Facebook Blocked in China?

July 8, 2009
By C. Custer

A brief update: some of our contacts are reporting the Western social networking site Facebook is down in China. Herdict confirms this, listing 40 inaccessible reports and one accessible one. If you currently live in China, give facebook a test and let us know the results. If Facebook is blocked, it would be the...
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Ethnic Rioting in Xinjiang Gets Worse

July 8, 2009
By C. Custer

For those who aren’t already aware, the unrest in Xinjiang continues as Han mobs have been reported attempting to reach Uighur enclaves in Urumqi and elsewhere. Lifted straight from the New York Times: Paramilitary forces fired tear gas Tuesday at Han Chinese protesters armed with clubs, lead pipes, shovels and meat cleavers. The mob...
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The Urumqi Riots and Media Strategy

July 7, 2009
By C. Custer

Violent events in China tend to spark controversy. When details are vague — and they almost always are, at least at first — it’s up to individual news teams to make decisions about how their coverage is going to portray the events. The recent riots in Urumqi are no exception; thus far a couple...
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Ethnic (Separatist?) Riots in Urumqi

July 6, 2009
By C. Custer
Ethnic (Separatist?) Riots in Urumqi

One of our frequent commenters, Wahaha, pointed us to this very recent news story. Details are still a bit sketchy. According to the report, “On July 5th at around 8:00 P.M., incidents of rioting and beating occurred in Urumqi. People in People’s Square, Jiefang St., the bus station, Xinhua South Street, Outer Ring Road,...
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Reporting Corruption the Easy Way

July 6, 2009
By C. Custer

In recent days, it seems like any discussion of China and the internet centers around censorship and the possible destabilizing influence presented by the free information exchange afforded by the web. Of course, the internet is used for other things too, but those just lead to more censorship, which leads back to the aforementioned...
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"Return My Sister Li Chunhua!"

July 4, 2009
By C. Custer

When Li Chunhua was being detained, her toes were bound with wire, she was shackled to an iron chair and then tortured using electrocution! She was going to Beijing to report to the authorities; she was trying to report them for illegally using electricity to torture a citizen! However, in Beijing -- "the best...
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