Bromides from Beijing for Israel and Palestine
...and China’s new plan for green aviation | October 24, 2023
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Jeremy Goldkorn
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CURRENT AFFAIRS
China hosts separate phone calls with Israel and Palestine |
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on October 23, 2023. Ken Ishii/Pool via REUTERS. |
China’s top diplomat Wáng Yì 王毅 spoke to counterparts from Palestine and Israel yesterday. He reiterated calls for a cease-fire and a “two-state solution” to resolve the ongoing war between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas. It is the highest-level communication with both sides that China has made public since Hamas launched its first attack on October 7.
“China is deeply concerned about the continued escalation of the conflict and the worsening situation, and deeply saddened by the large number of civilian casualties caused by the conflict,” Wang said in a phone call with Israeli counterpart Eli Cohen.
Wang expressed sympathy for the people in Gaza in a separate phone call with Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad Al-Maliki on the same day. “What the Gaza Strip needs most is efforts to end the war and promote peace, not geopolitical calculations,” Wang said. “What the people of Gaza need most is security, food and medicine, rather than war, weapons, and ammunition.”
Beijing has repeated calls for an immediate cease-fire and a “two-state solution” that allows for an independent Palestinian state, describing it as the fundamental way out of the conflict. But China to date has neither condemned the October 7 Hamas attacks on Israel, nor has it even mentioned the group by name.
The conflict has also split views on popular Chinese social media platform Weibo — including a rise in extreme and antisemitic views — which China’s powerful censorship apparatus have allowed to proliferate. Click here for all the details.
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NEWS BRIEFING
Here’s what else you need to know about China today:
China has officially sacked its defense minister Lǐ Shàngfú 李尚福, two months after he vanished from public life. Li and former Foreign Minister Qín Gāng 秦刚, who was removed from his post in July after disappearing for several weeks, have both also been removed from their positions on the State Council. State broadcaster CCTV announced the news today with no further explanation, nor any announcement of a successor to Li. China’s top diplomat Wáng Yì 王毅 will visit the U.S. from October 26–28, the U.S. announced yesterday. Wang was Foreign Minister from 2013 to 2022, and then resumed the role this year after Qin Gang’s disappearance. Wang is expected to meet with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan. It has not been announced whether he will meet with U.S. President Joe Biden. Wang’s trip is the highest-level exchange in a series of in-person meetings aimed at paving the way for an expected meeting between Biden and Chinese counterpart Xí Jìnpíng 习近平 in San Francisco in November. Today, a working group of American and Chinese officials held a “substantive, frank, and productive discussion” during their first meeting via video link to discuss economic topics, yet another small sign of improving ties between the two powers. Wang also met with his Bhutanese counterpart Tandi Dorji yesterday. The two foreign ministers discussed the “conclusion of boundary negotiations and the establishment of diplomatic relations,” according to the Chinese Foreign Ministry. China does not have official diplomatic relations with the tiny Kingdom of Bhutan, though the two sides maintain contact through periodic visits by officials. They also share a disputed border that runs through Tibet, a key point of tension which has never been officially recognized nor demarcated. Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro Urrego arrived in China today for his first state visit to the country since he took office, the Chinese Foreign Ministry announced yesterday. He is scheduled to meet with Chinese counterpart Xí Jìnpíng 习近平 on Wednesday during his trip from October 24–26, during which they are expected to “draw a blueprint for the growth of bilateral relations” and attend the signing ceremony of cooperation documents, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Máo Níng 毛宁 said. Advertising giant WPP sacked a senior executive based in Shanghai, after Chinese police raided the Shanghai offices of WPP-owned media agency GroupM and detained the unidentified employee and two others on suspicion of bribery last week. “We are terminating the executive’s employment with the company, and GroupM is suspending trade with any external organization we understand to be part of the police inquiries,” the world’s biggest ad agency said in a statement. China’s richest people have less money this year: 179 of the country’s top ranking billionaires are no longer on a list from the Shanghai-based Hurun Research Institute, which ranks China’s wealthiest people with a minimum net worth of 5 billion yuan ($690 million). Of those 179, 15% of them were in real estate, reflecting the country’s beleaguered property sector. “Whilst the number of dollar billionaires from China has dropped by 51 in one year and 290 in two years, it is worth noting that China is still the ‘billionaire capital of the world’ with 895 billionaires, almost 200 ahead of the U.S. and more than triple the number in India,” the report’s chairman and chief researcher Rupert Hoogeweft said. Weibo, China’s X-like social media platform, plans to display the real names of top influencers to the public, Chinese nationalist tabloid Global Times reported last week. The move, which the report stated is aimed at “further curbing cyberspace chaos,” has stirred up heated debate among Chinese internet users. Last week, Weibo’s CEO Wáng Gāofēi 王高飞 announced that users with more than 1 million followers will be required to reveal their identities on their profiles. “I’m testing out the controversial function myself first,” he said in a Weibo post on October 20 in response to user inquiries. Weibo has not officially announced the changes. Cathay Pacific will cancel all flights between Tel Aviv and Hong Kong until the end of the year because of the war between Israel and Hamas, the latest airline to cancel flights operating in and out of the area. “In view of the ongoing situation in Israel, all Cathay Pacific flights between Hong Kong and Tel Aviv from today up to and including December 31, 2023 will be canceled,” the Hong Kong-based airline said in a statement on its website. Last week, China urged its nationals in Israel to book commercial flights back home. Notable reads: China’s Age of Malaise is an excellent new piece from Osnos, author of China’s Age of Ambition, about the lowered expectations and gloom that have beset entrepreneurs and many urbanites in Xi Jinping’s China. Chinese state media: Xinhua News Agency’s top story is titled “Xi Jinping sent a letter to congratulate the 70th anniversary of the establishment of the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce.” Operating under the United Front, a Communist Party organization that seeks to align non Party members and groups with Party objectives, the Federation was set up in 1953 to bring capitalists into the communist fold, and still functions as a tool for the Party to monitor private sector players and ensure their compliance. The People’s Daily today continues the propaganda we noted yesterday about trade unions and the role of women; the two top stories are about the 13th National Congress of Chinese Women opening in Beijing, and Xi Jinping giving a speech to the All-China Federation of Trade Unions in which he urged delegates to “uphold the Party’s overall leadership over the trade unions and organize and mobilize hundreds of millions of workers to actively participate in building a strong country and the great cause of national rejuvenation.” English-language state media today is focusing on the International Symposium to Commemorate the 10th Anniversary of China’s Principle of Amity, Sincerity, Mutual Benefit and Inclusiveness in Neighborhood Diplomacy, which took place today in Beijing. Xinhua titled its story on the event: “Xi vows China’s continued efforts to help build peaceful, prosperous Asian homeland.”
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BUSINESS AND TECH
China releases green aviation plan but no net-zero emissions target date |
Illustration for The China Project by Alex Santafé |
China has announced a “green aviation manufacturing revolution” in a 13-page Green Aviation Manufacturing Development Outline (2023-2035).
Aviation is one of the most challenging sectors to reform and decarbonize, and global progress is behind schedule.
But in China as around the world, progress on green aviation is still painfully slow.
Barry van Wyk |
MORE FROM THE CHINA PROJECT
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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:The boss goes to the central bank U.S.-China tech war Automobile industry China’s wealthy AI Private sector POLITICS AND FOREIGN AFFAIRS:Defense Minister sacked, removed from State Council along with former foreign minister New finance minister Xinjiang exports surge U.S. official discovers Hong Kong has no Second Amendment Academic repression in Hong Kong Taiwan elections U.S.-China competition and tensions Philippines Cambodia Israel-Hamas war Denmark Japan SOCIETY AND CULTURE:Feminism Education
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