Asia

17 March 2006

China drops charges against NYT researcher, to be released soon

China has agreed to drop charges against a Chinese journalist who worked as a researcher for the New York Times. Zhao Yan, jailed since October 2004 after his arrest on charges of fraud and illegally releasing state secrets, is likely to be released soon. Zhao’s case was threatening to overshadow Chinese President Hu Jintao’s forthcoming visit to the United States. Hu is expected to make his first...

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9 March 2006

Microsoft denies aiding Chinese case against journalist

Microsoft on Wednesday denied providing Chinese authorities with information that led to the arrest of a Chinese journalist on charges of incitement to subversion. Reports emerged Tuesday that journalist Li Yuanlong was charged last month for using a Hotmail account to post articles on an overseas Web site under a pseudonym. "Microsoft did not assist the Chinese government in this action, nor have...

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9 March 2006

Yahoo's founder responds to China criticism

Yahoo executives feel "horrible" about political arrests of Internet users in China but believe it's better to operate in that market and cooperate with authorities than not be there at all, Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang said on Wednesday. "It is more important for us to participate, not only for economic reasons, but to be able to [help shape where the industry is going]," Yang said during a...

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7 March 2006

Microsoft denies role in arrest of Chinese journalist

BEIJING (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp. said on Tuesday it had no involvement in the case of a Chinese journalist charged with sending subversive e-mails abroad under a pseudonym using a Hotmail account. The indictment of Li Yuanlong, a 45-year-old reporter, follows accusations that Internet giant Yahoo Inc. provided evidence to Chinese authorities that led to the imprisonment of two journalists....

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3 March 2006

China carrying out brutal vendetta against Epoch Times

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has accused Chinese authorities of a "brutal vendetta" against independent journalism and media following the destruction of the offices of one of its leading critics. ASSAULTED: A picture of Chinese newspaper Epoch Times Chief Technical Officer Li Yuan, who demonstrators say was attacked in his home at Atlanta, US, , is shown during a...

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2 March 2006

Debate over censorship emerges in China

In a letter circulated to journalists in mid-February, a group of former senior Chinese officials called on the Beijing government to ease its rigid media censorship, particularly of political news and commentary. The appeal is another sign of a broader debate in Chinese ruling circles on how to deal with the extreme tensions being generated by the country’s deepening social inequality. Written on...

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2 March 2006

Google keeps files from China

Search giant Google is storing the search records for its recently launched Chinese site Google.cn outside the country in an effort to keep the Chinese government from demanding the files. "We didn’t want to be in the position of having to hand over these kinds of records to the government," said Peter Norvig, Google’s director of research, at a panel discussion at Santa Clara University in...

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26 February 2006

Editor has last laugh on China censors

LI DATONG, the sacked editor of one of China's most influential investigative newspapers, laughed as he explained why the closure and pending reopening of the weekly Bingdian ( Freezing Point) added up to an incredible victory, despite his dismissal. While the fight was not over yet, he sensed a watershed. "This is a rare occurrence," he said. "It (the reopening of an axed newspaper) has never...

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24 February 2006

China's media censorship rattling world image

BEIJING – At 5 p.m. on Jan. 24, Li Datong's status went into a deep chill. Mr. Li, a Tiananmen protest veteran and a rare crusading editor still allowed to work, learned that "Freezing Point," his weekly magazine, had been closed. The proximate reason: a lengthy article smashing official history of the 1900 Boxer Rebellion, when a peasant cult killed more than 230 foreigners in a spasm of...

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23 February 2006

China releases journalist 16 years after Tiananmen conviction

China has finally freed a journalist after 16 years of imprisonment left him mentally impaired after being tortured and held for long periods in solitary confinement. Yu Dongyue, then 23, was jailed for splattering paint on a portrait of Mao Zedong during the 1989 pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Square. MAO@TIANANMEN: The portrait of Mao Zedong looms over student protestors at Tiananmen Square...

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