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'No analogy' between China and Mideast unrest: Wen

China arrests more activists for urging protests
Beijing (AFP) March 13, 2011 - Police in China have arrested and charged more activists with subversion, rights groups say, as online calls Sunday urged Chinese to join anti-government rallies for the fourth week running. Guo Weidong, 38, was charged with "inciting subversion" Friday after he posted Internet calls for protesters to attend rallies marking the "Jasmine revolution," the Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy in China said. Guo, a businessman in east China's Zhejiang province, was taken into police custody Thursday, the Hong Kong-based centre said in a statement.

Chinese authorities have launched a security clampdown in major cities in response to calls for protests inspired by the "Jasmine revolution" in Tunisia, which sparked a wave of unrest against authoritarian regimes in the Arab world. Police have been deployed in force on the last three Sundays in both Beijing and Shanghai to prevent any demonstrations and block foreign media coverage of them. No public protests have been seen, although foreign journalists were beaten at a designated rally site in Beijing two weeks ago by thugs believed to be linked to police.

As in previous weeks, posts on overseas Chinese websites and micro-blogs again urged disgruntled Chinese to "stroll and smile" in designated sites in 34 cities on Sunday, but to "take no action and avoid confrontation" with police. According to the Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD), also based in Hong Kong, Guo was the 18th activist to be arrested and charged for alleged links to inciting the protest. At least three other activists have been charged over the past few days. Up to 100 activists around China have been placed under house arrest, interrogated or taken into police custody without charge for their alleged links to the rallies, CHRD said earlier.

On Sunday, at Beijing's Wangfujing commercial district -- a designated rally site -- there was no massive police presence as seen on previous Sundays. Security in Beijing, however, has been tight since the annual 10-day meeting of parliament started in early March when state press announced that some 180,000 police and 560,000 security volunteers began patrols in the capital. In Shanghai, no major unrest was seen, but police were seen checking identification papers and urging journalists to depart from the designated rally site on People's Square. Wary of the potential for social unrest across China, Premier Wen Jiabao pledged last month to tackle a range of hot-button public concerns including soaring inflation, runaway economic growth, and official corruption. China's leaders have watched with worry as those and other issues touched off political convulsions in the Middle East and North Africa.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) March 14, 2011
Premier Wen Jiabao rejected any comparison Monday between China and the unrest-hit Middle East, but admitted his government faced potent risks from inflation and other hot-button issues.

"We face extremely daunting tasks and complex domestic and international situations," Wen told reporters in an annual press briefing after the close of the nation's parliament session.

China's ruling Communist Party is grappling with a range of problems such as inflation, rampant corruption, environmental degradation, and land grabs by property developers and local governments who evict existing residents.

The leadership has thus watched with concern as a similar mix of issues -- and a lack of democracy -- sparked popular uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and elsewhere in the Arab world, but Wen rejected any comparison with China.

"We have followed closely the turbulence in some North African and Middle Eastern countries. We believe it is not right to draw an analogy between China and those countries," Wen said.

Inflation tops the government's agenda and while pledging further efforts to contain rising prices of food, housing and other essentials in the world's second-largest economy, Wen said inflation was "not easy to control."

"Inflation is like a tiger; once it gets free, it is difficult to put back in the cage," he said.

Inflation has remained stubbornly high -- 4.9 percent in both January and February -- despite a series of steps including three recent interest rate hikes.

Inflation, which hit a more than two-year high of 5.1 percent in November, has a history of sparking unrest in China, with its hundreds of millions of poor farmers and low-paid workers scraping to get by.

Wen pinned part of the blame on the United States, which in November undertook massive stimulus spending known as "quantitative easing" in a bid to jump-start the weak American economy.

"Some countries have pursued a quantitative easing that has caused fluctuations in exchange rates of some currencies and affected global commodity prices," Wen said.

Wen called corruption -- another key factor in the Middle East unrest -- the "biggest danger" faced by China and said political reform was necessary to help combat it.

"Without political reform, economic reform cannot succeed and the achievements we have made may be lost," Wen said.

Similar comments he made last year prompted rumours of a split in the top leadership and especially with President Hu Jintao, whose own later remarks on reform were far more tepid.

However, Wen gave no new proposals nor a timetable for expanding China's limited village-level elections on Monday, saying it would be a "gradual progress."

Beijing has targeted more balanced, less export-reliant, sustainable development and a fairer distribution of wealth under a new five-year growth plan approved by the rubber-stamp National People's Congress earlier Monday.

It calls for a more moderate seven percent annual economic expansion for 2011-15. The economy grew 10.3 percent in 2010.

China has annually set an eight percent economic growth target -- considered the minimum required to keep the economy growing fast enough to stave off social unrest. The goal is surpassed each year.

But Wen admitted it "will not be easy" maintaining enough growth to create sufficient new jobs while also curbing inflation.

Decades of blistering export-dependent growth have made China's economy a force in the world, but Beijing has struggled to spread the wealth evenly among its 1.3 billion population.

"Over the next five years and for a long period of time to come in the course of China's development, we will make the transformation of China's economic development pattern our priority," Wen said.

He also pledged the government would make greater efforts to spur development of affordable housing.

The urgency of appeasing disgruntled constituencies has come into focus over the past month with mysterious Internet calls for weekly Sunday "strolling" rallies in major Chinese cities.

They have largely fizzled under smothering security and no obvious protest actions have been reported, but the heavy police response revealed official concern over public dissatisfaction.



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US defence chief in Bahrain amid street unrest
Manama (AFP) March 11, 2011
US Defence Secretary Robert Gates flew in to Manama on Friday to encourage Bahrain's leaders to embrace reform, touching down shortly after anti-government protests raged on the streets. The unannounced visit was designed to reassure Bahrain's leaders of US support while also urging a dialogue with opposition groups, press secretary Geoff Morrell told reporters aboard Gates's plane. Gate ... read more







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