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SINO DAILY
Chinese blogger given 6.5 years for 'rumour-mongering'
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 23, 2014


China censors squash giant inflatable toad reports
Beijing (AFP) July 23, 2014 - Chinese reports about a giant inflatable toad have been deleted from the Internet after social media users compared the puffed-up animal to a former Communist Party chief.

The installation of a giant inflatable duck in Hong Kong's harbour last year sparked a national craze for oversized blow-up wildlife, with several Chinese cities launching their own imitations.

The latest, a 22-metre-high (72-feet) toad, appeared in a Beijing park last weekend, but met with mockery from social media users who compared its appearance to that of former President Jiang Zemin.

The website of China's official Xinhua news agency and popular web portal Sina had deleted their reports on the animal -- seen as a symbol of good fortune in traditional Chinese culture -- by Wednesday.

A message on Xinhua's website read: "Sorry, the report you are attempting to access has been deleted or has expired," although reports on some lower-profile news sites were still accessible.

China's ruling Communist Party tightly controls the Internet, blocking foreign sites such as Facebook while ordering local outlets to remove articles on political topics it deems sensitive, such as criticism of senior leaders.

Last year China's Twitter-like Sina Weibo blocked searches for "big yellow duck" after users posted an image of the iconic "Tank Man" photograph showing a Tiananmen Square protester but with military vehicles replaced by giant ducks.

Jiang -- who stepped down as president in 2002 but still wields influence within the party -- has been mockingly nicknamed "toad" by some Internet users for his jowly features.

Rumours have been swirling around Jiang amid reports that current party chief and president Xi Jinping is targeting some of the former president's allies in an anti-corruption drive.

A spokesman for Yuyuantan park in Beijing said there were no immediate plans to remove the toad.

A Chinese blogger known for criticising the ruling Communist Party was sentenced Wednesday to six-and-a-half years in jail, state media said, as authorities pursue a crackdown on online "rumours".

Dong Rubin -- a businessman known to his 50,000 online followers by the alias "Bianmin", or frontier person -- had long discomfited officials in the southwestern province of Yunnan on issues ranging from environmental safety to police brutality.

He was found guilty by Wuhua district court of conducting "illegal business operations" and "fabricating and spreading online rumours for economic gain", according to the official Xinhua news agency.

Hou Peng, the general manager of Dong's Internet consulting company, was sentenced to three years in jail, and the men were fined 350,000 yuan ($56,000) and 50,000 yuan respectively.

Dong rose to prominence in the early days of Chinese microblogging and quickly gained a following due to his outspoken stance on several hot-button issues.

In 2009 he sharply criticised the government's handling of the case of Li Qiaoming, a 24-year-old man who died from severe brain injuries while in police custody.

Police in Yunnan said that Li had died while playing "hide-and-seek" with other inmates, but national online fury sparked by Dong's criticism led authorities to conduct an internal investigation.

It concluded he was beaten to death by three fellow detainees, although three officers were sacked.

Last year Dong again garnered widespread attention when he vocally opposed the planned construction of a petrochemical plant near Yunnan's provincial capital, Kunming.

Nearly 1,000 people took to the streets to protest against the plant, which would produce the toxic chemical paraxylene (PX). Posts about the protest were later deleted by China's vast network of online censors.

China launched a national campaign against "rumours" last September, with Internet users facing three years in prison for writing defamatory messages that are re-posted 500 times or viewed more than 5,000 times.

The crackdown has swept up several prominent government critics including Chinese-American billionaire blogger Charles Xue, who was arrested last August.

Shortly after Xue's arrest, Dong wrote on his Sina Weibo microblogging account that police had raided his company office. At the time, he mused about the charges authorities might pursue against him.

"Using prostitutes, gambling, drug trafficking, tax evasion?" he wrote.

A week later, he was detained, and in October he was paraded on state broadcaster CCTV, delivering a televised confession.

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