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Comments

TheGhost

Freedom of the press in China would indeed be a wonderful thing, but it will be a long time before the Chinese press will ever be free. You make a good point, as with most communist countries when word gets out that they are up to something they usually back off and let sleeping dogs lay, except of course North Korea. I meet a Chinese journalist once and he told me that after his editor give the ok for a story he writes, many times a goverment 'advisor' will look over the story.

"Last November, local officials in northeast Jilin province failed to report a toxic spill in the Songhua river for several days. Harbin, a city of 9 million in Heilongjiang province, had to shut off public water supplies for nearly a week."

I read about this when it happened and the Russians were really angry because the toxic waste ended up flowing right into the Amur river. The Chinese goverment just does not understand that when something like that happens people need to know so a plan can be made to help contain the problem.
The toxic spill story:
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2005/11/581A68F8-D48F-449B-9616-24ED63D7013E.html

China Law Blog

China's media clampdown law is still in the proposal stage and the way things work in China, the longer it stays in that stage, and the more it is talked about, the less likely it is to be enacted. The silver lining in all of this is that this proposed law is increasing Chinese importance of press freedom. If this law ends up not being enacted (and I think that is a real possibility) its proposal and subsequent failure will end up being a good thing for freedom of the press in China.

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