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'Double standards'[/size=6]
In other news, the People's Daily Overseas Edition and the China Daily accuse the US of "double standards" in classing violent unrest in Xinjiang as ethnic conflict rather than terrorism and supporting exiled Uighur activists.
A bilingual editorial in the Global Times says the Western media have "once again stood against facts and the feelings of the Chinese people" by quoting the World Uyghur Congress as saying that the suppression of Uighurs triggered recent conflicts in Xinjiang.
Elsewhere, the mainland public are sceptical about an expanded online complaints platform that now includes petitions against abuses of administrative power and the infringement of public interests, the Global Times reports.
Some petitioners question whether their privacy can be protected by the service's real-name policy, as most cases, including tip-offs, will end up being transferred back to the local government, the Global Times says.
The People's Daily says some local authorities have in the past "cut off a bridge of communication with the masses" and "alienated flesh and blood ties with the masses" by blocking channels for petitioners to express grievances.
An editorial in The Beijing News says although online petitioning should be as easy and reliable as online shopping, it took authorities in Hainan province two years and nine months to reply to an online petition.
"Online petitioning was launched some places more than a year ago, but online petitioning halls are still deserted, and a certain degree of public mistrust is still reflected in this," commentator Fu Dalin writes in the Beijing Times.
BBC Monitoring reports and analyses news from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. For more reports from BBC Monitoring, click here. You can follow BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook.
In other news, the People's Daily Overseas Edition and the China Daily accuse the US of "double standards" in classing violent unrest in Xinjiang as ethnic conflict rather than terrorism and supporting exiled Uighur activists.
A bilingual editorial in the Global Times says the Western media have "once again stood against facts and the feelings of the Chinese people" by quoting the World Uyghur Congress as saying that the suppression of Uighurs triggered recent conflicts in Xinjiang.
Elsewhere, the mainland public are sceptical about an expanded online complaints platform that now includes petitions against abuses of administrative power and the infringement of public interests, the Global Times reports.
Some petitioners question whether their privacy can be protected by the service's real-name policy, as most cases, including tip-offs, will end up being transferred back to the local government, the Global Times says.
The People's Daily says some local authorities have in the past "cut off a bridge of communication with the masses" and "alienated flesh and blood ties with the masses" by blocking channels for petitioners to express grievances.
An editorial in The Beijing News says although online petitioning should be as easy and reliable as online shopping, it took authorities in Hainan province two years and nine months to reply to an online petition.
"Online petitioning was launched some places more than a year ago, but online petitioning halls are still deserted, and a certain degree of public mistrust is still reflected in this," commentator Fu Dalin writes in the Beijing Times.
BBC Monitoring reports and analyses news from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. For more reports from BBC Monitoring, click here. You can follow BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook.
BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook:

https://twitter.com/BBCMonitoring
https://www.facebook.com/BBCMonitoring
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