The censorship capital of China
Dear Access members:
First, a new online resource: The Committee, from the Paulson Instituteโs MacroPolo project. Itโs an interactive database that contains bilingual biographical data for all 375 members of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party.
Second, two events:
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The China Institute is hosting its Executive Summit on April 11, from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m., in New York with this theme: The next U.S.-China frontier: Technology, disruption and social innovation. Use the promo code โCIPartnerโ to receive a $30 discount on regular tickets.
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If youโre in New York on April 3, please join me and Kaiser Kuo for a special live taping of the Sinica Podcast with Howard W. French of Columbia University. French is a career foreign correspondent and the author of five books, including three works of nonfiction, a work of documentary photography, and a forthcoming memoir of his life in journalism. Access members get in free. Details here.
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief
1. The internet censorship capital of China
The city of Jinan in Shandong Province was somewhat late to capitalize on the astronomical growth in the digital media business, but it has finally carved out an unconventional niche as Chinaโs internet censorship capital.
Writing on Journalistโs Station (่ฎฐ่ ็ซ jรฌzhฤ zhร n), a WeChat public account focusing on the Chinese media industry, Lฤi Zว ็ฃๅญ reports (in Chinese) that People.cn, the internet arm of the Partyโs official mouthpiece, the Peopleโs Daily, has decided to make Jinan home to an information technology company affiliated with it. Local newspapers reported that the firmโs establishment is part of a โstrategic cooperation agreementโ made between the local government and the Peopleโs Daily, which hopes to cultivate a grand army of internet censors in the city. In return, Jinan offered a number of incentives, including cheap office space.
Journalistโs Station notes that People.cn is not the first media platform to locate its team of web censors in Jinan. Beijing-based news aggregator Yฤซdiวn Zฤซxรนn ไธ็น่ต่ฎฏ, New York-listed Phoenix New Media, and online content recommendation platform Zuรฌyรฒu ๆๅณ all earlier chose to move their censorship departments to the city. Because of this, Jinan is already home to over 5,000 internet censors, according to Journalistโs Station.
Please click through to The China Project for a longer version of this story.
โJiayun Feng
2. Professor Xu Zhangrun relieved of teaching duties and salary ย
In our 2018โ2019 Red Paper (free for Access members at this link), we noted:
The increasing authoritarianism of Xiโs rule drew few public high-profile criticisms within China. The most notable (in Chinese) was written by Xว Zhฤngrรนn ่ฎธ็ซ ๆถฆ, a law professor at Tsinghua University in Beijing, on July 24. In a long essay full of literary allusions, Xu described an โuncertainty about the direction of the countryโ that was rising to the level of panic under Xi, and directly called on Beijing to reverse the term-limit decision.
The scholar Geremie R. Barmรฉ, who worked on a detailed translation of Xuโs essay, called it โa challenge from the cultural heart of China to the political heart of the Communist Party.โ Barmรฉ predicted that its message will โresonate deeply throughout the Chinese party-state system, as well as within the society and among concerned citizens more broadly.โ Many overseas China-watchers commented that this essay might come to be seen as the peak of the Xi Jinping cult.
Yesterday the grimly predictable happened. Xu has been punished with a suspension, and is now under investigation by Tsinghua University authorities. Chris Buckley of the New York Times reports (porous paywall):
In a series of mobile phone messages, Professor Xu said that several Tsinghua University officials ordered him on Monday to stop all teaching and research and told him his pay would be cut drastically. He said a university โwork teamโ would investigate him, focusing on the essays he had written since July.
He said he was questioned for one and a half hours by the officials.
โI donโt know what theyโll do next,โ he said. โIโve been mentally preparing for this for a long time. At the worst, I could end up in prison.โ
Further reading
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Chinese academic stopped from teaching after criticising party leadership / FT (paywall)
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Other essays by Zhang translated by Geremie Barmรฉ:
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ๅชๆๅญฆ่ ไธ่กจ่พพ๏ผ / FT Chinese
A short essay in support of Xu by his friend and colleague Guล Yรบhuรก ้ญไบๅ.
โJeremy Goldkorn
3. EU lets member states decide on Huawei
Per Bloomberg (porous paywall), the European Union decided today against issuing a bloc-wide policy on 5G technology, at least for now, despite U.S. pressure to ban Huawei equipment. Instead, the European Commission โgave member states until July 15 to report back after carrying out risk assessments of 5G network infrastructure in their individual countries.โ The EU will then decide on any bloc-wide policies โby the end of December.โ
European Security Commissioner Julian King said at a press conference:
Weโre not talking about bans today, what weโre talking about is a process that will be based on a thorough analysis of the risks and vulnerabilities.
Bloomberg adds:
No European countries currently have Huawei bans in the works. Germany and France have proposed tighter security rules for data networks rather than outlawing Huawei, while the U.K.โs spy chief has indicated that a ban is unlikely.
Other Huawei news:
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Huaweiโs revenue is soaring, according to the companyโs rotating chairman, Eric Xu, who โaffirmed that Huawei’s revenue jumped 36 percent over the first two months of 2019 and was set for a 15 percent annual spike to US$125 billion,โ according to Reuters. The company just unveiled its P30 Pro smartphone, which aims โto take on Samsung’s Galaxy S10 and Apple’s iPhone X,โ at an event in Paris, Reuters separately reports.
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More canola from Canada is being turned away at the Chinese border, Reuters reports via Global News. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is reportedly considering sending a high-level delegation to Beijing over the canola dispute, which began early this month days after Canada approved extradition proceedings for Huawei CFO Mรจng Wวnzhลu ๅญๆ่.
A few more links:
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Pentagon eyeing 5G solutions with Huawei rivals Ericsson and Nokia: official / Reuters
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US firms register as foreign agents of embattled Chinese telecom giant Huawei / Open Secrets
Huawei โhas signed contracts with two public relations firms, Racepoint Global and Burson Cohn and Wolfe (BCW), to head its U.S. foreign influence campaign, according to Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) filings.โ -
Even Huaweiโs CFO wouldn’t carry Huawei products, opting for Apple instead / 9to5Mac
โMeng had been passing through Vancouver Airport with an iPhone 7 Plus, a MacBook Air, and an iPad Pro, according to a report from Bloomberg, which had found the detail in court filingsโฆ In fairness, there was one Huawei device among her possessions: the latest P20 mobile phone with the Porsche design.โ
โLucas Niewenhuis
4. Other notes from the U.S.-China trade war, day 264
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โChina could increase U.S. pork imports to the highest ever this year as part of its commitment to bolster purchases of American farm goods to resolve the trade war between the two countries,โ reports Bloomberg (porous paywall).
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U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer spoke to NPR ahead of his return to China for continued trade talks.
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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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Tech winter
Wave of layoffs washes over China’s tech giants / Nikkei Asian Review
โChina’s information technology companies, among the most sought-after workplaces for the country’s top talent, are rushing to streamline their workforces as the nation’s economy slows. Shockwaves rippled throughout China’s tech sector when news broke Tuesday that Tencent Holdings will demote 10 percent of middle managers for falling short of expectations.โ -
Health and fitness apps
From online doctors to counting steps: Top 5 Chinese health & fitness apps / What’s on Weibo
A review of popular fitness and health apps, from a menstruation tracker to mobile doctor consultations. -
Insurance startups
Two listed companies eye separate insurance start-ups / Asia Insurance Review
โHainan Haiqi Transportation Group and Chengdu Haoneng Technology, both of which are listed on the Shanghai stock exchangeโฆannounced separately that they plan to establish insurance companies, to be called Haijin Property Insurance and Western Agricultural Insurance respectively.โ -
Electric vehicles
China scales back EV subsidies / Seeking Alpha
โThe Chinese government says it will lower the highest subsidy for new energy vehicles by 50 percent as part of a plan to scale back completely after 2020.โ
Teslaโs Gigafactory 3 buildout hits overdrive as Chinaโs workforce mobilizes 24/7 / Teslarati
โAt this point, there is no doubt that Gigafactory 3โs construction is hitting overdrive, and Chinaโs formidable construction workforce is being mobilized fully.โ -
Australian companies still have China dreams
Australian companies to invest more in China despite short-term jitters / Australian Financial Review (paywall)
โAustralian companies in China are less upbeat about their operations in the country than they were a year agoโฆ However, long-term sentiment towards China was largely unchanged, with 81.5 percent of companies positive about their China operations over the next five years, which was a 1.5 percent reduction on last year.โ -
The trade in human poop
Got poop? Guangzhou hospitals will pay you for it / Thatโs Guangzhou
โAccording to Toutiao News, multiple hospitals in Guangdongโs capital city are accepting โpoop donations,โ with successful donors eligible to receive up to RMB500 in compensation for each contributionโฆ [Hospitals] transplant the bacteria to help โrebuild patientsโ gut floraโ in order to heal them.โ
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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Xinjiang concentration camps
Xinjiang needs to ‘perfect’ stability measures, top China leader says / Reuters
โXinjiang needs to โperfectโ stability maintenance measures and crack down on religious extremism, the ruling Communist Partyโs fourth-ranked leader said on a tour of the troubled region where China is running a controversial de-radicalization program.โ
Muslim group: return $2m from China / Newsroom (New Zealand)
โA massive donation for Christchurch shooting victims, raised by international associates of controversial businessman Zhฤng Yวkลซn ๅผ ไนๅค, should be returned, an Islamic group saysโฆ The Khadija Leadership Network is calling for the donation to be returned, and instead be channeled into helping the persecuted Uighur people in China.โ -
Lu Wei gets 14 years behind bars ย
Chinaโs former internet tsar Lu Wei jailed for 14 years for bribery / SCMP
The oleaginous Lว Wฤi ้ฒ็, former head of the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), who was felled by a corruption investigation last year in November, โwas sentenced to 14 years in prison for accepting bribes and fined 3 million yuan ($447,000) on Tuesday.โ He will not appeal. -
Filipino case against Xi for crimes against humanity
In Philippines, support mounts for South China Sea โcrimes against humanityโ case against Xi Jinping / SCMP
โMore than 25,000 people have signed a statement of support for former foreign secretary Albert del Rosario and former Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales, who want the International Criminal Court to examine whether China has carried out โcrimes against humanity.โโ -
China in the Middle East
China’s growing presence in the Gulf / East Asia Forum
Jonathan Fulton writes:
In February 2019 Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia Mohammad bin Salman paid a much-publicized visit to China where 35 memorandums of understanding were signed, including an oil deal worth a reported US$10 billion.
Some saw this as a reflection of worsening USโSaudi ties in the wake of the Jamal Khashoggi murder in 2018. It is actually part of a growing bilateral relationship between China and Saudi Arabia that has been deepening since diplomatic relations began in 1990. This in turn is part of Chinaโs growing relations with the other Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) member states: Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
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Roads in Moldova
Chinese contractors in talks to build two highways in Moldova, extending Chinaโs infrastructure order book in Eastern Europe / SCMP
โThe two highways will run a combined length of 300km, and will cost an estimated US$400 million.
โFinancing for the two projects may take two options: wholly funded by China, or split between China and Moldova 85:15.
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Hong Kong extradition agreement
Hong Kong scraps 9 types of commercial crimes from China extradition plan amid pressure from business sector / Hong Kong Free Press
The Hong Kong government has announced that nine types of commercial crime will be excluded from the upcoming update to the cityโs extradition laws. The new plan will allow Hong Kong to handle extradition requests from places such as mainland China and Taiwan. The business sector had voiced concern about the governmentโs proposal , fearing those accused of commercial crimes could be extradited to the mainland. They said that violent crimes should be handled first, and commercial crimes removed.
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The Vaticanโs deal with Beijing
Vatican China negotiator reveals decades-long path to deal / Crux
โThe Vatican official who negotiated a landmark agreement between the Holy See and China on bishop nominations said Monday that the path to normalizing Catholic life in the country โis still longโ but that a new future is now possible.โ
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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Homeschooling parents to be punished โ Ministry of Education ย
Guideline threatens punishment against home-schooling parents / Sixth Tone
โTaking children out of school for home schooling or to admit them to facilities such as sฤซshรบ ็งๅกพ โ which focus on teaching Chinaโs literary classics โ is illegal under current law, the [Ministry of Education] emphasized in a set of guidelines [in Chinese] published Monday.โ -
Facial recognition in schools
Camera above the classroom / Sixth Tone ย
โWhile advocates claim that using facial recognition to monitor studentsโ in-class behavior can accurately assess attention levels and help them learn more efficiently, most students I spoke with had a different opinion.โ -
Sexual assault and kidnapping
Taxi driver in China arrested for kidnapping teenage girl and holding her as sex slave / SCMP
โA man in his 50s has been arrested in central Hunan Province in China for kidnapping a teenage girl, then keeping her as a sex slave in a home-made dungeon for 24 days.โ -
Elephants running amok
Elephant in ‘bad mood’ joins commute in Chinese town / BBC
โThe animal wrecked several cars in [the city of Mengโa in Yunnan Province] after being forced out of its herd.โ
VIDEO ON SUPCHINA
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Take your after-dinner exercise to the next level
Going for a walk after dinner is a habit that many Chinese practice to stay healthy. Some also like to do light exercises such as dancing or rope jumping. The second can sound a little dull, but these guys pour creativity into their moves, making their after-dinner exercise almost a performance!
SINICA PODCAST NETWORK
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, episode 81
This week on the Caixin-Sinica Business Brief: the ongoing trade war talks between U.S. and Chinese officials, an explosion at a chemical plant in eastern China, the development of the so-called Jing-Jin-Ji ไบฌๆดฅๅ cluster, and more.
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Subscribe to the Business Brief on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher.
PHOTO OF THE DAY
Tattoo work
A young man gets inked at a tattoo studio in Rizhao, Shandong Province. Once regarded as taboo in China, as they were associated with prisoners, vagrants, and the criminal underworld, tattoos have become more socially acceptable over the last decade. Photo by Daniel Hinks.