Media instructions for a trade war

Hi there, Access members:
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The next guest Q&A on our Slack channel will be with Rui Ma and Ying-Ying Lu, the duo behind the TechBuzz China podcast. Date and time TBA.
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Early-access episodes of the Sinica Podcast are released on Mondays. To subscribe โ and be among the first to listen to this weekโs episode all about hacking in China โ just plug this RSS feed directly into your podcast app. This week, we have a fascinating show with journalist Kevin Collier, who covers cybersecurity, and Priscilla Moriuchi, the American NSAโs former chief of monitoring โnation state threatsโ from China.
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Thereโs a grab bag of news at the top โ five stories โ and the usual links and summaries below.
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief, and team
1. Media instructions for a trade war
China Digital Times has an ongoing series of censorship instructions called Directives from the Ministry of Truth. The latest installment is mostly about the U.S.-China trade conflict. Key instructions (quoted directly) are:
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Donโt relay comments from Trump, from U.S. government spokespersons, or from U.S. officials. Donโt relay U.S. news reports or commentary on the trade conflict without waiting for response from the Ministry of Commerce.
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We stop negotiation for now, acting tit for tat, roll out corresponding policies, hold public opinion at a good level without escalating it, limit scope, and strike accurately and carefully, splitting apart different domestic groups in the U.S. The trade conflict is really a war against Chinaโs rise, to see who has the greater stamina. This is absolutely no time for irresolution or reticence.
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Donโt attack Trumpโs vulgarity; donโt make this a war of insults.
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All media should prepare well for protracted conflict. Donโt follow the American sidesโ fluctuating declarations. Play down the correlations between the stock market and trade conflict.
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To re-emphasize: Do not make further use of Made in China 2025, or there will be consequences. ย
Other gloom, doom, trade, and boom news from the various fronts of the trade war:
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โChina will open up several industries to greater foreign investment, including airplane design and manufacturing, railway construction and agriculture,โ according to Caixin (paywall), but of course โ48 sectors remain on the โnegative list,โ including entertainment, internet publications and law firms.โ The full list is here (in Chinese).
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โChina fulfilled a pledge to slash tariffs on imported cars Sunday,โ says the Wall Street Journal (paywall), โbut the respite for auto makers who export to China from the U.S. will be brief as Beijing prepares to slap an additional 25% tariff on U.S. auto imports this Friday.โ
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The Sanmen nuclear power plant, designed by Westinghouse, is โat the centre of an $8 billion US-Chinese partnership and technology transfer agreement.โ The Financial Times reports (paywall) that it โhas delivered its first electricity to the Chinese grid, even as the countries square off in a looming trade war that threatens to derail future cooperation and stall US efforts to reboot its nuclear industry.โ
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โChinese venture capital investment into US biotech companies in the first half has already surpassed the record set for the whole of last year, underlining Beijingโs focus on medicine as a strategic sector โ a development that has flown under the radar of regulators in Washington,โ according to the Financial Times (paywall).
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โDonald Trumpโs assault on trade with China is moving from tweeted threats and abortive talks to the real-world,โ says Bloomberg (paywall), noting that โpurchasing manager index readings for June released on Saturday showed a gauge of export orders tumbling into contraction, the clearest sign yet that the oncoming trade war is having a real, negative impact on growth.โ
โJeremy Goldkorn
2. Beyond Trumpism: What is the โsmartโ direction for U.S.-China relations?
Are the U.S. and China headed into a โCold War 2.0โ? Some object to the very question.
Michael Swaine, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, balks at what he describes on Twitter as the โwholly overblown effort underway to redefine the US-China relationship as one of near Cold War adversaries.โ His piece in Foreign Policy, titled โThe U.S. canโt afford to demonize China,โ argues:
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Washington, under Trump, has embraced a conspiratorial mindset that sees China and the U.S. as a zero-sum global power competition.
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This mindset has supported โhugely distortedโ assumptions that often go unchallenged, including the myth that the U.S. ever explicitly sought democratization as the end goal of engagement, the unproven claim that China โseeks to eject the United States from Asia and subjugate the region,โ and the questionable line of thought that โBeijing is committed to overturning the global order.โ
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For more on Washingtonโs myth making about China, former diplomat Evan Feigenbaum recently wrote on the futility of American whining about China.
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A โmajor correction by both sidesโ is needed in the relationship, Swaine argues, because โhostile words and actions completely overshadow the obvious and pressing need for continued cooperation between Washington and Beijing in addressing common problems and concerns, including climate change, weapon of mass destruction proliferation, pandemics, the state of the global economic system, and stability in Asia.โ
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Contrary to claims that China is a global-order wrecker, โBeijing supports many elements of the existing order, including some that the current U.S. administration rejects or undermines, such as the fight against climate change and the value of multilateral economic agreements.โ
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Trumpโs America, in fact, seems to be the only country with major economic interests in the Asia-Pacific that isnโt negotiating a major trade deal there at the moment:
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โMinisters from the 16-nation Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, which includes China, Japan and India but not the U.S., met in Tokyo on Sunday to try and thrash out remaining differences,โ Bloomberg reports (paywall).
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โThe 11-member Trans-Pacific Partnership trade pact, which does not include the U.S., will prepare for its next stage of expansion when chief negotiators meet in Japan in mid-July to discuss how to usher new members in,โ according to Nikkei (paywall).
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But what would a better relationship with China, particularly in economic ties between the two countriesโ technology sectors, actually look like? A collection of experts on Chinaโs economy and rising technological capabilities have weighed in via a ChinaFile discussion titled, โShould the U.S. start a trade war with China over tech?โ
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Unsurprisingly, multilateral trade pressure over multiple domains โ i.e., the exact opposite of Trumpโs unilateral tariff-first tactics โ is a widely suggested strategy.
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Several respondents note that technology transfer is a feature, not a bug, of China-U.S. economic entanglement. Yukon Huang, the China economy contrarian who was interviewed on the Sinica Podcast earlier this year, also pointed to an American Chamber of Commerce in China report that shows 96 percent of respondents think intellectual property rights are improving in China.
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More investment in science and technology at home, and consistency in limiting Chinese investment only in cases of very obvious national security risk, is another common suggestion. Jack Zhang of Princeton University writes, โNothing would vindicate Chinese techno-nationalists more than for the U.S. to follow them down the road of state-intervention in the technology sector.โ
โLucas Niewenhuis
3. After banning foreign waste, China moves to expand recycling
China drew international attention earlier this year when it announced it would no longer import other countriesโ waste. A few months down the line, authorities are gearing up to bolster the countryโs lackluster domestic recycling system.
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23 percent of all potentially recyclable materials in China were recycled in 2013, according to the State Councilโs National Development and Reform Commission, although experts estimate the total was closer to 30 percent in 2017. Sarah Talaat reports for The China Project that Chinese recycling companies, local governments, and entrepreneurs are now exploring ways to morph Chinaโs haphazard domestic recycling into a successful business model, and to bring recycling awareness into daily public life.
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The most significant roadblock could be public awareness. Many Chinese people lack knowledge and resources to carry out recycling effectively, but the Ministry of Urban Development aims to have trash classification in โall cities at prefecture-level and above by 2020,โ according to Sixth Tone.
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โThe ministryโs target is for 35 percent of urban household waste to be recycled by 2020,โ Sixth Tone adds.
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In other waste-management news, five people have been ordered to pay $1.1 million for industrial dumping in southern China, Caixin reports (paywall). The case is believed to be Chinaโs first public-interest lawsuit against ocean pollution.
โLucy Best
4. Another rocky anniversary of Hong Kongโs handover to mainland China
July 1 marked the 21st anniversary of Hong Kongโs return to mainland China. As usual, the date did not go without notice or controversy in the city.
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An annual demonstration centers on supporting democratic values, but participants also take the opportunity to highlight other issues in Hong Kong and in China. This year, protestors called for an end to the new Chinese police presence in a Hong Kong train station and to Liu Xiaโs house arrest, and โ for the first time โ an end to one-party rule in China, the New York Times reports (paywall).
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There may be a decline in public interest or willingness to participate in this demonstration. According to the Times, organizers said about 50,000 people came out to protest, one of the lowest turnouts since the marchโs 2003 inception.
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The Hong Kong government was not pleased with the demonstrations. โ[C]hanting slogans which disrespect โone countryโ and disregard the constitutional order or which are sensational and misleading was not in line with Hong Kongโs overall interests and would undermine its development,โ a government press release declared, according to the Hong Kong Free Press.
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Police apprehended 20 protestors from getting near a flag-raising ceremony commemorating the handover from Britain to China, the Guardian reports.
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See pictures of the protest at Hong Kong Free Press.
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In this weekโs Kuora, Kaiser Kuo uses an apt analogy to sum up the Hong Kong-mainland Chinese relationship: They are twins who were separated at birth, now united โ and disposed to throwing tantrums at each other. Thatโs how the two sides see each other, anyway.
โLucy Best
5. Xiongโan: A waste of resources or urban planningโs future?
With Chinaโs mixed record and lengthy history of urban planning experiments, domestic and international observers alike have expectedly waited for developments from the city of Xiongโan, 100 kilometers southwest of Beijing. The city-by-fiat, announced last year to real estate spectatorsโ delight, is the latest darling of Chinaโs push for high-quality urbanization in anticipation for rapid economic development.
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Xiongโan is the work of the central government, unlike many failed locally headed urban experiments, Chinadialogue reports. This quality puts it alongside Chinaโs two greatest urban planning miracles โ Shenzhen and Shanghaiโs Pudong District. It also provides an extra incentive for success, as it could serve as a civilian gauge on the central leadershipโs efficacy.
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โWith the aim of establishing Xiongโan as a new model for urban planning, the government wants to create a hub for high-tech industry, innovation, and sustainable financing,โ Chinadialogue adds. The city plans to become a testing site for sustainable housing, water purification, and energy systems. If successful, the model could spread throughout China and even gain prominence internationally through the Belt and Road initiative.
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In addition to the governmentโs trillion-yuan investment in the city, China Southern recently pledged 10 billion yuan ($1.5 billion), Bloomberg reports (paywall). Other notable private-sector partners are Baidu and Alibaba, which will work in the cityโs transportation sector.
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The challenges of any city persist in Xiongโan, despite its plentiful resources. One example is the limited success of a $15,000 cleanup effort for a pond in Donghegang, Caixin reports (paywall). According to an engineer working on the effort, โHousehold wastewater continues flowing into the pond through the outfall below,โ making permanent pollution mitigation challenging.
โLucy Best
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Our whole team really appreciates your support as Access members. Please chat with us on our Slack channel or contact me anytime at jeremy@thechinaproject.com.
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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Biotech
WuXi AppTec aims for second listing in Hong Kong / Caixin (paywall)
The move takes advantage of โrecently revised rules that allow companies from certain high-growth sectors to list on the cityโs main board even if they are losing money.โ -
Tax cut in the works
China plans income tax cut to boost consumption and reduce inequality / FT (paywall) -
China-Japan competition
China backs $15bn tech fund to compete with Japanโs SoftBank / FT (paywall) -
Taiwanese tech
Taiwan’s technology secrets come under assault from China / WSJ (paywall)
โTaiwanese government officials and company executives say China is deliberately targeting Taiwan, whose manufacturers make chips for the biggest American companies, including Apple Inc., Nvidia Corp. and Qualcomm Inc.โ -
Battery market boom
Chinaโs firms are scouring the world for mineral ores in pursuit of nationโs electric dream / SCMP
Cobalt, lithium and nickel are booming due to Chinaโs insatiable appetite for electric vehicles / SCMP
More on The China Project: BYD builds biggest battery factory for electric cars -
China-Africa investments
Chinese investments In Nigeria telecoms hit $16bn / Economic Confidential
โChinaโs increased involvement in the African telecommunications industry is part of ย a multidimensional engagement in the continent to serve its broader strategy to enhance its global standing, counter Western influence and to obtain resources and new export markets to feed its rapidly expanding economy.โ -
Chemical company merger
China’s chemical giants to share a chairman, signaling a merger / WSJ (paywall)
โA single chairman has been named to lead Chinaโs two state-owned industrial-chemical giants, a move that likely foreshadows the long-expected combination of the two companies.โ -
Stocks
China rebound gone within a day as even biggest stocks crumble / Bloomberg (paywall)
โIn a further sign of capitulation, state-owned giants are bearing the brunt of the declines, with index heavyweight Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. plunging the most since February.โ
Nikkei Asia300 falls as investors await US-China trade tariffs / Nikkei Asian Review
โIf the first round of U.S.-China tariffs goes into effect as scheduled this Friday, assumptions of Trump merely using the tariff threats as a negotiating tactic would prove grossly incorrect.โ
China exports cool, markets fall as US trade tensions rise / Asia Times
โMarkets in China are feeling the heat as growth in the manufacturing sector shows signs of cooling amid rising tensions between Washington and Beijing.โ -
Trumpworld corruption
Son of US envoy to China used Trump ties to lure business / WSJ (paywall)
โEric Branstad, a son of Ambassador Terry Branstad, and the U.S. Commerce Departmentโs liaison to the White House until January, spoke on Thursday in Shanghai to more than 100 lawyers, bankers and advisers at a seminar entitled โHow to React To (Potential) US-China Trade War?โโ -
Douyin suspended
Chinese video app Douyin counts the cost of insulting Korean war hero as advertising halted / SCMP
โThe hugely popular Chinese short video app Douyin has suspended its commercial operations after an internet watchdog weighed in on a controversy involving insulting remarks made about a Korean war hero.โ -
Tech in healthcare
China counts on AI to find a cure for its ailing health care system / SCMP
โIn China, health care has become one of the latest applications for AI, along with security and new retail, where technologies like natural language processing and computer vision are being applied to greatly improve efficiency in a country with an acute shortage of qualified doctors and nurses.โ
China eager to embrace tech to meet overflowing health care demands / SCMP -
With more than 200 million Chinese people over 60, technology could be the lucky break Chinaโs overburdened healthcare system needs.
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New plans for Guangzhou airport
Guangzhou airport expansion plans could see 30 new international flights in next three years / SCMP
โGuangzhou is expected to have 30 new international flights in three years, increasing its reach to more than 100 cities globally as local authorities strive to market Baiyun Airport as an aviation hub.โ -
European Union
China urged to give foreign companies a fair chance to compete with domestic firms / SCMP
โChina should take concrete steps to ensure foreign companies enjoy a level playing field, especially in key hi-tech sectors, the outgoing German ambassador to Beijing has said.โ
European businesses in China are โhurtingโ from Donald Trumpโs trade war threats, EU chamber says / SCMP
โThe EU is possibly as bad as Chinaโ on trade, Donald Trump says in Fox interview / SCMP
In an ally-bashing rant, Trump complained, โThe European Union is possibly as bad as China, only smallerโฆ They send a Mercedes in, we canโt send our cars in. Look what they do to our farmers. They donโt want our farm products. Now in all fairness they have their farmersโฆ But we donโt protect ours and they protect theirs.โ -
China in space
Rocket startup iSpace receives $90 million in funding this year / Caixin (paywall)
โA young rocket startup said it has received financing worth 600 million yuan ($90.6 million) within a year, as China hopes to send its space industry into orbit in the coming years.โ
China aims to outstrip NASA with super-powerful rocket / Times of India
โChina is working on a super-powerful rocket that would be capable of delivering heavier payloads into low orbit than NASA.โ
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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Animal trade
China issues permits to trade in the bones of hundreds of leopards / EIA International
โLeopards are Asiaโs most trafficked big cat, with more than 4,900 seized from illegal trade in Asia since 2000 โ but despite this, new evidence indicates the Government of China is issuing permits to trade and use their bones.โ -
Outrage over alleged plan to export rare animals from Congo to China / The Guardian
โMountain gorillas and other endangered species from the Democratic Republic of the Congo are at risk of being taken from the wild and exported to Chinese zoos, conservation groups have alleged.โ -
Weapons design
China brings Star Wars to life with โlaser AK-47โ that can set fire to targets a kilometre away / SCMP
โThe ZKZM-500 laser assault rifle is classified as being โnon-lethalโ but produces an energy beam that cannot be seen by the naked eye but can pass through windows and cause the โinstant carbonisationโ of human skin and tissues.โ -
North Korea asks Beijing for economic relief
North Korea’s Kim asked China to bring early end to sanctions: Yomiuri / Reuters
โXi said he would make the โutmost effortโ in response to Kimโs request.โ
North Korean economic official arrives in China as Pyongyang continues to lean on Beijing for support / SCMP
โA senior North Korean economic policy official is visiting China in the latest sign Pyongyang wants to boost its engagement with Beijing to revive its economy, which has been squeezed by UN sanctions.โ -
China-Australia business deal falls through
China’s debt-laden HNA quits $200 million Australian logistics deal / Reuters
โChinaโs debt-saddled HNA Group Co Ltd canceled its A$280 million ($207 million) purchase of an Australian logistics business on Monday, with the seller citing cashflow problems at the conglomerate among reasons for the dealโs collapse.โ -
Debt and urban renewal
Slum redevelopment draws debate over government debt, housing prices / Caixin (paywall)
โReports last week that the China Development Bank (CDB) had halted funding for new shantytown redevelopment projects across the country have highlighted the unintended problems the national slum-clearing effort has caused in recent years.โ -
Social credit
Credible threat? Taiwan, websites, and social credit / China Law Translate
As companies increasingly shift their naming policies to align with the Chinese governmentโs interests, experts have begun examining how a Chinese social credit system could affect international commerce. -
Understanding Xi
Why Xi Jinpingโs China is legalist, not Confucian / China Channel
Xi Jinping โreaches for Confucianism to serve as a pleasant faรงade to cover the unkinder reality of Legalist authoritarianism, advocating for โintegration of the rule of law and the rule of virtue.โโ -
Veteran protest (?) aftermath
Chinese leaders gather for back-to-back meetings after military veterans protest / SCMP
โSenior Chinese officials gathered for two high-profile meetings over the weekend as they scramble to placate military veterans after thousands took to the streets last month to demand better welfare rights and an end to violence against them.โ -
Mattis visit to Beijing: The aftermath
US Defence Secretary Jim Mattisโ visit to Beijing did little to soothe tensions / SCMP
Ankit Panda, a senior editor of the Diplomat magazine, argues that the trip appeared to be a โmissed opportunity.โ He writes, โMattisโ trip could have gone much worse than it did, but one is left with the sense that the visit did little to divert the United States and China away from a trajectory of increased friction and overt competition.โ
On The China Project: Mattis visits Beijing as South China Sea tensions bubble. -
Mystery illness at U.S. Guangzhou consulate
More Americans evacuated from China over mysterious ailments / NYT (paywall)
โThe cases in Guangzhou โ and now possibly Shanghai and Beijing โ are similar to a wave of illnesses that struck Americans working at the embassy in Havana, Cuba, beginning in fall 2016.โ -
Belt and Road ?
Thereโs no Chinese โdebt trapโ, says Myanmar minister, as government pushes for joint port project to go ahead / SCMP
Myanmarโs union minister and security adviser Thaung Tun dismissed the fear of a โdebt trap,โ stating the port development project would be a โwin-winโ deal. -
Is the U.S. a dangerous place for Chinese tourists?
Chinese tourists in United States told to beware of shootings, expensive medical care / SCMP
Chinaโs embassy in the U.S. recently put out a notice warning would-be Chinese tourists about unsatisfactory social security and healthcare, customs regulations, and crime, among other issues.
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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Criminal justice
China โshould prosecute juveniles from age 12โ after boy, 13, accused of scissor attack on girl is let off / SCMP
โThere have been calls for Chinaโs age of criminal responsibility to be lowered from 14 to 12 after police said the case of a 13-year-old boy accused of attacking a 14-year-old girl was thrown out because he was too young to be prosecuted.โ -
Shanghai stabbing
Shanghai school stabbing suspect arrested on homicide charges / Sixth Tone
โThe 29-year-old man suspected of stabbing four people at a Shanghai primary school has been arrested on homicide charges.โ -
Maternity trends
Foreign births soar as local births drop at epicentre of Chinese maternity tourism in Canada, new statistics show / SCMP
โNewborns with non-resident mothers at Richmond Hospital rose by 23.8 per cent in the 2017/2018 financial year โ compared to 2016/2017 โ and made up 22.1 percent of all newborns at the hospital outside Vancouver.โ
Worried about miscarriage? Take some time off, says new Chinese law / Inkstone
In the newest installment of Chinese regulations to increase the birth rate, Jiangsu has passed a law allowing mothers with a doctorโs note to receive leave at 80 percent pay. -
A cuisine lost in translation
โHow would the Michelin Guide understand Chinese street food?โ / Quartz
โFor local Cantonese, a dinner of 3,000 yuan ($450) or private kitchens can never match a drive for pork offal porridge in Panyu district, fish fresh from the ponds in Shunde city, or river food in the countryside.โ -
Sexual harassment: Creeps arrested
Chinese peeping Tom installed secret cameras to film couples in love hotels and sell footage online / SCMP
โThe two cameras he is accused of installing then had been connected to the power strip in the ceiling and could be automatically turned on when the customers plugged in the room key.โ
118 Chinese men detained for groping women on Beijing subway trains / SCMP
โWomen have long complained of sexual harassment on Chinaโs subway network, especially during peak hours when the trains is packed like sardine cans and physical contact is hard to avoid.โ -
Forbidden City pets
Palace museum says goodbye to forbidden city celebrity cat Baidian / Whatโs on Weibo
Despite Forbidden City staffโs best efforts, famous Forbidden City stray Baidian passed away last week, prompting an outpour of social media posts about his life. -
Naked foreigner running amok prompts drug bust
Drug gang busted after laowai gets stoned out of his mind, goes on naked rampage / Shanghaiist
โPolice in Guangzhou have recently revealed more details regarding a drug bust which began with a naked foreigner running around the street and terrorizing passersby while armed with a bicycleโฆ The gang specialized in selling marijuana to foreign students.โ -
When cross-cultural stories donโt work
Pixarโs dumpling short Bao is polarizing audiences with cultural themes / Polygon
โWhen people donโt get a cameo at the end of a Marvel movie, they Google it for better understanding (trust us on that one). Yet more often than one might expect, when people are confronted with a particular cultural experience that they donโt get, the confusion rarely seems to turn into curiosity. Instead, it becomes a source of bewildered judgment.โ -
Traffic accidents
18 killed, 14 injured in China bus-truck highway collision / AP
โThe accident took place Friday evening in Hunan province south of Beijing. Video from the scene showed both heavily damaged vehicles along the rain-slicked highway. It appeared that one of the vehicles may have crossed a center divider.โ
Bus company dismisses fatigue claims in collision that killed 18 / Sixth Tone
โThe company operating the passenger coach involved in Fridayโs deadly highway collision in central China has urged media outlets to refrain from making โirresponsible remarksโ following reports of driver fatigue.โ
VIDEO OF THE DAY
Viral on Weibo: โInk Shooting,โ a new form of calligraphy?
Chinese artist Shao Yan, 56, uses syringes to make a form of calligraphy. A video of him squirting ink on a paper scroll has gone viral.
ON SUPCHINA
Kuora: Hong Kong and mainland China are twins separated at birth
July 1 marked the 21st anniversary of Hong Kong’s return to mainland Chinese control. This weekโs column, originally posted to Quora on December 13, 2014, looks at how Hong Kongers and mainland Chinese think of each other, and was written near the end of one of the most momentous events in Hong Kong’s recent history, the two-and-a-half-month-long pro-democracy Umbrella Movement.
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, Episode 54
In this installment, Kaiser discusses the latest business news in China and sits down with Caixin reporter Tanner Brown to talk about a 19-year-old womanโs recent suicide after a teacher allegedly sexually assaulted her.
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Subscribe to the Business Brief on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher.
PHOTO FROM MICHAEL YAMASHITA
The Mazu pilgrimage march
Pilgrims cross the Xi Luo Bridge in Taiwan in pouring rain on the third day of the Dajia Mazu Pilgrimage parade in April 2016. The annual parade celebrates Mazu, the goddess of the sea and Taiwanโs most popular deity, and usually takes place for nine days.
โJia Guo