China’s stability maintenance system kicks into high gear on ‘sensitive dates’

On dates considered politically sensitive by the ruling Chinese Communist Party, police and local officials across China call up or visit anyone they think might cause some kind of trouble for the authorities, and take steps to silence or control them.

On “sensitive dates” such as June 4, the date of the 1989 Tiananmen killings, authorities target independent journalists, rights activists and lawyers, anyone with a grievance against the government, people who complain and petition the authorities, and anyone with a track record of posting online content that the government doesn’t like.

Meanwhile, an army of internet censors, many of whom work for private service providers, keeps a list of metaphors, code words, homophones and other workarounds to help them block and delete unwanted content.

They are putting into practice China’s “stability maintenance” system, designed to nip social unrest in the bud.

Security personnel walk outside the Great Hall of the People after the second plenary session of the 14th National People’s Congress in Beijing on March 8, 2024. (Jade Gao/AFP)
Security personnel walk outside the Great Hall of the People after the second plenary session of the 14th National People’s Congress in Beijing on March 8, 2024. (Jade Gao/AFP)

Blogger and former police detective Deng Haiyan, who uses the online handle “Second Uncle,” said the police are trying to get ahead of any potential unrest, and nip it in the bud.

“Every time there is a major celebration or festival, they want to make sure nothing untoward happens,” Deng said. “They assume that certain people will take the opportunity to cause trouble at a time like that.”

“Once trouble starts, it spreads very easily, so they want to lock it down beforehand.”

Former Sina Weibo censor Liu Lipeng said online service providers must keep a calendar of “sensitive dates” and be aware of certain keywords and workarounds that internet users may employ to evade censorship.

“As a service provider, you have to have a manual to avoid getting into trouble,” he said.

“Sensitive dates” include major political meetings like the National People’s Congress that ran in Beijing from March 5-11.

‘Picking quarrels and stirring up trouble’

Fu Yuxia, who is pursuing a complaint against the government through official petitioning channels, hails from a small town outside Lianyungang city in the eastern province of Jiangsu. She was detained by police in her hometown of Niushan in late February on charges of “picking quarrels and stirring up trouble.” 

The reason? Fu had bought a rail ticket to visit her parents in Xuzhou, an action that was flagged by the stability maintenance system ahead of the Beijing parliamentary sessions.

“They’re afraid that I’ll go to Beijing during the National People’s Congress, so they have detained me in a rescue facility, with people from my local police station on guard outside, round the clock,” Fu told RFA Mandarin from detention.

“They keep coming to check that I’m still in my room,” she said, adding that police had also questioned her and taken her fingerprints, warning that she would be jailed if she made plans to travel to Beijing.

A petitioner holds photos of evidence in her grievance against local officials, outside a government petition office in Beijing on March 2, 2016, a few days before the National People's Congress opens its annual session. (Greg Baker/AFP)
A petitioner holds photos of evidence in her grievance against local officials, outside a government petition office in Beijing on March 2, 2016, a few days before the National People’s Congress opens its annual session. (Greg Baker/AFP)

Calls to the Niushan police department rang unanswered during office hours one day ahead of the National People’s Congress’ opening session.

Hangzhou-based freelance writer Zan Aizong also had his liberty restricted during the parliamentary sessions by police in his home city of Hangzhou, who kept coming to his apartment to check up on him.

He complained in an online statement: “What do the parliamentary sessions have to do with me? I’m not a delegate to the National People’s Congress or the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference.”

Zan couldn’t see why he was being targeted, as he isn’t someone who is pursuing a grievance, nor a member of a persecuted group.

“I’m just a writer and a not-very-famous online commentator,” he said. 

“Is it necessary to waste so much manpower and material resources? Is it necessary to maintain stability in this way?” Zan wanted to know.

Placed under guard

Meanwhile, state security police in Beijing were placing a guard outside the home of independent political journalist Gao Yu, according to her social media account.

“How are Beijingers supposed to live a normal life?” Gao said in a Feb. 27 post to her X account, calling the surveillance “unbearable.”

Gao said national security police repeatedly called her phone and turned up at her home in a bid to prevent her from meeting a dissident who was believed to be in Beijing.

Similar protocols are typically put in place every five years ahead of the Communist Party’s national congress, dissidents and activists have told RFA.

Petitioners and dissidents have told RFA Mandarin that they are also placed under guard, detention or house arrest up to two weeks ahead of China’s National Day, when the ruling Chinese Communist Party marks the founding of the People’s Republic of China by late supreme leader Mao Zedong on Oct. 1, 1949.

Veteran Chinese journalist Gao Yu works at her desk in her home in Beijing on March 31, 2016. (Greg Baker/AFP)
Veteran Chinese journalist Gao Yu works at her desk in her home in Beijing on March 31, 2016. (Greg Baker/AFP)

Qing Ming, the tomb-sweeping festival, can also be a political minefield for the authorities, because people often use it to commemorate high-profile dissidents like Liu Xiaobo and ousted former leaders like Zhao Ziyang.

Every April 5, police across the country are out in force to stop people from visiting the former homes and graves of people regarded as politically “sensitive” by the government.

In 2021, Geng He, wife of disappeared rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng, vowed to make offerings every year outside the Chinese Consulate in San Francisco on Qing Ming, because she can only assume her husband has died.

“I don’t have any dreams now. I only hope that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) can return Gao Zhisheng’s ashes to me for humanitarian reasons.”

“I now have a premonition that is getting stronger and stronger, which is that Gao Zhisheng has been persecuted to death,” she said in a public statement. “Otherwise, he would definitely have found a way to contact us.”

“From this day onwards, I will treat the Chinese Communist Party’s consulate, the closest one to my home, as his cemetery.”

Sensitive international dates

Internationally recognized dates are also a cause for concern in Beijing.

In 2015, the detention of five Chinese women’s rights activists ahead of International Women’s Day sparked an international outcry.

Zheng Churan, Li Tingting, Wu Rongrong, Wei Tingting and Wang Man were rounded up by police on March 6, 2015, two days ahead of International Women’s Day, as they planned a campaign against sexual harassment on public transportation. They were accused of “picking quarrels and stirring up trouble.”

While they were eventually released “on bail” in April 2016, they remained criminal suspects under tight police surveillance and under the threat of prosecution, while at least one of them was prevented from leaving the country.

According to Liu Liping, International Women’s Day is another “sensitive date” in the Chinese government’s calendar, when censors clamp down on online content even more than usual.

“They’re afraid that [talking about] women’s rights will cause trouble on March 8,” Liu said. “They’re also worried that workers could cause trouble on International Labor Day [on May 1].”

He said China’s internet censors will often scout around on the internet outside the Great Firewall of Chinese censorship to find current keywords that they need to ban ahead of important dates.

Geng He, front, the wife of missing Chinese human rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng, and supporters protest in front of China's consulate in San Francisco, April 19, 2021. (Provided by Geng He)
Geng He, front, the wife of missing Chinese human rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng, and supporters protest in front of China’s consulate in San Francisco, April 19, 2021. (Provided by Geng He)

Then there are the dates that resonate with anyone familiar with China’s recent history, like June 4, anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen massacre.

All of those phrases have long been on censors’ list of “sensitive words,” and posts that contain them are highly unlikely to appear on any Chinese social media platform.

There is also a carefully disguised effort on the ground to ensure the majority of China’s 1.4 billion people go about their business as if the date was nothing special.

Each year, police make arrangements for the relatives of those killed by the People’s Liberation Army in 1989 to make offerings at their loved one’s grave sites.

The ceremonies are private, and low key, made under the watchful eye of the police minders assigned to members of the Tiananmen Mothers victims’ group, which has campaigned unsuccessfully for more than three decades for a public account of the deaths, the pursuit of official accountability for the killings, and compensation for victims’ families.

Enforced ‘vacations’

Beijing-based rights activist Hu Jia said in a recent recording of a conversation with friends that he is typically taken on an enforced “vacation” every year by state security police ahead of the date.

Police also targeted late massacre victim Qi Zhiyong, who was left disabled after the massacre, and fellow dissidents who might otherwise try to lay floral tributes for the victims in Tiananmen Square.

But Hu said the “stability maintenance” operation isn’t as intensive as during major political meetings like the National People’s Congress.

According to Deng Haiyan, that’s because the authorities want to erase people’s memories of the massacre, so avoid any public show of force on that date.

“They will target a specific group on that day with strict and comprehensive blockades and controls, but make sure that the public are totally unaware of it, so they can’t see  or how big the iceberg really is,” Deng said.

Even decades-old dates can touch a nerve with the authorities.

Egg Fried Rice day is a colloquial term referring to the anniversary of the death of Mao Zedong’s son Mao Anying in a U.S. bombing raid during the Korean War (1950-1953).

According to an apocryphal story that still circulates widely in China, Mao Anying’s location was only discovered by the U.S. military because he broke blackout rules with a cooking fire, because he wanted to make fried rice.

In 2021, authorities in the eastern Chinese province of Jiangxi jailed a man surnamed Zuo for 10 days after he posted an irreverent comment on the Sina Weibo social media platform under the username @yuediyouyou.

“That fried rice was the best thing to come out of the whole Korean War,” the user wrote on Oct. 8, 2021, in a joking reference to the Nov. 25, 1950 death of late supreme leader Mao’s son Mao Anying in North Korea.

Participants attend a conference held by All-China Women's Federation to commemorate the International Women's Day, March 3, 2024 in Beijing, (Zhao Jun/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images)
Participants attend a conference held by All-China Women’s Federation to commemorate the International Women’s Day, March 3, 2024 in Beijing, (Zhao Jun/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images)

Internet chef Wang Gang caused a public storm last November after he made a video showing people how to make egg fried rice near the anniversary.

China has laws banning insults to revolutionary heroes and martyrs, as well as to the national anthem, its soldiers and police force.

Xi Jinping’s birthday has also become a sensitized date in recent years, according to Liu Lipeng.

“When it comes to June 15th, there are a bunch of references that won’t get posted, even the fat tiger in the Japanese comic Doraemon whose birthday is the same day as his,” Liu said. “On that day, it’s a sensitive word.”

“They have used the hero laws to arrest people on a large scale in recent years, just to create an atmosphere of terror,” he said. “No one dares to say no to his ultra-nationalist narrative. And this is the atmosphere they want.” 

Translated by Luisetta Mudie.

Senior U.S. diplomat to visit S. Korea, Indonesia for talks on democracy, human rights


A senior U.S. diplomat will travel to South Korea and Indonesia for talks on democracy, human rights and other issues, the State Department said Friday.

As part of the trip from Saturday to March 22, Uzra Zeya, under secretary of state for civilian security, democracy and human rights, will visit Seoul, where she will meet people from the government, civil society and the education sector for collaboration on anti-trafficking efforts, global humanitarian efforts and other issues.

In Seoul, Zeya will also join Secretary of State Antony Blinken at the third Summit for Democracy that South Korea is hosting from Monday through Wednesday.

She plans to give remarks at the opening ceremony of the summit on Tuesday to underscore the U.S. government’s commitment to supporting civil society and human rights defenders, according to the department.

In addition, she will give keynote remarks at an event, organized by the governments of the Netherlands and Denmark, to highlight the importance of upholding information
integrity online.

In Jakarta, Zeya plans to work to advance bilateral cooperation under the two countries’ comprehensive strategic partnership announced by their presidents in November 2023, the department said.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

2 suspects in Misamis Occidental broadcaster slay arrested

MANILA: Police have arrested two of the three suspects in the November 2023 killing of Misamis Occidental broadcaster Juan Jumalon, the Presidential Task Force on Media Security (PTFoMS) announced on Saturday.

Citing the report from Misamis Occidental police director Col. Dwight Monato, PTFoMS executive director Undersecretary Paul Gutierrez identified the arrested suspects as Boboy Bongcawel (alias Boboy) and Renante Bongcawel (alias Inteng).

Gutierrez said the two were arrested Friday in Barangay Poblacion, Sapang Dalaga town by the Calamba and Sapang Dalaga Municipal police.

The operations were conducted by virtue of an arrest warrant for murder and theft issued by Executive Judge Michael Lotao Ajoc of Calamba Regional Trial Court Branch 36.

‘Boboy was the person identified as poking a gun at Jumalon’s radio station helper when he opened the gate, while Inteng was identified as the driver of their getaway motorcycle,’ Gutierrez said in a statement.

‘No bail was recommended for their temporary liberty,
‘ he added.

The arrested suspects maintained their silence.

Gutierrez is optimistic that authorities would be able to apprehend “very soon’ the remaining suspect, gunman Julito Mangumpit (alias Ricky).

“Already, the Misamis Occidental PPO (Police Provincial Office) is following up on several leads on Mangumpit’s whereabouts,” Gutierrez said. ‘Their dedication and unswerving commitment to solve this case is truly commendable.”

Gutierrez said the resolution of Jumalon’s case is a top priority of the government, adding that President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. gave a clear directive to leave no stone unturned until justice is served to the slain broadcaster’s family.

Jumalon, also known as DJ Johnny Walker, was gunned down on Nov. 5, 2023 in Calamba town while on live broadcast inside his residence, where 94.7 Gold FM community radio station is also located.

Source: Philippines News Agency

PH gov’t committed to promoting welfare of OFWs in Czechia – Marcos

MANILA: President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. on Saturday (Manila time) assured overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) in the Czech Republic of the Philippine government’s commitment to protecting and promoting their rights and welfare.

He gave the assurance as he hailed the OFWs for their skills, diligence, and talent, qualities that impress not just their foreign employers but also the host countries.

During his meeting with the Filipino community in Prague, Marcos said he visited the Czech Republic to discuss with its government the importance of the security and protection of OFWs.

‘Ang ganda ng inyong performance. Kinahahangaan kayo ng inyong mga kasama, at bukod pa sa paghanga, napamahal na sa inyo dahil masyado raw mabait ang Pinoy (Your performance is exceptional. Your colleagues admire you, and in addition to their admiration, you became endeared to them because they say that Filipinos are so kind),’ he said.

‘Inimbitahan ko ang ating mga kaibigang Czech na lalong pagtibayin ang kanilang sistema na protekt
ahan ang karapatan at kapakanan ng ating mga OFW (I invited our Czech friends to further strengthen their system to protect the rights and welfare of our OFWs).’

Marcos told Filipinos in the Central European nation that a Joint Communiqué on Labor Consultations Mechanism was signed between the Philippines and the Czech Republic during his visit to Prague, to protect the OFWs’ rights.

He also noted that the Czech Republic is raising the annual quota for Filipino workers to 10,300 starting this year because of the OFWs’ outstanding performance and dedication to work.

Marcos said his administration would continue to strive harder to give Filipinos, especially the OFWs, a more comfortable life.

He added that the government would do its best to make the Philippines an ‘upper-middle-income economy’ by 2025, considering that the country is ‘getting back on its feet again after reeling from the effects of the pandemic.’

‘Ako, at ang ating mga kasamahan sa Gabinete, ay patuloy na nagpupursige na maiahon ang ating
bansa. Ito ang pangako ng Bagong Pilipinas na aming inilunsad noong Enero (I, along with my colleagues in the Cabinet, continue to strive to uplift our country. This is the promise of the New Philippines that we launched in January),’ Marcos said.

‘This is my commitment to provide our society with a principled, an accountable and dependable governance to attain better future for all Filipinos. Pinagbubuti namin ang aming serbisyo alang-alang po sa inyo at alang-alang sa masaganang kinabukasan ng bawat Pilipino (We are continuously improving our service for your sake and for the prosperous future of every Filipino),’ he added.

As of Dec. 31, 2023, there are about 7,026 Filipinos in the Czech Republic, according to the data from the Czech Ministry of Interior.

They are engaged in the processing industry, automotive, repairs of appliances, manufacturing, IT communications, real estate, health or wellness, and household service work.

Source: Philippines News Agency

PH eyes pharma-medical device ecozones within 2024

MANILA: The Philippines is eyeing to launch the pharmaceutical-medical device (pharma-dev) economic zones within 2024, with four locations across the country already under consideration.

At the Saturday News Forum in Quezon City, Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) Director General Tereso Panga said PEZA is now in the site selection stage.

‘So, nasa site selection kami, establishment ng criteria. Mayroon sa Laguna, mayroon Bulacan, mayroon Tarlac, mayroon din sa Cebu (We’re now in site selection, establishment of criteria. There’s Laguna, Bulacan, Tarlac, and Cebu),’ he said.

In a separate interview, Panga said PEZA is classifying this initiative as ‘urgent’ in line with President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.’s proposal to establish general pharmaceutical ecozones.

‘The goal is within one year. Urgent iyon kasi may nag-file na sa amin (This is urgent because a firm already filed) so we’re just awaiting the proclamation,’ he said.

Panga shared that Japanese firms handling medical devices previously expre
ssed intent to register with PEZA.

The dedicated pharma-zones are envisioned to be equipped with all necessary facilities, including cold chain, to ensure that operations of the locators are viable.

Panga said they will enjoy fiscal incentives such as four to seven years of Income Tax Holiday (ITH).

‘After that, they will graduate to plus 10 years of special corporate income tax. Iyan ay kapag export-oriented sila (that is if they are export-oriented),’ he said.

‘Kapag domestic market naman (If it’s the domestic market), after the ITH period, they will graduate to five years of enhanced deductions,’ he added.

In both cases, Panga said they would enjoy tax and duty-free importation, zero-Value Added Tax rating, and prompt facilitation of their shipments.

PEZA and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are closely working to formulate a policy that would be incorporated into the planned ecozones.

‘We will increase prolongation of the CPR (Certificate of Product Registration) or the LTO (License to Operat
e), the very necessary licenses for the pharmaceutical and medical device stakeholders,’ FDA Director General Samuel Zacate said in the same presser.

‘Without compromising safety, we will tailor-fit for them to comply and because the PEZA is here already, we will focus on exportation and part of it is for domestic use,’ he added.

Source: Philippines News Agency

CSC highlights role of civil service in ensuring gender equality

MANILA: The Civil Service Commission (CSC) is urging government agencies to continue to be at the forefront of ensuring gender equality in the public sector in line with the celebration of National Women’s Month.

In a statement on Friday, CSC Chairperson Karlo Nograles called on government workers across the country to reaffirm the collective commitment to fostering a culture of equality and inclusiveness by recognizing the capabilities of women and embracing partnerships across all genders.

‘Women’s leadership, resilience, and commitment serve as an inspiration to us all. As government workers, we all have a unique role to play in shaping the future of governance and in gender mainstreaming in the entire Philippine bureaucracy. We must be champions of ensuring gender equality,’ Nograles said.

He noted that the CSC, as the premier human resource (HR) institution of the Philippine government, has crafted and implemented various programs and policies aimed at helping female workers navigate their multiple ro
les and achieve work-life balance.

To deter the occurrence of sexual harassment cases in the public sector, the CSC strengthened the provisions of the 2017 Rules on Administrative Cases in the Civil Service, specifically those referring to the administrative proceedings for sexual harassment complaints where the offender is a government employee.

The changes were primarily made to further deter sexual harassment in the public sector, as well as to harmonize the rules with Republic Act (RA) 11313 or the Safe Spaces Act and its Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR).

Meanwhile, the IRR of RA 11210, or the Expanded Maternity Leave Law, issued jointly by the CSC, the Department of Labor and Employment, and the Social Security System, provides women who have undergone live childbirth with 105 days maternity leave with full pay, with an option to extend for 30 days without pay.

In addition to the 105 days, solo parents are entitled to 15 more days of maternity leave.

Furthermore, under RA 9710, also known as
the Magna Carta of Women (MCW), any female public sector employee, regardless of age and civil status, who has undergone surgery caused by gynecological disorders, may avail of special leave benefits under the provisions and IRR of the MCW.

The CSC also reminded agencies to ensure inclusive HR practices by enforcing the Equal Opportunity Principle (EOP) in recruitment and appointment processes.

This includes implementing the 2017 Omnibus Rules on Appointments and Other Human Resource Actions, as amended, which ensures not only standard procedures but also the fair and equal treatment of individuals in recruitment, selection, appointment, promotion, and other HR actions.

The EOP aims to remove barriers and discrimination during the selection process. It also aims to ensure equal participation in, or access to, learning and development interventions based on factors such as sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, civil status, disability, religion, ethnicity, or political affiliation.

‘Let e
very activity for this month be a catalyst of change. Let it all inspire us to prove the potential of women, and that the power of working together can collectively contribute to building a government that is fair, inclusive, and transformative,’ Nograles said.

The CSC is joining the nation in observing the 2024 National Women’s Month Celebration with the theme, ‘WE for Gender Equality and Inclusive Society.’

This year’s subtheme, ‘Lipunang Patas sa Bagong Pilipinas; Kakayahan ng Kababaihan, Patutunayan,’ highlights the need to give women equitable opportunities and not be hindered by gender biases and discriminatory stereotypes.

Source: Philippines News Agency