“We don’t need China”
Dear Access member,
Our word of the day is โthe Hong Kong Wayโ: ้ฆๆธฏไน่ทฏ xiฤng gวng zhฤซ lรน. Thatโs the name protesters gave to todayโs demonstration, inspired by the Baltic Way protests of 1989.ย
The statement in the subject line of this email is from a Trump tweet. Read on for details.ย
Interested in censorship? On The China Project this week: Inside Chinaโs ever-evolving censorship apparatus and Kuora: Chinese web censorship works. Unfortunately, it’s never going away.ย
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief
The human chain forming in Hong Kong (see story #2). Image from BBC reporter Stephen McDonellโs Twitter feed.ย
1. Multiple tariff escalations and Twitter tiradesย
On day 414 of the U.S.-China techno-trade war, there were multiple tariff escalations, and two Twitter tirades.ย
The first tariff escalation was a countermeasure to Trumpโs upcoming tariffs, announced by China via Xinhua:
China will impose additional tariffs on U.S. imports worth about 75 billion U.S. dollars in response to the newly announced U.S. tariff hikes on Chinese goods, the Customs Tariff Commission of the State Council announced Friday.
Based on laws and approved by the State Council, a total of 5,078 U.S. products, including crude oil, soybeans, peanuts, seafood, chicken, fruit and vegetables, and animal fur, will be subject to additional tariffs of 10 percent or 5 percent.
The tariff hikes will be implemented in two batches and take effect at 12:01 p.m. Beijing time on Sept. 1 and at 12:01 p.m. on Dec. 15, respectively, the commission said in a statement.
Auto tariffs will also go up: โChina will resume imposing additional tariffs of 25 percent or 5 percent on American-made vehicles and auto parts starting from 12:01 p.m. on Dec. 15,โ Xinhua reported, also citing the Customs Tariff Commission.ย
Trump launched into a fury on Twitter, in response to China but also apparently in response to the U.S. Federal Reserveโs unwillingness to do his bidding. A few excerpts from the 4-tweet thread:
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โWe donโt need China and, frankly, would be far better off without them.โย
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โOur great American companies are hereby ordered to immediately start looking for an alternative to China, including bringing your companies HOME and making your products in the USA.โ
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โI am ordering all carriers, including Fed Ex, Amazon, UPS and the Post Office, to SEARCH FOR & REFUSE all deliveries of Fentanyl from China.โ
Six hours later, Trump fired off another 4-tweet thread, this time announcing a countermeasure to Chinaโs countermeasure:
Starting on October 1st, the 250 BILLION DOLLARS of goods and products from China, currently being taxed at 25%, will be taxed at 30%
Additionally, the remaining 300 BILLION DOLLARS of goods and products from China, that was being taxed from September 1st at 10%, will now be taxed at 15%
What became fairly clear at the beginning of this month โ that the trade war is spinning out of control โ is truer than ever now.ย
Other reporting and analysis related to the techno-trade war:
The Amazon rainforest is burning: Humans are responsible for the fires, says WIRED, and Bloomberg writer David Fickling argues that the trade war is only making it worse by increasing the demand for Brazilian farmland. โChina’s most pointed action on trade has arguably been ceasing imports of American soy. It’s by far the biggest soybean importer and the U.S. and Brazil are by far the biggest exporters. With Chinese imports from the U.S. drying up, and the prospect of more crops damaged by the midwest floods this year, demand from Brazil is soaring.โ
Stocks are falling: Per CNBC: โThe Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 623.34 points lower, or 2.4 percent at 25,628.90. The S&P 500 slid 2.6 percent to close at 2,847.11. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 3 percent to end the day at 7,751.77. The losses brought the Dowโs decline for August to more than 4 percent.โ
Chinaโs growth will dip below 6 percent, once the effects of the Trumpโs previously announced tariffs have gone into effect (not counting the additional tariffs announced today), according to a survey of 14 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.ย
โLucas Niewenhuis
2. Human chain in Hong Kong, airport protests planned for weekend
On Friday evening in Hong Kong, tens of thousands of protesters formed a human chain โsnaking nearly 30 miles through Hong Kong Island, Kowloon and the New Territories,โ reports the Guardian.ย
Friday nightโs protest was unauthorised but peacefulโฆ
Protesters cited the Baltic human chain as inspiration. โIn that place, at that time, people tried to use this form of expression to express their wish for freedom from the Soviet state,โ said a protester named Kay, who declined to give her surname for fear she might be penalised at work for joining the protests.
โIn very similar terms, the Hong Kong people are trying to express themselves and express their yearning for freedom and basic human rights,โ she said.
Hong Kong Free Press has photos. Other news about Hong Kong:
If youโre flying to or from Hong Kong this weekend, you might want to change your ticket to next week. โHong Kong’s ardent pro-democracy protesters are attempting a โstress testโ of the city’s international airport this weekend as local and mainland authorities harden their resolve to quash the months-long unrest,โ according to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation:ย
The city’s High Court on Friday said it was extending an order requiring public demonstrations to have the permission of authorities, with an aim to ban “those who want to deliberately obstruct or interfere with the normal use of the airport”.
So in response, activists plan to disrupt transport to the international airport this weekend by all heading there at the same time
โAirline Cathay Dragon has fired the chair of its flight attendant union Rebecca Sy after she allegedly posted messages of support for Hong Kong protesters on Facebook,โ reports the Hong Kong Free Press.
โAs big companies in Hong Kong squirm under pressure to denounce the continuing antigovernment protests in the territory or risk angering China, some of their employees are speaking out, raising the prospect of escalating labor tensions in the Asian financial capital,โ says the New York Times (porous paywall).
Donald Trump โhas shifted his stance on the unrest in Hong Kong in recent days to show greater solidarity with the pro-democracy protesters after coming to view the issue as a point of leverage in trade negotiations with China,โ according to the New York Times (porous paywall).ย
The British Foreign Office has warned citizens that their phones may be checked at Chinese border crossings, according to the Guardian, noting: โYou should be aware that the thresholds for detention and prosecution in China differ from those in Hong Kong.โ
Pop star and activist Denise Ho (ไฝ้ป่ฉฉ Hรฉ Yรนnshฤซ) is the subject of a profile in the Sydney Morning Herald:
The Canto-pop star, a household name here for her music and film roles, has become a target of Beijing’s wrath because her latest gutsy performance was on the world stage โ at the United Nations Human Rights Council.
Ho had 90 seconds to make her plea for the UNHRC to call an urgent session “to protect the people of Hong Kong”. She was interrupted twice by angry Chinese officials.
Media mogul Jimmy Lai ้ปๆบ่ฑ Lรญ Zhรฌyฤซng) is perhaps Beijingโs public enemy number one in Hong Kong, and the subject of a New York Times profile (porous paywall).ย
โJeremy Goldkorn
3. Cracks in the Belt and Road
Itโs no secret to close observers that Chinaโs Belt and Road initiative suffers from a lack of clearly defined strategic vision โ at least judging by public records. The blog Panda Paw Dragon Claw highlights two recent pieces in Chinese media that investigate core challenges for the coherence and success of the Belt and Road.ย
China is sending empty freight trains to Europe through one of its key Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) projects: the China-Europe Railway Express. The bizarre phenomenon caught the attention of Depth Paper (็ญๆทฑ็บฟ dฤng shฤn xiร n), a Chinese online news platform. In a rare move by a Chinese media outlet in todayโs media environment, Depth Paper probed critically into one of the BRIโs most visible โconnectivityโ projects, uncovering the perverse incentives that are luring Chinaโs local governments and companies to create huge โbubblesโ of ostensibly flourishing rail routes that run tens of thousands of kilometers across the vast landmass of Eurasiaโฆ
In another example of Chinese media exposing the โunderbelly of BRI,โ on August 3, Caixin Media published a frontpage story about the corrupt deeds of China Development Bankโs former President Hรบ Huรกibฤng ่กๆ้ฆ, who was recently investigated by the disciplinary arm of the Communist Party. The report, which has since been taken down from Caixinโs website, contains jaw-dropping, mind-boggling details of how recklessly senior officials of Chinaโs largest policy bank (and a major instrument of the BRI) pursued their own interests at the expense of the bankโs financial health.
โLucas Niewenhuis
Here are the stories that caught our eye this week:
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Twitter and Facebook banned Beijing-controlled bots that they said were spreading coordinated disinformation about the Hong Kong protests. Twitter went a step further and released data on 936 of the accounts it suspended, and also banned state-owned media companies from buying ads. Youtube later also suspended over 200 accounts that it said โbehaved in a coordinated manner while uploading videos related to the ongoing protests in Hong Kong.โย
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1.7 million people peacefully protested in Hong Kong on August 18, a day after a much smaller counterprotest to support the police.ย
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An employee of the British consulate in Hong Kong was detained in China without explanation. The Chinese foreign ministry later said that Simon Cheng Man-kit (้ๆๆฐ Zhรจng Wรฉnjiรฉ) had violated unspecified โpublic security management regulations,โ and the editor of the Global Times then dubiously alleged that he was โdetained in Shenzhen for visiting [a] prostitute.โ
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Beijing blamed Hong Kong protests on a new โGang of Four,โ harkening back to Cultural Revolution-era rhetoric. Itโs hard to see how this, or many other aspects of Beijingโs communications on Hong Kong, are doing any favors for its international soft power.ย
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Beijing called up sycophants to praise its Xinjiang white paper, even as Uyghur Chinese citizens appeared in a New York Times video op-ed to appeal to China to โFree our parents from concentration camps.โย
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Qatar revoked its support for Beijingโs Xinjiang policies, withdrawing from a letter that it and many other Muslim-majority countries had signed in July.ย
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Trump dialed up the megalomania by declaring himself the โChosen Oneโ who has to โtake China on,โ regardless of pain to the U.S. in the short term. Meanwhile, tariffs will cost American households an average of $1,000 a year, according to JP Morgan, and companies arenโt even relocating back to the U.S. from China โ Thailand seems to be the primary winner from company relocation. Nicholas Lardy of the Peterson Institute for International Economics argues that China’s growth is slowing, but not because of the trade war. Huawei received another 90-day reprieve from the impending U.S. ban on sales to the telecom company.ย
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Heightened policing of China-connected research in the U.S. continues, as a University of Kansas chemical engineer was accused of hiding his additional affiliation with a Chinese university. About 150 prominent biomedical scientists and pharmaceutical industry leaders in the U.S. signed a letter opposing recent government actions that have contributed to โa climate of fear and uncertaintyโ amongst Chinese and Chinese-Americans in the biomedical research community.ย
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China will not legalize same-sex marriage, a spokesperson for the legal affairs commission of the National Peopleโs Congress confirmed. But the government is taking sexual harassment seriously: An update to Chinaโs Civil Code will no longer limit provisions covering sexual harassment to places of employment, and the topic was the subject of the top opinion piece (in Chinese) on the Peopleโs Daily website.
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Hindu nationalists in India called for a boycott of Chinese goods, and also tariffs of up to 500 percent, fter China backed Pakistan at the UN Security Council over Indiaโs decision to scrap autonomous rule in the disputed territory of Jammu and Kashmir.ย
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The sketchy journalistic standards of College Daily, a widely read publication marketed towards Chinese students in the U.S., were exposed by an illuminating profile in the New Yorker by Han Zhang. College Daily later fired back at the New Yorker, accusing it of bias and fabrication.ย
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The Epoch Times is all-in for Trump. The Falungong-affiliated media outlet spent more than any organization other than the Trump campaign to promote propaganda supporting the president in the past six months.ย
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Bringing dead bodies to school grounds is now an officially prohibited activity, one of eight types of โxiร onร oโ (ๆ ก้น) โ violence against school staff and other behavior from parents who feel their children have been mistreated โ that the Ministry of Education and other departments have identified.ย
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Beijing raised its minimum wage to 2,200 yuan ($311) a month, joining several cities and provinces that have recently increased minimum wages.ย
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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Autonomous vehicles
Professor X readies self-drive cars for China’s busy streets / Nikkei Asian Review (porous paywall)
A profile of Auto X, a California-based company with 130 employees โ including scientists who previously worked at places like MIT, IMB, and Facebook โ founded by Xiร o Jiร nxiรณng ่ๅฅ้, who took the name โProfessor Xโ when his colleagues at Princeton had trouble pronouncing his full name.ย -
Huaweiโs AI aspirations
Facing US sanctions, Huawei unveils worldโs fastest AI chip / Sixth Tone
Huaweiโs rotating chairman Eric Xu (ๅพๅ Xรบ Yวng) held a press conference on Friday, announcing the launch of what Huawei calls the โworldโs highest-performing AI processorโ โ the Ascend 910. Developing Huaweiโs own high-quality chips is crucial to developing its AI capabilities.ย -
AI startup to IPO
China AI startup to file for Hong Kong IPO soon despite protests / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
Chinese artificial intelligence startup Megvii is filing documents soon for a Hong Kong initial public offering that could raise as much as $1 billion, people familiar with the matter said, proceeding despite a market downturn spurred by pro-democracy protests across the financial hub.
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Fintech future mapped by central bank
Chinaโs central bank releases 3-year fintech development plan / TechNode
The Peopleโs Bank of China has released its three-year Fintech Development Plan (in Chinese). Fintech โ short for Financial Technology โ is an emerging industry that focuses on the application of big data, blockchain, and other software to delivering financial services. TechNode explains why this plan matters:
The rapidly expanding fintech sector has been outpacing the central governmentโs capacity to establish a comprehensive legal and regulatory framework, leading to consumer fraud and the quick rise and fall of the peer-to-peer lending segment.
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Deutsche Bankโs ties to corruption in China
U.S. fines Deutsche Bank $16 million to settle China, Russia corruption charges / Reuters
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) alleged that Germanyโs largest lender hired poorly qualified or unqualified relatives of officials in Asia and Russia at their request, in violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
Between at least 2006 and 2014, it said Deutsche employed relatives of executives working at state-owned enterprises in China and Russia with the โprimary goalโ of generating business for the company such as initial public offerings.
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Burger King IPO
Burger King’s $1 billion China franchisee considers Hong Kong IPO / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
TAB Food Investments, which handles Burger Kingโs franchise in China is seeking a Hong Kong IPO despite the protests, hoping for a $1 billion valuation.ย -
Pinduoduoโs good year
Pinduoduoโs annual active buyers exceeded 483 mn, ranking second in Q2 2019 / China Internet Watch
Ecommerce platform Pinduoduo reported great figures in Q2 2019, including revenues of nearly 7.3 billion yuan (a little more than $1 billion). It also boasted having 483 million active buyers over the last 12 months, behind Alibaba (674 million) and ahead of JD (321 million).ย -
Meituan is in the black
Chinese food delivery firm Meituan posts first quarterly profit since listing / Reuters
โChinaโs Meituan Dianpingโฆ posted its first quarterly profit as a listed firm as a surge in summer food delivery orders helped it beat competition from rivals including Alibaba-backed Ele.me.โ
Dianping and other food delivery apps owe their success to high demand from Chinaโs huge middle class, but also to the largely uneducated delivery workers who โrage against the algorithms.โ -
Coming rate cuts?
China likely to hold MLF rate on Monday, cut seen by mid-Sept before Fed / Reuters
Chinaโs slowing economy continues to keep analysts guessing about what Chinese authorities will or wonโt do to stimulate. Now, according to Reuters:
Analysts say a cut in the Peopleโs Bank of Chinaโs (PBOC) medium-term lending facility (MLF), which reflects commercial banksโ long-term liability cost, will likely signal a reduction in the new revamped Loan Prime Rate (LPR), launched this week. However, they donโt expect a cut in the MLF rate on Monday when the next batch of loans mature.ย
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How China deals with VPNs
Fortifying the Great Firewall: The criminalization of VPNs, part II / Dui Hua
The Dui Hua foundation provides an in-depth look into the criminalization of VPNs in China. Following up on Part 1, which focused on cases of individuals being punished, Part 2 focuses on the crackdown on providers themselves. -
Beef over pork
China is eating more beef than ever now that pork is so expensive / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
โChinaโs beef imports soared to a record last month as a surge in pork prices because of African swine fever spurs consumers to look for alternative meats.โ -
Teslaโs supply chain takes shape
Tesla to agree to buy batteries from LG for China factory / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
โTesla Inc. agreed to buy batteries from South Koreaโs LG Chem Ltd. to be used in electric vehicles produced out in China, according to people familiar with the matter.โ
SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND THE ENVIRONMENT:ย
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Coal use
China’s coal demand to peak around 2025, global usage to follow: report / Reuters
โThe worldโs biggest coal consumer is expected to see total consumption fall 18 percent from 2018 to 2035, and by 39 percent from 2018 to 2050, the CNPC Economics and Technology Research Institute, run by the state-owned China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC), forecast in a report on Thursday.โ -
Cloned dogs
China’s first cloned police dog ready for duty / Thatโs Magazine
โBorn in December of last year, Kunxun was cloned from a 7-year-old police dog, Huahuangma, stationed at the Puโer police detachment in Yunnan province.โ
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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Europeโs plan to counter Chinese companies
European officials draft radical plan to take on US and Chinese tech companies / Politico via SCMP
An โaggressive 173-page planโ written by EU officials was leaked to media, and identifies โChinese rivals such as Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent as firms that Europe needs to rival.โ The document also โseeks more stringent measures to block Chinese companies from taking part in tenders in Europe to penalise them for the level of subsidies that they receive from the government in Beijing.โ -
Cyber risk
U.S. cyber agency says reducing risks from China top priority / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
A newly created U.S. cybersecurity agency said Thursday that China represents the greatest strategic risk to the U.S., and as a result, the agencyโs top operational priority is reducing the risks from Chinese compromises to the global supply chain, including emerging 5G technology.
The statement was part of a report outlining the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agencyโs strategic intent for the next five years.
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China in Africa
Kenya sells its first oil to China / Business Daily (Kenya)
The maiden shipment of 200,000 barrels of crude from Mombasa is scheduled for next month.
Petroleum principal secretary Andrew Kamau Thursday revealed that ChemChina (UK) Ltd won the bid to lift the Turkana oil, in what marks Kenyaโs entry into the league of oil exporting countries.
The Chinese firm, which is the oil trading arm of ChemChina Petrochemical, is engaged in crude oil trading, storage and procurement for ChemChinaโs refinery companies.
Like many African countries, Sierra Leone has courted foreign companies which pay governments big fees for mining rights, while locals often feel they have no say nor benefit.
China is by far the biggest importer of minerals from sub-Saharan Africa; it invested about $30 billion in metals mining on the continent in the last decade, nearly 15 percent of it in Sierra Leone.
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Maritime disputes with Vietnam: U.S. and Australia stances
China escalates coercion against vietnamโs longstanding oil and gas activity in the South China Sea / United States Department of State
โThe United States is deeply concerned that China is continuing its interference with Vietnamโs longstanding oil and gas activities in Vietnamโs Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) claim. This calls into serious question Chinaโs commitment, including in the ASEAN-China Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea, to the peaceful resolution of maritime disputes.โ
Morrison discusses Chinese expansion in South China Sea with Vietnamese PM / Australian ABC
โThe Prime Minister has declared he’s standing up for the principle of international law, after taking a thinly veiled swipe at China during a visit to Vietnam.โ -
Confucius Classroom closed in New South Wales, Australia
NSW schools to scrap Confucius Classroom program after review / Sydney Morning Herald
โA Chinese government-funded language and culture program will be removed from NSW public schools and replaced with one run by the NSW Department of Education.โ -
East Timor โ the mouse that roars?
East Timorโs China friendship wonโt compromise its national interests: foreign minister / SCMP
Sceptics of East Timorโs relations with China should know it is not a โnew, fragile countryโ that can be easily swayed by others, its foreign minister said, citing how the nation handled its border dispute with larger neighbour Australia.
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Brexit blowout sale
Asian billionaires embark on UK spending spree as pound nosedives / Guardian
The Guardian says that there is a huge amount of โcash flooding to the UK from China and Hong Kong, as the Chinese state and the regionโs super-rich take advantage of the collapse in the value of pound to buy up everything from luxury homes, skyscrapers such as Londonโs Walkie Talkie and Cheesegrater, a third of Hinkley Point C nuclear power station, private schools and Pizza Express.โ
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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LGBT-themed films
Rainbow screens / World of Chinese
A list of โthe six highest-rated LGBTQ films on Douban from the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan.โ -
Schooling in Shanghai
Randomized school admissions rattle Shanghaiโs rat race / Sixth Tone
The governmentโs latest move โ made public on July 8 by Chinaโs Cabinet, the State Council โ requires private institutions that cover the compulsory education period of primary and middle school to select applicants at random whenever their number exceeds admission quotas, which is virtually always the case. Shanghai has said it will formulate specific local rules around the yearโs end, but the policy change promises to make intake interviews a thing of the past โ and extra classes irrelevant.
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Folk religions as documented by foreign missionaries
The story of an American missionary and her โpaper godsโ / Sixth Tone
โAnne Swann Goodrichโs collection provides a comprehensive window into early 20th century Beijing folk religion.โ
FEATURED ON SUPCHINA
The China Project Signal: Inside Chinaโs ever-evolving censorship apparatus
Like many things within China, the countryโs notorious censorship system is opaque. Who actually has the power to control what is published and broadcast in the Peopleโs Republic, and how they communicate their demands?
โA City of Sadnessโ: Hou Hsiao-hsienโs historical tragedy remains a masterpiece 30 years later
The first Chinese-language film to ever win the Venice Film Festivalโs Golden Lion award, “A City of Sadness”ย from director Hou Hsiao-hsien (ไพฏๅญ่ณข Hรณu Xiร oxiรกn) is the story of three brothers during Taiwanโs โWhite Terrorโ period following World War II, when the island was under martial law.
Kuora: Chinese web censorship works. Unfortunately, it’s never going away
As long as the Communist Party remains in sole possession of political authority in China, it’s not likely that web censorship will ever truly “stop.”
Mandopop Month: AKB48 SHโs wide-eyed trip into stardom
โLove Tripโ is the catchy debut for the fun-loving girl group AKB48 Team SH. The song has the kind of chorus that can loop in your head for hours and make you want to imitate the singers’ adorable, finger-wagging dance moves.
Vlogger tried to get an old Russian man to drink himself to death
A Chinese video blogger based in Russia, who has more than 750,000 followers on the short-video platform Kuaishou, is being heavily criticized for posting a series of videos in which he encourages a poor, elderly Russian man to abuse alcohol.
TV show applauded for depicting workplace sexual harassment
Chinese TV audiences, especially women, have been thrilled by “A Little Reunion” ๅฐๆฌขๅ, a hit show that depicts a subject rarely seen in Chinese mainstream entertainment: sexual harassment in the workplace.
Peking University slammed for giving scholarship to non-Chinese-speaking Filipino
Once again, an established Chinese university is in hot water for giving what is perceived as preferential treatment to foreign students. Last week, Peking University, one of Chinaโs top institutions, offered a full scholarship to a Filipino student to enroll in its prestigious medical school.
SINICA PODCAST NETWORK
Sinica Podcast: Matt Sheehan on California’s role in U.S.-China relations
Matt Sheehan, former China correspondent for the Huffington Post and current fellow at the MacroPolo think tank, discusses his new book, The Transpacific Experiment: How China and California Collaborate and Compete for Our Future.ย
ChinaEconTalk: The view from Chengdu: freelance reporting outside first-tier cities
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, episode 91
This week on the Caixin-Sinica Business Brief: Hong Kong protests, Chinaโs fall to third place in the U.S.โ trade table, Chinaโs growing deployment of renewable energy, recent sci-fi films, and more.ย
Middle Earth #17: Artful entrepreneurs: running a cultural venue in Beijing
PHOTO OF THE DAY
BEไบฌjing No. 25: Line 1
This photo from Subway Line 1 in November 2016 is part of BEไบฌjing, a 30-part photo essay project by Gregorio Soravito.ย