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China activists plan whistleblower site to spur reform

KALKI

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China activists plan whistleblower site to spur reform

A number of leading Chinese bloggers have voiced their concern about Government Leaks, saying it could expose whistleblowers to severe punishment.

HONG KONG: Chinese activists are planning to launch a whistle-blowing website modeled on WikiLeaks in a bid to expose state secrets and spur political reform, the South China Morning Post reported Friday.

The activists, who are using social networking sites like Twitter to mobilise and call on people to upload classified information to their database, said it plans to launch
“Government Leaks” on June 1 next year, the daily said.

The site’s founder – identified only as “Deep Throat” – said the website would go online just days ahead of the 22nd anniversary of the bloody June 4 crackdown on democracy protests in Beijing’s Tiananmen square.

“I think that by making government secrets open we can promote democracy in China,” he told the English-language daily.

“This is a fight against the dictatorship, and to return the right to information to the people. I believe it will advance China’s political reform.”

“Deep Throat” said that he had originally wanted to team up with WikiLeaks, but that emails sent to the website had bounced back undelivered.

“Government Leaks has no relation with WikiLeaks, but you can call us the copycat version of WikiLeaks in China,” he told the paper, adding that the site would continue to approach WikiLeaks for help.

A team of experts has been enlisted to run the China-based site, including journalists, editors, lawyers and hackers, who will safeguard against likely attempts by government censors to shut it down, the site’s founder said.

The website is expected to anger Beijing, which heavily monitors Internet traffic and restricts freedom of speech.

Beijing operates a vast system of web censorship, sometimes referred to as the “Great Firewall of China”. It blocks access to any content the government deems unacceptable, ranging from pornography to political dissent.

A number of leading Chinese bloggers have voiced their concern about Government Leaks, saying it could expose whistleblowers to severe punishment.

“In the worst case the informer could be prosecuted for illegally possessing state secrets,” the paper quoted blogger “Zola” as writing.

Alice Xin Liu, who writes for the Beijng-based blog Danwei, said the new website would likely fall flat.
“On a practical level I don’t see it working,” she told AFP.

“I don’t think every day people or those without the technological knowledge would be willing to put themselves on the line. The risks are simply too great.”

Government Leaks’ founder said his group would avoid using normal email channels to communicate with informers and was studying the use of high-security technologies to receive sensitive information.

“Deep Throat” said he was inspired by the US Watergate scandal of the 1970s, which eventually led to the resignation of then president Richard Nixon, as well as the recent success of WikiLeaks.

“Deep Throat” was the pseudonym of an informant – identified three decades later as a senior FBI official – who leaked sensitive information about the Nixon administration’s involvement in the scandal.

WikiLeaks gained widespread notoriety in July when it published nearly 77,000 classified US military documents on the war in Afghanistan, provoking the wrath of the Pentagon.

The site is expected soon to release some 400,000 secret military reports on the US-led Iraq war.

Founded in 2006 by Australian Julian Assange, WikiLeaks first grabbed headlines when it released a graphic video of a US military Apache helicopter strike in Baghdad in 2007 that killed two journalists and a dozen civilians.

In September, Assange, 39, was accused of **** in Sweden. He dismissed the allegations as part of a “smear campaign” aimed at discrediting WikiLeaks. — AFP

China activists plan whistleblower site to spur reform | DAWN.COM
 
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Meanwhile, here are the facts:

Chinese satisfied with government - Washington Times

China has the highest percentage of people in the world who support their government, and the national direction. No one else comes close.

Economic development is the number one priority right now. Political reform will come later.

In general, money and a good life makes people less bigoted, less prone to violence and more don't-carish. I guess thats what's happening in China these days.
 
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Looks like another western article ..why is it published in DAWN..?
 
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The best place for government leaks:

people.com.cn

read what's actually on it, not what the west tells you is on it. there's articles on corruption, slavery, inflation, crime, injustice, etc. almost every article in the West that has a specific charge against China is actually sourced from state media. Ones like this without a specific charge, are sourced from other westerners.

The problem is our stupid local government is corrupt to the core. The national one is doing great, that's why Hu Jintao has a high approval rate, but if asked to rate everyone's province or city government they'll be close to 0.
 
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Meanwhile, here are the facts:

Chinese satisfied with government - Washington Times

China has the highest percentage of people in the world who support their government, and the national direction. No one else comes close.

Economic development is the number one priority right now. Political reform will come later.

people make a opinion when they came to a thing...

do people of china has the freedom of ask question to their govt..
 
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do people of china has the freedom of ask question to their govt..

Sure, why not. :tup:

There are plenty of specific issues in which I disagree with the CCP, territorial disputes for instance. I do agree with the overall direction of the CCP. In terms of the most important issues (i.e. food/water/economy) they are doing very well.

I wouldn't mind some political reform at all, but economic development always comes first.
 
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Sure, why not. :tup:

There are plenty of specific issues in which I disagree with the CCP, territorial disputes for instance. I do agree with the overall direction of the CCP. In terms of the most important issues (i.e. food/water/economy) they are doing very well.

I wouldn't mind some political reform at all, but economic development always comes first.

don't you agree that their is a dictatership in china and people in large just have to follow what ever told to them ?

do you think that press and media in china has free hand to critizise their govt on a wrong doing..?

why then the resent noble price winner is in jail ..?
 
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don't you agree that their is a dictatership in china and people in large just have to follow what ever told to them ?

do you think that press and media in china has free hand to critizise their govt on a wrong doing..?

why then the resent noble price winner is in jail ..?

yes, press and media in china has free hand to criticize the government.

People's Daily does it every single day. there is not 1 day without news of corruption, bribe taking, land stolen without compensation, influential officials buying their way out of crime, workers who lost their wages when their company boss disappeared with their money, etc.

again: people.com.cn if you have the courage to face your lies.

what is funny is - western news cite articles from PEOPLE'S DAILY and XINHUA as evidence that China has alot of problems, and then claim that we are not reporting on our problems!!!

:rofl:

not falling for your troll, we all know which country more resembles an african dictatorship.
 
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asking about jailing of Liu Xiaobo is a troll..?

so , lets see why he was jailed and sentenced to eleven years' imprisonment and two years' deprivation of political rights ...

this man , Liu Xiaobo , was arrested due to his participation with Charter 08.

what is Charter 08 , it's a manifesto calling for freedom of expression, human rights, and for free elections..

Another scholar and Charter 08 signatory, Zhang Zuhua, was also taken away by police on suspicion of gathering signatures to the Charter.

people in china has been arrested/jailed for just signing a manifesto calling for freedom of expression, human rights, and for free elections..

is it a troll ?

and whould be more surprissing ,

Liu Xiaobo name is censored by Communist Party of China because they consider his writing a subversive as He has called for democratic elections, advocated values of freedom, supported separation of powers and urged the governments to be accountable for its wrongdoings.

what more ,

he was never allowed to meet with his lawyer ...
 
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if i prove that Liu's name was not censored (and that your statement that it was is inaccurate) will you eat cow s*?

also, Liu is not a whistleblower. the definition of a whistleblower is someone who reveals a specific problem in an organization. Liu did not do so. Therefore he is not a whistleblower. Instead, he has called for "Colonization of China for 300 Years" by britain. Indeed, we could see many parallels between his model of colonization of China, and what India went through. I can go on about his thoughts if you want, but I don't think you'd want that.
 
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don't you agree that their is a dictatership in china and people in large just have to follow what ever told to them ?

No, I have never felt that way at all.

The government doesn't tell me how to live my life.

Just curious, have you ever lived in China?
 
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how much freedom do indians in india have?

i will leave it as an open question for the trolls.

hopefully, indians in india can answer it.
 
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if i prove that Liu's name was not censored

"Thanks to his Nobel, Liu Xiaobo now joins Tiananmen, Tibet, Taiwan independence as censored words on China´s Internet."
American Chronicle | Highest Honor for Liu Xiaobo, Deepest Disappointment with China

"Soon after the Nobel announcement, major Chinese Web portals like Sina, Netease and Sohu all redirected their previous special reports on this week’s Nobel prizes to their homepages or simply displayed a message saying “deleted.” And reports on the Peruvian writer Vargas Llosa winning the Nobel Literature Prize were demoted on web site homepages and buried among hundreds of other headlines. China Mobile users also found it impossible to send out any text messages mentioning “Liu Xiaobo." "
World Blog - In China, citizens find ways to learn of Nobel prize
 
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Man, I really admire Indians got the nerve to question Chinese regarding "Freedom" while Indians still practicing the most oppressed, discriminated and evil system on the planet="Caste=system" where are the "freedom for the dalits"?:hang2:

May be the difference will be Chinese may have limited freedom but still enjoying a normal human life like having the basis human right such as a full stomach, sanitation facilities according to western standard, but those low caste Indians were born to have a miserable life, being treated worst than animals.(abuses, beating, raping, killing) were typical mistreatments, so much for the so-called "High moral ground" ehh :whistle:
 
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