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Gao Qinrong,43,was travelling by rail across China's Shanxi province when he overheard a couple of fellow passengers. They were complaining about official corruption in a massive irrigation project.
Gao was surprised. Local party leaders had claimed to have beaten a drought by building a system of 70,000 reservoirs to supply water to orchards and farmland. He had little reason to doubt them - until that day in the spring of 1998.
As provincial chief of the staterun Xinhua News Agency's political and legal affairs department,Gao felt compelled to investigate: President Jiang Zemin himself had urged reporters to expose corruption. So,armed with a notebook and a camera,he visited more than half a dozen parched counties. The cement cisterns seemed impressive,but they weren't connected to a water supply.
In fact,the tanks were little more than props built at the behest of Huang Youquan,the local party leader in the provincial capital of Yuncheng.
Gao's report,published in a Beijing newsletter read by China's political elite,charged that the £¤34million project was not an irrigation effort but rather a 'political project for the sake of the leader's promotion in Yuncheng.' His story was picked up by half a dozen newspapers and magazines. Chinese Central Television sent its own team to Shanxi,and it verified Gao's findings.
Gao's expose should have earned kudos. Instead,he was arrested and charged with bribery,embezzlement and pimping. After a one-day closed trial he was sentenced to 13 years in prison.
Gao's wife,Duan,was left to care for the couple's 10-year-old daughter. She wrote to President Jiang and Premier Zhu Rongji but never heard back from them.
'The jailing of Gao Qinrong violates China's international commitments to respect press freedom,' says Ann Cooper, executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists. But Gao will remain in a Qixian prison cell unless China's rulers reconsider his case.
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Pent-up and lonely,Diana began making herself ill,the first signs of bulimia. Several times a day she visited the kitchen,filling a bowl with cereal and fruit,adding sugar and drenching it all in cream. Afterwards she would go to the toilet and make herself sick.
Her moods became ever more unpredictable,and Charles drew much of her fire. Why,she asked,was he not spending more time with her? It was explained that the prince had a schedule of engagements arranged months before. That did little to pacify her Elizabeth chose to overlook Diana's behaviour in these early months,concluding that she needed time to settle in. Nearly everyone,from the queen to the staff who looked after Diana,attributed her behaviour to a bad case of 'nerves.'
Left to struggle through,Diana did so,barely. After one particularly difficult stretch in June 1981,when Charles was travelling,she bolted. Following a party to celebrate Prince Andrew's twenty-first birthday,she got into her car at 5.30 a.m. and drove from London to her family home,more than an hour away. She told her father,john Spencer,that she was calling off the engagement. He listened as Diana poured out her heart,then advised her that it was probably just the pressure. Once she was married,said her father,things would get easier.
By Sunday night Diana was back in Buckingham Palace,acting as if nothing had happened. Most brides revel in the first weeks of marriage. Instead,during her honeymoon cruise in the Mediterranean,Diana became violently ill with bulimia. After 15 exhausting days,which were punctuated by tremendous fights,the newlyweds arrived back at Balmoral. Charles summoned a doctor,the first of many who would try to help. 'All the analysts and psychiatrists you could ever dream of came plodding in to sort me out,'Diana recalled.
In medical terms,some feel that Diana suffered from Borderline Personality Disorder. Symptoms include fear of abandonment,a tendency towards histrionic behaviour,a need for adoration and mood swings. Bulimia can be another manifestation.
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ÀԷ½ð£: 2002. 09.10. 09:22
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