January 2007 Archives

Killing Puts Focus on Corruption in Chinese News Media

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By Howard W. French | The New York Times
31 January 2007

SHANGHAI, Jan. 30 - Lan Chengzhang sat in a car outside the office of a mining company while a colleague ventured inside to make inquiries.

It was his first month of work with the newspaper, and he had decided to take on what anyone in the area knew could be a most dangerous subject, the illegal coal mines that proliferate in the sooty hill country of Shanxi Province.

Within minutes, a band of men armed with lengths of pipe and other crude weapons set upon him, beating him so badly that within a few hours he succumbed to his injuries. Though severely beaten, his colleague from the China Trade News survived to tell the tale.

Attacks against journalists are not uncommon in China, even if deaths are rare. But in ways that few could have expected, the killing on Jan. 11 of this untested reporter for an obscure publication has become a watershed event, with reporters and editors around the country seeing in the murky contours of the case a cautionary tale for their booming but deeply troubled profession.

That Mr. Lan’s death has become a national event was helped in no small measure by China’s leader, Hu Jintao, who in an unusual statement a few days afterward demanded that justice be done.

But it also highlighted the culture of corruption that many journalists acknowledge pervades the industry, particularly the practice among some reporters of demanding money from subjects to avoid damaging articles.

Mr. Hu, who has spoken often of the need for the government to strengthen its control over the news media, has been seen as anything but a friend of journalists. Given that, many here said, and after several days of intense commentary about the killing in the international news media and on Chinese blogs and Web sites, Mr. Hu may have been moved to protect his country’s image.

“Hu Jintao is very much concerned about China’s international image,” said Zhan Jiang, dean of journalism at the Youth Politics Institute in Beijing. “Since this incident has been widely reported both at home and overseas, he had to do something.”

Inside the Chinese news media, introspection over the killing of Mr. Lan, 35, has been unusually forthright, mixing criticism of the government with harsh self-examination. Beijing is condemned for limiting the scope of honest, aggressive journalism, and the journalists themselves are condemned, indeed by themselves, for giving in to corruption as a professional way of life.

“This kind of control and degeneration are inseparable,” said Zhang Ping, a veteran reporter at Southern Metropolis magazine. “The control dims the hopes one has for a career in journalism, and many reporters, like people at Xinhua, don’t have any honorable feelings from being a journalist. They get no rewards the normal way and discover that in China only lie-telling can bring you income.” Xinhua is the main government news agency.

>> Read the complete article

Pirated Windows Vista on sale in China on global launch day

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By Agence France Presse | via (uncensored) yahoo.com
January 30, 2007

As Microsoft kicked off the global launch of its long-awaited Windows Vista, the software giant's new operating system also hit the streets of China -- in pirated form.

In an electronic market in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen, scores of sellers were offering the brand new software for as little as 10 yuan (1.3 US dollars), along with Microsoft Office, anti-virus software and others.

The sellers said Tuesday Vista was available even several weeks before its launch, although they would not say how they got hold of the version.

Described as the "official version of the new generation operating system" on its cover, the pirated copy offered an identification code at the back of the disk for downloading the software.

Microsoft could not be immediately reached for comment.

Vista, an operating system that took five years and six billion dollars to develop, hit the shops in 70 countries around the world Tuesday.

Counterfeiting remains widespread in China despite government efforts to control the problem following pressure from trade partners, particularly the United States and the European Union.

Everything from pirated books to CDs, DVDs, software, clothes, shoes and medicine can be found in most Chinese cities.

China warns on Olympics morality

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By BBC World News
January 29, 2007

Chinese authorities have warned government and Olympic officials not to indulge in corrupt or immoral behaviour during the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Officials will be monitored to ensure they are living clean lifestyles, the China Daily newspaper reported.

The city's Communist Party boss warned officials not to have their energies "dissipated by wine and women".

Liu Qi, also the organising committee chief, cautioned officials not to visit "entertainment venues" after work.

Losing face

Beijing's mayor has said that the eyes of the world's media will be on Beijing, with some 30,000 reporters expected to cover the Olympics.

"More than 20,000 unregistered reporters and 10,000 registered ones are coming, and they are going to cover every detail of Beijing in their articles," Wang Qishan said.

"We have to have a good Olympics, otherwise not only will our generation lose face, but also our ancestors."

The warnings came as Beijing's former vice-mayor faced criminal proceedings after being accused of accepting bribes linked to the building of Olympic venues.

Liu Zhihua, expelled from the ruling Communist Party last month, was also condemned for having low morals and for helping his mistress "seek profit".

China's Net users send wrong message

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (1)

By Steven Schwankert | infoworld.com
26 January 2007

The semi-annual report from the China Internet Network Information Centre (CNNIC) is almost always a cause for exuberance. There are millions more Internet users in China! Yippee! Hooray! Now if we could just sell one (or one more) of something to every one of those 137 million users, we'll be rich beyond our wildest dreams!

Unfortunately, anyone who reads the 122-page report (in Chinese, available here ) will realize that the news, especially for those looking to cash in on Chinese Internet growth, is not particularly good.

The raw numbers make China the world's second-largest Internet market, although that's been true for a while now. An overzealous China Daily, the country's official English-language newspaper, claimed Thursday that China would surpass the United States by 2010 , even though current growth rates of about 23 percent per year does not support that. In fact, Internet growth has slowed slightly since its peak in 2001 and 2002.

That China's current Internet population represents just over 10 percent of its total population shows that there is still significant room for growth. But to date, Internet penetration has failed to extend far beyond China's most developed areas. Beijing and Shanghai alone account for over 50 percent of the total number of users; add in wealthy Guangdong province, which surrounds Hong Kong, and the number hovers around 75 percent.

By contrast, the Xizang Autonomous Region -- the official name for Tibet -- ranked last for Internet use, with only 160,000 Internet users, 0.1 percent of China's total.

Chinese Internet users were previously viewed as a self-selecting, more highly educated and affluent group than their non-wired comrades. That doesn't seem to be the case. The simple majority (52.4 percent) of Internet users are aged 24 and under. While this group, in many Western countries, especially the United States, disposes of much of its disposable income and therefore is a highly desirable demographic, that's not the case in China.

As for Internet users being a viable market, 57 percent of users surveyed stated their monthly income was 1,500 renminbi ($193) or less (over 61 percent if you include users who said they had no income). That sounds to me like high school kids, college students, or young people in their first job. And if they're living in Beijing, Shanghai, or Guangdong province, that meager income isn't going to take them very far. If two-thirds of all Chinese Internet users are connecting via broadband, usually ADSL (asynchronous digital subscriber line), then 100 renminbi or so is going towards Internet access every month.

Only 5 percent of respondents said their income was 5,000 renminbi or more per month, usually a level associated with having reasonable disposable income. Five percent of 137 million [m] is still almost 7 million people, but it negates the idea that Chinese Internet user are, as a group, worth targeting.

Who stands to profit from Chinese Internet growth? As usual, the answer is Chinese companies, in this case Internet service providers such as China Network Communications Group Corp., and established Chinese Internet players such as Sohu.com Inc., who can push their customers towards value-added and mobile phone-based fee services. Still feeling exuberant about China's Internet market?

http://www.infoworld.com

Blackmailing By Journalists In China Seen As 'Frequent'

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By Edward Cody | Washington Post Foreign Service
25 January 2007

SHENZHEN, China -- At 9 p.m. in a dark Shenzhen parking lot, Bai Xiuyu handed over a plain brown envelope containing 15,000 Chinese yuan, the equivalent of nearly $2,000, in what was supposed to be a discreet blackmail payment to a local reporter.

Hidden in Bai's car, Gou Hua, Shenzhen bureau chief for the Southern Metropolitan Daily, watched the scene unfold and recorded the transaction with his cellphone camera. His interest was more than journalistic; the reporter receiving the payoff was Zhou Yu, a 29-year-old newcomer to Gou's own bureau.

To his consternation, what Gou saw the evening of Sept. 21 was another instance of the blackmail journalism metastasizing through China's news media. Bai's money was supposed to buy silence on alleged wrongdoing at her health clinic in this southern Chinese city. But more generally, journalists and officials say, Chinese reporters are demanding such hush money with increasing regularity from businesses and government agencies in exchange for the withholding of unfavorable news.

"It's very, very frequent," said Ma Yunlong, an editor whose newspaper exposed an instance of extravagant extortion in central Henan province in 2005. Ma said the case involved 480 reporters and others pretending to be reporters who asked for "shut-up fees" to keep news of a mine flood out of the public eye.

In many ways, blackmail journalism grew naturally out of a system in which Communist Party censors control the news rigorously, barring reports that could be seen as unfavorable to the party or contrary to the government's political goals. If the ruling party distorts the news for political reasons, blackmailing reporters have concluded, why wouldn't they do it themselves for financial reasons?

In addition, local party officials, long used to manipulating information, have been complicit in the payoff system when it suits their needs. In the everybody-does-it atmosphere, even non-reporters have found ways to get in on the take by posing as journalists.

After the August 2005 mine disaster, for instance, reporters and their friends in Henan province dispatched a flurry of cellphone messages as soon as they heard the news -- not because they were eager to report on it, but because they knew local officials would be eager to hush it up.

By the time Fan Youfeng of the Henan Business News arrived at the mine, in a village in Jiliao county, local officials said they had already given money to so many reporters and phony reporters that the coffers were dry. But still more people showed up, Fan wrote, and the officials sought more cash, pressing the mine owners to chip in.

>> Read the complete article

China Strains to Fit Migrants Into Mainstream Classes

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By Howard W. French | The New York Times
January 25, 2007

SHANGHAI, Jan. 24 — It seemed like an ordinary day earlier this month at the Jianying Hope School for migrant children here, with fidgety students settling down in their modest classrooms as their teachers prepared for the day’s lessons.

Then the police officers arrived. At least 100 of them, according to witnesses, along with even larger numbers of security agents and local officials, who quickly filled the school’s courtyard and cordoned off the site. The private elementary school, the teachers and their 2,000 students were informed, was being closed.

“They just showed up and closed the school while we were teaching,” said one teacher, who asked that her name not be used for fear of official retribution. “Children were crying, teachers were crying and people were very scared. You know in China that the police are the most frightening thing.”

The school closing has been widely criticized — even on the Web site of the state-run People’s Daily. Yet, for all the professed shock, the heavy-handed operation was just one of scores of closings in China’s big eastern cities recently as national and local authorities wrestle with a mandate that they provide a public education for the children of migrant workers, who until recently were barred from public schools in their parents’ adopted cities.

Indeed, the closing of the Jianying school, far from an effort to deprive the children of an education, was the logical, if rough-edged, consequence of the new measure.

Under complex rules governing social mobility that are a legacy of Maoist times, the laborers from rural China — who have streamed to the country’s rich eastern cities by the millions to build their towering skylines, clean and cook for others and do all kinds of work that more prosperous city dwellers shun — face widespread discrimination.

>> Read the complete article

China official vows to 'purify' Web

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By REUTERS | via CNN
January 24, 2007

Chinese Communist Party chief Hu Jintao has vowed to "purify" the Internet, state media reported on Wednesday, describing a top-level meeting that discussed ways to master the country's sprawling, unruly online population.

Hu made the comments as the ruling party's Politburo -- its 24-member leading council -- was studying China's Internet, which claimed 137 million registered users at the end of 2006.

Hu, a straitlaced communist with little sympathy for cultural relaxation, did not directly mention censorship.

But he made it clear that the Communist Party was looking to ensure it keeps control of China's Internet users, often more interested in salacious pictures, bloodthirsty games and political scandal than Marxist lessons.

The party had to "strengthen administration and development of our country's Internet culture", Hu told the meeting on Tuesday, according to the official Xinhua news agency.

"Maintain the initiative in opinion on the Internet and raise the level of guidance online," he said. "We must promote civilized running and use of the Internet and purify the Internet environment."

In 2006, China's Internet users grew by 26 million, or 23.4 percent, year on year, to reach 10.5 percent of the total population, the China Internet Network Information Center said on Tuesday.

The vast majority of those users have no access to overseas Chinese Web sites offering uncensored opinion and news critical of the ruling party.

>> Read the complete article

World's newspapers condemn China's satellite shooting

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By Agence France Presse | via (uncensored) Yahoo
January 20, 2007

Newspapers around the world have expressed concern after China shot down a satellite, urging new efforts to prevent an arms race in space.

The London Times said the action, reported by US officials but not confirmed by China, was an eerie reminder of the Cold War stand-off between the United States and the Soviet Union.

"In a power play reminiscent of the Cold War, it has unilaterally kicked aside a well-established international policy of voluntary restraint," The Times editorial said.

"Instead of gloating, Beijing should move rapidly to repair the damage, first by providing full details of the test. It should then rejoin the consensus against testing in space."

>> Read the complete article

'Chinese Government': The New Phrase Censored by China's Internet Control

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By Shen Hua | Radio Free Asia | The Epoch Times
January 15, 2007

The phrase "Chinese government" has been censored on China's official Web sites. If one searches for "central government of the People's Republic of China" on the Best Tone 114 Web site (China Telecom's Internet phone service and information platform), one gets: "Sensitive phrase: [we] can only provide news search service." An Internet user from China told the reporter that even "Mao Zedong" is listed as "illegal information" in some of China's search engines.

On the Best Tone 114 Web site, not only is "central government of the People's Republic of China" censored, but "democracy" and "National People's Congress" are also sensitive information. Zhou Guoqiang, an Internet user from Beijing, said he often comes across such disconcerting situations.

Zhou said, "When you search 'Mao Zedong,' 'Zhu Rongji' [China's previous premier], and 'Wen Jiabao' [China's current premier], many Internet search engines will tell you these are illegal phrases. Some chat Web sites won't even let you key in these phrases."

According to Zhou, administrators of Chinese Web sites often receive from the government lists of phrases to filter out. All phrases fall into two categories, those that can and those that cannot be searched. Users get "illegal information" in the results if their search falls in the latter category. Sometimes users protest about the censored words being outrageous. Then the administrator will come out and apologize for "technical errors."

Internet control by the Chinese government not only affects what results the Internet users get, but also impedes the freedom of posting messages on the Internet. Zhou said there are ways to bypass this. "One can add a space between characters of the censored phrases or simply create new names for the censored phrases. We refer to Jiang Zemin as Jiang, and the Chinese Communist Party as 'Wei-Guang-Zheng' ["great-honorable-righteous," the three words that have always been used to describe the Chinese Communist Party by the Chinese media]. There is a large pool of [these] misused words but it is becoming chaotic."

Fang Jue, a commentator on China issues who currently resides in the U.S., said, "Censoring the phrase 'Chinese government' tells people that government control over the media is way too much. Internet control in China blocks all phrases that can possibly lead the people to ponder democracy, freedom, and human rights. The range of control is going too far. They are blocking every neutral phrase that relates to politics."

Click here to read the original article in Chinese
http://epochtimes.com/gb/7/1/6/n1580917.htm

Smoking in China

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By Barry Petersen | CBS News
16 January 2007

This Letter from Asia comes from Beijing. Here's a fact of dubious distinction about China: One in three cigarettes smoked in the world is smoked here. This is not a country of smoke-free zones, or in most cases, of even smoke-free parts of restaurants.

Imagine the frustration of people like Dr. Henk Bekedam of the World Health Organization. He's fighting for good health. "If anyone lit a cigarette behind you in a bar or restaurant and you look over your shoulder and try to indicate 'Please, why are you doing this? I'm enjoying my meal!" No effect," says Dr. Bekedam.

While China happily lights up, the rest of the world is snuffing out. In America, places like California and New York City have laws so smoking is no longer allowed in restaurants or bars, and it doesn't stop here. Jump across the Atlantic to a fast growing number of European countries banning smoking in public places - even France, home to the smoky Paris bistro.

What blocks such moves in China is an insidious alliance between smokers and the government, which monopolizes cigarette production and makes millions on taxes . In some provincial areas, the money coming from cigarette taxes make up half the local government revenue.

>> Read the complete article

China Blocks Entry to Scorsese's "Departed": Sources

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By REUTERS | The New York Times
January 17, 2007

China's movie censor will not approve Golden Globe-honored film ``The Departed'' for domestic cinematic release due to its mention of a Chinese plan to buy military equipment, government sources said on Wednesday.

Martin Scorsese was named best film director at the Golden Globes on Monday for ``The Departed,'' a crime thriller many think might earn him first Oscar either for best directing or for best film.

``There is no chance 'The Departed' will be shown in mainland cinemas because the U.S. side declined to change a plot line describing how Beijing wanted to buy advanced military computer hardware,'' said onesource.

``That part of the plot is definitely unnecessary,'' added the source, who asked not to be identified as he does not have permission to speak to the foreign media.

``The regulators just cannot understand why the movie wanted to involve China. They can talk about Iran or Iraq or whatever, but there's no reason to get China in,'' added the source, who is close to the country's movie regulator.

Another government source, who also asked for anonymity, confirmed the decision.

>> Read the complete article

China's Rights Record Criticized

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By Maureen Fan | Washington Post Foreign Service
January 12, 2007

Report Says Conditions Worsened Significantly in 2006

Human rights conditions in China deteriorated significantly in 2006, with about 100 activists, lawyers, writers and academics subjected to police custody, house arrest, incommunicado confinement, pressure in their jobs and surveillance by plainclothes security forces, a new report by Human Rights Watch said.

Several widely publicized cases involving journalists and rights lawyers were cited in the report as evidence of a severe crackdown, prompted in large part by fears that individual cases of unrest might lead to regional instability. There were 39,000 cases of "public order disruptions," or large protests, in the first half of 2006, four times as many as 10 years ago, according to data from the Public Security Ministry.

Authorities fired and jailed journalists, shut down more than 700 online forums and ordered eight Internet search engines to filter "subversive and sensitive content" based on 10,000 key words, according to the report, which was released Thursday by the New York-based watchdog group. Lawyers who represented peasants protesting mistreatment were badly beaten, detained and arrested. In March, new restrictions were announced requiring protesters' attorneys to report to local judges in cases involving 10 or more plaintiffs.

In an indication of official attention being paid to perceived agitators, China's top security chief last weekend toured Shandong province, where a blind legal activist was jailed after revealing abuses stemming from China's one-child-only policy. Luo Gan, a member of the Communist Party's Politburo Standing Committee, ordered judicial departments to deal with "discordant elements" at their source.

>> Read the complete article

China steps up campaign against exiled Uighur rights activist

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By Agence France Press | via (uncensored) Yahoo
07 January 2007

China's ruling Communist Party has stepped up a campaign denouncing an exiled dissident nominated for the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize as a separatist and "terrorist".

US-based Rebiya Kadeer, leading a struggle for greater rights for minority Uighur Muslims in westernmost Xinjiang region, was the subject of a meeting of party officials in the region on Sunday, the China News Service said.

"To call Rebiya (Kadeer) the 'mother of all Uighurs' is absolutely preposterous and ... amounts to defaming an ethnic minority," the service quoted vice head of the party in Xinjiang as saying at the propaganda meeting.

"The statements of Rebiya clearly show that she wants to destroy the peace and stability of Chinese society, this does not conform with the requirements of the Nobel Peace Prize," Nuer Baikeli said at the meeting in the regional capital of Urumqi.

Xinjiang officials further accused Rebiya of trafficking in illegal drugs and engaging in illegal economic activities, the service said.

Rebiya, who was jailed for five-years in 1999 for her rights activism, was nominated for the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize which was awarded in October last year to micro-credit pioneer Muhammad Yunus of Bangladesh.

The 59-year-old stepped up her activism despite failing to win the prize, most notably by testifying before the Canadian parliament last month and urging the release from prison of her children who are still in China.

Xinjiang officials also accused her of engaging in activities to try and topple the central government and seeking Xinjiang's independence from China through "violent terrorist activities," the service said.

Rebiya was released from prison and exiled to the United States in March 2005. She had been jailed for leaking state secrets.

The release of the mother of 11 came after a vocal international human rights campaign aimed at securing her freedom.

>> Read the complete article

Royal attacks China over rights

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (1)

By BBC News
January 07, 2007

The Socialist candidate for the French presidency, Segolene Royal, has called on China to meet its international obligations on human rights.

Ms Royal, in Beijing for a three-day visit, criticised China's record on jailing journalists and lawyers.

"Professionals who have participated in defending rights should be protected," she said. "This is part of (China's) international commitments."

Ms Royal is to meet Chinese Vice President Zeng Qinghong on Monday.

Speaking during a tour of Beijing's Forbidden City, she said that ties with China should not mean "losing our fundamental values".

"The question of human rights should not be delinked from other problems," she said.

She also touched on the issue of environmental damage caused by China's rapid development.

"It is necessary to link economic development, environmental protection and the development of social rights," the French news agency AFP quoted her as saying.

"When there is serious environmental degradation, when water is polluted and millions of people have no access to clean water, this is an attack on human rights."

>> Read the complete article

By Human Rights in China | 中国人权
January 02, 2007

Human Rights in China (HRIC) has learned that Gansu-based activist Sun Xiaodi is facing serious harassment by local officials and unknown persons, and has been unable to obtain official permission to seek medical treatment in Beijing for a potentially life-threatening health condition.

Sun Xiaodi has spent more than a decade petitioning the central authorities over radioactive contamination from the No. 792 Uranium Mine in the Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Gansu Province. On December 1, 2006, HRIC presented Sun's acceptance message for the prestigious Nuclear-Free Future Award in Window Rock, Arizona. The award selection was made by a jury of international environmentalists, activists, scholars and journalists.

Sources in China told HRIC that Sun has faced an intensification of harassment since he was presented with the Nuclear-Free Future Award. He is under constant surveillance by State Security officials, and since December 5 has experienced several midnight raids on his home by unknown persons throwing stones at his door and windows. Sources say that when Sun reported the attacks to local state security officers, they told him, "You're free to leave if you want to!"

Sun has long been a thorn in the side of local officials because of his petitioning over the radioactive contamination, and since being detained briefly in early 2006, he has had his water and electricity shut off numerous times for no apparent reason. Although he is no longer officially under residential surveillance, in practice his every movement is monitored, and if he leaves the area for any reason, he is followed and interviewed by security personnel upon his return. He has also been the subject of official slander.

In November, a medical examination revealed a 4-5-centimeter tumor in Sun's abdominal cavity. (Residents of the area where Sun Xiaodi lives suffer an unusually high rate of cancer and other health conditions associated with radioactive contamination.) Given the limitations of local medical facilities, Sun put in a request with local public security officials for permission to go to Beijing for further diagnosis and treatment, but after nearly two months he has received no reply. Sun is currently experiencing such physical discomfort that he has difficulty sleeping, and in addition to the tumor he suffers from gall stones and coronary heart disease.

HRIC condemns the oppressive treatment of Sun Xiaodi by local officials in apparent retaliation against his receiving an international environmental award. The Chinese government is a party to numerous international agreements that require its cooperation in implementing international environmental standards, and has promised a "Green Olympics" in 2008. The international community should take the opportunity to put pressure on the Chinese authorities to fulfill its promises on the environment, and to protect the rights and physical safety of environmental activists such as Sun Xiaodi. The central government should also take immediate steps to ensure that local officials do not prevent Sun from traveling to Beijing and receiving the medical treatment he requires.

>> Read the complete article

Jobs scarce for China's graduates

Bookmark and Share
| | Comments (0)

By Mitchell Landsberg | Los Angeles Times
28 December 2006

Each year millions of new degree holders vie for few openings. Some blame official policy.

BEIJING — For the better part of a 20-hour journey, Yu Meng had slept as the train jostled and rolled across the north of China.

A broad-faced, cheerful 26-year-old graduate student in chemistry, she had come from remote Gansu province to attend a job fair in the capital. Now, still bundled in a knee-length brown parka, a clutch of resumes in her hand, she was trying to elbow her way to the front of a recruiting booth — one of hundreds sprawled across the vast interior of the capital's China International Exhibition Center.

Around her swirled thousands of other recent and upcoming college graduates from all over China, all competing for a limited pool of jobs. It was a graduate's nightmare that mirrored a national problem: too many people, too few jobs.

Figures vary, but the size of China's higher education system appears to have at least quadrupled in the last decade as the nation has pushed relentlessly toward building a modern economy. Next spring, Chinese colleges and universities expect a record 4.95 million graduates, up 820,000 from this year.

More than a million of them will wind up jobless, according to estimates. The glut is leading students and colleges to what might be considered acts of desperation.

In Guangzhou recently, 286 graduates and post-graduates competed for 11 positions as street cleaners, according to the official New China News Agency. The city hired one candidate with a PhD, four with master's degrees and six with bachelor's degrees.

"Given the already grave employment situation in the country … the employment pressure on university graduates will be obvious," Wang Xuming, a spokesman for the Ministry of Education, said at a recent news conference.

All of which is causing an air of concern among students.

>> Read the complete article

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries from January 2007 listed from newest to oldest.

December 2006 is the previous archive.

February 2007 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.




Beijing 2008
Silenced - China's Great Wall of Censorship. This book takes the reader on a fascinating and disturbing trip behind China’s Great Wall of Censorship. It also tells the story of Voice of Tibet, the radio station China couldn’t silence.

Powered by Movable Type 4.0

Readers' Comments

  • jay: While China acts to thwart the US and other's efforts to help Africa, such as in Darfur, we... [more]
  • Dar: Regardless of the motivation of those in the Chinese government, sanctions will hurt the pe... [more]
  • Carole: Comment to "Joe:" Animals are sentient. Also, concern for animals doesn't take anything a... [more]
  • Carole: I agree that a boycott of the 2008 Olympics is needed. However, I think the Chinese relati... [more]
  • Brian Anderson: We've just posted our cover article from our forthciming issue, Guy Sorman's remarkable "Em... [more]