I am the girl whose eye got shot in Hong Kong

Access Archive

Dear Access member,

If youโ€™re in New York on September 12, you might enjoy Silicon Dragonโ€™s annual forum on the theme: How China’s tech sector is challenging the world by innovating faster, working harder & going global. Access members can use the promo code SDNY2019The China Project for a 20 percent discount.ย 

Our word of the day is: โ€œthe girl whose eye got shotโ€ โ€” ่ขซ็ˆ†็œผ็š„ๅฅณ็”Ÿ bรจi bร o yวŽn de nวšshฤ“ng, or ็ˆ†็œผๅฅณ bร o yวŽn nวš for short.

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief


1. I am the girl whose eye got shot in Hong Kong

RTHK reports on one of the more powerful human symbols of the Hong Kong protest movement:

Police on Thursday said they are seeking a court warrant to get the medical records of a young woman who suffered a serious eye injury during protest clashes in Tsim Sha Tsui earlier this month.ย 

The police have been accused of shooting her with a bean bag round, but the force says it is still not clear what actually happened. Some have suggested that the injury may have been caused by a projectile thrown or fired by protestersโ€ฆ

Meanwhile, the woman has spoken for the first time since she was injured on August 11, [giving] a speech in a video clip which was played at a press conference held by a group of anti-government protesters.ย 

The womanโ€™s right eye was covered with gauze, and she was wearing a pair of sunglasses and a mask. In the four-minutes of footage โ€” said to have been recorded on August 26 โ€” the woman called on the police “to stop all violent acts”.ย 

Context: โ€™An eye for an eye’: Hong Kong protests get figurehead in woman injured by police in the Guardian. Other news from and of Hong Kong:

โ€œChinaโ€™s military has rotated a new batch of troops into Hong Kong describing the move as routine, state media said on Thursday, as protests against Beijing continue to rock the Asian financial hub,โ€ reports Reuters, adding that โ€œAsian and Western diplomats in Hong Kongโ€ฆwill be looking closely for any sign of increased numbers or unusual activity.โ€

When asked directly if additional troops had deployed in Hong Kong at a press conference, a Ministry of Defense spokesperson ducked the question, saying only โ€œThis year’s rotation is a routine arrangement.โ€ (Chinese transcript is here.)ย 

โ€œA Hong Kong policeman filmed pointing a shotgun at protesters who attacked him a month ago is among officers invited to attend a grand celebration for the 70th anniversary of the founding of the Peopleโ€™s Republic of China,โ€ reports the South China Morning Post.ย 

โ€œActivist Max Chung was assaulted by four men after leaving Tai Po Police Station on Thursday, shortly after he was granted unconditional release by police,โ€ per Hong Kong Free Press. โ€œChung [้พๅฅๅนณ Zhลng Jiร npรญng] was walking along Tai Wo Road when four men โ€˜attacked him with metal rods and umbrellas,โ€™ according to Truth Media Hong Kong.โ€

The corporate squeeze on staff continues: โ€œCathay Pacific Airways has reminded its staff about its policy to speak up and act as โ€˜whistle-blowersโ€™ as a climate of fear grows among the airlineโ€™s employees about possible reprisals for their activities on social media,โ€ says the South China Morning Post.

โ€œHong Kong police have banned both a rally and a march organised by the Civil Human Rights Front planned for Saturday, according to the groupโ€™s convener Jimmy Sham [ๅฒ‘ๅญๆฐ Cรฉn Zijiรฉ],โ€ reports the Hong Kong Free Press. โ€œIt marked the first time that an entire event organised by the pro-democracy coalition has been prohibited owing to concerns over public order.โ€

2. A grand military parade for October 1

Beijingers: Get ready for traffic disruptions, heightened security checks, temporary bans on outdoor dining, and all the other delightful inconveniences that come with a big event in the capital. Today state media announced (in English and Chinese):

Chinese Presidentย  Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟ‘ๅนณ will attend a grand gathering to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China on October 1.

Xi, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, will deliver an important speech at the eventโ€ฆ

A military parade and mass pageantry will be held following the gatheringโ€ฆAt a grand evening gala in Tiananmen Square on National Day, Party and state leaders will join the public to watch performances and a fireworks show.

This event adds urgent pressure to the Peopleโ€™s Leader (ไบบๆฐ‘้ข†่ข– rรฉnmรญn lวngxiรน) โ€” as Xi has recently begun more frequently calling himself (in Chinese), including in a front-page spread on the August 25 Peopleโ€™s Daily (in Chinese) โ€” to resolve the situation in Hong Kong.ย 

See Nikkei Asian Review (porous paywall) for more on Xiโ€™s use of โ€œPeopleโ€™s Leader,โ€ an honorific previously used only in China by Mao.ย See also The China Project roundup of news from September 2017, when in the lead-up to the 19th Party Congress Xi was frequently called โ€œlingxiuโ€ in state media (but not specifically in the Peopleโ€™s Daily).

3. The trade war toddler tantrumย 

Parent with toddlers may recognize the moment: when there is nothing to be done about a temper tantrum or a fit of crying, except to wait it out while making the occasional reassuring noise. At this phase of a toddlerโ€™s emotional outburst, neither the threat of punishment, nor loud screaming, nor even being nice and offering hugs and ice cream will work. You just got to wait. Eventually the little beast will become human again.ย 

The Chinese government seems to have resigned itself to a similar situation with regards to Trumpโ€™s trade war, on day 420. Hereโ€™s the latest:

โ€œChina indicated that it wouldnโ€™t immediately retaliate against the latest U.S. tariff increase announced by President Donald Trump last week, emphasizing the need to discuss ways to deescalate the trade war between the worldโ€™s two largest economies,โ€ reports Bloomberg (porous paywall).

โ€œChina has ample means for retaliation, but thinks the question that should be discussed now is about removing the new tariffs to prevent escalation of the trade war,โ€ Ministry of Commerce spokesman Gฤo Fฤ“ng ้ซ˜ๅณฐ told reporters in Beijing on Thursday.ย 

โ€œThe most important thing at the moment is to create necessary conditions for both sides to continue negotiations,โ€ said Gao, โ€œadding that China was lodging โ€˜solemn representationโ€™ with the United Statesโ€ about the latest round of tariffs, according to Reuters.ย 

Hereโ€™s another possible toddler move from Trump that the Chinese government is sure to ignore. A group of Americans own Hukuang Railway bonds, which were sold in 1911 to help fund construction of a rail line stretching from Hangzhou to Sichuan. The government of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) issued the bonds, just before it collapsed, rendering the bonds worthless. Bloomberg reports:

Now, with Trump ratcheting up the trade rhetoric with China, holders of the antiquarian bonds are hoping heโ€™ll press their case, even as other parts of the U.S. government are accusing people of fraudulently selling the same paper.

โ€œWith President Trump, itโ€™s a whole new ballgame,โ€ says Jonna Bianco, a Tennessee cattle rancher who leads a group representing pre-revolutionary China bondholders and who has met with the president. โ€œHeโ€™s an โ€˜America First’ person. God bless him.โ€

A voice of moderation in the Wall Street Journal: Has Americaโ€™s China backlash gone too far? (paywall) asks economy columnist Greg Ip:ย 

Yet if the pendulum swung too far toward accommodating China in the past, it may be rebounding too far toward confrontation now. Thatโ€™s what I gleaned from speaking with several establishment figures with decades of combined experience on China.

โ€œWe have a China attitude, not a China policy,โ€ says Henry Paulson who, as Treasury secretary under Mr. Bush, dealt with China intensively and has recently become more critical. โ€œYou have Homeland Security, the FBI, CIA, the Defense Department, treating China as the enemy and members of Congress competing to see who can be the most belligerent China hawk. No one is leaning against the wind, providing balance, asking what can we realistically do that has some chance of getting results that wonโ€™t be harmful to our economic and national-security interests in the long term?โ€

American companies โ™ฅ๏ธ Chinese consumers: Bloomberg reports (porous paywall):

With fewer Chinese tourists visiting the U.S., Tiffany & Co. moved some of its most expensive jewelry to its Beijing and Shanghai stores last quarter, selling limited quantities of special Tiffany Keys diamond pendants and Tiffany Love Bugs. The New York-based retailer is also upgrading all three greater China flagships, including Hong Kong.

Ford Motor Co., which expects China to become the biggest market for its Lincolns in the next few years, has said it eventually plans to build locally most of the vehicles it sells in the country under that brand, avoiding tariffs. Tesla Inc. is focused on getting its plant in Shanghai running by the end of the year.ย 

โ€œChina is studying technology companiesโ€™ reliance on American suppliers,โ€ says the Wall Street Journal (paywall), and โ€œplans to release โ€˜in the near futureโ€™ an โ€˜unreliable-entity listโ€™ of foreign businesses and individuals that would face restrictions in their dealings with Chinese counterparts.โ€

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn


BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:

The new 5G-capable Mate 30 is Huaweiโ€™s first flagship handset launch since the U.S. government placed it on a trade blacklist in May. The new smartphone will not feature HarmonyOS, Huaweiโ€™s self-developed mobile operating system, signaling that the worldโ€™s second-largest smartphone maker is not yet ready to break with Google.

Tencent has shelved plans to invest about $150 million to lead a fresh fundraising round for a Chinese education firm VIPKid, two people familiar with the matter said, as Beijing moved to tighten oversight of online education platforms.

China’s tax revenue is expected to fall this year for the first time since 1968 โ€” when ๆฏ›ๆณฝไธœ Mรกo Zรฉdลng’s Cultural Revolution gripped the land.

A large-scale 2 trillion yuan ($280 billion) tax cut announced by Premier Li Keqiang at the National People’s Congress in March has significantly eroded the government’s income. Furthermore, the slowdown in the Chinese economy has led to slower growth in corporate tax and real estate tax revenues.

  • Smart bus trial in Shanghai
    DeepBlue Tech lands Shanghai’s first connected bus license, plans road tests / Yicai
    โ€œDeepBlue Technology plans to start road testing its Smart Panda Bus after landing Shanghai’s first official permit to do trial connected buses.โ€

  • Understanding Social Credit for companies
    Social Credit joint-enforcement MOU breakdown / China Law Translate
    Both individuals and companies alike will have to heed Chinaโ€™s new Social Credit System, and specifically its โ€œblacklist.โ€ China Law Translate provides this self-described โ€œcomprehensive, interactive, and understandable guideโ€ to the systemโ€™s punishment mechanism.

  • Ideology and tech
    Chinaโ€™s long march to technological supremacy / Foreign Affairs (paywall)
    Chinaโ€™s rapid technological advance in recent years โ€œreflects a drive that dates to the origins of the Peopleโ€™s Republic,โ€ argues Julian Baird Gewirtz. โ€œIn the minds of Chinaโ€™s leaders, from Mรกo Zรฉdลng ๆฏ›ๆณฝไธœ to Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟ‘ๅนณ, technological progress is not only a means to economic and military prowess but also an ideological end in itself โ€” offering final proof of Chinaโ€™s restoration as a great power.โ€

SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND THE ENVIRONMENT:ย 

China, which is not a polar country, has launched aggressive Arctic diplomacy and gained non-voting observer status for itself at the Arctic Council, the international forum that addresses policy in the Arctic. Last year, China issued its first arctic policy.ย 

POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:

  • Yang Hengjun appeals to Australian PM
    Yang Hengjun: Scott Morrison says China’s spy claims ‘absolutely untrue’ / The Guardian
    Yรกng Hรฉngjลซn ๆฅŠๆ’ๅ‡, who was formally charged with espionage by the Chinese government recently and faces the possibility of a death sentence, in a message relayed through a consular official, pleaded with Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison to โ€œplease help me go home as soon as possible.โ€ย 
    In response, Morrison has called the espionage charge โ€œabsolutely untrue,โ€ and said โ€œwe do expect Australians, indeed all citizens, to have their human rights appropriately looked afterโ€.

  • Philippines and China โ€” no agreement on disputed reefs
    Xi, Duterte fail to resolve tense South China Sea dispute / Bloomberg (porous paywall)

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterteโ€™s much-touted meeting with Chinese leader Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟ‘ๅนณ does not appear to have yielded an agreement on the South China Sea territorial dispute between the two nations or a plan to explore the area for oil and gas.

Instead, Xi said China and the Philippines should aim to conclude talks on the Code of Conduct in the South China Sea by 2021 or earlier, the state-run Xinhua News Agency reports in a Weibo post.

The Trump administration has stepped up its efforts to track tankers linked to Chinaโ€™s biggest state-run oil company in response to signs that the vessels are helping to transport Iranian crude in defiance of US sanctions against Tehran.

โ€œThey are hiding their activity,โ€ Samir Madani, the co-founder of TankerTrackers.com, told the New York Times in July. โ€œThey donโ€™t want to broadcast the fact that they have been in Iran, evading sanctions. Itโ€™s that simple.โ€

  • Canada deports activist to China
    Canada deports Chinese activist Yang Wei over knife crimes / BBC
    Canada on Wednesday deported activist Yรกng Wฤ›i ๆฅŠๅ‰ to China, after he committed a series of violent acts with a knife. Yangโ€™s activism began as a teenager in 1989. After a spell behind bars, he fled to Canada in 1999. Supporters โ€œsaid his behaviour was the result of mental health problems.โ€ One former diplomat told the New York Times (porous paywall) that โ€œYang faced a certain return to prison then โ€˜brutality and solitary confinement.โ€™โ€

  • Beijing condemns nomination of Uyghur economist for human rights award
    China says Uyghur award nomination is ‘supporting terrorism’ / AFP via Straits Times
    Economics professor Ilham Tohti โ€” currently serving a life sentence after being convicted of โ€œseparatismโ€ โ€” โ€œis one of three nominees for the 2019 Vaclav Havel prize, along with Tajik human rights lawyer Buzurgmehr Yorov and a youth group promoting post-war reconciliation in the Balkans.โ€ China has called his nomination tantamount to โ€œsupporting terrorism.โ€

  • Chinese media in Africa falling on deaf ears?
    Chinaโ€™s media presence in Africa is growing fast. Is its influence growing at the same pace? / Asia Dialogue
    Dr Dani Madrid-Morales writes:

Throughout the Cold War, the US and its allies as well as Beijing all contributed to creating a narrative that inflated the actual extent of Chinaโ€™s propaganda influence in those parts of Africa where it had an extensive presence. Today, however, declassified records from that period indicate that despite Beijingโ€™s intense efforts to exert influence, its message often fell on deaf ears, which might well be the case now.

Japan is considering lowering the 10 percent ownership threshold at which foreigners are required to report a stake in domestic companies, two officials said, as Tokyo looks to better monitor potential Chinese investment in areas related to security.

SOCIETY AND CULTURE:

Eileen Gu โ€” also known by her Chinese name, Gว” ร€ilรญng ่ฐท็ˆฑๅ‡Œ โ€” has won two gold medals for China at the Australian New Zealand Cup, currently being held on New Zealandโ€™s South Island. The 15-year-old phenom earned her first gold as a Chinese athlete on Aug. 15 in the womenโ€™s slopestyle event and clinched her latest win Wednesday in the womenโ€™s freeski halfpipe.

Guโ€™s success comes just two months after she became a Chinese citizen in early June. Previously, she had competed for the United Statesโ€ฆ

Gu is not the first professional athlete to become a naturalized Chinese citizen. Last September, 17-year-old U.S.-born figure skater Beverly Zhu enrolled in Chinaโ€™s national figure skating program, hoping to compete for the country at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. And in May, British-born soccer player Nico Yennaris became the first naturalized Chinese citizen to be given a roster spot on the countryโ€™s national squad.

As newcomers to the U.S., the women have struggled in navigating a whole new social and political system as well as many personal barriers to overcome: language, visas, finances, just to name a few.

Despite this, both women described themselves as committed to the cause for the long haul. What drives their work, they say, is an unparalleled sense of fulfillment when they feel their impact on their country. โ€œItโ€™s not about personal livelihood,โ€ Lวš Pรญn ๅ•้ข‘ says. โ€œI am a nobody, but in a hard environment like China, the power I have might be greater than youโ€™d imagine.โ€

โ€œIn America, weโ€™re just getting started,โ€ says Lรผ, โ€œI have to be less impatient.โ€


FEATURED ON SUPCHINA

Click Here

The China Project Quiz: Books

Itโ€™s the last Thursday of the month, which means itโ€™s quiz time! Today we present: 12 questions about China books, in conjunction with the The China Project Book List.

The problems with giving it all away: Philanthropy in China

The rapid rise of charitable giving in China is reshaping the relationship between the private sector and society. In 2017, China gave the equivalent of Iceland’s GDP to charity, much of it for education. However, per capita rates of giving still remain low in China, and much still has to be done to professionalize the philanthropic sector and develop a more widespread culture of charitable giving.

Opinion: What Warrenโ€™s trade plan means for China

Frustrated with the lack of progress on a U.S.-China trade deal under Trump? Elizabeth Warrenโ€™s โ€œeconomic patriotismโ€ agenda would nullify any trade agreement with China, writes Daniel Schoolenberg.


SINICA PODCAST NETWORK

Click Here

Sinica Podcast: Making the world safe for autocracy: Jessica Chen Weiss on what Beijing wants

Jessica Chen Weiss is Associate Professor of Government at Cornell University and a prolific writer on Chinese nationalism and China’s international relations. Kaiser sat down with her recently to hear her ideas on how we should understand what it is that Beijing ultimately wants, on how to right-size the challenges that China poses to the liberal world order, and about the CCP’s relationship with its own nationalistic populace.


PHOTO OF THE DAY

Click Here

BEไบฌjing No. 29: โ€˜Redโ€™ door

This photo from Dongfuchi Hutong in October 2018 is part of BEไบฌjing, a 30-part photo essay project by Gregorio Soravito.ย