Huge Israeli delegation visits China
Top China news for March 21, 2017. Get this daily digest delivered to your inbox by signing up atย supchina.com/subscribe.
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu in Beijing
At the end of a three-day visit to Beijing, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with President Xi Jinping on Tuesday. The meeting was the top story on the websites of both the Peopleโs Dailyย and Xinhua News Agencyย (in English here). Xi spoke of the โlong-term and profound impact on the situation in the Middle East,โ referring toย the Israel-Palestine issue, and said that โChina appreciates Israelโs adoption of the two-state solution.โ
In 1971, at his maiden address to the United Nations after Chinaโs seat was handed over to the Peopleโs Republic, delegate Qiao Guanhua ไนๅ ๅ saidย that โthe intrinsic nature of the Middle East question lies in the aggression against the Palestinian people and the other Arab peoples committed by Israeli Zionism.โ Nonetheless, as pragmatism took over from ideology in Chinaโs foreign policy, China and Israel opened diplomatic ties in 1992. The last 25 years have seen a remarkable balancing act, as China has maintained close ties with many Middle Eastern countries, including Iran โ which many Israelis see as an existential threat to their country โ and continues to support the Palestinian quest for statehood. ย
However, judging from Israeli media coverage of Netanyahuโs visit to China, the attitude of the Jewish state appears to be โBalancing act, shmalancing act: Letโs do business!โย Haaretzย reportsย (paywall) that the Israeli prime ministerโs retinue included โno fewer than 100 businesspeople and academics,โ including โmakers of agricultural and desalination technology and two of Israelโs biggest banks, venture capital funds and even corporate lawyers.โ
Although details have not been announced yet, Haaretzย says that the two countries would signย deals in aviation, education, science, health, and environmental sectors, and ink an accord that would allow โthousands of Chinese workers to come to Israel to work in the building industry.โ In a separate article, Haaretzย saysย (paywall) that Netanyahu met with โproperty developer Wanda, the ecommerce giant Alibaba, the electronics makers Huawei and Lenovo and the internet company Baidu.โ Bloombergย also reportsย that Netanyahu asked Xi โto lift foreign currency restrictions for Chinese investors in Israeli technology companies.โ
โ Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor in Chief
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This issue of the The China Projectย newsletter was produced by Sky Canaves, Lucas Niewenhuis, Jia Guo, and Jiayun Feng. More China stories worth your time are curated below, with the most important ones at the top of each section.
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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Secretive billionaire reveals how he toppled Apple in Chinaย / Bloomberg
Bloombergย profiles Duan Yongping ๆฎตๆฐธๅนณ, the founder of the leading Chinese smartphone brandsย Oppo and Vivo. The two companies together shipped more than 147 million smartphones in China in 2016, beating Appleโs 44.9 million. Both brands have developed marketing approaches that appeal to local consumers, and their products surpass the iPhone on measures such as charging speeds and battery life while costing much less. A newly released model Oppo R9s Plus costsย 3,499ย yuan ($507) while an iPhone 7 costsย 5,388ย yuan ($781) in China. In 2016, Appleโs iPhone shipments plummeted 23.2 percent, shrinking Appleโs market share to just 9.6 percent โ the lowest in about two years.
In related news, Reutersย reportsย that on Tuesday, Apple CEO Tim Cook visited the Chinese bike-sharing company Ofo in Beijing. Ofo claims that it operates in 43 cities in China with 2.2 million bikes. Its rival, Mobike, which has raised more than $300 million so far this year, just rolled out its operation in Singapore, according toย Tech in Asia. For more on Chinaโs bike-sharing companies, see โBike sharing done right: A real Chinese innovationโ on The China Project. -
A year is a long time in Chinese businessย / Financial Times (paywall)
Real estate tycoon Wang Shi ็็ณ is back in the news after a year of struggling to retain control of Vanke, the company he founded that is one of the countryโs largest property groups. One year ago, real estate and insurance magnate Yao Zhenhua ๅงๆฏๅ, who had accumulated the largest single stake in Vanke, made a bid to buy a controlling stake in the company. Unluckily for Yao, his hostile takeover coincided with a period of market turmoil in China. Government measures to restore stability tightened control over financial markets: One result was that Yao was banned from participating in theย insurance industry for 10 years. Yao has not been detained or further penalized, but Wang is firmly back in charge of his company.
- Why PR chiefs are running Communist Party branches at China tech firmsย / SCMP
- China sits on financial house of cards, OECD findsย / WSJ (paywall)
- China steps up battle against property bubbleย / Financial Times (paywall)
- China Premier Li says will further open services, industriesย / Xinhua
- Chinaโs taxes on imported cars feed trade tensions with U.S.ย / NYT (paywall)
- Chinaโs fitness boom energizes sportswear brandsย / Financial Times (paywall)
- Rise in QR code scams in China puts online payment security in the spotlightย / SCMP
- Dianrong, Quark Finance launch innovative credit factoryย / TechNode
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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China looks to disqualify Xi doubters ahead of key congressย / Bloomberg
The Two Sessionsย concluded only last week, and Chinaโs state media is already looking ahead to the next big political gathering in Beijing: the Communist Partyโs 19th National Congress โ see, for example, this China Dailyย infographic. Unlike the Two Sessions โ which leave observers trying to interpret dreary speeches and find other ways of reading the tea leaves, the National Congresses, which take place every five years, are where leadership changes are formally announced. Bloombergย says that this year, delegates to the National Congress will be screened using a โnegative listโ: Party members who have expressed doubts about Party policies, taken bribes, been involved with illegal construction projects, or hold foreign passports will be barred from attending.
- Taiwan launches homegrown submarine program to counter Chinaย / Bloomberg
- Opinion: Chinaโs fear of U.S. missile defense is disingenuousย / Foreign Policy (paywall)
- China says number of โterror attacksโ is down, but threat remains highย / Reuters
- China to talk new Silk Road in Australia, no deal expected yetย / Reuters
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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Autistic boyโs death one of many linked to squalid โcare centerโ in Chinaย / NYT (paywall)
A care center for vagrants in Shaoguan, in southern Chinaโs Guangdong Province, sparked an outburst of public anger on Monday following media reports of at least 21 deaths at the facility this year so far. One of the fatalities, a 15-year-old autistic boy, died of typhoid fever after being given filthy water and food. Theย Beijing Newsย reportedย (in Chinese) that the boy was sent to the foster center last October after he wandered off from his father. He died two months later. Records from a nearby funeral home show that, during the 49 days from January 1 to February 18 this year, the care center delivered at least 20 other corpses. According to nearby villagers, the center is a โmysterious placeโ that used to be a detention center. Later on Monday, local officials announced that they had closed the facility in early March and had put four people under investigation, but the announcement didnโt confirm or dispute the estimated death toll. โThis is not a place to offer assistance, but a place to kill people,โ said an editorialย (in Chinese) from theย Beijing News. โWe canโt let these poor people die without giving a sound reason.โ -
Chinese subway system to carry out checks amid fears over faulty cablingย / SCMP
The vice-mayor of Xiโan publicly apologized on Monday after the cityโs subway system failed to pass quality inspections, and eight people were detained on suspicion of supplying substandard cabling. The initial inspections were triggered by a whistleblower, who claimed to be a former employee from the company that provided cable materials. In a widely shared online postย (in Chinese) titled โDo you dare to take the Xiโan subway anymore?,โ the whistleblower accused the firm of lowering the quality of cable supplies to reduce costs. The company, Aokai, responded with an announcement calling the accusation groundless. However, in face of growing public pressure to investigate the problem, the local government inspected the faulty cables and vowed to look further into any possible collusion between the company and officials.
- British schools hope to improve performance with Chinese textbooksย – hoping to emulate Chinese math educationย / The Atlantic
- Finding a pedicure in China, using cutting-edge translation appsย / NPR
- Demand for traditional Chinese medicine fueling rising slaughter of donkeys in Africaย / SCMP
- The great sprawl of China: Timelapse images reveal 30-year growth of citiesย / The Guardian
- Dinosaur-egg bandit arrested, police announceย / China Daily