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Armed Han settlers seek revenge

• Government imposes a curfew in the capital of Xinjiang region
• Toll from Sunday’s riot raised to 156 dead, 1,000 wounded

The Chinese government imposed a curfew on Urumqi after hundreds of Han residents armed with meat cleavers, iron pipes and shovels joined the frontline of the deadliest ethnic clashes the country has seen in decades.

As the United Nations called for restraint and petrol bombs were thrown at a Chinese consulate in Europe, armed riot police in Urumqi struggled to restore order with teargas and roadblocks in the capital of the far western Xinjiang region.

The local Communist party chief, Wang Lequan, warned that the struggle was far from over, although he said the worst violence on Sunday had been quelled.

Yesterday there were at least three confrontations between indigenous Uighurs, Han settlers and police, according to media reports. The authorities raised the casualty toll from Sunday’s riot to 156 dead and more than 1,000 wounded. No ethnic breakdown has been given, but reports from hospitals suggest the vast majority were Han. Chinese websites and newspapers have published pictures of rows of bloodied bodies.

There have been few domestic reports of the dozens of Uighur casualties – some of whom have been confirmed by the Guardian as having being shot – or claims by exiled Uighur groups that police killed protesters. Human rights groups have called for an independent investigation into the cause of the violence. The UN’s human rights high commissioner, Navi Pillay, said the Chinese authorities and civic leaders of the Han and Uighur ethnic groups should exercise great restraint to avoid sparking more violence.

But many Han residents – the largest ethnic group in Urumqi – and Hui armed themselves and took to the streets, looking for revenge or communal self-defence.

Several hundred headed for the Grand Bazaar, the main Uighur district, armed with clubs and chanting “Defend stability, protect the motherland” and “Attack Uighurs”. They smashed shop windows and knocked over food stalls. “They attacked us. Now it’s our turn to attack them,” a man in the crowd was quoted as saying by Reuters. Riot police reportedly held the mob back, then tried to break it up with teargas.

In another protest, hundreds of Uighurs, mostly women and children, confronted police and called for the release of husbands and fathers who were rounded up in a search for suspects. The authorities have arrested 1,434 people. Some were taken away during door-to-door searches in which police asked men to remove their shirts so they could look for wounds that might indicate involvement in the riot.

A separate report suggested a gang of about a dozen Uighurs armed with knives and bricks attacked passersby and drivers from other ethnic groups. On Monday evening about 200 demonstrators gathered in front of the main mosque in Kashgar, a Silk Road city closer to the border with Kyrgyzstan.

Police say “separatist groups” are trying to organise more unrest. The Chinese authorities blamed Rebiya Kadeer, leader of the exile group World Uighur Congress, for stirring up discontent. They say she and her supporters want to divide China by creating an East Turkestan homeland.

Police claimed today to have evidence that she instigated the riot. In a recorded conversation, they allege Kadeer said: “Something will happen in Urumqi.” The veracity of this claim could not be confirmed, nor why such a phrase might be proof of instigating violence.

Crowds initially gathered on Sunday to protest against the killing of two Uighur migrants by Han co-workers at a toy factory in Guangdong two weeks ago. In a belated response, police announced yesterday that they had detained 15 suspects in the case, though graphic video of workers repeatedly battering the victims with wooden staves has been circulating on the internet for more than a week.

The authorities acknowledged yesterday that they had restricted access to the web since Sunday. “We cut internet connection in some areas of Urumqi in order to quench the riot quickly and prevent violence from spreading to other places,” the city’s top Communist party official, Li Zhi, told state media.

Elsewhere in China, the microblog Twitter has been blocked and details about the riot censored.

Compared with the unrest in Tibet last year, the government has given more access to foreign reporters. Officials have organised press conferences and trips. But a visit to a local hospital was cancelled on security grounds and several correspondents have had equipment confiscated.

The conflict appears to have spread overseas. Uighur supporters have staged demonstrations outside Chinese diplomatic missions in the Netherlands and Germany. In Munich two petrol bombs were thrown at the consulate.

Xinjiang covers a sixth of China’s territory and has some of the country’s biggest oil, gas and coal deposits. Though its Muslim Uighurs have attracted less sympathy in the west than Buddhist Tibetans, the two groups face a similar predicament as homelands are developed by an influx of settlers, mostly from the Han majority.

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Fears for detained Rio Tinto staff

No reasons have been given by Chinese authorities for detaining four staff from the firm’s Shanghai office

The Chinese authorities have detained four employees of the British-based mining firm Rio Tinto, sparking fears for their safety. All four worked at Rio’s sales and marketing office in Shanghai and hold relatively senior positions. The company would not say if they were British nationals.

Rio was told that they had been detained on Sunday, after being unable to reach them by phone. The company said it had no idea why they had been detained and has asked the authorities in Shanghai for an explanation. A spokesman said: “The reasons for these actions are unclear. Rio intends to co-operate fully with any investigation the Chinese authorities may wish to undertake and has sought clarification on what has occurred. Rio Tinto is concerned about the employees’ wellbeing and is doing everything possible to help them and support their families.”

China is one of Rio’s biggest customers of iron ore and employs more than 100 sales and marketing personnel in three offices: Shanghai, Beijing and Guangzhou.

Last year, Chinese exports accounted for $12bn (£7.4bn) of Rio annual turnover of nearly $60bn.

In February, Rio unveiled plans for Chinalco, the state-run aluminium company, to lift its stake in the UK multinational from 9% to 18% in return for a $20bn investment boost.

The deal caused uproar among Rio’s British shareholders who complained that China was being allowed to increase its influence in the company at their expense. They claimed that they were being denied the opportunity to bolster Rio’s capital position themselves by subscribing to new shares via a rights issue.

The row led to the departure of former Rio chairman-designate Jim Leng, amid threats of a shareholder revolt against the British mining firm’s management.

In June, Rio bowed to mounting pressure and scrapped the Chinalco move, plumping instead for an alliance with BHP. The Chinese were furious, but sources close to Rio poured cold water on the idea that the arrests had anything to do with the Chinalco debacle.

Rio entered 2009 in a parlous financial state after acquiring Alcan, the Canadian metals producer, at the height of the commodities boom and racking up billions in debt. Its position has been eased by a rights issue and asset sales.

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Han Chinese take revenge in Xinjiang ethnic clashes

• Riot police move to break up crowds in Urumqi
• Hundreds take to the streets wielding sticks and shovels

A new wave of violence hit the capital of the Chinese region of Xinjiang today as thousands of angry Han Chinese rampaged through Urumqi, many smashing up Uighur stores and seeking vengeance for Han deaths at the weekend.

The authorities swiftly imposed a curfew on the restive city in an attempt to quell what the government has already described as the worst riots since the foundation of the People’s Republic 60 years ago. Police attempted to disperse today’s mob with teargas as they headed towards a predominantly Uighur area, but many were still on the streets armed with whatever came to hand: wooden staves, iron bars, metal chains, nunchuks, shovels and axes.

Rioters smashed Uighur restaurants, threw rocks at a mosque and threatened residents of Uighur areas, although moderates in the crowd attempted to restrain them.

“They attacked us. Now it’s our turn to attack them,” one protester told Reuters. Another said: “We’re here to demand security for ourselves. They killed children in cold blood.”

“It’s your time to suffer,” they shouted at some of the five- and six-storey apartment blocks lining Xinfu Road.

At least 156 people have been killed and more than 1,000 injured since ethnic clashes broke out at the weekend.

Navi Pillay, the UN high commissioner for human rights, called for “great restraint” on all sides “so as not to spark further violence and loss of life”. “This is a major tragedy,” she said.

There is no official breakdown yet of fatalities and casualties from Sunday’s violence, when an Uighur protest at mistreatment turned into full-scale ethnic clashes.

But witnesses described vicious and apparently indiscriminate attacks on Han Chinese people, although substantial numbers of Uighurs and other ethnic minorities were also injured.

Crowd members today told the Guardian that they believed Uighurs were coming back to attack them.

A respectable-looking middle-class woman carried a plank with a nail sticking out of it; a young woman in a colourful, patterned top and white diamante mules clutched a piece of metal pipe. A father held his young son in one hand and a length of wood in the other.

“We just want to defend our stuff,” said one man.

Few people seemed to know where rumours of further attacks had come from, but witnesses told Reuters that earlier in the day groups of around 10 Uighur men armed with bricks and knives had attacked Han Chinese passersby and shop owners until police arrived.

“They were using everything for weapons, like bricks, sticks and cleavers,” said Ma, an employee at a nearby fastfood restaurant. “Whenever the rioters saw someone on the street, they would ask ‘are you a Uighur?’ If they kept silent or couldn’t answer in the Uighur language, they would get beaten or killed.”

It was not clear if anyone died in those reported attacks.

Authorities were initially slow to react as large numbers of Han Chinese gathered on the streets around the People’s Square in the centre of the city from around 2pm.

But the city’s Communist party chief, Li Zhi, later took to the streets, using a bullhorn from the top of a police four-wheel drive to beg protesters to calm down and go home.

Police stopped the crowd entering an Uighur neighbourhood, but even teargas could not disperse them.

Journalists who tried to follow the crowd were bundled away from the scene “for their own safety”, as protesters turned angrily on some cameramen, shoving and shouting at them.

Elsewhere in the capital, officers pleaded with gangs to go home. One told protesters holding wooden and metal bars: “Please stand away. We are a nation united.”

A man replied: “Our brothers and sisters have been bloodied.”

Another officer told the mob: “We need to protect the law. Please retreat. Please trust us.”

Banks closed their doors and staff crouched inside, some holding staves, while hotel staff taped up windows.

Earlier in the day Chinese armed police and Uighurs clashed as residents erupted into protests during an official media tour of the riot zone, in the face of hundreds of officers.

Women in the marketplace burst into wailing and chanting as foreign reporters arrived, complaining that police had taken away Uighur men.

Authorities have arrested 1,434 people in connection with Sunday’s unrest.

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Death and debris on Urumqi’s streets

Muslim exiles accused of incitement as UN backs minorities’ right to protest

The Chinese government and Uighur exile groups blamed each other after the deadliest ethnic violence in decades left at least 156 people dead and 800 injured in Urumqi, western China, on Sunday.

As armed police cleared bodies, debris and torched buses from the streets, the government launched a media offensive against Rebiya Kadeer, the leader of the exiled World Uighur Congress.

The Chinese authorities claim she and her supporters masterminded the riot that tore through the capital of the Xinjiang region on Sunday evening, the latest escalation of unrest between indigenous Muslim Uighurs and Han Chinese settlers.

“Rebiya had phone conversations with people in China on 5 July in order to incite, and websites … were used to orchestrate the incitement and spread propaganda,” Xinjiang’s governor, Nur Bekri, said in a televised address.

“The unrest is a pre-empted, organised violent crime. It is instigated and directed from abroad, and carried out by outlaws,” a central government statement noted.

China Central Television broadcast images of attacks on Han and Hui Chinese by angry Uighurs, bodies in the streets and bloodied victims being rushed to hospital. State media said the rioters burned 203 shops, 14 homes, 190 buses, two police cars and more than 60 other vehicles.

Overseas Uighur organisations deny incitement and accuse the security forces of stirring up violence by killing peaceful protesters rallying to honour two Uighurs beaten to death in a racial attack by Han Chinese last month.

The World Uighur Congress said scores of demonstrators were shotdead by riot police and crushed by armed personnel carriers in a heavy-handed attempt to disperse the crowd of 1,000 to 3,000, some of whom were waving Chinese flags.

Kadeer drew parallels between the treatment of Tibet and East Turkestan, as many Uighurs call their homeland.

“It is a common practice of the Chinese government to accuse me for any unrest in East Turkestan and His Holiness the Dalai Lama for any unrest in Tibet,” she said. “The authorities should also acknowledge that their failure to take any meaningful action to punish the Chinese mob for the brutal murder of Uighurs is the real cause of this protest.”

Others asked for international support for the Uighurs to peacefully protest against Chinese rule, racial discrimination and restrictions on freedom of religion.

Independent verification of the opposing claims was difficult. Many areas of the city were blocked and mobile and internet communications disrupted. China Mobile’s phone service was suspended in the region “to help keep the peace and prevent the incident from spreading further,” a customer service representative in Urumqi told Associated Press.

Little evidence was presented of incitement and the authorities have not released a casualty list.

Armed police have flooded the city, setting up road blocks and rounding up hundreds of suspects.

The police chief, Liu Yaohua, told the state-run Xinhua news agency that checkpoints had been set up to prevent 90 “key suspects” fleeing. He predicted the death toll would rise further.

The Urumqi municipal government issued emergency controls banning traffic in certain areas from 1am to 8am to “maintain social order in the city and guarantee the execution of duty by state organs”.

In Geneva, the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-Moon, urged governments to respect citizens’ right to protest.

Roseann Rife, Amnesty International’s deputy director for Asia and the Pacific, said: “The Chinese authorities must fully account for all those who died and have been detained. There has been a tragic loss of life and it is essential that an urgent independent investigation takes place to bring all those responsible for the deaths to justice.”

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China ethnic violence leaves 140 dead

Riot police on streets of Urumqi after fighting between Uighur Muslims and Han Chinese leaves over 800 injured

At least 140 people have been killed and 828 injured after the worst violence in decades swept through the capital of China’s restive region of Xinjiang last night, authorities said today.

Hundreds were under arrest and thousands of riot officers and armed paramilitary police were keeping tight control of southern Urumqi, following vicious clashes between Muslim Uighurs and Han Chinese. But witnesses reported that protests had spread to a second city, Kashgar, in the north-western region.

In the capital, burnt-out buildings and vehicles were still smouldering in the area around the grand bazaar, where violence broke out. Bloodstains marked the road, along with sprays of broken glass and odd shoes, abandoned by their owners as they fled.

Hundreds of victims – predominantly Han Chinese, but also Uighurs and other minorities – remained in hospital having been beaten or stabbed. Officials said that some had also been shot.

Four-year-old Aliya, a Uighur boy, lay on a trolley, dazed by his head injury and his pregnant mother’s disappearance. He was clinging to her hand when a bullet hit her and surgeons were now trying to save her life.

These are the testaments to the violence unleashed in Urumqi last night, along with graphic photographs, seen by the Guardian, of bloodied corpses lying in the roads. It was not clear how most of the victims were killed.

Witnesses reported Uighur rioters attacking Han Chinese people and state television showed them attacking passing vehicles. Videos – apparently taken in Urumqi last night – have surfaced of people who seem to be Han, being brutally beaten. But Uighurs and other ethnic minorities were also injured last night, and exile groups blamed the government crackdown for deaths.

Turkic-speaking Uighur Muslims make up almost half of Xinjiang’s 19 million inhabitants. Many resent controls on religion, and increasing Han immigration, which they believe has eroded their way of life.

The Guardian was the only western media organisation on the first official tour of the city. Chinese authorities blamed Uighur exiles for stirring up violence, saying the unrest was “instigated and directed from abroad, and carried out by outlaws in the country in the region”.

The state news agency, Xinhua, reported that the unrest “was masterminded by the World Uighur Congress” – led by Rebiya Kadeer, a Uighur businesswoman jailed in China before being released into exile in the US.

But the congress alleged that police shot and beat demonstrators to death, and that some Uighurs were crushed by armoured vehicles near Xinjiang University. It urged the authorities to “cease the brutal crackdown and release those arrested”.

It said Uighurs had mounted a peaceful protest because authorities had taken no real action over the killing of two Uighur workers in ethnic violence in Guangdong more than a week ago.

Kadeer added: “It is a common practice of the Chinese government to accuse me for any unrest in East Turkestan and His Holiness the Dalai Lama for any unrest in Tibet.”

Last night’s violence had echoes of fatal riots in Lhasa last year which quickly spread to surrounding regions. In that case, too, the authorities blamed ethnic minority exiles for fomenting violence while Tibetans accused the government of a brutal crackdown.

Uighur and other residents were allowed to go about their business in the southern part of Urumqi today, despite the heavy paramilitary presence. Customers gathered in a market, although on many streets, shops were shuttered. But in a central area of town, well away from yesterday’s violence, we saw armed officers detain two Uighur men outside a shopping centre and march them away.

Liu Yaohua, the region’s police chief, told a press conference in Urumqi that police were searching for 90 key suspects in the city. Only those interviewed on the official tour agreed to be identified. Other residents who spoke to the Guardian would not give their names.

“It’s not good to talk about it,” said one Han worker. But he added: “Before this I felt safe, but a lot of Uighur people don’t like us. They say there are too many Han people here.”

A Uighur resident added: “It all started because some Uighurs were killed in Guangdong and people wanted to protest.

“There was a lot of fighting, but it was mostly Uighurs who got hurt. Uighur and Han people here really don’t get on.”

The size of the security cordon last night meant that few outside the area had any idea of the scale of the violence and destruction, although rumours about what had happened swept the city in the absence of real information.

Residents claimed access to the internet had been blocked across the whole of Xinjiang. Foreign phone numbers were inaccessible and mobile phone reception sporadic — blamed by citizens on the clampdown.

Dr Wang, head of the People’s hospital, said 274 patients were still being treated. Doctors had been unable to save 17 people, and 27 remained in critical condition. Most had been beaten or stabbed, but the authorities said seven had been shot.

Video shot by officials at the hospital the previous night showed patients with blood streaming down their heads, lying or crouching on the floor because all the beds had long since been filled. Two, bandaged around the head, lay on the fruit barrow that friends had used to transport them.

More than two-thirds of the patients were male and the vast majority, 233, were Han. But 39 were Uighur, 15 Hui – another Muslim minority – and four came from other ethnic groups.

“I left my office and took the 63 bus home, but a gang of people stopped it and beat us – they cut me; there were three knives so my arm was cut in three places,” said one victim, Liu Hongtao.

On the streets closer to the heart of the violence, red-eyed workers loaded sooty trays of cola bottles onto a trolley at Liu Jie’s store, trying to salvage what little remained after the mob smashed its windows and torched the building.

Liu’s hands were black and her clothing reeked of smoke. Her eyes filled with tears as she described how five attacks came within a few hours, from around 6pm.

“It was getting worse by 7pm and I told my workers to go home. When people broke the windows I fled myself. They were using big rocks,” she said.

“They beat and killed Han people in the street. I was hiding in the courtyard behind the shop and they tried to break the gate, then the second group came. We were attacked five times, the last time at about 11pm and they set [the shop] on fire. We hid in the backyard until the armed police and fire service came to help. There were people killed on the street, they were chased, beaten and knifed. Physically I was not hurt but mentally I was seriously attacked.”

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Xinjiang: the jewel in China’s crown

Suppression of Uighur dissent reflects deep fear in Beijing that separatists could splinter the nation

Riots in China’s restless Xinjiang province are nothing new. In 1990, 50 people were killed in the town of Baren when armed police put down a demonstration against Chinese rule by 3,000 disgruntled Muslims. In 1997, members of the province’s ethnic Uighur population gathered in the city of Gulja to protest against the execution of 30 activists who had been campaigning for an independent Eastern Turkestan. After two days of demonstrations, Chinese riot police moved in. The official death toll was put at nine, but some western observers say as many as 400 people died.

Early reports following Sunday’s riot in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, estimated that 140 people were killed and more than 800 injured when police and soldiers broke up a peaceful demonstration by Uighurs, which quickly turned violent. The riot, in which Han civilians were attacked, cars overturned and shops set on fire, has been described as the most bloody since the Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989.

More so even than Tibet, Xinjiang is the jewel in the crown of the People’s Republic. A strategic buffer between China and the former Soviet republics, it accounts for a sixth of China’s land mass and is rich in oil and gas deposits. The Communist regime is anxious, to the point of paranoia, that a coherent separatist movement will lead to an independent Xinjiang and thus to the fracturing of the country.

For this reason, it will stop at nothing to suppress Uighur dissent. If history is anything to go by, the next six months will be a desperate period for the Uighurs. In the wake of the Baren incident, every male in the area between the age of 13 and 60 was arrested. After the riots in Gulja, so many Muslim men were taken into custody the authorities were obliged to move them to a sports stadium on the outskirts of the city.

According to Amnesty International, the prisoners were hosed with water cannons and had to live without shelter for several days. It was mid-winter. Many lost hands and fingers to frostbite. The alleged ringleaders of the Gulja uprising were driven through the streets of the city in open trucks en route to a mass sentencing rally. Witnesses reported they appeared drugged and were beaten by their captors in full view of the crowd.

During this period, house-to-house searches became commonplace across Xinjiang. Curfews were imposed and foreign journalists barred from entering the region. A similar picture emerged in Tibet after last year’s riots. Monastery towns were sealed off and mass arrests carried out. Around 1,200 Tibetans seized during this period are still unaccounted for by their families. Beijing blamed the Dalai Lama for instigating the riots. It came as no surprise, therefore, to learn that last Sunday’s events in Urumqi have been blamed on Rebiya Kadeer, the businesswoman who lives in the United States and is regarded by the Uighur community as a ruler-in-exile.

The Uighurs and their Han rulers are engaged in a cycle of violence and despair that shows no sign of abating. In recent weeks, tensions between them were running high due to the seemingly heedless destruction of the old city of Kashgar. Buildings of enormous historical and cultural significance are being torn down to make way for highways and apartment blocks that symbolise the Chinese economic miracle. Uighur families who have lived in Kashgar for decades are being forcibly evicted to new homes on the outskirts of the city.

The frustration and resentment felt by most Uighurs at China’s crass insensitivity boiled over last Sunday. It can only be hoped that the continued suppression of Uighurs does not drive its more radical elements into the hands of ideologues and fanatics.

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China ethnic violence leaves 140 dead

Muslim Uighur protests over workers’ deaths turn violent as mobs burn buses and attack Han residents in western province

Ethnic violence in China’s restive Xinjiang province has left more than 140 people dead and hundreds injured, Chinese authorities said today, the bloodiest violence in the country since the Tiananmen Square protests.

Clashes broke out between Muslim Uighurs and Han Chinese in Urumqi, the western region’s capital, last night. Officials said 828 people were injured and hundreds had been arrested.

Today, thousands of armed paramilitary and riot police were blocking off the area where the violence began. Burned-out buildings were still smouldering and shop windows had been smashed.

One Han shopkeeper said: “Last night was very dangerous. We feel safer now because there are so many police.”

The official Xinhua news agency said 140 people died and the death toll was still climbing. It is still not clear how the majority of the victims were killed. There were reports of Uighur rioters attacking Han Chinese people and of violent clashes between riot police and the protesters.

One hospital reported that most of the casualties it had received were Han Chinese, but there were a significant number of Uighur casualties.

The protests were said to have started when several thousand people rallied in the grand bazaar to protest at the death of two Uighur migrants, and injuries suffered by hundreds of others, during an ethnic conflict between workers in a factory in Guangdong, southern China, last month.

Muslim Uighurs are the indigenous ethnic majority of Xinjiang. The region has seen an influx of Han Chinese seeking to profit from its oil and gas resources, which has stirred up resentment.

On an official tour of the damaged area around the city’s grand bazaar, hundreds of damaged vehicles, including a fire engine, could be seen while Uighur residents shopped in the market.

A car dealer, Guo Jianxing, said a large crowd of Uighur men had arrived at his showroom last night and caused damage worth hundreds of thousands of yuan, as well as injuring one of his workers. Blackened vehicles, one upside down, filled the forecourt and the showroom windows had either been smashed or had broken in the heat of the blaze that consumed the building.

Protesters smashed up buses, threw stones and assaulted passersby, according to another witness. Armed riot police moved in to restore order with teargas, armoured vehicles and road blocks, according to a foreign student in Xinjiang. Mobile phone networks appeared to be working only sporadically.

Shaky amateur video posted on the internet shows large crowds blocking several of the main streets in the city as people watch from rooftops. Other videos have been removed by internet censors.

“I saw a Uighur man kicking a Han or Hui woman,” said a student who wished to remain anonymous. “In the hospital, I saw a Han man arrive with lots of blood over his shirt, but the Uighur staff paid him no attention.”

“My family didn’t dare go out,” said Yang Yu, a Beijing-based journalist, whose family live in Urumqi. “They live on the 14th floor but they could still hear the people shouting and the emergency vehicles.”

Watching as her assistant salvaged blackened goods from what remained of her shop, Liu Jie said the demonstrators came five times yesterday, starting at around 6pm.

“It was getting worse by 7pm and I told my workers to go home. When people broke the windows I fled myself. They were using big rocks.

“They beat and killed Han people in the street. I was hiding in the courtyard behind the shop and they tried to break the gate, then the second group came. We were attacked five times, the last time at about 11pm and they set [the shop] on fire. We hid in the backyard until the armed police and fire service came to help. There were people killed on the street, they were chased, beaten and knifed. Physically I was not hurt but mentally I was seriously attacked.” She added: “I heard they were aroused by events in Guangdong.”

Along the road from her store, smoke was still pouring from the charred remains of buses. Blood had seeped into the road and odd shoes lay scattered in the street.

At People Hospital, doctors were still treating hundreds of victims from last night’s violence. The hospital head doctor said 274 patients were still in the hospital, the vast majority of whom were Han. Another 39 were Uighur, 15 were Hui Muslim and four came from other minority groups.

The casualties included a four-year-old boy who was holding his pregnant mother’s hand when she was shot. She was undergoing surgery, while the boy was left on a bed in a hospital corridor, his head bandaged, waiting for her.

In the intensive care unit, doctor Ge Xiaohu said: “We have never had a situation like this. It is terrible.”

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Uighurs riot as ethnic tensions rise in China

Protests over deaths of workers turn violent as mobs burn buses and attack residents from minorities in western province

Three people were killed during rioting in the western Chinese region of Xinjiang, as thousands of Muslim Uighurs took to the streets during the biggest display of ethnic unrest in recent memory.

The protesters smashed up buses, threw stones through shop windows and assaulted Han Chinese passers-by, according to a witness, who said the spark was the recent killing of Uighur migrant workers in Guangdong, southern China.

Xinhua, the state news agency, said those killed were “three ordinary people of the Han ethnic group.” It did not say how they died.

Vehicles were set on fire and traffic guard rails overturned. Bloodied victims were rushed to hospital in the regional capital, Urumqi, as armed riot police moved in to restore order with tear gas, armoured vehicles and road blocks, according to a foreign student in Xinjiang.

A large section of Urumqi was shut off to vehicles tonight , with police manning roadblocks at the perimeter. Witnesses reported large numbers of armed officers inside the cordon. Mobile phone networks appeared to get cut off sporadically. “There were big ethnic riots – there was a lot of fighting,” said one Han resident. “It’s not safe – you can’t go anywhere near there. They’ve blocked it all off. You have to be careful.”

“It’s very dangerous so you can’t go into the centre at all. It’s the Uighurs causing violence,” complained a Han businessman, who said he was unable to get home because of the blocks.

Shaky amateur video of the protest showed large crowds blocking several of the main streets in the city as people watched from rooftops. Other streams have been removed by internet censors. It is not known if there were any casualties.

“I saw a Uighur man kicking a Han or Hui woman,” said the student, who wished to remain anonymous. “In the hospital, I saw a Han man arrive with lots of blood over his shirt, but the Uighur staff paid him no attention.”

“My family didn’t dare go out,” said Yang Yu, a Beijing-based journalist, whose family live in Urumqi. “They live on the 14th floor but they could still hear the people shouting and the emergency vehicles.”

The protests were said to have started when several thousand people rallied in the Grand Bazaar to protest at the death of two Uighur migrants, and injuries suffered by hundreds of others, during an ethnic conflict between workers in a factory in Guangdong last month.

Muslim Uighurs are the indigenous ethnic majority of Xinjiang. The region has seen an influx of Han Chinese seeking to profit from its oil and gas resources, which has stirred up ethnic resentment.

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Now you’re talking …

Want to speak like a native but don’t fancy spending your entire trip in a classroom? These holidays combine lessons with activities and the chance to hang out with locals

French

Surfing: Biarritz

If only school could have been this relaxed. At a solar-powered surf camp in a 300-year-old farmhouse close to Les Casernes beach, near Biarritz, language lessons take the form of informal two-hour chats over beers in the afternoons. Mornings are spent riding the waves, and five days of surf lessons (for 1½ hours per day) are included. The camp has plenty of places for practising tenses in your free time – in the garden, hydro-pool, hammam, tree hut, canoe or hammock. Suitable for beginners and improvers.

• A week costs £606pp, including surfboard and wetsuit hire. 08445 020 445, golearnto.com.

Outdoor adventure: Verdon

Perhaps you’re more likely to remember new words if you learn them while scared out of your wits. A French immersion course in Moustiers, in the Parc Naturel Regional du Verdon, includes morning lessons (beginner to advanced available) in a converted hilltop monastery, plus afternoon exploration of the river Verdon by canoe, treks into the Garrigue with a forest guard, games of pétanque in the village square, dances at a bal populaire or viewings of French films, all accompanied by teachers to ensure French is spoken throughout. At the weekend, the adventuring ratchets up a gear with canyoning, rafting, kayaking and abseiling where no doubt you will learn the French for “Help!” and perfect your pronunciation of merde

• Course €1,670pp for 14 days, accommodation €458 per week, 0121 430 7660, experiencelanguage.co.uk.

Wine: Bordeaux

Many people’s language priority is being able to order food and drink. But imagine how impressive you’ll sound when you can not only stammer out “Un verre de vin, s’il vous plaît”, but are also capable of ordering a fine Bordeaux, commenting on its complexity of flavour and describing the time you visited the very vineyard where it was created. This seven-day French and Bordeaux wine course will set you well on the way to talking about terroir like a native, with four 45-minute sessions of French a day (there’s a test on day one to establish your level), three afternoon sessions on Bordeaux wines, including tastings at l’Ecole du Bordeaux, and excursions to Saint-Emilion and Médoc vineyards.

• Courses start 20 July, 17 August, 14 September, 12 October, £705pp. Homestay accommodation from £170 per week, flight from £115pp return. 0871 230 8512, statravel.co.uk.

Spanish

Walk the talk: Pyrenees

“When we visit my neighbour Hilaria’s vegetable garden, if you pick tomatoes, you’ll learn how to talk about them,” says Georgina Howard, who runs the Pyrenean Experience, a language course in the Baztan valley that teaches Spanish by living Spanish. Language tutors are always on hand to help guests in conversation practise while they ramble through the Pyrenean mountains, meet local farmers, visit bars and hamlets, have lunch with the neighbours or host parties at the seven-bedroom farmhouse, and generally live the Basque life. There are more formal morning lessons on a terrace, and weeks for beginners, intermediate and advanced speakers are run separately.

• Full board £850pp per week, 0121 711 3428, pyreneanexperience.com.

Surfing: Tenerife

Insted runs language courses in Austria, Spain and France that are combined with skiing or surfing. Its Tenerife course runs year-round from a central base in Puerto de la Cruz, a thriving town with busy bars and restaurants serving Latin American and African-influenced dishes. Minutes away from the classroom are the beaches, where the breaks have earned the Canaries the title “Hawaii of the Atlantic”. Accommodation is with a local family, or in an apartment sharing with other students from the course.

• Homestay with family from €165pp per week B&B in private room, €200 half board. Apartment from €165pp for private room. Two week minimum, €220 per week for the course. 00 33 450 530 366, insted.com.

Tango: Buenos Aires

“Bailamos?” is Spanish for “Shall we dance?” – as those returning from this trip will know. In the historic centre of Argentina’s capital, near the bohemian San Telmo district, pupils take a daily four-hour classroom lesson of Spanish, and Argentinian and Spanish culture, politics and history in groups of up to seven. Afterwards they don their dancing shoes to learn one of the world’s sexiest dances at a nearby milonga, or tango hall.

• Six nights including homestay with from £467pp, tango classes £4 per hour. Hotel accommodation available. Journey Latin America (020 8747 8315, journeylatinamerica.co.uk).

Portuguese

Capoeira: Brazil

Practise whirling your limbs to the moves of capoeira while learning to twirl your tongue around the Portuguese language on a two-week course combining the two in Salvador. Classes of eight study beginners’ Portuguese for 20 hours a week, then concentrate on the acrobatic Brazilian dance/martial art twice a week; both take place in a language centre. A samba lesson and cookery class are also included, and homestay accommodation is available so that you can practise over dinner (the language, not capoeira).

• Course £285 pp for 14 days, homestay accommodation from £89 per room per week. 08445 020 445, golearnto.com.

Italian

Food and cookery: Tuscany

For an indulgent foodie break with a side serving of language lessons, Sanctuary Villas puts up large groups of friends or two families in a luxurious converted farmhouse villa with an outdoor pool, sauna, steam room and Jacuzzi, near the medieval village of San Gimignano. The company can arrange extras including cookery classes with local chef Giuseppina and language lessons, taken in your villa, the garden which overlooks rolling, cypress-lined Chianti hills or wherever you prefer. Villa La Terme consists of two large houses, together sleeping 10 plus two children.

• From £5,824 per week (£69 pp per night) accommodation only, language lessons from £41 pp per hour with Sanctuary Villas (01242 547 902, sanctuary-villas.com).

Photography and cycling: Umbria

Northern Umbria is a very untouristy part of Italy, a bonus for language learners as locals are unlikely to revert to English when you chat, and because they have more time to do so. Guests at the Labbazia school in the Upper Tiber Valley will meet plenty of them on trips to local markets and bars in the nearby medieval villages, where they’ll put into practise all they learned that day in class (three levels available). There’s usually some sort of local pageant, dance or festival to attend, and many other activities are arranged on demand, from photography classes to tai chi, cycling or horse-riding.

• From €1,050pp per week, full-board at the agriturismo where lessons are held, including 20 x 45min lessons, transfers from Perugia and guided trips. 00 39 075 857 3004, labbaziaschool.com.

Greek

Beach and culture: Syros

On this two-week course at the OMILO centre on the Cycladic island of Syros, there are classes at the Pension Echo in Azolimnos (which is also one of the self-catering accommodation options) from 9.30am to 1.30pm each day. Then it’s time to hit the beaches right by the centre for swimming and sunbathing, before moving a short distance to the village’s lively tavernas. Excursions such as Greek dance lessons, museum visits, guided walks and local concerts are included and everyone goes along to a sociable first night meal. The island’s capital, Ermoupolis, an affluent harbour of neo-classical buildings, mansions, marble-paved streets and white houses, is 4km away.

• Catch a ferry from Athens. Next dates September, €590 for two weeks. Rooms from €35 per night. 00 30 210 612 2896, omilo.com.

German

Watersports: Bavaria

Lindau is a beautiful town on its own island in the eastern side of Lake Constance, with a historic medieval centre and pretty harbour. It’s a great base for learning German – after classes, pupils cool off by sailing and waterskiing on the lake, cycle around it or go on excursions to Meersburg, Salem Castle and Liechtenstein.

The Dialoge language school provides 20-25 lessons per week, and has a sports hall for basketball, volleyball and football games. Social evenings with barbecues, wine tastings and the cinema are arranged too.

• From €490 per week including accommodation with a host family or the school’s apartments, €330 without. 0808 234 8578, studytravel.com.

Arabic

Interaction: Cairo

Pupils of the Bridge Abroad programme will learn the Egyptian dialect (one of the easiest to pick up) as well as classical Arabic on a week’s beginners’ course in Cairo. The focus is on learning through interaction with some of the city’s 14.5million residents, after daily lessons in a school 15 minutes from the centre. Afternoons are spent among the throng, picking up more vocabulary in the souks, cafes and squares, and at lectures, concerts, cinemas and the famous sites.

• Three weeks (minimum) including accommodation costs from $878pp, $399 without accommodation, or from $711 per week private tuition, from $855 with accommodation. 0808 120 7613, bridgeabroad.com.

Japanese

Cooking and karaoke: Tokyo

Nowhere gives a culture shock like Japan, so throwing yourself into the local way of life is as important as learning the lingo if you are to have a hope of ever fitting in. Alongside a beginners’ course that also covers Japanese culture in a centrally-located school, pupils can take workshops on calligraphy, tea ceremonies, noodle cooking, judo and karate, and interact with native Japanese speakers on nights out bowling, to quizzes and, of course, singing karaoke.

• From $2900 for two weeks including accommodation with a host family, in student dorms or apartments with World Link Education (0046 5580 3720, wle-japan.com).

Mandarin

Live-in learning: Beijing

Moving in with your teacher would have been an abhorrent notion when you were a teenager, but now it could be the best way to develop your language skills. Instead of trawling through a textbook twice a day, you can chat to your tutors from breakfast to bedtime while staying in their home on Go Learn To’s “home language courses”. These suit all levels and give the option of staying with your teachers, couples and families around Beijing as well as informal tuition. Guests get a set of keys and are free to come and go as they please, but are usually invited to join in with their teacher’s life, to meet relatives and friends, go shopping and explore the nightlife.

• Seven days from £864pp per week full board, 08445 020 445, golearnto.com.

Russian

Culture: St Petersburg

Russia is one place where you’re unlikely to pick up much of the language without some serious tuition. A course that includes 20 lessons per week in St Petersburg is a good place to start. After class, it’s time to absorb the city’s rich culture at its many sites.

Bi-weekly group activities include visits to the theatre and ballet and to other places such as the riverside city of Novgorod. Go in the summer and you can join in many vercherinkas – small parties with caviar, vodka and Russian folk songs. Beginners’ and advanced courses are available, but everyone is asked to learn the Cyrillic alphabet before arriving.

• Two weeks from $2,170pp all inclusive, but excluding flights, languagesabroad.com.

• Don’t miss our free phrasebooks every day next week, plus Italian the week after

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China’s web filter system to go ahead

Government claims technology will curb access to pornography, but internet users say it blocks politically sensitive content and monitors behaviour

China’s controversial plan to install Green Dam internet filtering software on all computers will go ahead despite being postponement, a government official told state media today.

The official said it was only “a matter of time” until the software was installed.

The remarks – if they fully reflect official policy – will anger internet users, who mounted a vociferous campaign against the policy this week and hoped they had secured a victory against government censorship.

China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) announced a delay in the implementation of the programme late on Tuesday, hours before it had been supposed to come into force.

Officials claim the technology will help to curb access to pornography, particularly by younger users.

Internet users say the image and keyword filter blocks pornographic, violent and politically sensitive content and monitors behaviour and fear it will be used to curb access to information and keep track of users.

Green Dam has also come under fire for exposing users to security breaches, with experts warning it could easily be hacked, and a US-based software firm is threatening to sue the Chinese developers for copyright infringement.

Solid Oak warned computer manufacturers they would become “knowing infringers” if they included Green Dam.

Industry bodies, the US government and others had also called on China to abandon the project.

Some experts believed that countervailing arguments within the government might have prevailed.

But an official, speaking anonymously, told China Daily: “The government will definitely carry on the directive on Green Dam. It’s just a matter of time.

“What will happen is that some PC manufacturers will have it included with their PC packages sooner than the others. But there is no definite deadline at the moment.”

The official said the delay was necessary because some computer manufacturers needed more time to prepare.

“They have already spent around millions of yuan. If they don’t install it, people will ask why they spent so much for nothing, so they have to brazen it out,” Liu Xiaoyuan, a lawyer who has opposed the software, said.

“At present, there are too many questions and challenges domestically and abroad, so MIIT is in a dilemma.

“I believe they will carry it out after they have technically improved it and clarified the intellectual property rights.

“[But] if they really want to protect young people from porn, they should deal with the source – pornographic websites.”

Ai Weiwei, a leading contemporary artist and outspoken blogger who had proposed an “internet boycott” to mark opposition to the policy, said he was surprised to hear ministry sources say it would definitely go ahead.

“It was stopped just one day before the policy should be carried out – after preparing for such a long time and facing so much opposition from the public as well as manufacturers,” he said.

There has been confusion about whether the policy required the installation of the software, or whether manufacturers simply had to bundle it with computers.

“If it is true that installation has become party of the policy again, officials are limiting citizens’ freedom to choose and freedom of expression,” Ai said. “This is a backward step.”

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China thinks twice on Green Dam

• Beijing halts Green Dam filtering software plans
• Climbdown comes after wave of online opposition

For the netizens of the world’s biggest online community, it was a rare victory. At the 11th hour, and with no proper explanation, the Chinese government, the most assiduous internet censor on the planet, engineered a sudden climbdown.

Instead of proceeding with plans to transform its notorious Great Firewall internet censor with new tools known as Green Dam, the authorities desisted. A terse statement ran on the Xinhua news agency. “China will delay the mandatory installation of the ‘Green Dam-Youth Escort’ filtering software on new computers.”

The plan to bundle the software into every new computer in China had provoked an unprecedented wave of online opposition, protests by foreign governments and calls by prominent bloggers for Chinese netizens to climb, attack and demonstrate against the “Great Firewall”. China insists the software is necessary to clear the Chinese web of “harmful content”. But critics say it is a misguided attempt to put the internet genie back in the bottle by a Communist party with about 300 million netizens to answer to.

But this was just a small victory in a larger war. The tools have been shelved temporarily, not scrapped. Wen Yuchao, a journalist and blogger who goes by the online name North Wind, cautioned against overoptimism. “I am happy at this news, but this is just an interim victory – we still have a long way to go in the struggle. It remains to be seen whether the authorities will press ahead.”

Delusion

The mini-victory for advocates of internet freedom has a wider resonance in a world where internet censorship is becoming something of a fad. Dozens of countries deploy tactics to filter, block or choke off internet access for their citizens.

When the web was in its infancy, a nascent hope was kindled that the technology would help roll back authoritarianism. Two decades later, it often appears the reverse is true: that the authoritarians are rolling back the internet.

“The internet is sort of becoming the most regulated communications medium in the world,” said Dr Yaman Akdeniz, director of Cyber-rights.org.

“It’s not just new laws that governments are developing to increase control, but they are relying heavily on technological solutions to filter and block access to a variety of content and tools such as web 2.0 applications like YouTube, Facebook and Twitter.

“In the mid-1990s there was the impression the internet would help create more democracy and openness and transparency. That was a delusion. The more the internet penetrated our lives, the more governments got concerned.”

Examples stand out almost every week. Last week, Kazakhstan introduced a new law to regulate forums, chats, blogs, and even online shops.

Last month, the German parliament voted through internet censorship architecture which, though aimed at child pornography, has aroused concern that it could be used to tackle other content.

Elsewhere, Turkey has blocked access to YouTube for more than a year. Several Middle Eastern and Central Asian countries maintain tight control over what websites are available.

In Guatemala, bloggers have reported websites being blocked, according to the Open Net Initiative, a collaborative partnership of leading experts advocating a free internet.

Iran has, moreover, offered a sobering study in how the authorities can turn censorship on and off like a tap. Filtering has become much heavier in the last fortnight. Some users have reported speeds of less than a tenth of normal operations.

“The authorities are aware that almost every internet user knows how to get around the filtering and they don’t care much about it,” said Mehrdad, a student. “But once there is a danger the internet may undermine the political system, they intensify censorship so it gets very difficult to get access to blocked websites even with anti-filter software.”

Monitoring

Crucially, all internet traffic in and out of Iran travels through one portal – the Telecommunications Company of Iran (TCI) – though a few service providers operate below it. This makes it easier to monitor traffic. Sophisticated software allows officials to look at a website or tweet and see the IP address it came from. Decisions on blocking are made by a committee of government officials, members of the judiciary and intelligence services. Filtering is done by the telecommunications ministry.

“The authorities can filter a new website within 24 hours,” said Mahmood Enayat, an Iranian expert at the Oxford Internet Institute. “They monitor very intensively.”

Another method used by the state is deliberately to reduce bandwidth to prevent the transmission of mobile phone-recorded video. Still, that did not stop the world seeing the now iconic 40-second film of Neda Soltan bleeding to death on a street in Tehran.

“If you put 65 million people in a locked room, they’re going to find all the exits pretty quickly, and maybe make a few of their own,” commented James Cowie on the Renesys internet intelligence blog.

The Chinese climbdown offers a first glimpse of the netizens hitting back. As late as yesterday afternoon, information ministry officials denied the software would be delayed, but the authorities have been struggling to meet their deadline to roll out the image and keyword filter, which blocks pornographic, violent and politically sensitive content and monitors behaviour.

The Guardian struggled to find retailers who were selling computers with Green Dam software. In Zhongguangcun, Beijing’s electronic retail heartland, shop staff said they had not received instructions. In the vast Buy Now computer market in the city centre, assistants said the software was not available or would not be included until next year.

Embarrassed

It was unclear whether the reversal was an administrative failure or a change of heart in the government, which has been embarrassed by the backlash.

The US government called on China to abandon the plan. The European Chamber of Commerce co-signed a letter last week to prime minister Wen Jiabao that expressed concerns about the implications for internet security, trade and freedom of expression. But the fiercest opposition was online.

Isaac Mao, co-founder of the online Social Brain Foundation, believes the government made a mistake. “I think this is the tipping point between the people rising up and those in power trying to suppress them.

“The Great Firewall is overloaded and that is why the authorities are trying to move the focus of control to the desktop. But it has annoyed a lot of people. Not just liberals who want free speech, but the young who see it as an intrusion into their personal lives.”

Numerous protests had been planned, including an internet boycott called by the prominent artist and freedom of expression champion Ai Weiwei.

It remains to be seen, however, whether the government will go ahead with Green Dam or a watered-down version of it.

But bloggers were positive about the long-term influence of the information technology evolution.

Michael Anti, an influential blogger, believes that netizens can still realise that original dream of the internet as a champion of free speech.

“More and more people have accepted ‘internet-era values’ such as freedom of speech,” he said. “In 10 years, more people will be netizenised, or liberalised, which will increase the chance of China having genuine democracy.”

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China delays launch of internet filter Green Dam

• Beijing halts Green Dam filtering software plans
• Climbdown comes after wave of online opposition

For the netizens of the world’s biggest online community, it was a rare victory. At the 11th hour, and with no proper explanation, the Chinese government, the most assiduous internet censor on the planet, engineered a sudden climbdown.

Instead of proceeding with plans to transform its notorious Great Firewall internet censor with new tools known as Green Dam, the authorities desisted. A terse statement ran on the Xinhua news agency. “China will delay the mandatory installation of the ‘Green Dam-Youth Escort’ filtering software on new computers.”

The plan to bundle the software into every new computer in China had provoked an unprecedented wave of online opposition, protests by foreign governments and calls by prominent bloggers for Chinese netizens to climb, attack and demonstrate against the “Great Firewall”. China insists the software is necessary to clear the Chinese web of “harmful content”. But critics say it is a misguided attempt to put the internet genie back in the bottle by a Communist party with about 300 million netizens to answer to.

But this was just a small victory in a larger war. The tools have been shelved temporarily, not scrapped. Wen Yuchao, a journalist and blogger who goes by the online name North Wind, cautioned against overoptimism. “I am happy at this news, but this is just an interim victory – we still have a long way to go in the struggle. It remains to be seen whether the authorities will press ahead.”

Delusion

The mini-victory for advocates of internet freedom has a wider resonance in a world where internet censorship is becoming something of a fad. Dozens of countries deploy tactics to filter, block or choke off internet access for their citizens.

When the web was in its infancy, a nascent hope was kindled that the technology would help roll back authoritarianism. Two decades later, it often appears the reverse is true: that the authoritarians are rolling back the internet.

“The internet is sort of becoming the most regulated communications medium in the world,” said Dr Yaman Akdeniz, director of Cyber-rights.org.

“It’s not just new laws that governments are developing to increase control, but they are relying heavily on technological solutions to filter and block access to a variety of content and tools such as web 2.0 applications like YouTube, Facebook and Twitter.

“In the mid-1990s there was the impression the internet would help create more democracy and openness and transparency. That was a delusion. The more the internet penetrated our lives, the more governments got concerned.”

Examples stand out almost every week. Last week, Kazakhstan introduced a new law to regulate forums, chats, blogs, and even online shops.

Last month, the German parliament voted through internet censorship architecture which, though aimed at child pornography, has aroused concern that it could be used to tackle other content.

Elsewhere, Turkey has blocked access to YouTube for more than a year. Several Middle Eastern and Central Asian countries maintain tight control over what websites are available.

In Guatemala, bloggers have reported websites being blocked, according to the Open Net Initiative, a collaborative partnership of leading experts advocating a free internet.

Iran has, moreover, offered a sobering study in how the authorities can turn censorship on and off like a tap. Filtering has become much heavier in the last fortnight. Some users have reported speeds of less than a tenth of normal operations.

“The authorities are aware that almost every internet user knows how to get around the filtering and they don’t care much about it,” said Mehrdad, a student. “But once there is a danger the internet may undermine the political system, they intensify censorship so it gets very difficult to get access to blocked websites even with anti-filter software.”

Monitoring

Crucially, all internet traffic in and out of Iran travels through one portal – the Telecommunications Company of Iran (TCI) – though a few service providers operate below it. This makes it easier to monitor traffic. Sophisticated software allows officials to look at a website or tweet and see the IP address it came from. Decisions on blocking are made by a committee of government officials, members of the judiciary and intelligence services. Filtering is done by the telecommunications ministry.

“The authorities can filter a new website within 24 hours,” said Mahmood Enayat, an Iranian expert at the Oxford Internet Institute. “They monitor very intensively.”

Another method used by the state is deliberately to reduce bandwidth to prevent the transmission of mobile phone-recorded video. Still, that did not stop the world seeing the now iconic 40-second film of Neda Soltan bleeding to death on a street in Tehran.

“If you put 65 million people in a locked room, they’re going to find all the exits pretty quickly, and maybe make a few of their own,” commented James Cowie on the Renesys internet intelligence blog.

The Chinese climbdown offers a first glimpse of the netizens hitting back. As late as yesterday afternoon, information ministry officials denied the software would be delayed, but the authorities have been struggling to meet their deadline to roll out the image and keyword filter, which blocks pornographic, violent and politically sensitive content and monitors behaviour.

The Guardian struggled to find retailers who were selling computers with Green Dam software. In Zhongguangcun, Beijing’s electronic retail heartland, shop staff said they had not received instructions. In the vast Buy Now computer market in the city centre, assistants said the software was not available or would not be included until next year.

Embarrassed

It was unclear whether the reversal was an administrative failure or a change of heart in the government, which has been embarrassed by the backlash.

The US government called on China to abandon the plan. The European Chamber of Commerce co-signed a letter last week to prime minister Wen Jiabao that expressed concerns about the implications for internet security, trade and freedom of expression. But the fiercest opposition was online.

Isaac Mao, co-founder of the online Social Brain Foundation, believes the government made a mistake. “I think this is the tipping point between the people rising up and those in power trying to suppress them.

“The Great Firewall is overloaded and that is why the authorities are trying to move the focus of control to the desktop. But it has annoyed a lot of people. Not just liberals who want free speech, but the young who see it as an intrusion into their personal lives.”

Numerous protests had been planned, including an internet boycott called by the prominent artist and freedom of expression champion Ai Weiwei.

It remains to be seen, however, whether the government will go ahead with Green Dam or a watered-down version of it.

But bloggers were positive about the long-term influence of the information technology evolution.

Michael Anti, an influential blogger, believes that netizens can still realise that original dream of the internet as a champion of free speech.

“More and more people have accepted ‘internet-era values’ such as freedom of speech,” he said. “In 10 years, more people will be netizenised, or liberalised, which will increase the chance of China having genuine democracy.”

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China delays launch of internet filter Green Dam

Pressure from bloggers and governments brings climbdown on compulsory censorship software

In a last-minute climbdown, the Chinese government announced today that it will delay the launch of censorship software that was supposed to have been sold in every computer from tomorrow.

The postponement comes after an unprecedented wave of online opposition, protests by foreign governments and calls by prominent bloggers for Chinese netizens to climb, attack and demonstrate against the “great firewall”.

Xinhua, the state news agency, reported the change of plan four hours before the software launch was due.

“China will delay the mandatory installation of the ‘Green Dam-Youth Escort’ filtering software on new computers,” it said in a terse statement attributed to the ministry of industry and information technology.

The authorities looked likely to miss their deadline for the rollout of the software that blocks pornographic, violent and politically sensitive content.

The Guardian struggled to find a single retailer who had Green Dam either installed or bundled with computers.

Adding to the mystery, Lenovo, Sony, Dell and Hewlett Packard refused to comment on whether their PCs are now being shipped with the software, as the government ordered them to do last month.

The government says the software is necessary to clear the Chinese web of “harmful content”. But critics say it is a misguided attempt to put the internet genie back in the bottle by a Communist party that now has to answer to about 300 million web users.

“Green Dam is a mini-great firewall placed inside every personal computer,” said Michael Anti, an influential blogger. “The real logic behind it is that China is a big kindergarten in which even adults are treated as children that need to be ‘protected’.”

Isaac Mao, a prominent internet commentator, believes the government has made a big mistake: “I think this is the tipping point between the people rising up and those in power trying to suppress them. The great firewall is overloaded and that is why the authorities are trying to move the focus of control to the desktop. But it has annoyed a lot of people. Not just liberals who want free speech but the young who see it as an intrusion into their personal lives.”

Although the plan has at least temporarily failed, it succeeded in mobilising people against the censors. Wen Yuchao, a journalist and blogger who goes by the online name North Wind, said more than 1,000 netizens have signed up to his campaign to “climb” the firewall by signing up to proxy servers that bypass the government’s controls. He said 15,000 people are joining TOR ‑ one of the most popular proxies ‑ every day, about double the normal rate. Freegate, a proxy that was developed by Falun Gong, has also reported a sharp rise in demand.

Ai Weiwei, a prominent artist and freedom of expression champion, called for an internet boycott tomorrow.

“Thousands of netizens have said they will join the boycott. People are starting to realise how important it is to tell the government what they want,” said Ai. “There is nothing the authorities can do [to stop us]. That is what is great about this. It is personal but widespread.”

A group of bandit hackers, known as Anonymous, declared “war” on Green Dam and threatened to attack it tomorrow.

According to a source close to the group, they plan to create a remote computer ‘bot’ that pummels Baidu, Kaixin and other mainland websites with data requests containing forbidden or sensitive terms, such as expletives, Falun Gong, Dalai Lama and “Fifty-cent party member” (the derogatory name given to people paid to post pro-government comments online). They hope the volume of dirty traffic will clog up the keyword filters.

It remains to be seen whether the government will go ahead with Green Dam or a watered-down version of it. But bloggers and free speech advocates say the long-term trend is positive.

“More and more people have accepted ‘internet-era values’ such as freedom of speech, access to information and participatory democracy,” said Michael Anti. “These liberalised people or ‘netizens’ are changing the social institutions, step by step. In 10 years, more people will be [on the net] which will increase the chance of China having genuine democracy.”

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Climate warning over China growth

Cost of crop failure soars as weather disasters become more frequent and severe

China faces an increase in weather disasters which will threaten crops and economic growth, the country’s most senior forecaster has warned.

He Lifu, of the National Meteorological Centre, told the China Daily newspaper that events such as droughts, floods and storms had become more frequent and severe since the 1990s and the trend was likely to continue.

“Extreme weather will be more frequent in the future due to the instability of the atmosphere, and global warming might be the indirect cause,” the forecaster told the English-language paper. He said his agency responded to 16 emergencies last year, the most since its foundation in 1949.

The annual economic cost of extreme weather has soared from 176.2bn yuan (£15.6bn) on average in the 1990s to 244bn yuan (£21.5bn) between 2004 and last year, according to ministry of civil affairs figures cited by the paper.

Farmers are resorting to their own measures to avoid losses. Wheat producers in Henan, Shandong and Hebei fired chemical pellets into the clouds this month to prevent hail and heavy rain from damaging their harvest.

The State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters has also warned that drought has become more frequent since the 1990s, causing more crop failures.

According to the China Daily, the headquarters figures show that annual grain loss caused by drought has averaged 37.3m tonnes since 2000 – almost twice the level in the 1980s – while the annual average proportion of damaged crops has risen to 59.3%, compared with 48% in the 1990s.

Sun Jisong, the chief forecaster at the Beijing Meteorological Bureau, cautioned that part of the apparent increase in extreme weather might be due to more advanced observation techniques and improved recording.

He added that dealing with the rise would require reduced consumption of energy and resources to tackle the causes and improve forecasting and defences.

Last month, the annual Red Cross report said that a rise in weather-related disasters worldwide over the last decade – from around 200 a year in the 1990s to around 350 – was continuing. Its secretary general, Bekele Geleta, warned that extreme-weather events would become more frequent and more severe.

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June 26, 1498: A Brush With History

1498: The emperor of China patents the toothbrush: hogback bristles set into a piece of bone or bamboo. Dental hygiene takes a step up.
How — or if — you cleaned your teeth before this time depended on culture and class. The chew stick, or chewing stick or toothstick, was a piece of twig. One could [...]

‘Chevrolet Group’

Is the pending creation of a ‘New GM’ via a spell in Chapter 11 also a good point at which to consider some corporate re-branding? Yes.


It could be a way to jettison some of the negative baggage that comes with maintaining the name of the failed company, while emphasising that the new company really is a full-on fresh start – a new beginning. Hell, there’s a whole new name and the General is really gone.


Unlike Ford, ‘GM’ itself doesn’t figure too much as a brand on yer actual vehicles. It’s primarily a group umbrella brand that is perhaps crying out to be dropped or changed.


A re-branding would also provide an opportunity to elevate a constituent brand – one that is vital and already pre-eminent in the company’s future plans. Chevrolet fits the bill. Chevrolet is a globally crucial brand for New GM. It’s already established as a high performing brand in long-term automotive growth markets like Russia and China. It also has that striking gold bow-tie logo that is surely ready-to-go for corporate branding.


‘Chevrolet Motors’? You could maybe add the word ‘American’, too – highlighting the new company’s geographical origin and that it is actually more than just Chevrolet. ‘Chevrolet American Motors’? Mind you, there has already been an ‘American Motors’, and maybe throwing the word American in there doesn’t quite work for a global company.


Dunno. Maybe Chevrolet Group is the way to go, keeping it simple. Or how about GM2? No, that’s horrendous.


And no, I don’t think Government Motors – a mocking term bandied about by critics of the Obama administrations actions – quite works. 


Anyone else out there got any suggestions?   

ANALYSIS: New GM needs a new name

The Dead | 04.18 | Worcester, MA Pics from Jay Blakesberg!

Images by: Jay Blakesberg

The Dead :: 04.18.09 :: DCU Center :: Worcester, MA

The Dead (Phil Lesh, Bob Weir, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Warren Haynes and Jeff Chimenti) played the fifth show on their Spring Tour last night (Saturday April 18, 2009) at the DCU Center Worcester, MA.

Set I: Jam > Feel Like A Stranger, Goin’ Down The Road Feeling Bad, Mountains of the Moon > Dupree’s Diamond Blues, Althea > Bird Song, China Cat Sunflower > I Know You Rider

Set II: Jam > Dancin’ In The Streets > Milestones > Terrapin Station > Drums > Space > Days Between > Jam > Birdsong > One More Saturday Night

E: Johnny B. Goode


Pre-Order the show for Download on LiveDownloads.com

The Dead perform again tonight (4/19) in Worcester, MA, check back tomorrow for pics and updates. Complete Dead tour dates available here.

JamBase | Dead Set
Go See Live Music!


Mps Tackle Worries Over Food Price Rise

Govt doing its best to keep inflation low, assures minister

Nazry Bahrawi
nazry@mediacorp.com.sg

WITH groceries costing more by the day and consumers still getting used to
the four-month-old 2-per- cent hike in GST, it was inevitable that
inflation – and the Government’s handling of it – became one of the
talking points in Parliament yesterday.

Among the questions raised by several MPs: Is the Government monitoring
the increases in prices of food items such as flour and chicken? Are such
increases a cause of concern? What will be the impact of rising prices on
businesses? Should the Singapore dollar be allowed to appreciate further?

Madam Halimah Yaacob (Jurong GRC), wondered whether the Consumer Price
Index (CPI ) – which rose 2.7 per cent year-on-year in the third quarter
compared to 1 per cent in the second quarter and 0.5 per cent in the first
quarter – was an accurate reflection of inflationary trends in Singapore.
The CPI tracks the prices of a basket of goods and services, such as
housing, healthcare and transport, consumed by an average household.

Mr Inderjit Singh (Ang Mo Kio GRC) said he was concerned that higher
inflation would affect Singapore’s competitiveness in attracting foreign
investors. Non-Constituency MP Sylvia Lim of the opposition Workers’
Party, wanted to know how Singapore is diversifying its food sources in
order to stabilise prices.

In his response, Trade and Industry Minister Lim Hng Kiang said that the
Government would try its best to keep inflation low even as he noted that
the “current uptick in inflation is a global phenomenon”.

For example, Mr Lim said, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) had
managed to strengthen the value of the Singapore dollar by maintaining an
exchange rate policy since April last year that allows the currency to
“appreciate gradually and modestly” rather than pegging it to the US
dollar. The latter move would have resulted in Singaporeans experiencing
higher inflation.

In reference to Mdm Halimah’s query about whether the CPI was an accurate
reflection of the state of inflation here, Mr Lim noted that the index had
been low for the first two quarters of this year. The CPI is expected to
rise slightly above 2.7 per cent in the fourth quarter.

Mr Lim attributed the lower CPI in the first two quarters of the year to
the “low transport CPI” because of some changes to the transport policies
as well as the low oil prices back then.

However, oil prices are now on the rise and the impact of the GST hike in
July will continue “to show up in higher CPI inflation figures” for 12
months until June next year.

Mr Lim added: “Unlike food import prices, the GST increase has had only a
limited impact on basic food prices as the major supermarket chains have
been absorbing the GST increase for basic food items.”

Mr Lim expects the CPI to hover around 3 per cent in the later part of
2008, higher than the last few years. The Government expects inflation to
peak at 4 to 5 per cent in the first half of next year.

On the issue of food diversification, Mr Lim said while Singapore can
explore the possibility of importing vegetables from Thailand and China,
there is only so much that the Government can do to mitigate a price hike
in consumer goods.

For example, if there is a worldwide increase in the prices of cornfeed,
than chicken prices will go up even if Singapore were to diversify its
sources of frozen chicken from countries such as Australia, the United
States and Brazil.

Allaying Mr Singh’s concern over the impact of rising prices on
businesses, Mr Lim said that Singapore is still in a “good position” to
attract foreign investments because inflation here is still comparatively
lower than other countries.

Singapore is competitive also because while wages had increased, so too
had our productivity, said Mr Lim.

“I don’t think we should begrudge our workers having a fair share of wage
increase in the last two years if we look at the last broader 5 to 7 year
time frame,” he said, explaining that wages was slow to climb during the
longer term period.

The Tiger Could Lose Its Roar

M’sia needs to work harder and faster if it does not want to be left
behind: Analyst

William Pesek

Those wondering where Malaysia is headed should keep an eye on Mr Tony
Fernandes.

Perhaps no one personifies the promise of Asia’s 10th-biggest economy
better than the 43-year-old entrepreneur. In 2001, he created a budget
airline, beating the odds in an industry dominated by government-linked
companies. AirAsia has been turning heads ever since.

Airline magnate Aristotle Onassis once said the key to succeeding in
business is knowing something others don’t. Mr Fernandes knew that not
only were Asians ready for no-frills carriers, but so were investors.

Mr Fernandes is often called South-east Asia’s answer to Mr Richard
Branson. It seems highly appropriate, then, that the two men teamed to
launch AirAsia X, a long-haul budget carrier that made its maiden flight
this month. Mr Branson’s Virgin Group is among its key backers.

For all his success, Mr Fernandes is a microcosm of why Malaysia’s economy
isn’t on the upward trajectory it could be.

Politicians’ efforts over the years to protect the turf of Malaysia
Airlines (MAS) backfired, leaving Kuala Lumpur lagging behind in the race
for Asia’s travel hub. Malaysia has tied one hand behind its back to help
national champions at the expense of the bigger picture.

“I’m asking this for national interest, not MAS’ interest or that of
anything else,” said Mr Fernandes of his battle to fly from Kuala Lumpur
to Singapore. “The consumers have suffered enough.”

Politicians continue to dither over another national champion:
State-controlled carmaker Proton Holdings. While talks on an alliance with
Volkswagen AG are progressing, the saga is a reminder that Malaysia’s
leaders are wasting time the nation doesn’t have.

In Proton’s case, the exercise is about finding a partner to help revive
sales and return the 24-year-old company to profit. Yet this, like Mr
Fernandes’ fight to expand his innovative airline, is emblematic of how
politicians often don’t grasp that Malaysia’s place in Asia is rather
tenuous.

Malaysia is a remarkable place with incredible potential. Its economy has
achieved great things in the 50 years since independence from Britain.
Once a tropical backwater, Kuala Lumpur is now a modern, skyscraper-filled
city home to the world’s second-tallest buildings, the twin Petronas
Towers.

Yet, the next 50 years will arguably be harder than the last. It wasn’t
one of the original Asian tigers, but Malaysia became one over the years.

However, “the world is moving ahead at a rapid pace and it won’t wait for
Malaysia”, said Mr Razlan Mohamed, chief executive of Malaysian Rating
Corp. The nation “needs to work harder and work faster”.

Ms Chrisanne Chin from MIMS Business School, Malaysian Institute of
Management and INTI University College, puts it this way: “It’s not so
much what Malaysia is lacking, but that China, India, Vietnam and even
Thailand and Indonesia have improved so much they are capable of
leapfrogging Malaysia in another five years because of specific
comparative advantages, from low costs to human capital to technology.”

Human capital is a particular concern. The government needs to do more to
train the leaders of tomorrow and import the talent that companies need to
thrive. It also has to win more of the foreign direct investment flowing
elsewhere in Asia.

There is much backslapping about how the US$147-billion ($213-billion)
economy may expand 6 per cent this year and 6.5 per cent next year. The
real picture can be found in the World Economic Forum’s latest
competitiveness survey, in which Malaysia slipped two spots to 21st place.

A huge obstacle for Malaysia is something that can barely be discussed: A
37-year-old affirmative-action programme favouring the predominant Malay
community.

It alienates non-Malays, limits foreign investment, stifles competition
and keeps the economy from moving toward a meritocracy. Yet, it is a
third-rail issue. Most Malaysians won’t even discuss it without first
looking around to see who is listening.

A sense of political drift doesn’t help. Four years in office, Prime
Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has spent more time trying to solidify the
influence of his political party – the United Malays National
Organisation – than bringing Malaysia’s economy to the next level.

For a glimpse of the future, one could do worse than ask Mr Ramon
Navaratnam, president of anti-corruption group Transparency International
Malaysia and author of the book, Where to, Malaysia?, who has this to say:
“The future is bright, but only if we are honest with ourselves that we
have a lot of difficult work to do … Otherwise, we will see the rest of
Asia pulling ahead and Malaysia walking in place.”

William Pesek is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are
his own.

Businessbriefs

hyflux doubles q3 profit

Water-treatment firm Hyflux’s third-quarter net profit climbed to $4.2
million from $1.9 million a year earlier, while revenue rose to $51.9
million from $29.4 million. Hyflux’s China operations contributed about
68 per cent to its revenue while sales in the Middle East and North Africa
accounted for 27 per cent.

Noble group triples Q3 profit

Noble Group’s net profit nearly tripled to $60.6 million in the third
quarter from $23.5 million a year earlier because of rising demand for
commodities. A recent expansion in its operations – to take advantage of
low production costs in source markets – and its shipping fleet also
helped its bottom line. Turnover of the energy segment, Noble’s largest
business, rose to $2.2 billion from $1.8 billion on higher returns from
clean fuels, coal, coke and carbon credits activities. – AGENCIES