Beijing bans Cathay Pacific flight crew who protest from Chinese airspace

Access Archive

Dear Access member,

Have a great weekend!ย 

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn and team


1. Beijing bans Cathay Pacific flight crew who protest from Chinese airspaceย 

โ€œHong Kong is bracing for another potentially chaotic weekend, with more anti-government protests expected despite police banning four planned marches over the high risk of violence,โ€ says the South China Morning Post. If youโ€™re going through the airport, be prepared for delays.

Meanwhile, today Beijing revealed a new strategy to sanction people and companies that participate in protests: โ€œBeijing has ordered Cathay Pacific to stop aircrew who joined or supported illegal anti-government protests in Hong Kong from operating flights to mainland China or using Chinese airspace, firing its first warning shot at the cityโ€™s corporate giants,โ€ reports the South China Morning Post.ย 

In a statement [in Chinese] issued on Friday night, the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) told Hong Kongโ€™s flagship carrier that from Saturday, staff who had taken part in โ€œillegal protests,โ€ โ€œviolent actionsโ€ and โ€œoverly radical activitiesโ€ in the city would not be allowed to fly to or from the mainland.

The regulator also made it clear that from Sunday the airline would have to submit identification details of all aircrew operating all services using mainland airspace.

Flights that did not have CAAC-approved crew lists would not be allowed to use Chinese airspace, it said.

That rules out pretty much every westbound flight for crew who get blacklisted.ย 

Other developments in Hong Kong:

BLAMING FOREIGN โ€œBLACK HANDSโ€ย 

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday: For the sixth consecutive day, Party paper the Peopleโ€™s Daily has a front-page opinion piece (in Chinese) about Hong Kong in tomorrowโ€™s edition of the newspaper, titled โ€œThe interference of foreign forces is a disaster for Hong Kong society.โ€

The piece is both an indication of the levels of alarm in Beijing, and a doubling down on the Partyโ€™s favorite explanation for the protests: foreign โ€œblack handsโ€ (้ป‘ๆ‰‹ hฤ“ishว’u) working behind the scenes. For more on this, see yesterdayโ€™s newsletter, or the following updates:ย 

  • โ€œChinaโ€™s escalating claims of covert U.S. interference in Hong Kong are not so much warnings at Washington but classic United Front tactics aimed at HK and domestic audiences analysts say,โ€ tweeted reporter Gerry Shih about his article China leaks U.S. diplomatโ€™s personal information in Hong Kong as protesters flood into airport in the Washington Post.

  • โ€œChina on Friday hit back at the United States, accusing Washington of applying โ€˜gangster logicโ€™ after an official described Beijing as a โ€˜thuggish regime,โ€™ for leaking the personal details of a Hong Kongโ€“based U.S. diplomat to a pro-Beijing newspaper,โ€ reports the South China Morning Post. โ€œGangster logic,โ€ per the Peopleโ€™s Daily, is ๅผบ็›—้€ป่พ‘ qiรกngdร o luรณjรญ.

  • โ€œThe Auckland office of China’s Consulate General has lodged a stern warning to New Zealand and other foreign nations against turning Hong Kong into a pawn to curb China,โ€ according to the New Zealand Herald.ย 

SQUEEZING TAIWAN FILM AWARDS AND HONG KONG ACTORSย 

Following Beijingโ€™s boycott of Taiwanโ€™s Golden Horse Film Awards, organizers of the Golden Rooster Awards, Chinaโ€™s equivalent of the Golden Horse Awards, announced that this yearโ€™s event will be held in Xiamen, a city on the mainland side of the Taiwan Strait, on November 19โ€“23, clashing with the Golden Horse Awards ceremony on November 23. The South China Morning Post reports:

The boycott has created a dilemma for Hong Kong filmmakers and stars, who must now make a choice between competing for a Golden Horse or a Golden Rooster โ€” and face the political and commercial ramifications.

Taiwanese news website Line Today reported that Hong Kong film production companies had been warned by Beijing that films canโ€™t go on release in China if they apply for the Golden Horse Awards. Hong Kong stars who attended the event would be put on a watch list, it quoted Beijing as telling them.

CHINESE CITIZEN REACTIONS

โ€œAlthough discussions on the Hong Kong protests were initially silenced on Chinese social media, the demonstrations are now trending all over Weibo,โ€ according to Whatโ€™s on Weibo. State media is โ€œpropagating hashtags and illustrations in favor of Hong Kong government and in support of the Hong Kong Police Force,โ€ which Chinese internet users are enthusiastically sharing.ย 

2. ErdoฤŸan collects his payment

Despite decades of quiet support for Uyghur causes, in recent years, Turkey has never seemed able to make up its mind whether to firmly stand with the Uyghurs, whom Turks consider their kin, or whether to sweep their current existential cultural crisis under the rug โ€” in favor of better ties with Beijing.

On July 2, Turkish president Recep Tayyip ErdoฤŸan visited China. During a meeting with Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟ‘ๅนณ, state media reported that ErdoฤŸan said that โ€œresidents of various ethnicities living happily in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region thanks to Chinaโ€™s prosperity is a hard fact, and Turkey will not allow anyone to drive a wedge in its relations with China.โ€

ErdoฤŸan seems to have collected his reward. Bloomberg reports (porous paywall):ย 

Chinaโ€™s central bank transferred $1 billion worth of funds to Turkey in June, Beijingโ€™s biggest support package ever for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan delivered at a critical time in an election month. The inflow marks the first time Turkey received such a substantial amount under the lira-yuan swap agreement with Beijing that dates back to 2012.

3. Trade war weaponsย ย 

Weโ€™ve been calling it a โ€œtrade warโ€ since July 6, 2018, but a year ago, economists surveyed by the Wall Street Journal were evenly split as to whether to use this word for U.S.-China trade tensions. In a new survey (paywall), 87 percent of respondents are happy with the term.ย 

Here are todayโ€™s reports:ย 

COMPARING U.S. AND CHINESE LEVERAGE

Bloomberg says (porous paywall) that โ€œwhile President Donald Trump has fired two large weapons in the past week by green-lighting his biggest swathe of tariffs yet and formally branding China a currency manipulator, his arsenal is far from exhausted.โ€ย 

His noisiest if not most effective weapon โ€œmay be the one that he increasingly appears focused on: weaponizing the dollar, the worldโ€™s reserve currency.โ€ Meanwhile, Chinaโ€™s responses are, according to the New York Times (porous paywall), taking shape:ย 

China may turn its currency into a weapon. It has already stopped buying American crops. Its mining industry stands ready to hold back minerals that are crucial to making iPhones and missiles, and its policymakers are openly discussing doing without American trade.

In addition, โ€œChina is expected to dramatically reduce its intake of U.S. crude imports over the coming weeks, energy analysts have warned, following the latest flare-up in trade war tensions between the worldโ€™s two largest economies,โ€ reports CNBC.ย 

The Chinese central bank, however, appears to be reassuring markets that it will not weaponize the yuan: โ€œSenior Peopleโ€™s Bank of China officials reassured foreign companies that the currency wonโ€™t continue to weaken significantly, after the yuan fell below 7 per dollar for the first time since 2008,โ€ reports Bloomberg (porous paywall). See also this Reuters explainer: How does China manage the yuan, and what is its real value?ย 

HUAWEIย 

โ€œTrump has succeeded. Now lots of Chinese people are buying Huawei phones,โ€ writes Yร shฤ“ng Huรกng ้ป„ไบš็”Ÿ in the New York Times (porous paywall): Trumpโ€™s โ€œmaximum-pressure tactics have delivered no meaningful results โ€” other than undermining the good will of the Chinese public and its liberals toward America.โ€

โ€œThe White House is holding off on a decision about licenses for U.S. companies to restart business with Huawei Technologies after Beijing said it was halting purchases of US farming goods,โ€ reports the South China Morning Post.

Back in China, Huawei officially unveiled a self-developed operating system (OS). If the OS works, it would be a major step in Huaweiโ€™s new quest to become independent of American technology. However, as The Verge notes, โ€œthe extent to which it would be able to act as a substitute for Android is unclear.โ€

Finally, Huawei โ€œsaid it was seeking compensation from its contract manufacturer Flex Ltd for illegally withholding some 400 million yuan ($57 million) worth of its goods in the wake of a U.S. trade ban on the Chinese firm,โ€ according to Reuters.ย 

4. A sensible policy on opioids

The first time I went to a dentist after moving to America from China, I was shocked to be prescribed 30 oxycodone tablets after a relatively minor procedure.ย 

Hereโ€™s a policy that the U.S. could consider copying from China. Sixth Tone reports (links below in Chinese):

Amid a concerning trend of opioid addiction cases in China,the countryโ€™s National Medical Products Administration announcedโ€ฆthat medication containing up to 5 milligrams per unit of the painkiller oxycodone will be upgraded to a Category II psychotropic drug beginning next month.

Doctors may only prescribe Category II drugs for a week at a time, according to a report Thursday from financial news outlet Jiemian that quoted an official from the Chinese Association of Drug Abuse Prevention and Treatment. Only vendors approved by provincial-level governments can sell Category II psychotropic drugs, and under current regulations, doctors are required to keep records of any prescriptions for such drugs for at least two years.

5. Xiโ€™s hot words about garbage and North Korea

Today, Xinhua News Agencyโ€™s top stories in English and Chinese are a return to one of the regular themes of Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟ‘ๅนณ: โ€œthe need to improve community-level healthcare services, promote equitable access to basic public services in urban and rural areas and provide safe, effective, convenient and affordable public health and basic healthcare services for the people.โ€ย ย 

The Peopleโ€™s Daily leads with a story (in Chinese) titled โ€œWhat words did Xi Jinping popularize in the first half of 2019?โ€ There are 15 words. Here are a few of the most interesting ones:

Garbage sorting

ๅžƒๅœพๅˆ†็ฑป lฤjฤซ fฤ“nlรจi

Xi is determined to get China to sort its garbage. Itโ€™s actually happening in Shanghai, where new rules are forcing residents and companies to change their waste disposal habits.ย 

Reduce the burden on the grassroots; we will not withdraw troops until we have achieved absolute victoryย 

ๅŸบๅฑ‚ๅ‡่ดŸ jฤซcรฉng jiวŽnfรน; ไธ่Žทๅ…จ่ƒœใ€ๅ†ณไธๆ”ถๅ…ต bรน huรฒ quรกn shรจng, juรฉ bรน shลubฤซng

These are two separate phrases in the Peopleโ€™s Dailyโ€™s list, but they are both connected to one of Xiโ€™s major projects: poverty alleviation.ย 

I am willing to negate myself in devotion to the people

ๆˆ‘ๅฐ†ๆ— ๆˆ‘๏ผŒไธ่ดŸไบบๆฐ‘ wว’ jiฤng wรบ wว’, bรน fรน rรฉnmรญn

Annata, the Buddhist concept of โ€œnon-self,โ€ is ๆ— ๆˆ‘ wรบ wว’ in Chinese. Itโ€™s rather amusing for a man running a propaganda operation resembling a personality cult to claim he is โ€œselfless.โ€

Gold does not change with the passing of time

ๅŽ†ไน…ๅผฅๅš้‡‘ไธๆข lรฌjiว” mรญ jiฤn jฤซn bรนhuร n

When he met North Korea leader Kim Jong-un in June, Xi praised the long friendship between the two countries as being as constant as gold.ย 

Black swans and gray rhinosย 

้ป‘ๅคฉ้น… hฤ“i tiฤn’รฉ ็ฐ็Š€็‰› huฤซ xฤซniรบ

In a January speech, Xi warned of heightened risks to the economy. Black swans are risks that are completely unpredictable. โ€œGray rhinocerosโ€ comes from a book about large and obvious โ€œdangers we ignoreโ€ until they start running too fast, or, as a Peopleโ€™s Daily explainer (in Chinese) puts it: โ€œA gray rhino is massive, and responds slowly โ€” you can see it clearly in the distance, but if it charges you, it will catch you off guard and gore you.โ€

Donโ€™t forget the Partyโ€™s original aspirations and firmly remember your mission

ไธๅฟ˜ๅˆๅฟƒใ€็‰ข่ฎฐไฝฟๅ‘ฝ bรน wร ng chลซxฤซn, lรกojรฌ shวmรฌng

Respected Zhongnanhai scholar and tea leaf reader Willy Wo-Lap Lam (ๆž—ๅ’Œ็ซ‹ Lรญn Hรฉlรฌ) recently wrote about this slogan:

However, the calls for professing allegiance to the Party and reinstating its chuxin may be a cynical way for Xi to demand further loyalty to himself. As Xi stated in a Politburo study session in mid-2018, โ€œ[I]n upholding party leadership, the most important thing is to safeguard the authority of the party central authorities (ไธญๅคฎ, Zhลngyฤng) and to concentrate and unify leadership [at the top].โ€

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief


Here are the stories that caught our eye this week:

  • The U.S.-China techno-trade war is spinning out of control. Here is a brief summary of what has happened in the past week, since Donald Trump on August 1 announced another tariff escalation (reportedly without first consulting his trade representative, Robert Lighthizer):

    • China allowed the yuan to depreciate past the psychologically significant seven-to-the-dollar level. It was not currency manipulation โ€” the move brought the yuanโ€™s value closer, not farther away, to what economists consider its true value โ€” but the Trump administration nonetheless took the opportunity to officially label China a currency manipulator. This is best interpreted as a political messaging move, with few significant policy implications.ย 

    • China canceled purchases of soybeans and other crops that Trump had earlier cheered plans for.ย 

    • American farmers say they are suffering under the weight of tariffs and the now seemingly permanent reduction in access to the Chinese market.ย 

    • A global recession as a result of Trumpโ€™s inability to resolve the trade war now seems possible: Lawrence Summers, the Harvard economist who served as the director of the National Economic Council during the first Obama administration, said, โ€œWe may well be at the most dangerous financial moment since the 2009 Financial Crisis.โ€

    • Chinese exports increased due to growth in shipments to Southeast Asia and the European Union markets, as China signaled it may continue to allow the yuan to weaken.ย 

  • Hong Kong protestors have not given up, as a general strike on August 5 attended by thousands of workers escalated into city-wide clashes with police. Anxiety in Beijing over the turmoil in Hong Kong is extraordinarily high, as indicated by these signals:

    • Six consecutive front-page Peopleโ€™s Daily commentaries, starting on August 5, that communicated support for the Hong Kong police, support for the Chief Executive Carrie Lam, a defense of Beijingโ€™s interpretation of โ€œOne Country, Two Systems,โ€ an exhortation to patriotism, a plea to return to โ€œstability and prosperity,โ€ and a condemnation of โ€œinterference of foreign forcesโ€ that Beijing blames for the unrest.ย 

    • A statement by Yรกng Guฤng ๆจๅ…‰, a spokesperson for the Chinese governmentโ€™s Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office, on August 6 that blamed โ€œblack handsโ€ for whipping up trouble and warned the protestors, โ€œPlay with fire, youโ€™ll get burnedโ€ (็Žฉ็ซ่€…ๅฟ…่‡ช็„š wรกnhuว’zhฤ› bรฌ zรฌfรฉn).ย 

    • A drill by 12,000 police officers in neighboring Shenzhen on August 6.ย 

    • A statement by Zhฤng XiวŽomรญng ๅผ ๆ™“ๆ˜Ž, the top official at the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office, that compared the events in Hong Kong to a โ€œcolor revolutionโ€ on August 7.

    • A conspiracy theory, now widely propagated by Chinese government statements and state media reports, that American diplomats and CIA โ€œblack handsโ€ are behind the unrest.ย 

  • Some Hong Kongers do have hope, still. A notable example of this is Cheah Cheng Hye (่ฌๆธ…ๆตท Xiรจ QฤซnghวŽi), an enormously successful hedge fund manager and certainly part of the cityโ€™s elite, who wrote an op-ed to urge โ€œbadly needed political reformโ€ as the correct response to the protests.ย 

  • China criticized Indiaโ€™s decision to unilaterally revoke the autonomous status of Jammu and Kashmir, the Indian-contolled section of disputed territory that borders Pakistan-controlled Gilgit-Baltistan. One section of the territory in question happens to share a border with China.ย 

  • New Zealand called on China to respect free speech, after China’s consulate general in Auckland released a statement praising the โ€œspontaneous patriotismโ€ of pro-Beijing students who reportedly manhandled a Hong Kong-supporting protester at a demonstration at the University of Auckland. It could be part of a shift in the Kiwi government toward a harder line on China.ย 

  • Positive news for the Chinese LGBT community: More and more same-sex couples of all age ranges in China are naming their partners as their legal guardians, Weibo users overwhelmingly welcomed Budweiser packaging featuring same-sex couples for Chinese Valentineโ€™s Day or Qฤซxรฌ ไธƒๅค•, and on August 8, the Beijing Guoxin public notary office announced that it had approved the first legal guardianship in northern China for a same-sex couple.

  • The Canadian government appears to be too timid to confidently challenge China on the arbitrary detention of two Canadians, Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, judging by recent government statements.ย 

  • The Partyโ€™s policing of cartological political correctness has reached new extremes, as a top propaganda official said that censors had to stay alert โ€œevery secondโ€ to make sure content in cartoons and documentaries supported the leadership of President Xi Jinping, and Chinese television drama Go Go Squid! was investigated after showing a map that did not show Taiwan and Hainan Island as part of China.ย 

  • China cut gasoline prices for the fifth time this year. Gas costs about $4 a gallon in China, whereas in the U.S., it currently costs $3 a gallon, and in Germany, about $6 a gallon.ย 

  • A Uyghur man stuck in Qatar fearing deportation to China arrived in the U.S. on August 6.ย 

  • Some Western scholars, institutions, and companies are complicit in the racial profiling of Uyghurs and others in China. An article in Coda revealed how institutions like Imperial College London and companies like Microsoft had collaborated with culpable Chinese companies on facial recognition and other artificial intelligence technologies.ย 

  • A rare plea for rule of law was published in Chinese by The Paper, and in English by its sister news site Sixth Tone.ย 


BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:

According to the documents, the teenagers โ€” drafted in from schools and technical colleges in and around the central southern city of Hengyang โ€” are classified as โ€œinterns,โ€ and their teachers are paid by the factory to accompany them. Teachers are asked to encourage uncooperative pupils to accept overtime work on top of regular shifts.

Bloomberg reports that Foxconn has taken action against the plant, firing the plantโ€™s chief and head of human resources, while also punishing some managers involved.

Charging elderly clients just 1 yuan or about 15 cents a day, little-known Lanchuang Network Technology Corp has embarked on one of the most ambitious undertakings in aged care by a private sector firm in China.ย 

Provided with a setup box, a webcam paired with a TV set and โ€œXiaoyi,โ€ a Siri-like voice assistant, customers gain access to telemedicine and an SOS system as well as for-pay services that include housekeeping and meal deliveries.

A small robot that can ring up a medical center in response to verbal calls for help costs an extra 2 yuan per day.

Launched just four months ago, Lanchuangโ€™s smart care system has already signed up 220,000 elderly clients in 16 cities, half of which are in Shandong, a rapidly aging province in eastern China where the company is based.

  • Food prices up 9 percent
    July 2019 producer prices PPI and consumer price index CPI / CNBC
    Chinaโ€™s Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 2.8 percent over the last year, buoyed in large part by rising prices for food (up 9.1 percent). Meanwhile, Chinaโ€™s Producer Price Index (PPI) โ€” which gauges corporate profitability and industrial demand โ€” fell by 0.3 percent, the first contraction since 2016. The data, according to CNBC, adds โ€œto concerns of deflationary risks in the worldโ€™s second largest economy.โ€
    According to an analysis by the Wall Street Journal (paywall), these signs of deflation pose a problem for Chinaโ€™s central bank on the best way to proceed:

It could loosen monetary policy in a bid to stimulate demand and lift producer prices out of deflation, but a massive stimulus program would risk pushing consumer inflation higher and causing the property market to overheat, economists say.

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. President Michael Evans is among 17 current and former Goldman Sachs directors facing criminal charges over their alleged role in $6.5 billion of bond sales by 1MDB.

Evans, the international face of Chinaโ€™s e-commerce leader, was among a group of individuals who served as directors at three Goldman units Malaysia accused of misleading investors when arranging deals for 1MDB.ย ย 

Tencent Holdings Ltd. is teaming up with the Chinese Communist Party apparatus to develop โ€œpatrioticโ€ video games, edging closer to a government thatโ€™s increasingly intolerant of gaming.

In Homeland Dream, which was developed in partnership with Party mouthpiece the Peopleโ€™s Daily, players simulate building a city while alleviating poverty and executing tax breaks. Such actions are meant to echo real-life policies in China. Other political buzzwords such as President Xi Jinpingโ€™s Belt and Road Initiative also feature.

The second title โ€” Story of My Home โ€” is still under development in collaboration with the publicity department of the Guangdong government, Tencentโ€™s home province. The Chinese technology giant revealed the collaborations at ChinaJoy, the countryโ€™s largest gaming expo, in Shanghai last week.

The games โ€œwill focus on the accomplishments of our countryโ€™s development in the new era, as well as the lives of ordinary people,โ€ Tencent Senior Vice President Steven Ma said during a speech at ChinaJoy.

SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND THE ENVIRONMENT:ย 

  • Panda alert!
    Rare giant panda twins born at Belgian zoo / Reuters via CNA
    โ€œGiant panda twins born at a zoo in Belgium on Thursday face a precarious first few days, but the โ€˜extremely rareโ€™ birth still bodes well for the vulnerable species, the Pairi Daiza zoo announced.โ€

POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:

  • Beijing pays for positive coverage in Taiwanese media
    Beijing woos Taiwan hearts and minds with ‘paid’ news / SCMP
    โ€œMainland authorities have paid at least five Taiwanese media groups for coverage in various publications and on television, in an effort to win hearts and minds on the self-ruled island as part of Beijingโ€™s reunification agendaโ€ฆ. Reuters is withholding the names of the media groups at the request of the former and current employees who provided documents.โ€ย 

  • Beijing influence Down Under
    China’s influence on campus chills free speech in Australia, New Zealand / Washington Post
    A comprehensive roundup of the intensifying problems at universities Down Under where the large numbers of mainland Chinese students are clashing with their classmates and threatening free speech, often egged on by their embassies and consulates.ย ย 

  • Loyalty crackdown in Tibet
    China raises reward for informants in Tibet / Radio Free Asia

Chinese authorities in Tibet are offering large cash rewards to informants in a bid to stamp out online activities considered threatening to Beijingโ€™s control over the restive Himalayan region, with amounts paid out now tripled over amounts offered last year, sources say. Rewards of 300,000 yuan ($42,582) are now being promised for information leading to the arrests of social-media users deemed disloyal to China.

SOCIETY AND CULTURE:

  • A sad story about adoption with a happy ending
    One is Chinese. One is American. How a journalist discovered and reunited identical twins / Los Angeles Times
    In 2009, Beijing-based journalist Barbara Demick traveled around rural China investigating the origin of Chinese girls who were put up for adoption by foreign families in large numbers in the 1990s through to 2005, when China changed its adoption policies.
    During her research, Demick met a family in Hunan who had twin daughters, one of whom was taken away by family planning officials and later adopted by an American family. This tear-jerking article and accompanying video are about their eventual reunion at the age of 19.ย 

  • Orphans in China
    How China can improve the lives of its state-supported orphans / Sixth Tone
    โ€œThere are 68,000 parentless children living in Chinaโ€™s welfare homes, 20 percent of them over the age of 16,โ€ according to government stats (in Chinese):

Chinaโ€™s welfare system for orphans, which is largely a holdover from the Maoist period, was designed to cover their living and health care expenses from the cradle to the grave. Since the marketization reforms of the 1980s and โ€™90s, however, it has become a kind of poverty trap.


FEATURED ON SUPCHINA

Click Here

Mainland Chinese opinions of Hong Kong’s summer of discontent

What do people in mainland China know about the protests, and what do they think?

Opinion: In defense of the Yenching Academy

Ethan Paul, a current student at Yenching Academy, responds to NPR’s report last week that the FBI is targeting his classmates for questioning.ย 

Project Gutenberg is a fun, wild ride with a divisive final twist

Almost a year after it hit Chinese theaters and grossed more than $150 million, the crime-thriller Project Gutenberg ๆ— ๅŒ is now available to stream on Amazon Video.ย ย 

‘This isn’t a sex tour’: Inside China’s cross-cultural bride-finding industry

A Foreign Affair is an American company that organizes trips to China for men looking to meet Chinese women, provided they’re serious about marriage.

How China regulates foreign NGOs

Foreign groups have to jump through many, many hoops to operate in China. Why did Beijing change the laws regulating foreign NGOs in 2017?

Uyghur love in a time of interethnic marriage

Darren Byler writes on the notable rise since 2018 of propaganda promoting marriage between Han men and Uyghur women.ย 

Hip-hop label shuts down after rapper chops off fingertip in live stream

HHH, one of Chinaโ€™s most prominent hip-hop record labels, has shut down its operations after one of its artists cut off the tip of his pinky finger during a live stream.

Kuora: Chinese opinions on Hiroshima and Nagasaki

Kaiser Kuo writes that on balance, Chinese don’t have qualms about the use of the atomic bomb by the U.S. to compel a Japanese surrender, and believe it was necessary.ย 


SINICA PODCAST NETWORK

Click Here

Sinica Podcast: Wealth and Power with Orville Schell

Veteran journalist and China scholar Orville Schell is the Arthur Ross Director of the Center on U.S.-China Relations at Asia Society in New York and formerly served as dean of the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism. In this podcast, hosts Kaiser and David Moser talk to Orville about a book he co-authored, Wealth and Power: Chinaโ€™s Long March to the Twenty-First Century, and the role of select members of the Chinese intelligentsia in the formation of modern China.ย 

Ta for Ta episode 24: Roseann Lake

This week on Ta for Ta, Juliana speaks with Roseann Lake, a journalist with The Economist who is currently covering Cuba and was formerly based in Beijing.ย 

ChinaEconTalk: All about AI, eh?: Researching Chinese tech in Canada

This week on ChinaEconTalk, Jordan speaks with Dongwoo Kim, a postgraduate research fellow at the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada who specializes in AI.


PHOTO OF THE DAY

Click Here

BEไบฌjing No. 15: Balloons

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