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China petitioners face ban on direct appeals to Beijing
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) April 24, 2014


Chinese clampdown on extravagant feasts hits Pernod Ricard sales
Paris (AFP) April 24, 2014 - Pernod Ricard, the world's second-biggest wine and spirits producer, said on Thursday that sales dipped 7.0 percent in the third quarter, hit by China's clampdown on extravagant feasts at official events.

Revenues for the three months ending March reached 1.6 billion euros, according to a statement from the company, which owns brands including Absolut vodka, Ballantine's whisky and Ricard pastis.

Sales in its Asia/Rest of the world region were poor in Asia, slipping 9 percent in the third quarter to 690 million euros.

"Sales were impacted primarily by China where the decline was exacerbated by destocking in the third quarter as anticipated," the company said.

The group's chief executive Pierre Pringuet told AFP that demand in China is expected to stay muted this year.

"We do not expect improvements from China for the full year", he said, adding however that there is "no doubt that the Chinese market will rebound".

In a bid to improve its image after a string of corruption scandals, the Chinese Communist Party has banned officials from exchanging gifts or serving "expensive food, wine and beverages" during official meals.

Cognac sales have been hard hit by the move, with Pernod Ricard's Martell brand has recorded a drop in demand.

French drinks group Remy Cointreau also reported impact from the Chinese move, and warned of a profit slump this month.

The company, which owns several brands of spirits, said that group sales slumped by 13.5 percent in the 12 months to the end of March mainly because its Remy Martin brandy had lost favour in China.

Chinese will soon be barred from bringing grievances directly to the central government, state-run media said Thursday, amending a longtime practice of "petitioners" seeking official redress.

The State Bureau for Letters and Calls in Beijing will no longer accept most complaints against local or provincial officials as of May 1, the China Daily reported.

It is unclear, however, if the move will deter desperate petitioners who have long seen Beijing as a last resort after their calls have gone unheeded at the local level.

Millions of Chinese "petition" government authorities at various levels every year, in a practice dating from imperial times, over disputes and grievances ranging from land grabs to police abuse.

But many local governments work to prevent complaints being filed against them in the capital, to preserve their area's image and their own career prospects.

In one notorious case, a petitioner in Shanghai was allegedly beaten to death by local police last year over a property dispute, triggering protests in the heart of the commercial hub.

Beijing has announced other measures aimed at reforming the long-troubled petition system which have faced trouble in implementation.

Last month the ruling Communist Party said government bodies must not block "normal petitioners" from seeking to report corruption to national authorities.

But officials in the central province of Henan this month sent teams to surround a hotel where officials from Beijing were staying, to block residents from telling them about corruption, the state-run Global Times reported.

Henan authorities were also found to have detained petitioners despite official vows to halt the practice.

Zhang Enxi, spokesman for the State Bureau for Letters and Calls, told the official Xinhua news agency Wednesday that the purpose of the latest regulation "is to clarify the jurisdiction, regulate the procedure and improve the efficiency of handling petitions".

"It is expected to help citizens file petitions in a stepwise manner," Zhang said.

Xinhua noted that "a few exceptions are left at the central level".

They include "complaints about corrupt officials of provincial and central governments, petitions about issues that should be addressed across provinces and sectors, as well as those that are not properly handled by provincial governments".

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