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Despite Wen's pledge of openness, authorities ordered Chinese media to stop doing their own reporting on the crash, according to the Hong Kong Journalists Association. It said they were told to publish "positive coverage" by the official Xinhua News Agency. In apparent defiance, the business newspaper Economic Observer published a poignant commentary Saturday in the form of a letter to Xiang Weiyi, a 2-year-old girl who survived the crash that killed her parents. She was found in the wreckage after authorities had declared the search for survivors finished. "Should we tell you all about the hypocrisy, arrogance, rashness and brutality behind the tragedy?" the newspaper said. "There has never been a guarantee that we will not be martyrs to speed." The crash is the latest in a string of incidents that have prompted complaints about official priorities. In November, a fire at a Shanghai high-rise apartment building for teachers killed 58 people. Investigators said the blaze was started by a welding torch used by workers who were adding insulation as part of a government energy conservation drive. That triggered questions about whether conservation was worth such risks. The government ordered a halt to similar projects at other buildings pending an investigation. The cost of building the bullet train also is adding to concern over the Ministry of Railways' high and rising debt level and whether it will have to be bailed out by Chinese taxpayers. The ministry's publicly reported outstanding debts are 2 trillion yuan ($300 billion), equal to 5 percent of China's annual economic output. The ministry is probably not making enough money to pay that debt, Standard Chartered economist Stephen Green said in a report . The railway ministry, a bureaucratic behemoth that employs 3.2 million people, might be more susceptible to change than other portions of China's government because it already was reeling from scandal before the crash. The former minister, Liu Zhijun, the bullet train's main official booster, was dismissed in February amid a corruption investigation. Following warnings by Chinese train experts that the bullet trains' planned top speed was dangerously fast, his successor, Sheng Guangzu, announced in April it would be cut from 350 kph (220 mph) to 300 kph (190 mph). Sheng said slower trains with lower-priced tickets also would be added. The disaster might ultimately help Beijing by denting the image of state-led growth, said Fei-Ling Wang, a professor of international affairs at the Georgia Institute of Technology. "It will certainly recast the current development model in some more critical light," said Wang. "And it may have an impact on China's image and humble somewhat the enthusiasts, perhaps for the long-term good of China."
[Associated
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