Napping is good for you

China has put its citizens health on its agenda during the current congress.
I remember the early eighties when most offices had to supply beds so the staff could have a nap after lunch. With the years the habit disappeared. Personally I am a big fan of it and whenever I can I’ll have my 15-20 min powernap after lunch (so don’t call me then, mobile is OFF). Now western countries start admitting this is good both for the health and to increase productivity in the office. Unfortunately, many companies still feel this is not “OK”.

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The SCMP reported the Chinese Parliament currently in session is experimenting with the powernap, as their photographer documented. Well, this is what we all suppose. Or not?

The Internet in Beijing: back to “normal”

Finally all submarine cables are repaired and we are back to normal. The Chinese Great Netwall is continuing its job relatively well as they have now mastered the bugs in the CISCO equipment that elegantly blocks certain sites, according to some “badly informed people” (read: the whole foreign business community in Beijing)
Indeed the government genius representatives in Geneva have now passed their PHD in information obfuscation, at the G. W. University in Washington DC. Here some gems:
“In China, we don’t have software blocking internet sites. Sometimes we have trouble accessing them. But that’s a different problem.” – Yang Xiaokun, China’s representative to the UN’s Internet Governance Forum in Athens, denies censorship in a BBC interview as reported early 2007 by DigitalMedia.
Tuesday 31 October 2006 – The second day of the Internet Governance Forum (IGF) was partially strange, partially funny, and indeed quite productive.
The day began with a main hall session about “Openness”, ….. As one might imagine, a panel about openness and transparency on the internet did create quite a bit of China bashing, and while Mr. Art Reilly, senior director of strategic technology policy at Cisco Systems, had a hard time explaining the exact dealings of Cisco with the Chinese government (Yeah, I guess that’s really hard!), Vint Cerf made some clear statement for Google in terms of being transparent about filtering on request of the Chinese government, but trying to avoid to gather data that could be abused: “Let me also say that we also chose not to offer certain services in China. We didn’t offer Gmail. We didn’t offer blogging. The reason we did not do that is that we did not want to have materials on our servers that the Chinese government could ask us or insist that we reveal in order to identify individual parties. So we chose deliberately not to offer certain services in order to protect the interests of the Chinese people.”
So when Mr. YANG XIAOKUN of the Chinese mission in Geneva stood up after a long discussion about the subject to tell the assembled audience that China has no access restrictions of any kind, it did draw some unbelieving looks, and then some boos. Here is that part of the exchange:
>> NIK GOWING: Could I — may I ask you a question? How would you define, for those who are not familiar with your government’s policy and the detail of it, what is the principle on restrictions of openness in China?
>> YANG XIAOKUN: We do not have restriction at all.
While it is justified to criticize China for their human rights record, it is not like all Northern countries had such a fantastic record themselves. The United States come to mind immediately, but also European countries are not always the poster-children they’d like to portray themselves as. So we could also have spoken about the surveillance of internet traffic in Germany, the Patriot Act in the United States, or similar things in almost any other country.
[Source (edited): www.fsfe.org ]
Mr. Yang Xiaokun is right. I have “trouble” to access the site wikipedia.org. But that’s “another problem”, right? Or maybe another CISCO software “bug”?
On a further note, according to the SCMP, mainland media authorities have marked out 20 forbidden areas in an attempt to promote a “harmonious” atmosphere for upcoming national and party conferences. See here some items:
– Restrictions on coverage of historical events including the anti-rightist campaign, the Cultural Revolution and more recent events such as the ongoing anti-corruption campaign, the media freedom debate, and legal and rights protection campaigns.
– Discussion of the anti-rightist campaign should be played down, as a principle the issue should not be mentioned.
– Discussion of the mistakes made during the Cultural Revolution should not be geared towards denying the historic accomplishment of the party and Mao Zedong.
– Commemorative reporting on the Nanking Massacre and the July 7 incident should serve the current situation and cannot impact adversely on the Sino-Japanese relationship.
– Media coverage of the 90th anniversary of Russia’s October Revolution should be strictly censored and the collapse of the former Soviet Union and its East European satellites should be played down.
– Discussions of judicial corruption, activists’ campaigns to protect individual rights, sexual crimes, the aristocratic lifestyle of high-income groups and reporting on affairs with mistresses.
– The important state-sponsored construction plans cannot be commented on and challenged with a western-oriented stance … and private ownership cannot be affirmed
– The “pig character in general should not be mentioned” this year, because of the sensibilities of ethnic minorities.
I wonder what Yang Xiaokun has to comment on that. As SCMP was told, “government officials are on holiday”. Probably celebrating the Year of a certain Four-legged Animal (hint: next year is the Rat).
Of course I fully respect the guidelines of the government in my blog. I am a real “harmonious” person, you know.

The Year of the Pig is coming – saudades do Brasil

Sunday 18 February – a new Chinese Year.
Strange, I always feel emotional during this period of the year. The noise of the fireworks and fire crackers make me nervous. Why? Not that I have something against this traditional holiday (I’ll eat lots of dumplings this evening). I could say, the booms remind me of some war I went through. Not the case. Maybe it reminds me too much of my Brazilian time, very often the Festival comes at the same time as Carnival – both days are linked to moon: 50-47 days before the first Sunday after the first full moon after Vernal Equinox, or in layman’s terms, Ash Wednesday is calculated as 46 days before Easter Sunday, and carnaval falls on the 4 days before Ash Wednesday. (see www.brazilcarnival.com). Easter is linked to the moon cycle…
So this year, both dates are once again the same. When the Year of the Pig starts I always want to put some Samba Enredo at full blast – my Brazilian spirit awakens. Listen here to Unidos de Vila Isabel – 2006.
Saudades, saudades… Vou tomar uma boa pinga. Sim gente boa, achei aqui mesmo em Pequim. Saúde.

Beijing 2006: friends leaving… some others coming back

Beijing is, socially speaking, a difficult place to live. Few people stay here for a long time, like we say in Flemish “it’s like a pigeon house” (“duivenkot”), they fly in and out.
Makes it all difficult to know people and makes you reluctant to make friends – they might (will anyway) leave at some point of time. It hurts.
Diplomats tend to avoid friendships. They always rotate from one country to another. Leaving friends behind is hard, so better not make any!? They are a weird kind of people – distant and superficial – I got used to them. Weird, yes, but I sympathize with them.
Beijing is thus a lonely and superficial place.
I feel often frustrated, so difficult to make real friends. You don’t have your pub around the corner, neither your butcher who knows you since years. Here all is un-personal. You don’t make friends. You have business “relations”. It’s like standing in an airport and watching people come and go.
Being one of the few “permanent” museum pieces here, that is maybe the worst part of living here. Never mind the pollution, I smoke cigars anyway and still run marathons.

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So, bye bye Dr. Sven-Uwe Müller of the German Embassy, see above his farewell party at the German embassy.

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And especially my tough but so cool Delphine (and so charming, lucky guy you Thierry, take good care of her!) from the EUCCC (now in Denmark). Some of the people I will miss. Sure.
But surprises happen.

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My old friend (my – sometimes – boss when I was in Alcatel) Patrick Bourrier surfaced here in Beijing. He has the good point of having a Brazilian wife (hehe, no comments). Happens he is also the friend of my tenant here – François Bernard (KPMG). Yeah, small world. Patrick is unique. Talks like a tape recorder and his only competitor is Valerie. Seems he does well with Sun. Hm. Suspicious actually. Pics taken in François’ place and (of course) in Morel’s restaurant.

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And then surfaces, from the “dark” ages of the eighties in Beijing (read: the life and death in Beijing Hotel) – Martine, a good friend when I was trying to survive in the Beijing Hotel. Great lady, we had a good time in Morel’s restaurant (where else?). Happy to see you happy Martine. I guess you don’t care, but I do approve of your choice of husband (Jeffrey, Edelman).