Meng Wanzhou is accused of fraud and violating Iran sanctions
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1. Meng Wanzhou wanted for bank fraud and breaking Iran sanctions
The shocking arrest of Mรจng Wวnzhลu ๅญๆ่, CFO of telecom giant Huawei and daughter of the companyโs founder, is still the big China story of the day.
Today, the Washington Post reports:
Before a packed courtroom in Vancouver, a Canadian prosecutor disclosed that Meng Wanzhou, chief financial officer of Huawei Technologies, is wanted by the United States for allegedly deceiving financial institutions about the relationship between Huawei and SkyCom, a company that is widely believed to have close links to the tech giant.
They argued that Meng should be kept in custody pending possible extradition to the United States because she is a flight risk.
The case appears to center on sales of U.S.-manufactured technology to Iran by SkyCom, which is based in Hong Kong.
What is SkyCom?
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The prosecutor in Vancouver argued that it is an unofficial subsidiary of Huawei because โSkycom employees used Huawei email addresses and had badges and letterhead featuring the Huawei logo,โ and financial documents indicated it was controlled by Huawei until at least 2014, the New York Times reports (porous paywall).
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Links between Huawei and a SkyCom deal with Iran were first highlighted by Reuters in 2012, and in 2013, Reuters connected Meng, then a โrising star,โ to the story. In a business deal that Huawei did not deny, but said was never completed, โin late 2010, Skycomโs office in Tehran offered to sell at least 1.3 million euros worth of HP gear to Mobile Telecommunication Co of Iran, despite U.S. trade sanctions.โ
Earlier today, Reuters reported that bank fraud is also suspected of Meng Wanzhou. The U.S. Justice Department investigation of Huawei, which was first reported in April, has โmore recently…included whether the company used HSBC Holdings Plc to conduct illegal transactions involving Iran.โ Experts told Reuters: โIf the mobile phone and telecoms equipment maker conducted such transactions and then misled HSBC about their true nature, it could be guilty of bank fraud.โ The prosecutor in Canada today argued that Meng had โdirect involvementโ in Huaweiโs representations with banks.
Though HSBC is not being investigated, sources clarified, the bankโs โU.S.-listed shares fell as much as 6 percent on Thursdayโ and โended down 3.6 percent.โ
Now Meng is set for a lengthy extradition process, which could last as long as or longer than the 90-day timeline for U.S.-China trade negotiations, which have already become more complicated as a result of Mengโs arrest.
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โAny extradition process can take weeks or months,โ according to the New York Times; it adds, โThe United States Justice Department must now present evidence to the Canadian court that supports its request and has 60 days from the arrest to make a full request for extradition.โ
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But โreaching into another country to apprehend a citizen of a third country on sanctions violations is rare if not unprecedented, which could further complicate the legal proceedings, according to extradition experts and attorneys,โ Bloomberg says (porous paywall).
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It depends on whether she fights extradition: If she does, โher case could go on for years, lawyers said, pointing to examples like Lai Changxing, a Chinese businessman who fled to Canada after he was implicated in a bribery case and fought extradition to China for 12 years. If she chooses not to fight, she could be in the United States within weeks,โ the Guardian reports.
More bad news for Huawei
The bad news does not end with Meng Wanzhouโs arrest.
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The Japanese government will stop buying Huawei and ZTE equipment as early as Monday, December 10, the Yomiuri newspaper first reported, Reuters says.
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The EU is also raising caution: โDo we have to be worried about Huawei or other Chinese companies? Yes, I think we have to be worried about those companies.โ Those are comments from EU tech commissioner Andrus Ansip.
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In the U.K., Huawei is scrambling to maintain its relationship with the British government, the Financial Times reports (paywall). Recently, it โhas caved in to demands by British security agencies to address serious risks the UK believes exist in the Chinese groupโs equipment and software, pledging $2bn to overhaul its systems.โ
Other stories about Huawei and Meng Wanzhou:
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Significance to Canada
China-US feud threatens Canada as Huawei executive due in court / Guardian
โMengโs arrest comes amid a growing wariness in Canada over Huaweiโs increasingly outsized influence and presence in the country.โ
โIn a rare public speech earlier in the week, Canadaโs top intelligence official said that state-sponsored espionage โ including through 5G cellular technology โ is a critical threat to Canadaโs national security.โ
Mengโs arrest โhas nothing to do with politicsโ says Canada PM Trudeau / Hong Kong Free Press
โCanadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Thursday that his government had been given a few days notice prior to the arrest of Huaweiโs chief financial officer. He added that the case had nothing to do with politics.โ -
Reactions from Huawei and Chinese government/state media
Caught in the cross-fire between US and China, Huawei responds to CFOโs arrest / TechNode
โDespite the US government being unreasonable, we will not change the relationship with our global supply chain partners.โ
Link to Huaweiโs statement (in Chinese): ๅไธบ่ดไพๅบๅไธๅฐไฟก๏ผไธไผๅ ็พๅฝๆ ็ๆนๅๅไฝๅ ณ็ณป
Chinese state media says US trying to ‘stifle’ Huawei with arrest / AFP
Containing Huawei’s expansion detrimental to China-US ties / China Daily
โOne thing that is undoubtedly true and proven is the US is trying to do whatever it can to contain Huawei’s expansion in the world simply because the company is the point man for China’s competitive technology companies.โ
Huawei appoints chairman as acting CFO after Mengโs arrest / FT (paywall)
โHuawei has appointed chairman Liang Hua as acting chief financial officer following the arrest on US sanctions-busting charges of Meng Wanzhou in Canada.โ -
Larger significance
Huawei Bust Signals the Real U.S. Trade War With China / Bloomberg (porous paywall)
Noah Smith points out: โIf the U.S. loses its lead in furniture making, big deal. The same can’t be said of high tech.โ
Huawei Arrest Raises Thorny Questions of Law Enforcement and Foreign Policy / Lawfare
โAlthough it remains unclear whether the decision to go after Meng was meaningfully coordinated across the executive branch, that decision must be viewed in the larger context of a forward-leaning U.S. law enforcement strategy that reflects a new tolerance for actions that could escalate tensions with China.โ
โLittle noticed in the reporting on the Huawei arrest is the fact that Richard P. Donoghue, the U.S. attorney for that district, is one of five U.S. attorneys serving in a โworking groupโ under the Justice Departmentโs recently announced China Initiative.
โLaunched in November by then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the China Initiative is a broad-based strategy designed to counter Chinese economic espionage and a range of other national security threats.โ -
Anxiety among American executives
Huawei arrest stokes fears of China reprisals among America Inc executives / Reuters
โAt a closed-door security meeting of U.S. companies in Singapore on Thursday, one topic was high on the agenda: the arrest of a top executive at Chinese tech giant Huawei and the potential backlash on American firms operating in China.โ
China seeks to reassure US executives as concerns rise of retaliation over Huawei CFO’s arrest / SCMP
The foreign ministryโs response โ that China โhas always protected the legitimate rights and interests of foreign nationals in China and they should obey Chinese laws [when they are in China]โ โ is probably not entirely reassuring to American executives. Why would any American executive whose business deals with Taiwan, or in military deals that involve Taiwan, not be a likely target for Chinese retaliation at this time? -
Huaweiโs reach in Africa
Will Chinaโs Investments Reshape Africaโs Internet? / China Digital Times
Emeka Umejei points out: โSub-Saharan Africaโs 35.2 percent Internet penetration rate is well below the global average of 54.4 percent. Chinaโs two communications technology giants, ZTE and Huawei, are ranked among the top five telecommunication providers in Africa.โ -
Information from Trump administration
Trump did not know about Huawei extradition request before Xi dinner: source / Reuters
NPR News Interviews National Security Advisor John Bolton / NPR
2. Trade war, day 155: 90-day negotiations on โseparate trackโ from Meng Wanzhou arrest
Yesterday, after CNN reported that at least some Trump administration officials wanted to use Meng Wanzhou as โleverageโ in the trade talks with China, many China watchers flagged that as a terrible, terrible idea.
Unsurprisingly (because it was a terrible, terrible idea), that line was walked back by the White House today.
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Trump economic advisor Larry Kudlow appeared on CNBC to say he did not believe the Meng case would โspill overโ into trade talks, and that he โthinks itโs a separate track,โ referring to U.S. sanctions on Iran and any investigation of alleged violations by Chinese companies or individuals.
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Beijing is also taking care to separate the issues, the South China Morning Post observes. The Chinese foreign ministry โrefused to directly link the arrest of Mengโฆwith the trade negotiations,โ while โa spokesman for the Ministry of Commerceโฆsaid on Thursday that he had no information at all about Mengโs case,โ even as he expressed confidence in trade talks.
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Trump has not yet said anything about Meng Wanzhou, though he did tweet his confidence in trade negotiations twice in the last 24 hours (1, 2).
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For more on the impact of Mengโs arrest on trade negotiations and broader U.S.-China tech competition, see this essay by Eurasia Groupโs Paul Triolo on The China Project yesterday: The shocking arrest of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou in Canada: ZTE redux โ or worse?
Other trade-war-related news:
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Fascinating remarks by Beijingโs second-ranking rep in Washington
Chinaโs โnationalist bubbleโ partly to blame for suspicions over global role, envoy to US concedes / SCMP
โNationalism and the Chinese media are just as much to blame for exaggerated perceptions of the countryโs geopolitical strength as the imagination of foreign observers, Beijingโs number-two diplomat in the US said on Wednesday evening.โ
โImpressions of Chinaโs might were 60 per cent reality, 20 per cent the imagination of the outside world, and 20 per cent the result of the countryโs โnationalist bubble weโve created by ourselvesโ, said Li Kexin, deputy chief of mission at Chinaโs US embassy in Washington.โ -
Speculation about Stanford professorโs death
US-China tensions played no part in death of renowned Stanford professor Zhang Shoucheng, family says / SCMP
โThe family of Stanford professor Zhang Shoucheng, a world-renowned physicist and venture capitalist, denied speculation on Chinese social media that his death was connected to tensions in US-China relations or the arrest of Huaweiโs CFO in Canada on Saturday.โ -
Government think tank supports government policy
Government think tankโs defence of Chinaโs economic model points to reluctance to change tack in face of US pressure / SCMP
โIn an 87-page report released on Thursday, the Development Research Centre, a key governmental think tank linked to the State Council, attributed the countryโs massive economic progress over the past four decades to its cohesive political governance and an embrace of an open economy.โ
โA key finding of Chenโs team, based on data from more than 200 economies worldwide, is that political systems, either authoritarian or democratic, have a neutral impact on economic growth.โ -
Boeing addresses satellite controversy
Boeing Backs Out of Global IP Satellite Order Financed by China / WSJ (paywall)
Earlier this week, WSJ reported: China Maneuvers to Snag Top-Secret Boeing Satellite Technology
โLucas Niewenhuis
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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
Here are the stories that caught our eye this week (other than Meng Wanzhou):
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Following the Xi-Trump dinner in Argentina on Saturday, December 1, which resulted in a vague tariff cease-fire, Donald Trump unleashed a series of tweets on Tuesday, sending mixed messages about the future of U.S.-China trade negotiations. The stock market reacted to these tweets with one of the largest drops of 2018. Later, China affirmed that the Xi-Trump meeting had been โvery successful,โ but did not provide many specifics, likely because China doesnโt think it agreed to many of the specifics of the initial White House statement. Meanwhile, the Mariott hotel group said that some evidence โ though the case isnโt entirely clear โ indicated a major hack was traceable to China. ย
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New details regarding the alleged Richard Liu rape emerged in a new account compiled by Bloomberg, which reports that the story is based on documents including the alleged victimโs statement to the police, her WeChat messages to a friend, โwhich were reviewed by Bloomberg,โ and a conversation with her lawyer.
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The Guangzhou Gender and Sexuality Education Center (GSEC), a leading nonprofit organization in China dedicated to combating sexual violence and promoting gender equality, closed operations altogether on December 6, according to a post published on its official WeChat account.
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Hollywood summer hit Crazy Rich Asians failed to woo audiences in mainland China upon its debut. During its opening weekend, the romantic comedy took in less than $1.2 million at the box office.
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Scholars and China specialists around the world have signed an open letter about the harassment campaign against China scholar Anne-Marie Brady.
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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Dim outlook for carbon emissions
Heavy industry drives growth in Chinaโs emissions / Chinadialogue
โChinaโs emissions are projected to grow by around 4.7% this year following a rise of 1.7% in 2017, according to an assessment of global carbon emissions published on Wednesdayโฆ The question now is whether emissions will continue to grow in 2019. The governmentโs fiscal policy is already providing a strong clueโฆ Worryingly, rumours are already swirling that the government is planning to inject enormous stimulus into the economy over the next two years. A recent analysis by ING estimated the package could be around 9 to 10 trillion yuan (US$1.3-1.5 trillion), comparable only to the 2009 package after the global financial crisis.โ -
Space launch on Saturday, December 8
Chang’e 4 to launch China’s bid to be first on dark side of the moon / SCMP
โChina is making final preparations for the launch of its latest lunar lander and rover spacecraft, Changโe 4, in the early hours of Saturday, which will be humankindโs first attempt to land on the far side of the moon.โ -
European sportswear
Chinaโs Anta offers to buy Finlandโs Amer for โฌ5.6bn / FT (paywall)
โA consortium led by Chinaโs Anta Sports, the countryโs largest sportswear company, has launched a โฌ5.6bn takeover offer for Finlandโs Amer Sportsโฆ The deal, if successful, will go down as the largest outbound Chinese transaction into Europe this year.โ -
Bytedance cozies up to state funds and banks for even more money
China’s ByteDance to raise about US$1.45 billion for its venture fund: Report / Reuters
โByteDance, owner of news aggregator Jinri Toutiao, is in talks with investors including major Chinese government-led funds and state-owned investment banks, the website reported.โ
โReuters reported in August ByteDance aimed to raise about US$3 billion in a funding round, valuing the company as high as US$75 billion,โ which made it the worldโs largest startup. -
Medical tech
China’s WuXi AppTec raises US$1 billion in HK listing – sources / Reuters
โChinese medical tech platform WuXi AppTec raised US$1.01 billion in its Hong Kong listing, sources said, valuing the company at US$10.2 billion in a deal that marks one of this year’s last big stock offerings in the Asian financial hub.โ -
Technology innovation board trading in Shanghai
Briefing: Chinaโs โNasdaqโ to begin listing in June / TechNode
โShanghai Stock Exchangeโs technology innovation board, Chinaโs answer to the Nasdaq, will begin accepting IPO applications as early as March 2019, with listings planned for June.โ -
Who makes Disney and Fisher-Price dolls?
Disney doll factory in China accused of underpaying women workers / Reuters
โAn investigation by human rights groups Solidar Suisse and China Labor Watch found that staff at a toy factory in Heyuan, in the southern province of Guangdong, were working illegal overtime, receiving no holiday or sick pay, and often earned less than US$1.30 per hour.โ -
Appleโs App Store cleanup hits JD.com
JD Finance mobile app pulled from iOS App Store / TechNode
โJD Financeโs iOS app was removed from Chinaโs Apple App Store this morning (Dec. 7), Chinese media is reporting (in Chinese), the latest in a slew of removals affecting Chinese companies.โ -
โChina has the best makeupโ โ Kim Kardashian
Keeping up with China: Kim Kardashian woos Chinese market / AFP
โReality television star and lifestyle mogul Kim Kardashian has her sights set on the Chinese market with plans to open a pop-up store, state media reported Friday.โ -
Ofo told to tidy up its bikes
Briefing: ofo may soon require users to park bikes in designated areas / TechNode
โofo released a somewhat vague notice on Thursday (Dec. 6) saying it would begin regulating usersโ parking habits across China. In response to government requests to reduce the โnegative impact on societyโ of improperly parked bikes, ofo will begin enforcing new rules in select cities beginning Dec. 10.โ
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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Xinjiang internment camps and abuse of Uyghurs
Uighur leaders warn China’s actions could be ‘precursors to genocide’ / Guardian
โOn a visit to Australia, leaders of the Uyghur Human Rights Project (UHRP), based in Washington, said governments, businesses, academics and think tanks all had a responsibility to stop โbusiness as usualโ relations with China.โ
Nury Turkel, chair of the board for the UHRP, said: โThe Chinese have not publicly shown any sign of gassing Uighursโฆ[but] we may see mass murder.โ
Louisa Greve, director for external affairs for the UHRP, said: โAcademics believe that when you look at the progression of policies that dehumanise ethnic groups, you have to say that mass murder cannot be ruled out. We see many, many of the precursors of cultural and possibly physical genocide.โ
On The China Project: Listen to a Sinica Podcast interview with Nury Turkel.
Darren Byler on Twitter: “Zhou Xi, a key representative of the Chinese Academy of Sciences face recognition A class project โXinjiang Security Control,โ back in 2017: I have been trying to make the technology practical for many years. From Academic demo to commercial products, there is a long way to pursue. Actually, some of our designed system has been applied in Xinjiang and another regions since 2011. The product is mature.”
Zhou Xi is the founder of CloudWalk, an artificial intelligence facial recognition firm. Zhou says he โwent to Beijing, [spent] a quite [a] lot more time in the Microsoft Asia Institute of speech recognition group,โ which is where he learned many of his skills. Byler comments that this is a โpowerful demonstration of the way @MicrosoftASIA is connected to the new Chinese economy of mass surveillance/human engineering systems.โ -
North Korean foreign minister meets with Xi Jinping and Wang Yi
China urges North Korea to address US concerns on nuclear programme / SCMP
โChinese President Xi Jinping told visiting North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho on Friday that Washington and Pyongyang should address each othersโ concerns and make progress to rid the Korean peninsula of nuclear weapons.โ
In Beijing, North Korean foreign minister reaffirms commitment to denuclearisation / Reuters
โNorth Korea’s commitment to denuclearisation and safeguarding peace and stability on the Korean peninsula are unchanged, its Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho said on Friday (Dec 7) at a meeting in Beijing with the Chinese government’s top diplomat Wรกng Yรฌ ็ๆฏ .โ -
Global propaganda
Inside China’s audacious global propaganda campaign / Guardian
Louisa Lim and Julia Bergin report: โBeijing is buying up media outlets and training scores of foreign journalists to โtell Chinaโs story wellโ โ as part of a worldwide propaganda campaign of astonishing scope and ambition.โ -
China Aid in Zimbabwe
China leads Zimbabwe cities revamp / Bulawayo24
โUnlike other projects, which have left the country saddled with debts to Beijing, the construction of the new parliament building โ located on a hilltop to give a panoramic view of the surroundings โ is being done courtesy of a US$677 million grant from China Aid, a Chinese government-owned global development aid agency.โ -
Large environmental protest in Liaoning
Chinese town residents clash with riot police in protests over incinerator / SCMP
โThousands of residents in a township in northeast China clashed with riot police this week over government plans to build an incinerator.โ
โAlthough there should be a formal consultation before permission is granted, residents say the authorities have yet to comment publicly on the plans or hold the consultation.โ -
Hong Kong protestors
Hong Kong lawmakers to be arrested for Legco protest over controversial bill giving mainland Chinese police power of arrest at high-speed rail station / SCMP
โAndrew Wan Siu-kin and Lam Cheuk-ting were told on Friday to report on Monday to police headquarters in Wan Chai, where they will be formally arrested.โ
โThe two Democratic Party members said they were accused of breaching section 19(b) of the Legislative Council (Powers and Privileges) Ordinance by obstructing security guards in the legislature. Wan said he was also accused of common assault.โ -
German president talks Marxism in China
Frank-Walter Steinmeier criticizes Karl Marx at Sichuan University in China / Devdiscourse
โGerman President Frank-Walter Steinmeier told Chinese students on Friday that โhavocโ was wrought in the name of Karl Marx in Germany and eastern Europe, but that Marx also stood for things like freedom of the press.โ
โSteinmeier did make any specific criticisms of China, where attention most recently has focused on widespread concern in Western capitals about re-education camps for ethnic Uighurs and other Muslim peoples in China’s Xinjiang region.โ -
Belt and Road
Opinion: One Belt, One Road, one big mistake / Foreign Policy (porous paywall)
Tanner Greer points to a number of Belt and Road projects that have been renegotiated or canceled this year, and to the lack of investor confidence in projects, and concludes, โFar from being a strategic masterstroke, the BRI is a sign of strategic dysfunction. There is no evidence that it has reshaped Asiaโs geopolitical realities.โ
Darwin port’s sale is a blueprint for China’s future economic expansion / The Conversation
โDarwin already has no less than six โsister cityโ arrangements, including with the Chinese city of Haikou. But attention has been drawn to Darwinโs newly minted โfriendshipโ deal with Yuexiu District, in Guangzhou, due to Chinese media describing it as part of President Xi Jinpingโs signature Belt and Road Initiative. This suggests Chinese authorities regard Darwin as having strategic significance.โ -
Forced marriages
After fleeing violence at home, Myanmese women face forced marriage, childbirth in China / SCMP
โMore than 7,500 women from Myanmar were in forced marriages with Chinese men in the past five years, according to a new study.โ -
Australia influence controversies
WA Labor MP Pierre Yang served aboard suspected China spy ship / The Australian (paywall)
Jieh-Yung Lo ็พ ไป้ on Twitter: “To question Pierre Yang’s service and role in supporting the Australian Army Reserve in its search for MH370 just to provide more evidence of his links to pro-China groups is astonishing. This is a new low, even for The Australian. #auspol #WApol”
Pierre Yang brings 500 members to the WA Labor Party / The Australian (paywall)
โControversial West Australian Labor MP Pierre Yang has recruited a record 500 party members โ almost all of them from his local ethnic Chinese community โ since being elected to parliament 18 months ago.โ -
Explainer on โgrid managementโ for social control
China under the grid / China Media Project -
Animal abuse
Chinese animal lovers rescue 375 cats from illegal slaughterhouse / SCMP
โHundreds of cats were saved from slaughter this week after a group of animal lovers stumbled upon an illegal slaughterhouse in northeast China, according to local media reports.โ
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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#MeToo case in Taiwanโs film industry
Acclaimed Taiwanese director Doze Niu accused of sexual assault / AFP -
Controversy over Jackie Chan memoir
Opinion: Why hypocritical Jackie Chanโs empty confessions deserve no sympathy / by Vivienne Chow in SCMP
โWorst of all is Chanโs decision to feed children he doesnโt know, through his donations to Unicef, instead of providing for his estranged daughter Etta Ng Chok-lam. He has forced her to inherit the abandonment and trauma he experienced during his own childhood, which he outlines in his latest memoir, Never Grow Up.โ -
Ethnography of rural porn
Tumblrโs adult content crackdown hits an obscure online enclave of rural porn in China / Radii China
Dino Ge Zhang writes, โAgri-porn is mostly made or documented by unprofessional video makers from small counties, towns, and villages across China, and circulated as under-five-minute โshort clipsโ (ๅฐ่ง้ข xiao shipin) on social networks such as Miaopai, WeChat, and QQ before getting re-posted to Tumblr, where I began to collect and archive them.โ -
When boy bands are actually cross-dressing girl bands
Is Chinese masculinity in crisis or an opportunity for brands? / Jing Daily
โAcrush is the latest hot boy band to appeal to the insatiable taste for โlittle fresh meatโ โ young, good-looking male celebrities in the mainland Chinese popular culture scene. While the appeal of good-looking men as desirable partners should come as no surprise, the preference for a boyish androgynous appearance has raised eyebrows and stirred some debates about the state of Chinese masculinity. Even so, it might come as a greater surprise to the uninitiated to learn that Acrush is made up of five young women whose cross-dressing is so convincing it has challenged gender norms for both men and women.โ -
Hong Kongโs weird blue firefighting mascot
The inside story of Anyone: Hong Kongโs favourite weird blue mascot / SCMP
โLaunched in early November, the outlandish blue man quickly won the support of Hongkongers on social media, and was praised as a departure from official formality.โ -
Voice-messaging platforms
The people paid to hear pillow talk / Sixth Tone
โNow boasting 20 million registered users, Yuwan is part of a small but growing number of voice-messaging apps that connect strangers who want to chat online. Although the app was intended to be an innocent space to find friends, a quick glance through the chat listings reveals a burgeoning hookup culture.โ That means they need content moderators to avoid a government crackdown, which has not happened to voice-messaging platforms yet. In this case, 30 human workers listening to the (mostly already public) conversations of 500,000 daily active users. -
Drug bust in Jiangsu
Chinese brothers bought drugs from cancer patients to sell on the street / SCMP -
Sorghum superstition in Shandong
Chinese village’s ‘magic’ stalk cut down by police because it’s ‘superstitious’ / SCMP -
Traces of dinosaurs in Sichuan
Dinosaur footprints found at mine / China Daily
โA large area of fossilized dinosaur footprints has been found at a copper mine in Sichuan Province.โ -
Zoo reform
Animal kingdoms: Why Chinaโs zoos are getting a facelift / Sixth Tone
โAfter decades of neglect, the countryโs zoos and wildlife parks may finally be on the right track.โ -
Dormitory showers
Chinese students left high and dry as bluetooth shower system fails to deliver hot water / SCMP
โStudents at Changsha University of Science and Technology in central China have been largely unimpressed with a new smart shower system installed on campus.โ
VIDEO ON SUPCHINA
Viral on Weibo: Spectacular! An inverted rainbow and a sun dog in the sky in Inner Mongolia
A huge halo around the sun, known as a sun dog, appeared in the sky in Yakeshi, Inner Mongolia, on December 6, along with an inverted rainbow on top. The extremely rare sighting attracted crowds.
We also published the following videos this week:
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Watch brave gas station workers put out a fire in 90 seconds
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300 outfits made of household objects: Chinese man puts on DIY fashion show
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Giant panda Gao Gao makes first public debut after returning to China
FEATURED ON SUPCHINA
Cheaters exposed in Chinese snooker, Shenzhen half-marathon
It hasnโt been a good few days for cheating in the Chinese sports world. Chinese snooker is in turmoil after two of the countryโs best players, Yu Delu ไบๅพท้ and Cao Yupeng ๆนๅฎ้น, have been banned for 10 and six years, respectively, after both admitted to fixing multiple matches over a two-year period. And a staggering 258 runners in last monthโs Shenzhen half-marathon were caught cheating, with the vast majority sneaking through bushes to shave two kilometers off their race distance.
The shocking arrest of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou in Canada: ZTE redux โ or worse?
Paul Triolo writes: The timing of the arrest and extradition request is rich. While the law enforcement action against Huawei has been in the works for some time, that Huaweiโs CFO and company founder offspring Mรจng Wวnzhลu ๅญๆ่ would choose to travel to Canada on the day President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ were meeting in Buenos Aires at the G20 may go down as one of the most ironic chance occurrences in U.S.-China relations ever.
Starving and subdued in Xinjiang detention centers: One woman’s story
When Chinese state authorities prepared to release Gulbahar Jelil, an ethnic Uyghur woman born and raised in Kazakhstan, they told her that she was forbidden to tell anyone about what she had experienced over the 15 months in which she was detained. She didn’t listen: In an 82-minute interview with Turkey-based channel Pidaiylar Biz, Jelil recounts her ordeal, including the inhumane conditions of her cell, the starvation diet the detainees were given, and the political and Chinese-language “reeducation” forced upon them. Article by Darren Byler.
‘An American-made Asian movie’: Chinese moviegoers on ‘Crazy Rich Asians’
Crazy Rich Asians, with its majority-Asian cast, was both a critical and commercial success in the U.S. upon its release over the summer. But its reception in mainland China has been decidedly muted, as it brought home a meager $1.2 million over the weekend after its November 30 debut. But what did those who saw it think?
When passengers attack: The harsh reality of being a bus driver in China
Driving is a risky activity. But imagine how demanding and distressing it would be to drive for people who have no respect for your services and wouldnโt mind putting others at risk if angered by minor issues that often have nothing to do with you. Such is the harsh reality that Chinese bus drivers experience at their jobs.
Chinese Corner: TikTok does no good for the Chinese music industry
In this installment of Jiayun Fengโs weekly review of interesting nonfiction on the Chinese internet, she looks at TikTokโs impacts on the Chinese music industry, the fall of Chinaโs bike rental business, women in tech, and a lead poisoning lawsuit.
Kuora: Breaking the Great Firewall
Let’s talk internet censorship. Why does the Chinese government believe itโs necessary? How do people within China feel about it? Can “heroes” rally together to break the Great Firewall, thus “freeing” those trapped within? Kaiser Kuo discusses these questions in this week’s Kuora, and introduces his famous “aluminum foil” analogy.
Sponsored: China launches the first potato-based skincare line โ Pototaly
Sponsored content: If China has potato royalty, Yiwen Hao is it. She is the founder of Pototaly, the worldโs first potato-based organic skincare brand. Itโs no accident that she’s launching a product made from the earth bean (ๅ่ฑ tวdรฒu): Her family business is Landun Xumei Foods, an enormous farm-to-factory and farm-to-restaurant producer of potatoes, which does everything from processing to delivery.
SINICA PODCAST NETWORK
Sinica Podcast: The Nature Conservancy in China
This week on Sinica, Kaiser speaks with Charles Bedford, who has been the managing director since 2012 of The Nature Conservancy (TNC)โs Asia-Pacific region, which encompasses Asia, the Pacific Islands, Indonesia, and Australia. Kaiser and Charles discuss the formation of the national parks system in China beginning nearly two decades ago (in which Charles and TNC played an instrumental role); the promising Chinese ecotourism industry; hydropower in China; and โsponge cities,โ โgreen bonds,โ and more.
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Subscribe to the Sinica Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.
TechBuzz China: Alibaba and the Little Red Book (Xiaohongshu): Powering Ecommerce With Content
In episode 31 of TechBuzz China, co-hosts Ying-Ying Lu and Rui Ma talk about Xiaohongshu, also known as RED, which had received a $300 million investment from Alibaba. Xiaohongshuโs tagline is โThe worldโs best lifestyle at your fingertips,โ and people often refer to the site as โInstagram and Pinterest sprinkled with a dose of Taobao.โ
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Subscribe to TechBuzz China on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.
Ta for Ta: Tiffany Ap
In this weekโs episode of Ta for Ta, Juliana sits down with Tiffany Ap, the China bureau chief for Womenโs Wear Daily. In her reporting, Tiffany covers how the worlds of fashion, beauty, and business interact. On Ta for Ta today, we explore retail and fashion in China, and answer questions such as: Why are Chinese consumers flying to Turkey to buy handbags? Why doesnโt China have a big luxury house yet? Why is the daigou (ไปฃ่ดญ dร igรฒu) shopping phenomenon still relevant? We also get her expert advice on what works โ and doesnโt โ for Western brands that have expanded to China.
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Subscribe to Ta for Ta on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.
ChinaEconTalk: Daniel Kurtz-Phelan on George Marshallโs China Mission
George Marshall, World War II hero and creator of the Marshall Plan, spent 1945-47 drinking baijiu with Mao and playing croquet with Chiang Kai-shek, fighting to stave off a civil war. Was the โloss of Chinaโ to the CCP inevitable? Did Marshall, with his strategy of forcing reconciliation on the Nationalists and Communists, in any way contribute to it? And what can we learn from Marshallโs expedition to China about the limits of American influence abroad? Daniel Kurtz-Phelan, the executive editor of Foreign Affairs, discusses these questions on the latest ChinaEconTalk.
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Subscribe to ChinaEconTalk on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed straight into your favorite podcast app.
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, episode 71
This week on the Caixin-Sinica Business Brief: the Trump-Xi meeting in Argentina, Google’s internal opposition to its China search engine project, an artificial rainfall project in western Chinaโs Qinghai Province, Doug Young on Chinaโs recent upgrade of its train network, and more.
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Subscribe to the Business Brief on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.
PHOTO OF THE DAY
Tending to the flowers
A worker waters the flowers and plants in front of the local government building in Qingdao, Shandong Province, on National Day on October 1. In the background, the Chinese propaganda characters can be translated as โ[Xi Jinping] Thought on Socialism With Chinese Characteristics for a New Eraโ and โStriving for the Great Rejuvenation of the Chinese Dream.โ Photo taken by Daniel Hinks.