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SINO DAILY
Migrant death sparks 'anti-suicide' protest in China
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) May 12, 2013


China probes top state planner amid graft claims
Beijing (AFP) May 12, 2013 - China is investigating a top state planner for alleged "serious disciplinary violations" the official Xinhua news agency said Sunday, in phrasing which typically refers to corruption cases.

Liu Tienan, deputy director of the National Development and Reform Commission, was under investigation by the Communist Party agency tasked with probing corruption and other malpractice by party members, the report said.

Allegations against 58-year-old Liu, formerly party chief of China's National Energy Administration, surfaced last December when a journalist at an influential business magazine accused him of improper business dealings.

Luo Changping, deputy managing editor of Caijing Magazine, claimed the official used his position to enrich family members. The energy agency denied those allegations at the time.

China's newly-installed leaders have made tackling corruption a key policy, with President Xi Jinping saying there would be "no leniency" for wrongdoing.

In a recent case the former railways minister Liu Zhijun has been accused of bribery and abuse of power and is now awaiting trail.

Bo Xilai, former party chief of the southwestern metropolis of Chongqing, is also expected to face trial for taking bribes and helping cover up his wife's murder of British businessman Neil Heywood.

The death of a young Chinese migrant worker in Beijing has sparked an online protest by those sceptical of official claims that she committed suicide.

Highlighting suspicion of the government by Chinese society, hundreds of people have made online "anti-suicide" pledges to mock the police ruling that the woman killed herself.

"Hereby I say I won't commit suicide under any circumstances, for the Communist Party, for the country or for the people," said one using the name PY-Liu in a posting on a microblog.

"If I commit suicide, then it's definitely fake."

The government keeps a tight grip on the Internet, censoring content it deems politically sensitive or pornographic, but experts say the number and speed of microblog postings makes them more difficult to control.

Online postings had claimed the 22-year-old woman from the eastern province of Anhui was gang-raped and thrown to her death from the building of a clothing market in the May 3 incident.

But police say she jumped from the building and their initial investigations ruled out sexual assault and murder. Authorities have arrested a woman for "spreading rumours" about the case, state media have reported.

Another microblog user, yesir1, urged more to support the cause: "One wave after another! Microblogs are full of anti-suicide pledges. There has never been such a strange state of affairs in 5,000 years (of Chinese history)."

The case also sparked a rare public protest outside the clothing market in the tightly-policed Chinese capital on Wednesday, according to witnesses and Internet postings.

Participants reportedly included her relatives and other migrant workers but media reports, which could not be verified, said the family has accepted compensation of 400,000 yuan ($64,000) for her death.

The Jingwen market, a maze of hundreds of tiny clothing stores, is largely staffed by women who have moved to Beijing in search of jobs.

The case has now generated more than 35,000 postings online, many calling for greater transparency by authorities over the case.

"The police say the Anhui girl falling was a suicide without any violation (of her). There is serious doubt. Why not release all the surveillance videos?" said Fubai De Shehui.

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SINO DAILY
China academic's weibo blocked over 'rumours': Xinhua
Beijing (AFP) May 10, 2013
A prominent Chinese law professor had his social media account suspended, state media said Friday, after authorities vowed a renewed crackdown against "online rumours". Several people have been arrested in recent weeks for posting material online on topics ranging from bird flu to mysterious deaths, but activists say that rumour charges are sometimes used to suppress political content. H ... read more


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