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China

10 replies · 184 views
over 15 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
China
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over 15 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
My sister, who is currently living in Japan however will be spending a few weeks in China in the near future has just sent me this.

Don't know weather to laugh or cry.

Chinese Embassy in NZ wrote:


2010 Nobel Peace Prize a disgrace

Friday the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Liu Xiaobo, an incarcerated Chinese criminal.

The Nobel committee once again displayed its arrogance and prejudice against a country that has made the most remarkable economic and social progress in the past three decades.

The Nobel Prize has been generally perceived as a prestigious award in China, but many Chinese feel the peace prize is loaded with Western ideology.

Last century the prize was awarded several times to pro-West advocates in the former Soviet Union, including Mikhail Gorbachev, whose efforts directly led to the disintegration of the Soviet Union. The Western preference of the Nobel committee did not disappear with the end of the Cold War.

The committee continues to deny China's development by making paranoid choices.

In 1989, the Dalai Lama, a separatist, won the prize. Liu Xiaobo, the new winner, wants to copy Western political systems in China.

There are many different perspectives to view these two people, but neither of the two are among those who made constructive contributions to China's peace and growth in recent decades.

Other Chinese dissidents, such as Rebiya Kadeer and Hu Jia, were reportedly on the shortlist for the peace prize this year, which naturally generates animosity among many Chinese against the award.

They have reason to question whether the Nobel Peace Prize has been degraded to a political tool that serves an anti-China purpose. It seems that instead of peace and unity in China, the Nobel committee would like to see the country split by an ideological rift, or better yet, collapse like the Soviet Union.

Liu Xiaobo was sentenced to 11 years in jail by the Chinese government last year. Several countries tried to interfere into China's domestic affairs. What the Nobel committee did Friday was a continuation of that act.

The controversy in the West over Liu Xiaobo's sentence is not based on legal concerns. They are trying to impose Western values on China.

Obviously, the Nobel Peace Prize this year is meant to irritate China, but it will not succeed. On the contrary, the committee disgraced itself.

The award however makes it clearer that it is difficult for China to win applause from the West during China's development, and China needs to be more determined and confident in choosing its own development path, which is different from Western approach.

The Nobel committee made an unwise choice, but it and the political force it represents cannot dictate China's future growth.

China's success story speaks louder than the Nobel Peace Prize.


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over 15 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
is a big country that has little cups that break easily.
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over 15 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
It is a pretty interesting choice. You have to say. From a Chinese perspective,you can see their position.Tegal2010-10-23 16:52:01

Allegedly

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over 15 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
Don't know why they're so upset, Obama got it for doing nothing, it's a joke of accolade.

We will never fully decide who has won the football.

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over 15 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
I don't understand Mr Incredible. Are you suggesting that just by visiting China your sister will be eligible to win the Nobel Prize?
 
 

"Ive just re-visited this and once again realised that C-Diddy is a genius - a drunk, Newcastle bred disgrace - but a genius." - Hard News, 11:39am 4th June 2009

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over 15 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
this gong lost  a lot of it's allure when Henry Kissenger was awarded it, despite being directly responsible for the deaths of over 1 500 000 SE Asians.


E's Flat Ah's Flat Too

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over 15 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
I know nothing about Liu Xiaobo, but where else in the modern world would you be an incarcerated criminal for having a different ideology.
The overall tone is that a different ideology is dangerous, "split by an ideological rift, or better yet, collapse."  However, the spectacular progress, not with standing,  it might be more mature to accept that in a nation of a billion people there may be a few dissenting views.
I know under MMP, I have felt like installing a slot machine for eyes, so I only need to pull a lever to 'start my eyes rolling.'
 Having said that, if he is some kind of nutter who threw bombs, yep it's jail time.
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over 15 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
Anfieldal and I have written to the Chinese Ambassador having a moan about their attitude. Won;t change anything but better to do than NOT do.

How can Charter08 be seen as criminal???

Charter 08 is a manifesto drafted and signed by Chinese intellectuals calling for reform of China's human rights. It was issued on 10 December 2008 to mark the 60th anniversary of the UN's Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It is inspired by Charter 77, the Czech manifesto that called for reform in communist Czechoslovakia. When Charter 08 was issued it was signed by 303 Chinese intellectuals and dissidents, and has since been signed by several thousand people inside and outside China.

The author of Charter 08 is the intellectual Mr Liu Xiabao (right) who was imprisoned and sentenced to 11 years in prison in December 2009. This led to international protests. He was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010.


dairyflat2010-10-26 18:26:45
Profile pic. Should you be interested. Lakhsen, on the right, lost touch with him.
Mohammed, on the left, I'm still in touch with. He's now living in Agadez, Niger. More focused on his animals now as tourism has dried up. Is active with a co-op promoting local goods, leather work and bijouterie, into Europe. 
20/5/20

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over 15 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
The Nobel prize is just a political tool right now. I don't respect any of the recent awards at all - they're just trying to flew muscles and take pop shots at certain people/groups/countries.
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over 15 years ago · edited over 13 years ago
China... in this case? Maybe? Just asking....
Profile pic. Should you be interested. Lakhsen, on the right, lost touch with him.
Mohammed, on the left, I'm still in touch with. He's now living in Agadez, Niger. More focused on his animals now as tourism has dried up. Is active with a co-op promoting local goods, leather work and bijouterie, into Europe. 
20/5/20

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