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China-Japan-Koreas
China's Wen asks people to speak up
2011-01-27
[Al Jazeera] Wen Jiabao, the Chinese premier, has been quoted by the state media as urging citizens to voice their criticisms of the government and speak out about injustice during a visit to the country's highest petition bureau, where people are allowed to file complaints against officials.
"Yeah. Let a Hundred Flowers Bloom."
Wen met farmers and workers condemning land grabs and unpaid wages among other complaints at the State Bureau for Letters and Calls in Beijing, official media reported on Wednesday, in a rare public show of worry about discontent with the government.

"Please don't hold anything back, and give me the facts," Wen told the people, according to a report on the central government's website.

"Our government is a government of the people, and our power is granted by the people."

The official Xinhua News Agency said late on Tuesday that it was the first time since the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949 that a premier had met ordinary petitioners.

China Central Television quoted Wen as telling visitors and staff at the bureau on Monday afternoon that the government must "create conditions that allow citizens to criticise and supervise the government, and enable government to responsibly resolve the problems and difficulties of the masses".

Human rights

Millions of petitioners visit government offices across China every year to demand redress and are often treated by officials as an embarrassing nuisance, even a threat to control, despite rules that say they should be given a hearing.

People with complaints are often held in a government-run centre in Beijing to be sent home, or nabbed in illicit "black jails".

Al Jizz's Melissa Chan, reporting from Beijing on Wednesday, said petitioners in some cases have been punished and even committed to mental institutions even though there was nothing wrong with them.

"To our knowledge this is the very first time for anyone from the top leadership to have stepped onto the street and try to speak to these petitioners directly," she said.

Wen has won widespread public affection in China by casting himself as a servant of the people, and he pressed that role again by meeting people who journeyed to Beijing to demand a hearing from central officials at a special petitions office.

But Wen's meeting with petitioners amounted to an unusually blunt acknowledgement that China's feverish economic growth had also brought discontent, especially over land confiscations, harsh work conditions and scant support for the many poor people.

"This may be the first time a central leader has done this. Even minor officials usually stay away from us," Liu Anjun, a veteran petitioner in Beijing who has run a support group for complainants, told the Rooters news agency.

"It may be staged, but it's a signal to people. It may be related to Hu Jintao's visit to the United States, which strengthened the focus on human rights
... which are not the same thing as individual rights, mind you...
. The petitioners reflect all the most basic human rights problems in China, and Wen may want to show that at least he's concerned."
Posted by:Fred

#5  An oddity of China is that the people as a whole like the central government, and hate the regional and local governments

Not so hard to understand. Sort of a corollary to "the mountains are high and the emperor is far away". The central gov is off annoying the Japanese and Americans for the greater glory of the Middle Kingdom, while the local and regional guys are involved in the corruption and thuggishness that affects everyday life.
Posted by: SteveS   2011-01-27 23:52  

#4  Toward the end, the Gestapo/SS offered 2 kilos of jam to each Jew who voluntarily reported to the Umshkagplatz...
Posted by: borgboy   2011-01-27 16:09  

#3  Mao did the same thing. But don't worry, I'm sure that THIS time, the government won't brand those who complain as "counter-revolutionary wreckers" or anything...
Posted by: mojo   2011-01-27 15:25  

#2  If Hu is serious about this, or even creating the impression that he is serious about this, it will be very popular.

An oddity of China is that the people as a whole like the central government, and hate the regional and local governments. So if Hu would clamp down on them, he would be wildly popular.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2011-01-27 11:33  

#1  urging citizens to voice their criticisms of the government and speak out about injustice

A shortage of replacement organs?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2011-01-27 05:28  

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