• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • NBCNews.com
  • TODAY
  • Nightly News
  • Rock Center
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • msnbc
  • Breaking News
  • Newsvine
  • Home
  • US
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Travel
  • Local
  • Weather
Advertise | AdChoices
  • Recommended: Will China mediate the Israeli-Palestinian peace process?
  • Recommended: 'Get out': Over 1,000 take to the streets in China to protest oil refinery
  • Recommended: Chinese spooked by food scandals take action - by growing it themselves
  • Recommended: A Nixon returns to China, retracing steps of 1972 visit

In Behind the Wall, NBC News correspondents and producers examine events and trends in China, both big and small.

  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • 30
    Jan
    2013
    11:02am, EST

    Resounding silence in China as dissident wins US human rights award

    Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

    Actor Richard Gere, right, puts an arm around Chen Guangcheng after the Chinese dissident was awarded the Tom Lantos Human Rights Prize in Washington on Tuesday. Next to Chen is his wife, Yuan Weijing, and adjacent to her is Lantos' widow, Annette Lantos.

    By Ed Flanagan, Producer, NBC News

    BEIJING — Blind Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng urged the United States to not put business interests ahead of Beijing's human rights abuses and to help end the Communist Party's "rule of thieves" at an awards ceremony in Washington, D.C., Tuesday.

    "It is clearly difficult to shift attention away from issues of finance and the economy," Chen told the award ceremony's attendees in translated remarks read out in English by actor and noted Tibet advocate Richard Gere. "[But] remember that placing undue value on material life will cause a deficit in spiritual life."


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The 41-year-old self-taught lawyer also urged the United States to hold fast to its founding principles such as democracy, human rights and freedom of speech when dealing with China.

    Chen's words could well be making some American officials squirm. As the Chinese and U.S. economies become more interdependent, Beijing has applied pressure for the two countries to put aside human rights issues and focus on mutual business interests.

    China is the United States' second-largest trading partner behind Canada, and growth has it poised to move into the top spot. Goods and services trade between the countries totaled $539 billion in 2011, according to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.

    Chen is best known for his daring nighttime escape from 19 months of house detention in his native Shandong province in April. Despite breaking his leg during his dash for freedom, he managed to travel some 300 miles to Beijing, where he sought refuge at the U.S. Embassy.

    His escape to U.S. custody sparked a diplomatic maelstrom that eventually led to his negotiated release from the embassy to a Beijing hospital. Chen and his family were later granted permission to travel to New York University, where he could continue his legal studies out of the Chinese media spotlight.

    Blind social activist Chen Guangcheng is starting a new life of freedom in the U.S. NBC's Michelle Franzen reports.

    Acquaintances 'have been threatened'

    Chen accepted the Tom Lantos Human Rights Prize, named after the only Holocaust survivor to have served in the U.S. Congress. Lantos' background had a "profound resonance" in his heart as he remembered his experience, that of his relatives in China and that of other human rights advocates still in detention, Chen said.

    "Recently, many friends and neighbors who I have been in touch with by phone have been taken into custody by the authorities for questioning," Chen said. "They have been threatened and made to describe what our conversations have been about."

    Chen's nephew Chen Kegui was sentenced last month to three years in prison after he was found guilty of assaulting local officials with a knife. The family says that officials barged into Chen Kegui's home and that he had been acting in self-defense.

    In sheltering Chen and helping to negotiate his exit to New York, the U.S. government outraged Beijing, which roundly rejects foreign involvement in its domestic affairs.

    Chen's frequent speeches and interviews in the United States regularly make news among China watchers and human rights advocates, but in China his words are blocked and censored.

    On China's popular Twitter-like service, Weibo, Chen's name has long been blocked and mention of his award Tuesday generated no comments.

    Beijing is likely to have bristled at Chen receiving an American peace prize. State media gave no attention to his award and the Foreign Ministry did not issue a statement on it.

    37 comments

    The U.S. wants to earn points by showing token support for a Chinese "human rights activist" but does not want to focus on the fact that the man is fiercely opposed to abortion and population control laws. We can expect the Chinese government and media to deceive their people since they are Communis …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, china, human-rights, dissident, ed-flanagan, chen-guangcheng, tom-lantos
  • 4
    Jun
    2012
    12:14pm, EDT

    China censorship: Shares fall 64.89 points on June 4, 1989 protest anniversary

    Bobby Yip / Reuters

    People take part in a candlelight vigil at Hong Kong's Victoria Park on Monday to commemorate those who died during the military crackdown of the pro-democracy movement at Beijing's Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989.

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    BEIJING – Government controls many aspects of life in China, but for today at least the invisible hand of market forces proved too strong even for the country’s ruling Communist Party.

    In an apparent coincidence, Shanghai’s local stock market, the Shanghai Composite Index, opened trading this morning at 2346.98 points. Read backwards, it looks like the date, June 4, 1989 – this day 23 years ago when the Communists brutally cracked down on pro-democracy activists in Tiananmen Square and elsewhere in the capital.


    Even more bizarre? By the end of trading in the afternoon, the market had lost 64.89 points.

    PhotoBlog: Thousands remember Tiananmen Square crackdown

    The significance of the numbers might have passed without comment had authorities not tried to censor discussion of the anniversary by preventing users on Weibo - China’s equivalent of Twitter – from posting terms such as “six four,” “candle” and “never forget.” With users abuzz over the Shanghai Composite Index numbers, censors had to widen the list of banned terms to include the Chinese word for ‘Index’.

    Hundreds of students and other civilians are estimated to have been killed in 1989 as People’s Liberation Army soldiers entered the capital to clear the streets of protesters. The topic of the crackdown is taboo in this country and little discussed aside from sanitized official accounts in textbooks that call the event a “political disturbance.”  

    Security around Tiananmen Square is typically boosted before the anniversary and censors work to keep discussion to a minimum. 

    June 4, 1989: NBC News reports as Chinese soldiers crush demonstrations.

    State Department deputy spokesman, Mark Toner, issued a statement on Sunday urging the Chinese government to "release all those still serving sentences for their participation in the demonstrations; to provide a full public accounting of those killed, detained or missing; and to end the continued harassment of demonstration participants and their families."

    In response, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, Liu Weimin, called U.S. statements on the June 4th incident a “crude meddling in domestic Chinese affairs.”

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Will Saudi-Bahrain union plan provoke Iran?
    • US drone strikes in Pakistan kill 27 people in 3 days
    • New Vatican documents leaked after arrest of pope's butler
    • Jublilee flotilla: A gloomy, gray - and great - day for UK
    • Murderer's corpse dragged from car, eaten by bear in Canada
    • Queen's critics face uphill battle during Diamond Jubilee
    • Tahrir Square occupied as anger grows over Mubarak verdict
    • Google tells Chinese when they're being censored
    • Secret donors, foreign firms bankroll UK queen's celebration

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


     

    50 comments

    The misogynous child-murderers of Tiananmen Square have never been held responsible for their crimes. That only reinforced the dictators' hold on the rest of the country. Killing baby girls, selling others, enslaving others.... When will the perversion stop? I document my own experiences at http://j …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, china, human-rights, protest, democracy, shares, tiananmen-square
  • 19
    May
    2012
    6:45pm, EDT

    Blind Chinese activist Chen in US: 'Promote justice and fairness in China'

    Keith Bedford / Reuters

    Blind Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng, center, is helped by his wife, Yuan Weijing, right, after arriving in New York on Saturday.

    By NBC News

    Updated at 11:15 p.m. ET: Blind Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng arrived in the United States on Saturday after China allowed him to leave a hospital in Beijing in a move that could end a diplomatic tussle between the two countries, NBC News reported. 


    Follow @msnbc_world

    Chen's escape from house arrest in northeastern China last month and subsequent stay in the U.S. Embassy was a huge embarrassment for China and led to a diplomatic rift while U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was visiting Beijing for talks to improve ties between the world's two biggest economies.


    A United Airlines plane carrying Chen, his wife and two children, landed in at Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey shortly after 6 p.m. Saturday, said NBC News' Bo Gu, who was on board the flight.

    During his flight out of China, Chen told Gu that he had to escape because his health was deteriorating quickly. He had a cast on his right leg but said he is recovering from an injury sustained during his escape.

    He said he believes China’s central government is good-willed and all the evil done to him and his family was by the Shandong authorities. He said he hopes the central government will investigate.

    Blind social activist Chen Guangcheng is starting a new life of freedom in the U.S. NBC's Michelle Franzen reports.

    Chen was promised he could return to China anytime he wants, he told Gu. He said his children were not happy to leave China, though.

    He also said he is concerned about his nephew, charged with attempted murder for injuring officials who broke into his house on the night Chen escaped.

    He expressed concern that "acts of retribution may not have abated" in his hometown. The village of Dongshigu, where Chen's mother and other relatives remain, is still under lockdown.

    Chen said after going on to New York that he was gratified the Chinese government had been dealing with his situation with "restraint and calm," Reuters reported.

    "I hope to see that they continue to open discourse and earn the respect and trust of the people," Chen, speaking through a translator, told reporters outside a New York University housing building in Manhattan's Greenwich Village neighborhood.

    "I'm very grateful for the assistance of the American Embassy and also (for) receiving a promise from the Chinese government for protection of my rights as a citizen over the long term," he said. "I believe that the promise from the central government is sincere and they are not lying to me."

    "I believe that no matter how difficult the environment nothing is impossible as long as you put your heart to it ... I hope everybody works with me to promote justice and fairness in China," he said. "Equality and justice have no boundaries."

    Chen is going to study as a fellow at the NYU School of Law, the institution said Saturday. 

    Earlier: Blind Chinese activist Chen leaves Beijing on flight to US 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Explosion at school in Italy kills 1, injures several more
    • Sri Lanka holds parade to mark victory over Tamil separatists
    • Japanese woman, 73, reaches Mount Everest summit
    • Vancouver Island park’s 800-year-old tree falls to illegal loggers
    • Panetta seeks another $70M for Israel rocket shield

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    133 comments

    So now what? What kind of job is he going to get to provide for his family? Or are they just going to live off the goodwill of the American Taxpayers?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, china, human-rights, abortion, u-s, beijing, chen-guangcheng
  • 19
    May
    2012
    1:57am, EDT

    Blind Chinese activist Chen leaves Beijing on flight to US

    By Bo Gu and Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    Updated at 7 a.m. ET: BEIJING – Blind Chinese social activist Chen Guangcheng began the final leg of his long odyssey to freedom, leaving Beijing Saturday on a flight to the United States.

    Early Saturday morning NBC News called Chen at the Beijing hospital where he has been held since leaving the U.S. Embassy on May 2. Chen said he still didn’t know when he was leaving but remained optimistic that it would be soon.


    Moments later, NBC News made a second call to Chen, during which a group of Chinese officials were heard entering the room.

    Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    Police check in Chinese activist Chen Guangcheng's luggage at Beijing airport for a flight to the U.S.

    One of them was heard telling Chen, “wrap up, you are leaving today.”

    During a 10-minute conversation, Chen was told he would undergo some final medical check-ups and then he and his family would be taken to the airport. 

    At one point, Chen, 40, reminded the officials that the investigation into his detention in Shandong should continue after his departure. 

    After the officials left, Chen got back on the phone. He sounded excited about his imminent departure and said he had left the phone on so that NBC News could hear the conversation.

    Why did blind activist Chen Guangcheng anger Chinese authorities?

    News of Chen’s release from hospital and departure to the United States caused a stir online and foreign journalists rushed to Beijing’s Capital Airport.

    Uncredited / AP

    In this photo released by the US Embassy Beijing Press Office, blind lawyer Chen Guangcheng sits in a chair at the U.S. embassy before he left for a hospital in Beijing, May 2.

    At the airport, it was largely business as usual, with no apparent additional security around. 

    Shortly after he arrived at the airport, he appeared to be uncertain that he would actually be leaving. "I'm at the airport now. I've already left the hospital. But there are many things that are still unclear," he told Reuters, saying he had not got his passport.

    'Thousands of thoughts'
    But NBC News watched as two security officers walked up and checked in plain black suitcases, apparently the family’s luggage, and a ticket counter representative confirmed that Chen and his family had checked in on the flight.

    "Thousands of thoughts are surging to my mind," Chen told The Associated Press by phone. 

    Vice President Joe Biden talks with NBC's David Gregory about human rights activist Chen Guangcheng and its greater implications for the U.S.-China relationship.

    To his supporters and others in the activist community, Chen expressed gratitude and indicated that he hoped to return. 

    "I am requesting a leave of absence, and I hope that they will understand," he said. 

    The flight took off shortly before 6 a.m. ET. Chen is expected to travel to New York, where he has been offered a fellowship at New York University.

    His departure brings to an end a saga lasting weeks that has put a strain on US-China relations and underscored continued human rights issues in the mainland.

    Chen, a self-taught lawyer who has worked to expose forced abortions under China’s tough one-child policy in his home province of Shandong, was sentenced to four years in prison in 2006 for disrupting traffic and damaging property.

    Upon his release, he was placed under house arrest until his daring escape last month to the American embassy in Beijing.

    Chinese crackdown on dissident's family and friends

    Chen initially stated he wished to stay in China to help bring about reform, but later changed his mind and said he wished to leave for the United States.

    At a U.S. Congressional hearing on May 4, Chen pleaded for help and requested again to be brought to America.

    Chinese officials earlier this week had begun the process of preparing a passport for Chen and his family, but Chen told China Aid’s Bob Fu -- a friend of Chen’s –- that he and his family had still not received any passports from Chinese authorities.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    This is a breaking news story. Please check back for more details.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Vancouver Island park’s 800-year-old tree falls to illegal loggers
    • Japan mayor: I wouldn't hire tattooed Gaga, Depp
    • Panetta seeks another $70M for Israel rocket shield
    • Library opened by Mark Twain falls victim to cuts
    • China abuzz over reported N.Korea boat hijackings
    • Queen Elizabeth II's lunch for world monarchs sparks controversy

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    297 comments

    I wonder how much money this thing has cost taxpayers and how much more will be spent on housing this guy and his family. I wonder how many other dissidents will try the same thing. Maybe Chen and his family can catch a ride on one of the planes carrying some of the huge amount of Chinese goods sold …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, china, human-rights, abortion, u-s, beijing, chen-guangcheng
  • 3
    May
    2012
    4:17am, EDT

    Blind activist Chen Guangcheng: 'I want to leave China on Hillary Clinton's plane'

    The blind Chinese dissident also asked to live in the United States with his family, after the U.S. appeared to have brokered a deal that allowed him to stay in China. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    By NBC News and Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    UPDATED: 5:36 p.m. ET -- Blind Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng spoke on the telephone during a Congressional Executive Commission on China hearing, asking for help to leave China with his family.

    Follow @alastairjam

    Chen told the commission he would be in a much worse situation had he not been taken into the U.S. embassy, adding that he wanted to thank Secretary of State Hillary Clinton face to face.

    Speaking through a translator, Chen said he is concerned about the safety of his mother and brothers, adding he would want to find out how they were doing.


    Frantic efforts to resolve the diplomatic wrangle surrounding Chen continued in Beijing Thursday after he appealed for asylum following what was described as a "change of heart" over an earlier deal.

    U.S. officials said they are still trying to help the lawyer, who says he fears for his family's safety, and denied he was pressured to leave the American Embassy to resettle inside China in exchange for guarantees about his future treatment.

    Chen said by telephone from hospital, where he was escorted by U.S. officials and was being treated for a broken foot, that he had changed his mind about the resettlement deal after talking with his wife, who spoke of recent threats made against his family.

    In a string of interviews, he said he now wants to leave China as soon as possible. “My fervent hope is that it would be possible for me and my family to leave for the U.S. on Hillary Clinton’s plane,” he told the Daily Beast.

    A senior State Department official told reporters on Thursday that officials were "trying to get full, frank and candid conversation with him," adding: "We are not there yet. If he is changing his view, we're starting from square one with the Chinese."

    "When we feel that we have a clear view of what his final decision is, we will do what we can to help him achieve that," the official said.

    A source familiar with the situation said Chen and his wife appeared to have had "a change of heart" about a deal, agreed on Tuesday, to remain in China after receiving guarantees about their safety.

    U.S. Ambassador Gary Locke discusses the blind activist Chen Guangcheng's apparent 'change of heart' and how the U.S. is trying to help resolve the issue.

    China censors 'Shawshank' as Clinton heads to Beijing amid dissident drama

    "We don't know if there was intimidation or pressure from friends who think he made the wrong choice, or whether he got in the room with his wife and she was looking at a different situation," the source added.

    The New York Times reported that the saga leaves Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton's scheduled summit meeting in Beijing "under a cloud of confusion."

    It reported that the Obama administration was "exposed to criticism from Republicans and human rights groups that it had rushed to resolve a delicate human rights case so that it would not overshadow other matters on the bilateral agenda," such as the Iranian and North Korean nuclear programs and China's currency and trade policies.

    'I feel unsafe'
    Chen, a self-taught legal activist, explained his change of mind: "I feel very unsafe. My rights and safety cannot be assured here," he said. His family, who were with him at the hospital, backed his decision to try to reach the United States, he added.

    Blind activist: Chinese officials threatened my wife

    The activist, citing descriptions from his wife, Yuan Weijing, said his family had been surrounded by Chinese officials who menaced them and filled the family home. Chen, from a village in rural Shandong province, has two children.

    "When I was inside the American Embassy, I didn't have my family, and so I didn't understand some things. After I was able to meet them, my ideas changed."

    Us Embassy Beijing Press Office / AFP - Getty Images

    In handout photograph from the US Embassy Beijing Press office taken on Wednesday, Chen Guangcheng together with US ambassador to China Gary Locke as Chen's wife Yuan Weijing and children meet him in Beijing.

    Gary Locke, the U.S. ambassador, told reporters he could say unequivocally that Chen was never pressured to leave the embassy.

    Locke said Chen had two conversations with his wife before agreeing to the original deal on Tuesday. "We waited several minutes and suddenly he jumped up very eager and said 'let's go' in front of many witnesses," the ambassador said.

    Clinton urged China to protect human rights but made no specific mention of Chen, whom she had spoken to on Wednesday after he left the embassy.

    Blind dissident's case a 'hot potato' for US-China relations

    "Of course, as part of our dialogue, the United States raises the importance of human rights and fundamental freedoms," Clinton said. "We believe all governments have to answer our citizens' aspirations for dignity and the rule of law and that no nation can or should deny those rights."

    US-China relationship under pressure
    Despite Chen's change of heart about staying in China, it was unclear if he would be able to travel to the United States. Having left the Embassy and the protection of U.S. authorities, his fate is now in the hands of the Chinese government.

    U.S. officials appeared no longer to be with him on Thursday, with the dissident saying he had still not had an opportunity to explain his change of heart to the U.S. side.

    "I hope the U.S. will help me leave immediately. I want to go there for medical treatment," Chen said from the hospital, where a pack of camera crews and reporters was waiting outside, kept away from the entrance by a few police.

    Chen, 40, is a legal activist who campaigned against forced abortions under China's "one-child" policy. On April 22, he escaped 19 months of house arrest, during which he and his family faced beatings and threats.

    Us Embassy Beijing Press Office / Reuters

    An handout photo from US Embassy Beijing Press office shows blind activist Chen Guangcheng making a phone call as he is accompanied by U.S. Ambassador to China Gary Locke, Wednesday.

    Chen's dramatic escape from house arrest and his flight last week to the U.S. Embassy have made him a symbol of resistance to China's shackles on dissent, and the deal struck by Beijing and Washington would have made him an international test case of how tight or lose those restrictions remain.

    Now, however, his change of mind throws not only his own future into doubt but also raises questions about the wider U.S.-China relationship. 

    Reuters, The Associated Press, NBC's Kristin Wilson and msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Blind China activist: Officials threatened to kill my wife
    • Deadly suicide blast in Kabul after Obama leaves
    • Catholic priest: I've been secretly married for a year
    • New era as Aung San Suu Kyi joins Myanmar parliament
    • Bold move as Syria leader makes time for chess
    • N. Korea accused of jamming commercial flight signals

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    502 comments

    To: GOP Shut up, this is NOT your call. It's Hillary and Obama's. To: China Let us take the guy off your hands. He's going to be a PR nightmare as long as you have him.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us, featured, china, hillary-clinton, human-rights, beijing, activist, chen-guangcheng
  • 2
    May
    2012
    3:56am, EDT

    Blind activist Chen Guangcheng: Chinese officials threatened my wife

    Courtesy U.S. Embassy Beijing Press Office

    Blind Chinese activist Chen Guangcheng is seen holding the hand of U.S. ambassador to China Gary Locke, right, in this photo released by the U.S. Embassy in Beijing on Wednesday.

    .

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 10:50 p.m. ET: BEIJING -- In a visit to China on Thursday, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton cautioned China to protect human rights, the Associated Press reported.

    Without mentioning Chen Guangcheng, the blind Chinese dissident who sought refuge in the U.S. Embassy in Beijing for six days, Clinton said, “all governments have to answer to our citizens’ aspirations for dignity and the rule of law and that no nation can or should deny those rights.”  

    Only hours earlier, U.S. officials said they had extracted from the Chinese government a promise that Chen would join his family and be allowed to start a new life in a university town in China, safe from the rural authorities who had abusively held him in prison and house arrest for nearly seven years.

    In her remarks, Clinton did not mention Chen by name, although she had spoken with him hours before when he left the embassy. In a statement she welcomed the resettlement as one that “reflected his choices and our values.”

    This came after an interview Chen gave to the Associated Press on Wednesday from a hospital room in Beijing where he was taken for medical treatment, during which he said a U.S. official told him that Chinese authorities had threatened to beat his wife if he did not leave the embassy. He said he feared for his safety and wanted to leave.


    In a separate interview with Britain's Channel 4 News, Chen said he wanted to go to any country that will take him and his family and added he's disappointed that American officials didn't stay at the hospital with him as he thought they would.

    "Nobody from [the] embassy is here … I don't understand why. They promised to be here," he told Channel 4 News.

    Chen also told NBC News that he asked the U.S. to take concrete steps to guarantee his safety.

    The State Department denied much of the AP's account of what Chen said. 

    The blind Chinese activist at the center of a diplomatic tug-of-war between Washington and Beijing left the U.S. Embassy Wednesday morning to receive medical care and be reunited with his family. NBC's Ian Williams reports.

    "At no time did any U.S. official speak to Chen about physical or legal threats to his wife and children. Nor did Chinese officials make any such threats to us," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told NBC News.  

    Chen was told his family would be sent back home if he stayed in the embassy, she said. 

    China censors 'Shawshank' as Clinton heads to Beijing amid dissident drama

    "At every opportunity, he expressed his desire to stay in China, reunify with his family, continue his education and work for reform in his country.  All our diplomacy was directed at putting him in the best possible position to achieve his objectives," Nuland added. 

    Chen's plight has overshadowed high-level talks on economic and international issues due to begin Thursday. The United States hopes the negotiations will encourage greater Chinese cooperation on trade as well over Iran, Syria, North Korea and other international disputes.

    Who is Fu? Chinese exile is 'God's double agent'

    In what earlier appeared to be a deal to end the diplomatic tussle between the U.S. and China over his future, Chinese authorities promised he would be relocated to a safe environment where he could study at a university, a U.S. official said, speaking prior to Chen's comments.

    Chen, who went to the embassy after making a daring escape from house arrest on April 21, ran afoul of local government officials in China for exposing forced abortions and other abuses. His dogged pursuit of justice and mistreatment by authorities brought him attention from the U.S. and foreign governments, and earned him supporters among many ordinary Chinese.

    Chen may have been forced to accept what he's offered, according to Zeng Jinyan, a long-time friend of Chen's family and also a human rights activist. Zeng has been tweeting about Chen's latest situation since Wednesday evening, some in Chinese, some in English, according to NBC News.

    Chinese crackdown on dissident's family and friends

    According to Zeng, Chen was unwilling to leave the American embassy but had no choice because his wife and two children would be sent back to Shandong province if he insisted on staying. It is not known when and how they arrived in Beijing, but Chen's wife Yuan Weijing told Zeng that local government in Shandong province installed security cameras inside her home and moved in, waiting for her and the children if Chen didn't agree to leave the embassy. Yuan also said she was arrested on April 27th when they found out Chen has escaped.

    Teng Biao, a lawyer who's been assisting Chen in the past few years, tweeted about his conversation with Chen Wednesday afternoon, asking Chen "I've heard you were threatened, is that true?" Chen said, "Yes, very true. People from the Foreign Ministry said this afternoon, if you didn't leave the embassy, your wife and children would have been sent back to Shandong." In the same conversation, Chen said the Shandong officials who escorted his family are still in Beijing.

    Blind dissident’s case a 'hot potato' for US-China

    Meanwhile, Chinese government is taking a more hard-lined attitude on the case, demanding an apology from the American government.

    Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said: "It should be pointed out that Chen Guangcheng, a Chinese citizen, was taken by the U.S. side to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing via abnormal means, and the Chinese side is strongly dissatisfied with the move."

    Jordan Pouille / AFP - Getty Images

    Chinese activist activist Chen Guangcheng (left) is seen in a wheelchair pushed by a nurse at the Chaoyang hospital in Beijing Wednesday.

    He stressed that China demands that the United States thoroughly investigate the event, hold relevant people accountable and ensure that such an event does not happen again. "What the U.S. side has done has interfered in the domestic affairs of China, and the Chinese side will never accept it," said the spokesman.

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton -- who arrived in Beijing Tuesday ahead of the talks -- said that the case had been handled "in a way that reflected his choices and our values" -- comments made before Chen's remarks that he feared for his and his family's safety.

    She said it was crucial to ensure that Beijing kept its pledge to leave him unmolested. "The United States government and the American people are committed to remaining engaged with Mr. Chen and his family in the days, weeks, and years ahead," Clinton added.

    Chen's supporters said last Friday that he had escaped after 20 months of house arrest and gone into U.S. government protection.

    More on Chen: Video reveals blind Chinese activist's plight

    NBC News, msnbc.com staff, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Obama hails the future of a 'new kind of relationship' with Afghanistan
    • China censors 'Shawshank' as Clinton heads to Beijing amid dissident drama
    • Want a bin Laden brick? Pieces of Abbottabad compound sell for a nickel
    • UN: More than 34 children killed in Syria since truce
    • For Afghans, death of bin Laden hasn't ended their problems

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    291 comments

    Seeing as we're basically being robbed of our wealth, our know-how, our jobs, and everything else that once made America great, why exactly is it that our politicians seen so determined to maintain this situation? It seems to me that our politicians are either grossly incompetent or are bought by th …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, china, clinton, human-rights, activist, dissident, chen-guangcheng
  • 1
    May
    2012
    7:51am, EDT

    China censors 'Shawshank' as Clinton heads to Beijing amid dissident drama

    U.S. relations with China are being put to the test over the fate of Chen Guangcheng, a blind Chinese dissident who escaped from house arrest in China and is believed to be in the U.S. embassy or another safe site. NBC's Ian Williams reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson and msnbc.com news services

    As Secretary of State Hillary Clinton headed to Beijing late Monday for a high-stakes meeting, China blocked Web searches of terms related to blind activist Chen Guangcheng including "Shawshank Redemption," the prison-break film being compared to his case.

    The drama over the dissident, who according to NBC News sources is holed-up under U.S. protection in Beijing, threatens to overshadow this week's top-level talks between the two governments.


    In a further complication, the activist is seeking to remain in China and continue his campaign for reform rather than living in exile -- creating a dilemma for Clinton and adding to tension between the world's two biggest economies. 

    Chen fled house arrest in eastern China a week ago with the help of supporters, slipping out under the noses of dozens of guards and into Beijing, dissident Hu Jia and other activists have said.

    Blind Chinese activist escapes from house arrest

    Such is the sensitivity surrounding the issue that neither country has made any official comment or even confirmed Chen’s whereabouts.

    According to a report in the Sydney Morning Herald, searches for Chen's name and the Chinese terms for "Shawshank", "blind person", "embassy", and Chen's home village of Dongshigu were all blocked on Sina Weibo, China's leading microblogging service.

    A blind human rights activist is said to be under the protection of the U.S. after escaping house arrest in China last week.

    Also blocked was "UA898", a United Airlines direct flight from Beijing to Washington, apparently after Web users speculated online about the possibility Chen would gain U.S. asylum, the newspaper reported.

    NBC sources: Blind activist is under US protection

    Chen's audacious escape from house arrest, under the watch of the world's largest domestic security apparatus, was a "miracle" of planning and endurance, said Guo Yushan, a Beijing-based researcher and rights advocate who has campaigned for Chen and helped bring him to the Chinese capital after his escape. 

    But he said the 40-year-old, self-taught lawyer wants to stay in China and campaign for reform. 

    Who is Bob Fu? Chinese exile is 'God's double agent'

    "He was adamant that he would not apply for political asylum with any country. He certainly wants to stay in China, and demand redress for the years of illegal persecution in Shandong and continue his efforts for Chinese society," said Guo on Monday, speaking in his first long interview since he was released from days of police questioning. 

    The New York Times reported that analysts characterized the diplomatic situation surrounding Chen as "fiendishly difficult to resolve."

    Behind The Wall: Video reveals blind Chinese activist's plight

    Chen, who campaigned against forced abortions as part of family planning, was confined to his village home in the eastern province of Shandong since September 2010, after release from jail on charges he rejected as spurious. 

    President Barack Obama nudged China to improve its human-rights record, saying the two countries' relationship "will be that much stronger and China will be that much more prosperous and strong as you see improvements on human rights issues in that country". 

    But at a news conference, he walked a fine line between not saying anything that would make it harder to resolve Chen's case while conveying U.S. concern for human rights and appreciation for wider cooperation with China. 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • U.S. official acknowledges drone strikes, says civilian deaths 'exceedingly rare'
    • Who is Fu? Chinese exile is 'God's double agent'
    • Did rogue spies or 'Pakistani Blackwater' shield Osama bin Laden?
    • Relatives wait anxiously outside Venezuelan prison after gunfire is heard
    • British spy probably was poisoned or suffocated in locked bag, expert testifies
    • Koalas get some protection in parts of Australia
    • NBC sources: Blind Chinese activist is under US protection

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    77 comments

    Don't get involved in this issue with the blind "activist." He is not an American. This is between China and one of its citizens. It is not our responsibility to rescue every repressed person in the world.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us, featured, china, clinton, human-rights, blind, chen-guangcheng
  • 30
    Apr
    2012
    9:21pm, EDT

    Who is Fu? Chinese exile is 'God's double agent'

    China Aid

    Taking a page from the "million hoodies" campaign in honor of shooting victim Trayvon Martin, China Aid created this show of support for Chen Guangcheng, who is blind, with hundreds of people donning sunglasses.

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    Updated at 9:13 a.m. ET: After the dramatic nighttime escape of Chen Guangcheng from house arrest in his Chinese village, one of the first people to know that the blind lawyer was safe in Beijing was thousands of miles away — in Midland, Texas.

    Pastor Bob Fu, 44, says he knew of Chen’s escape three days before the security guards surrounding the house discovered it. He says he was among the first to receive and post a 15-minute video of Chen, made in hiding, appealing to Chinese President Wen Jiabao to bring to justice the local officials who illegally imprisoned him and his family for months. Fu says he also had a hand in preparing U.S. officials for Chen’s escape and arrival at the U.S. Embassy, while also helping lay the groundwork for alternatives, the details of which he says he cannot divulge.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Kari Huus


    Follow Kari Huus on Twitter and Facebook.



    Fu knows China’s security apparatus from personal experience. He made his own escape from China, arriving in the United States as a refugee with his wife and newborn son 16 years ago.

    Now, through his Midland-based nonprofit China Aid, Fu is one of the leading voices on behalf of religious freedom in China, connected with activists in his home country and respected on Capitol Hill.

    "Bob Fu is one of the most credible people you’ll ever find about what is going on in China," said Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., who chairs the Human Rights Subcommittee within the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the Congressional-Executive Commission on China. "He’s very well connected and knows people inside of China who are the agents of reform — people like Chen who (take action) because they want a better China."


    According to tax documents, China Aid has raised several million dollars to fund legal counsel for "house church Christians," financial support for the families of jailed dissidents and publicity for human rights cases in China. In extreme cases, China Aid has helped fund "logistics" for an underground railway, Fu says.

    In China, worship is allowed only in state-sanctioned churches, mosques and synagogues. Evangelizing outside those sites and worshipping in independent churches, often called "house churches," is prohibited.

    China censors 'Shawshank' as Clinton heads to Beijing amid dissident drama

    Fu’s activism goes back to the Tiananmen protests of 1989, when he led a group of fellow students from Liaocheng University in Shandong province to join the massive rallies in the capital. After the crackdown on demonstrators he was one of many student activists required to attend special political study sessions and write self-criticism day after day. He worried that he would be forced to leave his hard-won position at the university.

    U.S. relations with China are being put to the test over the fate of Chen Guangcheng, a blind Chinese dissident who escaped from house arrest in China and is believed to be in the U.S. embassy or another safe site. NBC's Ian Williams reports.

    During this time, Fu said, he read a book given to him by American missionaries who were teaching English in China. It was the story of a famous Chinese intellectual who was addicted to opium in the early 1900s, but was able to shake the drug after he converted to Christianity.

    "I was really, really struck by the story," Fu said, in an interview with msnbc.com. "I came to the realization if you want to change China, the first thing you need to do is change people’s hearts. And if you want to change other people’s hearts, you first you have to change yourself."

    Jerry Huang / AP

    Bob Fu of the Texas-based rights group China Aid in Midland, Texas on Monday.

    Fu and his wife, Heidi Cai, began holding underground worship services and Bible studies, he said. At the same time, he was teaching English at the Communist Party School in Beijing.

    "I was God’s double-agent," he said, chuckling.

    In 1996, they were arrested and held in jail for two months, and then placed under house arrest, Fu said. Then they received word that they soon would be jailed again, he said, in the “sweep” that preceded China’s Oct. 10 National Day.

    By this time, Fu’s wife was pregnant with their first child, he said, but without the necessary permission from the government, which controls when a woman is allowed to have her one child. If she had been found out, she would be forced to have an abortion, Fu said.

    So in the dark of night, Fu escaped through a second-story bathroom window and Cai left in disguise, he said. They fled to the countryside, Fu said, where they were protected by "house church brothers and sisters."

    Fu said that with the shelter of this network, the help of a Christian policeman and travel documents obtained by a highly placed businessman, they were able to join a tour that went to Thailand and then Hong Kong, which was still under British control. Just three days before the territory was transferred to Chinese sovereignty, Fu and his wife were give refugee status, and flew to the United States.

    NBC sources: Blind activist is under US protection

    Fu and Cai lived in a suburb of Philadelphia, where he started China Aid in his garage while attending Westminster Theological Seminary. They later moved to Midland, Texas, where they are raising their three children.

    What prompted Fu to set up China Aid was a 2002 crackdown on a group of Christians in a house church in Hubei province that led to many arrests, among them five people who were sentenced to death, he said.

    Fu and a group of contacts in the Christian, dissident and exile communities started publicizing the case and raising money, he said. Ultimately, Fu said, they used the funds to pay for 58 lawyers to defend the accused. They contacted the media, making the front page of The New York Times and The Washington Post.

    Andrea Mitchell talks with Bob Fu, founder and president of China Aid, and Christopher Johnson, former China analyst with the CIA, about Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng's escape from house arrest under the Chinese government, and his current location in U.S. custody.

    "That year, all the five death sentences were overturned," Fu said. "It was a major legal victory, and even the 'evil cult' charge was removed."

    A group of activists who came of age as he did during the Tiananmen movement, are now human rights lawyers, many of them Christian, he said. Fu said he taps into this network, and links them to Washington by picking up the phone.

    'Little ants'
    Fu compares himself and fellow human rights activists to "little ants" forcing "one case after another into courts, moving around and mobilizing and going through all the technical procedures" in place under China’s laws, but often not observed or even taken seriously by officials. 

    "We want to move the pile of dirt with 1 million ants," he said.

    "I had never envisioned or wanted to establish (a nonprofit) like this," he said, but now that China Aid is nearly 10 years old, Fu is gratified by some success. "We can help the persecuted, and we did advance rule of law," he said.

    China Aid is doggedly following and publicizing many human rights cases around China, Fu said.

    "You can write to imprisoned Christians to encourage them and to let them know that you are praying for them," through China Aid, the website says.

    Video reveals blind Chinese activist's plight

    Fu’s group also prints and distributes Bibles in China.

    For Fu, the escape of Chen was a major triumph, but it also has generated new concerns — for the wife and daughter of Chen, and for those who helped get Chen to safety.

    In an opinion piece published in the Washington Post on Monday, Fu calls out the bravery of one such supporter, He "Pearl" Peirong, who drove Chen the 300 miles to Beijing after he escaped over a compound wall in Shandong.

    "I am awed by the courage of those who helped Chen escape. Pearl told me she is willing to die with Chen because he is such a 'pure-hearted courageous person'," Fu wrote. "I was talking to her last week when she said 'guobao laile,'— that state security had arrived."

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Teens hit by car -- while tanning on rural road
    • Hiker beats hypothermia after 3 days lost in desert
    • EPA official resigns over 'crucify' philosophy

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    Follow Kari Huus on Facebook

    80 comments

    <p>You know what... I have lived in China for more than 11 years not. My first child was unpermitted. THey wanted to forcefully bort our child. We wer blackmailed, and for 9 months of pregnancy I am not going to run throught the story of running across the country, trying to protect my gf from …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: human-rights, china, christians, chen-guangcheng, china-aid, bob-fu
  • 27
    Apr
    2012
    10:23am, EDT

    Blind Chinese activist Chen Guangcheng escapes from house arrest

    AFP - Getty Images

    This image grab taken from a video which was released on Friday shows Chen Guangcheng, a blind Chinese lawyer, speaking following his escape from house arrest. Reuters reported that one person on a Chinese social-media site wrote that Chen "has escaped from the clutches of the devil."

    By Bo Gu, NBC News

    BEIJING -- Chen Guangcheng, a blind lawyer who is also one of China’s best-known human-rights activists, has escaped after spending one-and-a-half years under house arrest.

    Reuters reported that Chen, who campaigned against forced abortions, had been restricted to his village home in Linyi in eastern Shandong province since September 2010 when he was released from jail.

    Groups of local thugs watched him 24 hours a day and stopped anyone who tried to visit him, sometimes using violence, including scuffling with Hollywood actor Christian Bale.


    He Peirong, an activist and longtime friend of Chen, said on Twitter that the lawyer fled on April 22.

    Chen once tried to dig a tunnel in a bid to break out. However, his plan was discovered and the guards, allegedly appointed by the local government, paved cement over the ground outside his home to prevent any further attempts to flee.

    Video reveals blind Chinese activist's plight

    He Peirong told Britain's Times newspaper that Chen had planned the escape for months. She said Chen climbed over a wall while a guard wasn’t paying attention, crossed a river, and then managed to meet a friend who picked him up and drove him to Beijing.

    '100 percent safe'
    Reuters cited Bob Fu, president of the Texas-based religious and political rights advocacy group ChinaAid, as saying that Chen was in Beijing and "100 percent safe."

    Chen’s whereabouts remained unknown on Friday. Rumors swirled that he may be hiding inside the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, but officials said "no comment" when approached by media.

    Boxun News, an overseas Chinese news website, uploaded a recorded video of a monologue by Chen early Friday, with a headline reading "Chen Guangcheng's three requests to Premier Wen Jiaobao."

    The 15-minute video started with Chen’s brief statement: "Dear Premier Wen, it was very difficult but I made my escape. I am here to prove, all those allegations online and the accusations against Linyi (government)’s violence on me are true. And the fact is only worse."

    His first request to the premier was a thorough investigation for his house arrest, and to severely punish the criminals in accordance with law. Chen claimed dozens of people had been sent to his house, violently beat up Chen, his wife and his mother on multiple occasions.

    Chen named all the people who were allegedly involved, including the one who roughed up Christian Bale and CNN TV crew last winter.

    Chinese hail 'Pandaman vs Batman'

    Security cameras
    Chen also gave details of how thugs were grouped to watch and patrol in and around his home, by roads leading to his home and the village, sometime even in neighboring villages. Security cameras were installed around his house and all connections between his home and the outside world were shut off.

    Chen’s second request was to safeguard his family members' security: "I’m free now, but I worry about my wife, my child, and my mother. They’ve been persecuted for so long and I’m worried they will be victims of revenge." Chen says his wife has been beaten many times and was prevented from seeing a doctor.

    Chen’s seven-year-old daughter was also constantly watched and sometimes even had her school bag searched. She wasn’t allowed to leave home after school. The electricity of Chen’s home was constantly cut off and his mother wasn’t allowed to go shopping. "I will keep on fighting if anything happens to my family," Chen warned.

    Chen's last request will resonate with many Chinese citizens: to curb corruption. "When they were persecuting me last August in a Cultural Revolution style, they said, ‘we have spent even more than 60 million Yuan ($9.5 million) on you, but that doesn’t include the money used to bribe officials in Beijing!’…what a corruption."

    'Abuse of tax money'
    A huge amount of public money is used to crack down protests and human-rights movements, under the name of the "stability maintenance fund." In Chen’s case, he estimated millions have been spent just to keep him locked up. "The officials say they didn't get much and the largest share was taken by others. So, clearly, there is serious corruption and the abuse of tax money and power."

    His escape was widely discussed on China's popular Twitter-like service Weibo, with users referring to him as "the blind man" or "Shawshank Redemption" to avoid censorship of his name.

    "Some birds aren't meant to be caged. Their feathers are just too bright," the line from the 1994 drama film "The Shawshank Redemption" has been forwarded many times on Weibo today.

    "Every historial period has its own blind prophet. He speaks out the fear hidden in the hearts of those who can see," said a Weibo user by the name of "Zhang Wenwu."

    Self-taught lawyer
    Born in 1971, Chen became blind after suffering a fever when he young. He studied medicine and later turned into a self-taught lawyer, providing legal support for disabled people and other fellow villagers over their land dispute with local governments.

    Since 2005, he campaigned against local family planning agencies on human rights violations including forced abortion, forced sterilization, beatings, fines and illegal arrests. He was sentenced to four years and three months in prison in 2006 for the crime of "deliberate destruction of property and disrupting traffic."

    He had been under house arrest along with his family since his release in 2010.

    He Peirong, the friend and possible collaborator who published the news, has not been heard from since this morning. Her phone was picked up by a man who told journalists "you’ve got the wrong number."

    It is not known if Chen’s family has been subjected to reprisals at the moment.

    Chen ended his speech with a question: "Premier Wen, if you continue to neglect this, what will people think?"

    (Horace Lu contributed to this report.)

    97 comments

    I've wondered why we won't deal with Cuba but we will with China. China abuses us with fake drugs, poisonous drywall, and adulterated baby formula, abuses the Tibetans, abuses their own people. The only thing I can't blame them for is the loss of our jobs, which is the fault of American corporations …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, china, human-rights, christian-bale, bo-gu, chen-guangcheng
  • 22
    Mar
    2012
    6:48am, EDT

    One woman's desperate stand to protect her home from demolition

    Reuters

    Huang Sufang reacts as she sees a part of her house being taken down by demolition workers at Yangji village in central Guangzhou city, Guangdong province, China on March 21, 2012.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    Huang Sufang, a resident of the Chinese city of Guangzhou, mounted a desperate last stand to protect her home as demolition workers moved in on Wednesday.

    According to local media cited by Reuters, part of Huang's house was mistakenly demolished as workers were flattening another building nearby.

    Hers was one of more than 1,000 homes in Yangji, a former village that has been swallowed up by the rapid expansion of Guangzhou, China's third-largest city with a population of over 12 million.

    In 2010, China Daily reported that Yangji was one of 138 'urban villages' in Guangzhou earmarked for demolition to make way for new developments in the next decade.

    Disputes over land rights are the leading cause of surging unrest across China, according to a study cited by Bloomberg News.

    Reuters

    Huang Sufang tries to attack a worker with a brick after a part of her house was demolished.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Huang Sufang attempting to protect her home as workers move in for demolition.

    Reuters

    A relative holds Huang Sufang as she wipes away tears.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Workers demolish a group of villagers' houses in Yangji village.

    Reuters

    Huang Sufang lies on the ground after a part of her house was demolished.

     

    142 comments

    Nothing that could not happen here in the USA. The people here are allowing corporate power to grow, and since the 1% already controls whom "the people" can vote for it may already be too late.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: world-news, featured, china, human-rights, asia, housing, guangzhou, forced-eviction, yangji, huang-safang
  • 25
    Oct
    2011
    3:52am, EDT

    China cracks down on economic leaks

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News
     

    BEIJING – Getting caught leaking state secrets is no laughing matter in China

    AP

    Two Chinese government officials were convicted and sentenced to jail this week for leaking state secrets to securities firms in China.

    On Monday, Wu Chaoming, a researcher at the People’s Bank of China, and Sun Zhen, from the National Bureau of Statistics, were sentenced to six and five years, respectively, for passing on sensitive information to people they shouldn’t have.

    Four other people who weren’t identified by officials have also been arrested in connection with leaked economic secrets.

    The cases show how some officials have learned to profit from the veil of secrecy that surrounds sensitive economic data in China. These and other recent cases also illustrate how easy it is to run afoul of the country’s wide-reaching and opaque privacy laws. 

    The country’s topsy-turvy stock market is still heavily influenced and guided by the government’s “silent hand.”  This, paired with the fact timely data is often in short supply, makes advanced knowledge of economic information especially valuable.  So, for example, finding out about upcoming government moves to curb inflation would allow traders and brokerage houses to reap a tidy profit.


    Up-to-date information is also especially valuable in China, whose super-charged economy – GDP grew by more than 9 percent in the third quarter of 2011, outpacing most of the rest of the world – is growing so fast that valuable data in the public domain quickly becomes stale.

    While declining to say what specific secret information had been leaked, Du Yongsheng, Deputy Director of the National Administration for the Protection of State Secrets, on Monday said some of the officials arrested had not directly sold secrets to brokerages.  Rather, they were paid for “speaking engagements” by firms eager to get a heads up economic trends.

    Unsurprisingly, the government has launched an aggressive campaign to eliminate both intentional and accidental leaking of classified economic information.

    In prepared remarks to the media yesterday morning, the Deputy Director General of the ponderously named Procuratorial Department of Duty and Infringement on Citizen’s Rights of the Supreme People’s Directorate, warned that the government would “strike hard” against those who tried to profit from such leaks.

    "The leaking of national macroeconomic data harms economic operations, prevents fair market competition and affects government credibility, thereby causing heavy losses to the interests of the country, society and individuals," the official, Li Zhong Cheng, said.

    In Sun and Wu’s cases, their advanced knowledge of money supply, gross domestic product numbers and the consumer price index put them in an excellent position to trade on their insider information.

    There has long been a culture of paying for what is perceived to be secret economic data, as well simply getting a read on policy important debates, writes Tom Orlick, a Wall Street Journal reporter and author of “Understanding China's Economic Indicators.”

    “Well-connected academics and analysts in government think-tanks routinely request a consulting fee for meetings with investment banks and their clients,” according to Orlick.

    Journalists looking to get a scoop or a steer on important economic data have also been warned.

    “I think it’s normal for some media organizations, in particular foreign media organizations to try to forecast China’s economic data, to judge the economic performance of our country,” Director Li said. Some reporters were also using “back channels” to verify state secrets, he said.

    “[This is] not allowed,” Li added.  “I’d like to remind our friends from the media here of the importance of abiding by China’s laws and regulations… otherwise you will be subjected to the consequences of the law.”

    What exactly is a state secret?

    While the government last year laid down new laws ostensibly meant to curb the number and scope of state secrets leaks, critics say the definitions are still vague and could be used to silence political opposition.

    According to the Law of the People’s Republic of China on Guarding State Secrets, they can be defined in the following ways:

    1. Secret matters concerning major policy decisions on state affairs; 2. Secret matters in the building of national defense and in the activities of the armed forces; 3. Secret matters in diplomatic activities and in activities related to foreign countries and those to be kept secret through commitments to foreign countries; 4. Secret matters in national economic and social development; 5. Secret matters concerning science and technology; 6. Secret matters concerning activities for safeguarding state security and the investigation of criminal offenses; 7. Other matters that are classified as state secrets by the national department for the administration and management of state secret-guarding.

    The ambiguity of these classifications have led to high-profile arrests and convictions of foreign businessmen.  The most notable case involved Stern Hu, an Australian national who was sentenced to 10 years in prison for stealing commercial secrets.

    Less well publicized was the plight of Xue Feng, an American geologist working for an American consulting firm who was arrested in 2007 and sentenced to eight years in prison for trying to buy a database that showed the location of oil wells belonging to a Chinese government-owned company – information that was readily available for sale online.

    Both men were charged and sentenced before the new state secrets regulations were passed, but it is unlikely that the new laws would have helped them.

    It remains to be seen when, and if, the state secrets laws will be defined more narrowly.

    What is clear is that the policy will remain an effective way for the Communist Party to keep corrupt officials in line, and a headache for foreign companies trying to compete against companies that are plugged into the government’s economic planning apparatus. 

    SLIDESHOW: China's booming middle class

    70 comments

    The only thing leaking out of china are the people , put a cork in it.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: economy, china, human-rights, ed-flanagan, state-secrets
  • 29
    Aug
    2011
    8:48am, EDT

    Monday morning China roll call

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    Happy Monday all! Below are some of the stories and trends we’re following here at Behind the Wall today.

    1. China working to legalize “secret detentions”

    Barbara Demick of the Los Angeles Times had this alarming article in Sunday’s edition about a proposed change in the Chinese criminal code disclosed last week. The amendment would enable police to forcibly detain citizens for up to six months in a secret location without formal charges being filed.  Under the provision, government officials would also not be legally obligated to notify lawyers and family members of the detention.

    As we have documented in the past, China has stepped up its use of “forced disappearances” and “residential detentions” to muzzle human rights activists crossing the Communist Party.  The new proposal comes as Beijing undertakes reforms of its criminal code for the first time since the 1990s, with other released proposals actually garnering praise from human-rights activists and lawyers.

    2. Ai Weiwei writes about his own personal prison: Beijing

    Peter Parks/AFP

    Artist and human rights activist, Ai Weiwei

    Recently freed artist and human rights activist, Ai Weiwei penned an essay for Newsweek that serves as a nice foil to the aforementioned article on detentions.  Ai, who was released from custody in June before being promptly placed in home detention, is dark in his writing and certainly not subtle in expressing his dissatisfaction with the current state of civil affairs in China.

    Of his own ordeal in detention, the stunted prose and seeming rapid fire emotions of the excerpt below will transport you to what was assuredly a nightmarish time in his life.

    The strongest character of those spaces is that they’re completely cut off from your memory or anything you’re familiar with. You’re in total isolation. And you don’t know how long you’re going to be there, but you truly believe they can do anything to you. There’s no way to even question it. You’re not protected by anything. Why am I here? Your mind is very uncertain of time. You become like mad. It’s very hard for anyone. Even for people who have strong beliefs.

    Ai’s has written similarly toned script before in Chinese, but what makes this piece all the more surprising – and significant – is that it comes so soon after an explicit warning from officials following his release to keep silent on sensitive issues like human rights. His travel is restricted by the government and they put a gag order on him for at least one year.

    So the fact that Ai chose to write this in English for a major foreign publication like Newsweek makes this feel like that proverbial line in the sand. Will China cross that line or turn another cheek?

    3. Bride imports to China blamed for growing gender imbalance

    AP

    Imported brides from poorer provinces and abroad are helping to temporarily alleviate the problem of gender imbalance in some areas of China, but over time single men from lower income areas will suffer the most.

    The Times of India published this story yesterday on the slow-growing but approaching social implications of China's gender imbalance.  One way this is being manifested is in the growing trend of young brides-to-be from poorer Chinese provinces as well as nearby countries like Vietnam, Laos and North Korea being imported to China to help correct the imbalance.  In the relatively well-off coastal province of Zhejiang alone, an estimated 36,000 brides are brought in every year.  This may alleviate the issue in Zhejiang but only amplifies the problem in poorer areas where the gender imbalance only gets worse as women flee in search of more affluent marriage partners elsewhere.

    Although Beijing has been successful in narrowing the gap through education and restrictions – albeit loosely enforced – on ultrasounds and abortions of female fetus, this problem is likely to plague China’s future generations: the country currently counts 23 million more boys than girls between the ages of 0-19.

    4. Meanwhile in the rest of Asia, marriage is changing

    As China battles its growing marriage challenges, the rest of Asia is witnessing evolving attitudes on marriage and the role of women in traditional family life that closely shadow Western demographics.  Recent research shows not only are Asians marrying later in life, fewer of them are doing it at all.

    Just 30 years ago, only 2 percent of women in Asian countries were single. Today’s research finds, “Unmarried women in their 30s in Japan, Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong has risen 20 points.” In South Korea, men are now glumly claiming that women are “on marriage strike.” 

    Women in those countries who are getting married are now waiting later than previous generations; the mean age for marriage is now around 29 to 30 for women and 31 to 33 for men.  This is older even than in the United States, where women are marrying at around 26 years old and men at 28.

    Experts attribute this dramatic change in marriage habits to women's better education and career opportunities.  Women with increased education and financial independence not only elect to stay single longer but also in effect elevate themselves into a smaller, more affluent “marriage bracket” of men with similar or greater economic and educational stature.

    Comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, sex, human-rights, detention, ed-flanagan, gender-imbalance, ai-wei-wei
Older posts

Browse

  • china,
  • featured,
  • ed-flanagan,
  • adrienne-mong,
  • bo-gu,
  • world-news,
  • beijing,
  • human-rights,
  • eric-baculinao,
  • north-korea,
  • chen-guangcheng,
  • u-s,
  • economy,
  • ai-weiwei,
  • asia,
  • ian-williams,
  • bo-xilai,
  • environment,
  • tibet,
  • communist-party,
  • hong-kong,
  • xi-jinping,
  • shanghai,
  • behind-the-wall,
  • one-child-policy,
  • internet,
  • censorship,
  • gu-kailai,
  • protest,
  • world,
  • updated,
  • weibo,
  • asia-pacific,
  • activist,
  • us,
  • hacking,
  • apple,
  • pollution,
  • taiwan,
  • military,
  • wen-jiabao,
  • corruption,
  • scandal
Also
Advertise | AdChoices

Behind The Wall

Behind the Wall provides a dynamic look at China by examining news events and trends – both big and small – from NBC News correspondents and producers. Learn about China's developing economy, politics and the cultural trends that move its 1.3 billion people.

Ed Flanagan

is a Beijing-based producer for NBC News. In China since 2005, he has been a part of the team's China as well as regional news coverage.

Ed Flanagan Blogroll

  • Michael Pettis
  • James Fallows
  • China Law Blog
  • Silicon Hutong
  • Sinica Podcasts
  • China Digital Times
  • The China Beat
  • China Geeks
  • NBC World Blog
  • China Hush

David R Arnott

is NBCNews.com's Multimedia Editor in London.

Archives

  • 2013
    • May (7)
    • April (7)
    • March (11)
    • February (16)
    • January (9)
  • 2012
    • December (6)
    • November (15)
    • October (12)
    • September (18)
    • August (11)
    • July (13)
    • June (12)
    • May (22)
    • April (17)
    • March (16)
    • February (20)
    • January (13)
  • 2011
    • December (13)
    • November (17)
    • October (10)
    • September (13)
    • August (13)
    • July (14)
    • June (21)
    • May (12)
    • April (10)
    • March (12)
    • February (22)
    • January (18)
  • 2010
    • December (20)
    • November (36)
    • October (6)
    • September (3)
    • August (2)
    • July (4)

Most Commented

  • Will China mediate the Israeli-Palestinian peace process? (262)
  • Chinese spooked by food scandals take action - by growing it themselves (40)
  • 'Get out': Over 1,000 take to the streets in China to protest oil refinery (37)

Other blogs

  • Daily Nightly
  • The Maddow Blog
  • The Last Word
  • Hardblogger
  • First Read
  • World Blog
  • Field Notes
  • Inside Dateline
  • Behind the Wall
  • The Ed Show
  • Morning Joe
  • Daily Rundown

NBCNews.com top stories

3147,10
© 2013 NBCNews.com
  • World news on NBCNews.com
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Site map
  • Careers
  • Closed captioning
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertise