InsideGFW

Stories from inside the Great Fire Wall

EXPO makes the city “clean”

Only 10 days to go until the EXPO in Shanghai opens and the whole city is being told to “clean up” for visitors.

An old lady slowly passing through the empty newly decorated street.

A old woman passing the empty newly decorated street

“I’m happy to see that the old building I live in has been repainted although it could be much nicer if they also had repaired the inside, but I really don’t like that they are forbidding me to dry my clothes on the balcony for six months.” Xu is a resident of a “brand new” building and can’t hang his clothes outside the window under the sunshine because the building he lives in is within the 1 km no hanging area specified in a newly released law.

“I work every day until late in the evening and used to go to the street food vendor during my short break. He would have all kinds of food, noodles, rice, etc and it would be really cheap. But now that he is gone, I have to go to the restaurant which serves the same food but 2 times expensive.” Liu is a construction worker whose workplace is near the EXPO area. The food place he used to go to is now a parking lot of Chengguan*.

“I saw these 3 men with huge suitcases passed right below the barriers to the passenger restricted area, sat on the bench and even chatted for about a minute, and then got into different trains.” Marco is one of the many foreigners who came to Shanghai to work for one of the EXPO pavilions. “ These days with the Expo stuff I am seeing uncountable security guards, policemen, army men, etc, there are bag scanners in the subway often with 5 guys who aren’t much older than 18. They seem to be some kind of students / volunteer watchers, but very often they are not even watching rather just laughing or chatting on QQ on their phones – you can hear that “Pipipipipipi” sound…”

After I saw Marco’s post on the internet I wanted to know if the situation is real or not, so I passed the security check with my big backpack, ignoring the old woman besides me,  shouting at me to get my bag checked. After 2 seconds, I was already on the other side of the barriers . Looking back, nobody was chasing me, the old women and the young boy were both sitting still behind the x-Ray machine.

“At first, I applied of being a volunteer of the EXPO, and I passed several exams and interviews. But later, they send many of us, mostly just college students like me to be a security guard or whatever.” Bryan wrote this on his personal Blog and question, “How can we be a security guard? I know nothing about it. When the danger comes, we don’t even know how to protect ourselves! If you don’t need that much of volunteers, Why you ask them to do that and sacrifice their times to do those worthless works.”

Yesterday evening, the weather was kind freaky. First it’s warm and sunny, but when I got out of the subway it’s raining heavily, although I was without worry as I knew the street vendor would be excited to see me again. Outside the station I saw the saviour of “stupid” people like me who did not have an umbrella with them surrounded by four Chengguan who were busy throwing the umbrellas into a big trash truck- Busted! EXPO seems to be a bad time for me and so it was for him.

I just can’t wait to see those visitors who come from all over China and the rest of the world become like dogs in the rain when there are no more street vendors selling umbrellas on the “clean” streets.

*Chengguan.

In general the Chengguan serve as an official agency employed by cities across China “to tackle low-level crime.”[5] However, the agency is widely disliked by the Chinese due to their alleged abuses of power.[5]

Chengguan have been involved in several high-profile cases that highlighted public discontent towards a perceived abuse of power by Chengguan. One high profile case involved Cui Yingjie, who killed a Chengguan in 2006 after a confrontation in Beijing. Public support for Cui Yingjie before and during the trial may have affected the leniency shown Cui, who received a commuted death sentence.

Following an incident in Tianmen City (天门市), Hubei province in January 2008 in which the manager of a construction company, Wei Wenhua[6], was beaten to death for filming the actions of the Chengguan in a local dispute over rubbish dumping, nationwide calls were made to abolish the unit. Thousands of messages were posted over the Internet and protests took place in Hubei province. According to sources, some Chengguan officials have connections to organized crime.[7]


Jack's Weekly Updates

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April 22, 2010 at 10:00 pm Comment (1)

News bulletin-throw 50 Cent to Wu Hao.

Wu Hao is the Minster of the department of propaganda of Yunnan. He was giving a speech to university students in people’s university in Beijing while three human rights activist (Wang Zhongxia, Mo Zhixu, Tan Sutong) throwing fifty cents bank notes to him.

Wang Zhongxia was the first one to come to the front rostrum and throw a handfull of fifty bank notes to the up front of Wu Hao’s head with a slogan “Wu Hao, Wu Mao!” means Wu Hao is a Fifty cent and the other two followed.

The Fifty cent bank notes (Wumao) they throw to him means Wu Hao is a member of the networking commentator team also known as Wu Mao Party (Fifty cent Party) who will get paid after post a positive comment online. The protest was living on The Twitter under the tag of #wuhaowumao. Search this tag to get more information about it in Chinese or wait for me to update it late.

Sent from my iPod

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April 22, 2010 at 3:50 pm Comment (1)

300 Netizens protesting around the courthouse for 3 netizens

I reviewed the whole case last night and early this morning. Found out that some information I got is not 100% truth but an exaggerated results. Therefor I am sorry for given out the wrong information and corrected them. 1.there were protesters around the courthouse and the number was near 300. 2. Ai Weiwei was in Beijing not outside the courthouse.

On the morning of 17th. April there are more than two thousand(FALSE INFORMATION FROM TWITTER, the protester are less than 300.) netizens, coming from all over the country and Hong Kong, gathered in front of the courthouse in three netizens are on trial.

10.Feb. 2008, the 26 years old woman Yan xiaolin died in Minqing Fujian.The heart stricken mother Lin Xiuyin insisting that her daughter was killed during the gang rape forced by lots of people including the local police officers while the official answer is “heavily blood lost due to tubal rupture”. The illiterate mother ran into with the human rights activist Fan Yanqiong during the appealing who later helped her to write the appeal and posted her story online.

25th. July. 2009, Polices from Fuzhou detained nine netizens including Fan right after the post is exposed. Later some of the netizens got released, but Fan and other two netizens You Jinyou who helped her to made a video about it and Wu huayin is still under arrest charging for False Charges.

(FALSE INFORMATION FROM TWITTER, Ai Weiwei is in Beijing during the trail)
“The Chinese leading artist and vociferous social critic Ai Weiwei with 25,000 followers on Twitter is also in the crowd, trying to draw more attention from the media and thereby lower the general danger to the other protesters.”

Here is a video showing some pictures from the site. If u only saw a big blank, you probably will need to get a proxy.

“Ten thousand years* to Freedom!” “Ten thousand years to justice!” “Free three netizens!” Outside the court, protesters are shouting clear and loud.

“I’m proud to be here with all these people form everywhere in China, this may be one small step of the hard and long journey to democracy” On the street, one protester twits in Chinese under the tag of #fjwangmin.

“This is an important day for the shitizens* of China. By helping those three innocent netizens we are actually expiating the sins of being silent for more than twenty years since the Tienanmen Square massacre in 1989.” Another protester typed the above while standing outside the court.

The trail was over when I updating the post. The court changed the charge during the trail from false charge to defamation. You jinwu and Wu huayin are both being jailed for one year and Fan yanqiong for two years.

*Ten thousand years.

The use of the phrase “ten thousand years” in various East Asian languages originated in ancient China as an expression used to wish long life to the Emperor, and is typically translated as “long live” in English.

*Shitizen.

can refer to those people who are officially citizens but treated unjustly by their government as if they are just indentured servants or even slaves. When this meaning is used, often it is conveyed with compassion or self-mockery.

PS: Some Worlds from the video.

*The Song of Fuck your mother.

*Liu Xiaoyuan.
Famous human rights lawyer.

Jack's Weekly Updates

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April 16, 2010 at 11:59 am Comments (6)

One picture one time

This week, let’s start with two pictures. The first picture has a middle aged farmer in it and was taken during the period of the Cultural Revolution. The farmer was actually Jiang Qin who happened to be one of the most powerful in the group “Gang of Four*” that ruled china at the time due to the great trust given by the then old chairman Mao who also happened to be Jiang’s husband.

The second picture is of some members of the committee planting a forest; the so called the “Forest of committee” right before a flight to Beijing to attempt the “LiangHui*”.

Please note that all those women and men in this picture are smiling and look really relaxed; the cloths they are wearing and their hairstyle is fancy; there are blue plastic bags protecting their shoes, the shovels are OVER the ground and look brand new and the tree is newly planted.

Some times this stuff really makes me wonder. It’s been almost thirty years since the Cultural Revolution, but the propaganda seems to have turned into something much more shoddy and obvious. They don’t even care about whether people see through them. How will people react to them? Does anyone even care about it? What time is the worst? Is it a time where nobody cares about anything or is it one where everybody believes in “something”?

At the end of this article is a video which shows the bravado of the Chinese police force in overpowering a kidnapper equipped with a knife. I mean overpower, literal.

*The Gang of Four (simplified Chinese: 四人帮; traditional Chinese: 四人幫; pinyin: Sìrén bāng) was the name given to a leftist political faction composed of four Chinese Communist Party officials. They came to prominence during the Cultural Revolution (1966-76) and were subsequently charged with a series of treasonous crimes. The members consisted of Jiang Qing, Mao Zedong’s last wife and the leading figure of the group, and her close associates Zhang Chunqiao, Yao Wenyuan, and Wang Hongwen.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gang_of_Four

*The lianghui (两会) or “two organizations” is a general term used in many occasions in present-day China, most notably with reference to the two organizations which make national-level political decisions: the National People’s Congress (NPC) and Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lianghui

Jack's Weekly Updates

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April 9, 2010 at 11:28 pm Comments (0)

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