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SINO DAILY
China censors Ai Weiwei's Newsweek essay
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Sept 2, 2011

Chinese censors have removed an essay by Ai Weiwei in which the dissident artist strongly criticises the country's government and justice system from the latest issue of Newsweek magazine.

The article, Ai's first for a foreign publication since he was released from detention earlier this year, had been ripped from copies of the September 5 issue seen by AFP on a newsstand in Beijing.

In the essay Ai, 54, whose artworks have been displayed around the world, said his ordeal in police custody made him realise he was only a number in an anonymous system where "they deny us basic rights".

"The worst thing about Beijing is that you can never trust the judicial system. Without trust, you cannot identify anything; its like a sandstorm," Ai wrote in the essay on his native city in the current issue of Newsweek.

"This city is not about other people or buildings or streets but about your mental structure... Beijing is a nightmare. A constant nightmare."

The essay follows a series of anti-government comments posted by Ai on Twitter, where he hit out at the treatment of colleagues and fellow dissidents, and is an apparent violation of the terms of his bail.

Ai was barred from giving interviews or leaving Beijing after he was released on bail in June following his detention.

He faces charges of tax evasion, but rights groups say he was detained as part of a wider crackdown on government critics amid official concern that unrest in the Arab world would spread to China.

By Friday afternoon, Internet users in China were still able to connect to an online version of the essay on the magazine's website, despite China's highly sophisticated online censorship system, know as the Great Firewall.

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Chinese bloggers question official's suicide
Beijing (AFP) Sept 2, 2011 - Tens of thousands of Internet users have gone online to question reports in China's state-run media saying an anti-corruption official found dead with 11 stab marks to his body had taken his own life.

The body of Xie Yexin, who worked as an anti-corruption official in the central Chinese province of Hubei, was discovered in his office on Tuesday next to a knife wrapped in a paper napkin with a knife, press reports said.

By Friday, Xie's death was the third most talked-about subject on the popular news site Sina.com, while the same company's Weibo -- China's answer to Twitter -- had more than 130,000 comments on the subject.

The vast majority were sceptical about the suicide verdict, put forward by Chinese police despite an autopsy showing Xie had been stabbed 11 times and had his throat cut. Xie's family has also rejected the official version of events.

"In China, anything is possible. What a miraculous country!" one blogger, Qiuzuochang, posted on Sina's Weibo.

"Chinese people really are stupid," said another, posting under the name Xiyanglaohuangsheng.

"Ending your life with eight cuts puts us well behind Japan -- there, they only have to stab themselves once."

China has the world's largest online population, with 485 million Internet users, and last month the Internet giant Sina said its weibo, by far the country's biggest microblogging site, had surpassed 200 million users.

The growing influence of weibos, which are harder to control than the country's state-run media, appears to have worried Chinese authorities, who last week urge them to stop the spread of "false and harmful information".





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SINO DAILY
China cancels Estonian minister's visit over Dalai Lama
Tallinn (AFP) Sept 1, 2011
China has cancelled the visit of Estonia's agriculture minister in the wake of a trip by the Dalai Lama to the Baltic country last month, an Estonian farms ministry spokesman said Thursday. "On Thursday a notice from the foreign relations department of the Chinese Ministry of Agriculture arrived in Tallinn, stating that all meetings on the political level have been canceled that means the Es ... read more


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