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The Internet speculation sent censors into overdrive to excise the comments. Searches for "Jiang Zemin" in Chinese or simply "Jiang"
-- which means "river" -- drew warnings on Sina Corp.'s popular Twitter-like service that said the search was illegal. Some posts then began appearing on Sina Weibo about former leader "River" in English. News that some overseas media had reported Jiang's death whizzed around the social networking site, with some mainland users puzzling over how Hong Kong media could have received the news first. The government is very secretive about the health of top leaders and is particularly sensitive ahead of a leadership transition that starts late next year at a major Communist Party congress. The death of Jiang, a retired but still very influential figure, could cause some of his proteges to shift allegiances, affecting the jockeying for power among China's rising political elites. China prefers to keep such machinations behind the scenes as much as possible. Jiang led China for a dozen years until transferring power to President Hu Jintao in 2002.
[Associated
Press;
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