No gay marriage but China gets serious about sexual harassment
Dear Access member,
Our word of the day is โsexual harassmentโ: ๆง้ชๆฐ xรฌng sฤorวo.
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief
1. No gay marriage, but sexual harassment law is strengthenedย
โAsked at a news briefing whether China would legalize same-sex marriage, [a spokesperson] for the legal affairs commission of the National Peopleโs Congress โsaid Chinese law only allowed for marriage between one man and one woman,โโ according to Reuters:ย
โThis rule suits our countryโs national condition and historical and cultural traditionsโฆAs far as I know, the vast majority of countries in the world do not recognize the legalization of same-sex marriage.โ
According to the Beijing News (in Chinese), the spokesperson also said that the third draft of Chinaโs Civil Code is being updated after public review. One of the major changes is that sexual harassment was previously defined as only happening in the workplace. The provisions covering sexual harassment are no longer limited to places of employment.ย
It seems the government is taking this seriously: the topic was the subject of the top opinion piece (in Chinese) on the Peopleโs Daily website today.ย
2. Indians call for boycotts and tariffs on Chinese goodsย ย
The South China Morning Post reports:ย
Days after China backed Pakistan and prodded the United Nations Security Council into an informal discussion on New Delhiโs decision to strip Jammu and Kashmir of its autonomy, anger is brewing in India against the Asian dragon.
The Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM), an affiliate of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the Hindu nationalist ideological fountainhead of Indiaโs ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), has launched a campaign across the country asking Indians to shun Chinese products.
The Confederation of All India Traders (CAIT), a nationwide group with over 70 million affiliated businesspeople, has joined in. The group wants Prime Minister Narendra Modi to raise import duties to 500 percent. All this has been backed by a vicious social media campaign.
To see a range of Indian reporting and commentary on this issue, search for Swadeshi Jagran Manch and China.ย
3. Fear and uncertainty in the biomedical community
About 150 prominent biomedical scientists and pharmaceutical industry leaders in the U.S. have signed an open letter opposing recent government actions that have created โa climate of fear and uncertaintyโ amongst Chinese and Chinese-Americans in the biomedical research community.
Meanwhile, Bloomberg reports (porous paywall) that Franklin Tao (้ถไธฐ Tรกo Fฤng), a โUniversity of Kansas researcher was indicted for allegedly hiding that he was working full-time for a Chinese university at the same time he was doing U.S-funded industrial research.โ But as Bloomberg points out, โa web search shows thatโฆhis dual Kansas and China ties are disclosed in at least two U.S.-funded research papers published last year, as well as in several Chinese-language websites easily translatable online.โ
See also The new Yellow Peril?, and our Sinophobia Tracker on The China Project.ย
4. Beijing claims British consul employee arrested for soliciting prostitutes
Yesterday the South China Morning Post reported that Simon Cheng Man-kit (้ๆๆฐ Zhรจng Wรฉnjiรฉ), an employee of the British consulate in Hong Kong, was detained in China โfor breaking the law.โ Today comes this news, not from the police but from the Twitter feed of the editor of the Global Times:
According to police, Simon Cheng, an employee of the British consulate in HK, was detained in Shenzhen for visiting prostitute. Police didn’t contact his family requested by Cheng. Police are willing to help reduce damage to his reputation, UK diplomats and media ruined him.
The story is quite clearly made up: for one thing, the above tweet is actually the source of โdamage to his reputation.โ Additionally, per this tweet from Michael Mo:ย
Getting caught because of prostitution at West Kowloon XRL Station? Either “mile fast club” service available on the train or a lame lie we are used to target political figures.
BTW, how can be it done in a 17-min ride? You must be joking, Peking!
Accusing political enemies of sexual improprieties, particularly visiting prostitutes, is an old Party tactic. See also Family of detained British consulate staffer refutes Chinese state mediaโs prostitution claim from Hong Kong Free Press, and this Twitter thread from scholar Mike Gow.
Chengโs arrest will not reassure Hong Kongers about Beijingโs intentions. According to CNN:
Cheng’s detention is even more symbolic for where it may have taken place: Not at the primary border crossings of Lok Ma Chau and Lo Wu, across from the Chinese city of Shenzhen, but in the heart of Hong Kong.
The high-speed train between Shenzhen and Hong Kong only passes through one immigration checkpoint: West Kowloon station, shared by both China and Hong Kong on the tip of the territory’s northern peninsula. At a demonstration outside the British consulate Wednesday, protesters said Cheng’s apparent arrest was likely one of many, and linked his detention to longstanding fears about the station’s immigration arrangement.
Other news from Hong Kong:ย
โHSBC and Standard Chartered have taken out newspaper adverts in Hong Kong condemning the violence in the Asian financial hub. In the adverts, the banks also called for a peaceful resolution after more than two months of political unrest,โ reports the BBC.ย
Alibaba โhas postponed plans to list its shares on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, according to two people briefed on the matter, as protests continue to rock the Asian financial capitalโ says the New York Times (porous paywall).
Big Four accounting firms KPMG and PwC have sent messages to their Hong Kong staff warning them against speaking in public or on social media about the protests, reports Bloomberg (porous paywall).ย
โCathay Pacific has warned staff their social media content will be heavily scrutinised, and said posts expressing support for anti-government protests in Hong Kong could fall foul of a strict new policy being forced on the airline by the Chinese aviation authority,โ reports the South China Morning Post.
โTwo men have been charged with rioting for alleged participation in the mob attack in Yuen Long, a month after the incident on July 21,โ reports Hong Kong Free Press. 28 people were arrested for attacking protesters, all were granted bail. The two men are the first to be charged.
โHong Kong student leaders on Thursday August 22 announced a two-week boycott of lectures from the upcoming start of term, as they seek to keep protesters on the streets and pressure on the government,โ according to Agence France-Presse.ย
Finally, โexpertsโ from Nepal, Bosnia, the Shanghainese Association of Australia, โhave urged an end to the blatant violence perpetrated by radical demonstrators in Hong Kong and denounced external forces behind the protests,โ says Xinhua News Agency.ย
โJeremy Goldkorn
5. Youtube disables channels on Hong Kong, following Twitterโs lead
Today, Google announced:
Earlier this week, as part of our ongoing efforts to combat coordinated influence operations, we disabled 210 channels on YouTube when we discovered channels in this network behaved in a coordinated manner while uploading videos related to the ongoing protests in Hong Kong. This discovery was consistent with recent observations and actions related to China announced by Facebook and Twitter.
Earlier this week we noted how Twitter and Facebook banned Beijing bots. Twitter is the leading platform when it comes to cracking down on misinformation about Hong Kong: Facebook said it was tipped off on a coordinated state-backed campaign by Twitter, and no other company has yet followed Twitterโs lead in banning state-owned media companies from buying ads.
Other reports on propaganda on Youtube, Facebook, and Twitter:
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YouTube pressured to ban Chinese state media ads that spread misinformation about protesters / The Vergeย
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Twitter helps Beijing push agenda abroad despite ban in China / Bloomberg (porous paywall)ย
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China paid Facebook and Twitter to help sow anti-Muslim misinformation / Vox
โLucas Niewenhuis
6. Action on fentanylย
โThe Trump administration on Wednesday imposed sanctions on three Chinese nationals accused of trafficking synthetic opioids, stepping up efforts to curb the flow of fentanyl from China into the United States,โ according to the New York Times.
โJeremy Goldkorn
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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Computer games
Gaming platform Steam to launch China-specific version / Caixin Live
A localized, slightly censored version of Steam, a desktop gaming platform produced by Valve, is coming to China. Called zhฤngqรฌ pรญngtรกi ่ธๆฑฝๅนณๅฐ, literally โSteam Platform,โ popular games like Dota will be included in its initial release but not the full rangfe available on the international version. An article by PC Gamer about the announcement, referencing an interview between Eurogamer and Valveโs DJ Powers, reports that the move will still benefit Chinese gamers.
“We want Chinese customers to have really high-quality access to Steam games, and that means getting a set of games approved through the appropriate channels, and a service that is local. The servers that are right there, they can have fast download times, features make their quality of life better obviously.”
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Context on The China Project: Chinaโs gaming industry, explained
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Robots
Chinaโs industrial robot market shrinks for first time in 2018 / Caixin (paywall)
China’s industrial robotics market contracted for the first time as industry consolidation continues… [shrinking] 3.75 percent in 2018, breaking a growth streak of five consecutive years, said Xฤซn Guรณbฤซn ่พๅฝๆ, deputy head of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), speaking at Wednesdayโs World Robot Conference in Beijing:
Xin said that the global trade environment, fears of a downtown in the world economy, and the poor performance of Chinaโs automakers โ which use many of the countryโs industrial robots โ had led to predictions of lower growth and further industry reshuffles.
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Short term gloom in the auto sector, long term hope for electric vehicles
Carmakers post downbeat forecasts as policy changes begin to bite / Caixin (paywall)
Whether they make traditional automobiles or new-energy vehicles, Chinese auto manufacturers in general are bracing for a global downturn, with Geely and BYD posting โbearish outlooks in their half-yearly earnings reports this week.โ
Electric vehicles run into Chinaโs regulatory change / WSJ (paywall)
China’s largest EV maker โ Warren Buffett-backed BYD โ reported wednesday an 87 percent jump in net profit for the quarter through June, compared with the year-earlier period, while forecasting a 70 to 90 percent year-over-year drop for the current quarter. Its Hong Kong-listed stock fell 6.6 percent Thursday.ย
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Is this the end of gas-fueled cars in China? / Caixin (paywall)
The country will launch pilot programs to test phasing out vehicles that run on the polluting fuel, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) said [in Chinese] publicly Tuesday.
The ministry will help municipalities replace gas-powered public transport vehicles and establish zones in cities where gas-fueled vehicles are not permitted to go. If the programs are successful, the MIIT and another government body, the National Development and Reform Commission, will together draw up a timeline for an eventual nationwide phase-out.
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IKEA online
Ikea to invest $1.4 billion in China with focus on ecommerce / Caixin (paywall)
โIkea will invest 10 billion yuan ($1.41 billion) into the China market in the upcoming 2020 fiscal yearโฆ the money will mainly go toward user experience and business digitization.โ -
Facial recognition
China universities deploy facial recognition for student registration / Tech in Asia
A growing number of universities are now extending their use of facial recognition to the enrollment and registration process, after its initial adoption in applications such as security and recording student attendance.
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Free-ish trade zones
How free are Chinaโs free trade zones? / SCMP
Chinaโs free trade zones are failing to gain traction, despite encouragement by the central government. While special economic zones were extremely successful back in the 80s, especially in places like Shenzhen and Shanghaiโs Pudong district, investment in free trade zones in cities like Dalian are falling, in part owing to reduced local autonomy and increased central control.ย
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What tech winter?
Top tech investor brushes off China’s startup funding slump / Nikkei Asian Review (porous paywall)
James Mi (ๅฎ็พค Mรฌ Qรบn), โwho this year ranked twelfth on Forbes Midas List of the world’s most successful dealmakers in high-tech venture capitalโ strikes a bullish tone on Chinese startups. -
5G, mobile operators, and Huawei
China telcos weigh sharing 5G network to cut costs, potentially hurting Huawei / Reuters
China Telecom announced that it has reached an agreement with its domestic rivals (China Unicom, China Mobile) to build Chinaโs 5G infrastructure, a capital-intensive undertaking that stands to benefit from a cost-sharing partnership. This comes at the expense of Huawei, however, which had hoped to win contracts domestically while its 5G roll-out abroad is proving, in a word, problematic. -
Baidu in trouble again
โChinaโs Wikipediaโ sued over playwrightโs distorted entry / Sixth Tone
Chinese tech giant Baidu has been held legally accountable for disparaging language appearing on a deceased writerโs page on its Wikipedia-like reference site Baike, according to a Beijing courtโs ruling Wednesday.
The lawsuit โ filed by the son of the late playwright, screenwriter, and composer Zhร o Zhลng ่ตตๅฟ โ claimed that Baidu had been negligent in supervising the content on its platform, resulting in the infringement of Zhaoโs right to reputation.
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Food delivery
China’s delivery drivers rage against the algorithm / The Nation
The couriers who deliver food for popular services like Ele.me and Meituan complain that the algorithms which assign routes, impose strict time limits, and calculate their wages, are making these jobs increasingly hazardous and exploitative. -
The business of surfing
Chinaโs $26-million wavepool is up and running (and barreling) / Surfline
SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND THE ENVIRONMENT:ย
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Making Chinese pork cheap again
China seeks to stabilize its swine fever-rattled pork industry / Sixth Tone
China โwill expedite subsidies to pig farmers and promote large-scale farming to normalize the domestic meat market.โ -
Summer flood casualties
Hundreds killed in recent China floods / Australian Associated Press
At least 201 people have been killed and 63 are missing following flooding across China in July and August, government rescue services say.
The most recent deaths came in mountainous western Sichuan province, where eight were killed and 23 remain missing as of Wednesday morning.
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Two child policy
Association of China’s universal two child policy with changes in births and birth related health factors: national, descriptive comparative study / The BMJ
A study on the impact of Chinaโs two-child policy since its implementation in 2016. The conclusion:
Since its announcement in October 2015, the universal two child policy has been associated with a rise in births in China and with changes in health related birth characteristics: women giving birth have been more likely to be multiparous, and more likely to be aged 35 and over. No evidence of concurrent worsening outcomes (that is, premature births) was seen.
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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Xinjiang internment camps
Uyghur activists welcome Qatar withdrawal from support for China crackdown / Middle East Monitorย
Qatar has withdrawn its support for China detaining Uyghur Muslims despite initially being among 37 mainly Muslim majority countries which supported the crackdown as a necessary counter-terror measureโฆ
โWe Uyghurs heartily welcome the Qatar governmentโs right decision about withdrawing support for the Chinese ethnic genocide policy against Uyghurs and other Turkic groups in occupied East Turkistan,โ [said] Uyghur activist Abdugheni Sabit.ย
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Fleeing to Vanuatu and Australia
Passport sales out-earn VAT / Vanuatu Daily Post
โRevenues from citizenship sales is the single largest source of revenue in Vanuatu todayโฆPassport sales to the PRC now Vanuatu’s biggest source of revenueThe overwhelming majority of citizenship applications come from China, and most Chinese applications come from Hong Kong.โ
Australia sees rush of Hong Kong millionaires as unrest rumbles onย / SCMP -
The odd couple: Russia and China
Russia and China’s cosplay alliance /ย Moscow Times
Mark Galeotti writes: โRussia needs China more than China needs Russia, and as a result Moscow privately resents and fears Beijing, which privately disdains it in returnโฆThis is a cosplay alliance, though, more about form than substance.โ
China and Russia to raise U.S. โthreat to peaceโ at UN Security Council meeting / SCMP
โChina and Russia have called on the United Nations Security Council to address U.S. withdrawal from a landmark cold war-era nuclear treaty, citing โthreats to international peace and security.โโ
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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Communist kitsch at Beidaihe
At Maoโs beach, Chinaโs leaders still make history as lifeguards hide from the sun / NYT (porous paywall)
โHow can one put this with finesse?โ said Geremie Barmรฉ, who writes about Chinese culture and who often visited Beidaihe in the post-Mao era. โThe Chinese communists donโt really do โbeach culture.โ They model their habits on the Soviet leaders, and the Black Sea resorts and sanitariums of the Soviet heyday. The result is rather perfunctory, dismal and, in particular, in the age of post-poverty socialism, incredibly kitschy.โ
FEATURED ON SUPCHINA
Peking University slammed for giving scholarship to non-Chinese-speaking Filipino
Once again, an established Chinese university is in hot water for giving what is perceived as preferential treatment to foreign students. Last week, Peking University, one of Chinaโs top institutions, offered a full scholarship to a Filipino student to enroll in its prestigious medical school. The generous scholarship sparked intense criticism after internet users discovered the foreign student couldnโt speak any Chinese and would need to spend an extra year taking language classes before officially starting her study.
SINICA PODCAST NETWORK
Sinica Podcast: Matt Sheehan on California’s role in U.S.-China relations
Matt Sheehan, former China correspondent for the Huffington Post and current fellow at the MacroPolo think tank, discusses his new book, The Transpacific Experiment: How China and California Collaborate and Compete for Our Future. In this episode, Matt talks through a few select chapters of his book with Jeremy and Kaiser, such as the fracturing linkages between Silicon Valley and the Chinese tech industry, the story of Dalian Wanda entering the United States, and his outlook on the future of the U.S.-China relationship.
ChinaEconTalk: The view from Chengdu: freelance reporting outside first-tier cities
PHOTO OF THE DAY
BEไบฌjing No. 24: Work
This photo from Andingmen in October 2018 is part of BEไบฌjing, a 30-part photo essay project by Gregorio Soravito.ย