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Officer from Suzhou Petition Office: The Police Have a Duty to Beat People up

According to VOA, an officer from the Suzhou Petition Office made some shocking remarks while being videotaped. The video then spread widely over the Internet, causing many heated discussions. A local businessman from the city of Suzhou encountered resistance when he went to the Petition Office to file a complaint against a land developer. During the argument, an officer from the Petition Office shouted, “If the policeman does not beat people up, then why do we have policemen?” One writer responded with an online post saying, “The official made a true statement. This has been on people’s minds, but no one has dared to speak up.” Another post commented, “This officer’s mentality is scary, but at least it was a true statement. It contains much more powerful information than the national news program that CCTV aired just 30 minutes ago.”

VOA called the Suzhou Petition Office to interview the officer, but the office declined the request. The office stated that they could not validate the legitimacy of the reporter’s status.

In interviews with VOA on this topic, people told VOA that many local legal departments have become thoroughly corrupt. Jiang Tianyong, a rights lawyer, told VOA that the official’s remarks reflect the reality in China, making the issue a social tragedy. Hu Xingdou, a China expert from the Beijing Institute of Technology, stated that the police force has a poor public image and has become a thug for the government.

Source: VOA, July 2, 2013
http://www.voachinese.com/content/suzhou-video-clip-20130702/1693378.html

Decline in Teen Physical Fitness a Major Concern in China

According to an article in China Review News, Chinese teenager’s physical health continues to decline. A research study showed that, from 2005 to 2009, the measure of power, speed and endurance, and instantaneous reactions among teenage students had gotten worse. A lack of physical exercise was cited as the major contributor. According to the article, middle school students spent an average of 11 hours a day at school including travel time, plus an additional two hours on homework or reviews. The study showed that only 9.34 percent of middle school students and 14.89 percent of high school students participate in after school sports activities in China compared to 57.39 percent, which is the average rate for Japan, the U.S., England, Australia, and Singapore.

Source: China Review News, July 6, 2013
http://www.chinanews.com/edu/2013/07-06/5010696.shtml

Study Shows 33.5 Percent of General Public Utilize Private Lending Channels

The Chinese Family Finance Investigation and Research Center of South Western University recently conducted a research study on lending. The results disclosed that 33.5 percent of Chinese citizens utilize private lending channels. The total amount channeled through the private lending business has reached 8.6 trillion yuan (US$1.4 trillion). Of this amount, 3.8 trillion (US$0.62 trillion) was used in home financing, 3 trillion (US$0.49 trillion) was for agriculture and business financing, and the rest was used for auto equity and education. It was believed that these results indicated that the financial services in China’s banking sector have not been able to meet public demand.

Source: Guangming Daily, July 5, 2013
http://finance.gmw.cn/2013-07/05/content_8180051.htm

People’s Daily: Philippines Committed “Seven Crimes” in the South China Sea Issue

The overseas edition of the People’s Daily published an article that enumerated seven “crimes” the Philippines committed in the conflict with China over the South China Sea issue. They are:  

“The first is the ‘original sin’ of illegal occupation of China’s eight Nansha islands and reefs. The second is to continually strengthen the so-called ‘actual control’ of the eight islands and reefs. The third is the attempt to turn Second Thomas Shoal (Ayungin Reef) into an actual possession. The fourth is unilaterally inviting foreign capital to engage in oil and gas development in the disputed waters of the South China Sea. The fifth is deliberately promoting the internationalization of the South China Sea conflict. The sixth is trying all means to pull in extraterritorial countries as its supporters in order to increase the leverage against China. The seventh is the complete lack of good faith in solving the South China Sea problem through dialogue and cooperation.” 

The article warned, “If [the Philippines] wants to choose confrontation … and tries to rely on external forces to strengthen their claim, which lacks legitimacy, it is futile and will eventually prove to be a pyrrhic strategic misjudgment.” 

Source: People’s Daily (overseas edition), June 29, 2013 
http://paper.people.com.cn/rmrbhwb/html/2013-06/29/content_1261261.htm

National Business Daily: Rail Construction May Slow Down

On July 2, 2013, National Business Daily published a commentary on the impact that banks’ tightening of credit will have on rail expansion.

China is transitioning from a country on tires to one on the rails. High-speed railways, urban subways, and light rails are becoming the primary mode of transportation. The total rail length will reach 6,000 kilometers by 2020, requiring an investment of 3 to 4 trillion yuan.

According to the commentary, real estate appreciation has become the most important element in funding rail transit construction. The rail transit companies that the local authorities control first acquire some land. Then they start to develop real estate, followed by construction of a rail transit system and other infrastructure in the area. This leads to anticipated appreciation of the land they own. The increase in the real estate market allows the rail transit companies to make the money needed to cover the cost of all the construction and to repay the debts they owe for rail transit. 

The commentary concluded that, as banks tighten credit by evaluating the financials of prospective rail transit projects, a few planned rail transit projects will not make it. 

Source: National Business Daily, July 2, 2013
http://ntt.nbd.com.cn/articles/2013-07-02/754446.html

Senior PLA Official: Promoting Military Reform with Chinese Characteristics

Liu Yazhou, the political commissar of the National Defense University of the People’s Liberation Army, published an article in the recent issue of Qiushi about promoting and deepening military reform with Chinese characteristics.

Liu wrote that the PLA faces two “incompatibles.” First, the existing level of modernization is incompatible with the requirement to win local informationization wars. Second, military capabilities are incompatible with fulfilling our historic mission in the new century. “The only way to solve these two "incompatibles" is through a vigorous and deep reform. Otherwise, we will once again be eliminated by the tide of military development.”

Such military reform must be included in the framework of national reform so that “the military reform will synchronize with political and economic reforms and reforms in other fields and will be in harmony with social reforms. On the other hand, it is essential for the military reform and for overall national development that, during the historic stage of overall changes in society, military reform does not exceed what social reform can tolerate.”

Source: Qiushi reprinted at sina.com, July 1, 2013
http://news.sina.com.cn/c/2013-07-01/155827545695.shtml

VOA: When the Father of China’s Internet Censorship Resigned, Chinese Netizens Cheerfully Mocked Him

On June 29, 2013, Voice of America published an article on why Chinese netizens were so cheerful when a university president announced he would resign from his post as the president of Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications due to illness. The president was Fang Binxing, China’s best-known Internet censorship engineer, nicknamed the “Father of China’s Great Firewall.” The “Great Firewall” allows China’s regime to censor websites like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Google, and anything that the Chinese authorities do not approve. When Fang sent his greetings on a Weibo (Chinese microblog) account, Chinese netizens responded with 250,000 “Go Away” messages. In 2012, when Fang spoke at Wuhan University, students threw eggs and shoes at him.

Fang’s resignation announcement sparked a new round of mocking. Some netizens even posted a sarcastic couplet poem to Fang: “Thousands of People Point Fingers at You When You Are Alive; One Excremental Name Will Follow You after You Pass Away.” The title of the poem was “A Life Journey Not Taken in Vain.”

Source: Voice of America, June 29, 2013
http://www.voachinese.com/content/beijing-principal-20130629/1691720.html  

430,000 Hong Kong Residents Protest the CCP during July 1 Annual March

Despite heavy rain, 430,000 Hong Kong residents took to the streets on Monday, July 1, 2013, demanding that the Chinese Communist Party-backed Hong Kong chief executive, Leung Chun-ying, resign. They also demanded universal suffrage and democratic reform. July 1 is the Chinese Communist Party’s birthday and also the anniversary of the Hong Kong territory’s handover from Britain to the People’s Republic of China 16 years ago. Every year on this day, Hong Kong residents protest Beijing and demand democratic reform.

Sources: RFA and ABC, July 1 & 2, 2013
http://www.rfa.org/mandarin/yataibaodao/gangtai/sy-07012013105950.html
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2013/07/hong-kong-nationals-protest-beijing-in-annual-march/