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         Chinese Government:     more books (101)
  1. Administrative Reform in China and Its Impact on the Policy-Making Process and Economic Development After Mao: Reinventing Chinese Government (Chinese Studies) (v. 16) by Meiru Liu, 2001-03
  2. Papers in Chinese Linguistics by Chou Fa Kao, 1986-01-01
  3. Chinese Ambassadors the Rise of Diplimat by Xiaohong Liu, 2002-03
  4. China's Universities: Post-Mao Enrollment Policies and Their Impact on the Structure of Secondary Education (Michigan Monographs in Chinese Studies) by Suzanne Pepper, 1984-01-01
  5. Considerations of a Representative Government (Webster's Chinese Traditional Thesaurus Edition) by Icon Group International, 2010-06-10
  6. If They Don't Bring Their Women Here: Chinese Female Immigration before Exclusion (Asian American Experience) by George Peffer, 1999-07-16
  7. Political Participation and Ethnic Minorities: Chinese Overseas in Malaysia, Indonesia, and the United States by Amy L. Freedman, 2000-06-01
  8. Overseas Chinese, Ethnic Minorities and Nationalism: De-Centering China (Routledge Studies in Asia's Transformations) by Elena Barabantseva, 2010-10-11
  9. Brokering Belonging: Chinese in Canada's Exclusion Era, 1885-1945 by Lisa Rose Mar, 2010-10-13
  10. In China's Shadow: Regional Perspectives on Chinese Foreign Policy and Military Development (Conference Proceedings) by Center for Asia-Pacific Policy (Rand Corporation), 1998-01
  11. Chinese-English Dictionary of Contemporary Usage (Center for Chinese Studies, Uc Berkeley)
  12. A Nation Aroused: How India is Determined to Fight Chinese Aggression by Government of India, 1962
  13. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE OF CHINESE GOVERNMENT EXHIBITS FOR THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION OF CHINESE ART IN LONDON VOLUME I BRONZE by The Chinese Organizing Committee, 1936
  14. China; or, Illustrations of the Symbols, Philosophy, Antiquities, Customs, Superstitions, Laws, Government, Education, and Literature of the Chinese: Derived ... accompanied with drawings from native works by Samuel Kidd, 2005-11-30

41. Chinese Government Must Free Pro-Democracy Advocates( HRW December 1998)
chinese government Must Free ProDemocracy Advocates The Three Chinese Detainees. 15on the chinese government's 21 Most Wanted Students list.
http://www.hrw.org/campaigns/china-98/china-detainees.htm
HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH HOME SITEMAP SEARCH CONTACT ... What You Can Do Chinese Government Must Free Pro-Democracy Advocates
The Three Chinese Detainees 1. Wang Youcai Read Update (December 9, 1998) Wang Youcai, a leader in the movement to register the Chinese Democracy Party, a opposition political party, was formally arrested on November 30, 1998. He is being held in a State Security Detention Center in Zhejiang Province. The specific charges are unknown but are rumored to include subversion. On June 25, 1998 he and thirteen others had attempted to register the party in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province. Alone among the thirteen, he was arrested in July and charged with "incitement to overthrow the state" but was released seven weeks later on parole. He was picked up again on November 2, allegedly for violating parole. Related Material
Chinese Government Must Free Pro-Democracy Advocates

HRW Press Release, December 2, 1998 China Signs Human Rights Treaty But Implementation is Key
HRW Press Release, Oct 5, 1998
Wang has a long history of involvement in dissident activities. After serving part of a four-year sentence for his involvement in the 1989 pro-democracy movement, he kept a low profile until 1998 when he became active in a petition and letter writing campaign urging China's leaders to honor international human rights standards. In April, he co-authored a petition demanding the release of two dissidents themselves jailed for petitioning and worker rights activities, and an end to the administrative sentencing system of reeducation through labor to which they were subject. A month later, he signed a petition calling for a reevaluation of the "current" ideology which, the petition said, led to corruption and a "trade of money for power." Even before then, in February, he was questioned about his dissident activities. Since then he has been under constant surveillance and subject to repeated questioning and short-term detention.

42. China To Police Viruses | CNET News.com
In efforts to tighten its grip on the growing threat of computer viruses, the chinese government has announced it will implement new rules that will put the nation's police force in charge of all virus research. News.com
http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,19559,00.html?st.ne.fd.mdh

43. UCLA Asia Institute: How Repressive Is The Chinese Government In Tibet?
How Repressive Is the chinese government in Tibet? Scholar tells skepticalaudience that claims by Tibetan exiles of Chinese cultural
http://international.ucla.edu/asia/article.asp?parentid=2732

44. ChinaSupport.net
Click here to listen! Or, just boycott! Yeah baby! . chinese governmentHands Death To Protestants ONE AMONG SEVERAL OUTRAGES -.
http://www.kusumi.com/chinasupport.net/topnews1.htm
www.chinasupport.net
Supporting Chinese democracy, not communism.
- Organized by Americans after the Tiananmen massacre, 1989 -
News
History Views Pressure ... Contact ...China Support Network does talk radio... Click here to listen! Or, just boycott! Yeah baby!... Chinese Government Hands
Death To Protestants - ONE AMONG SEVERAL OUTRAGES -
January 2, 2002 (CSN) The China Support Network (CSN), coming off a "banner year" in strengthening its presence, advocacy, and support for its activism in 2001, today expressed outrage at a recent series of abuses in China, plus American missteps which cross the Chinese democracy movement. The litany of outrages, simply from the past two weeks, is arranged below as a chronology. Dec. 19 In New York City, Wang Ruowang, a prominent writer and Chinese dissident, dies of cancer at the age of 83. The death will proceed to cause problems in China and for the Chinese democracy movement, as seen in the Dec. 27 and 28 entries, below. Dec. 21 A reporter, Lu Wenbin, is arrested in Dafeng, China for writing about a strike at a textile mill. The reporter wrote for the China Textile Daily, but was arrested by agents of the Ministry of State Security before he could file his story. Dec. 27 With China having completed prerequisite steps for WTO entry, George W. Bush signed off on finally giving China the "PNTR" standing, as part of its trade deal which passed the Congress in 2000. The Chinese democracy movement has stood united against PNTR, and this is clearly where the U.S. government takes sides in China's internal debate, of democracy versus tyranny. "At the China Support Network, PNTR stands for Permanent Normal Tyranny Reward," says CSN director John Kusumi.

45. Tiananmen Square, 1989: The Declassified History
Useful collection of documents providing a U.S. perspective of the events surrounding the chinese government's use of heavily armed military forces against student demonstrators at Tiananmen Square in 1989.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB16/
National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 16
Tiananmen Square, 1989 The Declassified History Includes Selected Documents from the Microfiche Collection:
China and the United States: From Hostility to Engagement, 1960-1998
Prepared by Jeffrey T. Richelson and Michael L. Evans
June 1, 1999
The relationship between the United States and the People's Republic of China over the fifty years since the PRC was established on October 1, 1949 has been extraordinarily complex. Several years ago the National Security Archive initiated a project to shed more light on U.S.-China relations. The purpose was to obtain critical documentation on key aspects of the U.S.-Chinese relationship, with a focus on the years 1969 to the present. Through Freedom of Information Act requests, collection of relevant publications, and archival research, the Archive has amassed a collection of more than 15,000 pages of previously classified documentation on U.S.-China interaction on foreign policy issues, the U.S.-PRC military relationship, the growing economic relationship between the two countries, as well as documents related to the several issues that divide the countries to this day. In June 1999, the Archive will publish on microfiche with a detailed, item-level printed index, these extraordinary documents, which include policy and research studies, intelligence estimates, diplomatic cables, and briefing materials. Titled

46. What The Chinese Government Doesn’t Want You To Know (Aaron Swartz: The We
what the chinese government doesn’t want you to know. Odd, accordingto the RealTime Chinese Filtering Testing System by Zittrain
http://www.aaronsw.com/weblog/000541
Odd, according to the Real-Time Chinese Filtering Testing System by Zittrain and Edelman, this website is blocked in China Update: SourceForge is blocked originally posted August 29, 2002 10:38 AM ( Politics
Nearby
up
Incredible Commentary on .Org Process

Ask Ashcroft to Stop Library Invasion

Shrub Wants to Stop Wildfires by Stopping Forests
... me@aaronsw.com All text above by me is hereby placed in the public domain.

47. Consulate-General Of The People's Republic Of China In New York
Information on consular services and the consulate's departments, plus details of the chinese government's policies on Taiwan and the Falun Gong.
http://www.nyconsulate.prchina.org/eng/index.html
link E-mail Consulate-General of the People's Republic of China in New York CONSULATE INFORMATION PRESS OFFICE CULTURE EDUCATION ... OVERSEAS CHINESE all MFA sites this site The Human Rights Record of the United States in 2002 Health Minister Briefs SARS Conditions in China China's efforts lead to decreasing atypical pneumonia cases China's Human Rights Progress: Eight Historic Changes ... more ... 520 12TH AVENUE, NEW YORK NY 10036, USA

48. Pravda.RU Mao Tse-tung's Offspring Does Not Need The Internet
As the chinese government has stated, it plans to shut down some150 thousand unlicensed Internetcafes throughout the country.
http://english.pravda.ru/main/2002/06/29/31452.html
Say what you want! PRAVDA.Ru will hear you!
Jun, 29 2002 In Russian Em Portugues Former USSR Top Stories ... About Pravda.RU:Top Stories:More in detail
Mao Tse-tung's offspring does not need the Internet
As the Chinese government has stated, it plans to shut down some 150 thousand unlicensed Internet-cafes throughout the country. This decision was made after the incident in Beijing, when 25 people died in a fire in one such cafe. The Beijing mayor closed all Internet-cafes in the city after the tragedy. In connection with this fact, the governmental opposition accused the authorities of using the fire as a pretext for toughening control over the use of the world-wide web in China. The Chinese Ministry for Culture released a statement in which it was said that the owners of all unlicensed Internet-cafes would be called into criminal account, beginning from July of the current year. Other establishments will have to prove that they strictly observe all security rules.
Translated by Dmitry Sudakov
Baikal Business Center

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49. Ananova - Scientists Solve Ancient Chinese Riddle
From Ananova, scientists have helped the chinese government confirm where the ancient makers of terracotta warriors pulled their earth from the ground to build the fabled statues.
http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_726804.html
web Ananova News
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Ananova: Scientists solve ancient Chinese riddle Scientists have helped the Chinese government confirm where the ancient makers of terracotta warriors pulled their earth from the ground to build the fabled statues. After three years of research, scientists have concluded that the statues were created near where they were found in the central city of Xi'an. The warriors were unearthed from the tomb of Qin Shihuang, the emperor remembered for unifying China in about 220 BC. Nearly 8,000 life-sized terra-cotta warriors and horses along with tens of thousands of pieces of weaponry were uncovered in the 1970s from three pits less than a mile from the emperor's tomb. The purpose of the warriors and horses was to protect their ruler throughout eternity. To determine where the warriors were made, researchers collected and analysed more than 100 samples from different parts of the Qin tomb, according to the government's Xinhua News Agency. Then researchers selected 32 elements from each sample for further analysis, Xinhua said.

50. Pravda.RU Can The Humble Modem Threaten The Chinese Government? Apparently So…
Pravda.RUWorldMore in detail, 1513 200206-20 CAN THE HUMBLE MODEMTHREATEN THE chinese government? APPARENTLY SO… In the news
http://english.pravda.ru/world/2002/06/20/30781.html
Say what you want! PRAVDA.Ru will hear you!
Jun, 20 2002 In Russian Em Portugues Former USSR Top Stories ... About Pravda.RU:Top Stories:More in detail
Can the Humble Modem Threaten the Chinese Government? Apparently So…
In the news headlines this morning we see the Chinese have shut down the internet cafes that have been surging in popularity behind the Great Red Wall. Few “products” have ascended in popularity like the internet; its ability to carry a message to the masses is unequaled. This message today will be carried around the world by the same tool that allows a people bound by the throws of communism to experience just a screen shot of the free world.
Using the guise of fire safety, the Chinese government has systematically shut down over 2400 internet cafes (some 2200 of them illegal mom and pop shops) in the capitol city of Beijing. In wake of a tragic fire in an internet café that left two dozen dead, the Chinese government ordered the cafes closed. For years the communist government has been attempting to shut down the flow of information from the free world. Rumors of secret scanning programs and random hard drive checks have kept “approved” owners of internet cafes toeing the line. Who would have thought the Chinese would use the fire code as the coup d’ etat for those seeking cyber-time. This move will at least allow the Chinese government to further implement the far reaching secret police that patrol the internet cafés.

51. China (Includes Hong Kong And Macau)
Critical account of the chinese governments record for 2001. Includes accounts of Hong Kong, Macao and Tibet.
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2001/eap/8289.htm
[Print Friendly Version]
China (Includes Hong Kong and Macau)
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
March 4, 2002
(Note: Also see the report for Hong Kong and the report for Macau The security apparatus is made up of the Ministries of State Security and Public Security, the People's Armed Police, the People's Liberation Army, and the state judicial, procuratorial, and penal systems. Security policy and personnel were responsible for numerous human rights abuses. In 2000 officials stated that there were approximately 1,300 individuals in prisons serving sentences under the Law Against Counterrevolutionary Activity, a crime that no longer exists; many of these persons were imprisoned for the non-violent expression of their political views. According to Amnesty International (AI) 211 persons remain in prison for their activities during the June 1989 Tiananmen Square demonstrations. Since December 1998, at least 30 leaders of the China Democracy Party (CDP) have been given long prison sentences on subversion charges. The authorities released a few political prisoners before their terms were over, notably Zhang Jie, Han Lifa, Guo Haifeng, Cao Maobing, and Ma Zhe. Others, such as CDP activist Zhou Yongjun, who was released in March, were released after completing their sentences. At year's end several thousand political prisonersincluding Bishop An Shuxin, Cai Guihua, Han Chunsheng, Li Bifeng, Liu Jingsheng, Qin Yongmin, Shen Liangqing, Zha Jianguo, Wang Youcai, Xu Guoxing, Fang Jue, Xu Wenli, Zhang Lin, Zhang Shanguang, Zhao Changqing, Abbot Chadrel Rinpoche, Jigme Sangpo, and Ngawang Sangdrol (see Tibet addendum)remained imprisoned or under other forms of detention for the peaceful expression of their political, social, or religious views. Some of those who completed their sentences and were released from prison were kept under surveillance and prevented from taking employment or otherwise resuming normal lives. Authorities also harassed and monitored the activities of dissident's relatives.

52. China Law,China Government,Chinese Government,China Trade,WTO
Legal reference service, with free basic information as well as subscription services.Category Regional Asia China Business and Economy Legal Services...... chin a tradeChina import and export trade law and regulations. The chinese governmentallows free importation and exportation of goods and technology.
http://www.isinolaw.com/
isinolaw, most comprehensive china law resources and research center. Here you can find information on china law, wto china, china trade, china legislation, china law specialists on china patents, trademarks, and intellectual property law. This site also contains most updated research resources in free and subscribed database to details of chinese jurisdiction, legislation, legal case studies, judicial interpretations, court judgement, arbitrations, environmental protection law, patent and trademark application and consultancy, legal news, introduction to chinese legal system, china and wto agreement, lawyer's directory, chinese law publications catalog, company law, taxation, foreign investment enterprises, bankruptcy law, contract law, banking law, real estate law, online legal help, online bookstore, and more.
If you are looking for china law attorneys or Chinese lawyers, here you will find a directory also; china online legal courses are also available. china law Chinese legal information in the areas of China national laws and regulations - national laws and local laws wt o china WTO China - most updated information about China entering World Trade Organization. The World Trade Organization (WTO) is the sole global international organization established to govern trade between nations and to set rules for those trading activities. At its heart are agreements negotiated and signed by different trading nations who then ratify the agreements in their own parliaments. These agreements establish the rules for international commerce. Essentially, they are contracts guaranteeing member countries important trading rights. They also bind governments to keep their trade policies within the agreed limits. How WTO rules will affect China is a current focus of the major trading nations. Register at isinolaw.com

53. Bad Trade: The Cuban Embargo And The World Trade Organization
Points out the hypocricy of rewarding the chinese government while starving the people of Cuba.
http://econ161.berkeley.edu/OpEd/cubachinawto.html
Op Eds
Created 3/22/1997
Go to Brad DeLong's Home Page
Bad Trade: The Cuban Embargo and the Future of the World Trade Organization
Brad DeLong March 25, 1997; draft 3.0 We all know why trade with China is vital. Trade with China gives executives and entrepreneurs contact with the liberal democratic civilization of the industrial west. It shows them that things do not have to be as they are in Chinawith all power in the bloody hands of a narrow oligarchy and a broader party of boot-lickers. Although China's human rights record has been abysmal, the best way to change this is to "engage" China so that its government has a stake in the good opinion of the rest of the world. We also all know why no trade with Cuba is vital. Trade would give Fidel Castro and his lieutenants a powerful boost. Prosperity from trade would strengthen the regime, and delay democratization. The best way to nurture civil society and dissent in Cuba is by embargo. Castro and his high party officials are not personally impoverished, but that is the point: only by making the material economic failure of the Cuban regime crystal-clear can the U.S. "help" Cuba. So far this is bipartisan Washington hypocricy. Congress is eager to vote for sanctions on Cuba, and reluctant to vote for sanctions on China. The President is eager for "engagement" with China, and happy to sign the Helms-Burton Act punishing Cuba. But today's inconsistency is no worse than under George Bush, Ronald Reagan, or before. The legacy of the Cold War, the hatred of Castro by immigrants from Cuba, provocations like the shoot-down of "Brothers to the Rescue" planes over international waters (along with Castro's belief that he is strengthened mightily by confrontation with the United States) have brought us here, where American politicians are comfortable with one set of principles for the Caribbean and another for the Pacific. The embargo has been tough luck for twelve million Cubans who cannot buy or sell in the U.S. But so far it has made little difference otherwise.

54. CHINESE GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS VISIT UPMC HEALTH SYSTEM TO ESTABLISH TIES WITH INT
chinese government OFFICIALS VISIT UPMC HEALTH SYSTEM TO ESTABLISH TIES WITHINTERNATIONAL TRADITIONAL CHINESE MEDICINE CENTER. PITTSBURGH, Jan.
http://www.upmc.edu/newsbureau/director/chinese_medicine_center.htm
News Bureau News Bureau Home Page In The News News Releases Archives Biographies Contact the News Bureau CHINESE GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS VISIT UPMC HEALTH SYSTEM TO ESTABLISH TIES WITH INTERNATIONAL TRADITIONAL CHINESE MEDICINE CENTER PITTSBURGH, Jan. 18, 2000 "We are pleased to welcome these distinguished visitors to Pittsburgh," stated Thomas Detre, M.D., executive vice president, international and academic programs, and director, international affairs, UPMC Health System. "The International TCM Center will be the first integrated, systematic and large-scale international effort to develop scientific and clinical standards for TCM. It was established in Pittsburgh to take advantage of the extensive world-class, clinical and research programs and capabilities which are available here in Western Pennsylvania." "For thousands of years, TCM has proven to be empirically effective in China for the treatment of a variety of diseases. However, before TCM can be used as a source of herbal medicines or conventional drugs in the United States, a number of issues relating to the safety, efficacy and quality of TCM must be understood and clarified. The center will provide the scientific underpinnings that will allow private industry to take these products to market," Dr. Detre continued. Ronald Herberman, M.D.

55. Andinia.com - We Ask The Chinese Government For Compassion.
espacio publicitario en venta Home. We ask the chinese government forcompassion! We ask the chinese government for compassion. Today
http://www.andinia.com/a00061.html
Home We ask the Chinese government for compassion!
We ask the Chinese government for compassion. Today in China 10,000 (ten thousand) bears are kept prisoner for extracting bile form their gall bladders. The bears are kept in a horizontal position, in cages that look rather like coffins . They wear a metal collar and are held down by pressure bars. A catheter is introduced into their body that continuously absorbs the liquid from their gall bladders. The bears cannot change their position and remain in this condition of permanent pain between 15 and 20 years! We cannot accept this cruelty, torture and barbarism to continue and be part of the life of these poor bears for another minute. With their paw they take some food through a little opening in the cage. To quench their thirst they have to stretch their tongue to lick the bars of their prison. They suffer excruciating pain as they have to stay for an average of 15 years in the same position that deforms their bones. We are talking about 15 years or 180 months, or 5,475 days, or 131,400 hours or 78,844,000 continuous pain. The bile serves a disgusting market: it is used to produce shampoos, aphrodisiacs and 'miraculous' remedies. During the extraction of the liquid, a tube is inserted in the gall bladder; one end of the tube stays outside the belly of the bear, linked to a
machine that extracts the bile.

56. Chinese Government, Scientists Oppose Human Cloning
chinese government, Scientists Oppose Human Cloning. China opposesany experiments for the purpose of human cloning, but will allow
http://www.edu.cn/20011130/3012409.shtml
HomePage English November Chinese Government, Scientists Oppose Human Cloning China opposes any experiments for the purpose of human cloning, but will allow "closely-monitored" embryo stem cell research for treatment and prevention of disease, the Ministry of Health announced Thursday. This is the official announcement by the Chinese government on its stance on human cloning after a U.S. biotechnology company claimed November 25 that it had created human embryos through cloning. Meanwhile, some Chinese scientists have urged the country's lawmakers to quicken legislation on banning human cloning. "China does not approve of, support, allow or accept any experiments in human cloning, and this stand is definite and clear," said the announcement of the ministry. The research of embryo stem cells used to treat and prevent diseases will be allowed, "but has to be rational and done under effective monitoring," it said. The ministry also urged that legislation concerning human cloning must be speeded up so that "the cloning technology can be developed healthily and used safely." Chinese scientists also echoed their concerns over legal and ethical issues associated with the cloning technology.

57. Nee's "dark, Mysterious Control"
Nee's Dark, mysterious control . Discusses the imprisonment of Watchman Nee, whose teachings the chinese government claimed undermined the authority of the state.
http://www.gospelcom.net/chi/ARCHIVEF/04/daily-04-12-2001.shtml
tell a friend home contact us free newsletter ... get Glimpses BROWSE OUR INFO-PACKED PAGES Get our free newsletter Who was born this day? It happened this day in church history Back issues of Glimpses Bulletin Excerpts from Christian Heritage Library Archive of earlier daily stories Early church to 600 AD Century-by-century thru church history 100 most important church events Stories that didn't fit anywhere else Stories behind famous sayings Great Christian women Test your knowledge with these quizzes Factoids: Interesting tidbits Dare we ask? Oddities and curiosities About Christian History Institute We need your support Rate us on how we are doing Best books Where to find what in our site Links to other sites
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A Watchman Nee title Among China's millions of Christians, none has been as well known to the West as Watchman Nee. Many of his books, such as

58. Chinese Government
chinese government Guide picks. PRC Government Homepage Inlcudes mainlylinks to government websites. Government Online In Chinese GB.
http://chineseculture.about.com/cs/government/
zfp=-1 About China Online Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
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Guide picks
PRC Government Homepage

Inlcudes mainly links to government websites. China Meteorological Administration
The organization administers the national meteorological service and the organizational arrangement and coordination of national meteorological affairs. China National Tourism Administration Information Center The official government tourist site. Chinese Law Information about Chinese law and legal system Chinese Military Links about Chinese air force, security and general info. Government Introduction to the National People's Congress, the State Council, the Supreme People's Court, etc. Government Online In Chinese GB. Ministry of Foreign Affairs With news and other information about foreign affairs. In both Chinese and English.

59. CNN.com - China Sends Condolences To U.S. - September 12, 2001
The chinese government sends its sympathies and condemns the attacks, but declines to involve itself in any further disputes.
http://www.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/asiapcf/east/09/11/china.us.reax/index.html
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China sends condolences to U.S.
The U.S. flag at half mast in Beijing By Willy Wo-Lap Lam
Senior China Analyst HONG KONG, China (CNN) Beijing's international affairs experts say American "unilateralism" might have contributed to tension with terrorist groups that were suspected of masterminding the attacks against the U.S. Chinese President Jiang Zemin on Tuesday sent a message of condolence to counterpart George W. Bush. The Chinese Foreign Ministry said that it was the Chinese government's long-standing policy to "condemn and oppose all types of terrorist acts of violence." Diplomatic sources in Beijing said soon after the terrorist acts were reported in the Chinese capital, Communist party Politburo leaders met to discuss the emergency. The sources said the leadership decided on three principles: Beijing would condemn the terrorist acts; it would express sympathy with the victims in the U.S.; but it would not get involved in America’s disputes with terrorist groupings or anti-U.S. elements in the Middle East. Tsinghua University foreign affairs expert Yan Xuetong pointed out no form of terrorist action could be condoned.

60. Uighur-l Chinese Government White Paper On Minority Policies To BeDiscus
uighurl chinese government White Paper on Minority Policies to beDiscussedat UCF Forum. From Jack Churchward; Subject uighur-l
http://www.mail-archive.com/uighur-l@taklamakan.org/msg00044.html
uighur-l
Chronological Find Thread
uighur-l Chinese Government White Paper on Minority Policies to beDiscussed at UCF Forum
  • From: Jack Churchward
  • Subject: uighur-l Chinese Government White Paper on Minority Policies to beDiscussed at UCF Forum
  • Date: Sat, 11 Dec 1999 19:46:42 -0800
http://www.china.org.cn/English/WhitePapers/MinoritiesPolicy/ ) The Tibetan Government's response is available online at: ( http://www.tibet.com/NewsRoom/diir9.html ) For further information, contact: *** Jack Churchward Citizens Against Communist Chinese Propaganda 727-441-3982 *** Megan Gainer UCF-SFT 407-657-1817 *=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=* TO POST ON THE UIGHUR-L LIST Send your message to uighur-l@taklamakan.org TO SUBSCRIBE OR UNSUBSCRIBE Send to majordomo@taklamakan.org the message subscribe uighur-l or unsubscribe uighur-l *=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*

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