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China hints at possible Web clampdown

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China hints at possible Web clampdown

In a meeting with senior politicians, President Hu Jintao calls for 'a system of public opinion guidance on the Internet.' Analysts say the Mideast, Libya protests have shaken Beijing.


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China protest

A police officer films the crowd this weekend after an Internet call for protests in Beijing. President Hu Jintao hinted at tighter Internet controls in a speech Monday. (David Gray, Reuters / February 22, 2011)

By Barbara Demick, Los Angeles Times

February 22, 2011

Reporting from Beijing —

With a wary eye on popular uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa, Chinese leaders are calling for new ways to defuse social unrest in what appears to be an ominous harbinger of tighter controls on the Internet and elsewhere.

Splashed across the front page of Monday's People's Daily newspaper were highlights of a speech given by President Hu Jintao at a Saturday meeting that included all nine members of the Politburo's standing committee and senior cadres from around the country.

Hu, in the speech at the Central Party School in Beijing, called on the nation to "enhance and complete management of information on the Internet" and to "establish a system of public opinion guidance on the Internet," according to excerpts.

The speech also called for danwei, the work units to which Chinese traditionally belong, to enhance their roles in "social management"; for a database that would keep track of the movements of migrant populations; and to make clear the "social responsibilities" of private companies.

Zhou Yongkang, the country's top law enforcement official, also called for officials to "strive to defuse conflicts and disputes while they are still embryonic."

Some analysts considered Hu's speech a call to heighten social and media control.

"They are sending out strong signals that we need to be vigilant at this time. We need to tighten the ship," said David Bandurski, a Hong Kong-based China analyst who translated portions of the speech for the China Media Project.

The uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt, Bahrain and Libya have shaken some Communist Party leaders in showing how quickly autocrats can lose control in the face of overwhelming populist anger, analysts said.

"The party is very, very nervous, way beyond their normal level of anxiety," said Li Datong, a retired editor with the party-run China Youth Daily. "The propagandists always used to point to the Islamic countries to argue that the model of Western democracy doesn't work everywhere in the world, but now this has showed up their lies."

The Ministry of Public Security has reported that China experiences an estimated 90,000 "mass incidents" each year, often spontaneous protests against local officials over forced evictions, unpaid wages, factory closings, pollution or traffic accidents.

It was unclear when last weekend's meeting was organized or whether the agenda had been dictated by recent world events. Zhang Liangui, a senior faculty member at the Central Party School, said such meetings for senior cadres were annual occurrences, but foreign analysts called the two-day session with its high-powered list of attendees an extraordinary event.

"This is not the kind of meeting they hold if everything is going well," said Russell Leigh Moses, a Beijing-based expert in Chinese politics.

In a preemptive move against expressions of sympathy for the Middle East protesters, Chinese authorities have detained or placed under house arrest dozens of activists and restricted Internet searches. Over the weekend, an overwhelming security presence limited demonstrations in Beijing and other cities.

China politics: Mideast protests have Chinese leaders worried - latimes.com
 
China Official Eyes Nazi 'Database' Idea

Dharamshala: Zhou Yongkang, China's official in charge of the state security apparatus, spoke at a seminar at the weekend urging senior officials to improve 'social management' and to 'detect conflicts and problems early on', says state media outlet Xinhua.

In the hours leading up to Sunday's failed 'Jasmine Uprising', police in Shanghai detained several known activists and lawyers to rule out the possibility of them participating in the protest, which failed to draw large crowds due to government censorship of the internet and a large police presence in the streets.

Mr Zhou is one part of the nine-man politburo Standing Committee and is responsible for maintaining law and order in the country. He recently suggested that the government create a centralised data-base of Chinese citizens, and use it to collect and record information, an idea with which scary comparisons can be drawn to the citizen surveillance policies of Nazi Germany.

China's autocratic ruling party has been worried by recent protests in the Middle-East and North Africa, fearing a similar eruption could occur in China and threaten Communist rule if not supressed quickly and forcefully. The country's uneven economic development has been one of the factors contributing to discontent, with rising food prices and a 4.9% inflation rate coupled with stagnant wages and poverty among rural populations causing long-term problems.

According to the Chinese government there have been a staggering 90 000 'mass incidents' - of public unrest, in other words - every year since 2007. Official figures published last year show that the government has spent almost as much on maintaining internal order as on defence.

China Official Eyes Nazi 'Database' Idea
 
The great thing about China is we have 90000 protests a year, where people exercise their freedoms and call for more responsible government in all aspects of life. Due to both government and non-governmental organization action, most of these problems are being corrected, yet because our country is so large, it is inevitable that more protests spring up. But not to worry, they're freely exercising their rights under the Constitution of the PRC.
 
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