Editor’s Note for Thursday, February 10, 2022
A note for Access newsletter readers from Jeremy Goldkorn. Today: Xinjiang, Afghanistan, Evergande's CEO, and more.

My thoughts today:
Is China preparing a campaign to promote trade with Xinjiang? That is one conclusion some commenters drew from the appointment of the Mฤ Xฤซngruรฌ ้ฉฌๅ ด็ to the top job as Xinjiangโs Communist Party chief after his successful tenure as governor of the coastal economic powerhouse province, Guangdong.
Ma replaced Chรฉn Quรกnguรณ ้ๅ จๅฝ, who is widely believed to have designed, or at least implemented, the internment camp system in Xinjiang that may have ensnared more than a million Uyghurs.
Itโs far from certain that the repression will end, but here is a sign that there may be a new focus on trade: a friend in Beijing in international business told me that he had been approached by the organizers of the Eurasia Expo, which was held in Xinjiangโs provincial capital Urumqi from 2011 to 2014: They are hosting the event again in Urumqi in 2022.
But in Xiโs China, security will always be the first concern, and developments in Afghanistan as described in todayโs top story might derail any plans to loosen up on repression in Xinjiang.
I’m shocked! Shocked to find out that there has been some financial irregularity at the worldโs most indebted real estate company, founded by the Hermรจs Belt Brother Xว Jiฤyรฌn ่ฎธๅฎถๅฐ a.k.a. Hui Ka Yan.
Itโs not actually Belt Brother who is the subject of todayโs story, though, it’s the current CEO of Evergande, Xiร Hวijลซn ๅคๆตท้ง, who, according to recent filings reported by the Wall Street Journal, โsold his holdings of company dollar bonds with a face value of $128 million last summer, stock exchange-filings showed, with the sales coming a few weeks before the property developer issued a profit warning.โ
The WSJ dryly notes: โIt couldnโt be determined why the disclosure was made several months after the sales,โ even though the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission generally requires company directors to file such notices โwithin three business days.โ
Our word of the day is: The withdrawal of foreign troops has created a vacuum in the security situation (ๅคๅฝ้จ้ๆคๅบๅฏผ่ดๅฎๅ จๅฝขๅฟๅบ็ฐ็็ฉบ wร iguรณ bรนduรฌ chรจchลซ dวozhรฌ ฤnquรกn xรญngshรฌ chลซxiร n zhฤnkลng).
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief