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         Chinese Government:     more books (100)
  1. Chinese Government Plans To Split State Insurer.: An article from: National Underwriter Property & Casualty-Risk & Benefits Management by Lisa S. Howard, 1998-08-17
  2. Administrative Reform in China and Its Impact on the Policy-Making Process and Economic Development After Mao: Reinventing Chinese Government (Chinese Studies) by Meiru Liu, 2001-03
  3. Poisonous DeceitHow The Chinese Government Literally Gets Away With Murder By Lying Deceiving And Fabricating Its "evidence" Against Falun Gong: An Hbcu Story by Mo Wen, 2004-04-30
  4. The Directory of Chinese Government Organs
  5. Ancient Chinese Political Theories (Studies in Chinese Governmentand Law) by Kuo-Cheng Wu, 1977-06
  6. FOREIGN INVESTMENTS IN CHINA. A Cooperative Research Study Made Under the Joint Auspices of the Institute of Pacific Relations (Honolulu, H.I.), Social Science Research Council (New York), Brookings Institute of Economics (Washington, D.C.), and Chinese Government Bureau of Statistics (Nanking). by D.K. Lieu, 1929
  7. Selected legal documents of the People's Republic of China (Studies in Chinese government and law)
  8. Chinese Communist Politics in Action (Studies in Chinese Government and Politics, No. 1) by Arthur Doak (editor) Barnett, 1969
  9. CHINA: Construction start-up on planned 600,000 tons per year purified terephthalic acid (PTA) plant is still awaiting approval from the Chinese government, ... & Plant Operations in the Developing World
  10. Chinese government shuts down Western-run China Development Brief newsletter in Beijing.: An article from: The Newsletter on Newsletters by Gale Reference Team, 2007-07-24
  11. CHINA: Construction start-up on planned 600,000 tons per year purified terephthalic acid (PTA) plant is still awaiting approval from the Chinese government, ... Gas & Petrochemicals in the Developing World
  12. Financing the Chinese government budget, Mainland China, 1950-1959, by George N. Ecklund by George N. Ecklund, 1966
  13. Chinese government in Ming times : seven studies / Tilemann Grimm, [et al] ; edited by Charles O. Hucker. A selection of 7 papers, early drafts of which were originally presented at the Research Conference on Ming Government held in 1965 by Charles O. Hucker, 1969
  14. Beijing winter: the Chinese government goes after cyber-dissidents and journalists.: An article from: The Weekly Standard by Jennifer Chou, 2005-02-14

41. Guardian Unlimited | Special Reports | China Offers Aids Tests For All
Watts in Beijing Thursday April 15, 2004 The Guardian After more than a decade ofcovering up its HIV problem, the chinese government announced yesterday that
http://www.guardian.co.uk/aids/story/0,7369,1191985,00.html
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Special report: Aids and HIV
Aids and HIV: archived articles

In this section Catalonia to put condom vending machines in schools
Swept into the back streets

Oxford scientists accused of stealing Aids orphans' blood for illicit research

Witness told in court he has HIV
...
Death sentence for medics in Libyan HIV case

China offers free Aids test for all in policy shift Jonathan Watts in Beijing Thursday April 15, 2004

42. China (Includes Hong Kong And Macau)
Critical account of the chinese governments record for 2001. Includes accounts of Hong Kong, Macao and Tibet.
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2001/eap/8289.htm
[Print Friendly Version]
China (Includes Hong Kong and Macau)
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
March 4, 2002
(Note: Also see the report for Hong Kong and the report for Macau The security apparatus is made up of the Ministries of State Security and Public Security, the People's Armed Police, the People's Liberation Army, and the state judicial, procuratorial, and penal systems. Security policy and personnel were responsible for numerous human rights abuses. In 2000 officials stated that there were approximately 1,300 individuals in prisons serving sentences under the Law Against Counterrevolutionary Activity, a crime that no longer exists; many of these persons were imprisoned for the non-violent expression of their political views. According to Amnesty International (AI) 211 persons remain in prison for their activities during the June 1989 Tiananmen Square demonstrations. Since December 1998, at least 30 leaders of the China Democracy Party (CDP) have been given long prison sentences on subversion charges. The authorities released a few political prisoners before their terms were over, notably Zhang Jie, Han Lifa, Guo Haifeng, Cao Maobing, and Ma Zhe. Others, such as CDP activist Zhou Yongjun, who was released in March, were released after completing their sentences. At year's end several thousand political prisonersincluding Bishop An Shuxin, Cai Guihua, Han Chunsheng, Li Bifeng, Liu Jingsheng, Qin Yongmin, Shen Liangqing, Zha Jianguo, Wang Youcai, Xu Guoxing, Fang Jue, Xu Wenli, Zhang Lin, Zhang Shanguang, Zhao Changqing, Abbot Chadrel Rinpoche, Jigme Sangpo, and Ngawang Sangdrol (see Tibet addendum)remained imprisoned or under other forms of detention for the peaceful expression of their political, social, or religious views. Some of those who completed their sentences and were released from prison were kept under surveillance and prevented from taking employment or otherwise resuming normal lives. Authorities also harassed and monitored the activities of dissident's relatives.

43. Guardian Unlimited | Netnews | Chinese Government Backs Down On Google
chinese government backs down on Google Jason Deans Friday September 13, 2002 TheBeijing government has suddenly ended its twoweek block on Chinese subjects
http://www.guardian.co.uk/internetnews/story/0,7369,791772,00.html
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Related stories Internet providers say no to Blunkett
Peace netter: Noam Chomsky

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Snooping laws may be illegal

Chinese government backs down on Google
Jason Deans Friday September 13, 2002
The Beijing government has suddenly ended its two-week block on Chinese subjects using US internet search engine Google. Users in Shanghai and Beijing reported yesterday that they could once again view Google, which until the ban was widely used by China's 30 million-plus web surfers because it has a powerful feature for finding Chinese language material online.

44. Human Rights Watch: Asia : China And Tibet
Press Release Printer friendly version Hong Kong Interpretation of Basic Law SeriousSetback for Electoral Reform The chinese government s new interpretation
http://www.hrw.org/asia/china.php

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News Releases About HRW Contribute ... Contact Us
China and Tibet
China: Stifling the Memory of Tiananmen

Fifteen years after the Tiananmen Square massacre, the Chinese authorities are harassing activists to discourage them from publicly discussing the events of June 4, 1989, Human Rights Watch said today.
June 3, 2004 Press Release
Printer friendly version

China: Vice-Premier Must Tackle AIDS Reform

Chinese Vice-Premier and Minister of Health Wu Yi should do more to address abuses against persons living with HIV/AIDS, Human Rights Watch said today. The Vice-Premier is visiting Washington D.C. this week for meetings on trade and commerce.
April 23, 2004 Press Release
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U.N.: Rights Body Appoints Sudan Monitor But on Last Day of Session, Commission Fails to Address Significantly Rights Crisis in Sudan The U.N. Commission on Human Rights, which concluded its annual six-week session in Geneva today, appointed a monitor to investigate the human rights situation in Sudan, even though it failed to condemn the government for massive abuses and attacks on its civilians, Human Rights Watch said. April 23, 2004 Press Release

45. China: Nipped In The Bud - The Chinese Government's Response To The CDP
V. THE chinese government S RESPONSE TO THE CDP. However, it was not justbad timing which made the chinese government respond so harshly.
http://www.hrw.org/reports/2000/china/china009-04.htm
Recent Reports Support HRW About HRW Site Map
V. THE CHINESE GOVERNMENT'S RESPONSE TO THE CDP
Why was the government response to the China Democracy Party so harsh? Its members had never used or advocated violence. Their weapons were faxes, e-mails, and public declarations. They were determined to raise issues of democratic reform and exercise rights guaranteed in two international human rights treaties that China had just signed. What Chinese authorities were calling efforts to subvert state power, most people would have called advocacy of peaceful political change. By Chinese standards, moreover, this was a tiny group of people, probably never numbering more than 200 activists at its height. Most had a history of openly challenging official policy, with some 70 percent having been active during the 1989 pro-democracy movement. A smaller group, including many of the leaders, had been active during the 1979 Democracy Wall movement. They were represented in all but three of China's twenty-seven provinces, with a particularly strong presence in Hangzhou (at least seventy members) and Shanghai (at least twenty members). But in part because of the risks involved in overt confrontation with the authorities, the CDP was never likely to attract a mass following. What, then, did the government fear? It was clearly concerned about possible unrest as a series of sensitive anniversaries approached, in particular the tenth anniversary of June 4, 1989, and the fiftieth anniversary of the PRC on October 1, 1999. Added to this was a chain of unexpected events which caused authorities in Beijing to be more nervous than usual. On April 25, 1999 the Falun Gong spiritual meditation group staged a massive protest around Zhongnanhai, the residential compound of the Chinese leadership. On May 7, 1999 the NATO bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade generated a new wave of nationalism and anti-West emotion. It was not coincidental that the authorities, who often saw demands for multiparty democracy as evidence of negative influences from the West, made a point in the trials of CDP members of stressing their contacts with foreigners or "hostile outside forces."

46. Tiananmen Square, 1989: The Declassified History
Useful collection of documents providing a U.S. perspective of the events surrounding the chinese government's use of heavily armed military forces against student demonstrators at Tiananmen Square in 1989.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB16/
National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 16
Tiananmen Square, 1989 The Declassified History Includes Selected Documents from the Microfiche Collection:
China and the United States: From Hostility to Engagement, 1960-1998
Prepared by Jeffrey T. Richelson and Michael L. Evans
June 1, 1999
The relationship between the United States and the People's Republic of China over the fifty years since the PRC was established on October 1, 1949 has been extraordinarily complex. Several years ago the National Security Archive initiated a project to shed more light on U.S.-China relations. The purpose was to obtain critical documentation on key aspects of the U.S.-Chinese relationship, with a focus on the years 1969 to the present. Through Freedom of Information Act requests, collection of relevant publications, and archival research, the Archive has amassed a collection of more than 15,000 pages of previously classified documentation on U.S.-China interaction on foreign policy issues, the U.S.-PRC military relationship, the growing economic relationship between the two countries, as well as documents related to the several issues that divide the countries to this day. In June 1999, the Archive will publish on microfiche with a detailed, item-level printed index, these extraordinary documents, which include policy and research studies, intelligence estimates, diplomatic cables, and briefing materials. Titled

47. Chinese Government White Paper
Useful Links, more Home Topics chinese government White Paper. History Thechinese government White Papers Issued in Recent Years. Welcome
http://www.china-embassy.org/eng/zt/zfbps/default.htm
Home Embassy Information News Foreign Ministry Spokesperson's Remarks Home Embassy Information News Foreign Ministry Spokesperson's Remarks ... Welcome to Read the Chinese Government White Papers

48. The Chinese Government White Papers Issued In Recent Years
The chinese government White Papers Issued in Recent Years. •Tibet sMarch Toward Modernization http//www.china.org.cn/ewhite
http://www.china-embassy.org/eng/zt/zfbps/t36543.htm
Home Topics Chinese Government White Paper The Chinese Government White Papers Issued in Recent Years
www.china.org.cn/e-white/index.htm

www.china.org.cn/e-white/index.htm

www.china.org.cn/e-white/index.htm

www.china.org.cn/e-white/index.htm
...
www.china.org.cn/e-white/index.htm

[Suggest to a Friend] [Print] Related News: Appendix

49. Ananova - Chinese Government Gives Awards To Non-porn Websites
Ananova chinese government gives awards to nonporn websites. The Chinesegovernment has given awards to websites that don t feature porn.
http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_433741.html
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Technology

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Gadgets and gizmos
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Ananova: Chinese government gives awards to non-porn websites The Chinese government has given awards to websites that don't feature porn. Organisers say they want people to learn the internet can be entertaining without sex. A spokesman for the National Internet Civilisation Project said: "Some are obsessed with the idea that no entertainment portal could possibly operate without sex." According to the South China Morning Post , China Telecom has offered award winners a discount on their website fees to encourage more civilised practices on the internet. The Chinese government is also concerned about the number of sites featuring 'evil cults' and superstition. Home News Entertainment Sport ... About Ananova

50. Chinese Government Websites
Online Databases. Periodical Resources. chinese government Links. The content ofeach of these pages is controlled by the relevant chinese government office.
http://www.usembassy-china.org.cn/shenyang/pas/cgov.html
Consulate Shenyang
Home Search Site Map Contact Us ... Info Exchange
Public Affairs Section
Section Overview CD-ROM Resources Online Databases Periodical Resources ... Chinese Government Links
Websites of the Government of the People's Republic of China
This list is prepared for the covenience of visitors to our site. The content of each of these pages is controlled by the relevant Chinese government office. If you wish to view one of these links, you will be leaving the U.S. Consulate site.

51. Ministries & Commissions
IRC Overview. IRC Services. About the USA. chinese government Resources. IRCResources. Online Resources. Ministries Commissions. Ministries Commissions.
http://www.usembassy-china.org.cn/irc/chgovt.html
Home Search Site Map Contact Us ... About the USA
Information Resource Center
IRC Overview IRC Services About the USA Chinese Government Resources ...
Commission of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense
GB Ministry of Agriculture GB Ministry of Communications GB Ministry of Construction GB Ministry of Culture GB
Ministry of Education
GB Ministry of Finance GB Ministry of Foreign Affairs English Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation English Ministry of Health GB Ministry of Information Industry GB Ministry of Land and Natural Resources GB State Drug Administration GB
Minitry of Personnel
GB Minitry of Public Security GB
Ministry of Railways GB
Ministry of Science and Technology English
Ministry of Water Resources
English People's Bank of China English State Development Planning Commission GB State Economic and Trade Commission English
State Ethnic Affairs Commission
English
State Family Planning Commission English
State Administrations subsumed under Ministries
State Administration of Building Materials Industry
GB State Administration of Coal Industry GB State Administration of Cultural Heritage GB State Administration of Foreign Exchange GB State Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine Online GB State Administration of Light Industry English State Administration of Machine-building Industry GB State Administration of Metallurgical Industry GB State Administration of Non-ferrous Metals Industry English State Administration of Textile Industry English

52. Chinese Appoints A Second Panchen Lama
Chinese appoints a Second Panchen Lama Dharamsala, 1 December 1995 The atheistchinese government has announced the name of a six year old child as the new
http://www.tibet.com/PL/dec1a.html
Chinese appoints a Second Panchen Lama
Dharamsala, 1 December 1995 - The atheist Chinese government has announced the name of a six year old child as the new Panchen Lama, despite the fact that His Holiness the Dalai Lama announced the reincarnation of the Panchen Lama, Gendun Choekyi Nyima, a six year old boy, in May this year. Gyaltsen Norbu, a six year old child from Lhari, in Nagchu, north-eastern Tibet was declared to be the new Panchen Lama. The Chinese ceremony that was held to select the reincarnation of the Panchen Lama not only contradicted His Holiness the Dalai Lama but also defied Tibetan religious tradition. This violation of religious freedom in Tibet should not be able to stand up in the 1990's. Chadrel Rinpoche, the previous head of the Panchen Lama Search Committee, who was accused of secretly colluding with His Holiness in the proclamation of Gendun Choekyi Nyima as the reincarnation of the Panchen Lama, is still being detained by Chinese authorities. The safety of Gendun Choekyi Nyima, the six year old reincarnation of the Panchen Lama is now seriously in doubt. The Chinese authorities have denounced the young Panchen Lama and his parents after five months of silence as to their whereabouts. The statement denouncing the boy stated that the boy had " once drowned a dog" and described his parents as "notorious for speculation, deceit and scrambling fame and profit", and declared that the family's attempts to "cheat the Buddha would not be allowed by all ordinary pious Tibetans".

53. The Chinese Government And The International Committee Of The Red Cross (ICRC) S
The chinese government and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)sign Memorandum of Intent On the Opening of an ICRC Regional Delegation In
http://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/zxxx/t97920.htm
Print Suggest To A Friend HOME Latest News The Chinese Government and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) sign Memorandum of Intent On the Opening of an ICRC Regional Delegation In Beijing
On May 10th, Mr. Li Baodong, Director-General of the Department of International Organizations and Conferences of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, representing the Chinese Government signed a Memorandum of Intent with Mr. Jean de Courten, Vice-President of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), on the intention of ICRC to open a regional delegation in Beijing. The two parties acknowledged that an ICRC regional delegation for East Asia in Beijing shall promote the cooperative relationship between the ICRC and China and other neighboring East Asian countries in the humanitarian field. The two parties agreed to continue consultations on the opening of an ICRC regional delegation in Beijing, aiming at reaching agreement on the remaining issues as soon as possible.
Print
Suggest To A Friend Related Foreign Ministry Spokesman Kong Quan's Statement on China Foiling Another Anti-China Resolution at the UN Commission on Human Rights Foreign Minister Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri of Pakistan will pay an official visit to China Vice Minister Dai Bingguo Visits US as a Special Envoy of the Chinese Government(11/03/2004) Chinese and Russian Vice Foreign Ministers Hold Pre-meeting Consultation on the Second Round of Six-Party Talks ... China and the US Hold Consultation on Security, Multilateral Arms Control and Anti-proliferation Issues

54. Li Hui, Special Envoy Of The Chinese Government And Assistant Foreign Minister V
Li Hui, Special Envoy of the chinese government and Assistant ForeignMinister Visits Ukraine. 2004/04/15. From April 13 to 15, 2004
http://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/wjdt/wshd/t85411.htm
Print Suggest To A Friend HOME Policies and Activities ... Activities Li Hui, Special Envoy of the Chinese Government and Assistant Foreign Minister Visits Ukraine
From April 13 to 15, 2004, Li Hui, Special Envoy of the Chinese government and Assistant Foreign Minister of China, visited Ukraine at the invitation of the host. Speaker of the Ukrainian Parliament Volodimir Litvin, First Deputy Chief of the Presidential Administration Office Demin, acting Foreign Minister Volodymyr Y. Yel'chenko and Vice Foreign Minister Valentyn Nalyvaichenko of Ukraine met respectively with Li. Li forwarded a letter by Chinese President Hu Jintao to Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma, in which President Hu spoke highly of the China-Ukraine relations, expressing hopes that the two countries should enhance mutual support and coordination in international organizations. During the visit by Li, the two sides also held consultations on bilateral relations and other international issues of common interest.
Print
Suggest To A Friend Related Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing Holds a Phone Conversation with His Pakistani Counterpart Assistant Foreign Minister Li Hui Holds Consultations with Deputy Foreign Minister of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) Lidija Topic Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing Meets with Deputy Foreign Minister of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) Lidija Topic Assistant Foreign Minister Li Hui Holds Diplomatic Consultations with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Razov ... Li Zhaoxing Holds a Phone Conversation with Dr. Condoleezza Rice

55. Monsanto Receives Final Safety Certificates From Chinese Government For Biotech
Monsanto Receives Final Safety Certificates from chinese government for BiotechImports. Good News for Growers as these Approvals Ensure Continued Trade. ST.
http://www.monsanto.com/monsanto/layout/media/04/02-23-04b.asp
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Monsanto Receives Final Safety Certificates from Chinese Government for Biotech Imports Good News for Growers as these Approvals Ensure Continued Trade ST. LOUIS (Feb. 23, 2004) - The Chinese government's approval today of the final safety certificates for the importation of grain from biotech crops is good news for growers who plant crops improved through biotechnology. China is a very important market for soybeans where imports have continued under an interim process for the past two years. Issuance of these final safety certificates will allow for a more predictable process for traders and continued trade of Roundup Ready soybeans. "American growers who plant biotech crops should know that yet another significant importing nation has recognized the safety of these products," said Jerry Hjelle, Ph.D., Monsanto's vice president of regulatory affairs. Hjelle said that Monsanto received safety certificates for import of five commercial products in soybeans, corn, and cotton, thereby allowing farmers greater choice in how they produce their crops, control insects and decrease weeds. Specifically, the certificates received by Monsanto include: Roundup Ready soybeans, one version of Roundup Ready corn, YieldGard Corn Borer, Bollgard

56. Geneva Library UNOG: "the History Of The League Of Nations"
(I) Communication and Appeal from the chinese government to the League.(a) August 30, 1937. On the evening of July 7 Japanese troops
http://www.unog.ch/library/archives/lon/library/Docs/kchiau30.html
(I) Communication and Appeal from the Chinese Government to the League. (a) August 30, 1937.
On the evening of July 7 Japanese troops held illegal maneuvers at Lukouchiao, a railway junction of strategic importance in the vicinity of Peiping, where their presence could not be defended under any existing treaty or agreement. Alleging that one Japanese soldier was missing, Japanese troops demanded after midnight to enter the adjacent city of Wanping to conduct a search. When permission was refused by the Chinese authorities, the Japanese suddenly opened an attack on Wanping with infantry and artillery forces and thus the Chinese garrison was compelled to offer resistance.
While the Chinese authorities from the very beginning showed their willingness to reach an amicable settlement of the Lukouchiao incident, Japan has sought to exploit the incident for furthering her designs on North China and relentlessly forced China to resort to armed resistance, thus precipitating a sanguinary conflict of which the world has as yet only witnessed the beginning.
With a view to avoiding further hostilities and effecting a peaceful settlement with Japan through regular diplomatic channels, the Chinese authorities with great self-restraint and forbearance, in face of repeated provocative attacks by Japanese forces, proposed a mutual withdrawal of troops in order to separate the two opposing forces and, later, as unmistakable proof of China's peaceful intentions, actually proceeded to withdraw her troops from the scene of conflict even before Japan commenced similar withdrawal.

57. Geneva Library UNOG: "the History Of The League Of Nations"
Appeal of the chinese government to the League Council, 21 September1931 (L of Ns 0J, 1931). Through statements made to it at its
http://www.unog.ch/library/archives/lon/library/Docs/kchinapp.html
Appeal of the Chinese Government to the League Council, 21 September 1931 (L of Ns 0J, 1931). In view of the foregoing facts, the Republic of China, a member of the League of Nations, asserts that a situation has arisen which calls for action under the terms of Article 11 of the Covenant. I am, therefore, instructed by my Government to request that, in pursuance of authority given to it by Article II of the Covenant, the Council take immediate steps to prevent the further development of a situation endangering the peace of nations; to re-establish this status quo ante; and to determine the amounts and character- of such reparations as may be found due to the Republic of China. I will add that the Government of China is fully prepared to act in conformity with whatever recommendations it may receive from the Council, and to abide by whatever decisions the League of Nations may adopt in the premises.

58. China Government Organizations
A directory of China government organizations browsable by state and provinciallevel. Chinese Version. chinese government Organizations. Content provided by
http://www.tdctrade.com/chinagov/index_eg.htm
Chinese Government Organizations
Content provided by:
Major Government Organizations of State Level
Major Local Government Organizations
Anhui Beijing Chongqing Fujian ... Help

59. Chinese Government Media Silent On NTD TV Interview With Mr. Li Hongzhi | Clearh
chinese government Media Silent on NTD TV Interview With Mr. Li HongzhiBy Minghui reporter Ouyang Fei On January 20, 2004, NTD
http://www.clearharmony.net/articles/200402/17576.html
@import url(/clearharmony.css); /*IE and NN6x styles*/ >> Print version Close window Chinese Government Media Silent on NTD TV Interview With Mr. Li Hongzhi
By Minghui reporter Ouyang Fei
On January 20, 2004, NTD TV ( New Tang Dynasty TV ) conducted a half-hour special interview with Mr. Li Hongzhi, the founder of Falun Gong. This is the first time Mr. Li appeared in the media since late 1999. Dozens of TV stations, newspapers and Internet websites around the world reported the news. AP (Associated Press) published a report entitled "Falun Gong Founder Says Government Envious." An AP AP reporter received a "standard answer" from the Foreign Affairs spokesman only when it sought out some sort of comment. Jiang Zemin's own statement that "I just don't believe I can't fix Falun Gong" is a transparent show of his resentment. On April 25, 1999, around 10,000 Falun Gong practitioner went to Beijing and asked for the release of Falun Gong practitioners who had been illegally arrested in Tianjin. Premier Zhu Rongji gave the practitioners a satisfactory response, but Jiang coerced the Politburo to act according to his wishes. In his letter addressed to the Politburo, Jiang Zemin requested that a "610 Office" be established to coordinate and carry out the persecution throughout the country. This is an organisation that is similar to the "Cultural Revolution Leadership Group" that overrode all other judicial and legislative bodies.

60. Linux PR: Chinese Government Hosts The"International Linux Standards And Applica
chinese government Hosts the International Linux Standards And Application SymposiumAnd The First National Linux Standards Feedback Session In Mid April Apr
http://linuxpr.com/releases/6826.html
Affiliate site of
Chinese Government Hosts the"International Linux Standards And Application Symposium And The First National Linux Standards Feedback Session" In Mid April
Apr 14th, 09:59 UTC Sun Wah Hi-Tech (Nanjing) System Software Ltd., one of the core members of the Linux National Standards Workgroup, announced that the Workgroup and the China Electronics Standardardization Institute will host the International Linux Standards and Application Symposium and the First National Linux Standards Feedback Session in Beijing on 14-5 April. BEIJING, China - Tue Apr 13, 2004 The Chinese government plays an important role on driving the development and application of Linux in China. China Electronics Standardization Institute, jointly with Linux National Standard Workgroup will host the International Linux Standards and Application Symposium and the First National Linux Standards Feedback Session on 14-5 April, 2004 at the Tianhong Plaza Hotel, Beijing, China. This symposium comes timely as the first set of Linux National Standards ever in China and Asia has been completed last month. During the Symposium, experts from the Free Standards Group (FSG), government ministers, scholars and experts from the Linux industry will speak on Linux and standardization. Local and foreign vendors and technical experts will hold seminars and workshops to explore the trends and direction of Linux and standardization, both inside and outside China.

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