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SINO DAILY
China hands down death sentences in lending crackdown
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) April 26, 2013


Two Tibetan monks self-immolate in China: reports
Beijing (AFP) April 25, 2013 - Two Tibetan monks in southwestern China died after setting themselves on fire, a media outlet and a rights group said, the latest in a series of such protests against Beijing's rule.

Lobsang Dawa and Konchog Woeser set themselves ablaze on Wednesday in Sichuan province's Aba prefecture, where many such incidents have occurred, said US-based Radio Free Asia (RFA) and Britain-based rights group Free Tibet.

"All the Tibetans who resort to self-immolation do so because they feel they have no other way to make China and the world listen," Free Tibet director Eleanor Byrne-Rosengren said in a statement.

RFA said monks held prayers for the deceased, aged 20 and 23, and the bodies were due to be cremated on Thursday.

More than 110 Tibetans have set themselves alight since 2009, with most dying of their injuries, in demonstrations against what they view as Chinese oppression.

Beijing rejects such claims, pointing to substantial investment in Tibet and other regions with large Tibetan populations, although critics say economic development has brought an influx of ethnic Han Chinese and eroded traditional Tibetan culture.

Authorities have ramped up security in the areas, sometimes blocking communications, according to RFA.

In recent months Tibetans have been jailed on charges of inciting the protests and spreading information about such incidents overseas.

Beijing condemns the acts and blames them on the exiled Tibetan leader, the Dalai Lama, saying he uses them to further a separatist agenda.

The Dalai Lama, a Nobel Peace laureate who has lived in exile in India since 1959 after a failed uprising in Tibet, has described the protests as acts of desperation that he is powerless to stop.

China said on Friday it has jailed or sentenced to death more than 1,400 people for underground money lending during a crackdown on informal financing used by small and medium sized enterprises.

China has convicted 4,170 people on charges of "illegal fund-raising" since 2011, with 1,449 given sentences ranging from five years in prison to the death penalty, China's State Council Information Office said on its website.

It did not say how many of those were sentenced to death.

The rate of "heavy" punishments reflects official "determination to crack down on illegal fund-raising", the website quoted Du Jinfu, a Public Security Ministry official who leads a task force on underground lending, as saying.

The others convicted received lesser penalties, he said.

China's state-controlled banks are not allowed to charge higher interest on riskier loans, making them reluctant to lend to private enterprises and leaving business owners dependent on illegal loans.

Economists including those from the World Bank have urged China to relax restrictions on lending to increase financing to China's entrepreneurs, who have consistently generated faster growth than state-owned companies.

China sentenced businesswoman Wu Ying to death for "illegal fundraising" in 2009, provoking a public outcry. China's Supreme Court overturned the sentence last year, China's official Xinhua news agency said.

Top Chinese officials in 2012 launched a pilot scheme to funnel more money to enterprises in Wenzhou, a business hub in east China rife with under-the-counter lenders who charge annual interest rates of 40 percent or even more.

The city was hit by a debt crisis in 2011 when a number of private loans went bad, leading entrepreneurs to commit suicide or go into hiding, and sparking fears of a nationwide financial crisis.

China's banks are not allowed to charge higher interest on riskier loans and mainly lend to other large state-controlled enterprises, shunning small- and medium-sized firms.

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