Miscellaneous News

Blackstone

Brigadier
No, that's not how it works at all. Xinhua's material is vetted by its editors, not by the CPC leadership. Xinhua is never going to publish anything that criticizes the CPC, but that doesn't mean it speaks for the CPC leadership.

As for Xi's corruption crackdown, corruption is not a failing of morality, it is a failing of institution. Corruption happens not because there is some nebulous "morality problem", but because of concrete institutional flaws such as lack of oversight and enforcement.
Let me give it one last try, what do you say must be linked to reasonably show CCP leaders recognized there were morality in China that must be addressed? Corruption is indeed morality failures, it's strange how you don't see it.
 

solarz

Brigadier
Let me give it one last try, what do you say must be linked to reasonably show CCP leaders recognized there were morality in China that must be addressed? Corruption is indeed morality failures, it's strange how you don't see it.

How about a quote from Xi Jinping or Li Keqiang actually saying "there is a moral problem in China"?
 

Blackstone

Brigadier
How about a quote from Xi Jinping or Li Keqiang actually saying "there is a moral problem in China"?
Here's one from Wang Qishan for you. Don't even try and say Wang isn't a CCP leader.

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China’s ruling Communist Party must learn from the traditional virtues which have defined Chinese culture since ancient time as it tackles corruption, a problem that still hangs “acutely”

President Xi Jinping has launched a sweeping campaign against graft since assuming the party leadership in 2012 and presidency in 2013, warning, like others before him, that the issue is so severe it could affect the party’s grip on power.

Writing in the party’s official newspaper the People’s Daily, Wang Qishan, who is in charge of battling corruption, said the source of the party’s rules on tackling this problem were the morals and virtues passed down through history.

“In a series of important speeches General Secretary Xi Jinping has cited a great number of ancient texts and words from the classics, stressing and lauding the fine traditional culture of the Chinese people which has meaning in the new era,” Wang wrote.

In traditional Chinese culture, morality and law are joined at the hip, rules are observed like rituals and everyone follows them, he said.

The party’s rules on fighting corruption and ancient morality can be traced to the same origin, he added, in comments written to explain why the party this week tightened its clean-living rules for party members.

“In setting and adjusting rules, we must learn from the essence of traditional Chinese culture and move with the times in managing the party in accordance with new situations and new missions,” Wang said.

The Communist Party issued an amendment of its discipline rules for the first time over a decade this week.

The party listed golf and gluttony as violations for the first time in its newly tightened rules to stop officials from engaging in corrupt practices, while also turning an even sterner eye on sexual impropriety.

But it also makes “inappropriate comments or assessment of major party policies” that are deemed to be harming party unity punishable, including expulsion from the party.

Vilifying party leaders and distorting party history are also forbidden.

The new measures, in the aftermath of high profile graft cases involving former party leaders at the top echelons of the party, raised concerns that they would stifle dissenting voices even within the Communist Party.

Wang said the party was determined to enforce these rules to ensure they don’t just end up as “something that hangs off the walls or it merely chatter about”, repeating a vow that the party’s graft fight would never end.

The party must be under no illusions about how serious the problem is, he said.

“The trials the party faces in being in power, reforming and opening up, the market economy and foreign environment are long term, complex and serious,” Wang wrote.

"Dangers of laziness, inability to properly act, remoteness from the people and passive corruption hang even more acutely in front of the party," he said.

“If allowed to continue then it will weaken the party’s ability to govern and shake the party’s basis for governing.”
 
London, UK most recently:
DCQcyrRXYAAWd-V.jpg

I just briefly went through
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now ...
here's CNN:
London fire live updates: Blaze engulfs apartment block
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delft

Brigadier
London, UK most recently:
DCQcyrRXYAAWd-V.jpg

I just briefly went through
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now ...
here's CNN:
London fire live updates: Blaze engulfs apartment block
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The building was built in 1974 and its renovation was completed a few months ago.There was no central fire alarm. There were problems with the gas supply.
Thirty people have been taken to hospital, but hundreds are feared lost.
 
The building was built in 1974 and its renovation was completed a few months ago.There was no central fire alarm. There were problems with the gas supply.
Thirty people have been taken to hospital, but hundreds are feared lost.
now I briefly looked at London fire: people trapped as major blaze engulfs tower block – latest
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Equation

Lieutenant General
The building was built in 1974 and its renovation was completed a few months ago.There was no central fire alarm. There were problems with the gas supply.
Thirty people have been taken to hospital, but hundreds are feared lost.

Bad landlord is to blame for this fatality! :mad::(
Now if this were to happen in China, Blackstone would take this opportunity to call out the CPC government, just like some western media. I'm just saying.o_O
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
The good news.
High-level U.S. visit leads North Korea to free student in coma


By
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| WASHINGTON/CINCINNATI

Otto Warmbier, an American university student held prisoner in North Korea for 17 months and said by his family to be in a coma, was medically evacuated from the reclusive country after a rare visit there from a high-level U.S. official.

Warmbier, 22, a University of Virginia student from suburban Cincinnati, arrived in the United States on Tuesday evening, witnesses said.

His release came after Joseph Yun, the U.S. State Department's special envoy on North Korea, traveled to Pyongyang and demanded Warmbier's release on "humanitarian grounds," capping a flurry of secret diplomatic contacts, a U.S. official said.

Warmbier's parents, Fred and Cindy, confirmed their son was on a medevac flight.

"Sadly, he is in a coma and we have been told he has been in that condition since March of 2016," the parents said in a statement. "We learned of this only one week ago. We want the world to know how we and our son have been brutalized and terrorized by the pariah regime in North Korea."

Warmbier was detained in January 2016 and sentenced to 15 years of hard labor in March last year for trying to steal an item with a propaganda slogan, according to North Korean media.

Warmbier's plane landed at Cincinnati Municipal Lunken Airport at around 10.15 p.m. local time (0215 GMT), according to a Reuters witness. Medical personnel carried a male, believed to be Warmbier and wearing a blue shirt and dark blue pants, off the plane without the use of a stretcher.

The person carried from the plane did not appear to be moving independently, the Reuters witness said.


r

left
right
People, believed to be family members, approach and board the medical transport plane carrying Otto Warmbier before he was transferred to an awaiting ambulance at Lunken Airport in Cincinnati, Ohio, US, June 13, 2017.REUTERS/Bryan Woolston

A small group of family friends was nearby to celebrate Warmbier's arrival, cheering and holding signs that read "Pray for Otto" and "Welcome home Otto."

The man was loaded into an ambulance bound for the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, where a hospital spokeswoman said he would receive treatment.

Warmbier's family said they were told by North Korean officials, through contacts with American envoys, that Warmbier fell ill from botulism some time after his March 2016 trial and lapsed into a coma after taking a sleeping pill, the Washington Post reported.

The New York Times quoted a senior U.S. official as saying Washington recently received intelligence reports that Warmbier had been repeatedly beaten in custody.

Hours after his release, the U.S. government blamed Pyongyang for a raft of cyber attacks stretching back to 2009 and warned more were likely.



BIG PRIORITY

Warmbier's release came as former U.S. basketball star Dennis Rodman arrived in North Korea on Tuesday, returning to the nuclear-armed country where he met leader Kim Jong Un on previous visits.

The State Department denied any connection between Warmbier's release and Rodman's visit, which President Donald Trump's administration said it did not authorize.

The State Department is continuing to discuss three other detained Americans with North Korea, U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said.
Since taking office in January, Trump has faced a growing national security challenge from North Korea, which has conducted a series of ballistic missile tests in defiance of U.S. and international sanctions.

White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders told reporters on Air Force One that "bringing Otto home was a big priority for the president."

In rare high-level contacts, Yun met senior North Korean officials in Oslo in May, where it was agreed Swedish officials in Pyongyang, who handle U.S. consular affairs there, would be allowed to see all four American detainees, a State Department official said.

The North Koreans later urgently requested another meeting in New York. Yun met North Korea's ambassador to the United Nations on June 6 and was told about Warmbier's condition, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Tillerson consulted with Trump and arrangements were made for Yun and a medical team to travel to Pyongyang, the official said.

Yun arrived on Monday, visited Warmbier with two doctors and demanded his release, the official said. The North Koreans agreed and he was flown out on Tuesday.

"In no uncertain terms North Korea must explain the causes of his coma," veteran former diplomat Bill Richardson said in a statement after speaking to Warmbier's parents. Richardson has played a role in past negotiations with North Korea.



(Additional reporting by Eric Walsh, Steve Holland, David Brunnstrom, Lesley Wroughton, Ian Simpson, Mark Hosenball and Patricia Zengerle in Washington, Ginny McCabe in Cincinnati, Eric M. Johnson in Seattle; Writing by Matt Spetalnick; Editing by James Dalgleish, Peter Cooney and Paul Tait)
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