Danwei Picks is a daily digest of the “From the Web” links found on the Danwei homepage. A feed for the links as they are posted throughout the day is available at Feedsky (in China) or Feedburner (outside China).
Era of transparent government dawns in Kunming: From China Media Project:
China’s leaders say the long-awaited national ordinance on openness of information, due to take the stage in May this year, will usher in an era of "sunshine" governance in which government affairs are marked with clarity and transparency. Don’t count your chickens. The ordinance is hardly a panacea, and there are major questions about how effectively it will be enforced. But some government leaders ARE taking transparency seriously — or making a show of it anyway.
Since the weekend the Web has buzzed in China with the news that Kunming Daily, the mouthpiece of top leaders in Kunming, the capital of Yunnan Province, printed a list of the names of city officials, their contact numbers and their specific areas of responsibility.
Spielberg, the Olympics, and oil: At Global Voices Online, John Kennedy translates a detailed blog post by Hecaitou in which he explains for his readers the historical and cultural context behind Spielberg and the Hollywood left’s criticism of Beijing:
The problem, looking at this from China’s point of view, is ‘do we denounce the Sudanese government?’ Well, does China still want the oil? China is a country which has already transitioned to full reliance on oil imports, and where does the gasoline and diesel we burn up every year come from—Daqing, or Karamay? Of course it’s a problem that the blacks in Darfur are being attacked, being massacred. Well, the gas tanks of the cars and wallets of car owners on China’s roads are problems as well. With any humanitarian spirit, the Sudanese government should be denounced. But, once the denunciation is done, what are we gonna burn then? Denouncing the Sudanese government, supporting the people of Darfur, I imagine everybody would raise their hand for both. But, to say that for the people are Darfur, we would rather go without gasoline, or endure much higher fuel prices and overall hikes in commodity prices, would anybody still raise their hand for that? When it involves vital interests, we might see things differently as we consider the problem. Would you choose three years of a lagging economy if it meant not another person in Darfur would have to die?
Smugglers return iPhones to China: The New York Times reports on how iPhones are manufactured in China, shipped to the US, and then reimported on the grey market:
IPhones are widely available at electronic stores in big cities, and many stores offer unlocking services for imported phones.
Chinese sellers of iPhones say they typically get the phones from suppliers who buy them in the United States, then have them shipped or brought to China by airline passengers. Often, they say, the phones are given to members of Chinese tourist groups or Chinese airline flight attendants, who are typically paid a commission of about $30 for every phone they deliver.
Let the protest games begin: The Sunday Times details the circumstances surrounding Spielberg’s withdrawal from the Beijing Olympics and guesses at what might happen next:
Spielberg’s unease deepened after that. He had taken up the Olympic challenge for two reasons, friends say. One was his friendship with Zhang Yimou, the director of the hit film House of Flying Daggers, who is in charge of designing the opening and closing ceremonies. The other was the hope, "perhaps naive in retrospect", the executive admitted, that he could change policy on Darfur from within China.
Top 10 news photo of the year was faked: ESWN translates a Chengdu Evening News article that explains how a composite photo of Tibetan antelopes underneath the Qinghai-Tibet railroad, done up for a picture postcard, came to be chosen by CCTV as one of the top ten news photos of 2006, and how netizens uncovered the truth.