Editor’s note for Monday, June 29, 2020

A note from today's editor of the The China Project Access newsletter.

editor's note for Access newsletter

Dear Access member,

We live in interesting times:

New Delhi has pulled a China move on Chinaย by banning all the major Chinese apps and internet services that were popular in India: See story #1 below for details.

Carrying a compass, a notebook, and cash moneyย are apparently good evidence that you are a foreign spy, if you happen to be Australian right now, according to state-owned nationalist rag the Global Times which saysย that: โ€œa Chinese law-enforcement agencyโ€ฆarrested agents who work for Australian security intelligence agencies.โ€ The iron-clad evidence of their espionage activities, according to the Global Timesโ€™ โ€œsource,โ€ is this:

The Australian spies caught red-handed also had a compass, a USB flash disk, a notebook, a mask, gloves, and a map of Shanghai. On the notebook, there was some English handwriting about addresses, which are relevant to their operations.

The report is part of a government campaign. Although the Global Times is not an official mouthpiece, it often signals Communist Party intentions. To confirm this, a Global Times reporter asked a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson at a briefing todayย about the report. He replied, โ€œI am afraid that what is revealed by the Global Times this time is just the โ€˜tip of the iceberg.โ€™โ€

This comes after the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) conducted an unprecedented raidย of the house of a Labor Party politician, Shaoquett Moselmane, โ€œsearching for evidence to support allegations of a Chinese government plot unfolding on Australian soil.โ€

If youโ€™re from Down Underย (or Canada, Sweden, or the U.S. and several other countries), you should probably not wander around in China with a compass, invisible ink, X-ray spectacles, or any other obvious spy equipment.

The World Health Organization is sending a team to Chinaย to investigate the origins of the coronavirus, reportsย Reuters. Will they dare to say anything that would contradict the official narrative from Beijing? ย 

Want to chat about all of this? On July 8, join me and Sinica Podcast co-host Kaiser Kuo for a Zoom call-in showย to recap how much China and its relationship with the world has changed in 2020.

Our word of the dayย is cyber sovereigntyย (็ฝ‘็ปœไธปๆƒ wวŽngluรฒ zhว”quรกn). See story #1.

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief