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Tags
- china
- fashion
- science
- beijing
- politics
- internet
- crashes
- law
- hu jintao
- wall street
- wikileaks
- wall street journal
- columbia university
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- jiang zemin
- search engines
- turning point
- sina
- google china
- value system
- the order
- zhou yongkang
- standing committee
- universities
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- google inc
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- ccp
- ministry of railways
- chinese communist party
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- north wind
- interest groups
- internet police
- and then
- political affairs
- the right
- august 21
Description
Follow us on TWITTER: http://twitter.com/cnforbiddennews Like us on FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/chinaforbiddennews Wenzhou train crash caused collective disobedience of media and netizens towards the Central Propaganda Department. Internet influence increased, and impacted interest groups of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). In China's Internet era, there are about 500 million netizens. The CCP strengthens monitoring of online opinions, blockading Falun Dafa information, and exposing power struggles between the factions of Hu and Jiang. On August 21, Beijing CCP Secretary Liu Qi inspected Youku and Sina Corporations, and listened to CEO Charles Chao of Sina, who introduced the microblogs. The former head of Google China, Kai-fu Lee also spoke. Sina microblog has over 200 million registered users. Liu warned Internet companies to avoid "false and harmful information" and spread the socialist core value system. After Wenzhou train crash, under the order of Zhang Dejiang and Zhou Yongkang, heads of rail and political affairs, the Ministry of Railways immediately buried the crashed train to conceal evidence. Li Changchun in charge of the Propaganda Department forbids media from reporting on it. Sina and other microblogs became places where millions of netizens disclose information and express their anger. Wall Street Journal quoted analysts and pointed out that Wenzhou's crash is a turning point of Sina's microbloging. Many users worry that this might be the end of microbloging. Recent official newspapers' editorials reinforce this concern. In this context, Liu Qi's visit to Sina headquarters may be an ominous hint. The North Wind (a netizen): "A while ago we saw CCTV criticizing the microbloging, but it suddenly stopped. I don't think this thing is over. Their purpose could be to stir public opinion, and then to launch a new round of Internet campaigns, followed by focussing on the microblogs." Liu Qi, Li Changchun, Zhou Yongkang and Zhang Dejiang are all key figures in Jiang Zemin's faction. Sina has relationships with Hu Jintao originally. The former CEO of Sina, Mao Daolin, is Hu's son-in-law, in 2003 he married Hu Haiqing, Hu's daughter. Boxun website recently revealed news from Hu's Office, that CCP now has a collective leadership. Politburo Standing Committee members have their own share of the work, where they have the right to decide. The control and management of the Internet basically are not under the instructions of Hu andWen. Information Office proposed to just close the microblogs, but Hu and Wen administration refuse to discuss the matter. In the next two years, Hu and Wen may utilize public online opinions to get rid of the most corrupted people within CCP. In March and Sept. 2010, Baidu, China's largest search engine, suddenly lifted restrictions on sensitive topics like the court cases against Jiang Zemin, the tide of CCP withdrawals, the Shen Yun shows, etc. It lasted many days. Li Tianxiao, Ph.D. in Political Science, Columbia University, said, with Internet police and 'Fifty Cent Party' monitoring, technical failures would be less likely to persist. Maybe Hu directed Baidu to do so, as to attack Jiang's forces. CCTV has bombarded Baidu for four days as a false website. Outside analysis see in this Li Changchun's efforts to strengthen supervision of Baidu, while cleaning the road for Xinhua Web and People's search engine. North Wind: "People's search engine may take actions soon, there is no doubt it needs to out compete Baidu. There is no better way than using CCTV to discredit it." US Google Inc. was forced out of the Chinese market in a similar fashion. WikiLeaks disclosed secret messages from US public affairs, that those who ordered the hacking of Google's Website, include Li Changchun, Zhou Yongkang and Liu Yunshan (Head of the Propaganda Department). NTD reporters Li Yuanhan and Zhou Ping
