Court in China Adds Last-Minute Charge Against Rights Leader During Sentencing

On August 8, 2013, Guo Feixiong (real name Yang Maodong) was arrested and then indicted on charges of “gathering a crowd to disrupt order in a public place.” The heavy sentence came as a shock to everyone following the case. More shockingly, the court added a charge right in the courtroom in order, apparently, to deliver a heavier sentence.

China’s Joking on Smog

In the world of Chinese air pollution, there’s a new kid on the block. Shenyang, the northeastern stronghold of heavy industry and manufacturing since the Mao era, last week saw its levels of PM2.5 pollution shoot past 1000 and register a whopping 1400 on some monitoring sites.

Mail & Guardian

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From their website:

The Weekly Mail was started in mid-1985 by a group of journalists who had been recently retrenched from the Rand Daily Mail and the Sunday Express, which had both closed down. The paper was run on a shoestring, but made possible by the revolution in “desktop publishing” of the 1980s. 

The space for contestation of the apartheid regime was closing down, and these journalists felt there should be a publication that kept that space open. It would report news that the South African public was technically not allowed to know, particularly the news of township “unrest” and police repression that was restricted under the State of Emergency laws promulgated by then-president PW Botha in 1985. 

The Weekly Mail often sailed close to the legal wind, trying to dodge these emergency laws and inform the public about what was really going on in South Africa. The country was in a state of barely suppressed civil war as more and more people challenged the authority of the apartheid government. The paper revealed the white rulers’ support for Renamo in Mozambique and kept a tally of activists in detention. Eventually, in 1988, the state succeeded in shutting down The Weekly Mail for three months, but support for the paper was rallied and it reopened in late 1988 and kept going. 

“The paper for a changing South Africa” was the motto given with the paper’s masthead, and in the years from the unbanning of the liberation movements to the first fully democratic election in 1994 it detailed a fast-changing South Africa for its readers. One explosive exposé was the paper’s revelation of the apartheid state’s funding and training of Inkatha death squads. But the paper also covered less explosive issues, such as a developing multiracial culture and the vibrant music and art of the time. It introduced many vital new voices to readers and set up a training programme for a new generation of South African journalists. 

Today, the Mail & Guardian is still South Africa’s leading investigative publication, a forum for debate about the country and its politics, and a provider of the top arts and culture coverage. It operates across several websites, including M&G Online, Thought Leader and M&G Africa.

The M&G has received numerous accolades and awards for its online work, often scooping the inaugural digital awards in various competitions. It was the first to win the multi-platform award at the 2013 Sikuvile awards. TheM&G scooped the CNN Multichoice Africa Journalism Award for digital journalism in 2012 and the online multimedia award at the 2012 Standard Bank Sikuvile Journalism Awards. 

The M&G's website won three Bookmarks awards in 2010 and 2011, one of which was a gold award for its Nelson Mandela tribute site. It received three Webby Honourable Mentions in 2008 for its Thought Leaderblogging platform and in 2001, the site was voted one of the world's top 175 websites by Forbes.com. 

Lina Benabdallah

Lina Benabdallah is a Ph.D. candidate in the department of Political Science and Center for African studies at the University of Florida. Her research looks into the dynamics of vocational training and power diffusion in China-Africa relations.

Eleanor Goodman

Eleanor Goodman is a Research Associate at the Fairbank Center at Harvard University. Previously, she spent a year at Peking University on a Fulbright Fellowship. Her book of translations, Something Crosses My Mind: Selected Poems of Wang Xiaoni (Zephyr Press, 2014), was the recipient of a 2013 PEN/Heim Translation Grant and the winner of the 2015 Lucien Stryk Prize. The book was also shortlisted for the International Griffin Prize in 2015.