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Charges Against Chinese Rights Activist Said to Be Reduced

BEIJING â€" We’ve been tracking the situation of Liu Ping, the rights activist from Xinyu in Jiangxi Province, for more than a year - and last month we reported that the authorities had detained her and planned to charge her with subversion, according to her daughter and lawyers hired by her daughter.

More than a month since Ms. Liu, 48, disappeared at the end of April, one of her two lawyers was informed last week she had been formally arrested, said her daughter, Liao Minyue, 20, a college student in Anhui Province.

But in what Ms. Liao said was good news, the charges against her mother have been reduced: instead of subversion, Ms. Liu is accused of “illegal assembly,” Ms. Liao said. One of two lawyers for her mother, Zheng Jianwei, confirmed that in a telephone conversation. Ms. Liao spoke via online written messages.

“It’s a piece of good news,” she wrote. “Because my mother doesn’t fit the charge of ‘illegal assembly,’ and under it, her lawyers have the right to apply to see her.” As we reported last month, Ms. Liao has had sleepless nights over fears her mother was being badly treated in detention, which has happened before, according to both women.

But Mr. Zheng cautioned his client still faces “under five years” in jail if prosecutors decide to impose the heaviest punishment.

He ridiculed the new charge, saying it didn’t fit Ms. Liu. He didn’t know if she had gone out in a group to call for officials to disclose their assets, he said, but she had gone out with an umbrella printed with the words “Citizen” and “Freedom, Righteousness, Love.”

“If that’s how they define the crime, we may as well all stay at home,” he said, adding that Ms. Liu was just using a “citizens’ right to express themself.” “Do we need permission to speak, as well?” he asked.

Ms. Liao believes public pressure contributed to prosecutors being reluctant to press the heavier charge, while the local police were keen to do so. “The prosecutors and police had a disagreement,” she said. Calls to the Xinyu city prosecutor’s office weren’t answered Thursday.

“It’s definitely because there were many online voices, attention from the media,” she said. Her mother’s lawyers advised her that the state could not prove subversion, so “if the prosecutors sentenced her for that they would definitely have been reviled and condemned by a lot of people,” she said.

Ms. Liu, a former worker at a steel factory, had been increasingly speaking out about rights issues that many ordinary Chinese sympathize with: workers’ rights, standing as an independent candidate in local National People’s Congress elections, and, recently, urging top officials to disclose their financial assets.

Mr. Zhang plans to apply for bail for Ms. Liu, her daughter said.



Pushy Parents Urged to Let Offspring Go It Alone

LONDON â€" Here’s a question for every parent. Is it right to use your connections to give your children a potentially unfair advantage in the labor market or should you make them stand on their own feet?

It was posed this week by James Caan, one of Britain’s most successful and high-profile businessmen, who on Wednesday begins a new role as the government’s adviser on social mobility.

In an interview this week, he told The Telegraph that too many parents were eager to provide their offspring with work experience at top companies rather than allowing them to make their own way in the workplace.

Parents should only step in after a year in which “the child has tried everything” and failed to find a job.

Mr. Caan was speaking ahead of the launch of an initiative, spearheaded by Nick Clegg, Britain’s Liberal Democratic deputy prime minister, that aims to persuade companies to take on more young people from poorer backgrounds.

The initiative comes as new government-sponsored research indicates that young people from lower social categories are several rungs behind on the career ladder.

In a debate on social mobility, Mr. Clegg has criticized the growing phenomenon of unpaid internships that some see as favoring the children of well-connected and well-off parents.

It is an issue echoed in other countries where tight job markets have led to tougher competition for top jobs among the young. My colleague Joyce Lau reported last month on job seekers who actually pay for the privilege of working for nothing in order to enhance their resumés.

At first sight, Mr. Caan seems the ideal candidate to preach the virtues of self-reliance. The 52-year-old Pakistani-born entrepreneur passed up the chance to go into his father’s London leather goods business and left school at 16 in order to strike out on his own.

He went on to found a major international recruitment business before moving into private equity.

Formerly a panelist on the reality TV show “Dragon’s Den” â€" Britain’s version of the American “Shark Tank” â€" Mr. Caan helped select aspiring entrepreneurs pitching their business ideas in order to secure investment finance.

His advice to parents to let their children go it alone was potentially undermined this week when it emerged that one of his daughters works at a company he invests in, while another has interned at his private equity firm.

Mr. Caan insisted both daughters had been treated the same way as other applicants to his companies via a rigorous recruitment procedure.

He acknowledged, however, “The fact is that parents will always have the innate feeling to help their children into jobs. I’m no different.”

As Mr. Clegg’s government’s social mobility czar, Mr. Caan will lead a campaign to encourage companies to offer fair and open access to jobs and professions for young people, regardless of who they are or where they come from.

Some commentators were skeptical about whether Mr. Caan’s assault on nepotism was likely to have much effect on prosperous, aspirational parents.

“Middle-class parents are notoriously energetic when it comes to securing the best possible opportunities for their offspring,” according to Toby Young, writing in The Telegraph on Wednesday.

“It’s a safe bet that any solution that depends on parents being less pushy is doomed to fail, particularly in the current climate,” he wrote.

Let us know what you think. Do prosperous and well-connected parents have a moral duty to ensure a more level playing field in the labor market? Or will it always be a case of “family comes first?”



In London Theater, Repetition Is Not a Dirty Word

LONDON â€" How soon is too soon?

The question hovers over any theatrical community that folds the classics into its overall output, or at least makes the past part of its present. But as someone who travels relatively frequently between New York and London, I remain struck by differing attitudes in the two theater capitals toward this very topic. “Not again,” I more often than not hear American friends and colleagues remarking, as when a certain title that smacks of overfamiliarity comes their way â€" “Cat On a Hot Tin Roof,” most recently, to pick just one title much-seen on Broadway lately.

But the same conveyer belt of plays in performance causes barely a ripple in London. If memory serves, I seem to recall attending five different productions of “The Tempest” at the very end of the 1980s, and I can report as fact that last year I saw both “The Taming of the Shrew” and “Henry V” three times (four in the case of the history play if one adds in the actor Tom Hiddleston’s hugely charismatic take on the title role on British television).

In Britain, of course, Shakespeare is common currency, as is to be expected from a country that can field simultaneously the Royal Shakespeare Company and Shakespeare’s Globe, without an apparent diminution of interest in the output of either. It helps, of course, that the Royal Shakespeare Company is based in Stratford-upon-Avon, Shakespeare’s birthplace, whereas the Globe, while sending shows on tour, occupies Thames-side pride of place next to the Tate Modern.

Playgoers here, far from being put off by an overabundance of a certain title, can in some ways be seen to collect experiences of a certain show. This extends not just to Shakespeare but across the spectrum. There’s been a major London production of Harold Pinter’s “Old Times” more or less once a decade since its 1971 premiere â€" the most recent one was this past winter, with Kristin Scott Thomas, Lia Williams, and Rufus Sewell â€" and Ms. Scott Thomas, in fact, made her West End stage debut in a 2003 production of Chekhov’s “Three Sisters” that predated by several months a National Theatre reappraisal of the very same play. That one, directed by Katie Mitchell, had Eve Best in the role of Masha that had been taken a theatrical heartbeat before by Ms. Scott Thomas.

With that in mind, it’s a small wonder that the twice Tony-nominated Ms. Best was sounding relatively sanguine in a recent interview on the topic of her imminent directing debut with “Macbeth,” a play much on Britons’ lips at the moment: James McAvoy recently finished a sellout West End run in the title role, garnering an Olivier nomination in the process, while Kenneth Branagh will essay the same role opening in Manchester in early July. Ms. Best’s production for Shakespeare’s Globe has its opening the very same week as the Manchester one, but that’s just the way things are, she said. (And the two cities are, of course, several hours apart by train.)

“What’s lovely about this play â€" and all Shakespeare plays, obviously â€" is that they are so magnificently and eminently flexible that they can encompass six or eight or 10 productions all going on at the same time,” said Ms. Best, “all equally fascinating, all equally interesting.” Besides, Ms. Best as an actress has been here before, not just with Chekhov in 2003 but a few summers ago with the Bard. In 2011, she opened as Beatrice in a Globe “Much Ado About Nothing” a scant six days before the popular comedienne Catherine Tate took on the same role in the West End in a totally different production. Happy news: Both productions played to capacity (though the Globe one, it must be said, was infinitely better.)

The Tony-winning director Michael Grandage (“Red”) has two Shakespeare plays planned as part of his ongoing West End tenancy at the Noel Coward Theatre, which on June 1 concluded the world premiere of John Logan’s “Peter and Alice,” starring Ben Whishaw and Judi Dench. In the fall, Mr. Grandage will open “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” â€" a play that just opened at (where else?) the Globe â€" to be followed by his former Hamlet, Jude Law, taking on “Henry V,” local memories of the recent spate of productions of that play no doubt fresh in theater people’s minds.

The point, Mr. Grandage said one recent day, is that the array of productions of the same work is in its own way “completely liberating,” not least because, in his view, “audiences don’t have any issue with seeing something that for many of them will be a new play.” As regards Shakespeare, he said, “we have a 450-year-old history of repeating these plays but I don’t think they’re ever thought of as repeats, and we tend not to use the word ‘revival.’ The public has got a different mindset about the history of it all.”

Mr. Grandage recently revisited a title himself, opening his West End season this past December with “Privates on Parade,” the Peter Nichols play-with-music that he had previously directed at the (far smaller) Donmar Warehouse late in 2001. But the recent go-round, the director said, was “a completely different production that arose out of a completely different set of circumstances; we came at it like it was a new play again.” (Both, incidentally, got excellent reviews.)

What then of a New York theater season to come that will see major revivals of “Betrayal” and “The Real Thing,” two English titles not exactly unknown around Broadway, as well as a “Waiting For Godot,” with Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart, that comes less than five years after the last Broadway “Godot,” which starred Bill Irwin and Nathan Lane?

Well, major symphonies and ballets are constantly revisited, so why not plays? Those who choose to get too exercised about it should consider the following: If this were London, these “Godot” plays might well have opened not within five years of one another but five days.



Can Job Training Trump a Degree?

HONG KONG â€" China and India, Asian giants with a staggering 2.5 billion people between them, have a big problem with their youth.

No matter how much they increase education funding or how quickly they build universities, there is no way there will be enough spaces for everyone. Even if there were, the reality is that not every young person has the academic background, motivation or desire to complete a four-year university education.

For Asian parents, a college diploma is the ultimate status symbol for their children. But, on the ground, there are simply not enough well-paid jobs to accommodate all these graduates â€" at least, not in their fields of study. So, after grueling entry exams and years of additional study, many young graduates can barely find enough work to pay their own rent.

Meanwhile, factories are left without skilled machinists, and hotels are desperate to hire bilingual professional chefs, bartenders and waitstaff fluent in the ways of international fine dining.

The Asian economic boom has created billions of new cars, laptops, cellphones and air conditioners that need upkeep and repair â€" and not enough technicians who know how to do that really well. (And never mind finding a good, last-minute plumber when your toilet explodes on a Sunday night anywhere in the world).

Two I.H.T. reports on vocational education found similar themes in India and China: Hundreds of millions of young people who need job-friendly skills, and the vast numbers of companies that are desperate to hire skilled workers. According to the Chinese Society of Vocational and Technical Education, more than 95 percent of vocational school graduates found work.

Amy Yee reports from Ghaziabad, on the outskirts of Delhi, where she visits one of the many training centers run by Gras Academy. In India, private vocational schools are filling in the gaps left by formal education. And while some of their students are middle-school dropouts, others are college students who feel their universities are not giving them the hands-on work experience they need. Amy’s full article is here.

Corinne Dillon reports from the BN Vocational School in Beijing, a nonprofit venture that trains the children of poor migrant workers who have moved away from the impoverished countryside in search of a better life. BN’s programs are tailored to regional needs - it produces car makers in the industrial north and pastry chefs in sophisticated cities that are tourist draws. Corinne’s full article is here.

While a college education is good for some, is it right for everyone? Should developing nations pay more attention to hands-on training for less academically-inclined youth? Is it better to be a well-employed mechanic or chef, or a university graduate with a degree but no job?



IHT Quick Read: June 5

NEWS The French foreign minister announced on Tuesday that laboratory tests confirmed that sarin gas had been used in Syria, and that there was “no doubt it was the regime and its accomplices” that had used it. Steven Erlanger reports from Paris, and Nick Cumming-Bruce from Geneva.

Several weeks ago, rebels in Syria opened a front on the flatlands east of the Aleppo-Damascus highway in an effort to break a near-stalemate with government forces, and an attempt to shift away from guerrilla tactics and more toward traditional battle tactics. Results have been mixed. C.J. Chivers reports from Iblil, Syria.

In Italy and around Europe, detention centers that hold people lacking proper working or residence permits are increasingly being criticized for being inhumane, ineffective and costly. Elisabetta Povoledo reports from Rome.

Chancellor Angela Merkel visited flood-stricken regions of eastern and southern Germany on Tuesday and pledged millions of euros in immediate aid to residents struggling to cope with high-water levels not seen in centuries. Melissa Eddy reports from Pirna, Germany.

A spike in diabetes cases in Vietnam is worrying doctors, who say the prime causes of the increase are “Westernization and urbanization.” Thomas Fuller reports from Ho Chi Minh City.

The European Union’s trade commissioner on Tuesday carried out his threat to impose tariffs on solar panels from China â€" but significantly watered down the penalties that will be in place, at least initially. James Kanter reports from Brussels, and Keith Bradsher from Hong Kong.

On Wednesday, Bloomberg L.P. will announce the formation of Bloomberg Beta, a $75 million venture capital fund to fund young start-ups, including some that its news operations report on. Nicole Perlroth reports from San Francisco.

China is notorious for its knockoffs, and now it even has a knockoff of Steve Jobs: Lei Jun, the chief of Xiaomi. Xiaomi sold $2 billion in handsets in China last year and expects its revenue to double this year. David Barboza reports from Beijing.

ARTS The composer Joseph Bertolozzi is on a mission to “play the Eiffel Tower” by striking its surfaces and collecting the sounds to use as samples in a composition called “Tower Music.” Maïa de la Baume reports from Paris.

A Paris Opera production brings some levity to Handel’s opera “Giulio Cesare.” George Loomis reviews.

SPORTS The miasma of corruption claims hanging over the Board of Control for Cricket in India, by far the most powerful body in the game, is not going away any time soon. Huw Richards reports.

After falling behind in her quarterfinal match, Serena Williams fought her way back and defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova. Christopher Clarey reports from Paris.