Full Coverage: China
May 2006
Recommended links
» The OneWorld China Country Guide
The aim of this Guide is to provide a brief introduction to human rights and sustainable development issues in China
Browse the archives by month:
| … |
2005
|
2006
|
2007
|
… |
05/31/2006
According to a new report, China, India, and Brazil could cut their rapidly rising energy use and greenhouse gas emissions by more than 25 percent using existing energy efficient technologies.
Read moreFrom: Inter Press Service (IPS) Related: [India] [Brazil] Image: Wind is the world's fastest growing energy source. © Worldwatch Institute
|
05/30/2006
The moment of truth for the world's largest dam will arrive on 6 June, when the main concrete wall of China's Three Gorges Dam must begin to hold water after a temporary coffer dam is demolished in a series of explosions.
Read more* Three Gorges Campaign From: Environment News Service (ENS) Image: The Three Gorges Dam (WWF) © WWF
|
05/29/2006
With world energy prices and climate-altering greenhouse gas emissions ballooning in tandem with a surge in energy demand from the hot economies of China, India and Brazil, the world has a major stake in the success of energy reduction efforts, particularly in those three countries, say experts concluding a four-year international project.
Read moreRelated: [India] [Brazil] |
05/28/2006
SAN FRANCISCO, May 27 (OneWorld) - Executives at Yahoo's annual shareholders meeting Thursday turned down a request from the human rights group Amnesty International, which is demanding the world's most visited Web site stop censoring the Internet and referring dissidents to the Chinese government.
Read moreFrom: OneWorld US Related: [Corporations] [Business] [Freedom of Expression] [Internet] [Justice and Crime] [Law] |
05/27/2006
from Climate Change blog:
Read more
Both countries are building dirty coal-fired power stations fast. These are not 'clean energy sources' as industry PR suggests: the 'lie that may destroy the Earth's atmospheric system'.
Related: [United States] [Energy] [Climate Change] |
05/26/2006
Amnesty International USA, a Yahoo stockholder, challenged the company to uphold human rights in its operations in China at the annual stockholders meeting Thursday. Yahoo provided sensitive information to the Chinese government that may have helped convict Li Zhi, a civil servant, who was jailed for criticizing the government.
Read moreFrom: Amnesty International USA Related: [United States] |
05/24/2006
As Beijing moves forward with construction for the 2008 Summer Olympics, project developers are embracing state-of-the-art energy technologies as well as measures to save water and protect sensitive ecosystems.
Read moreFrom: Worldwatch Institute Image: © Worldwatch Institute
|
05/23/2006
At least 3,000 Chinese scientists will spend three years working in rural communities in developing countries to help improve their food security, China's Ministry of Agriculture announced.
Read moreFrom: SciDev.Net |
05/23/2006
The decision of China's Public Security Bureau to refuse to allow detained blogger and documentary filmmaker Hao Wu access to a lawyer on national security grounds was dismissed as “absurd” by a media watchdog as Hao began his fourth month in detention.
Read more |
05/19/2006
Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, the Chinese government...Amnesty International has made it easy for you to tell them all that you want everybody everywhere to be able to freely express themselves and have unfettered access to information through the Internet.
Read moreFrom: Amnesty International USA Image: © Amnesty International USA
|
05/16/2006
Fearing that news of land disputes and other civil discontent could fuel a threat to its authority, China’s government has undertaken one of the biggest media crackdowns since the aftermath of the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy demonstrations, says a new report.
Read more |
05/15/2006
In China, Microsoft, Google, Yahoo and others are aiding repression, censorship, and violation of fundamental freedoms. Amnesty International urge you to take action.
Read moreFrom: Amnesty International - International Secretariat Related: [Human Rights] [Internet] Image: Internet Rights
|
05/09/2006
“DO YOU know how serious a mistake you've made?” Yan Yuanzhang recalls an official asking him not long ago. Mr Yan had been summoned to Beijing's Internet Propaganda Management Office to talk about his websites.
Read moreRelated: [ICT] [Internet] |
05/08/2006
A gentle community gets on with life despite having a wall of missiles pointing at them, reports OneWorld UK's man in East Asia, Nury Vittachi.
Read moreFrom: OneWorld UK Related: [Taiwan] Image: Nury Vittachi
|
05/02/2006
The Stanford University School of Medicine has signed on to a deal that will provide consumers and health professionals in China access to leading medical research in the United States.
Read moreRelated: [Health] [ICT] [Internet] |
Browse the archives by month:
| … |
2005
|
2006
|
2007
|
… |



Both countries are building dirty coal-fired power stations fast. These are not 'clean energy sources' as industry PR suggests: the 'lie that may destroy the Earth's atmospheric system'.
