Week in Review: Friday, June 5, 2020

Here are the stories that caught our eye this week:

  • Thousands in Hong Kong attended the cityโ€™s annual vigilย marking 31 years since the Tiananmen Square crackdown on Thursday. Police had earlier announcedย a ban on public gatherings due to COVID-19, but the ban was not enforced.
  • Chinese state media and diplomats,ย including multiple foreign ministry spokespeople, publicly delighted over the weekend in the scenes of protest and violence on American streets following the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis a week ago. The Global Times lambasted the U.S. as a โ€œfailed state,โ€ย as a large number of social media users were quick to draw comparisons with U.S. support for the Hong Kong protesters and accuse the U.S. of hypocrisy. ย 
  • China reportedly shared only โ€œminimal informationโ€ with the World Health Organizationย in the early days of the COVID-19 outbreak, according to a new report by the AP. The report alleges that WHOโ€™s public praise of Chinaโ€™s COVID-19 response was really an attempt to coax further information out of its government.
  • The entire Wuhan population over the age of sixย has been tested for COVID-19 as the city completed its mass testing campaign. Officials in the northeastern city of Mudanjiang in Heilongjiang Province now intend to do the same for their cityโ€™s 2.8 million residents as new COVID-19 clusters continue to emerge.
  • Alicia Garcรญa Herrero, the chief economist for Asia-Pacific at French investment bank Natixis, spoke to The China Project about the ramifications of Trumpโ€™s announcement that he is moving to revoke Hong Kongโ€™s special status.
  • Thirty-three Chinese companies with ties to Xinjiang, Chinaโ€™s military, and efforts to produce weapons of mass destruction have been hit with new restrictions by the U.S. Department of Commerce. The restrictions will come into effect on Friday. Chinaโ€™s Foreign Ministry has said it strongly opposes sanctions related to Xinjiang, and views them as an attempt to interfere in Chinaโ€™s internal affairs.
  • Malaysian economist Yew-Kwang Ng (้ป„ๆœ‰ๅ…‰ Huรกng Yว’uguฤng) attracted a great deal of ire on Chinese social media after he published an articleย (in Chinese)ย suggesting that China legalize and promote polyandry (where women can marry multiple men) in an effort to solve the countryโ€™s surplus of bachelors.
  • A proposed regulation that would see skeptics of traditional Chinese medicine punished and even criminally charged has drawn severe public backlash, with a large number of observers calling the regulation an aggressive move on the governmentโ€™s part to make TCM โ€œbeyond criticism and speculation.โ€
  • The Chinese Basketball Association team Beijing Royal Fighters, coached by Stephon Marbury, has become the first team in the league to announce that employees have volunteered to take a pay cut amid the coronavirus-induced suspension of the league and financial pressures.