Bungling bank robbers sentenced to death

August 10th, 2007

China Daily reports that the two men responsible for China’s largest ever bank robbery, over 50 million yuan, have been sentenced to death.

Bank robber sentenced to death

I first wrote on this story in Not so smart bank robbers. Ren Xiaofeng (pictured above) claimed that he and his accomplice “never intended to rob the bank.” They spent most of the money they took on lottery tickets believing the odds of winning big were in their favor. After winning big they would return what they took to the bank and still be able to live in luxury. Ren confessed that he and his accomplice both “like to play the lottery”. Unfortunately their winnings did not match the money they stole and they became China’s two most sought after fugitives.

In Vault managers get death for bank theft, China Daily reports that five bank officials have been fired as a result of this fiasco.

Ren Xiaofeng is the father of two year old twins.

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Defying Olympic Ambitions

August 9th, 2007

Yesterday Beijing observed the one-year countdown to the 2008 Olympics with fireworks and dancing in Tiananmen Square. Sun Ruoyu lives a few blocks away in a two-story building that has belonged to her ancestors since the 1840s. Miss Sun is guarding her home with her life because local officials want to evict her. A bulldozer waits outside for an opportune moment to begin demolition.

Sun family restaurant

In the article In Beijing, a Little Building Is Defying Olympic Ambitions, The New York Times reports that a “recent study by a European research institute estimated that 1.5 million people would be evicted or displaced in Beijing by the opening of the Olympics.” Local media has not reported on Miss Sun’s case, as forced evictions are a politically sensitive subject in China.

While Sun’s family has been offered compensation for their home and business, the money offerd has not been adequate.  The government wants to use the land her home is on to make a park for the Olympics. Afterwards the land will be developed as a residential and commercial area in what is expected to become one of the city’s priciest districts.

Miss Sun has said:

No matter what they offer, I won’t be able to afford an apartment here. I want to be able to live here. They’ve used the Olympics to strip people of their property. They’re doing things against the spirit of the Olympics.

Read the complete Times article: In Beijing, a Little Building Is Defying Olympic Ambitions.

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Chinese Dissidents Join Foreign Appeals for Beijing to Honor Rights Commitments

August 8th, 2007

The Washington Post reports that a day after a small group of foreigners challenged Beijing to honor its Olympic commitments, a group of prominent Chinese dissidents and intellectuals also called on the government to honor its human rights commitments.

The open letter posted Tuesday on the Internet represented a different — and perhaps more difficult — challenge for Beijing. Signed by 40 Chinese men and women widely known for scholarly work or anti-government agitation, the appeal seemed harder to dismiss than complaints lodged by foreign groups.

The Chinese government has violated promises it made to secure the Olympic Games, the letter said, by jailing dissidents, pushing poor people from their homes to build stadiums and keeping censorship in place for Chinese journalists and artists.

The Chinese government has warned that attempts to politicize next year’s games will fail. Of course, using the Chinese capital as Olympic venue in order to show off the success of Communist Party rule is also a kind of political grandstanding.

Read the Post article Before Olympics, a Call for Change.

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China harassing, intimidating, detaining foreign journalists

August 7th, 2007

Two separate reports were released this week, accusing China of breaking its promise to grant foreign journalists freedom to cover the Olympics openly and objectively. One of the reports has the rather long title You Will Be Harassed and Detained: Media Freedoms Under Assault in China Ahead of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games. The Asia director of Human Rights Watch is quoted as saying:

The ongoing harassment and detention of journalists make Beijing’s Olympic pledge on media freedoms seem more like a public-relations ploy than a sincere policy initiative.

The article, China detaining journalists, is part of CNN’s extensive Beijing Countdown coverage. Also this week, Reporters Without Borders, Amnesty International and the Committee to Protect Journalists have voiced similar complaints. The Committee to Protect Journalists released a statement warning:

China’s poor press freedom landscape could hinder visiting reporters covering the Games and may have a lasting negative effect on local journalists once the international spotlight has faded. Unless things change, and soon, reporters who venture beyond the Olympic village should be prepared to work in an environment where official interference and detentions of journalists are common and sources are at risk.

The New York Times reported today in China Under Fire Over Media Curbs Ahead Of Games that Reporters Without Borders held a news conference in Beijing calling for greater media freedom. After the conference several journalists were kept from leaving for up to two hours with no explanation.

Reporters Without Borders said China had made specific promises when it was awarded the Games that it would improve press freedom and human rights.

Also this week, Telegraph correspondent Richard Spencer blogs about press freedom in Beijing. In his Beijing Olympics: the countdown begins entry, he writes about watching his fellow journalists on TV in Beijing, only to have their reports blocked in China. When asked on air to discuss the blocking, the report was blocked again.

Can you blame China for not keeping all their promises? Simply hosting the Olympics is seen as a victory for the Communist Party. They were naturally willing to say anything in order to host the games. In a country run by ageing technocrats, who have never had to answer questions from their own people, pesky foreign journalists are becoming bothersome. The authorities are irritated when foreign journalists ask them awkward questions about not keeping their promises. They would prefer the foreign press only write on positive aspects of the games, as in mandated in domestic media. It’s kind of like inviting someone over, and asking them to make themselves feel at home. Then you demand they behave the way you want them to. That’s not quite what hosting international events is all about.

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Oldest Profession Flourishes in China

August 6th, 2007

The Washington Post has published a well researched article on prostitution in China, illustrating the connection between China’s bounding economy and the rise in the number of sex workers. As more women enter the field, prices for services are plummeting. The article, Oldest Profession Flourishes in China, begins with the story of a 22 year freelance prostitute working in Beijing:

By the time she came to Beijing last June, the market price for women like her was $20. With a couple of customers a day, she could make $1,350 a month, save most of her earnings and still send money home, she said. But now, because of increased competition from younger workers newly arrived from the countryside, her price has dropped to $13.

“I’m getting older,” she said over a simple dinner of vegetables and spicy chicken in a Beijing suburb, a slim gold ring on each middle finger. “Though the price has gone down, the number of customers is up. I used to receive two visitors before, and now I have three to four a day. My income is the same, I just have to work a little harder.”

No longer limited to well-known bars or a growing number of karaoke parlors, prostitutes are everywhere in China today, branching out onto college campuses, moving into private residential compounds and approaching customers on mobile phone networks.

In some spots, the article really gets to the heart of the matter. It points out that the rise in prostitution does not necessarily correspond to a decline in values, in fact “the majority of prostitutes have violated old social mores out of desperation to help their families.”

Jing Jun, a sociology and AIDS policy professor at Tsinghua University, is quoted in the article as saying:

“They are absolutely moral. A lot of these women send half their income back to support their families. They’re more filial than I am,” Jing said. “Among government officials, Chinese social scientists, health professionals, they are coming around to see that prostitution is not fundamentally connected to a lack of values but a lack of jobs, choices, opportunities and education.”

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Cleaning up habits in time for the Olympics

August 5th, 2007

The real countdown to next year’s Olympic Games in Beijing has begun, and Beijing Olympic officials are trying hard to educate the public about potentially offensive behavior. The question is, can people clean up their bad habits in time for the games? And more importantly, will the government’s plans have any long-lasting influence?

In the article Organizers strive for a ‘civilized’ sheen, CNN interviews a sociology professor from Hong Kong’s Chinese University who says:

Changes to public manners should not be enforced from the top-down. But rather it entails a fundamental change within the mindset of the people — a bottom up phenomenon.

If it is solely a form of political slogan, it will only make the population feel sick and tired.

A Beijing businesswoman interviewed for the article adds:

The government is putting in so much money and effort to elevate the inner quality of its citizens. We see those slogans about being civilized everywhere but there does not seem to be any substance behind the words.

It is impossible to change manners in a year. The whole populace must reach the critical point that the majority will adhere to good mannerisms.

Time will tell what impression Beijingers make on the world in 2008. Until now, the emphasis on good manners has been solely about “saving face,”by not looking uncouth in front of foreign tourists. Nothing has been said about the public bettering their manners for their own sake. The people of Beijing will still have to live with one another long after the games are over.

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Beijing food makes me nervous

July 27th, 2007

More on the tainted food scandals in China:

It’s scary to live here not knowing if the food and drinks are safe.

The above quote comes from CNN correspondent John Vause. The CNN website has an interesting Behind the Scenes feature, where their correspondents share their own experiences. Written from a personal point of view, they offer a refreshing perspective on the events they cover. Here are some excerpts from John Vause’s take on eating in China.

Eating out in China used to be one of the great experiences of living here. I often thought going out with friends and colleagues for dinner was a bit like the game of “Hungry Hungry Hippos” — vast quantities of amazing food that made dining a pleasure. Best of all, it was affordable and palatable.

But these days, the joy of anticipation of what the next dish will bring has been replaced with, well, the dread of what the next dish may contain.

When ordering at restaurants, I wonder: Is that drug-tainted fish and shrimp? Did that pork come from a pig that was force-fed wastewater? Any melamine added to those noodles?

Those are among some of the recent food scares here. Even drinking a glass of water instills fear: A recent government report found half the bottled watered in this city was counterfeit.

In defense of food quality, officials have argued that they are doing a lot to stamp out poor quality food. They insist that many of the recent events are isolated cases. The reporter continues:

I have another perspective. In a Communist country where corruption is rampant and the press appears only free to go after the little guy, I believe the deep systemic problems go unreported — that is until dogs and cats in the United States start dying from pet food made with Chinese-tainted ingredients and the world starts asking China some very difficult questions.

The bottom line is: If you’re worried about Chinese exports, rest assured the local stuff is without doubt many, many times worse.

The complete online article is Ordering food in Beijing makes me nervous.

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Confucius Making a Comeback In Money-Driven Modern China

July 26th, 2007

The Washington Post reports on the growing popularity of Confucianism in China. Confucius Making a Comeback In Money-Driven Modern China finds many reasons for the recent resurgence in popularity. As can be gleamed from the article’s title, the resurgence can be seen as an alternative to corruption and materialism, which have become  driving values in China today. Communist Party leaders like how Confucianism emphasizes respect for authority. Parents like it because it stresses filial piety and obedience.

Is there anything new to be found in digging up ancient values? What real difference is there in sending kids to Confucian schools instead of regular schools? The article writes of one school where “children as young as 3 were memorizing and reciting ancient Chinese classics.” Memorizing and reciting is the basic bread and butter of any school in China, only the mindless doctrine is different.

What the article touches on really well, is that most “Chinese today are hard-pressed to fully describe the philosophy. It has become a grab bag of ideas that people are tailoring to their own needs as they search for a new belief system.” People are selectively choosing and discarding the bits of philosophy that suit their purposes. Confucianism has been seldom appreciated in recent years because it advocates a patriarchal system where men are superior to women. Also casually ignored, is the fact that Confucius himself “was a radical social critic with low opinions of his rulers.” These ideas seem to conveniently be brushed aside.

It seems that the current enthusiasm for this ancient philosophy is just another fad serving the times. Confucianism, above all else, is a belief system that trained millions of Han Chinese over the centuries to be obedient like sheep and accept leadership. The current government is not the first to note the advantages in that.

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Not so smart bank robbers

July 25th, 2007

You would expect bank employees to have some required skills when it comes to handling money. It seems that two not so smart bank employees in Hebei province ended up becoming two not so smart bank robbers. With unfettered access to the vault, Ren Xiaofeng and Ma Xiangjing stole 51 million yuan and spent most of the money on lottery tickets. Read on:

The two thought that by buying millions of yuan in tickets they would eventually win back enough to replace the missing funds and allow them to leave their low paying jobs for a life of luxury, press reports said.

“Ma Xiangdong and I both like to play the lottery, we thought that we could use the money and buy lottery tickets and win the big prize. We were going to pay the bank back, we never intended to rob the bank.”

“The most we ever spent on lottery tickets at one time was 14.1 million yuan, we were thinking that we could win double what we had stolen,” said Ren, the father of two-year-old twins.

“But we didn’t win. It was at that time that we knew we were finished and that we had better escape,” he said. “So we decided we should steal some more money and flee Handan forever.”

Ren and Ma are facing charges of corruption and the illegal use of public funds. They face execution if convicted.

Read the original AFP article Bumbling Chinese bank robbers spotlight poor management.

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China Identifying Olympic Troublemakers

July 24th, 2007

The Associated Press reports that China is gathering information on foreigners who might try to use the 2008 Olympics as an opportunity to protest a variety of things.

China’s intelligence services are gathering information on foreigners who might protest and spoil the nation’s moment in the spotlight during the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Spy agencies and research organizations compiling lists of potentially troublesome groups are looking beyond the usual suspects, human rights groups, at evangelical Christians demanding religious freedom, Darfur advocates wanting Beijing to use its oil-buying leverage with Sudan to end the strife there, and environmental campaigners angry about global warming, security experts and a consultant familiar with the effort said. (Source: China: Identifying Olympic Troublemakers)

No mention of terrorism or public safety, issues that host countries often pay the most mind.

Also this week, it has emerged on several China blogs that the government is toughening up its visa requirements between now and the Olympics. The new rules don’t seem to be aimed at tourists, but more specifically at foreign English teachers, expats and other people who regularly travel to China on business.

The Today in China blog writes:

I received the following notification from the company for which I’m working.

In the meeting held by the Exit & Entry Administration Ministry of Beijing on July 12, 2007 afternoon, expats’ visa application process were revised as following:

From July 16,2007 till the end of the Olympic games in 2008, in order to ensure the security of Beijing, during the 2008 Olympic Games, the Ministry of Public Security will carry on strictly foreign management in China.

1. If applicants enter China with L, F visa, the visa cannot be transformed to other visa types. (Except for the applicant’s job title is above vice president, legal representative of the company, director, or foreign representative office’s leader).
2. The urgent application (express visa service) cannot be accepted by the government for the time being.
3. When foreigners with L, F visa need to extend their staying in Beijing, the applicants need to do the visa extension personally, and need to present the company’s business license as supporting.
4. The applicants applying for the residence permit for the first entry will need to the application personally; also need to present the company’s business license as supporting.
5. The applicants who apply for the residence permit extension need to provide their employment permits, or the representative permits and company’s business license as supporting.

The original post is Visa application & extension process revision.

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