past few years, the authorities have put a new emphasis on social welfare, after years of breakneck growth left many struggling to keep up with an increasingly expensive society.   Perhaps the highest profile victim of this change of emphasis is Chen Liangyu, Shanghai’s former Communist Party boss, who, has just been sentenced to 18 years on corruption charges. Duncan Hewitt writes from Shanghai:
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  • New Terror Plot, Visa Clampdown

    Mary Hennock | Apr 10, 2008 07:29 PM

    Just after the discombobulated San Francisco torch relay concluded, a new threat hit the headlines: Beijing said it had thwarted a Muslim terror plot in which terrorists planned to kidnap Olympic athletes, foreign journalists and other visitors during the August Games. And China's attempts to police its borders are getting media attention too; the visa clampdown that we'd blogged and written about earlier is really beginning to bite.

    Today in a Beijing press conference Ministry of Public Security spokesman Wu Heping said 35 people had been arrested, and bomb-making materials discovered, between March 26 and April 6 in the far Western region of Xinjiang, home to some 8 million Uighur Muslims. Militant Uighurs have long been accused of "religious extremism, separatism and terrorism", by the government, though there's alot of disagreement over whether the intensity of the threat has been hyped.

    Xinjiang was home to a brief-lived East Turkestan Republic in the 1930's and 40's. Today's East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM) is recognized by both Beijing and Washington D.C. as a terrorist organization with links to Al Qaeda.  In an earlier plot revealed in March, Wu said, ETIM extremists had plotted to attack hotels, government offices and military targets in Shanghai, Beijing and other cities with poison, poison gas and remotely controlled bombs.

    So, about those border controls.
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  • Monks Protest Before Media, Again

    Jonathan Ansfield | Apr 9, 2008 05:47 PM
    Mark Ralston / AFP-Getty Images
    Protest scene: Labrang's historic monastery
     
     
    Here we go again.  More than a dozen monks staged an unexpected protest, interrupting a government-organized media tour to the famous Tibetan Buddhist Labrang monastery in Gansu province, a scene of unrest in March. "They said in Chinese, 'We want more freedom, more human rights, and we want to see the Dalai Lama,'" reported Caroline Puel of Le Point, who was invited on the trip. Their outburst lasted about 10 minutes, during which time government officials didn't try to silence them. Then the foreign media were urged to leave, and the unscripted moment was over.
     
    Later a senior monk told journalists the monks would not be punished but faced sanctions if authorities found that they had broken the law. A similar scene had taken place March 27, when monks in Jokhang temple disrupted an official briefing for more than two dozen international and domestic journalists invited by the government on a brief trip to Lhasa. In both cases, the fates of the monks remain unknown. (Foreign media are still barred from making independent reporting trips to Lhasa and many other Tibetan areas affected by violent protests; there have been two tightly managed press tours to such areas arranged by authorities since March 14.)
     
    There are many paradoxes at work here.  One of the most fundamental is this: Chinese constantly wonder why Tibetan monks, urban youth and town folks who in some cases have benefited so much from China's economic largesse are nonetheless so persistent about biting the hand that feeds them? The perception that Tibetans are perversely ungrateful is prevalent among Han Chinese. One bartender in Beijing, Xiao Wang, put it this way, "Without the People’s Republic they’d be primitives living under the feudal nobility of monks. What do they want?”
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