中国艾滋致孤儿童资助项目's profile东珍纳兰-中国艾滋致孤儿童资助项目(官方博客) ...PhotosBlogListsMore ![]() | Help |
东珍纳兰-中国艾滋致孤儿童资助项目(官方博客) China AIDS Orphan Project关注艾滋致孤儿童的身心健康及成长历程,用关怀和扶助去鼓励其勇敢面对未来成长中遇到的各种问题,重新感受曾经失去的亲情和人生指引,树立起自我奋斗并重获幸福生活的信心。发扬人性关爱精神,弘扬社会平等相助,共同抗击艾滋病所造成的社会遗害。 |
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August 19 转载洛杉矶时报报道China launches media crackdown
Authorities target bogus news reports and illegal publications. The action comes as leaders prepare for Communist Party congress.
By Mark Magnier August 16, 2007 China announced the launch of a broad crackdown on false news reports and illegal publications Wednesday as authorities struggle with a spate of embarrassing scandals and look ahead to the most important event on the country's political calendar. Although China's one-party leaders face no popular election, they are extremely sensitive before major political meetings, which tend to be heavily scripted. Wednesday's announcement comes as President Hu Jintao moves to consolidate his power at a Communist Party congress expected in October, set the conditions of his second term and secure his place in history. China is battling a wave of bad press at home and abroad over the safety and quality of toys, tires, toothpaste, seafood, pet food, pharmaceuticals and food additives, among others. But the media crackdown, announced on a central government website and in the People's Daily, the main party mouthpiece, is ostensibly a reaction to a couple of recent scandals. In one, a television station reported that pork buns were being stuffed with cardboard. The report received widespread attention, but the government ruled that the story was a fake and sentenced the recently hired journalist to a year in jail. Even if the story was false, some Chinese journalists and international rights groups have criticized the sentence as excessive, arguing that media ethics issues are best handled by news organizations. In another case, a journalist was beaten to death in January by thugs while reporting about a coal mine. Accounts differ on exactly what happened, but a cottage industry has grown up in which owners of illegal mines are blackmailed so that reports on their dangerous, unlicensed operations do not reach the public. Some say these cases were only convenient pretexts for a crackdown. "They need to control the society to be on the safe side and avoid anything that might spoil the happy atmosphere of their meeting," said Jin Zhong, chief editor of Open magazine, a Hong Kong-based monthly. "They don't like diverse opinions because they don't understand that debate is good for society. They feel that any criticism makes the government lose face." Others said the move was justified because of the expansion of Internet reporting in China, which has proved difficult to control. "Some people are even afraid to eat stuffed pork buns now," said Huang Nanping, a professor at Peking University's Marxism and Leninism Institute. "Fake news makes their lives unstable." As part of the campaign announced Wednesday, which is to last through mid-October, the government also announced a crackdown on illegal publications, including those that target the military, leak state secrets or "fabricate political rumors," the People's Daily said, quoting Liu Binjie, director of the General Administration of Press and Publications. In a step felt by China's nascent nonprofit world, the publication China Development Brief newsletter was shut down last month, ostensibly for conducting "illegal surveys." The publication tracked local and international civic organizations working on health, labor, environment and other issues. China's government has made no secret of its fear that foreign-funded nonprofit groups might try to unseat the Communist Party. On Wednesday, authorities shut two offices of a small group called China Orchid AIDS Project in Henan province. This followed the forced cancellation of an international conference on AIDS in early August and of a meeting of Chinese AIDS activists Wednesday. "This is very disturbing," said Sara Davis, executive director of Asia Catalyst, which has worked with several of the groups. "And it comes just at the moment when international eyes are on China." Reporters say a directive by propaganda officials in July has barred the state-run press from writing any "negative" news on the safety and quality scandals. "Food safety is a very sensitive issue right now," said a Guangzhou-based reporter. "The domestic media can't touch it right now." Chinese leaders are also facing discontent over a sharp increase in food prices. The consumer price index rose 5.6% in July, its steepest increase in 10 years. This comes at a time when the Communist Party has made a reduction in China's wealth gap a cornerstone policy. "I can't afford to buy much now, and the government really should do something to control this inflation," said Wang Shen, 29, a Beijing resident who works in marketing. "The price of almost every consumer item is going up, and people's lifestyles are deteriorating." The government's response to the wave of negative publicity has been to focus on the messenger. Zi Beijia, a reporter for Beijing Television, was jailed after the government determined that he had concocted a report in which makers of steamed pork buns were said to soak cardboard in caustic soda to soften it before flavoring it with pork juice. Analysts said the government was particularly angry because the report came from China's mainstream press. "I think the issue is politicized," said Jiao Guobiao, a former professor at Peking University, now in Germany, who lost his job after criticizing the propaganda ministry. "Does this mean the authors of all fake news get jail terms in the future?" In a memo leaked to the press this year, Chinese censors listed 20 topics off limits to reporters before the party congress, which occurs every five years. Among these are judicial corruption, campaigns for individual rights, sex crimes, lifestyles of the rich, and extramarital affairs. "The government can make real news turn into fake news," said one anonymous Internet posting. "I think they're worse than those stuffed bun makers!" -- mark.magnier@latimes.com 转载英国卫报报道China bans negative reporting ahead of party congress · Founder member of Democracy party imprisoned · Aids activists detained and NGOs shut down Jonathan Watts in Beijing Friday August 17, 2007 Guardian Unlimited China has ordered its media to report only positive news and imprisoned a pro-democracy dissident amid a clampdown on dissent ahead of the most important meeting of the Communist party in five years. Media controls have been tightened, Aids activists detained and NGOs shut down as the president, Hu Jintao, prepares for the 17th party congress, when the next generation of national leaders will be unveiled in a politburo reshuffle. Chen Shuqing - a founder member of the banned China Democracy party - suffered the toughest punishment meted out so far when he was found guilty yesterday of "inciting people to overthrow the government". The intermediate people's court in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, sentenced him to four years in prison. Chen was an outspoken critic of the Communist party, though because of the tightly controlled traditional media, his campaigning in recent years was largely restricted to the internet. The free-speech group Reporters Without Borders said it was appalled by the verdict. "Courts taking their orders from the Communist party continue to crack down on cyber-dissidents," the Paris-based organisation said. "We reiterate our appeal for the release of Chen and the 50 other cyber-dissidents and Internet users held in China." With the congress looming - the exact date is a secret, but it is expected in October - the domestic media have been forbidden from conducting independent investigations of food and product safety stories. In Beijing, the municipal propaganda department has issued detailed instructions to editors on how they should cover the test of traffic-easing measures, which started today. During the four-day trial, more than a million cars have been ordered off the roads. Local newspapers and TV stations can only report on the improvements to the environment and transportation. Interviews with inconvenienced commuters or images of over-crowded buses are forbidden. On Wednesday, the government issued new regulations that prohibit false news and illegal TV coverage. This is ostensibly a response to a fabricated report last month about cardboard being used as a filling for steamed buns. Zi Beijia, the TV journalist held responsible for the fake story, has been jailed for a year. Chinese journalists privately say the current atmosphere is stifling. International civil rights groups say the rules are a new threat to press freedom. "This crackdown is a legal gun to the head to responsible journalists who want to report on the basis of facts," said Sophie Richardson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "China has a long track record of using similar campaigns to weed out news that the authorities find objectionable because it exposes social and political problems." In recent decades, China has gone through cycles of media opening and repression. Since president Hu came to power five years ago, there have been steps backward - such as the jailings of several prominent journalists - and steps forward, including the easing of restrictions on foreign correspondents at the start of this year. But as was the case ahead of the last party congress in 2002, the leadership has reverted to bunker mode. Aids activists are also feeling the pressure. In Henan yesterday, the police shut down two offices of China Orchid Aids Projects, saying that they were part of an illegal organisation. Earlier this month, Li Dan, the director of the group, was detained for 24 hours and a planned conference about the legal rights of people infected with HIV cancelled. Meg Davis, founder of the Asia Catalyst organisation that was to have participated in the conference, said China's leaders were excessively anxious ahead of the congress and the Olympics. "Groups like China Orchid Aids Projects are among the best and the brightest in the world. China should be showing them off, not shutting them down," she said. "We can't sit on our hands and stop fighting Aids for a year because of a sporting event." Guardian Unlimited (c) Guardian News and Media Limited 2007 August 17 开封办公室关闭始末8月15日 :当地工商、公安无端指责我方志愿人员是“非法组织”进行“非法活动”,勒令于17日14点前必须搬离河南大学。
8月16日:当地工商、公安强行要求我方志愿人员签收“非法经营”通知书。
8月17日:河大阻挠我方志愿人员搬迁工作,搬家公司借机敲诈,索要双倍费用。数名警方人员一直在场观望,并威胁志愿人员必须离开开封。
目前我方志愿人员以个人身份在开封代为保管我方物资,处境复杂多变,警方下一步行动尚未可知。已有实习生及老师被警方控制传讯。
让我们在此祝福他们一切平安!
人性不可泯灭!爱心不可践踏!
以下引用海外媒体报道:
August 03 个案调查:雪雪DZKFHJ003(需要资助)1. 化名:雪雪 2. 性别:女 3. 健康情况:非HIV 4. 档案编号:DZKFHJ003 5. 出生日期:1998年2月18日 6. 亲属:父亲(HIV),母亲(类风湿) 7. 家庭介绍:父亲十来年前卖了很多的血,于2004年秋天大检查时初告知感染HIV,母亲因类风湿,腰不能直起来,没有劳动能力。虽有四亩地,但没有充足的劳动力去耕作。另外,因为最近十几天河南连续刮大风下大雨,致使她家的房子倒塌,现在她家人面临着住房的问题。 8. 分析: a) 案主的成绩优秀。在我们走访她家的时候,与案主及家人交流中了解到,孩子在学校表现良好,案主表现出强烈的求知欲望。 b) 业余生活单调。当我们第一次来到案主的家时,家里只有案主一个人,虽然外边有人在玩,但没有出来。当我问为什么不去我们的活动中心时,她也不回答。在与之家人交谈中,也从侧面了解到小女孩的这方面的情况。我们东珍活动中心可以解决案主这一方面的需求。但说服案主参与到我们的活动中来,还需要我们社工的进一步介入。 c) 案主心理。案主年龄虽小,但受到家里的影响,不爱与别人交流,不能与其它正常家庭的孩子一样有一个良好的童年。 d) 家庭情况。家庭是孩子生活、娱乐、歇息的重要地方,它关联着她的生活,心理等大部分的方面,但这仅有的家,也受到来自自然和人为的威胁。也带来了一系列的问题。如果家庭再得不到一定程度的帮助,不光家庭会崩溃,而且孩子的读书都会出现问题。 9. 介入方法: a) 争取社会人士、基金会等社会慈善组织的帮助,尽量为案主提供助学的资金,保障案主能正常的接受教育。家庭的不幸,那是大人的麻烦,不应该由孩子来分担,她们应该有自己的童年,完成自己的学业,我们应该为案主寻找资源,争取一定的资助,保障案主学业的顺利完成。 b) 心理辅导。根据案主的情况,我觉得有必要做心理辅导。通过我们的辅导,能让案主过一个她应有的童年,消除来自家庭的消极影响。这其间主要是通过游戏的方法,让她在游戏中放松,去学会战胜困难。 c) 对其家庭进行资助。河南今年是一个不多见的多雨的年份,连续的下雨给这个家庭带来了新的困难,就连自己仅有的房子也在雨中倒塌。这是他们的棘手的问题,虽已向当地部门反映,但据当地人看来,希望不大,因此,我们应积极为这个家庭寻找资助,让案主有一个遮风避雨的地方 |
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