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SINO DAILY
Police 'killing' triggers online uproar in China
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 29, 2014


China blocks access to Google e-mail service
Beijing (AFP) Dec 29, 2014 - China has blocked the last remaining way to access Google's popular e-mail service, experts said Monday, as authorities work to establish "Internet sovereignty" by controlling what enters the country via the web.

Gmail, the world's biggest e-mail service, has been largely inaccessible from within China since the run-up to the 25th anniversary in June of the Tiananmen Square crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators.

But users could still access the service by using third-party mail applications, rather than the webpage.

"But they have blocked those ways of accessing," said Jeremy Goldkorn, founder of Danwei, a Beijing-based firm that tracks Chinese media and the Internet.

"I think this is pretty confirmed. It is now already four, five days, so this is real," he said.

Analysts say China operates the world's most extensive and sophisticated Internet censorship system and routinely blocks foreign websites.

"There is an increasingly aggressive attitude towards what they (Beijing) call 'Internet sovereignty' and they are confident about talking about Internet censorship in positive terms," Goldkorn added.

"The past two years have seen a consistent tightening of all kinds of censorship on the Internet and media."

A graph showing Internet traffic from China accessing Gmail dropped sharply on Friday, according to Google's Transparency Report, and has not returned to normal levels.

"We've checked and there's nothing wrong on our end," a Singapore-based spokesman for Google told AFP.

Internet users in China were irate Monday, with many spewing vitriol on Sina Weibo, a Twitter-like microblogging service.

"The reason for blocking of Gmail domestically is political problems... it reflects the grim situation facing the political environment," one user said.

Another commentator fumed, "Protest the government blocking Gmail! Demand its restoration!"

China tightly controls the Internet, and only a fraction of its online population of 632 million can circumvent government restrictions.

Controls include the blocking of foreign websites such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube using a system known as the "Great Firewall", as well as routinely deleting content the ruling Communist Party deems offensive.

A Chinese police officer has been arrested after a female migrant worker was allegedly beaten to death in a case which sparked anger over the authorities' latest apparent abuse of power.

The arrest over Zhou Xiuyun's death earlier this month, reported by the state-run Global Times newspaper on Monday, has triggered a wave of online commentary in China, where rights groups say abuse and violence by law enforcement authorities is common.

Zhou Xiuyun was attacked by the police officer at a construction site in northern Shanxi province where she was demanding delayed salary for her son totalling 20,000 yuan ($3,200), the Dahe newspaper reported Monday.

The situation descended into chaos when officers attempted to take away the 47-year-old, the newspaper said, citing her husband Wang Youzhi, who had accompanied his wife, along with their son.

The police officer seized Zhou by the neck and pinned her to the ground after she tried to stop the officers from handcuffing her husband, Wang was quoted as saying.

The three were brought to a local police station where an unconscious Zhou was then thrown onto the ground while Wang and his son were beaten up, leaving the father with four broken ribs.

It was not immediately clear precisely when she died, but footage showing the policeman trampling on the hair of a lifeless Zhou went viral online, prompting the local Public Security Bureau to issue a statement last Friday saying it had suspended the policemen involved.

"The police... were suspected of impropriety in handling the case. Zhou subsequently died abnormally," it said.

The statement also said the policemen were under prosecutor's investigation, but did not give further details.

The Global Times on Monday said one policeman -- who was surnamed Wang -- had been arrested, and another suspended.

The incident was the second hottest topic on China's Twitter-like Sina Weibo on Monday after the missing AirAsia jet.

"As the people's policeman, who gave you the power to infringe human rights and insult others' dignity?" asked one user. "You are an animal under a human cover."

Yu Feilong, an author, said in a separate posting: "He acts like an animal and he should be executed for the crime he committed."

Police officers in China are often accused by rights groups and critics of aiding companies or local governments in cases such as labour disputes, land seizures and evictions.

They often extort confessions with violence, according to human rights activists, while abuses carried out by urban management officers known as 'chengguan' also regularly trigger public outcries.

Deng Zhengjia, 56, was beaten to death last year by six chengguan for selling watermelons at a street stall without a licence in a case which sparked widespread public anger.


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