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Durante que China prepara pro un succession de su commando, conflictos intra li populo e l'autoritate captura aliquotes titulos de notitias, quasi que illos presagi un Primavera Arabic occurrente in China. Li puncto del concession, como con totes alteres, impedi li protesto de se extende e coalesce como un movimento social con large appoio popular. In mantenente lis protestos localisates, li Partito Communista de China alsi propaga un message que istes protestos son non in consequentia de cosas fundamentales: que illos non son proque li carentia de pesos e contrapesos, e reformas veres, in l'administration provincial que se discamminar a lis actos insuffribiles per lis administrationes locales arrogantes.
[Un extracto de "Protests in China will not bring change" per Tng Ying Hui, publicate per al-Jazeera in anglese, 30 decembre 2011]
Although some protests have occurred this year in China, they are not a threat to the government
As China prepares for leadership succession, clashes between the people and the authorities steal the headlines, as if foreshadowing a semblance of Arab Spring taking place. The point of the concession - as with all others - prevents the protest from spreading to other cities and coalescing into a broad base social movement. By keeping protests localised, the Communist Party of China also spreads the message that protests are not a result of underlying root causes: that it is not about the lack of check and balances, and real reforms, at the provincial levels that led to insufferable acts by hubristic local authorities.
[Automatic summary extract from "Protests in China will not bring change" by Tng Ying Hui, in al-Jazeera English, Dec. 30, 2011; summary generated by Open Text Summarizer.]
