Speak loudly and carry a small olive branch?
...and Wang Yi meets Joe Biden | October 30
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CURRENT AFFAIRS
Xiangshan Forum: Chinese military leaders take aim at U.S., sound strident tone on Taiwan, and cozy up to Russiaโs military |
Screenshot from interview with PLA Lieutenant General Hรฉ Lรฉi ไฝ้ท |
Chinese defense officials criticized the U.S. and made hawkish statements about Taiwan at the 10th Xiangshan Forum in Beijing, a three-day security conference that kicked off yesterday.
The hawkish remarks come amid heightened risks of conflict between the U.S. and China: A Pentagon report to Congress released this month showed there had been more โrisky and coerciveโ Chinese intercepts of U.S. aircraft in the past two years than in the previous decade, a sign of ratcheted up tensions between the two countries. But General Zhang also stressed a need for deepening defense cooperation with the U.S.
Click here for all the details. ย Eduardo Jaramillo |
NEWS BRIEFING
Hereโs what else you need to know about China today:
U.S. President Joe Biden met with Chinaโs Foreign Minister Wรกng Yรฌ ็ๆฏ in Washington, D.C. on October 27 (readout from Beijing, Washington). Biden stressed for their two countries to โmaintain open lines of communicationโ and to โwork together to address global challenges,โ per Washingtonโs readout. Wang also met with Secretary of State Antony Blinken and National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan. In his two rounds of talks with Blinken, both sides โagreed to work together for the meetingโ between Biden and his Chinese counterpart Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ in San Francisco during the November 11โ17 APEC meeting there, according to the Chinese Foreign Ministry. At the same time, the road to the potential meeting โwill not be smooth sailing and cannot rely on autopilot,โ the Chinese Foreign Ministry said in a separate statement (in Chinese) on October 28. Blinken and Wang also had โan exchange of views on the Palestine-Israel conflict,โ as well as on Ukraine, cross-strait issues, and nuclear tensions in the Korean peninsula. Chinaโs Vice Premier Hรฉ Lรฌfฤng ไฝ็ซๅณฐ was granted more power over Chinaโs economy after he assumed a key policymaking role at a top economic decision-making body. He, 68, has taken over as office director of the Central Financial and Economic Affairs Commission, a powerful Communist Party organization headed by Chinese President Xi Jinping to manage the worldโs second-largest economy. He was promoted to vice premier in March. His greater command over Chinaโs financial and economic affairs comes as He, a close ally of Xi, gradually transitions into his position as the successor to Xiโs trusted U.S.-China trade war-era policy aide Liรบ Hรจ ๅ้นค, 71. Tech companies are ditching their Chinese IPOs amid Beijingโs higher standards for listing applications this year. The Financial Times, citing public records, reported that a record 126 companies have canceled or suspended IPO applications on Shanghaiโs Star Market in 2023. It is more than in the previous four years combined, as the increased regulatory scrutiny aimed at weeding out lower-quality companies puts chances for start-ups to IPO further out of reach. California Governor Gavin Newsom wrapped up his visit to China with a tour of Teslaโs Shanghai factory and a newly signed Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between his state and the city on protecting the environment and combating climate change. Earlier last week, Newsom met with Xi in Beijing โ the first California governor to meet with Xi since 2017 โ where they discussed issues including climate change, the fentanyl crisis, and trade. Hong Kong denied a work visa to a Tiananmen crackdown scholar, preventing the professor from returning to her teaching post in the city and fuelling concerns about academic freedom and growing government censorship in the Chinese territory. Rowena He (ไฝๆๆธ Hรฉ Xiวoqฤซng) is a Canadian citizen who was an associate professor in history specializing in Chinaโs bloody 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK). She was in the U.S. on sabbatical leave when she was informed by the cityโs Immigration Department last week that her application had been rejected. Her employment with CUHK was โterminated with immediate effectโ on October 27, citing her visa rejection. Her profile on the CUHK website, however, was still active this morning, stating that she โis currently on leave.โ A Hong Kong court dropped charges against โโa U.S. state senator for bringing a gun into the city in his carry-on bag at the cityโs airport, after he admitted it was an โhonest mistake.โ Stephen Jeff Wilson (R-Longview, WA) was arrested on October 20 after he arrived in the city with an unloaded firearm. He was released today after a Hong Kong court withdrew a gun-possession charge against him, on the condition that they confiscate his weapon and that he does not commit more firearms offenses in the Chinese city for two years. Outpourings for the late former Chinese Premier Lว Kรจqiรกng ๆๅ ๅผบ continued across the country over the weekend. Flower wreaths and photographs of Li have been placed at landmarks associated with his life, while messages and videos in memoriam have taken hold of Chinese social media. Li, an advocate of economic reform, died suddenly at the age of 68 on October 27 in Shanghai. His passing shocked many and has since sparked a wave of nostalgia of greater economic possibility and openness to private business, at a time when the Chinese government has tightened control on all that passes through its borders. Chinese state media: Xinhua News Agencyโs top story features a photograph of Xi Jinping mansplaining womenโs rights to a group of women from the All-China Womenโs Federation. This follows state media reports last week on Xiโs concern for women and on the 13th National Congress of Chinese Women. Under Xiโs tenure, the ruling Politburo failed to include a single woman among its 24 members selected in 2022, breaking a tradition of two decades, while the current National Peopleโs Congress has only 790 women out of 2,977 representatives. The Peopleโs Daily print edition today leads with a story on renewable energy development in Hebei Province, and one on China being an โimportant opportunity for world development.โ ย |
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS
The Chinese diaspora โneeds to rise upโ about atrocities against Uyghurs โ Q&A with human rights lawyer Rayhan Asat |
Rayhan Asat, a Harvard-trained human rights lawyer, at the University of Oxford, where she is Reuben Scholar. Photo courtesy of the subject. |
Rayhan Asat is one of the most vocal advocates today for the Uyghur people, whose homeland in northwestern China is the scene of the Communist Partyโs ongoing commission of what the United Nations says may be โcrimes against humanity,โ and what U.S. President Joseph Biden called a โgenocide.โ
Asat called on Chinaโs diaspora in business and policy circles to rise up and take action to pressure China to end its ongoing repression in Chinaโs Uyghur region in an interview with The China Project.
Read the full conversation between Asat and Jonathan Landreth here, or come to NextChina in New York on November 2 to listen to Asat speak. ย |
SOCIETY AND CULTURE
China in limbo over importing Middle East oil overland through Pakistan |
Illustration for The China Project by Derek Zheng |
China wants to build a pipeline and transport route through Pakistan as part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) that launched in 2013 with a budget of around $60 billion.
But separatist and sectarian violence in much of the area such a pipeline would traverse could put a stop to Chinaโs plans.
Syed Fazl-e-Haider and Akbar Notezai report from Pakistan on CPECโs ongoing woes. ย |
THE CHINA AGENDA
Here is this weekโs China Agenda, a guide to the diplomatic, political, and business events for the week of October 30โNovember 5, including:
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FROM THE NEWSBASE
Below are links from our NewsBase to other noteworthy reports published in the last 24 hours from and about China.BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:U.S.-China flights U.S.-China tech war Electric vehicles Automobile competition in Southeast Asia Family businesses Evergrande Huawei SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND ENVIRONMENT:Air quality POLITICS AND FOREIGN AFFAIRS:The Communist Party, elite politics, and government The aftermath of Li Keqiangโs death Military Hong Kong Taiwan U.S.-China relations Chinese immigrants are traveling to the U.S. through Panama Solomon Islands Australia Japan SOCIETY AND CULTURE:Antisemitism in China Chinaโs AI English teacher Chinese youth are buying gold ย |
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