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Engineer

Major
Well another fact you conveniently ignored is how a great many of the dead and wounded were attacked with knives, clubs and a whole range of weapons.

Another fact that he conveniently ignored is that local police in China don't carry guns.
 

Engineer

Major
No one here is enjoying the fact that innocent people, their livelihoods and properties are being ransacked and set ablaze. But the parallels with these riots and how the west in general responded to similar riots in china is interesting, if not ironic.
I do admit I have a grim satisfaction that the shoe is on the other foot now, for a moment. But that's mostly because it's showing some hypocrisy on the british/western part -- not because this is simply a "bad look" for the country, that property is being desecrated and certainly not because I'm a malicious b*st*rd.

Exactly. The only people who enjoy innocents getting hurt and properties being destroyed are those who are trying desperately to justify similar violence in China. Pointing out hypocrisy is hardly Schadenfreude.
 

Engineer

Major
Guardian said:
The police watchdog investigating the death of Mark Duggan, whose shooting by police sparked the first rioting in London on Saturday, has said it may have "inadvertently" misled journalists into believing he fired at police. Responding to inquiries from the Guardian, the IPCC said in a statement: "it seems possible that we may have verbally led journalists to believe that shots were exchanged". The announcement is an embarassment for the IPCC. It was scepticism surrounding the official account of his death that led supporers of Duggan to protest two days later.
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News.az said:
Iran ready to send peace keeping forces to London.

Commander of the Basij (volunteer forces) in Iran Mohammad Reza Naghdi said on Thursday that the Ashura and al-Zahar battalions are ready to be dispatched to London as peace keeping forces to help restore calm to the troubled cosmopolitan city.

Speaking to a group of commanders, he strongly criticized British officials for labeling protesters as looters and saboteurs.

'Much to our regret the crimes and brutality of despotic British monarchy against the country’s oppressed continue,' he said.

There are about 1,600,000 of closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras in Britain out of which one million are in the capital city London but the police cannot identify and arrest those whom they label as thieves, he said.

The Untied Nation Security Council does nothing but to back bullying powers and issue resolutions against freedom seekers around the globe but it remains indifference towards current developments in Britain.

If the UN General Assembly ratifies dispatch of Iranian battalions as peace keeping forces to Britain, these forces are ready to help defend human rights as well as oppressed people in London, Liverpool and Birmingham, said the Iranian commander.

History of British monarchy is full of crimes, colonialism, aggression, mass killings and pitting countries throughout the world against one another, resulting in deaths of millions of people and brining miseries for others, he said.

People in UK seek justice and this is among their legitimate rights, he said.
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Quickie

Colonel
Another fact that he conveniently ignored is that local police in China don't carry guns.

Another fact is there're also other riots in China. If what he said is true, a lot more people would have got shot by the trigger happy police, and this would be impossible to hide in this day and age and would spell big trouble for stability. Just doesn't make sense.
 

bladerunner

Banned Idiot
Another fact that he conveniently ignored is that local police in China don't carry guns.

In an area long known for trouble, you dont think an exception would have been in place in case of outbreaks? They had them pretty handy that i wager


Much to our regret the crimes and brutality of despotic British monarchy against the country’s oppressed continue,' he said.

Can't place to much credibility on the likes of this guy who doesn't even realise the British monarchy doesn't govern the UK
China's got problems if it relies on support of Iranians who are clearly out of touch.
 
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bladerunner

Banned Idiot
Another fact is there're also other riots in China. If what he said is true, a lot more people would have got shot by the trigger happy police, and this would be impossible to hide in this day and age and would spell big trouble for stability. Just doesn't make sense.

Not if they stopped if warning shots are fired and as plawolf said at the outset of any firing, most rational people would stop their rioting and run like hell. and i betcha the guns may be out of sight but they arent far away?

Another fact people seem to have forgotten is in the Xinjiang riots the aiuthorities welcomed Foreign press in complete contast to the Tibetean riots, and actually gave them dail briefings with questions and answers as well as escorting them to the riot devasted places.
 
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plawolf

Lieutenant General
Well since the mods have stepped in to ask we not go off on a tangent any more, I will take myself out of this discussion and I suggest others do the same before the mods decide to take more serious action.

I think both sides have already made the bulk of their arguments and point-by-point counter arguments will not advance the discussion much more.
 

Engineer

Major
In an area long known for trouble, you dont think an exception would have been in place in case of outbreaks? They had them pretty handy that i wager

Local police in China don't carry gun, that is a fact. If you have solid evidence showing otherwise (that police shot protestors), I'm sure you would have post it already instead of resorting to pure conjectures. :roll:

Can't place to much credibility on the likes of this guy who doesn't even realise the British monarchy doesn't govern the UK
Can't place much credibility on the likes of a guy who takes a single sentence of the entire article out of context and tries to justify violence where people getting hacked to death as peaceful protest.

China's got problems if it relies on support of Iranians who are clearly out of touch.
The Iranians are doing a bloody brilliant good job at mocking the British government.

In other news:
The Australian said:
INDONESIAN seafarers are being beaten, raped and forced to eat rotten food in slum-like conditions aboard Korean-owned fishing boats, according to a New Zealand study.

New university research compiled from interviews with dozens of fishermen has exposed disturbing levels of inhumane treatment on foreign fishing vessels operating in New Zealand's exclusive economic zone.

The conditions suffered by 2000 mainly Indonesian men on 27 vessels were judged "appalling", with gruesome accounts of extreme physical violence and verbal abuse.

"Officers are vicious bastards ... factory manager just rapped this 12kg stainless steel pan over his head, splits the top of his head, blood pissing out everywhere...," one informant told the University of Auckland.

"I told the Master can't leave him cause he's bleeding all over the squid. He said 'Oh no no, he's Indonesian, no touchy no touchy'... Took him to the bridge and third mate said 'Indonesian, no stitchy no stitchy'. I ended up giving over 26 stitches ... bit of a mess."

Muslim workers were frequently called dogs, monkeys and other derogatory names.

Others were sexually abused, one describing being forced to "massage" the captain every day.

Another said: "Galley boy, good looking boy on a Korean boat was raped by four Chinese crew who got him...."

They drank brown water, ate rotten fish bait and were denied medical treatment when sick or injured.

A fisherman described his experience as being "trapped into modern slavery", while another said they lived "like rats".

A New Zealand official quoted in the study called the boats "a floating freezer ... absolutely appalling conditions just like a slum ... there are definitely human rights abuses out there, they are slave ships".

Many of the interviewees were survivors from the 30-year-old Oyang 70, which sank off New Zealand's South Island last year, killing six men.

The replacement crew and crew from another boat, the 30-year-old Shin Ji, have also contributed after marching off the job objecting to poor conditions and wages.

The Korean company at the centre of the allegations, Sajo Oyang Corporation, has denied claims of widespread abuse. In a statement, it said it had not been asked to offer evidence and claimed the researchers were known to be against foreign fishing.

The study, entitled "Not in New Zealand's waters, surely?", showed the men's annual incomes were just a tenth of what crew on New Zealand boats received. Many did not get one day off in two years, and worked an average of 16 hours a day.

However, falsified time sheets showed shorter days and regular breaks.

Paperwork obtained by the researchers show New Zealand officials were routinely and systematically lied to over wages and conditions.

The revelations have shocked New Zealanders and sparked a ministerial investigation into the operations.

The crew of both boats remain on New Zealand shores fighting for lost wages.

Immigration officials had planned to deport them but this is unlikely to go ahead amid fears the company may never pay the men and may seek retribution upon return to their homeland.

"Deporting the men now would be unjust and also prevent all the relevant evidence being available to the ministerial inquiry into the conditions on foreign charter fishing boats in New Zealand waters," Green Party MP Keith Locke said.
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AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
Let's just remember the media is comparing this to the bombings during WWII. So they're trying to compare the disenfranchised youth without jobs in London with Nazis. Ironic how the "foreign" media is not seen as credible.
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Well when it comes to China, they preached liberty, internet freedom, the right to know. but when their own house is burning suddenly there is change of tune. Guess who has the last laugh?

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David Cameron, Meet Hu Jintao
By James Fallows

Aug 11 2011, 4:25 PM ET
HuJintao.jpgIn my article in the current issue (subscribe!) about this spring's abortive "Jasmine Protests" in China, I mention how hard the Chinese authorities cracked down on social media, as a way of thwarting protests before they happened and of apprehending would-be organizers. In certain parts of Beijing and other cities, text-message transmission -- a main means of Chinese communication -- was blocked altogether. The "real" versions of Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube are banned, and the Chinese counterparts were heavily interfered-with.

Obviously constraints on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and similar social media were hallmarks of autocratic response during the "Arab Spring" protests as well.

Cameron.jpgDid David Cameron not read a single foreign news story this past year? Did he have no idea what camp he was placing himself in, with his call to block social media as a way of controlling violence in England? Du ("When people are using social media for violence we need to stop them" etc. "Free flow of information can be used for good, but it can also be used for ill."ring the Jasmine era, I read more or less those views, from Chinese officials, about the need to get tough.)

Let's stipulate that violence and looting are different from non-violent protest, and much more deserving of being stopped; that the United Kingdom, despite being more thickly covered with surveillance cameras than China, is overall a vastly freer society; and that unlike the United States, with its First Amendment, the United Kingdom has never had an absolutist commitment to freedom of speech.

Still, this was an obtuse -- and harmful -- thing to say. Obtuse because of the failure to pay homage to the liberty-vs-security tradeoff that is central to the social bargain of all free societies. (Compare the Norwegian Prime Minister's response after the horrific killings there.) Harmful, because for years to come any authoritarian government that blocks people's ability to communicate -- in Syria, Libya, Burma, China, wherever -- will have an obvious retort to any Western critique. This is just what the Brits did when things got tense, they can say. If it's good enough for the UK and the Mother of Parliaments, how can it be wrong for us? It's all nice to talk about liberty and privacy when things are going smoothly, they will conclude; but your governments, too, are ruthless when they feel threatened. We're really all the same. (For similar reasons, Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib, and U.S. acceptance of torture and suspension of civil liberties over the past decade badly undercut America's ability to stand in judgment of abuses elsewhere.)

I can barely imagine the pressure on people of all sorts in England, but this was not a grace-under-pressure response.

Britain's U-turn over web-monitoring
English.news.cn 2011-08-12 19:32:46 FeedbackPrintRSS
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BEIJING, Aug. 12 (Xinhua) -- Following days of violent riots in Britain, speculation has grown as to why and how the trouble spread so rapidly.

Apparently the rioters used social media, like Twitter, Facebook and the Blackberry messenger system and Prime Minister David Cameron said Thursday he's looking at banning potential troublemakers from using the online services.

The British government, once an ardent advocate of absolute Internet freedom, has thus made a U-turn over its stance towards web-monitoring.

Communications tools such as Facebook and cellphones also played a delicate role in the massive social upheaval earlier this year in north Africa and neighboring west Asian countries, whose governments then imposed targeted censorship over message flows on the Internet.

In a speech delivered in Kuwait in February, the British prime minister, however, argued that freedom of expression should be respected "in Tahrir Square as much as Trafalgar Square."

Learning a hard lesson from bitter experience, the British government eventually recognized that a balance needs to be struck between freedom and the monitoring of social media tools.

Cameron himself admitted that the "free flow of information can be used for good. But it can also be used for ill."

"And when people are using social media for violence, we need to stop them," he told lawmakers Thursday.

We may wonder why western leaders, on the one hand, tend to indiscriminately accuse other nations of monitoring, but on the other take for granted their steps to monitor and control the Internet.

They are not interested in learning what content those nations are monitoring, let alone their varied national conditions or their different development stages.

Laying undue emphasis on Internet freedom, the western leaders become prejudiced against those "other than us," stand ready to put them in the dock and attempt to stir up their internal conflicts.


With no previous practice, the world is still exploring effective solutions to Internet monitoring.

"Technology has no morality," observed Emma Duncan, deputy editor of The Economist.

And the Internet is also a double-edged sword that cuts both ways. For the benefit of the general public, proper web-monitoring is legitimate and necessary.
Editor: Zhang Xiang
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