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  • 18
    Mar
    2013
    10:07am, EDT

    China river's dead pig toll passes 13,000 but officials say water quality is 'normal'

    Str / AFP - Getty Images

    A dead pig is seen in a dirty tributary of the Yangtze River, in central China's Hebei province, some 750 miles from the city of Shanghai, in a photo taken on March 12, 2013. The number of dead pigs found in the Huangpu River, which runs through China's commercial hub Shanghai, has reached more than 13,000, state media reported on March 18.

    By Ed Flanagan, Producer, NBC News

    BEIJING – To the chagrin of Shanghai city residents, there’s more “pork chop soup” on the menu for the foreseeable future. 

    More than a week since authorities in Shanghai started pulling thousands of dead pigs from one of the city’s major waterways, the Huangpu River, municipal authorities in that city of 23 million are continuing to pull hundreds of carcasses from its waterways each day, bringing the total since last week to over 13,000. 

    Workers on Sunday pulled nearly 500 pigs from the Huangpu, bringing the total found from that river alone to over 9,500. The Huangpu River supplies over a fifth of Shanghai’s drinking water.

    As the pig tally creeps up, Shanghai government officials have been struggling to put a positive spin on the ghoulish images popping up each day from the city’s waterways. 


    Shanghai is in the process of burning some of the 13,000 pig bodies found in a major waterway. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    A report Monday in People’s Daily, the official newspaper of China’s ruling Communist Party, focused on the stepped up food and water quality tests across the city. It also earnestly noted that not only have the numbers of pigs being pulled from the rivers dropped, but the size of them too.

    Citing a report from Shanghai’s city government, the paper stated that two thirds of the most recent carcasses found were piglets, suggesting that the worse may have passed.

    Social media outrage
    Still, the daily sight of carcasses being pulled from the city’s waterways for disposal has angered the public and sparked a spirited discussion on China’s Twitter-like service, Weibo. 

    Reports that many of the pigs found have tested positive for porcine circovirus, a virus that has killed large numbers of pigs in the region in recent months, has also raised suspicions about the safety of Shanghai’s water supply.

    “The water must have been polluted [by these dead pigs],” wrote one user named Lujun, “Authorities are being dishonest and trying to hide something.”

    “The government is as corrupt as these dead pigs,” another user using the name Ziyoudeweini wrote disgustedly. “I feel so cold. Who can we count on?” 

    “Water quality in the Huangpu River has been normal up to now,” one official at the Shanghai Information Office assured NBC News Monday. He also stressed that porcine circovirus cannot be contracted by humans. 

    Where are they coming from?
    Shanghai officials have stepped up surveillance for dead pigs around the Huangpu River and have called upon local government in the nearby city of Jiaxing in Zhejiang Province to step up their own searches. 

    Just northeast of Shanghai, Jiaxing is believed to be the source of many of the dead pigs floating down into Shanghai. Shanghai’s Information Office officials declined to speculate on whether Jiaxing was the sole source of all the pigs, but told NBC News that the prefecture was the focus of a joint Shanghai-Jiaxing investigation.

    An official at the Jiaxing Environmental Protection Agency declined to comment on the progress of the investigation late Monday.

    But steps were being taken in Jiaxing to curb the continued dumping of pigs into the region’s waterways. The city’s local newspaper, Jiaxing Daily, reported that leaflets had been passed out to farmers in the region, urging them to properly dispose of dead pigs with local authorities rather than quietly dumping them into the river.

    Jiaxing is likely not the only community to be dumping dead pigs into its waterways, as reports indicate that porcine circovirus has spiked across farming communities this winter, killing more pigs than usual. Many have speculated that farmers have been attempting to discretely dispose of the sick pigs rather than reporting them to authorities and risk investigation.

    NBC News’ Danny Zhang contributed to this report.

    Related links

    More than 2,800 dead pigs found in Chinese river

    Click here for more Behind the Wall posts 

     

    71 comments

    Define "normal" as regards Chinese environmental standards. Ick...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, water, shanghai, rivers, pigs, social-media, featured, ed-flanagan, behind-the-wall, weibo
  • 10
    Mar
    2013
    7:07am, EDT

    Online outrage over fruit seller's run-in with China cops shows power of social media

    nandu.com

    Law enforcement officers tackle fruit seller Li Shengyan in Guangzhou, China, in an incident that turned into a public relations nightmare for the authorities.

    By Le Li, Producer, NBC News

    Cops in China charged with fighting petty crime have become so notorious for their abuse of power that their official name, Chengguan, has become slang for thuggishness. “Don’t be too chengguan,” one might admonish another, meaning “don’t be such a bully.”

    That reputation was given more fuel Wednesday when a newspaper ran pictures of an officer tackling a diminutive fruit vendor in the southern boomtown of Guangzhou as her 16-month-old daughter looked on. During the incident, he grabbed Li Shengyan's neck and wrestled her to the ground after a dispute over a fruit knife.

    Once such incidents would have provoked little comment and the authorities did not need to fear the court of public opinion.

    nandu.com

    After Li Shengyan was arrested, her 16-month-old daughter gave her a hug.

    But the popularity of social media websites has changed all that. Users of China’s two most popular Twitter-like services had commented on the pictures some 7 million times by Friday, many expressing their disgust at the police.

    There are now signs that those in power are being forced to take people power seriously, even if the eventual outcome is much the same.

    One expert on Chinese social media said that while officials’ first instincts were “to cover up and distract attention” from controversial events, they now faced losing their jobs if they handled them badly.

    Wednesday’s incident – as described by the report in the Southern Metropolitan newspaper -- started after officials confiscated her fruit knife. One officer, Ao Dating, then threatend to take away her fruit and the cart.

    Pomegranate thrown
    Li then yelled at Ao and hurled a pomegranate at him. This enraged Ao and he grabbed her by the neck.  The officer then forced her to the ground. His colleagues eventually dragged him off Li.

    One picture showed Li with her hands tied -- unable to comfort her daughter as the young girl hugged her.

    After the confrontation, Li was arrested and taken to a police station along with her daughter. Her cart was confiscated.

    By Thursday, the story had become an internet sensation. 

    “Brute!” one blogger posted.

    “Can’t you be a little more civilized? Do you know how much it will traumatize the girl,” another said.

    The traditional response given by officials to international press enquiries about events like this is: “I do not know.” 

    However, this time, a spokeswoman for Guangzhou’s City Urban Administrative and Law Enforcement Bureau was surprisingly forthcoming.

    “Our bosses are investigating the incident and will inform the public once we find out,” she said. “We are waiting for the results too.”

    Jeremy Goldkorn, an expert on Chinese media and Internet culture, said local governments were increasingly held to account by higher authorities for issues raised on the blogosphere.

    “If they do not react, these lower level officials like city urban management police could lose their jobs,” he said.

    “The first reaction of these types of officials is just to try to cover up and distract attention from the case. Because of the speed and growth of the social media, it becomes more and more difficult for that kind of distraction happen,” he added.

    Investigation blames Li
    After its investigation, the law enforcement bureau said officers had been suspended and there was a report Li had been given an apology as she was released from custody.

    However, the investigation blamed it on Li, accusing her of attacking officials, injuring one. A picture of Li throwing the pomegranate was also released.

    The original report in the Southern Metropolitan was taken down and other websites commenting on the incident also disappeared.

    Li's cart was returned, but she was left unhappy.

    “They (the officials) said ‘The girl, and her parents were well taken care of by the police,” she posted on a Tencent Weibo account which was registered to her. “It was just a show. My girl’s diaper was not changed in 24 hours … the police should face what they have done instead of writing a nice article to make themselves look good."

    Huang Pei, of NBC News, contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Chinese ex-police detained while trying to stamp out corruption

    Communist Party honcho's airport rage caught on camera

    Chinese official booted after account of lurid affair emerges

    148 comments

    Go on youtube and you'll find hundreds of videos of such police abuse here in the USA.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, police, social-media, featured, guangzhou, chengguan, weibo, fruit-seller
  • 18
    Jan
    2013
    3:57pm, EST

    Chinese official booted after account of lurid affair emerges

    By Ed Flanagan, Producer, NBC News

    BEIJING — The rise of new Chinese leader Xi Jinping last November has not been good for mainland officials caught with their pants down.

    In recent months, a slew of low-level Communist officials as well as a few high ranking ones —most notably the vice party chief of the southwestern province of Sichuan, Li Chuncheng — have been exposed by local media and dismissed from their positions after their sexual peccadilloes came to light.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The latest senior official to be toppled due to a sex scandal, Yi Junqing, was a vice minister in charge of China Central Committee’s Central Compilation and Translation Bureau.

    His dismissal was announced Thursday in a one-sentence statement by Chinese state media, which simply noted he had been "removed from post for 'improper lifestyle.'" 

    The terse release by the state-run Xinhua news service belied the expansive and often lurid claims that have flooded the Web about Yi’s sexual trysts. Yi was seemingly exposed by his alleged mistress, Chang Yan, who posted a 120,000 Chinese character essay online detailing the sex, money and gifts exchanged over many months.

    Though many of the affair’s particulars read like the cliché-ridden narratives familiar to many Chinese who have followed the adventures of officials over the years, this case is unique in that it shows the lengths to which many in China go to secure coveted ministry jobs, and the economic and social security that comes with those jobs.

    Chang, 35, a married native of China’s Shanxi province, was a visiting post-doctorate student at the Translation Bureau and had aspirations of landing a job there once her studies were completed.

    Earning employment at the bureau’s Beijing office — and thus the proper permits needed to bring her husband from Shanxi to live and work in Beijing —would require the authorization of Yi, who ran the bureau.

    According to Chang’s account, the price for that approval turned out to be steep, both morally and financially.

    "I was trying to figure out what he wants, money or me," Chang wrote in one excerpt translated by the U.K.’s Telegraph newspaper. "There is no free lunch if I wanted to work for the bureau. I knew there was a price to pay to work for the bureau. I had already paid 10,000 yuan [USD$1,600]. He said he would take two months to get me the job and then he would invite me."

    Besides giving in and becoming Yi’s mistress, Chang writes that she paid $10,000 in total to Yi to secure this government position. Yi’s failure to deliver on that job led Chang to post details of the sordid affair on her private blog, she said.

    That someone would sleep with a potential boss or even pay for a position is of no surprise in China, but to have it written about so openly sparked an uproar online.

    Despite censors erasing the story on Chinese websites, news of the essay soon spread on the Web.

    On China’s Twitter-like service, Weibo, the affair became a hot topic Friday.

    A post by Chang on her blog — where the original entry was quickly erased — seemed to suggest that the story had been written as a piece of fiction.

    "In my spare time I put together a work of fiction," Chang wrote on her blog entry. "I suffered serious depression... and regularly sank into a state of delusion and even fantasy."

    Weibo users overwhelmingly dismissed the confession as forced and condemned Yi for his corruption.

    "Rumor has again proven to be truth," wrote one user.

    "If we got rid of officials like Yi who had these types of affairs, we’d have to eliminate 99.9 percent of them!" declared another.

    Regardless of whether her story is true or not, Yi’s dismissal Thursday shows the lengths to which China’s ruling Communist Party appears willing to go in order to maintain its legitimacy and supremacy.

    More news from China from NBC News' Behind the Wall

    NBC News' Le Li contributed to this report.

    59 comments

    Actually, the U.S. is way ahead. We elect Senators who play footsy in the john.

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    Explore related topics: china, featured, ed-flanagan, weibo, yi-junqing
  • 31
    Oct
    2012
    2:36pm, EDT

    Wall-to-wall coverage of superstorm Sandy provokes controversy in China

    Slideshow: Sandy slams into East Coast

    Superstorm Sandy made landfall Monday evening on a destructive and deadly path across the Northeast.

    Launch slideshow

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    BEIJING – As Hurricane Sandy barreled down on the Eastern Seaboard this week, a nation's eyes were glued to the extensive media coverage of the storm.

    We're talking about China, of course.

    Yes, the major American networks gave viewers non-stop updates of the storm's movements and the damage left in its wake, but Chinese state broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV) was also in the game.

    With already more than 150 employees in Washington, D.C., alone – about a third of them Chinese nationals – CCTV boasts the means to provide extensive coverage of major events outside of its home country.

    However, just because CCTV can offer wall-to-wall coverage of Sandy – already being called the costliest storm in U.S. history – doesn't mean its audience is prepared to watch.

    Certainly not at the cost of local stories that Chinese viewers want to hear about.

    Trending topic
    As the storm played out and CCTV provided near-continuous coverage, comments on China's popular Twitter-like service, Weibo, exploded – over 6 million at this point, making it easily the biggest trending topic on the site. Many were overwhelmingly negative and criticized CCTV's handling of superstorm Sandy.

    Their complaint: CCTV was so singularly focused on coverage of the American storm that the Chinese state broadcaster had stopped covering news in China, ironically transforming instead into what many here called mockingly "the conscience of the United States."

    Or as a popular online cartoonist who goes by the pen name "Murong Aoao" sardonically put it: "CCTV is an excellent American media company."

    Courtesy Murong Aoao

    Murong Aoao's cartoon about Chinese TV coverage of Sandy.

    In a cartoon that has been shared more than 50,000 times on Weibo, Murong paints what appears to be a CCTV reporter or government employee pointing to what is assumed is the United States while calling out, "Look! His house is on fire!" all while he himself is ablaze.

    Asked why he drew the cartoon, Murong simply told NBC News: "It wasn't a big deal, it was just a way to ridicule the coverage."

    The cartoon encapsulates the anger that has been laced through much of the online dialogue over CCTV's coverage.

    China considers end to unpopular one-child policy

    Much of the frustration conveyed in Murong's cartoon is rooted in the fact that CCTV's reporting on the storm and other American disasters in the past often superseded local stories here in China that netizens believe demand coverage. Most noticeably, a week-long protest in the eastern city of Ningbo over local government plans to build a controversial chemical plant there has been ignored.

    In the eastern Chinese city of Ningbo officials have halted the planned expansion of a chemical plant, following days of public protests. ITN's China Correspondent Angus Walker reports.

    State media was allegedly warned not to cover the story and when thousands flocked to the streets of Ningbo to peacefully protest the plant, only foreign media could be seen in the city reporting on the gatherings, sparking applause from grateful locals.

    "CCTV sends lots of correspondents to the U.S. to report on Sandy," complained one irate user. "Why don't they have time for Ningbo, but plenty for America?"

    "Because the leaders' relatives are in the U.S., they care!" went the chorus of replies to the poster.

    NYT report: China leader's family has amassed billions in assets since '98

    Indeed, this notion that CCTV's Sandy coverage was more for the benefit of Chinese government officials – many of whom are known to have their family members and financial assets in the U.S. – than everyday people was a persistent joke underlying many of the posts in recent days.

    Aerial footage reveals devastation from New York City to North Carolina's Outer Banks in the wake of superstorm Sandy.

    "CCTV is not to blame, there are so many leaders' children and relatives studying and working in New York and the East Coast," wrote one Weibo user. "If CCTV does not report on these huge hurricanes when they happen, how will the leaders who don't speak English find out what's going on with their loved ones?"

    The secret to a perfect smile? Chopsticks, Chinese officials are told

    Despite the biting cynicism, frustration and humor conveyed by Web users about CCTV's Sandy coverage, the overwhelming message on Weibo was concern and support for those who had suffered due to the storm.

    One day after Sandy slammed into the East Coast, NBC News' Lester Holt reports on the record-breaking hybrid storm system that swamped neighborhoods, paralyzed the nation's biggest city, and left millions of families from the Carolinas to Ohio without power.

    Messages from families and friends attempting to reconnect with loved ones in the affected areas and heartfelt posts of support for Americans coming out of the storm were continuing well into Wednesday.

    They reveal a friendly, empathetic connection between China and the United States that all too often is lost in the often daily rounds of political bashing from both sides of the Pacific.

    NBC News' Yanzhou Liu and Johanna Armstrong contributed to this report.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • Obama surveying NJ disaster; Navy sends carriers to help
    • Devastated NY community built by firefighters burned beyond their reach
    • Flames rage anew in barrier island town ravaged by Sandy
    • Sandy leaves trail of destruction, disbelief in its path
    • Toppled tree exposes skeletal remains, cement box
    • Your Sandy photos: Show us the heroes in your life
    • Volunteers rush in to help devastated region recover
    • Sandy leaves NYC subway system, infrastructure licking its wounds
    • New York's post-Sandy divide: Those with power and those without
    • By the numbers: Superstorm Sandy

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


    71 comments

    The Chinese aren't the only victims of our excessive media coverage. Remember the all-day OJ chase or the days devoted to Michael Jackson's death, while Mother Teresa's got maybe half an hour. Endless speculation about Zimmerman or Sandusky with little-to-no actual information.

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    Explore related topics: china, cctv, social-media, featured, ed-flanagan, weibo, hurricane-sandy
  • 22
    Aug
    2012
    5:42pm, EDT

    Can Chinese eye exercises help prevent myopia?

    By NBC News Beijing

    BEIJING – Zhang Xinyu meticulously completes her eye exercises twice daily. Her teacher tells her they will help keep her eyesight sharp. At age 12, Xinyu has already been wearing glasses for two years.  


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    For 49 years, the Chinese Education Ministry has required students to exercise their eyes in the name of the Communist Revolution and to combat myopia, or short-sightedness.

    The prevalence of myopia, however, is skyrocketing. An estimated 80 to 90 percent of Chinese are short-sighted by the end of high school – triple the U.S. rate. Few Chinese questioned the effectiveness of the eye exercises over the past five decades – until a recent post challenging the exercises was published earlier this summer on Sina Weibo, China’s widely popular answer to Twitter. 

    “China has had eye exercises for 49 years,” posted a microblooger under the alias “Live from Shanghai.” “Of all the countries in the world, only China uses these eye exercises. The eye exercises are no good for people’s vision. Today, more than 360 million Chinese teenagers have myopia, the second largest percentage in the world.” 

    Watch an educational video about the eye exercises distributed by China's Ministry of Health in 2009.

    Watch on YouTube

    The post ignited a firestorm online. Within a day, the post was re-tweeted more than 10,000 times and had received 1.5 million comments on Sina Weibo.  


    What are Chinese eye exercises?
    All schools in China require students to do the exercises daily, playing familiar music over loud speakers during the workout. The Education Ministry even organizes occasional competitions to reinforce the program.  

    This uniquely Chinese activity dates back to 1961, when the Beijing Education Bureau noticed a sharp increase in the rate of myopia and appointed a Chinese doctor to create exercises to stop the growing problem. 

    “The Beijing government must have taken this issue very seriously,” said Yan Yirou, a retired employee from the Beijing Education Bureau who worked closely on developing the eye exercises. “There were only three people in charge of students’ health, and two were sent out to handle the project.”

    It took two years to develop the exercises. Chinese students have been performing them ever since, except during the 1966-1976 Cultural Revolution, when schools were often closed.

    Are they effective?
    “For the Communist Revolution, let’s protect eye sight and prevent short-sightedness,” was the explanation school children received for the exercises until recently.  

    The Chinese Education Ministry cannot provide a scientific rationale for this practice. Under pressure from netizens following the recent Weibo post, the ministry told the Oriental Morning Post, “We’ll ask the experts and make an announcement as soon as possible.”

    Ministry officials declined an interview request from NBC News to explain the benefits of the exercises.  

    Zhu Tianyu, a Beijing local in his 40s, admitted his doubts about the exercises. “I do not know whether they help or not. My eyesight is awful, but I never took the eye exercises seriously.”

    His wife, Du Yu, disagrees. “It works,” she said. “I still do them now. Every time I exercise, I feel my eyes are more relaxed.”

    Not everyone is convinced.

    “It’s difficult for me to say whether they are good or not. But even if they are, their advantages are not apparent,” Xu Yujing, who's been a high school teacher for more than 25 years, told NBC. “Students do not know the pressure points… Everyone does it for the sake of inspection.”

    Ian Morgan, a visiting scholar at Zhongshan Ophthalmic Center in Guangzhou, is even more skeptical of the Chinese routine.

    “I think it is pretty obvious that Chinese eye exercises do not prevent myopia,” Morgan said. “There is no scientific evidence that they do anything useful at all.”

    Student pressure
    There is broad consensus that China's hyper-competitive education system is a prime cause of the prevalence of myopia.   

    “The Chinese believe that exams and the Gaokao [the Chinese college entrance exam] decide a student’s future,” said Yan Yirou, the retired Education Bureau employee. “The eyesight problem is obviously from the heavy school work. In my survey for the Education Ministry, I found myopia rates were the lowest during the Cultural Revolution because no one was studying."

    Chinese school children's excessive workloads have only gotten worse with time and are widely believed to be contributing to the problem. 

    “When I became a teacher in 1986, only one third of students were short-sighted,” said Xu, the longtime teacher. “Today, most students in my class are.”

    Pressure for students to study is intense – especially since a student’s Gaokao score can largely dictate his or her future career path.

    Despite the prevalence of myopia and the flawed eye exercises, there appears to be no solution in sight.

    “It’s unlikely that either the Chinese education system or the eye exercises will change anytime soon,” said Zhang Xin, chairman of the Beijing Education Association Students' Health Division.

    Some recent research has shown that children who spend more time outside during daylight hours do not become short-sighted, even if they study a lot. But getting children outside is difficult when the pressure to study is so great. 

    Some Chinese parents are now taking their overworked children to so-called “eye exercise centers,” where children can rest while masseurs do the eye exercises for them.

    At only $3.50 for one treatment, the cost seems like a bargain way to combat short-sightedness for the glory of the Communist Revolution.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Trayvon Martin case: How might it be treated abroad?
    • Q&A: NBC's Richard Engel answers questions about Syria
    • Video: Poaching surge threatens survival of rhinos
    • Anti-tanning 'Facekinis' cause stir on China beach
    • Reports: Kim Jong Un will travel to Iran
    • Slideshow: Migration in the Americas
    • Reports: Olympic sprinter drowned when migrant boat sank

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    19 comments

    I'm sure some Rhino horn or Tiger testicle extract would help their myopia problem.

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    Explore related topics: china, students, featured, myopia, eye-exercises, weibo, nbc-beijing
  • 19
    Mar
    2012
    11:15am, EDT

    One tweet, 10,000 followers: Dissident artist Ai Weiwei slips, briefly, through China censor

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    BEIJING – The sudden appearance and rapid disappearance of dissident artist Ai Weiwei on China’s version of Twitter has provided a window into the zany, fast-paced and utterly incomprehensible world of social media censorship in the communist state.

    Ai told NBC News that he had been told that -- since new rules were introduced over the weekend on the mandatory real-name registration of every account on the Twitter-style Sina Weibo website -- his name was no longer being blocked on the site.


    “Before if you looked up my name on Sina Weibo you got a message that said that it was a ‘sensitive or illegal word being used,’” Ai told NBC News Monday. “Yesterday a friend told me that my name was no longer being blocked, so we thought we’d give it a try.”

    Ai, whose outspoken criticism of China’ ruling Communist Party and alleged tax-evasion led to his detention for 81 days last year, has had his name censored by China’s “Great Firewall” and his physical travel has also been restricted.

    So the sudden discovery that his name was suddenly viewable and searchable on Weibo spurred him to experiment.

    “I just wanted to see if this policy really applies. They [new internet rules] said if you use your real name and identity, you can open your own Weibo account,” Ai said, “so we tried and found that it worked.”

    "Ai Weiwei testing, 3/19/2012" would be Ai’s first and last post under his Weibo account.

    Account deleted
    In a little under two hours, 10,680 people flocked to follow him online before censors deleted his account.

    Though unsurprised by the number of followers he attracted in such a short time, he still can’t explain why he was suddenly able to open an account.

    “I have no idea. Some people said it may just be a mistake, I have no idea,” he said. 

    Read more news from Behind the Wall

    Curiously, the introduction of the new rules was followed shortly afterward by the banning of the Chinese term for “real-name registration.”

    Weibo users had been comparing notes regarding whose accounts had or hadn’t been suspended for not providing their real names. The blocking of “real-name registration” appeared to happen because the discussion of the topic became so widespread.

    Sildeshow: History of US-China relations

    Sina has provided some information about how many of its users have opted to register their Weibo accounts with their real identities. The last official statistic released was a week ago when the company announced that it anticipated 60% of its users would be registered by last Friday’s deadline.

    Earlier Monday, NBC News attempted to create a new Weibo account using an anonymous identity. While the site seemed to accept the information filled in, no confirming email required to start using the account ever showed up in our inbox.

    'Jasmine Revolution'
    However, some users who say they have not submitted any identification to Sina claim they have the ‘V’ badge that all users who verify their identity have on the site.

    China’s government is sensitive about the destabilizing potential of social media sites as seen in places like Egypt, Libya and most recently Syria.

    Chinese TV show 'Interviews before Execution' stirs controversy

    An anonymous call for a “Jasmine Revolution” early last year sparked a tightening of restrictions on such sites and increased calls by Chinese regulators and officials for real name registration.

    Another newly banned word was “Ferrari,” amid intense gossiping over the potential identity of the owner of a Ferrari who crashed their car early Sunday morning in Beijing, killing one and injuring two others.

    The topic that was quickly censored after users speculated that the victim could have been the child of a high-level Communist official.

    NBC News’ Bo Gu contributed research to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Four killed in shooting at Jewish school in France
    • Cuba detains 70 'Ladies in White' ahead of Pope visit
    • Report: 'I am the real dictator,' wife of Syria's Bashar Assad says
    • US teacher killed in Yemen; al-Qaida link seen
    • American reportedly held hostage in Iraq released

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    11 comments

    "Testing..." BANNED. Oh, China. What are you so afraid of? You silly little dictatorship.

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    Explore related topics: china, ferrari, featured, censor, twitter, ai-weiwei, weibo, real-name-registration
  • 20
    Jan
    2012
    4:17am, EST

    Yao Ming's political debut is an eye-opener (for some)

    Netease

    Yao Ming attends a Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference meeting on January 13th, 2012.

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    BEIJING – That’s Comrade Yao to you.

    Nearly six months after Yao Ming formally retired from basketball, the 7-foot-6, eight-time NBA All-Star has been anything but idle. In that time, Yao has started college, spearheaded a campaign to end shark-finning, and even started his own vineyard.  

    But last week he added a new title: Standing committee member of Shanghai’s Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).

    At 31, Yao is the youngest member of the 142 member committee charged with advising the Communist Party on issues that affect the public interest.


    Zhang Chi, a spokesman for Yao Ming told the China Daily that despite taking the position, Yao had no political aspirations beyond pushing policies related to sports and charity, saying, “Yao wants to use his influence to do good deeds for society, but not to seek a political position.”

    Netease

    Judging by what he saw on the first few days on the job, who can blame him?

    On Sunday, Yao took his seat on the committee to much fanfare. Unfortunately for the other members there, the assembled media stuck around long enough to catch – and publish – what many of these consultative meetings often look like: a snooze-fest.

    With arms-folded and intent gaze, Yao is seen in one picture listening attentively while his fellow committee members doze off.

    The picture was picked up on by China’s microblogging sphere and soon went viral. Some netizens pointedly suggested that the photos may have come during a break in the committee hearings, but most people responded with amusement to the scene they’ve come to expect from such events.

    “Poor Yao, he probably regrets being that tall and not being able to sleep!” wrote one commentator on China’s twitter-like service, Weibo.

    “Yao Ming is still new to meetings like this,” wrote another before continuing, “He’ll be just like the rest of them soon enough.”

    20 comments

    He's pretty big in China politics. ;)

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, yao-ming, featured, cppcc, ed-flanagan, weibo

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Ed Flanagan

is a Beijing-based producer for NBC News. In China since 2005, he has been a part of the team's China as well as regional news coverage.

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