Wednesday 30 December 2009

Death sentence dilemma? No!

A UK drug smuggler was just executed early this morning for carrying 4kg of heroinin to China Urumqi. He was ended by lethal injection but the debate has never come to an end...


comment on Mr. Shaikh's case


Mr. Brown:
I condemn the execution of Akamal Shaikh in the strongest terms…

 As a journalist with non-professional knowledge on law, I am not clear that if a person commit such crimes as smuggling in a foreign country, which country’s law should be used on him?


Well, my common sense tells me that he should obey the foreign country’s, like the saying, “when in Rome, do as the Romans”.

So death sentence to Mr.Shaikh is obvious not against laws for his 4kg heroin smuggling in China.

But why this case has been catching worldwide attentions including British leaders? Even British-Chinese relationship is under threats.

Death penalty

It is understandable that Shaikh family are keeping appealing to Chinese court to spare Shaikh’s life all these days.

However, Mr. Brown’s words are quite surprising. He, as the British Prime Minister, issues that, “ I condemn the execution of Akamal Shaikh in the strongest terms…”

I do not think it is appropriate for an office to express such words.
The possible result would be more hates and arguments.

It is really not appropriate for a president to issue such speech. His unreasonable behaviour just let the argument to a political level.

It is quite interesting that the prime minister also engages in this case rather than the Foreign Minister only.

When it comes to next year’s election, Mr. Brown has a claim that he is the one who cares his people.

Actually, whether to abandon the death penalty is not easy to reach a consensus. People with different cultural background, values have different understandings on the death penalty.

In Chinese value, it is necessary to let people pay back what evil they have done. If they committed severe crime such as murdering, death sentence to them would comfort the victim’s family and educate the public.

In Western culture, it is important to forgive people no matter what he has done. No one has the right to deprive another’s life. They believe that consciousness would punish the criminal in his rest of life.

Obviously ,either one is not superior to the other.

Point fingers at Chinese law system

“Human rights” is a term used a thousand times criticizes China. It can easily irritate common hatred; then people in UK come launch campaigns against China in front of Chinese embassy.

Mostly, in the western’s eyes, China is a place where lacks human rights but full of restrictions of media. It is a country in great need of well-developed western interactions on its human rights..

The media have no patience to explain the differences between UK laws and Chinese laws. In China, if a person claims to have a mental problem, he should hand in relevant evidence.

Thanks to the powerful media stereotype, every peace-loving person becomes concerned about China’s development on human rights more than Chinese people do.

The politicians catch this opportunity to express their great “concern” too, but with some hidden purposes. They try to shift their people’s attention on their badly-performed economy, high rate of unemployment and wrong action of Iraq war.

First they create an excuse to invade Iraq by telling his people that Iraqis are suffering from Saddam’s bad rules.

Then, it is China’s turn. Since China is such a large and powerful-to-be country, they use numerous news which cover Chinese unsatisfied fields.

Also it is a fabulous moment to decline the taxation agreement with China with an excuse that “we do not see eye to eye”.

It seems that the economic turndown and the unsatisfying ends of Copenhagen Climate Conference have not been annoying enough. So point a finger on Chinese law system is really necessary to save them.

Now, what the media fail to tell us is that who gave Mr. Shaikh such a large amount of heroin? Who is the hidden leader of the global smuggling group? China is not a country which enjoys depriving lives. When it comes to criminal punishments, when in Rome, do as the Romans.

about Mr Shaikh's case






The followings are some comments from netizens


Tuesday 29 December 2009

about Mr Shaikh's case





I do not think it is appropriate for an office to express such words. The possible result would be more hates and arguments.



the followings are some comments from netizens



Wednesday 23 December 2009

Why victims gain justice so late

A rape case which happened in 1986, 24 years ago, just caught its murder.





The first time that I read such stories in newspaper has shocked me a lot. 24 years ago? The victim teenager girl has turned into an almost mid-aged married mother.



If luckily her husband is not struggling the idea on her wife experience, and she has overcome the painful nightmare of that horrible scene days after days which hit her when she is a teenager, she would not care about how long has been taken to gain the justice finally.



24 years, I repeated this number for I can not understand why the police need such a long time to find the murder. Has the rapist hurt other girls when he was at large for 24 years?



This is not the only case that takes police more than twenty years to catch a murder, a robbery etc, while it only takes days or months to find the 911 terrorism and soon came to an decision to let them pay back.



I don’t want to let the local police admit they are humble to the FBI or whatever. It is because the relative groups have not devoted all themselves to catch a rapist, the case of terrorism is on the contrary.



Attitude of serving public is not a vague logo. I wish next time I opened the newspaper, it is 24 hours ago rather than years.

The earlier the victims gain justice, the safer environment of our life is.


Original source:

Man charged with 1986 rape

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/man-charged-with-1986-rape-1848528.html










http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1237914/Father-wins-8-000-running-investigation-prove-son-law-killed-daughter.html?ITO=1490

Monday 21 December 2009

2012 will be the end of the world


Now I come to some kind of believing that


2012 will be the end of the world

December 11, 2009

I had never believed the nonsense like 2012 will be the end of the world until I opened today’s daily mail.





It says that scientists have discovered a way to remove the fearful memory. They found that when recalling back, people have a short period of time to let their brains “rewrite” the unpleasant part to a better one.




It is predicted that deleting fear memories would achieve success in labs soon and come into practice in the near future. If human being removed all painful memories, such as slave trade, Nazi war, Nanjing Massacre…then the end of the world would be around the corner.



Actually, painful memories are more likely to push us forward than happy ones. In every disaster there is a golden lesson that we can learn.



Human being removed the memory of nature disaster caused by over pollution. They forgot the painful memory of losing families. The tragedy would happen again, even worse.



Not every scientific experiment can be performed. It, on the one hand, can head the history forward. On the other hand, it has the power to end it.


original article on Nature










source:
http://scienceblogs.com/notrocketscience/2009/12/rewriting_fearful_memories_by_bringing_them_back_to_mind.php

A sentence makes me thinking


I am reading the NUJ’s code of conduct which has set out the main principles of British and Irish journalism since 1936 when a line of words jump into my eyes:
……





A good will, I think.

I am a Chinese journalist-to-be. Maybe in the context of China, it will be even harder to realise this. However, I never believe it is possible to come true here, in UK.



As a human being, nobody can avoid being influenced by his environment. As a media organization, so far there has not been any can stand out claiming that they are fully free from pressures of both the market place and the government.

The outside world is so powerful that everyone has to adjust himself to fit in. The human nature of not being isolated from the majority has taken an important role to ruin the journalists’ objectiveness.



According to psychological studies, people tend to select information to form their own “fact”. The individual opinion has already shaped the “fact”. A thousand of individuals will have a thousand “facts” based on their knowledge, education background, family etc.

I believe that bias is one of the things that we can never get rid of no matter how hard you try. It is such kind of human nature that makes a person a person- no doubt a journalist is a person. Everyone behaves in a way that believes is right.




At this point I can not believe that differences among fact and opinion can be identified.






Still the NUJ puts this norm to the code of conduct is not losing its value. In terms of media I hope every journalist respects the truth and has the capability to differentiate the fact and opinion. In this way we will not go too far from the truth.

Friday 11 December 2009

The importance and qualities of the good investigative journalist

The importance of the good investigative journalist,especially in China, is to reveal the abuse of power in public services and the harm done to individuals in our society.

 Good investigative journalists use the media to call on more people to join together, thus finding a solution for the better. Or with their help, justice can finally come to those who are treated unfairly earlier.

They discover something wrong first, then investigate it and expose it in press or broadcasting. When the problem comes into public attention by the media, the government will be pushed to put efforts to solve it.

In fact, compared with economic growth, there are more important issues that need to be addressed, such as violation of human rights, government corruption, social injustice, etc. Only relying on the government itself can not tackle all of the developing problems. In addition, NGOs in China are not well developed.

At this moment, investigative journalists become an important power to contribute to a citizen society.


Investigative journalism demands different qualities from the reporter than other types of journalism.

First good investigative journalists should have the capability of evaluating potential investigative stories, knowing what to investigate. Investigative reporting is expensive in terms of time and resources after all.



Good investigative journalists also should be able to handle the dilemma of anonymous sources.

On the one hand, relying on anonymous sources is risky especially when journalists only have one anonymous source. On the other hand, sometimes breaking news is inside the very one anonymous source. When good investigative journalists “source” the information from the anonymous, they should have the capability to tell how reliable the source is.



It is also an important quality of good investigative journalists that they should have the capability of protecting themselves.

In some cases, investigations are dangerous tasks. An investigative report may involve an immense petrol corporation or a powerful local governor. They will hinder investigations by threats or violence.

In addition, given the context of China, there might be restrictions from the central government on such negative reports. Good investigative journalists should be able to find a clever angle to report such story.

Thursday 3 December 2009

Feature Writing Slides

Check out this SlideShare Presentation:

Writing Online Journalism

Check out this SlideShare Presentation:

A good beginning of being a journalist (2nd edition work)


Ady has been a journalist in his native Indonesia for four years. We spent a good time talking about life as a journalist for nearly two hours at lunchtime. Ady told me his most embarrassing interview moment when he had been a journalist for just one month.
He sat in front of me, holding a mug of water and he, began his story.” I became a journalist in July 2005 and was assigned my first interview in August 2005. You will never ever guess what happened during my first interview.”


His first interviewee was the army governor of Jakarta, a tough man with a bad temper and, at the time, running a temperature. Ady stopped the governor as he was leaving a ceremonial event. Following exactly what his senior editor had told him, Ady asked Jakarta:” does it matter if people think you are a pro-status quo?” At the very moment, Jakarta replied no words but gave him a slap in front of all the journalists and guests- Ady did not tell me whether it was painful or not because obviously that was not the point. Embarrassment was. Almost at the same time, all the other journalists and guests there stepped back in great astonishment. The body guard of Jakarta soon came up to Ady and said:” Please don’t mind. He is ill. Please don’t mind.”

“I am not angry.”Ady said,” it is understandable since he is sick.”
The embarrassing moment did not finish then. The whole procedure was imortalised by a television station camera and shown later on in the evening. When saying these, he neatened his scarf and shook his head slightly.  

"That is how I began my journalism career." Ady said with a gentle smile.


“Wow, that’s a really spectacular start to your journalistic career.” I laughed, “I am sorry to hear that story. Such an awful thing is not supposed to be your first interview experience.”

Ady interrupted me waving his hand, “No, no, actually I learnt from this very interview.” He drank some water and explained,” you know, I should have done some research myself rather than reated every question that my editor had given me. If I had done that, I would have known his political stand and his personality. Maybe the interview would have ended differently”

With this beginning, Ady was subsequently able to tackle quite a few un-expected interview moments. He found a way to mature: learn by your mistakes. So in this way, this slap  was worth a thousand lessons in Ady’s journalism career. 

Investigative Journalism

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