city:chongqing

  • ‘Worse than doing time’ : life on the wrong side of China’s social credit system
    https://www.inkstonenews.com/china/chinas-13-million-discredited-individuals-face-discrimination-thanks-social-credit-system/article/3003319

    David Kong felt shattered after a recent business trip to Chongqing. It took him more than 30 hours to travel to the city from Beijing, on a hard sleeper known in China as the “green-skin train” for its distinctive dark olive hue. The same 900-mile journey would have taken just three hours by air, or about 12 hours by high-speed train. But Kong could not take either, as he was a “deadbeat.” High-speed trains are out of the question for those who have been blacklisted. Photo : Xinhua/Li (...)

    #algorithme #CCTV #santé #vidéo-surveillance #surveillance #SocialCreditSystem

    ##santé

  • China embraces a revolution in genetic testing, seeking answers on destiny and identity
    https://www.statnews.com/2018/09/27/china-embraces-consumer-genetic-testing

    BEIJING — It was from the news of American actress Angelina Jolie’s double mastectomy that Yang Yang learned it would be possible to have her DNA sequenced. A white-collar worker from Chongqing, a major city in southwest China, Yang admired her idol’s decision in 2013 to take her future into her own hands after a genetic test revealed a high risk of breast cancer. Five years later, Yang has discovered that genetic testing services are not only available to Hollywood stars, but also to the (...)

    #23Mofang #biométrie #génétique

  • GNOME 3.28
    https://linuxfr.org/news/gnome-3-28

    GNOME a annoncé, mercredi 14 mars, la version 3.28 de son environnement de bureau, qu’elle a baptisé Chongqing en référence à la ville chinoise qui a accueilli le rassemblement GNOME Asie de 2017. Comme tous les six mois, nous profitons de la sortie de la dernière mouture pour parler un peu de ce qu’il s’est passé durant le dernier cycle de développement, dans GNOME et autour. On verra que c’est toute la chaîne d’approvisionnement des logiciels qui est en cours de mutation, puisque la communauté s’est officiellement dotée d’une instance Gitlab comme nouvelle forge logicielle, que la compilation de plusieurs briques importantes de GNOME est désormais confiée à Meson, et que Flatpak continue son bonhomme de chemin.

    lien n°1 : Notes de publication de GNOME 3.28lien n°2 : Article précédent, à (...)

  • The Song Sisters Facts
    http://biography.yourdictionary.com/the-song-sisters

    By marrying men of political distinction and adhering to their own political pursuits, the Song sisters— who included Ailing (1890-1973), Meiling (born 1897), and Qingling (1892?-1981) Song— participated in Chinese political activities and were destined to play key roles in Chinese modern history.

    Charlie Song and Guizhen Ni had three daughters and three sons, all of whom received American educations at their father’s encouragement. Though dissimilar political beliefs led the Song sisters down different paths, each exerted influence both on Chinese and international politics; indeed, Meiling’s influence in America was particularly great.

    In childhood, Ailing was known as a tomboy, smart and ebullient; Qingling was thought a pretty girl, quiet and pensive; and Meiling was considered a plump child, charming and headstrong. For their early education, they all went to McTyeire, the most important foreign-style school for Chinese girls in Shanghai. In 1904, Charlie Song asked his friend William Burke, an American Methodist missionary in China, to take 14-year-old Ailing to Wesleyan College, Georgia, for her college education. Thus, Ailing embarked on an American liner with the Burke family in Shanghai, but when they reached Japan, Mrs. Burke was so ill that the family was forced to remain in Japan. Alone, Ailing sailed on for America. She reached San Francisco, to find that Chinese were restricted from coming to America and was prevented from entering the United States despite a genuine Portuguese passport. She was transferred from ship to ship for three weeks until an American missionary helped solve the problem. Finally, Ailing arrived at Georgia’s Wesleyan College and was well treated. But she never forgot her experience in San Francisco. Later, in 1906, she visited the White House with her uncle, who was a Chinese imperial education commissioner, and complained to President Theodore Roosevelt of her bitter reception in San Francisco: “America is a beautiful country,” she said, “but why do you call it a free country?” Roosevelt was reportedly so surprised by her straightforwardness that he could do little more than mutter an apology and turn away.

    In 1907, Qingling and Meiling followed Ailing to America. Arriving with their commissioner uncle, they had no problem entering the United States. They first stayed at Miss Clara Potwin’s private school for language improvement and then joined Ailing at Wesleyan. Meiling was only ten years old and stayed as a special student.
    The First and Second Revolutiona

    Ailing received her degree in 1909 and returned to Shanghai, where she took part in charity activities with her mother. With her father’s influence, she soon became secretary to Dr. Sun Yat-sen, the Chinese revolutionary leader whose principles of nationalism, democracy and popular livelihood greatly appealed to many Chinese. In October of 1911, soldiers mutinied in Wuhan, setting off the Chinese Revolution. Puyi, the last emperor of China, was overthrown and the Republic of China was established with Sun Yat-sen as the provisional president. Charlie Soong informed his daughters in America of the great news and sent them a republican flag. As recalled by her roommates, Qingling climbed up on a chair, ripped down the old imperial dragon flag, and put up the five-colored republican flag, shouting “Down with the dragon! Up with the flag of the Republic!” She wrote in an article for the Wesleyan student magazine:

    One of the greatest events of the twentieth century, the greatest even since Waterloo, in the opinion of many well-known educators and politicians, is the Chinese Revolution. It is a most glorious achievement. It means the emancipation of four hundred million souls from the thralldom of an absolute monarchy, which has been in existence for over four thousand years, and under whose rule “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” have been denied.

    However, the “glorious achievement” was not easily won. When Qingling finished her education in America and went back in 1913, she found China in a “Second Revolution.” Yuan Shikai, who acted as president of the new Republic, proclaimed himself emperor and began slaughtering republicans. The whole Song family fled to Japan with Sun Yat-sen as political fugitives. During their sojourn in Japan, Ailing met a young man named Xiangxi Kong (H.H. Kung) from one of the richest families in China. Kong had just finished his education in America at Oberlin and Yale and was working with the Chinese YMCA in Tokyo. Ailing soon married Kong, leaving her job as secretary to Qingling, who firmly believed in Sun Yat-sen’s revolution. Qingling fell in love with Sun Yat-sen and informed her parents of her desire to marry him. Her parents, however, objected, for Sun Yat-sen was a married man and much older than Qingling. Charlie Soong took his family back to Shanghai and confined Qingling to her room upstairs. But Qingling escaped to Japan and married Sun Yat-sen after he divorced his first wife.

    Meanwhile, Meiling had transferred from Wesleyan to Massachusetts’s Wellesley College to be near her brother T.V. Song, who was studying at Harvard and could take care of her. When she heard of her parent’s reaction to Qingling’s choice of marriage, Meiling feared that she might have to accept an arranged marriage when she returned to China; thus, she hurriedly announced her engagement to a young Chinese student at Harvard. When her anxiety turned out to be unnecessary, she renounced the engagement. Meiling finished her education at Wellesley and returned to China in 1917 to become a Shanghai socialite and work for both the National Film Censorship Board and the YMCA in Shanghai.

    Ailing proved more interested in business than politics. She and her husband lived in Shanghai and rapidly expanded their business in various large Chinese cities including Hongkong. A shrewd businesswoman, who usually stayed away from publicity, Ailing was often said to be the mastermind of the Song family.

    Qingling continued working as Sun Yat-sen’s secretary and accompanied him on all public appearances. Though shy by nature, she was known for her strong character. After the death of Yuan Shikai, China was enveloped in the struggle of rival warlords. Qingling joined her husband in the campaigns against the warlords and encouraged women to participate in the Chinese revolution by organizing women’s training schools and associations. Unfortunately, Sun Yat-sen died in 1925 and his party, Guomindang (the Nationalist party), soon split. In the following years of struggles between different factions, Chiang Kai-shek, who attained the control of Guomindang with his military power, persecuted Guomindang leftists and Chinese Communists. Qingling was sympathetic with Guomindang leftists, whom she regarded as faithful to her husband’s principles and continued her revolutionary activities. In denouncing Chiang’s dictatorship and betrayal of Sun Yat-sen’s principles, Qingling went to Moscow in 1927, and then to Berlin, for a four year self-exile. Upon her return to China, she continued criticizing Chiang publicly.

    In 1927, Chiang Kai-shek married Meiling, thereby greatly enhancing his political life because of the Song family’s wealth and connections in China and America. Whereas Qingling never approved of the marriage (believing that Chiang had not married her little sister out of love), Ailing was supportive of Chiang’s marriage to Meiling. Seeing in Chiang the future strongman of China, Ailing saw in their marriage the mutual benefits both to the Song family and to Chiang. Meiling, an energetic and charming young lady, wanted to make a contribution to China. By marrying Chiang she became the powerful woman behind the country’s strongman. Just as Qingling followed Sun Yat-sen, Meiling followed Chiang Kai-shek by plunging herself into all her husband’s public activities, and working as his interpreter and public-relation officer at home and abroad. She helped Chiang launch the New Life Movement to improve the manners and ethics of the Chinese people, and she took up public positions as the general secretary of the Chinese Red Cross and the secretary-general of the commission of aeronautical affairs, which was in charge of the building of the Chinese air force. Under her influence, Chiang was even baptized.

    Meiling’s marriage to Chiang meant that the Song family was deeply involved in China’s business and financial affairs. Both Ailing’s husband Kong and her brother T.V. Song alternately served as Chiang’s finance minister and, at times, premier. In 1932, Meiling accompanied her husband on an official trip to America and Europe. When she arrived in Italy, she was given a royal reception even though she held no public titles.
    The Xi-an Incident

    In 1936, two Guomindang generals held Chiang Kaishek hostage in Xi-an (the Xi-an Incident) in an attempt to coerce him into fighting against the Japanese invaders, rather than continuing the civil war with Chinese Communists. When the pro-Japan clique in Chiang’s government planned to bomb Xi’an and kill Chiang in order to set up their own government, the incident immediately threw China into political crisis. In a demonstration of courage and political sophistication, Meiling persuaded the generals in Nanjing to delay their attack on Xi-an, to which she personally flew for peace negotiations. Her efforts not only helped gain the release of her husband Chiang, but also proved instrumental in a settlement involving the formation of a United Front of all Chinese factions to fight against the Japanese invaders. The peaceful solution of the Xi-an Incident was hailed as a great victory. Henry Luce, then the most powerful publisher in America and a friend to Meiling and Chiang, decided to put the couple on the cover of Time in 1938 as “Man and Wife of the Year.” In a confidential memo, Luce wrote "The most difficult problem in Sino-American publicity concerns the Soong family. They are … the head and front of a pro-American policy.

    "The United Front was thereafter formed and for a time it united the three Song sisters. Discarding their political differences, they worked together for Chinese liberation from Japan. The sisters made radio broadcasts to America to appeal for justice and support for China’s anti-Japanese War. Qingling also headed the China Defense League, which raised funds and solicited support all over the world. Ailing was nominated chairperson of the Association of Friends for Wounded Soldiers.
    Meiling’s Appeal to United States for Support

    The year 1942 saw Meiling’s return to America for medical treatment. During her stay, she was invited to the White House as a guest of President Franklin Roosevelt and his wife Eleanor. While there, she was asked by the President how she and her husband would deal with a wartime strike of coal miners, and she was said to have replied by drawing her hand silently across her throat. In February of 1943, she was invited to address the American Congress; she spoke of brave Chinese resistance against Japan and appealed to America for further support:

    When Japan thrust total war on China in 1937, military experts of every nation did not give China a ghost of a chance. But, when Japan failed to bring China cringing to her knees as she vaunted, the world took solace ….Letusnot forget that during the first four and a half years of total aggression China had borne Japan’s sadistic fury unaided and alone.

    Her speech was repeatedly interrupted by applause. In March, her picture again appeared on the cover of Timeas an international celebrity. She began a six-week itinerary from New York to Chicago and Los Angeles, giving speeches and attending banquets. The successful trip was arranged by Henry Luce as part of his fund-raising for United China Relief. Meiling’s charm extended past Washington to the American people, and the news media popularized her in the United States and made her known throughout the world. Indeed, her success in America had a far-reaching effect on American attitudes and policies toward China.

    Soon afterward, Meiling accompanied Chiang to Cairo and attended the Cairo Conference, where territorial issues in Asia after the defeat of Japan were discussed. The Cairo Summit marked both the apex of Meiling’s political career and the beginning of the fall of Chiang’s regime. Corruption in his government ran so rampant that—despite a total sum of $3.5 billion American Lend-Lease supplies—Chiang’s own soldiers starved to death on the streets of his wartime capital Chongqing (Chungking). While China languished in poverty, the Songs kept millions of dollars in their own American accounts. In addition to the corruption, Chiang’s government lost the trust and support of the people. After the victory over Japan, Chiang began a civil war with Chinese Communists, but was defeated in battle after battle. Meiling made a last attempt to save her husband’s regime by flying to Washington in 1948 for more material support for Chiang in the civil war. Truman’s polite indifference, however, deeply disappointed her. Following this rebuff, she stayed with Ailing in New York City until after Chiang retreated to Taiwan with his Nationalist armies.

    Ailing moved most of her wealth to America and left China with her husband in 1947. She stayed in New York and never returned to China. She and her family worked for Chiang’s regime by supporting the China Lobby and other public-relations activities in the United States. Whenever Meiling returned to America, she stayed with Ailing and her family. Ailing died in 1973 in New York City.
    Differing Beliefs and Efforts for a Better China

    Meanwhile, Qingling had remained in China, leading the China Welfare League to establish new hospitals and provide relief for wartime orphans and famine refugees. When Chinese Communists established a united government in Beijing (Peking) in 1949, Qingling was invited as a non-Communist to join the new government and was elected vice-chairperson of the People’s Republic of China. In 1951, she was awarded the Stalin International Peace Prize. While she was active in the international peace movement and Chinese state affairs in the 1950s, she never neglected her work with China Welfare and her lifelong devotion to assisting women and children. Qingling was one of the most respected women in China, who inspired many of her contemporaries as well as younger generations. She was made honorary president of the People’s Republic of China in 1981 before she died. According to her wishes, she was buried beside her parents in Shanghai.

    Because of their differing political beliefs, the three Song sisters took different roads in their efforts to work for China. Qingling joined the Communist government because she believed it worked for the well-being of the ordinary Chinese. Meiling believed in restoring her husband’s government in the mainland and used her personal connections in the United States to pressure the American government in favor of her husband’s regime in Taiwan. Typical of such penetration in American politics was the China Lobby, which had a powerful sway on American policies toward Chiang’s regime in Taiwan and the Chinese Communist government in Beijing. Members of the China Lobby included senators, generals, business tycoons, and former missionaries. In 1954, Meiling traveled again to Washington in an attempt to prevent the United Nations from accepting the People’s Republic of China. After Chiang’s death and his son’s succession, Meiling lived in America for over ten years. The last remaining of three powerfully influential sisters, she now resides in Long Island, New York.
    Further Reading on The Song Sisters

    Eunson, Roby. The Soong Sisters. Franklin Watts, 1975.

    Fairbank, John. China: A New History. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1992.

    Hahn, Emily. The Soong Sisters. Greenwood Press, 1970.

    Li Da. Song Meiling and Taiwan. Hongkong: Wide Angle Press, 1988.

    Liu Jia-quan. Biography of Song Meiling. China Cultural Association Press, 1988.

    Seagrave, Sterling. The Soong Dynasty. Harper and Row, 1985.

    Sheridan, James E. China in Disintegration. The Free Press, 1975.

    #Chine #USA #histoire

  • Shippers get the news: Hanjin finally reveals where its ships are - The Loadstar
    http://theloadstar.co.uk/shippers-get-news-hanjin-finally-reveals-ships

    (localisation, mais sans carte…)

    Unloading operations have begun on some Hanjin vessels after the line finally began to update shippers and forwarders on where its vessels actually are.

    A fleet update issued by the carrier this morning shows the vast majority of its vessels still “waiting in open sea” for instructions from headquarters.

    So far six vessels are confirmed to have been arrested – the Hanjin Baltimore at Panama, with the Panama Canal “impassable” to the line; Hanjin Vienna in Vancouver; Hanjin California in Sydney; Hanjin Rome, as widely reported, in Singapore; and Hanjin Rotterdam in Yantian; and Hanjin Sooho in Shanghai; while the Hanjin Montevideo has been arrested by its bunker supplier in Long Beach, California.

    Another seven vessels are at port under embargo and three more – Sky Pride, Sky Love and Pacita – have been returned to their owners.

    Ten vessels are waiting off the coast of China and two off Japan; a further 12 are waiting off South Korea, two of which – Hanjin Chongqing and Asian Trader – have now run out of fuel and are waiting for bunker supplies. Another nine vessels are underway to Pusan, where they won’t run the risk of arrest.

    The Hanjin Europe is under embargo in Hamburg, with Hanjin Harmony waiting in the North Sea, while five vessels wait in the Mediterranean. Two of the latter were refused entry to the Suez Canal and now face circumventing the Cape of Good Hope on their journey to Asia.

    There are nine vessels waiting in the waters of South-east Asia, the Indian Ocean and around Australia, and a further three in the Arabian Gulf.

    In the US, Hanjin Greece began unloading at a Long Beach terminal, while five vessels wait off the coast, with reports that one, the Hanjin Gdynia, will dock this week.

  • Les déplacés des #Trois_Gorges

    Parmi les déplacés des Trois Gorges, trois groupes sont arrivés à Shanghai. Originaires de zones rurales de la municipalité de Chongqing, ils ont tous été installés dans la périphérie de la métropole où une maison et des terres leur ont été attribuées. Cet article présente le cas de ceux arrivés sur l’île de Chongming. A travers leur situation, nous mettons en lumière les problèmes auxquels sont confrontés les migrants forcés et les limites de la planification gouvernementale, alors que de nouveaux plans de déplacement de population, tant en zone urbaine que rurale, se multiplient aujourd’hui en Chine.

    http://perspectiveschinoises.revues.org/978
    #déplacés_internes #réfugiés #migrations #barrage

    • Impacts du #barrage des Trois Gorges sur le développement durable de la #Chine

      L’#eau douce, ressource que nous pensions inépuisable, est rare et souvent difficile à prélever. Selon les plus récentes données, moins de 1 % de toute l’eau douce sur la planète est facilement accessible à l’être humain. Mais cette faible proportion pourrait suffire si la répartition géographique de cette ressource était mieux équilibrée sur la planète. Actuellement, 1,2 milliard d’habitants, soit un sur cinq, n’a pas accès à cette eau douce si vitale. Le manque d’eau est également lié à la croissance démographique et à la pollution. Cette réalité est particulièrement vraie dans le cas de la République populaire de Chine. Avec une population de plus d’un milliard et une augmentation de douze millions de personnes par année, la Chine ne peut fournir de l’eau douce de qualité à tous ses habitants. Depuis la réforme économique de la fin des années 1970, les villes, les industries et les agriculteurs déversent sans relâche d’énormes quantités d’eau non traitée dans l’environnement, ce qui contribue à contaminer les réserves d’eau douce de ce pays. Cette pollution engendre de graves conséquences environnementales et économiques qui s’additionnent aux catastrophes naturelles qui frappent régulièrement le pays. Pour remédier à cette problématique complexe, de grands projets tels que la construction du barrage des Trois Gorges, qui sera le plus grand barrage au monde, ont été mis de l’avant. Ce projet fait l’objet d’une analyse dans une perspective de développement durable pour la Chine. Celle-ci permet de rendre compte des impacts sociaux, économiques et environnementaux que ce méga projet occasionne.

      https://vertigo.revues.org/3899

  • La Chine marche sur les pas de Robocop
    http://bigbrowser.blog.lemonde.fr/2016/04/27/la-chine-marche-sur-les-pas-de-robocop

    Quelqu’un a dit que dans le futur « on aurait voulu des voitures volantes et on n’a eu que 140 caractères ». Peter Thiel sera rassuré d’apprendre qu’on se rapproche tous les jours un peu plus d’un futur peuplé de machines de science-fiction rêvées. Cette semaine, la Chine a profité du 12e Salon high-tech de Chongqing pour dévoiler au monde son premier prototype de robot policier « intelligent ».

    #surveillance #AnBot #robotique

  • A New Map for America - The New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/17/opinion/sunday/a-new-map-for-america.html

    We don’t have to create these regions; they already exist, on two levels. First, there are now seven distinct super-regions, defined by common economics and demographics, like the Pacific Coast and the Great Lakes. Within these, in addition to America’s main metro hubs, we find new urban archipelagos, including the Arizona Sun Corridor, from Phoenix to Tucson; the Front Range, from Salt Lake City to Denver to Albuquerque; the Cascadia belt, from Vancouver to Seattle; and the Piedmont Atlantic cluster, from Atlanta to Charlotte, N.C.

    Federal policy should refocus on helping these nascent archipelagos prosper, and helping others emerge, in places like Minneapolis and Memphis, collectively forming a lattice of productive metro-regions efficiently connected through better highways, railways and fiber-optic cables: a United City-States of America.

    Similar shifts can be found around the world. Despite millenniums of cultivated cultural and linguistic provinces, China is transcending its traditional internal boundaries to become an empire of 26 megacity clusters with populations of up to 100 million each, centered around hubs such as Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Chongqing-Chengdu. Over time these clusters, whose borders fluctuate based on population and economic growth, will be the cores around which the central government allocates subsidies, designs supply chains and builds connections to the rest of the world.

    Western countries are following suit. As of 2015, Italy’s most important political players are no longer its dozens of laconic provinces, but 14 “Metropolitan Cities,” like Rome, Turin, Milan and Florence, each of which has been legislatively merged with its surrounding municipalities into larger and more economically viable subregions.

    #connectivité #cartographie #implantation_humaine #mégavilles

  • Facial recognition system implemented in railway transport system in China
    http://metbuat.az/news/336590/facial-recognition-system-implemented-in-railway-transport-s.html

    Hohhot Railway Administration in China (Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region) has implemented on a pilot basis a facial recognition system developed by Chongqing Branch of the Chinese Academy of Sciences to enhance the security of public transport passengers. Generally station workers don’t have enough time to carefully check identification documents produced by passengers boarding the train. And tracking of violations with security cameras requires a lot of human (...) #CCTV #vidéo-surveillance #biométrie #reconnaissance_faciale #surveillance

  • La Machine est ton seigneur et ton maître - Yang - Jenny Chan - Xu Lizhi
    http://agone.org/centmillesignes/lamachineesttonseigneurettonmaitre

    Comment le système Foxconn – les usines chinoises qui produisent iPhone et PlayStation – expérimente et met en œuvre les pires formes d’exploitation.

    Les machines ressemblent à d’étranges créatures qui aspirent les matières premières, les digèrent et les recrachent sous forme de produit fini. Le processus de production automatisé simplifie les tâches des ouvriers qui n’assurent plus aucune fonction importante dans la production. Ils sont plutôt au service des machines. Nous avons perdu la valeur que nous devrions avoir en tant qu’êtres humains, et nous sommes devenus une prolongation des machines, leur appendice, leur serviteur. J’ai souvent pensé que la machine était mon seigneur et maître et que je devais lui peigner les cheveux, tel un esclave. Il fallait que je passe le peigne ni trop vite ni trop lentement. Je devais peigner soigneusement et méthodiquement, afin de ne casser aucun cheveu, et le peigne ne devait pas tomber. Si je ne faisais pas bien, j’étais élagué.

    Foxconn est le plus grand fabricant du monde dans le domaine de l’électronique. Ses villes-usines, qui font travailler plus d’un million de Chinois, produisent iPhone, Kindle et autres PlayStation pour Apple, Sony, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, etc. En 2010, elles ont été le théâtre d’une série de suicides d’ouvriers qui ont rendu publiques des conditions d’exploitation fondées sur une organisation militarisée de la production, une taylorisation extrême, l’absence totale de protection sociale et une surveillance despotique jusque dans les dortoirs où vivent les ouvriers.

    Ce livre propose quelques éléments d’analyse du système Foxconn à partir du portrait que fait la sociologue Jenny Chan d’une ouvrière qui a survécu à sa tentative de suicide en 2010. Complété par le témoignage de Yang, un étudiant et ouvrier de fabrication à Chongqing, il retrace également le parcours de Xu Lizhi, jeune travailleur migrant chinois à Shenzen, qui s’est suicidé en 2014 après avoir laissé des poèmes sur le travail à la chaîne, dans « L’atelier, là où ma jeunesse est restée en plan ».

    Traduit de l’anglais et préfacé par #Celia_Izoard

    #livre #Foxconn #critique_techno #machinisme #industrie #iPhone #Playstation #Chine #exploitation #usine #capitalisme #automatisation

    • Ce livre est absolument recommandable : les poèmes sont beaux (et glaçants) ; la première partie n’apprendra peut-être rien à celleux qui suivent déjà le sujet, mais donne des références solides ; et la conclusion qui relie les deux mondes (l’abattage à Shenzhen et les délicatesses de la Silicon Valley) est d’autant plus forte qu’elle est écrite sans hyperbole.
      #merci

  • METAMORPOLIS - Ulule

    http://fr.ulule.com/metamorpolis

    Un beau projet très prometteur. Je participe.

    La ville de Chongqing, une des plus grandes de Chine, a connu récemment un des développements les plus rapides du pays. Tim Franco, photographe français résidant à Shangaï, a suivi cette folle mutation depuis 2009. Aujourd’hui, il souhaite publier un livre, document photographique résultant de 5 années de prises de vues.

    Suite à toutes les migrations liées à la construction du barrage des Trois-gorges, la ville de Chongqing est trés rapidement devenue une des plus peuplées au monde, avec une population estimée de plus de 30 millions d’habitants. Quand il visita la ville pour la première fois en 2009, Tim Franco explique qu’il était complètement perdu : « Les vieilles maisons étaient partout en démolition, survolées par de gigantesques nouveaux ponts ou bien remplacées par d’immenses immeubles d’habitation. Cela m’a pris un certain temps pour comprendre ce qui se passait ».

    #chine #photographie

  • “Say cheese!” – Cities with the most surveillance cameras | Panethos

    http://panethos.wordpress.com/2014/11/12/say-cheese-cities-with-the-most-surveillance-cameras

    Ever felt like someone was watching you? Well, the following list of the cities with the most raw number of surveillance cameras was prepared by Vin Tech in 2011 and was updated to include projected 2012 numbers for Chongqing, China.

    Chongqing, China = approximately 500,000 cameras
    Beijing, China
    London, United Kingdom
    Chicago, USA
    Houston, USA
    New York City, USA

    #surveillance #cctv #contrôle

  • Accidents de téléphone

    Téléphoner en marchant peut s’avérer périlleux. Pour éviter les accidents impliquant des piétons distraits, certaines villes chinoises ne manquent pas d’imagination.

    La Chine, qui compte sept cents millions d’utilisateurs de smartphones, expérimente actuellement une méthode visant à prévenir les accidents liés à l’usage de ces appareils : dans la ville de Chongqing, un tronçon de trottoir long de cinquante mètres a été divisé entre une voie normale et une voie réservée aux usagers de technologies mobiles. « Il y a beaucoup de personnes âgées et d’enfants dans cette rue, et marcher avec un téléphone portable peut provoquer des collisions inutiles », explique Nong Cheng, un responsable municipal. (...) Le problème que posent les piétons absorbés par leur smartphone n’est pas spécifique à la Chine. Selon l’université de Washington, un Américain sur trois regarde son téléphone ou un autre appareil quand il franchit une intersection dangereuse. Et le ministère des transports des Etats-Unis a établi une corrélation entre cette pratique et l’augmentation du nombre d’accidents mortels impliquant des piétons.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/worldviews/wp/2014/09/15/a-chinese-city-is-asking-smartphone-users-to-walk-in-their-own-sidew

    Coupures de presse (octobre 2014)
    http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2014/10/A/50855

  • Revue de presse sur la #Chine semaine du 01.04.13

    Chine/ #Immobilier : 3 grandes villes s’attaquent à la #surchauffe

    Trois grandes villes du sud-ouest de la Chine - #Pékin, #Shanghai et #Chongqing - vont appliquer des mesures strictes dans le cadre du plan du gouvernement pour freiner la surchauffe du marché immobilier, selon l’agence de presse officielle Chine nouvelle.

    http://bourse.lesechos.fr/infos-conseils-boursiers/actus-des-marches/infos-marches/chine-immobilier-3-grandes-villes-s-attaquent-a-la-surchauffe-867098

  • Après les #prisons françaises, les camps de travail chinois. Si la volonté de Xi Jinping, n°1 du PC chinois, est suivie de faits, ceux-ci pourraient disparaître dans quelques années ou du moins réformés dans un premier temps. Cela marque une belle étape dans ce combat d’intellectuels comme Hu Xingdou par exemple.

    M. Hu estime que les quelque 350 camps chinois détiennent entre 1 000 et 2 000 prisonniers chacun – soit en totalité entre 350 000 et 750 000 personnes. Un certain nombre de cas d’emprisonnement abusif, à l’instar de celui de Ren Jianyu à Chongqing, ont défrayé la chronique en 2012, ouvrant de nouveau une brèche dans la censure médiatique imposée sur le sujet.
    Les camps de rééducation par le #travail, institués en 1957 au début de la campagne antidroitiers (en chinois), accueillent les petits délinquants, mais aussi toute une population de « prisonniers d’#opinion » accusés souvent de « troubles à l’ordre public ». On y trouve des « plaignants », dont les démarches gênent le pouvoir, des convertis de tout acabit dont le prosélytisme est jugé dangereux par le parti (comme les membres de la secte Falun gong), mais aussi des dissidents (Liu Xiaobo, qui purge désormais une peine de onze ans de prison pour incitation à la subversion de l’état, y fut envoyé pendant trois ans dans les années 1990).

    Mais...

    Quelles que soient les intentions du nouveau pouvoir, l’intellectuel Hu Xingdou estime aussi qu’il faudra toutefois, pour réformer la rééducation par le travail, vaincre un certain nombre de résistances : il y a beaucoup d’intérêts particuliers en jeu. « Les camps produisent des marchandises. Et font des profits », explique-t-il.

    Un ancien détenu, Fang Hong, envoyé en 2011 en rééducation par le travail dans la municipalité de Chongqing pour un tweet persifleur à l’égard de Bo Xilai, le numéro un local de l’époque, avait raconté au Monde dans un entretien en juillet 2012, qu’il avait passé des journées entières à fabriquer des décorations de Noël pour le compte d’une entreprise de Shenzhen qui exportait en Allemagne. Il était payé ... 8 yuans par mois (1 euro).

    Source : http://www.lemonde.fr/asie-pacifique/article/2013/01/23/en-chine-l-abolition-des-camps-de-reeducation-de-nouveau-en-debat_1821027_32

  • Revue de presse sur la #Chine semaine du 17.09.12

    Le procès sous huit clos avec verdict attendu lundi prochain.

    Rappel des faits :

    Wang Lijun avait fait défection en demandant l’asile politique au consulat américain de #Chengdu, la capitale régionale du Sichuan distante de 300 km de #Chongqing, le 6 février après avoir appris de la propre bouche de #Gu-Kailai, l’épouse de #Bo-Xilai, son protecteur et chef du parti #communiste de Chongqing, qu’elle avait assassiné par empoisonnement l’homme d’affaires britannique Neil #Heywood, un proche de la famille Bo.

    http://www.lepoint.fr/monde/chine-verdict-lundi-dans-le-proces-de-l-ex-chef-policier-wang-lijun-21-09-20