Sunday, September 26, 2010




http://www2.ttcn.ne.jp/honkawa/2794.html



Japanese Despise China like in 1930's

1. Chinese Criminals in Japan

Every day in Japan several Chinese criminals are arrested for criminal trial.

The Chinese Government should stop them from visiting Japan. Otherwise, the Chinese Government should pay damages to Japanese victims. the Chinese Government should officially apologize to Japan, since they have educated those Chinese people to become criminals.





2. Chinese Gangsters in USA and Canada

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Global Crime Syndicates Target U.S. From Canada - Chinese Gangs Brief Article - Statistical Data Included

"The international criminal threat posed by ethnic Chinese criminal networks has become more complex as crime groups originating in mainland China have joined the traditional triad societies of Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan" in expanding beyond China's borders, the report states. Such secret triads, which date from the 17th century, have established relationships throughout the Pacific Rim and the Western Hemisphere and are adept at using what the report calls "traditional Chinese practices of networking" to facilitate criminal activity.

Intelligence estimates put total membership in the triads at more than 100,000, a figure that includes "quasi-legitimate businessmen involved in an array of criminal enterprises." Hong Kong has produced two of the most powerful triads: One is called 14K; the other is the Sun Yee On triad. Both have branches in Canada. The 14K is based in Toronto, maintains a chapter in New York and operates in other U.S. cities. Sun Yee On members have settled in Toronto, as well as Edmonton, Alberta, and Vancouver, British Columbia, and operate in the United States.

But China's biggest, most expansive and successful triad is the Big Circle Gang, which has cells around the world, including Canada. Since first appearing in the United States in the early 1990s, it has set up cells in New York, Boston, Seattle, San Francisco and Los Angeles. "The Big Circle Gang is responsible for importing much of the Southeast Asian heroin entering Canada -- much of which is then smuggled into the United States -- and is the source for many of the counterfeit credit cards used in North America" the report states.


http://www.travelersdigest.com/global_crime.htm
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3. Crimes in China

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Posted on Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Rising Chinese businessman killed on party official's orders

XIANYANG, China — Zhu Baoqi should have been a shining example of China's economic miracle in the heartland of the ruling Communist Party. As government funds flooded into industry and construction across his home province of Shaanxi, Zhu became a rich man...

At the end, though, Zhu's ambitions couldn't keep up with the frenzy, and he ran afoul of party officials feeding at the trough of local projects. A local potentate who'd wanted to invest in Zhu's coal mine sent two men to his home just past midnight on June 15, 2008. One of them pulled out a blade and stabbed the 62-year-old Zhu repeatedly, leaving him for dead...

Zhu was trapped. He began paying the millions of dollars to Guo, but it didn't matter. Guo was out for blood, thinking that if Zhu were gone completely, he could take the mine with even less trouble, according to court testimony reported by state media...

"Crimes like murder and robbing and stealing are quite common these days in China. People usually don't pay attention," Li Tiesuo said. "If Zhu wasn't a billionaire, it wouldn't have created this big stir."


http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/06/09/95618/rising-chinese-businessman-murdered.html#storylink=misearch
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4. RIOTS AND DEMONSTRATIONS IN CHINA

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FACTS AND DETAILS

- Protest and riots are called "mass incidents." Once regarded as taboo and still illegal, they occur surpsingly often. In 2005, there were 84,000 recorded mass incidents, more than 200 a day, involving over four million Chinese. They included protests over unpaid wages, taxes, lay offs, land seizures, factory closings, poor working conditions, environmental damages, corruption, misuse of funds, ethnic tensions, use of natural resources, forced immigration and police abuse. Some of them have been quite large and violent.

- The number of mass incidents rose from 10,000 with 730,000 participantsin 1994 to 74,000 with 3.8 million participantsin 2004. In 2000, there were about 40,000 protests, including 230 incidents of mobs laying siege to Communist Party offices in 82 cities, resulting in 5,500 casualties. In 2003 the government admitted to 58,000 incidents. The number of "incidents" was around 23,000 in 2006.

- Once the text message campaign gained momentum it took on a life of its own. In early June 2007, demonstrations with 10,000 participants were held and Xiamen began getting nationwide coverage. Everyone was caught by surprise when the city announced construction of the chemical factory would be stopped. Many felt that was perhaps most significant about the protest was that people were not afraid to speak out even though they knew their messages could tracked.

- In August 2009, an executive was beaten to death and over a 100 hundred people were injured at a protest by 30,000 steel workers outside the Tonghua Iron and Steel plant over a planned merger deal that would leave many workers without jobs. The executive a killed by workers over resentment that he earned $440,000 a year while some workers earned as little $35 a month. Protesters prevented an ambulance from entering the plant to help the executive.


http://factsanddetails.com/china.php?itemid=305&catid=8&subcatid=49
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