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China
- Taiwan condemns ‘shameless’ China for accepting world’s concern on quake
Taiwan on Thursday condemned China as “shameless” after Beijing’s deputy ambassador to the United Nations thanked the world for its concern about a strong earthquake on the island.
China claims democratically-governed Taiwan as its own territory and also claims the right to speak for it on the international stage, to the fury of Taipei given Beijing’s communist government has never ruled the island and has no say in how it chooses its leaders.
On Wednesday, after the 7.2 earthquake hit eastern Taiwan, killing 10 people, China’s Deputy Permanent Representative to the U.N., Geng Shuang, mentioned at a meeting about children’s rights that another speaker had brought up the quake in “China’s Taiwan”. China is concerned about the damage and has expressed condolences to Taiwan and offered aid, he said, according to a transcript of his remarks carried on the Chinese mission to the U.N.’s website.
“We thank the international community for its expressions of sympathy and concern,” he added.
Taiwan’s foreign ministry expressed anger at the remarks.
The ministry “solemnly condemns China’s shameless use of the Taiwan earthquake to conduct cognitive operations internationally”, it said, using Taiwan’s normal term for what it views as Chinese psychological warfare.
This shows China has no goodwill towards Taiwan, the ministry added.
Taiwan’s government has already thanked governments and leaders around the world for their messages of concern and offers of support, including from the United States, the island’s most important international supporter despite the lack of diplomatic ties.
- Citizen Lab: "Not only the Chinese government, but also US-based firms, are complicit in the political and religious censoring of content on China-accessible platforms"citizenlab.ca Citizen Lab submission to the Congressional-Executive Commission on China about the State of Human Rights in China - The Citizen Lab
Emile Dirks, Research Associate at the Citizen Lab, prepared a written submission for the Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC) about the state
Cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/12913117
In its submission to the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, the University of Toronto's Citizen Lab gives recomnendations to hold Chinese and U.S. firms accountable for their involvement in online censorship and assisting victims of digital abuse and intimidation.
- China's ageing population: A demographic crisis is unfolding for Xiwww.bbc.com China's ageing population: A demographic crisis is unfolding for Xi
The country is running out of time to build enough of a fund to care for its growing number of elderly.
A slowing economy, shrinking government benefits and a decades-long one-child policy have created a creeping demographic crisis in in Xi Jinping's China.
The pension pot is running dry and the country is running out of time to build enough of a fund to care for the growing number of elderly.
Over the next decade, about 300 million people, who are currently aged 50 to 60, are set to leave the Chinese workforce. This is the country's largest age group, nearly equivalent to the size of the US population.
Who will look after them? The answer depends on where you go and who you ask.
- China and Human Rights: Beijing’s Real Face Fails to Hide as Gifts of Water and Cyberattacks Compete - [Opinion]dominotheory.com China & Human Rights, March-End 2024: Beijing’s Real Face Fails to Hide as Gifts of Water and Cyberattacks Compete - Domino Theory
The guns of Tiananmen still backfire on the Chinese Communist Party as it gropes around the globe to conceal a list of crimes that grows by the day.
China repays states for co-alignment variously. Its “no limits” partnership with Moscow was this week bolstered by Beijing’s propaganda outlet Global Times serving Russia’s narrative that the recent terrorist attack in its capital city may be connected to the United States of America and Ukraine, against the latter of which it is attempting to justify a war of invasion.
Making no reference to obvious use of torture, the Global Times’ English-language service tweeted that the Russia’s “investigation and interrogation” of terrorism suspects reveals a “complicated” situation and implied possible involvement from Washington and Kyiv.
Beijing also sought to keep the Maldives, one of its more recent allies, happy with the March delivery of one million bottles of glacial meltwater from colonially occupied Tibet. For years, civil society organizations have highlighted how Tibetan pastoralists are being removed from their traditional lands to facilitate resource exploitation by Chinese companies, including for bottled water.
Extraction of water is reportedly exacerbating environmental degradation and conflict in tandem with a flurry of dam construction that saw major protests earlier this year in Dege County, currently part of China’s Sichuan province. The hundreds of protesters arrested during that incident have been released, but not before suffering deprivation of water, overcrowding and sometimes severe beatings in custody. Moreover, the wider picture suggests that not all of the detainees have been set free; some remain unaccounted for; several younger monks have been sent to government schools since the demonstrations; and restrictions on movement in Dege are still in place.
Meanwhile, far from gifts of water, other countries that are not regarded on quite such friendly terms by Beijing like New Zealand, the U.S., U.K. and members of the European Union have instead been the victims of widespread cyber-attacks. Attributed to two entities known as APT 31 and APT 40, which are considered to be affiliated with the Chinese state, the attacks focused on targets such as the British Electoral Commission, companies of strategic importance, dissidents, journalists, parliamentarians and other politicians critical of China.
- From Gao Yaojie to Mao Yushi: The high cost of being a whistleblower in Chinawww.aljazeera.com The high cost of being a whistleblower in China
While the right to report wrongdoing is recognised in the Chinese constitution, it comes with strict limits.
Long before eye doctor Li Wenliang sounded the alarm on COVID-19 and succumbed to the virus in early 2020, Dr Gao Yaojie was China’s best-known whistleblower. Her decision to expose the source of China’s AIDS epidemic made her an exile for the last 14 years of her life.
At 81, Gao was the oldest dissident ever to have fled China. Barely one month after her death, prominent economist Mao Yushi set a new record. Mao, whose liberal think tank known for advocating market reforms was shut down by officials, shared pictures on social media of his 95th birthday celebrations in Vancouver, Canada, not long after he fled China.
Gao kept writing books into her last days, and she never took her final years in exile for granted.
“The US is no paradise,” wrote Gao, but she added: “Had I never left [China], I wouldn’t have lived past 90.”
She died last December at the age of 95 in New York.
- China renames 30 Indian villages, rivers and lakes in its latest attempt to claim sovereignty over a disputed border regionwww.telegraph.co.uk China renames Indian villages as border dispute intensifies
Beijing says it has “standardised” titles of 30 locations in Zangnan, its name for Arunachal Pradesh
"If I change the name of your house, will it become mine?” Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, the Indian foreign minister, said.
The Chinese Ministry of Civil Affairs said it had “standardised” the geographical names of 30 locations in Zangnan, the Chinese name for Arunachal Pradesh.
“Arunachal Pradesh was an Indian state, is an Indian state and will remain so in the future. Nothing will be gained by changing names.”
Tensions have been ramping up along the Line of Actual Control that separates India and China since May 2020, when soldiers from each side engaged in hand-to-hand combat and beat each other with nail-studded bats.
At least 20 Indian soldiers and four Chinese soldiers died in the skirmish.
- China promised to import more high-quality products and services from France, after a European probe into Chinese EV exports threatened to spark a trade dispute between the two countries
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10665013
China's foreign minister Wang Yi, at a joint press event with his French counterpart, Stephane Sejourne, said China hoped that Europe's de-risking policy was not targeted at specific countries.
"We are constantly relaxing market access, including promoting the flow of cross-border data," Wang said, adding that China will do more to address French companies' market access concerns.
Europe has been pursuing a de-risking strategy and reducing dependency on China to retain its industrial edge and competitiveness.
- China’s EV market has slowed down, leading to a price war that is killing brands and infuriating consumersrestofworld.org China’s EV price war is killing brands and infuriating consumers
Fast depreciation in an already slow market has panicked car buyers, many of whom are venting their frustrations on social media.
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10664796
After years of rapid growth spurred by government support, the world’s biggest EV market is facing a slowdown as consumers cut spending in an uncertain post-pandemic economy. As carmakers slash prices further to sustain their sales, some car owners are seeing the value of their vehicles plummet months or even weeks after their purchases. Several EV companies are also in financial crises, leaving thousands of buyers unable to access after-sales and software maintenance services.
EV startups HiPhi, the Baidu-backed WM Motor, and the Tencent-backed Aiways have run out of funds to sustain their operations. Other brands including Levdeo and Singulato Motors have entered bankruptcy proceedings.
- Satellite images reveal China built a replica of Taipei’s presidential district in remote Inner Mongolia, fuelling speculation that Beijing uses the site as training ground for an invasion of Taiwanwww.france24.com Taipei replica in remote Chinese province fans Taiwan invasion fears
Satellite images verified by FRANCE 24 reveal that China has built a replica of Taipei’s presidential district in remote Inner Mongolia, fuelling speculation that Beijing intends to use the site as a…
The satellite images reveal a layout of streets strongly resembling the Bo’ai Special Zone, a restricted area in Taipei’s Zhongzheng District that houses Taiwan’s most important state buildings, including the presidential palace, the supreme court, the ministry of justice and the central bank of Taiwan.
The Bo’ai Special Zone is subject to specific regulations, including a strict ban on overflight.
- Chinese scientist who gene-edited babies is back in lab and ‘proud’ of past work despite jailingwww.theguardian.com Scientist who gene-edited babies is back in lab and ‘proud’ of past work despite jailing
China’s He Jiankui, who used Crispr to edit genome, says he is working on genetic diseases and suggests human embryo gene editing will one day be accepted
He Jiankui's experiments sent shockwaves through the medical and scientific world. He was widely condemned for having gone ahead with the risky, ethically contentious and medically unjustified procedure with inadequate consent from the families involved.
The court found that He had forged documents from an ethics review panel that were used to recruit couples for his research.
He said he had used a gene-editing procedure known as Crispr-Cas9 to rewrite the DNA in the sisters’ embryos – modifications he claimed would make the children immune to HIV.
- Chinese state media stoked allegation Taiwan's president would flee the country if war erupts with China, while another fake story said the president's confidantes hold VIP "runaway" passes
Taiwan's outgoing President Tsai Ing-wen plans to flee in a U.S. plane if war erupts with China, according to an unsubstantiated report first published in 2021 and echoed in the run-up to the island's January 2024 general election.
Another story said Tsai had given her confidantes VIP "runaway" passes.
They are among the many unsupported tales of Tsai's preparations to escape harm that have been fed into the island by Chinese state media outlets, according to an analysis conducted by the Information Environment Research Center (IORG), a Taiwan-based non-government organisation.
The IORG analysis revealed that the narrative that Tsai planned to flee if war broke out with China, and that Taiwan’s military drills were rehearsals for this, originated with an outlet controlled by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in June 2021, and was quickly repeated by other official Chinese news sources.
Taipei has repeatedly said the reports are false. The government has not publicly detailed its plans for the leadership in the event of conflict. Reuters could not independently determine the existence of any such escape plans.
- China Registers 2.5 Million Chinese Businesses in Uyghur Homeland, While Arresting Uyghur Business Leaders and Seizing Their Propertiesuyghurtimes.com China Registers 2.5 Million Chinese Businesses in Uyghur Homeland, While Arresting Uyghur Business Leaders and Seizing Their Properties - Uyghur Times
Uyghur Times: Independent source about Uyghurs
Chinese propaganda outlet Xinjiang Daily reported from the Autonomous Region Market Supervision Administration that “there are currently 2.476 million registered business entities in Xinjiang, including 266,700 in the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, representing a 7.75% increase compared to the previous year. Among them, there are 548,300 enterprises, showing a 10.41% year-on-year increase, and 1.8816 million individual businesses, reflecting a 7.25% year-on-year rise. “
However, the Chinese government’s report on “Xinjiang”‘s thriving business sector did not mention the ethnicity of the registered business owners.
It has been widely reported that Uyghur business leaders in the region have encountered significant challenges, with many being arrested and their properties seized by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Prominent Uyghur business leaders were reportedly detained in the region starting early in 2015. In a detailed report by Uyghur Hjelp citing the detention of nearly 5000 Uyghur businessmen, a figure also reported by the Wall Street Journal.
Of particular importance is the fact that while the Chinese government arrested Uyghur business leaders and seized their properties, they also sent and forced those Uyghur millionaires, among millions of other Uyghurs, to Chinese factories to work under harsh labor conditions without any freedom, effectively as slaves.
- "Needlessly endangering lives": EU and member states urge China to respect international law amid the country's growing aggressions in South China Seascandasia.com International community reacts to current aggressions in South China Sea - Scandasia
21 countries, including Denmark, Finland, Sweden and the European Union, have expressed concern about dangerous maneuvers and the use of water cannons against Filipino ships by the China Coast Guard. They refer to the United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea (UCLOS) and they call for upholdin...
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10581641
21 countries, including Denmark, Finland, Sweden and the European Union, have expressed concern about dangerous maneuvers and the use of water cannons against Filipino ships by the China Coast Guard. They refer to the United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea (UCLOS) and they call for upholding the rules, when managing the dispute in the South China Sea.
The statements follows weeks of tension between the Philippines and China in the South China Sea, with both countries accusing each other of initiating aggressions.
The Embassy of Sweden in Manila wrote on social media, that damaging the Philippine vessels is “needlessly endangering lives”, and that the “disputes must be resolved peacefully in accordance with UNCLOS and the international rule of law.”
- One-party, communist country Vietnam is seeing US ties as it seeks to diversify from Chinawww.france24.com Seeing US ties, Vietnam appeals for 'market economy' status
Vietnam on Tuesday called on the United States to recognize it as a market economy, saying stronger trade ties would benefit Washington in key areas as it seeks to diversify from China.
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10580624
Despite the trauma of war between the two nations, the United States and Vietnam have sharply expanded cooperation since the reestablishment of relations 30 years ago.
Vietnam has historic tensions with China including disputes in the South China Sea, where Beijing has increasingly exerted claims against Hanoi, the Philippines and others.
- China decries U.S. ‘bullying.’ But, to many, China is the bully.www.washingtonpost.com Analysis | China decries U.S. ‘bullying.’ But, to many, China is the bully.
Beijing says it wants Asia to “jointly” manage its own security. Some countries in China’s neighborhood are not likely to be convinced.
Under President Xi Jinping, China has put forward a somewhat vague project known as the Global Security Initiative — a set of broad-brush principles that, as the Financial Times summed up, “advocates for resolving conflicts through dialogue".
Many countries in China’s neighborhood are not likely to be convinced. Recently the government of the Philippines lodged a protest with Chinese counterparts after a dangerous escalation in the South China Sea, where China’s maritime expansionism is butting against the parallel territorial claims of its weaker neighbors. Authorities in Manila furnished video evidence of a Chinese coast guard vessel attacking a Philippines naval resupply ship with water cannon on March 23, injuring Filipino crew members and damaging their vessel.
This follows a pattern of coercive Chinese measures, including water cannon attacks, deployed around the disputed Second Thomas Shoal, which Manila is defending from constant Chinese encroachment and provocations. The South China Sea is an artery that sees the passage of a third of global trade and its reefs and uninhabited archipelagoes have taken on deeper strategic significance in the shadow of China’s geopolitical rise.
“The systematic and consistent manner in which the People’s Republic of China carries out these illegal and irresponsible actions puts into question and significant doubt the sincerity of its calls for peaceful dialogue,” the Philippines coast guard said in a statement after another incident in December. “We demand that China demonstrate that it is a responsible and trustworthy member of the international community.”
- Chinese tech has been critical in bridging Africa’s digital divide, but the support often comes with high and hidden costsasiatimes.com The price of Africa's digital dependence on China - Asia Times
Digital technologies have many potential benefits for people in African countries. They can support the delivery of healthcare services, promote access to
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10554617
Several African countries depend on China as their main technology provider and sponsor of large digital infrastructural projects.
Under the so-called “EPC+F” (Engineer, Procure, Construct + Fund/Finance) scheme, Chinese companies like Huawei and ZTE oversee the engineering, procurement and construction while Chinese banks provide state-backed finance. Angola, Uganda and Zambia are just some of the countries which seem to have benefited from this type of deal.
The Chinese government’s expectation is that mobile applications and startups in Africa will increasingly reflect Beijing’s technological and ideological principles. That includes China’s interpretation of human rights, data privacy and freedom of speech.
Researchers like Arthur Gwagwa from the Ethics Institute at Utrecht University (Netherlands) believe that China’s export of critical infrastructure components will enable military and industrial espionage. These claims assert that Chinese-made equipment is designed in a way that could facilitate cyber attacks.
Human Rights Watch, an international NGO that conducts research and advocacy on human rights, has raised concerns that Chinese infrastructure increases the risk of technology-enabled authoritarianism. In particular, Huawei has been accused of colluding with governments to spy on political opponents in Uganda and Zambia. Huawei has denied the allegations.
In the long term African countries should produce their own infrastructure and become less dependent.
- "Significant risks in terms of privacy and information security": Latin America in the Crosshairs of China-backed Cyber Piratesdialogo-americas.com Latin America in the Crosshairs of China-backed Cyber Pirates
Cybersecurity has become essential throughout the world, and Latin America is no exception to this reality. According to the IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence Index 2024 report, the region was the fourth most attacked in 2023, accounting for 12 percent of incidents worldwide.
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10551378
State-sponsored cyberattacks are a leading cause of concern among government entities throughout the world, and Latin America is no exception to this reality.
Most of the attacks come from China and Russia and seek to steal and hijack data and personal information, said Jean Reyes, of Honduran technology firm GBM.
“As part of the technological deployment, Chinese companies such as Huawei, ZTE, Xiaomi, and TikTok and online stores of Chinese origin are involved in collecting user data, which they share with the Chinese government,” Víctor Ruiz, founder of the SILIKN cybersecurity center in Mexico, told Diálogo on March 5. “This poses significant risks in terms of privacy and information security.”
- Migrant workers who helped build modern China have scant or no pensions, and can't retireapnews.com Migrant workers who helped build modern China have scant or no pensions, and can't retire
China’s first generation of migrant workers played an integral role in the country's transformation from an impoverished nation to an economic powerhouse.
As China’s population ages, so are its migrant workers. About 85 million were over 50 in 2022, the latest year for which data is available, accounting for 29% of all migrant workers and up from 15% a decade earlier. With limited or no pensions and health insurance, they need to keep working.
Migrant workers can get subsidized health care in their hometowns, but they have little or no coverage elsewhere. If they need to go to hospital in Beijing, they have to pay out of pocket.
Older workers are being hit by a double whammy. Jobs have dried up in construction due to a downturn in the real estate market and in factories because of automation and the slowing economy. Age discrimination is common, so jobs tend to go to younger people.
- How Xi Jinping’s authoritarianism is killing China’s economy - (video, 22 min)www.dw.com How Xi Jinping’s authoritarianism is killing China’s economy – DW – 03/28/2024
Under Xi Jinping, the Chinese Communist Party has become more controlling than at any stage in the past four decades - rarely good news for free enterprise. In this episode we ask if that lust for control at all costs is the main reason why so many people - both within China and outside of it - have...
Under Xi Jinping, the Chinese Communist Party has become more controlling than at any stage in the past four decades - rarely good news for free enterprise. In this episode we ask if that lust for control at all costs is the main reason why so many people - both within China and outside of it - have lost faith in a global economic powerhouse’s capacity to bounce back from its current troubles.
- Philippine president warns of countermeasures in response to Chinese aggression at sea
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10503259
The Philippine president said that his government would take action against what he called dangerous attacks by the Chinese coast guard and suspected militia ships in the disputed South China Sea, saying “Filipinos do not yield.”
Ferdinand Marcos Jr. did not provide details of the actions his government would take in the succeeding weeks but said these would be “proportionate, deliberate and reasonable in the face of the open, unabating, and illegal, coercive, aggressive and dangerous attacks by agents of the China coast guard and Chinese maritime militia.”
“We seek no conflict with any nation,” Marcos wrote on X, formerly Twitter, but said the Philippines would not be “cowed into silence.”
Marcos’s warning is the latest sign of the escalating disputes between China and the Philippines in the contested waters that have caused minor collisions between the coast guard and other vessels of the rival claimant nations, sparked a war of words and strained relations.
- Propaganda: Chinese state media’s "A Fractured America" series shows how AI is beginning to shape Beijing’s influence campaignswww.aljazeera.com China turns to AI in propaganda mocking the ‘American Dream’
Chinese state media’s A Fractured America series shows how AI is beginning to shape Beijing’s influence campaigns.
The Fractured America series is just one example of how artificial intelligence (AI), with its ability to generate high-quality multimedia with minimal effort in seconds, is beginning to shape Beijing’s propaganda efforts.
Henry Ajder, a UK-based expert in generative AI, said while the CGTN series does not attempt to pass itself off as genuine video, it is a clear example of how AI has made it far easier and cheaper to churn out content.
“The reason that they’ve done it in this way is, you could hire an animator, and a voiceover artist to do this, but it would probably end up being more time-consuming. It would probably end up being more expensive to do,” Ajder says.
Chinese state-backed actors have been deploying AI-generated content since at least March 2023, Microsoft said, and such “relatively high-quality visual content has already drawn higher levels of engagement from authentic social media users”.
It is not limited to the U.S., of course. In the run-up to Taiwan's election in January, for example, more than 100 deepfake videos of fake news anchors attacking outgoing Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen were attributed to China’s Ministry of State Security, the Taipei Times reported, citing national security sources.
Much like the CGTN video series, the videos lacked sophistication, but showed how AI could help spread misinformation at scale, said Chihhao Yu, the co-director of the Taiwan Information Environment Research Center (IORG).
- The Double-Edged Sword of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in Africa
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10499674
While China has built infrastructure throughout the continent, though China’s promising projects are typically faulty or incomplete, revealing its self-serving goals.
Ethiopia is a prominent example of African countries’ challenges. As Ethiopia lacks the funds to build a seaport in its ally Djibouti. China started investing in Ethiopia and agreed to construct a railroad from Addis Ababa to the Port of Djibouti. China gave Ethiopia a $1.3 billion loan with 3% interest and a 6-year repayment period. The modernization project covered 750 km and cost $4 billion. China’s state-owned EXIM bank, one of the primary lenders for BRI projects, covered 70% of the cost with Ethiopia paying the rest in loan installments.
Because China now owns 32.9% of Ethiopia’s external debt, the African country heavily depends on loans from state-owned banks linked to China’s state-controlled market, and is thus affected by China’s economic health.
As repayment amounts are denominated in China's currency yuan, a weaker currency means inflated repayment costs, straining these indebted countries even more.
The overall economic leverage is primarily attributed to a system of high-interest, high-risk loans, as countries fall into a “debt trap” caused by unsustainable debt that continuously accrues.
China has tried to alleviate concerns by highlighting debt-restructuring agreements with African countries. These agreements aim to help struggling countries repay loans, but they’re vague and don’t adequately help countries overcome the debt trap.
Adding to Ethiopia’s woes are corrupt activities by Chinese companies. To get projects in Ethiopia, these firms have bribed corrupt politicians. When they start constructing in Ethiopia, Chinese companies fail to deliver their promises of high-quality infrastructure. In contrast, as Ethiopia’s debt increases, reports have appeared of faltering infrastructure due to lower quality materials than initially promised.
China has built similar projects in other African countries like Kenya and Zambia, with similar attractive promises, like the Nairobi-Mombasa railway and Mongu-Kalabo highway respectively. All these projects require large loans to often opaque conditions.
- China has a growing problem with drug-resistant gonorrhea - and one that doesn't heed borders, Chinese researchers sayarstechnica.com China has a big problem with super gonorrhea, study finds
Drug-resistant gonorrhea is a growing problem—one that doesn't heed borders.
Health officials have long warned that gonorrhea is becoming more and more resistant to all the antibiotic drugs we have to fight it. If public health alarm bells could somehow hit a higher pitch, a study published Thursday from researchers in China would certainly accomplish it.
The study surveyed gonorrhea bacterial isolates—Neisseria gonorrhoeae—from around the country and found that the prevalence of ceftriaxone-resistant isolates nearly tripled between 2017 and 2021. Ceftriaxone-resistant strains made up roughly 8 percent of the nearly 3,000 bacterial isolates collected from gonorrhea infections in 2022. That's up from just under 3 percent in 2017. The study appears in the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
- Peru has annulled China’s exclusive control over its $3.5bn Chancay Port, amid concerns over Beijing’s grip on Latin American infrastructurewww.ship-technology.com Has China overplayed its hand in Latin America’s Silk Road?
Peru has annulled COSCO’s exclusive control over the $3.5bn Chancay Port, amid concerns over China’s grip on Latin American infrastructure.
The Peruvian Government terminated the exclusive right of COSCO, the Chinese state-owned shipping company, to operate the Chancay megaport COSCO is currently building under China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). The BRI has enticed more than 150 countries worldwide to sign up for Chinese investment in key infrastructure; from pipelines, power plants and telecoms networks, to airports, roads, railways and ports.
In Peru, Beijing has focused heavily on exporting the country’s large commodities market, led by copper, gold, gas, and grapes.
While promoting Chinese aims – and trade – overseas remains the overarching goal of the BRI, Beijing’s strategy in Peru “has evolved over the last couple of years”, according to Rory Green, chief China economist and head of Asia research at TS Lombard.
“China’s BRI investment has moved away from unrestrained outbound investment to a much more strategic approach”, Green tells Ship Technology. “BRI and outward direct investment are now focused on a few core objectives; the supply of essential raw materials, access to major markets, acquisition of tech IP – and geopolitics.”
Some see the BRI, or so-called ‘New Silk Road’, as a harbinger of a new era of trade and growth for developing economies in Asia, Africa and Latin America.
Sceptics say China is using the BRI to lay a debt trap for borrowing governments – and use its right to retain the right to demand repayment at any time for geopolitical leverage over issues such as Taiwan’s sovereignty or the treatment of Uyghurs.
- Abuse of workers at China-backed infrastructure project in Africa a "defining feature of labour relations", researchers warnwww.cambridge.org Tensions in Sino-African labour relations: the view from the Karuma hydroelectric dam in Uganda | The Journal of Modern African Studies | Cambridge Core
Tensions in Sino-African labour relations: the view from the Karuma hydroelectric dam in Uganda - Volume 61 Issue 4
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10465099
Investigating Sino-African labour relations at the Karuma hydroelectric dam in Uganda and published recently by Cambridge University Press, researchers Robert Wyrod and Kimberlee Chang urge African countries to introduce stronger worker protections to avoid situations as at Karuma "where [labour] abuse seems systemic".
"Unless African governments take a proactive role in monitoring and enforcing standards in a sector they define as strategic, Chinese state capital operates like any other form of transnational capital," they say.
Their findings suggest that there may be something at work beyond more classic labour conflicts related to pay, benefits and safety. They also stress that the abuse is not simply a language barrier issue.
Dams became some of the most controversial development projects, criticised especially for their environmental damage, displacement of communities, and loss of local livelihoods. Due to such criticisms, by the turn of the millennium the World Bank, along with other Western funders, had reconsidered how dams figured into their development portfolio, essentially retreating from this sector.
This shift in the role of hydroelectric dams in Western development funding coincided with the rise of a new player in global dam construction, particularly China. As part of China's ‘going global’ strategy aimed at finding new international markets for China's state-owned and private companies, China began promoting overseas dam construction, along with other large-scale infrastructure projects.
The researchers focuse on the Karuma Hydropower Project, a 600-megawatt power station on the Nile River in northern Uganda. When completed, the Karuma dam will be the largest in Uganda and one of the largest in sub-Saharan Africa. While Uganda is a relatively small country, it has forged a strong partnership with China in recent years. This has resulted in an outsized range of China funded and/or constructed projects in Uganda.
- Canada watchdog says human rights abuses likely occurred at a mine in China operated by Vancouver-based firm Dynasty Gold
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10439953
Canada's corporate ethics watchdog on Tuesday said it was likely that human rights abuses of using Uyghur forced labor had occurred.
In a report, the Canadian Ombudsperson for Responsible Enterprise (CORE) recommended the federal government refuse to provide any future financial support to Dynasty until it implemented recommendations to combat abuse.
[Edit typo.]
- Hong Kongers Are Purging the Evidence of Their Lost Freedom, Human Rights Watch Sayswww.hrw.org Hong Kongers Are Purging the Evidence of Their Lost Freedom
Last week, the city enacted a draconian security law — its second serious legislative assault on Hong Kong’s freedoms since 2020. Known as Article 23, the new law criminalizes such vague behavior as the possession of information that is “directly or indirectly useful to an external force.”
Hong Kong was once a place where people did not live in fear. It had rule of law, a rowdy press and a semi-democratic Legislature that kept the powerful in check. The result was a city with a freewheeling energy unmatched in China. Anyone who grew up in China in the 1980s and 1990s could sing the Cantopop songs of Hong Kong stars like Anita Mui, and that was a problem for Beijing: Freedom was glamorous, desirable.
When Britain handed Hong Kong back to China in 1997, the city’s people accepted, in good faith, Beijing’s promises that its capitalist system and way of life would remain unchanged for 50 years and that the city would move toward universal suffrage in the election of its leader.
Not anymore. Now Hong Kong people are quietly taking precautions, getting rid of books, T-shirts, film footage, computer files and other documents from the heady days when the international financial center was also known for its residents’ passionate desire for freedom.
- Li Yuhan, the ‘big sister' of human rights lawyers, is free againwww.asianews.it CHINA Liaoning: Li Yuhan, the ‘big sister' of human rights lawyers, is free again
She was arrested for defending Wang Yu, a younger colleague who was one of the main victims of the 9 July 2015 crackdown, one of the harshest on activists in China. Despite her age, she served her full sentence, six years and six months, for “picking quarrels and provoking trouble”.
She was arrested for defending Wang Yu, a younger colleague who was one of the main victims of the 9 July 2015crackdown, one of the harshest on activists in China. Despite her age, she served her full sentence, six years and six months, for “picking quarrels and provoking trouble”.
- Chinese Communist Party-Backed Businessman in Fiji is a Top Australian Criminal Targetwww.occrp.org Chinese Communist Party-Backed Businessman in Fiji is a Top Australian Criminal Target - OCCRP
Prominent Fiji-based businessman Zhao Fugang is a trusted advocate for China’s interests in the Pacific. But Australian law enforcement and intelligence agencies suspect he plays another part: as a...
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10403446
The businessman Zhao Fugang's role is typical of Beijing’s steady efforts to build its footprint in the Pacific Islands. The ruling Chinese Communist Party often uses prominent members of the overseas diaspora as proxies to push Chinese interests, under a strategy it calls the “United Front.”
Australian law enforcement and intelligence agencies believe that Zhao is not merely a businessman or political operative. They suspect he is also a senior organized crime figure.
Australia’s top criminal intelligence body, the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission, went to the extraordinary step of adding Zhao to its registry of Australian Priority Organization Targets in mid-2023, reporters have learned. The list of priority targets is secret, and includes about a dozen top suspected criminals, typically based abroad, who are deemed to be “the most significant threats facing Australia.”
- New Zealand joins US and UK in alleging it was targeted by China-backed cyberespionageapnews.com New Zealand joins the US and the UK in alleging it was targeted by China-backed cyberespionage
New Zealand says hackers linked to the Chinese government targeted its Parliament in 2021. New Zealand’s allegation comes a day after American and British authorities announced a set of criminal charges and sanctions against seven hackers, who targeted U.S. officials, journalists, corporations and p
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10400125
New Zealand’s allegation comes a day after American and British authorities announced a set of criminal charges and sanctions against seven hackers, all believed to be living in China, who targeted U.S. officials, journalists, corporations, pro-democracy activists and the U.K.’s election watchdog.
“The use of cyber-enabled espionage operations to interfere with democratic institutions and processes anywhere is unacceptable,” Minister Responsible for the Government Communications Security Bureau (GCSB) Judith Collins said in a media statement.
- China's Private Property Developers Face Persistent Funding Constraints, Fitch Ratings Says
China’s private property developers continue to experience funding pressure amid weak internal funding from contracted sales, says Fitch Ratings. Funding assistance by authorities since late 2023 has also been hampered by a focus on the project level, rather than developers’ central operations, while state-backed developers are also struggling after several defaults and reports of difficulties in serving maturing debt.
Local governments in almost all of China’s cities have submitted thousands of whitelisted projects, largely from non-state-owned developers, requesting that banks consider granting loans, as guided by the government’s Coordination Mechanism for Urban Property Financing. The mechanism requires local authorities to provide detailed project information to banks to help them better evaluate projects and offer accelerated paperwork. About 6,000 projects have been submitted and over CNY200 billion loans granted as of 28 February 2024.
- UK lawmakers claim 'harassment, impersonation, and attempted hacking' from Chinawww.lbc.co.uk MPs claim 'harassment, impersonation, and attempted hacking' from China
MPs thought to have been targeted by China in cyber-attacks say they want to see the country labelled as a threat.
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10380911
Sir Iain Duncan Smith, Tim Loughton and Stewart McDonald said it's time for a "new era" in UK-China relations at a press conference in London, with Sir Iain adding they cannot be "bullied" by Beijing.
The former Tory party leader said: "We have been subjected to harassment, impersonation and attempted hacking from China for some time."
While that was "extremely unwelcome", Sir Iain said "our discomfort pales in comparison to Chinese dissidents who risk their lives to oppose the Chinese Communist Party".
Sanctions against Chinese officials are expected to be announced later.
- Millions of U.S. citizens' online accounts have been caught up in a "sinister" Chinese hacking plot that targeted US officials, officials saywww.bbc.com Millions of Americans caught up in Chinese hacking plot - US
Seven Chinese men have been charged over a "sinister" hacking plot, the justice department says.
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10380737
Seven Chinese nationals have been charged with enacting a widespread "malicious" cyber-attack campaign.
The justice department said hackers had targeted US and foreign critics of China, businesses, and politicians.
- "I will definitely find evidence against you": Hong Kong officials warn that posting and sharing criticism could breach the city’s newly enacted national security lawwww.theguardian.com Hong Kong official warns online criticism could breach new national security law
The Article 23 legislation includes penalties for five categories of crime including treason, insurrection, espionage, sabotage and external interference
Hongkongers who repost, and agree with, overseas criticism of the city’s new, domestic national security law could breach the legislation if they are found to have been inciting hatred against the authorities, justice minister Paul Lam has said.
The Article 23 legislation, which came into force on Saturday, includes penalties of up to life imprisonment for five categories of crime including treason, insurrection, espionage, sabotage and external interference.
It also expands the British colonial-era offence of “sedition” to include inciting hatred against China’s Communist party leadership.
Hong Kong security chief Chris Tang said that additional evidence such as “what you keep at home and what other acts you have done” would have to be collected to facilitate prosecution.
“As I often said, if you breached the law, I will definitely find evidence against you,” Tang said.
- UK: Oxford University held training sessions attended by Chinese doctors accused of illegally harvesting organswww.telegraph.co.uk Oxford University held training sessions attended by Chinese doctors accused of harvesting organs
Experts warn of the practice of using political prisoners in China for body parts
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10346015
Academics designed dozens of courses over three years for the benefit of hundreds of medics, despite warnings that there is no safe way to collaborate with the Chinese transplant sector because the killing of political prisoners for their organs is so widespread.
The alleged role of one “honoured guest” at the most recent New Horizons programme, Prof Zheng Shusen, was said in a submission to a 2018 tribunal to need explanation over a “clear and convincing evidence pattern” of being “directly or indirectly complicit in the commission of crimes against humanity… against unknown individuals who were killed in the process of having their organs extracted”.
It comes amid increasing concern about the influence of the Chinese Communist Party on Britain’s top universities.
- South China Sea: Philippines says China 'once again' attacked supply vessel with water cannon, causing injuries and damageshongkongfp.com South China Sea: Philippines says China attacked supply vessel with water cannon
The Philippines said the China Coast Guard blocked a Filipino supply vessel and damaged it with water cannon on Saturday, causing injuries near a reef off the Southeast Asian country. The China Coa…
The Philippine military released video of what it said was a nearly hour-long attack off Second Thomas Shoal in the contested South China Sea, where Chinese ships have unleashed water cannon and collided with Filipino vessels in similar stand-offs in recent months.
China Coast Guard and other vessels “once again harassed, blocked, deployed water cannons, and executed dangerous manoeuvres” against a routine rotation and resupply mission to the shoal Saturday morning, the National Task Force for the West Philippine Sea said.
- ‘It’s now or never’ for Macau: ‘City of Dreams’ is battling for survivalwww.smh.com.au ‘It’s now or never’: ‘City of Dreams’ is battling for survival
Three decades of casino money have made Macau rich and fast, but dive beneath the shimmering surface and you will find a centuries-old culture disappearing.
Addition for the archived version.
Three decades of casino money have made this city rich, fast, but dive beneath the shimmering surface and you will find a centuries-old culture battling to survive.
The challenge is part identity, part political. The “good boy” to Hong Kong’s “bad boy”, Beijing’s golden goose kept locals happy with annual cash handouts from casino revenue. China got little political turmoil in return.
Now some residents fear Macau has been plucked so much that it is in danger of losing the characteristics that made it different from the mainland.
- Record number of Chinese aircraft detected around Taiwanwww.france24.com Record number of Chinese aircraft detected around Taiwan, says govt
Taipei’s defence ministry announced Friday the highest single-day number of Chinese military aircraft around the self-ruled island this year, which analysts attributed as a reaction to Taiwan’s political…
Beijing claims democratic Taiwan as part of its territory and has never renounced the use of force to bring it under China’s control.
Friday’s incursion, an uptick from the previous day’s tally, follows a pattern of what experts dub “grey zone” actions—tactics that fall short of outright acts of war—which have ramped up since the 2016 election of President Tsai Ing-wen.
Political tensions have also risen since January after Tsai’s deputy Lai Ching-te—who Beijing regards as a “dangerous separatist”—was elected as president, and amid an ongoing row between China and Taiwan over a fatal boat incident.
In the 24 hours leading up to 6:00 am Friday (2200 GMT Thursday), the Ministry of National Defence said it had detected 36 Chinese military aircraft and six naval ships operating around Taiwan.
- African Development Bank chief criticizes opaque Chinese loans tied to Africa's natural resources as they leave African countries in financial crisisapnews.com African Development Bank chief criticizes opaque loans tied to Africa's natural resources
The head of the African Development Bank is calling for an end to loans given in exchange for oil or critical minerals used in smartphones and electric car batteries.
Cross-posted from: https://feddit.de/post/10302481
The head of the African Development Bank is calling for an end to loans given in exchange for the continent’s rich supplies of oil or critical minerals used in smartphones and electric car batteries.
“They are just bad, first and foremost, because you can’t price the assets properly,” Akinwumi Adesina said in an interview with The Associated Press in Lagos, Nigeria, last week. “If you have minerals or oil under the ground, how do you come up with a price for a long-term contract? It’s a challenge.”
Linking future revenue from natural resource exports to loan paydowns is often touted as a way for recipients to get financing for infrastructure projects and for lenders to reduce the risk of not getting their money back.