Beijing

China’s Uyghur question as a strategic pit

Sa, 12/03/2013 - 12:10 -- Anonymous (doğrulanmamış)

The recent Tiananmen incident that led to the death of five people once again revived the debate on the Xinjiang/Uyghur question. The Uyghur issue not only exposes deficiencies in human rights and fundamental liberties in China but also appears as a hurdle for China’s two most pronounced strategic imperatives, namely “building a harmonious society” and the “peaceful rise of China.” PRC’s reaction to the recent incident and its pattern of handling crises of ethnic tension are increasingly dragging China into a strategic pit, which gets deeper with every instance of ethnic violence related to Tibet or Xinjiang. Beijing’s reluctance to acknowledge the root causes of minority discontent leads the PRC to “resolve problems in its own way” by using force, instilling fear in society, marginalizing minorities, and radicalizing dissent groups.

Wife of China’s jailed Nobel Laureate suspected of suffering from severe depression

Sa, 12/03/2013 - 11:51 -- Anonymous (doğrulanmamış)
Liu Xia, wife of imprisoned Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo, weeps in anguish after her brother was jailed in June. Photo: AP

The wife of jailed Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Liu Xiaobo is unwell under house arrest and possibly suffering from severe depression, but refuses to seek medical help as she is afraid of further punishment, her friends said on Monday. The accounts from Liu Xia’s friends shed a rare light into her condition since being held at home after Liu Xiaobo won the Nobel Prize in 2010. They also come two days ahead of a visit to China by US Vice President Joe Biden, during which human rights will likely be raised amid a broader crackdown on dissent and freedom of speech and assembly. Liu Xia wrote to prominent human rights lawyer Mo Shaoping in August that she was “close to going crazy, close to mental collapse” during the time of the trial of her brother, Liu Hui, on fraud charges, Mo told reporters.

Housing Prices Challenge China's Reforms

Sa, 12/03/2013 - 11:22 -- Anonymous (doğrulanmamış)
IMAGINECHINA New high-rise residential apartment buildings under construction in Lianyungang, Jiangsu province, Nov. 18, 2013.

Eight months after taking office, China's new government is still struggling to bring housing prices under control. Despite a series of measures since March, prices have kept up their relentless climb, frustrating first-time buyers and the government's urbanization drive. In October, 65 of 70 surveyed cities reported higher new home prices, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). The increases in China's four largest cities were the biggest since January 2011, Bloomberg News said. Price hikes from a year earlier ranged from 16 to 21 percent in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen, the NBS reported. In November, prices rose again in 69 out of 100 cities in a China Index Academy survey, Shanghai Daily said.

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