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Tainted Milk Parents Held

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By Radio Free Asia
September 14, 2009

Chinese authorities detain parents observing the anniversary of a far-reaching milk scandal that sickened their children.

Three parents of children sickened in China's 2008 tainted-milk scandal were detained after observing the one-year anniversary of the milk scandal, and another who planned to join them has been taken to an unofficial "black prison," victims' parents say.

Guo Caihong and Zhou Jinzhong from central Henan province and Xiang Qingyu from southern Jiangsu province met last Friday at a restaurant in suburban Beijing's Daxing county, parents said. But authorities then detained and questioned them.

Milk powder contaminated with an industrial chemical killed at least six babies and sickened nearly 300,000 others with painful kidney stones last year. Friday marked one year since Sept. 11, 2008, when a Chinese dairy recalled hundreds of tons of baby formula and the government vowed "serious punishment" for those responsible.

Chinese authorities are jittery and eager to crack down on dissent ahead of the 60th anniversary of Chinese Communist Party on Oct. 1. Police have arrested or detained leading dissidents and are harassing lawyers who defend them.

Zhao Lianhai, a representative of victims' parents, said a local official from Henan contacted Guo Caihong on Friday and promised to take her home from Beijing.

"But on Saturday afternoon, a volunteer told me that the three parents had been taken by their respective local officials to an unknown place instead of home. When they were led away, local police were there as well," Mr. Zhao said.

Zhou Jinzhong, one of the three parents, described what has happened.

"On Saturday, I was taken away by staff members from the Henan Province Office in Beijing, and then they questioned me. Now I am with local officials from our township and our village. I will be heading home tomorrow," Zhou said in an interview Monday.

He said the two other parents received similar treatment.

Another parent of a tainted-milk victim, Liu Hai from Siyang city, had planned to attend anniversary activities in Beijing but was sent to a "law study group," an unofficial detention center also known as a "black prison."

"My husband has been taken away by an office of the local government," Liu's wife said.

"This is the news his uncle managed to get through his connections. For me this is the end of the world."

Original reporting by Qiao Long for RFA's Mandarin service. Mandarin service director: Jennifer Chou. Translated by Ping Chen. Written for the Web in English by Sarah Jackson-Han.

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Beijing Limits Information on Burmese Refugees Remaining in China

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By Michael Wines | The New York Times
September 2, 2009

Chinese officials imposed an information blackout on Tuesday on the situation along its border with Myanmar and began taking down tents that had sheltered an estimated 30,000 refugees who fled into China to escape recent fighting between Myanmar's military and ethnic rebels.

But news reports stated that many thousands of refugees remained in China, unwilling or unable to return to Myanmar, formerly called Burma, and it was not clear how the Chinese government intended to address their plight.

The Chinese authorities withheld comment on the border situation on Tuesday, aside from saying, in a Foreign Ministry briefing, that "necessary humanitarian assistance" was being provided. And they began ordering foreign journalists to leave the area around Nansan and Genma, Chinese towns on the mountainous border where the refugees have been housed in seven separate camps.

While about 4,000 refugees had returned to Myanmar on Monday, the day after the fighting ended, the pace has since slowed significantly. Only about 30 people crossed the border into Myanmar in a half-hour period on Tuesday morning, The Associated Press reported.

"It seems to be slowing down," one foreigner near Nansan said in a telephone interview on Tuesday. "There's still a large number of refugees in and around Nansan, both in the camps and hanging around." The foreigner, who asked not to be identified, said Chinese Army troops had stepped up patrols in the area.

An unknown number of those who fled to China during the fighting are Chinese citizens who have been conducting business in Myanmar, where China is building dams and other projects and has extensive mining ventures. They are unlikely to return soon.

China has insisted that the northern Myanmar region of Kokang is safe and stable after the fighting last week, in which hundreds of government troops overwhelmed an armed ethnic group, breaking a cease-fire that had prevailed for two decades. Human rights groups and others have warned that the junta's actions could ignite a wider conflict in the area, where other, better armed, ethnic groups also are resisting government control.

Thai newspapers and The Irrawaddy, an independent magazine that focuses on Myanmar, have reported that the government is sending fresh troops into the northern state of Shan in an attempt to consolidate its control there. The army wants the rebels to disarm and join a government border patrol force, as required under a new Constitution. Most of the rebels have resisted the order, which would effectively place them under government control.

Myanmar's military junta apparently seeks to take control of the region before elections, the first in almost 20 years, that are scheduled for next year. Outside monitors accuse the military junta of brutal human rights violations as part of its effort to stay in power. The Myanmar government has said that 26 of its soldiers and at least 8 rebels died in three days of battles.

The Myanmar conflict has thrust the Chinese government, one of Myanmar's only staunch backers, into an awkward situation. China has provided diplomatic support to the junta in exchange for access to its considerable mineral wealth and cooperation in efforts to suppress a growing cross-border trade in heroin and other illicit drugs. The flood of refugees prompted the Chinese to issue muted criticism of the junta, on Friday calling for it to secure Myanmar's borders.

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Lead Children Denied Tests

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By RADIO FREE ASIA
August 26, 2009

Parents in China say authorities are failing to make good on promises to test children for lead poisoning.

Promises by local government officials offering free blood tests to children affected by pollution from smelting plants in the central Chinese province of Hunan have yet to be fulfilled, residents and officials said.

An official at the hospital near worst-hit Wugang township, where more than 1,000 children are believed to have higher-than-normal levels of lead in their blood, said the hospital had not yet been told how to deal with the large numbers of worried parents trying to book tests.

"There are several dozen patients coming for blood tests every day, but I don't know the actual patient numbers per day," said an employee who answered the phone at the Wugang People's Hospital.

"Senior management has requested a survey [of lead poisoning cases], and we will know the procedure in a few days' time," she added.

Local officials have promised the closure of privately owned zinc and manganese smelting plants after being hit by a wave of violent clashes between police and angry parents in central Hunan and northern Shaanxi provinces in recent weeks.

Official Chinese media also reported that free blood tests would be available for children affected by the polluting factories, but residents of Wugang say the authorities have yet to deliver on their promises.

Bribery alleged

"There are only three government permission slips for free individual blood tests for the whole village," a mother surnamed Wang from Wugang said.

"Some parents are willing to pay the cost themselves in order to have their children checked. However, local hospitals have been bribed by someone, so the parents never see the correct results," she said.

Another Wugang villager surnamed Zhang said she had been turned down for lead tests at several hospitals in the area.

"Some said there was no electricity, some said the machines weren't working, and some said the maintenance staff hadn't shown up for work at the right time, and so on," Zhang said.

Some villagers even went as far as Hengyang city, taking their children to at least five hospitals, she said.

"But none of the children has actually been tested," she said.

A resident of nearby Shuangjiang village surnamed Liu said she was turned down for a blood test for her two-year-old as far away as southern Guangxi province.

"They knew about the lead poisoning cases in Wugang and they asked if I was from there," she said.

After she told the truth, the hospital refused to test her child.

Calls to the Wugang township government went unanswered during office hours Monday.

Cover-up

A villager from nearby Hengjiang village surnamed Wang said the township government had initially tried to cover up the widespread incidence of lead poisoning among local children.

"The government at first had promised to give an answer [to our complaints] but didn't keep their word," she said.

"Then, the villagers surrounded the cars of officials. Finally, the government [said it would] allow three children to go for free blood tests," she said.

More than 1,300 children have been poisoned by lead from the year-old manganese factory near Wugang, with hundreds of cases also reported near a cement factory in Hunan's Lengshugang city, and Fengxiang county in northern Shaanxi province.

The Dongling Lead and Zinc Smelting Co. was ordered by environmental protection authorities in Fengxiang county to suspend lead and zinc production Aug. 6 following a public outcry.

Fengxiang county government has offered free blood tests for 1,016 children aged 14 and under from three villages of Changqing Township, official media reported.

Original reporting in Mandarin by Qiao Long. Mandarin service director: Jennifer Chou. Translated by Chen Ping. Written for the Web in English by Luisetta Mudie. Edited by Sarah Jackson-Han.

>> Original source

Reporters banned from Chinese village

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By BBC World News
August 25, 2009

Police and local government officials in China have swamped a village at the centre of a lead poisoning case in Changqing, which left hundreds of children sick.

Villagers are forbidden from speaking to journalists, and reporters attempting to visit the area are being detained and questioned by the police.

Quentin Sommerville was one of those detained in Bao Ji, a township of Changqing.

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Parents of China lead victims fear for future

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By Francois Bougon | Agence France Presse AFP | via UNCENSORED Yahoo! News
August 23, 2009

HENGJIANG, China (AFP) - The landscape near Hengjiang village offers a picture-postcard view of China, with rice paddies, water buffaloes and rolling green hills. It seems an unlikely spot to find industrial pollution.

But more than 1,300 children in this rural part of central Hunan province have tested positive for suspected lead poisoning, caused by a nearby manganese smelting plant, and parents are worried, confused and scared about the future.

"In late July, the children here started feeling unwell -- they had headaches, they couldn't sleep and were generally quite weak," said one 40-year-old man whose 13-year-old daughter has been affected.

The man, who refused to give his name for fear of trouble with the local authorities, said a group of parents complained to officials at the Wugang Manganese Smelting Plant in Wenping town, but they were ignored.

Now, the factory has been shut down, two plant executives have been detained, one is on the run, and two officials from the local environmental protection bureau are under investigation for dereliction of duty.

Another smelting plant in northern Shaanxi province was ordered to close its doors this month after more than 850 children were found to have lead poisoning, according to official reports.

The twin incidents highlight how China's rapid industrialisation over the last 30 years has led to widespread environmental damage, resulting in some of the world's worst water and air pollution.

Many poverty-stricken regions in China's rural interior have allowed the establishment of high-polluting industries without the necessary environmental standards in a desperate bid to boost economic growth, state media has said.

The manganese plant in Wenping -- which residents say has been spewing black smoke and dust since it opened more than a year ago -- was unlicensed, state media reported.

It is located within 500 metres (yards) of a primary school, a middle school and a nursery, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

In both Hunan and Shaanxi, angry villagers protested, demanding answers.

So far, they don't have any, and they fear for their children's future.

The father of the 13-year-old girl in Hengjiang says the lead level in her blood was 120 milligrams per litre -- surpassing the normal reading of between zero and 100 milligrams. His nine-year-old son so far is healthy.

"Most of the cases so far have not been that serious, but we really don't know what is going on. It's the unknown that scares us," he said.

Another villager, who also asked not to be named, approached, clutching requests sent to four local children to undergo secondary exams at a hospital in the provincial capital Changsha.

"They gave us initial results, and now they want to do new tests -- what does that mean?" he said.

In preliminary tests, 1,354 children -- 70 percent of those under the age of 14 in four villages near the plant including Hengjiang -- were found to have elevated lead levels in their blood.

A reading of more than 200 milligrams is considered hazardous. Children are more vulnerable to lead poisoning, which can harm the nervous system and impair motor skills.

The lead poisoning scare comes less than a year after China was rocked by a massive contaminated milk scandal. Six infants died and 300,000 fell ill after consuming products tainted with melamine, an industrial chemical.

"The reason why children are often victims here is specific to China," Zhao Lianhai, who leads an activist group for parents whose children consumed bad milk, told AFP.

"There is a lack of responsibility, and of willingness to investigate to the end to find out who is responsible. Officials protect each other, and there is a laissez-faire attitude towards their corruption."

Near the Wugang plant, one villager lambasted a local Communist Party boss who criticised the factory's failure to abide by environmental standards in the local press.

"On the day the plant opened its doors, he was there," the man said with visible disdain.

>> Original source

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