China news tagged with: slideshow (69)
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Slideshow: National Military Parade Preparations in Beijing
Scenes of the preparations for the military parade on the 60th anniversary of the PRC on October 1, via paowang.
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Slideshow: Historical Photos of Sun Yat-sen’s Burial Procession
According to Wikipedia: “Sun Yat-sen (pinyin Sūn Yì Xiān) (12 November 1866 – 12 March 1925) was a Chinese revolutionary and political leader. As the foremost pioneer of Republican China, Sun is frequently referred to as the Father of the Nation. Sun played an instrumental role in overthrowing the Qing Dynasty in October 1911, the last imperial dynasty of China. He was the first provisional president when the Republic of China (ROC) was founded in 1912 and later co-founded the Kuomintang (KMT) where he served as its first leader. Sun was a uniting figure in post-Imperial China, and remains unique among 20th-century Chinese politicians for being widely revered in both mainland China and Taiwan.”
Here are some historical photos of Sun Yat-sen’s burial procession posted on iLishi (Love History) blog.
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Slideshow: Photos of local government office buildings posted by Chinese bloggers
Photos of local government office buildings posted by Chinese bloggers
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Timeline, Slideshow and Video: China’s 1989 Student Democracy Movement
Major news outlets are marking the twentieth anniversary of China’s 1989 pro-democracy movement which culminated in the military crackdown on students in Tiananmen Square. CNN has a timeline which chronicles the movement starting from 1987:
1987
Jan. 1. More than 2000 students in Beijing stage a rally in defiance of new regulations limiting demonstrations.
Jan. 6-9. The official People’s Daily and other state-run newspapers carry front-page condemnations of student demonstrations as harmful to the country and warn against “bourgeois liberalization.” A 1984 speech by Deng Xiaoping attacking those who advocate “bourgeois liberalization” is published by the People’s Daily at the same time.
Jan. 29. Premier Zhao Ziyang says the campaign against “bourgeois liberalization” will be limited and will not interfere with ongoing economic reforms and the opening of China to foreign investments.
See also the Guardian for a slideshow which captures the events of Tiananmen Square from the beginning of student protests to their suppression by the People’s Liberation Army.
Also from Al Jazeera :
» Read moreTwenty years have passed since hundreds of thousands of people flooded onto the streets of Beijing and into Tiananmen Square demanding democracy, freedom of speech and an end to corruption. After a seven week standoff, the Communist government called in the troops and a bloody battle pursued. Twenty years on, Al Jazeera speaks to some of those who took part in the world’s largest and most influential pro-democracy movement.
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Photo Series: Memories of 2008 in Shanxi
These photos are from “Shanxi Evening,” a local newspaper in Datong, carried by News.QQ.com:
- See also Photo Series: Memories of 2008 in Hubei by CDT
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Photo Series: A Collection of Photo Stories(2)
These photos are from fengniao.com and QQ.com and they reflect the grassroots’ recent life in China.
Photo source: fengniao.com, CCN, QQ.com
- See also Photo Series: A Collection of Photo Stories(1)
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Photo Series: Memories of 2008 in Hubei
This slideshow is a collection of photos, most of which were taken in Hubei in 2008. It reflects daily life and also the impact of the Olympic Games on the common people. It also documents some scenes of the Sichuan Earthquake, via QQ.com:
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Slideshow: Anti-Terrorism Exercises in China
Earlier in June, China launched a week-long series of anti-terrorist drills called “Great Wall 5″, in preparation for the upcoming 2008 Olympic Games. The drills involved emergency responders, “police forces, the People’s Armed Police, the People’s Liberation Army and the health, environmental protection, meteorology and transportation departments.” according to China’s Xinhua News Agency. (14 photos total)
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Sichuan Earthquake Aftermath: Slideshow
A quake volunteer on the Tianya BBS posted striking photographs of the Sichuan earthquake aftermath.
The following slideshow presents selected photos from the set. Scroll over “Notes” in the slideshow’s bottom right-hand corner for more information on the pictures and for some CDT translated captions.
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Slideshow: Anti-France Protests in Hefei
From the EastSouthWestNorth blog: The following is a photo play of the events that took place outside the Carrefour store in Hefei city (Anhui province) on April 19, 2008.
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Netizens Find Space to Comment on Lhasa Riots
Tibetan unrest has prompted the Chinese government to undertake its most comprehensive Internet censorship campaign in recent memory. YouTube has been blocked inside China, presumably to stop the spread of videos of the chaos in Tibet, and one of CDT’s Beijing-based contributors reports his MyYahoo! page has been inaccessible ever since Tibet-related headlines started showing up in wire service RSS feeds. Only Xinhua versions of the news are available on mainstream news portals like Sina, Sohu and Netease, and comment functions under those articlesare now locked.
But as the Hainan-based Tianya online community demonstrates, Chinese netizens have ways of working around even the most stringent of online controls.
The Tianya Forum records roughly 200,000 online users, hundreds of thousands of new posts, and millions of comments per day. The entire Tianya community boasts more than six million registered members. In other words, anything posted to the site will be viewed extensively. Sure enough, most of the Lhasa riots-related posts are being deleted by Tianya moderators right away. Community members have nevertheless been able to comment on the riots thanks to a post called “Walk into Lhasa.” The content of the post consists entirely of touristic impressions of the Tibetan capital: blue skies, the sound of trumpets, old wrinkled men in the streets. As a result, the innocuous post–and it’s less than innocuous comment section–have so far survived the censors. Some selected comments, translated by CDT:
* We are all living in a helpless situation…… They won’t let us to care about this so what can we do!?
* Hehe, all gone.
* Lu Xun said there are only two kinds of people in China: those who are happy to be slaves, and those who want to be slaves but can’t.
* Let’s have a grand migration: Everyone in Xinjiang move to Tibet, everyone in Tibet move to Xinjiang. Then name another “Dalai.” I think representative Mao Xinyu is well suited for the job.
* Learn the wisdom of posting from this author.
* Even three Japanese were rescued? F…K, don’t they strongly support (Tibet independence)?
* This is hopeless. I published a post supporting the unity of the country, but it was deleted anyway.
* “Your post … is being moved to the “underground square.” If you have questions, please contact the editor of this forum.” What does “underground square” mean? Hell?
* I don’t know. Any posts that have “sensitive words” are deleted. Except for posts containing “beautiful scenery,” nothing else can be published, or is deleted as soon as it published.
* F…K. All deleted.
* Such big news. Why is the discussion inside of China completely banned? All real Chinese people should care about this.
* Good job, moderator. You are really efficient.
* The government wants to handle this with a low profile. Please understand this. After all, this is quite tense timing. We should not give others any ammunition to use against us.
* What’s to discuss? Separatist trash should be all killed. It’s not a good idea to just talk about it. Even if there is democracy some day, I will support a nationalist party coming to power.
* But even then it is wrong to ban the subject. People in China have the right to know. Such a big website like Tianya has no news focus on this, no discussion pages on this. Plus, most Chinese people will defend unity.
* Yep, that’s why CCTV broadcast it. They [the government] must be afraid of more radical points surfacing in the debate.
* Not sure if people inside China can watch YOUTUBE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x9QNKB34cJo&&
Many comments from Chinese students abroad were deleted by YouTube. Just now I saw a bunch of comments, but they disappeared after reloading.* What if someone is about to travel to Tibet but isn’t aware of the situation?
* YouTube is already blocked inside China.
* At this moment Chinese should be in solidarity. Don’t give those who want to disrupt the Olympics a chance.
* We do not have to love the government or the party, but we must love China.
* It’s already on CCTV. Why can’t Tianya not publicize it? Pretending to be a virgin? F…K!
* Strange, such a big thing but there’s nothing on Tianya.
* I published many posts, none of them survived. All deleted. F…K!
*There is a difference between statement and discussion.
* I say let have the government send in a few thousand chengguan (城管,”Urban Management Forces”). Problem solved.
* The most handsome photo of Brother Tao [Hu Jintao] is the where he’s wearing a helmet, standing on the streets of Lhasa in 1989.
* Sh…t. These days every word is sensitive and can’t be published online. The propaganda department is really insecure.
* Ganzi county in Sichuan has also started up (demonstrations)
* So sensitive. The whole world is watching Beijing now.
Rebecca MacKinnon has posted some interesting observations on the online response to the riots, with several links to other translations:
For those living in the West who didn’t realize that there’s little sympathy for Tibet independence among ethnic Chinese in the PRC, this blog post on Global Voices will be a shocker. John Kennedy has translated chatter from Chinese blogs and chatrooms that generally runs along the lines of: those ungrateful minorities, we give them modern conveniences and look how they thank us… where have we heard this before? Reuters has a roundup on the Washington Post that begins: “a look at Chinese blogs reveals a vitriolic outpouring of anger and nationalism directed against Tibetans and the West.”
Finally, some photo taken on March 16, around 2 pm, by a Lhasa-based blogger.
Also from the blogger in the same post: “I saw two military trucks carrying about 20 to 30 rioters, their heads were pushed down by PLA soldiers, on the Second Ring Road to the suburbs of Lhasa. I could not get the picture because the trucks were driving too fast.”
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Who Is That “Small Minority of People” Who Are Attacking and Burning Lhasa?
Here are some relevant information about the Tibet protests. First, Xinhua’s account of the events in Lhasa:
Xinhua, in Chinese, Saturday Morning 1:30 AM
Responsible Person in TAR Says that A Very Small Minority of People are Attacking, Smashing, Shooting and Burning, answering queries from a Xinhua Journalist
Xinhua March 14 Lhasa. In recent days, a very small minority of people have been attacking, smashing, shooting and burning, disturbing public order and harming the safety of the lives and property of the masses. These is sufficient evidence to say that this been plotted, organized and painstakingly planned by the Dalai clique. This has already aroused great anger and strong condemnation among all the nationalities of the TAR. The relevant departments in Tibet are according to law taking appropriate measures. We are entirely capable of preserving Tibet’s social stability and protecting the lives and property of all the nationalities of Tibet. The plots of a small minority is scheming to destroy the stability and harmony of Tibet is not winning the hearts of the people and so is doomed to failure.
The following commentary about the demographics behind the Tibet protests is translated from a Chinese text:
While Tibetans have very serious grievances including racism and broad spectrum oppression, there are also other factors including demography and employment.
Tibet’s population is very young. The median age in a population is according to some scholars linked to phenomena such as violent crime which is committed disproportionately by people in their 20s. Now the median age in the U.S. is 36 years up from about 27 years in 1968. The U.S. 60’s youth culture culminated that year — which also the year the U.S. had the lowest median age over the past 70 years. See here.
Tibet has a developing country population structure (might demographics be a factor in turbulent politics?) while China is reaching a “developed country” population structure.
I did a little looking around and found data on Tibet’s (Tibetan Autonomous Region) median age and China’s median age in 2000. Tibet: 21 years (half the population was under 21 in 2000), China: 28.95 years. China’s population had a median age of 21 back in 1978, just five or so years after China’s birth rate started its sharp decline. Family planning rules are not applied to the TAR countryside, but do apply in cities, particularly for government workers and party members. Thus Tibet has a very different demographic profile than the rest of the PRC. Probably true of Xinjiang as well, where relaxed family planning rules apply in the countryside. China’s median population is projected to increase to 33.21 years in 2010, 35.44 years in 2020, 38.51 years in 2030, and 40.58 years in 2040. So the demographic contrast between the TAR and the PRC will continue to widen for many years to come.
Think about unemployment. Many Chinese provinces let off some pressure by the large numbers of people who go off to other provinces to seek work. This is much harder for Tibetans, (and similarly for Uighurs, I think) because of the big language barrier they face in a Chinese speaking world and the alienness of Han culture to them. So rural unemployment in Tibet is a bigger problem (even allowing for serious poverty and lack of development) since the safety valve can’t work as well as it does in the provinces of the interior. Now discrimination in employment that Tibetans feel is sometimes due to ethnic Han racism against them, but probably is often because many Tibetans can’t speak Chinese as well as migrant competitors from the interior. (I saw the same problem in Xinjiang ten years ago), even so, it is felt as discrimination against them as Tibetans. Then there is discrimination for political reasons, with tour guides being the most famous example, since Tibetan tour guides might say politically incorrect things. Not to mention the herders who are settled in cities with nothing to do.
More about Tibet’s developing country population structure is here (in Chinese).
Here is a video clips from RussiaToday:
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Slideshow: A Flipbook on China
View the last 60 years of Chinese history through the Magnum lens. According to Slate, the photo agency’s China archive can be now be seen in motion:
The series’ release coincides with FotoFest 2008: The Twelfth International Biennial of Photography and Photo-Related Art, which opened in Houston March 7 and continues through March 20. This year, its dual themes are “China” and “Transformations.” Details from FotoFest:
» Read morePolitically and culturally, photography has been a key element in creating the public face of China since the late 19th century. From 1870 to 1920, photography helped explain and justify European economic exploitation and occupation of China. From 1938 – 1980, photography became a major tool in Communist Party campaigns to win internal public support for its philosophy and programs – and the message it wanted to send to the outside world. From 1980 – 2008, photography has become one of the major mediums of communication, public and private, about contemporary Chinese society.
Departing from most contemporary art programs on China, the FOTOFEST2008 exhibitions and programs will present both historical and contemporary work. The historical component features three exhibitions showing works from 1934 – 1975 that have never been shown outside of China before. Seven contemporary programs and exhibitions present work from the late 1980’s to 2008 – classical and mixed media work by Chinese artists addressing religion, ethnicity, gender, urban transformation, identity, globalization, and the inter-relationship of current art to classical Chinese art and history. All the exhibitions are by Chinese artists working in mainland China. Much of the work to be presented by FotoFest will be seen outside of China for the first time.
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Slideshow: Guangzhou Fanyu Casio Factory Workers Go On Strike
According to the Guangzhou-based Southern Metropolitan Daily, more than 4,000 workers from the Fanyu Casio factory in Guangzhou went on strike for their wages on the morning of March 6, 2008. The authorities sent out anti-riot police and public security personnel to return workers to the factory; twenty workers were injured in the process.
This news went online in Chinese cyberspace for only few hours before being taken down from many major news sites. But photos and comments are still spreading in BBS and blogs. Radio Free Asia also reported the incident. Here are some photos, from Southern Metropolitan Daily etc.
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Slideshow: Behind the Dried Bamboo Curtain
Dried bamboo shoots (笋干) are a popular specialty food product manufactured by hand in Yong’an (永安), Fujian in a back-breaking process few Chinese consumers of the snack appreciate. One photographer recently went to a bamboo mountain in Fujian last spring to document how the snack is made, via fengniao.com:
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