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15,000 in Northern China Defend Falun Gong

On June 19, Epoch Times reported that 15,000 people defied Chinese authorities and signed a petition in support of a family that practices Falun Gong. Twenty-three year old Qin Rongqian wrote a petition asking for help. Qin wrote on her petition, “Every signature and thumbprint of yours, your kindness, and your attention to this matter will help my family obtain justice for my father and freedom for my sister and mother. In two weeks, she collected over 15,000 signatures and thumbprints. In February 2011, her father died in prison, where he was serving a 10 year sentence because he refused to give up the practice of Falun Gong, a meditation practice that has been banned in China since 1999. Although the father had injuries that were obviously from severe beatings, the authorities notified the Qin family that he died of natural causes. Qin’s mother and sister had recently been arrested due to their efforts to appeal the case to the authorities.

Source: Epoch Times, June 19, 2012.
http://www.epochtimes.com/gb/12/6/19/n3616011.htm

A Crisis Looms in China: Too Many Males

Wang Xia, head of the National Population and Family Planning Commission, stated that the male-to-female ratio in China started to narrow in 2009 and declined to 117.78 in 2011 (117.78 males to every 100 females). He said that the decline is limited. As the ratio is over a dozen points above normal, the task to stabilize the ratio remains daunting.

A natural gender ratio at birth could be somewhere between 103 and 107 males to every 100 females. As a result of the one child government policies, China’s male-to-female birth ratio has hovered at a high level, reaching a record high of 120.56 in 2008. Xinhua reported that, according to official statistics, males under the age of 30 exceed females by more than 20 million. 

Source: Xinhua, June 21, 2012
http://news.xinhuanet.com/photo/2012-06/21/c_123313000.htm

PLA Officials Required to Report Personal Assets

PLA Daily reported on Thursday, June 21, 2012, that China’s military officers who are ranked above secondary regiment grade will be required to report their incomes and real estate assets, as well as their investment information.

The new amendment to the regulation on military officers’ personal information reports addresses President Hu Jintao’s order on discipline and on fighting corruption in the military.

The amendment also includes regulations that deal with the review, investigation, and approval of the reports of officials personal information.

Source: PLA Daily, June 21, 2012
http://www.chinamil.com.cn/jfjbmap/content/2012-06/21/content_8040.htm

Huanqiu Commentary: We Should Fight the U.S. with Wisdom

Huanqiu published a commentary in response to the remarks that U.S. Defense Secretary Panetta made at the Shangri-la Dialogue.

The Huanqiu commentary stated, “China will be at disadvantage in dealing with the United States for many years into the future. China’s ability to form alliances with others will also be greatly inferior to that of the U.S.” “There is no need for China to butt heads with the U.S. In other words, to do so is the worst strategy. The best way is for China to act in such a way that U.S. military deployment becomes useless and to lead Sino-U.S. game playing in a direction that is favorable to the growth of China’s power.” The commentary stated that the direction of Sino-U.S. economic cooperation is “for our interests to be increasingly intertwined,” which appears to favor the weaker party. “We should not fight the U.S. with our forces, but with our wisdom, with an open mind and with persistence.”

Source: Huanqiu, June 4, 2012
http://opinion.huanqiu.com/1152/2012-06/2784041.html

Huanqiu: Five Erroneous Ideas That Mislead Public Opinion

On May 29, 2012, Huanqiu (the Chinese edition of Global Times) published an article titled “Guard against Five Erroneous Ideas on the Internet That Mislead Public Opinion.” The five erroneous ideas are: “Marxism is outdated,” “Only privatization can save China,” “The culture industry should be market-oriented,” “Seeking more money is the ultimate goal in Internet Management,” and “Only hire those who can increase profits.”

Source: Huanqiu, May 29, 2012
http://china.huanqiu.com/hot/2012-05/2768093.html

Over 80 Confucius Institutes Established in the U.S. in 8 Years

The International Herald Leader, a newspaper under Xinhua News Agency, published an article on June 5, 2012, titled “Over 80 Confucius Institutes Established in the U.S. in 8 Years.” As of today, over 80 Confucius Institutes with 299 Confucius Classrooms have been established in the 48 states across the U.S. The Confucius Institute has opened 6,127 classes with nearly 160,000 student enrollments; it has organized more than 2,800 sessions of cultural activities with a total participation of 147,000 people.

Some American scholars criticize China, saying it is using the Confucius Institutes to export the CCP’s ideology. According to the article, this misunderstanding about the Confucius Institutes will gradually fade.

Source: International Herald Leader, June 5, 2012
http://ihl.cankaoxiaoxi.com/2012/0605/45150.shtml
 

Chinese General: Many U.S. Trained Scholars Want to Kill China with Their Praise

On June 19, 2012, Huanqiu (the Chinese edition of Global Times) published an interview titled, “Zhang Zhaozhong: Many U.S. Trained Scholars Are Traitors Who Are Harming China.”  Major General Zhang Zhaozhong is from China’s National Defense University.

According to Zhang, “Some scholars have been trained in the United States. They read American books, believe in America’s ideology and help the United States to delude the Chinese. Those who said that China will surpass the United States in 20 to 30 years must have had an ulterior motive. They support Chinese in feeling relaxed and buying more bonds from the U.S. They want to kill China with their praise! This is what the imperialists are so pleased to see.”

Source: Huanqiu, June 19, 2012
http://mil.huanqiu.com/Forum/2012-06/2835748.html

Two State-Run Media Publish Conflicting Opinions

[Editor’s Note: State media Huanqiu Online published a commentary on May 29, 2012, “Fighting Corruption Is a Tough Uphill Battle for China’s Social Development.” [1] The article stated that “corruption cannot be ‘fixed completely’ in any country. The key is to control it to a level the public can accept.” It added, “The public should understand the objective reality that China cannot completely suppress corruption at the present time.” On May 31, China Youth Daily countered Huanqiu‘s article by publishing an article, “Without a Change in the System and Democracy, There Is No Cure for Corruption.” [2] It stated that “the Party’s top leaders have stressed on many occasions that (we) must have zero-tolerance for corruption. Having zero-tolerance for corruption should be the current universal standard.”

It is rare to see two of China’s state media express completely opposite viewpoints. Voice of America (VOA) suggested that “the debate among top level state media indicates that the dispute among China’s top leaders is so great that even the Party’s Central Propaganda Department can no longer cover it up.” [3] The following are translations of excerpts from these articles.]

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