On the road from Damascus
...and all about the Asian Games | September 25, 2023
Dear reader:
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad flew on an Air China plane to Hangzhou where he attended the opening ceremony of the Asian Games and met with Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ last week. Scroll down to the The China Agenda section in this newsletter to see the view from the top of the boarding stairs as Assad and his wife were about to deplane: The red carpet, waiting limousine, and assembled officials and soldiers must have been a welcome sight for Assad. He has been a global pariah โ or at least isolated by Western nations โ since the start of the Syrian Civil War in 2011. Assad has not visited China since 2004, but he made the most of this trip, agreeing with Xi to upgrade their countriesโ relationship to a โstrategic partnershipโ and earning pledges from China to aid reconstruction of war-torn Syria. No doubt there will be goodies for state-owned Chinese infrastructure companies when the time comes to start building stuff in Syria, but aside from those, Assadโs government praised a host of Chinese government initiatives and policies, from the Belt and Road to the China-Arab Cooperation Forum. The very first concrete item on the Chinese government readout about the Xi-Assad meeting was that โSyria firmly adheres to the one-China principle, recognizes that the government of the Peopleโs Republic of China is the only legal government representing the whole of China, and Taiwan is an inalienable part of China.โ Next up: Syria โfirmly supports Chinaโs position on Hong Kong-related issues.โ And then, of course, Damascus โfirmly supports Chinaโs position on Xinjiang-related issues, [and] reiterates that Xinjiang-related issues are not human rights issues, but anti-violent terrorism, de-radicalization and anti-separatism issues.โ As scholar Tuvia Gering points out, when Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas โestablished a similar strategic partnership between Palestine and China in June, he used the same exact wording in his endorsement of Chinaโs crackdown against Muslim minorities in Xinjiang.โ Itโs all rather unsavory. But as the new African aphorism goes: โEvery time China visits we get a hospital, every time the West visits, we get a lecture.โ The same applies to leaders from the developing world when they go to China, as long as they make the appropriate observance of the Chinese Communist Partyโs world view. Thatโs a reality that many in the West, particularly in Washington D.C., simply refuse to acknowledge. Our Word of the Day is: Asian Games (ไบๆดฒ่ฟๅจไผ yร zhลu yรนndรฒng huรฌ, often abbreviated to ไบ่ฟไผ yร yรนn huรฌ). If you’re not already a subscriber, sign up for ourย Daily Dispatch, or ourย free Weekly. |
Jeremy Goldkorn
Editor-in-Chief ย |
CURRENT AFFAIRS
China kicks off the Asian Games with no fireworks and a parade of global leaders |
Chinaโs swimming Olympic champion Wang Shun and a digital torchbearer jointly light the cauldron during the opening ceremony of the Hangzhou Asian Games on September 23, 2023. Xinhua/Cheng Tingting. |
Chinese leader Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ opened the Asian Games in the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou on September 23, after a one-year delay due to Beijingโs now-axed COVID-zero curbs. The Games, held once every four years similar to the Olympics, will run until October 8.
But political tensions at home and abroad have cast a few shadows over all the fanfare.
Click here for all the details. ย Nadya Yeh |
NEWS BRIEFING
Hereโs what else you need to know about China today:
World-renowned Uyghur anthropologist Rahile Dawut has been sentenced to life behind bars on spurious charges of endangering state security, according to Dui Hua, a respected advocacy organization that has a long history of engaging with China to attempt to get political prisoners released. The New York Times and Wall Street Journal have further reporting. Chinaโs Coast Guard installed a floating barrier in a disputed area of South China Sea, blocking access to more than 50 Filipino fishing vessels, Philippine Coast Guard spokesman Jay Tarriela said in a post on X on September 23. The 300-meter (328-yard) barrier, made up of three inflatable boats of the Chinese Coast Guard and a service boat of the Chinese maritime militia, barred the entrance of a lagoon in the southeast portion of the Scarborough Shoal (้ปๅฒฉๅฒ huรกngyรกn dวo;). Philippine officials today removed what it earlier called the โillegal and illegitimateโ barrier. About 400 miles south of the Scarborough Shoal is the disputed Mischief Reef (็พๆตๅฒ mฤijรฌ dวo), where the New York Times has documented Chinaโs military buildup and the increasingly aggressive behavior of Chinese Coast Guard vessels. China has placed an exit ban on a senior executive from Japanese investment bank Nomura. Charles Wang (็ไปฒไฝ Wรกng Zhรฒnghรฉ) has been ordered not to leave mainland China. The move is โconnected to a long-running investigation into the countryโs top tech dealmaker Bฤo Fรกn ๅ ๅก,โ founder of investment group China Renaissance, and his colleague Cรณng Lรญn ไธๆ, the Financial Times suggests. Bao and Cong went missing in February, and are reported to be โassistingโ with a probe into financial crimes. The chair of the Hong Kong Journalists Association was sentenced to five days in jail today for obstructing police officers. Ronson Chan (้ณๆๆ Chรฉn Lวngshฤng) had pleaded not guilty to the charges, after he was detained and handcuffed by two plainclothes officers for failing to hand over his Hong Kong ID card while covering a story last September. Australia will continue pursuing a case at the World Trade Organization against Chinaโs tariffs on wine imports, rejecting a proposal to tie the issue to a separate dispute on steel products. Chinese and Arab companies signed on to 171 billion yuan ($23.4 billion) worth of deals in sectors including trade, agriculture, energy, and medical care at the sixth China-Arab States Expo in Yinchuan, capital of the northwestern Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, from September 21โ24. China has become the Arab statesโ largest trading partner in the past decade, with total trade volume almost doubling from 2012 to $431.4 billion dollars last year, according to official data. In the first half of this year, trade between China and the Arab states hit $199.9 billion. Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ and his second-in-command Lว Qiรกng ๆๅผบ pledged to intensify support for modern industries at a national conference in Beijing over the weekend, in the latest effort by the Chinese government to boost advanced manufacturing. Chinese state media: The Peopleโs Daily highlights the Asian Games in Hangzhou, noting that the Chinese team has already won 31 gold medals. Xinhua News Agency leads with a review of Xi Jinpingโs inspection visit to his old stomping grounds of Zhejiang Province, where he urged Party members to โwrite a new chapter in Chinese-style modernization.โ ย |
THE WEEK AHEAD
The China Agenda for September 25โOctober 1 |
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and his wife Asma Fawaz al-Assad about to step down from their borrowed Air China plane at Hangzhou, where they arrived on September 21 for the Asian Games and a meeting with Xรญ Jรฌnpรญng ไน ่ฟๅนณ. Photo via Syrian state media. |
The diplomatic, political, and business agenda for the coming week includes:
The Asian Games continues in Hangzhou this week: See above for details of whatโs happened so far. Several United Nations events: The General Assembly High Level Week continues in New York, with the General Debate concluding on September 26, and the 54th session of the UN Human Rights Council continues in Geneva until October 3. The 10th China-EU High-Level Economic and Trade Dialogue in Beijing on September 25. EU Trade Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis will represent the EU side, which he will co-chair alongside Hรฉ Lรฌfฤng ไฝ็ซๅณฐ, Vice Premier of the State Council. The U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee will hold hearings on โcountering Chinaโs malign influence operations in the United Statesโ on September 27. The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee will hold hearings to examine opportunities to counter the Peopleโs Republic of Chinaโs control of critical mineral supply chains on September 28. For more on the above and other political events, as well as details on economic data releases, IPOs, and academic and think tank conferences, and all the times and links you need to know, please click through to the full China Agenda. ย |
MORE FROM THE CHINA PROJECT
This week on the Sinica Podcast, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the 1950 concert tour of China by the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1973, host Kaiser Kuo chats with Matรญas Tarnopolsky, the orchestraโs president and chief executive; Alison Friedman, executive and creative director of Carolina Performing Arts; and virtuoso guzheng player and composer Wรบ Fฤi ๅด้.
You can wait for the general podcast release on Thursday, or you can get the ad-free, subscriber-only version of Sinica using any major podcast app on your phone by following the instructions at this link. ย |
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:Economic gloom or boom The global electric vehicle competition Local debt Huawei U.S.-China flights increasing slowly Stock market Chinese pork industry back on the rise Chinese security company in lawsuit following failed investment Real estate Evergrande ย SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND ENVIRONMENT:COVID-19 Solar panel supply chains POLITICS AND FOREIGN AFFAIRS:Uyghur scholar received life sentence Nomura banker unable to leave China Democracy in China? Rural development Legal practice in China Hong Kong journalist arrested Taiwan U.S.-China competition Canada Germany Japan Pakistan India Afghanistan Vietnam Philippines Syria The Koreas Thailand Russia East Timor EU NATO SOCIETY AND CULTURE:Chinese dissident seeks asylum Mining accident kills sixteen Asian Games Education Charity ย |
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