Categories
Liberty

[1693] Of from Tibet to East Turkestan, tyranny

Just as you think the issue of Tibet went into slumber as a sign of respect for the victims of the Sichuan earthquake, the China strives to dismantle any kind of sympathy it may have garnered. Just today, a mosque was demolished by the Chinese government, allegedly because the local Muslim community refuses to do what the government had ordered: show sign of support for the Olympics.

In a Reuters article (via):

BEIJING (Reuters) – Chinese authorities in the restive far western region of Xinjiang have demolished a mosque for refusing to put up signs in support of this August’s Beijing Olympics, an exiled group said on Monday. [Group says China demolishes mosque for not supporting Olympics. Reuters. June 23 2008]

The official reason, it seems is this:

Dilxat Raxit added that the mosque, which had been renovated in 1998, was accused of illegally renovating the structure, carrying out illegal religious activities and illegally storing copies of the Muslim holy book the Koran. [Group says China demolishes mosque for not supporting Olympics. Reuters. June 23 2008]

I may be able to reluctantly accept illegal renovation as a reason for demolition but “illegally storing copies” of the Koran?

Remember, this is the same government which thinks that it has “an exclusive rights to the selection of all future reincarnations of Tibetan lamas and have ordained that the Dalai Lama must be a citizen of China.”

Categories
Conflict & disaster Liberty Society

[1635] Of violent PRC citizens in South Korea fuels anti-PRC sentiment

Violence by Chinese during the Olympic flame relay in Seoul, Sunday, has ignited anti-China sentiment among Koreans.

The Beijing Olympic torch was successfully relayed from the South to North Korea, supported by enthusiastic Chinese supporters. However, the relay was marred by a clash between human rights activists and an overwhelming number of supporters, which left a sour taste in the mouth of many South Korean citizens.

Before the event, the police’s main concern was that rallies by human rights activists to protest China’s crackdown in Tibet might disrupt the relay. However, tens of thousands of nationalistic Chinese supporters flocked to streets in Seoul, resulting in an outbreak of violence against anti-Beijing Olympic protestors.

[…]

Koreans watching the relay were surprised to see the lining up of as many as 10,000 Chinese on streets the flame passed through. About 8,300 policemen were mobilized for the event. Among other questions raised were whether all the Chinese were legal residents or not; how “foreigners” could attack citizens of their host country; and why they held a demonstration here, not in Beijing, a Seoul citizen said.

[…]

Citizens also criticized the police for their lack of stern measures against the Chinese nationalists. “It is obviously dereliction of duty,” Seong Baek-ju posted on the official Web site of the National Police Agency. “How could they not do anything about these Chinese rioters.” [Anti-Chinese Sentiment Looms After Torch Relay. The Korea Times. April 28 2008]

Hmm, foreigners attacking citizens and the police did nothing against the aggressors.

Why does that sound so familiar?

Categories
Liberty

[1620] Of coercion-backed bias is the issue

Culture strongly affects our takes on issues. Our biases, at least partly, are influenced by our experience. We all have our own biases and that are not usually bad. In a free society, competition of ideas flourishes and that competition necessarily includes biases. What makes biases unacceptable however is when it involves coercion.

All of us are entitled to our opinion, be it contemporary, forward looking or ones that truly belong to the dark ages. Where liberty reigns, individuals are free to express their thoughts.

Just like individuals, institutions have biases of their own and so too the media. Despite the fact the ethics of journalism calls for neutrality in reporting, I am not overly concerned with biases promoted by the media, regardless of its political sympathies. After all, these media themselves are run by individuals whom they themselves maintain their own biases. While I do appreciate objectivity in reporting, there is really no way to fully enforce such ethical demand without applying coercion. Furthermore, pursue of neutrality itself maybe subjective.

In the end, it is up to our mental faculty to decipher an event and wade through any bias that might cloud the objectivity of the news.

Biases usually worry me when there is coercion involved. For instance, when a supposedly impartial arbiter or judges whom have coercive power exhibits bias. Or when the media are controlled by the state which has censor power. Monopoly of information is bad enough in spite of still being within voluntary sphere but biases backed with threats go beyond monopoly.

The accusation thrown at western media — read non-pro-PRC media — by the People’s Republic of China is a suitable example where biases are backed by threat.

The recent unrest in Tibet has put the PRC in a unfavorable spotlight. With international media seemingly sympathetic to the Tibetan cause, coupled PRC’s atrocious record in violation of liberty as background and the upcoming Beijing Olympics, the call for free Tibet has grown considerably stronger than it has in recent past. Apart from calls for partial or full boycott, the Olympic Torch Relay has seen protest in various cities.

The PRC is noticeably annoyed and has taken swiped at international media that contributed to stronger support for Tibetan independence, calling them biased. Regardless of the beef of the accusation, the PRC made it as if only those media are biased whereas media controlled by the ruling communist party in PRC are biased themselves.

The hypocrisy of the PRC notwithstanding, I am unperturbed with biases exemplify by any side. What concerns me is the status of media within the PRC. In fact, because of the lack of free press in the PRC, I find it is easy to ignore the PRC’s claim. If the PRC is honest about its accusation of bias, then the PRC government must refrain from controlling the media by virtue of having exclusive access to legal — in descriptive terms — coercion. It must stop enforcing its biases over the media.

Between biases under a situation of unfree press, it is free press, or the perception of free press that will appeal to a third person. A free press does a better job at influencing others than controlled press. This is true in Malaysia where alternative media gained credibility for being free, among other things, at the expense of controlled mainstream media in the last general election.

When the press are controlled, the nagging question is why is it so? Is the state hiding something? This suspicion only attracts criticism and sows distrust against the state. But states like China and Malaysia could comfortably shove the question asides with clear conscience if free press is practiced.

Categories
Environment Society

[1533] Of more than a crisis in China

Several clips over at CNN on TV illustrated how extremely bad weather — snowstorm — is adversely affecting transportation in China at the moment. With the Chinese New Year less than a week away, traffic is spiking in the southern part of China. Delays and cancellations of bus, train and airplane trips have brought traffic to a great halt. The system just cannot process the flow as fast as it needs to be.

The video showed a rowdy crowd with individuals pushing each other. If the congregation in Mecca is intimidating, the one in Guangzhou as depicted in the clips, China is many times frightening. Unlike in Mecca, the crowd in the video was hostile as chaos started to reign in. If news of stampede broke out, it would not catch by me surprise.

The presence of police officers seemed to fail to placate the growingly nervous crowd. Without security personnel, it would have been anarchy. The Chinese government has advised its citizens to stay at home instead of traveling to celebrating the upcoming Chinese New Year but the people is not listening.[1] If the situation goes on unmitigated, it would not be hard to imagine how this crisis would grow to threaten stability in China.

That is not the only ill effect of the worst snowstorm in 50 years. Prices have shot up as the weather hurts food production while electricity has been unceremoniously interrupted to many areas.[2][3] I have been through bad winters and I certainly will not want to experience this Chinese winter without heat.

All in all, somehow I feel if there is going to a some sort of turning point in China, this is it. The snowstorm has grown from merely logistics issue to that of economics and social. Potentially soon, politics too.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[1] — BEIJING, China (CNN) — China has taken the step of asking millions of migrant workers to forgo their annual Lunar New Year trip home, saying the worst winter weather in 50 years is expected to pummel the country for at least another three days. [China advises millions to abandon travel plans. CNN. January 31 2008][↩]

[2] — BEIJING (AP) — Snow battering central China has dealt an “extremely serious” blow to winter crops, a top agriculture official warned Thursday, raising the likelihood that future shortages would exaggerate already surging food prices. [China Warns of Serious Impact on Crops. AP via Google News. Christopher Bodeen. January 31 2008][↩]

[3] — Huge cities have plunged into darkness, with parts of Chenzhou, a city of 1.2 million in central Hunan province, without power for eight days. [Blizzard chaos costs China $7.5 billion. CNN. February 1 2008][↩]

Categories
Economics Environment Humor Politics & government

[1228] Of too witty to be serious

Panda Kong:

Copyrights by The Economist. Fair use.

Roar!

IF THE guest list determined a meeting’s value, the Strategic Economic Dialogue between China and America on May 22nd would be a roaring success. Almost half the Chinese cabinet is trooping to Washington, DC, for the second of the twice-yearly discussions, conceived by Hank Paulson, America’s treasury secretary, between the world’s largest economy and its fastest-growing one. The process was designed, in large part, as an antidote to the latest case of Asiaphobia among America’s politicians. [America’s fear of China. The Economist. May 17 2007]

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

p/s — also at The Economist:

Conservationists—and polar bears—should heed the lessons of economics.

[]

One reason for this taxonomic inflation is that the idea of a species becoming extinct is easy to grasp, and thus easy to make laws about. Subspecies just do not carry as much political clout. The other is that upgrading subspecies into species simultaneously increases the number of rare species (by fragmenting populations) and augments the biodiversity of a piece of habitat and thus its claim for protection.

In the short term, this strategy helps conservationists by intensifying the perceived threat of extinction. In the long term, as every economist knows, inflation brings devaluation. Rarity is not merely determined by the number of individuals in a species, it is also about how unusual that species is. If there are only two species of elephant, African and Indian, losing one matters a lot. Subdivide the African population, as some taxonomists propose, and perceptions of scarcity may shift. [Hail Linnaeus. The Economist. May 17 2007]