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Archive for July 24th, 2008

Mass Arrests as Beijing Prepares for Olympics

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Gu Qing’er and Ben Hurley, Epoch Times
July 24, 2008

At least two petitioners are thought to have died as Beijing authorities intensify their campaign to “clean up” the capital for the Olympics, with busloads of people taken away each evening.

Petitioners contacted by telephone told The Epoch Times that on the evening of July 13, five busloads of people were seized and taken away, with another busload taken the following evening.

“Every evening they are seizing people,” Mr Zhao Jianping, told The Epoch Times by phone. “The people living under bridges are becoming fewer and fewer.” Mr Zhao has been appealing in Beijing for more than four years.

Beijing appellant Tang Xuiyun told of a similar situation. “These past two days have been very dangerous for us,” he said. “If you hand in a letter of appeal you’re immediately seized.

“Jilin Province petitioner Xingrong [sic] was yesterday beaten lifeless, then dragged away, right now we have no idea whether [he or she] is dead or alive. Right now everyone is very vulnerable, and we don’t dare to step outside.”

Airing Grievances

Thousands of people, mostly from rural districts, travel to Beijing each year to air their grievances at government “appeals offices”, mostly over land grabs by corrupt local officials.

They are routinely arrested and sent back to their home provinces, but Beijing authorities are now ramping up a campaign that started in September last year, with the central government doing all it can to present a “harmonious” China to the world during next month’s Olympic games.

The mass arrests are coupled with measures to prevent petitioners from reaching the capital. Those wanting to enter Beijing now must apply for a permit, a process that rules out the many who have been blacklisted. All vehicles entering and leaving the capital undergo a “safety check”, with passengers asked to show their identification. Leaflets have been distributed telling residents to report any foreigners or suspicious people to the police.

Daily commuters on buses and trains are randomly asked to show their ID, with government officials stressing both “strictness” and “convenience” for security forces while inspecting people, state media reported.

Additionally, landlords renting out their basements were ordered in June to clear out existing tenants by July 1, according to Hong Kong’s Mingpao newspaper, with estimates that this forced more than 100,000 non-Beijing residents to return to their home provinces. Small hotels and guesthouses have been closed, surveillance cameras have been installed throughout the city, and large numbers of police wearing red armbands have started patrolling the streets.

“They are arresting people everywhere, and hotels don’t allow us to stay there for the night, our identities are all blacklisted,” Mr Zhao said. “The public safety authorities are more restrained in the daytime, but come evening, every appellant they discover is thrown into a vehicle and taken away.”

Suspicious Circumstances

Mr Zhao says a petitioner from his home village told him he saw a girl murdered during the initial roundup on July 13, as she was fleeing from police. “Just as my fellow villager was running away, he saw a Hunan petitioner being stabbed on the road. She was probably a little over 30 years old. Probably thugs from her local district silencing her for good, but who knows what the real reason is.”

Petitioner Mr Li Jiancheng also says he saw someone beaten to death that night, in Beijing’s Gaofa neighbourhood. He said it took place around 11pm, and the corpse was taken away around 2am. The following day, the whole area was sealed off by police.

In another case, a woman in her forties took her own life by leaping off a bridge. She had submitted an appeal letter to the Beijing appeals office, and ran as police followed her out of the building.

“They were trying to stop her from appealing and seize her,” said petitioner Tang Xiuyun. “She ran from them, she saw a bridge and jumped from it, she didn’t want to live anymore, and fell to her death. There were hundreds of people watching, the police came and sealed the whole area off, didn’t allow people to come and look. Some people’s cameras were confiscated, and enquiries about her identity were unsuccessful.”

Mr Zhao says he also witnessed the event. “I came out of the appeals office and saw a lot of people crowding around. I heard she had jumped to her death from a bridge and the police had dragged her body away. She was from Jiamusi, in Heilongjiang Province. We don’t know what her name was. She must have totally lost hope.”

Outside of the Law

Mark Allison, East Asia Researcher for Amnesty International, says petitioners are often detained by local authorities in undocumented detention centres on the outskirts of Beijing.

“They seem to be converted hotels and that kind of thing, and they seem to be completely outside the Chinese criminal justice system–legal system–and there are reports of people being beaten in those centres before being sent back to their home provinces.”

Mr Allison says the issue highlights the problem of detention without trial in China, with petitioners sentenced to re-education through labour for up to four years without legal justification.

“Given that the authorities have actually made promises to improve human rights in the run-up to the Olympics, it’s ironic that a system like that has actually been extended. What does that say for the legacy of the Olympics for human rights in China?”
Tragic Stories

Mr Zhao’s story is typical of the petitioners who travel to Beijing. He says he owned a number of properties before local officials seized them, and sold each square metre to developers for RMB10,000 ($A1510). “I’ve already appealed for four or five years, he said. “I’ve lost all hope in this society, there’s nowhere I can go for justice.

“My property was seized, I went to appeal, the provincial authorities shut down my legal case. I’ve not received a cent. I’ve come to Beijing countless times and it’s just useless; it’s so hard for people to appeal to the authorities. We’re arrested and taken back home, where we’re jailed, beaten and detained. I haven’t dared to return home for four years. I’ve been living away for years now, relying on part-time work to live.”

Li Jiancheng, who has been appealing for more than 10 years, said he no longer holds any hope in the legal appeal process. “Today [a friend’s] mobile received a message, reminding city people to bring their ID when they leave their houses, in case of a random check,” he said. “They are taking appellants as the number one public threat, I think any time now I could be arrested.”

Source | See Also: Defiant Beijing family loses home | China wages war on Olympic weather | Beijing families forcibly relocated for Olympics | Toronto rallies denounce Burma, China regimes | China’s Men In Blue | ICBC Deposes Citigroup as Chinese Banks Rule in New World Order

Kids and cellphone warning

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Tyler Hamilton and Robert Cribb, Toronto Star
July 24, 2008

U.S. advisory echoes Toronto Public Health’s wireless phone concerns

The head of a U.S. cancer centre is urging that children not use cellphones, except in emergencies, because of a growing body of literature pointing to possible adverse health effects, including cancer.

The warning comes on the heels of similar recommendations from Toronto Public Health, as first reported July 12 in the Star. The city’s chief medical officer advised children use land lines, limit their time on calls, and use headsets.

Dr. Ronald Herberman, director of the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, cited Toronto Public Health’s warning and similar recommendations from France, Germany and India, in issuing his own advisory.

“Although the evidence is still controversial, I am convinced that there are sufficient data to warrant issuing an advisory to share some precautionary advice on cellphone use,” he wrote in a memo to centre staff, citing a “growing body of literature” drawing a link between cell use and possible health effects. He said the recommendations have been reviewed by experts in neuro-oncology, epidemiology, neurosurgery and the university’s Center for Environmental Oncology.

Louis Slesin, publisher of scientific newsletter Microwave News, said Herberman is the first head of a U.S. cancer centre to urge precaution.

“The public health community is beginning to speak out on something that was once taboo,” said Slesin. “It may turn out to be a false alarm, but they’re saying there is hard data out there suggesting we may have a tumour problem.”

In Canada, 61 per cent of 12- to 19-year-olds have a cellphone, according to market research firm Solutions Research Group. Some experts say children are more affected by cellphones because of their thinner skin and skull bones.

The wireless industry insists there are no harmful effects from using their products. Health Canada, meanwhile, says there is no scientific reason to consider the use of cellphones unsafe.

The biggest study to date on potential health effects is the 13-country Interphone project, co-ordinated by the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research On Cancer. It focuses on head and neck cancers in adults.

Interphone is more than two years late, though some countries have released preliminary results that hint at increased cancer risks after 10 years or more of cellphone use. Plans are underway to start a second Interphone study focused on children.

Source | See Also: Cellphone use potentially risky for kids, teens: health agency | Mobile phone inventor dreams of human embeds

US mortgage firm bailout includes rider clause to expand police state: all credit card transactions now to be reported to IRS

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Ron Paul, youtube.com
July 24, 2008

Texas Congressman Ron Paul (R) explains how the recent massive bailout – a nationalisation, in effect – approved by the US Congress for juggernaut mortgage firms Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac merely exacerbates a worsening financial crises – and expands the police state besides, with a clause requiring all credit card processors to report transactions to the IRS.

Source | See Also: Federal Reserve cites global stakes in Fannie and Freddie rescue | Financial ’super cop’ role for Fed | What Really Killed Bear Stearns? | Soros points out regulated markets fail to operate on market fundamentals, calls for more regulation | Competition study calls for lowered barriers to foreign ownership, bank mergers | Massive overhaul urged on foreign investment in airlines, media, and banks | Bilderberg Seeks Bank Centralization Agenda | Secretive Bilderberg Group Reverses Policy, Releases Press Release and Attendance List

Rogers Looks For New Ways To Annoy Customers, Hijacks Failed DNS Lookups

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Blaise Alleyne, Techdirt.com
July 24, 2008

Rogers — a Canadian telco — has been attracting a lot of negative attention lately between deliberately disabling notifications for cellular roaming charges, setting ridiculous iPhone pricing plans and injecting its own content into Google’s home page. As if that wasn’t enough, Rogers has started hijacking failed DNS lookups. This means that when a user types in a web address that doesn’t exist, instead of getting a “page not found” error, the user is redirected to a search page filled with banner ads and sponsored links. Michael Geist notes that there’s an “opt-out” feature, but it doesn’t take long to see that it’s pretty pathetic. The “opt-out” sends a cookie which just redirects the user to a different Rogers page instead — a fake “Internet Explorer” error page hosted on the same server. It does essentially the exact same thing, only pretending (poorly, for non-IE users) to revert back to expected behavior. And the option is reset whenever the browser’s cookies are cleared. The comments on Geist’s post are evidence that many Rogers customers are not pleased (myself included).

This isn’t just annoying, it’s also a security threat. It breaks how the internet was designed to work; a lot of software is written with the expectation that a DNS lookup for a non-existent domain name will return an error. For example, Kevin Dean notes in the comments on Geist’s post how this has caused problems for him accessing his VPN. At first, he thought his computer had been compromised, since Rogers’ new “feature” ends up resembling a hostile attempt to redirect traffic to an unknown server.

Some American ISPs already do this, such as Earthlink (which was used to demonstrate the security risk), though it seems to have a slightly better opt-out process, instructing users to configure alternate DNS servers instead of setting a browser cookie. VeriSign had originally tried to do something similar with SiteFinder back in 2003 (though not at the ISP level), but it didn’t exactly go over too well. VeriSign reluctantly backed off, though it just recently obtained a patent on the concept. Rogers is the first Canadian ISP to implement the practice and it seems to think it won’t meet much resistance. In another comment on Geist’s post, Ian relates a telling quote from the FAQs page for Paxfire (the American company handling this for Rogers): “What feedback you do receive typically will come from a small group of highly technical users. Even that feedback tends to fall away after just a few weeks — as they get used to the new behavior.”

Rogers thinks it can just brush off complaints from its users, especially since there really isn’t a lot of choice in the Canadian ISP market. However, Rogers should be careful in treading so brazenly into what some consider “net neutrality” territory. Bell Canada (one of Rogers’ few competitors) has landed itself in front of a national regulatory body over its throttling practices. Rogers wants to have complete control over its network, but by continually pushing the line they only spur on the debate about net neutrality and government regulation. We haven’t heard the last of this.

Source | See Also: Vint Cerf blasts ISPs for choking off internet infrastructure | Bell’s internet throttling illegal, Google says | Canadian Industry Minister lies about Canadian DMCA on national radio, then hangs up | The Canadian DMCA: Check the Fine Print | Government ready to drop copyright bomb | Transparency needed on ACTA | Net neutrality bill hits House of Commons | Revamped copyright law targets electronic devices | New Attempt to Align Canada’s Copyright Act with USA Coming Soon | CRTC revisits Internet oversight | Bell accused of privacy invasion | Canadian DMCA To Be Introduced Tomorrow Morning?

OPP officer posed as journalist during 2007 Mohawk protest

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

CBC News
July 24, 2008

An OPP officer pretended to be a news reporter at a Mohawk protest that prompted the closure of a major rail line and Highway 401 in eastern Ontario during last year’s Aboriginal Day of Action, CBC News has learned.

The officer’s tactics have emerged from testimony recently made public when a judge overturned a publication ban on the preliminary hearing for Mohawk protester Shawn Brant.

Const. Steve Martell testified he pretended to be a journalist on June 29, 2007, and got so close to the barricades that he recognized some protesters’ faces.

Observers and media organizations, including the CBC, are protesting the tactic of police posing as journalists, saying it makes reporters’ jobs more difficult and more dangerous.

It’s not the first time that OPP officers have posed as journalists.

Videotape recorded during an aboriginal occupation of Ipperwash Provincial Park in 1995 shows reporters questioning undercover officers pretending to be a camera crew a day before an OPP sniper shot and killed protester Dudley George.

“You guys shooting for someone?” one of the reporters asks one of the officers.

“Freelancing,” he replies.

When asked specifically who he’s working for, he tells reporters: “UPA.”

“What’s it stand for?”

“United Press Associates,” the officer replies, but no such organization exists.

When the videotape came to light four years ago, the OPP promised to “revisit” the tactic, but based on evidence presented ahead of Brant’s trial, it appears the force has not stopped using it.

Full Story | See Also: Illegal wiretap leads to call for investigation of OPP chief | OPP threatened natives to end blockade | Protestors added to database of terror suspects | US Counterinsurgency Manual Leaked, Calls for False Flag Operations, Suspension of Human Rights | Anti-terror cops probed Ottawa punk band for Cartoon, Political Speech | CSIS Spying on Natives, Olympic Dissidents | Undercover cops tried to incite violence in Montebello: union leader | U.S. Government Caught Red-Handed Releasing Staged Al-Qaeda Videos | Canadians who trust our secret police should think again