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Tag: China

  • As China doubles down on COVID, some have had enough

    As China doubles down on COVID, some have had enough

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    A few months ago, a box was left outside the door of 34-year-old Yu Ting Xu’s* apartment in Beijing. Inside, there was an electronic monitoring wristband and a demand that she wear the wristband at all times as part of the fight against COVID-19 in her residential area.

    While telling her story over a video call, Yu shuffles about in the background. When she returns to her screen, she is holding up the wristband, which looks like a smartwatch but has a plain white plastic surface instead of a display.

    “I have never put it on,” she said.

    “I have accepted lockdowns, forced COVID-19 tests and health codes, but this thing feels like surveillance just for the sake of surveillance.”

    The wristband was the last straw for Yu who is among an increasing number of citizens concerned about the motivation for the Chinese authorities’ expansive use of COVID-19-related technology.

    “I am afraid that the COVID-19 strategy is starting to be about controlling Chinese people instead of fighting COVID-19,” she told Al Jazeera.

    China introduced a tracking app so that people with the virus or who might have been exposed would not spread it to others [File: Greg Baker/AFP]

    Just a few days before Yu received the wristband, thousands of residents in central China had used social media to organise a protest outside a bank in Zhengzhou.

    Many had been unable to access their bank deposits at the city’s Yu Zhou Xin Min Sheng Village Bank since April with the bank claiming that the problem was due to “system upgrades”.

    Fed up with months of excuses, the depositors planned to protest in front of the bank’s headquarters. But the day before, thousands of depositors suddenly found their smartphones buzzing and the health codes on their compulsory COVID-19 apps turning from green to red.

    Colour changes usually happen when the holder has visited a COVID-19-infected area or been designated a close contact with someone with the virus, and it means that the individual must quarantine immediately.

    The red codes raised eyebrows.

    There had not been a registered COVID-19 outbreak in the province, and the health codes of the family members who accompanied the many depositors to the protest remained green.

    Protesters hold banners demanding their deposits be returned outside outside a People's Bank of China building in Zhengzhou
    Some people who wanted to join protests in Zhengzhou over the freezing of their deposits suddenly found their COVID app went from green to red so they could not go out [File: Handout via Reuters]

    Beijing has said technology such as the app and wristband are crucial to its zero-COVID strategy and its commitment to stamping out the virus, but the red health codes in Zhengzhou and the electronic wristbands in Beijing have contributed to growing scepticism.

    Protection causing harm

    When the health code system was implemented in early 2020, rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, warned such digital tools risked breaching the human rights of any Chinese citizen with a smartphone.

    In the first two years of its operation, those early warnings were largely drowned out by thundering applause at the apparent success of the zero-COVID policy. While many Western countries were stumbling from one chaotic national lockdown to the next, Chinese authorities were able to keep most of China COVID-19-free with targeted lockdowns using digital tools to prevent the infected or potentially infected from spreading the virus.

    Today, however, the roles are largely reversed.

    While most of the world has used vaccination as a way to move on from coronavirus restrictions, China is stuck in a loop of relentless lockdowns in an unrelenting quest to stamp out every COVID-19 outbreak. Despite the wide availability of COVID-19 vaccines and the associated decrease in death rates, Beijing’s zero-COVID policy remains firmly in place with no end in sight.

    The Chinese government defends the policy as a well-meaning strategy to protect people.

    But prolonged lockdowns in cities such as Shanghai have brought with them reports of food shortages, family separations and even the killing of the pets of patients sent to quarantine. In the middle of September, there was outrage when a bus transporting people to a COVID-19 quarantine centre crashed, killing 27 passengers.

    A security guard in a protective overall stands guard at a sealed off residential area in Shanghai
    District lockdowns, security guards in protective clothing and COVID-19 testing sites remain common across the country nearly three years after the pandemic first began in its central city of Wuhan [Aly Song/Reuters]

    The accident fed directly into the ongoing discussion in Chinese society about the accumulating costs of the government’s coronavirus policy.

    “It is the government’s zero-COVID strategy that is killing us, not COVID-19,” one Weibo user declared after the accident.

    His post was quickly removed by censors.

    Censors were initially overwhelmed, however, by the popular uproar that swept through Chinese social media sites following the handling of the bank demonstration in Zhengzhou. What human rights organisations had warned about in 2020 had happened: digital tools supposedly implemented to secure the health of Chinese citizens had instead been used to rob those very citizens of their rights.

    More intrusion, less support

    Han Wu*, 37, from the southern city of Guangzhou, was among the many Chinese users on Weibo that expressed outrage following the incident in Zhengzhou. Like Yu in Beijing, he also believes that the authorities have gone too far in their pursuit of zero COVID.

    Han was forced to leave his home and move into one of the government’s quarantine centres for 14 days after testing positive for COVID-19 at the end of June.

    “When I returned to my apartment, I could see that the door had been forced open and my things were scattered all over the place,” he told Al Jazeera, before turning on the camera on his phone to show marks and cuts on the outside of his door as evidence of the forced entry.

    Han later learned from the local authorities that they had entered his apartment to disinfect the rooms and to make sure no one else was living there. These were necessary precautions, he was told.

    “I back the containment of COVID-19 infections, but I don’t back government break-ins and privacy violations,” he said.

    Lin Pu is a scholar of digital authoritarianism and Chinese influence at Tulane University in the United States.

    He explains that it used to be so-called terrorists, separatists, criminals and political activists who felt the Chinese authorities’ capacity for oppression, but the zero-COVID policy had exposed the usually more apolitical middle class to the strong arm of the government.

    He says the discontent could prompt further abuse of the system.

    “It is quite possible that the digital tools initially used for COVID control will be increasingly used for social control if dissatisfaction continues to rise,” Lin says.

    “In turn, this can create a feedback loop where dissatisfaction with the COVID strategy tempts the authorities to use the digital tools to ensure social control which creates more dissatisfaction.”

    ‘No revolutionary’

    Upset over the COVID policies comes at a time when the need for stability is paramount for China’s ruling party.

    The 20th Congress of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is set to start on October 16 and President Xi Jinping is expected to secure an unprecedented third term, making him the party’s longest-serving leader since Mao Zedong.

    The congresses are among the most important political events in China, and are held only once every five years.

    “China is facing a series of compounding challenges at a time when the CCP and Xi Jinping needs China to appear prosperous and harmonious,” said Christina Chen, who specialises in Chinese politics at the Taiwanese think-tank INDSR.

    The zero-COVID strategy is also damaging the economy, with growth at its slowest in decades, youth unemployment at a record 20 percent and a distorted housing market where thousands of people are refusing to pay mortgages on incomplete homes, while a decades-long building frenzy has left upwards of 50 million homes unoccupied.

    “China needs to look stable, and the political projects associated with his presidency, like the zero-COVID strategy, must appear like indisputable successes in order to legitimise him serving a third term,” Chen adds.

    People in China scan a QR code as part of COVID measures
    Many welcomed the COVID-related digital tools when they first appeared thinking it would make their lives easier. But as time has gone on, resentment has grown [File: Hector Retamal/AFP]

    Going into the congress, COVID cases are rising and new variants have been discovered. While no deaths have been reported since April, the government continues to stress its commitment to zero COVID no matter the resentment among the general public from the harsh restrictions and regular testing.

    Back in Beijing, Yu admits the policy has made her more sceptical of the authorities.

    “I am no revolutionary,” she said as she closed her fingers around the electronic monitoring wristband in her palm.

    “I just don’t want to be monitored and exploited.”

    When asked what she would do if she were forced to wear the wristband, she stands up and pushes her chair away.

    “I will show you.”

    She takes a few quick steps towards an open window at the back of the room and tosses the wristband out into the night.

    * The names of Yu Ting Xu and Han Wu have been changed to protect their identities.

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  • Indian students most likely stay back for work in developed nations: Report

    Indian students most likely stay back for work in developed nations: Report

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    Indians pursuing education in developed countries are likely to stay back and join the workforce there, unlike the global average, said a report by Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). The OECD is an association that consists of 38 economically-developed countries attracting massive international migrants. The report on migration matters titled ‘International Migration Outlook 2022’ was released on Monday.

    According to the report, 9.7 lakh international students in OECD countries in 2020 were from China. The student figure from China accounted for 22 percent of the total international students. Out of the remaining, 4.36 lakh students (10 per cent) hailed from India. However, there was a major difference between students from both countries in the likelihood of staying back on extended permits or holding a work permit five years after their arrival.

    The organisation said that Indian students tend to have a higher stay rate than the overall international student population. “The retention behaviour of Chinese students is more diverse, with overall larger shares leaving after their education.”

    The report added that Indians opt for master’s or doctorate degrees way more than the Chinese. Such a trend thereby explains Indians entering into the labour market with a shorter period on an education permit.

    According to UK Home Office data, around 118,000 Indian students received a UK student visa in the year ending June 2022 which was an 89 per cent increase from the previous year.

    Also read: British citizens might lose expensive holidays as India changes visa application rules last minute

    Also read: How Suella Braverman has put India-UK free trade deal on the verge of collapse

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  • Why is the US role in Africa shrinking?

    Why is the US role in Africa shrinking?

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    From: The Bottom Line

    Russia, China and Turkey are making bold moves across the continent as the United States’s presence wanes.

    Is the West’s outdated attitude towards Africa hampering meaningful cooperation and partnership?

    Russia, China, Turkey and other countries have been forging ahead with development plans and military sales while United States influence slowly fades away.

    When Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy made his appeal to the leaders of the African Union in June, only four showed up – out of 55. Most African nations have hesitated to support their Western allies in the Ukraine war.

    Host Steve Clemons asks political economist Zainab Usman and journalist Yinka Adegoke about what the US is getting wrong, and what other countries are getting right.

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  • The yen may be weak, but Japan’s tourism isn’t expected to get a ‘bona fide’ rebound without Chinese visitors

    The yen may be weak, but Japan’s tourism isn’t expected to get a ‘bona fide’ rebound without Chinese visitors

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    After more than two years of strict Covid-19 border controls, Japan reinstated visa-free travel to 68 countries on Tuesday.

    Maki Nakamura | Digitalvision | Getty Images

    The Japanese yen’s slump against the U.S. dollar has sparked some worry in Japan, but that could encourage more travelers to visit the country again, according to analysts — though they say a significant rebound in the tourism sector won’t happen without the return of Chinese tourists.

    After more than two years of strict Covid border controls, Japan reinstated visa-free travel to 68 countries on Tuesday. 

    Package tours are no longer necessary, the Japan National Tourism Organization (JNTO) reported. 

    The daily entry limit of 50,000 people and the on-arrival PCR test at the airport have been scrapped. However, it is still mandatory for travelers from all countries and regions to submit a negative Covid test certificate or proof of vaccination, JNTO said.  

    With the easing of restrictions and the depreciating yen, tourism to the country will return quickly — especially from Asia, said Jesper Koll, director of financial services firm Monex Group told CNBC.

    Koll said that although travelers from Europe and the U.S. are important in aiding Japan’s tourism recovery, “the bulk of the enthusiasm and the bulk of travel” still come from countries like Singapore, the Philippines and Thailand. 

    “The cheapness of the yen obviously increases the probability of tourism contributing greatly to the economy,” Koll said. “As the restrictions get rolled back further, and the capacity of inbound flights open up, I expect that we will see inbound spending and inbound tourism accelerate very, very quickly.” 

    In 2019, Japan welcomed 32 million foreign visitors and they spent about 5 trillion yen, but inbound spending is now only one-tenth of that, according to a Goldman Sachs note from September. 

    The investment bank estimated that inbound spending could reach 6.6 trillion yen ($45.2 billion) after a year of full reopening, as travelers will be encouraged to spend more because of the weak yen.

    “Our ball-park estimation points to potentially larger inbound spending of ¥6.6 tn (annual) post full reopening versus the pre-pandemic level of ¥5 tn, partly helped by the weak yen,” the note said. 

    The Japanese currency plunged to a fresh 24-year low and was at 146.98 against the greenback during London’s trading hours on Wednesday.

    Japanese officials intervened in the forex market in September when the dollar-yen hit 145.9.

    “I don’t think the yen has been as cheap as it is now in living memory,” said Darren Tay, Japan economist at Capital Economics, said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Tuesday. “Tourists were already clamoring for borders to reopen … So I think the weak yen will serve as another motivating factor” for them to travel to Japan again. 

    Although flight ticket prices to Japan have increased since the announcement was made, tourists will still get a bang for their buck when they spend in Japan, Koll said.

    “You can eat twice as many hamburgers, twice as much sushi for your dollar here in Japan compared to the United States, and even compared to the rest of Asia,” he added. 

    Chinese tourists ‘hold the key’

    The outlook for Japan’s tourism recovery looks promising, but “the overall impact on Japan’s economy may not be a net positive” as Chinese tourists have yet to return, Tay said.

    “Chinese tourists actually make up a large amount of what foreign tourists spent back in 2019 … They’re still pursuing a zero-Covid strategy so they won’t be returning anytime soon,” he said. 

    Why China shows no sign of backing away from its 'zero-Covid' strategy

    Goldman Sachs said Chinese tourists, who made up 30% of foreign visitors to Japan in 2019, could return only in the second quarter of 2023. 

    Once China fully reopens, inbound spending from Chinese visitors has the potential to increase from 1.8 trillion yen in 2019 to 2.6 trillion yen — 0.5% of Japan’s gross domestic product, said Yuriko Tanaka, economist at Goldman Sachs. 

    “Chinese visitors hold the key to a bona fide rebound in inbound spending,” Tanaka said.

    It's 'pure speculation' that China's zero-Covid policy will be eased after party congress: Moody's

    Without visitors from China, it could take some time before inbound spending in Japan returns to pre-pandemic levels, Koll said. But strong demand from the rest of Asia could drive inbound spending to return “relatively quickly” to over $3 trillion by March 2023.

    Outlook for yen 

    As markets expect the U.S. Federal Reserve to hike interest rates by 75 basis points in November, the yen will continue to weaken as the dollar continues to strengthen, said Koll. 

    “You’ve got the widening interest rate differential [between Japan and the U.S.], and the Federal Reserve is not done yet. There is at least one more interest rate hike in the cards,” he said. 

    He added that yen could weaken further toward the 155 level, strengthening only next spring — and that wouldn’t be the result of action from Japan, but of the Fed signaling that it has “stepped enough on the brake.”

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  • Elon Musk’s unsolicited idea for Taiwan welcomed by Beijing, slammed in Taipei | CNN Business

    Elon Musk’s unsolicited idea for Taiwan welcomed by Beijing, slammed in Taipei | CNN Business

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    Hong Kong
    CNN Business
     — 

    As tensions between China and Taiwan simmer at their highest point in decades, officials in both places have clashed in recent days over an unsolicited idea from billionaire Elon Musk.

    The world’s richest man suggested in an interview that hostilities between the two could be resolved if Taipei handed some control of the democratically governed island to Beijing, prompting praise from China and predictable outrage in Taiwan.

    “My recommendation … would be to figure out a special administrative zone for Taiwan that is reasonably palatable, probably won’t make everyone happy,” Musk told the Financial Times in an interview published on Friday. “And it’s possible, and I think probably, in fact, that they could have an arrangement that’s more lenient than Hong Kong.”

    China’s ambassador to the United States, Qin Gang, thanked Musk for his suggestion in a tweet Saturday, calling for “peaceful unification and one country, two systems.”

    But Taiwan’s representative to the US, Bi-khim Hsiao, wrote: “Taiwan sells many products, but our freedom and democracy are not for sale.”

    China’s ruling Chinese Communist Party views Taiwan as part of its territory, despite having never governed it, and has long vowed to “reunify” the island with the Chinese mainland, by force if necessary. Taiwan, a democracy of 23 million people, strongly objects to Beijing’s claims to the island.

    Beijing has offered Taiwan a “one country, two systems” system of governance, similar to Hong Kong, but that has been rejected by all of the island’s mainstream political parties and the proposal has received very little public support.

    In a briefing on October 7, China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said the “Taiwan question is China’s internal affair.”

    “China’s position on resolving the Taiwan question is consistent and clear. We remain committed to the basic principle of peaceful reunification and ‘one country, two systems,’” she said. “At the same time, we will resolutely defeat attempts to pursue the ‘Taiwan independence’ separatist agenda, push back interference by external forces, and safeguard our sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

    Wang Ting-yu, a senior lawmaker for Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party, slammed Musk in a Facebook post on Saturday. “Musk’s solution is all about victim concessions,” he said.

    Musk’s comments about Taiwan come days after he angered Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for tweeting a “peace” plan between Russia and Ukraine, proposing that Kyiv permanently cede Crimea to Moscow and hold new referendums in regions annexed by Russia – this time under the supervision of the United Nations.

    “Which Elon Musk do you like more?” Zelensky asked his Twitter followers, using the social media platform’s poll function.

    “One who supports Ukraine,” or “One who supports Russia.”

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  • US waives export curbs for some non-Chinese chipmakers

    US waives export curbs for some non-Chinese chipmakers

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    South Korea’s SK Hynix confirms it has received permission to obtain equipment for chip production facilities in China.

    The United States government has allowed at least two non-Chinese chipmakers operating in China to receive restricted goods and services without their suppliers seeking licenses, easing the burden of a new crackdown on the Chinese chip sector, according to industry sources.

    The Biden administration had planned to spare foreign companies operating in China, such as South Korean memory chip makers SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics Co, from the brunt of new restrictions, but the rules published on Friday failed to exempt such firms, the sources said.

    South Korea’s SK Hynix on Wednesday confirmed it had received authorisation from the US Department of Commerce to receive chip equipment needed for its chip production facilities in China for one year, without seeking additional licensing requirements.

    As published, the Biden administration’s rules require licenses before US exports can be shipped to facilities with advanced chip production in China, as part of a US bid to slow Beijing’s technological and military advances.

    The US had planned to grant licenses to supply non-Chinese chip factories on a case-by-case basis, while licenses to Chinese chipmakers will face a presumption of denial.

    As of midnight Tuesday, vendors also cannot support, service and send non-US supplies to such China-based factories without licenses if US companies authorise, direct or request them.

    But whether a license is approved or not, the time it takes to get through the licensing process could create delays in shipments and halt production.

    A US Commerce Department spokesperson did not directly respond to a request for comment on the authorisations but said the department hopes to get input from stakeholders about the rule and may consider changes.

    A White House spokesperson also did not respond to a request for comment.

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  • Asian stocks moving lower in wake of latest volatile session on Wall Street

    Asian stocks moving lower in wake of latest volatile session on Wall Street

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    TOKYO (AP) — Asian shares were mostly lower on Wednesday following another volatile day on Wall Street, as traders braced for updates on inflation and corporate earnings.

    Benchmarks fell in Tokyo
    NIY00,
    +0.09%
    ,
    Shanghai
    SHCOMP,
    -1.12%

    and Hong Kong
    HSI00,
    -2.90%

    but rose in Sydney.

    South Korea’s Kospi
    180721,
    +0.34%

    lost 0.1% to 2,189.86 after the Bank of Korea raised its key rate by 0.5 percentage point, amid the backdrop of Fed rate hikes in the U.S. and growing inflation risks from the weak won and rebounding global oil prices.

    In currency trading the Japanese yen declined to a 24-year low against the U.S. dollar
    JPYUSD,
    -0.24

    at 146 yen-levels, raising expectations of another intervention by Tokyo to prop up the yen. By midday the dollar
    USDJPY,
    +0.24%

    was at 146.17 yen, up from 145.80 late Tuesday. The euro
    EURUSD,
    +0.12%

    cost 96.96 cents, inching down from 97.07 yen.

    The weaker yen raises costs for both consumers and businesses who rely on imports of food, fuel and other needs, but the bigger purchasing power for foreign currencies is expected to boost tourism. Japan reopened fully to individual tourist travel this week after being closed for more than two years because of the pandemic.

    Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 lost 0.2% to 26,348.73 in morning trading. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200
    ASX10000,
    -1.54%

    gained nearly 0.2% to 6,656.00. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng slipped 2% to 16,491.39, while the Shanghai Composite shed 1.2% to 2,943.24.

    On Tuesday, the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.65%

    fell 0.7%, marking its fifth straight loss, closing at 3,588.84. The Nasdaq
    COMP,
    -1.10%

    dropped 1.1% to 10,426.19. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.12%

    added 0.1% to 29,239.19, while the Russell 2000 index
    RUT,
    +0.06%

    rose 1 point, or about 0.1%, to 1,692.92.

    Recession fears have been weighing heavily on markets as stubbornly hot inflation burns businesses and consumers. Economic growth has been slowing as consumers temper spending and the Federal Reserve and other central banks raise interest rates.

    The International Monetary Fund on Tuesday cut its forecast for global economic growth in 2023 to 2.7%, down from the 2.9% it had estimated in July. The cut comes as Europe faces a particularly high risk of a recession with energy costs soaring amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    See: Global economy most vulnerable since COVID crisis, with housing market at potential ‘tipping point,’ IMF warns

    Wall Street is closely watching the Federal Reserve as it continues to aggressively raise its benchmark interest rate to make borrowing more expensive and slow economic growth. The goal is to cool inflation, but the strategy carries the risk of slowing the economy too much and pushing it into a recession.

    “The market desperately wants a reason for the Fed to be able to stop tightening and the data recently hasn’t given them that opening with respect to inflation,” said Willie Delwiche, investment strategist at All Star Charts.

    Computer-chip manufacturers continued slipping in the wake of the U.S. government’s decision to tighten export controls on semiconductors and chip manufacturing equipment to China. Qualcomm
    QCOM,
    -3.99%

    fell 4%.

    See: Intel reportedly plans to lay off thousands of workers, with details potentially emerging alongside quarterly earnings

    Uber
    UBER,
    -10.42%

    fell 10.4% and Lyft
    LYFT,
    -12.02%

    slumped 12% following a proposal by the U.S. government that could give contract workers at ride-hailing and other gig economy companies full status as employees.

    The Fed will release minutes from its last meeting on Wednesday, possibly giving Wall Street more insight into its views on inflation and next steps.

    Investors still expect the Fed to raise its overnight rate by three-quarters of a percentage point next month, the fourth such increase. That’s triple the usual amount, and would bring the rate up to a range of 3.75% to 4%. It started the year at virtually zero.

    Rex Nutting: Leading indicators show inflation is slowing, but Fed policy makers are too busy looking in rearview mirror to notice

    The government will also release its report on wholesale prices Wednesday, providing an update on how inflation is hitting businesses. The closely watched report on consumer prices will be released on Thursday, and a report on retail sales is due Friday.

    “Everyone is still hoping that every inflation report will be the one that shows that pressure is alleviating,” Delwiche said.

    Wall Street is also gearing up for the start of the latest corporate earnings reporting season, which could provide a clearer picture of inflation’s impact.

    Among the companies reporting quarterly results this week: PepsiCo
    PEP,
    +0.48%
    ,
    Delta Air Lines
    DAL,
    -1.97%

    and Domino’s Pizza
    DPZ,
    -1.99%
    .
    Banks including Citigroup
    C,
    -2.76%

    and JPMorgan Chase
    JPM,
    -2.89%

    will also report results.

    In energy trading, benchmark U.S. crude
    CL00,
    -0.75%

    lost 82 cents to $88.53 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. U.S. crude-oil prices fell 2% Tuesday. Brent crude
    BRN00,
    -0.56%
    ,
    the international pricing standard, fell 62 cents to $93.67 a barrel.

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  • What is China’s Communist Party Congress and why does it matter? | CNN

    What is China’s Communist Party Congress and why does it matter? | CNN

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    Editor’s Note: A version of this story appeared in CNN’s Meanwhile in China newsletter, a three-times-a-week update exploring what you need to know about the country’s rise and how it impacts the world. Sign up here.



    CNN
     — 

    Xi Jinping is poised to cement his role as China’s most powerful leader in decades this month, when members of the country’s ruling Communist Party meet for a twice-a-decade leadership reshuffle.

    In recent years, these meetings have seen a streamlined transfer of power: the convention is for the top party leader, having completed two five-year terms, to pass the baton to a carefully chosen successor.

    But this year, Xi is expected to smash that precedent, taking on a third term as general secretary of the party and pitching China into a new era of strongman rule and uncertainty over when or how the country would see another leader.

    As a result, the 20th Party Congress is among the most consequential and closely watched party meetings in decades, and will reveal much about the direction of the world’s second-largest economy for the next five years.

    Here’s what you need to know about the events – and how China chooses its leaders.

    The Chinese Communist Party’s National Congress, known simply as the Party Congress, is a roughly week-long conclave that meets once every five years to appoint new leaders, discuss changes to the party constitution and lay out a policy agenda for the country.

    The Congress itself, typically held in October or November, convenes nearly 2,300 carefully selected Communist Party members, called delegates, from around the country. These delegates range from top provincial officials and military officers to professionals across sectors, and so-called grassroots representatives like farmers and industrial workers. Just over a quarter are women, while about 11% come from ethnic minorities, according to figures released ahead of this year’s Congress.

    This cohort also includes the hierarchy of the Chinese Communist Party, which is among the world’s largest political parties with more than 96 million members.

    There are three distinct rings of power in that hierarchy. Around 400 of the National Congress delegates are members of the Party’s elite Central Committee, which in turn includes the members of the upper echelon: the 25-member Politburo and its Standing Committee – China’s most powerful decision-making body, typically composed of five to nine men and led by the general secretary.

    The Politburo members are typically men from China’s dominant ethnic Han majority – with only one woman in the current group – who take important roles in the government.

    The week-long meeting is all about the Communist Party – the overarching source of power in China – and will ultimately guide who fills government positions. However, it is distinct from a state government meeting.

    For example, while Xi is expected to be named the party’s general secretary following the Congress, he won’t be confirmed for a third term as China’s head of state, or President, until an annual meeting of the rubber-stamp legislature in March.

    While votes are held at the Party Congress, this is widely viewed as a formality – not a true election process. Instead, the real decisions are believed to be made during an opaque process involving top leaders that begins long before the Congress.

    During the Congress, the delegates will cast votes for a new Central Committee – the principle party leadership body of about 200 full members and another roughly 200 alternatives, which meets regularly and is responsible for formally selecting the members of the Politburo.

    Immediately after the conclusion of the Congress, the newly formed 20th Central Committee meets for its first plenary session, where they select the Politburo and its Standing Committee.

    Watchers of elite Chinese politics believe the decisions over who will fill these top spots are typically made during months of back-room negotiations between top party leaders, where different power players or factions will typically try and advance their candidates, with choices settled well before the Congress starts.

    This time, Xi is believed to have largely eliminated his rivals and dampened the lingering power of party elders, who in the past were thought to have played a strong role in such decision-making.

    The new Politburo Standing Committee revealed for the first time after the Communist Party's 19th National Congress in 2017.

    Following their selection by the Central Committee, the Party’s new top leaders will make a choreographed entrance into the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, walking in order of importance.

    As in 2017, Xi is expected to lead the group into the room as the newly-confirmed general secretary and introduce the other members of the new Standing Committee in a nationally televised event.

    The line-up will provide a rare glimpse into the black box of Chinese elite politics. China watchers will be waiting to see how many members of the Standing Committee are selected and who they are, as signs of whether Xi has absolute power or has made concessions. They will also be looking for a potential successor in the midst, which could give a clue into how long Xi intends to rule.

    For more than two decades, a new general secretary has been appointed at every other Congress.

    But since the last Congress in 2017, Xi has signaled plans to keep a firm grip on all aspects of what’s considered a trifecta of power in China: control over the party, the state and the military. For one, at the last Congress, he broke with tradition and did not elevate a potential successor to the Standing Committee.

    Then, months later, China’s rubber-stamp legislature eliminated the term limits for President of China. This was widely seen as enabling Xi to continue to a third term as head of state, while also retaining his control of the party – where the true power lies.

    While there are no formal term limits for general secretary, staying in the top party role would also require Xi to break with another unwritten rule: the party’s informal age limit.

    The norm is that senior officials who are 68 or older at the time of the Congress will retire. At 69, Xi would flout this recent convention by staying in power. What’s less clear is whether he will seek to give other Politburo allies exemptions, disrupting one of the few neutral methods the party has to ensure turnover, or whether, in contrast, he could lower the retirement age for others to oust some existing members.

    The Congress opens with the general secretary reading out a work report summarizing the party’s achievements of the past five years and indicating the policy direction it will take for the next five.

    This year, observers will be watching for signs of the party’s priorities when it comes to its restrictive zero-Covid policy, handling of steep economic challenges, and stated goal of “reunifying” with Taiwan – a self-governing democracy the Communist leadership claims as its own despite never having controlled.

    Xi is also expected to strengthen his legacy, likely through amendments to the party constitution – a regular feature of each Congress.

    Last month, the Politburo discussed these changes during a scheduled meeting, according to a government statement that did not include specifics.

    In 2017, Xi became the first leader since Mao Zedong – Communist China’s founder – to have his philosophy added to the constitution while still in power, and observers have suggested Xi’s key principles could be further enshrined this time around.

    These details will be signs of how much power Xi holds within the upper echelons of the party – and how strong his backing is as he steps into his expected, norm-breaking third term leading one of the world’s most powerful countries.

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  • Elon Musk draws rebuke by suggesting Taiwan accept rule by China

    Elon Musk draws rebuke by suggesting Taiwan accept rule by China

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    Taiwan’s premier on Tuesday said Elon Musk “doesn’t know much” about the self-ruled island, after the billionaire suggested it should become part of China. The world’s richest man has sparked anger in Taiwan over an interview he gave to the Financial Times which touched on Taiwan’s fraught relationship with its giant neighbor.

    Taiwan lives under constant threat of invasion by Beijing, which claims the democracy as part of its territory, to be taken one day. 

    “This is not a matter of if they will invade, it’s a matter of when they will invade,” Admiral Lee Hsi-min, who used to head Taiwan’s armed forces, told correspondent Lesley Stahl about China on “60 Minutes” on Sunday amid escalating tension between the democratic, self-governing island and China. 


    Life in Taiwan with China flexing its military might | 60 Minutes

    13:33

    In the Financial Times interview published Friday, Musk said he believed Taiwan should strike a “reasonably palatable” agreement with Beijing to become a “special administrative zone” of China.

    That model is used by Beijing to run Macau and Hong Kong.

    Beijing’s leaders have long suggested the same model for Taiwan although it has always been a non-starter for the vast majority of Taiwanese.


    Hong Kong observes 25 years of independence from British rule

    02:15

    Premier Su Tseng-chang — Taiwan’s most senior politician after the president — became the highest-ranking official yet to address Musk’s comments, which he dismissed on Tuesday.

    “Musk is a businessman,” Su told a parliamentary session. “He has a big car factory in Shanghai and he wants to promote his electric vehicles… a businessman may say this today and say that tomorrow”.

    “Musk only speaks for himself but he really doesn’t know much about Taiwan and he also doesn’t understand cross-strait relations,” Su added.

    Bloomberg Pictures Of The Year: Extreme Business
    Elon Musk, center, reacts as Robin Ren, vice president of sales, second left, Ying Yong, mayor of Shanghai, second right, and Wu Qing, vice mayor of Shanghai, right, applaud during an event at the site of Tesla’s manufacturing facility in Shanghai, China, January 7, 2019.

    Qilai Shen/Bloomberg/Getty


    Polls have consistently shown that a large majority of Taiwan’s people have no appetite to be ruled by China, something that has deepened after Beijing deployed a sweeping political crackdown in Hong Kong.

    Musk is a notoriously outspoken business figure, especially on Twitter, where he frequently wades into social and geopolitical causes.

    His comments on Taiwan were praised by multiple Chinese officials, including Beijing’s ambassador to Washington Qin Gang.

    Last week Musk became embroiled in a social media spat with Ukrainian officials including President Volodymyr Zelenskyy over his ideas on ending Russia’s invasion.


    Russia launches biggest attack on Ukraine in months

    07:43

    Musk proposed a peace deal involving re-running under U.N. supervision annexation referendums in Moscow-occupied Ukrainian regions, acknowledging Russian sovereignty over the Crimean peninsula and giving Ukraine neutral status.

    Kyiv’s ambassador to Germany Andriy Melnyk replied bluntly: “F*** off is my very diplomatic reply to you.”

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  • Superyacht linked to Russian billionaire mysteriously shows up in Hong Kong | CNN

    Superyacht linked to Russian billionaire mysteriously shows up in Hong Kong | CNN

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    Hong Kong
    CNN
     — 

    A megayacht linked to a sanctioned Russian oligarch has dropped anchor in Hong Kong, amid efforts by the West to seize the luxury assets of Russian elites in allied ports as the war in Ukraine drags on.

    The Nord, a nearly 142-meter (466-foot) yacht that is said to be one of the world’s largest, was spotted by CNN on Friday in Hong Kong’s waters, just minutes from the central downtown district. The vessel is estimated to be worth at least $500 million and widely believed to belong to Alexey Mordashov, an industrial billionaire, according to a yacht broker who spoke with CNN.

    The yacht, 1.5 times the size of an American football field, arrived in Hong Kong on Wednesday from the Russian port of Vladivostok, according to the Chinese city’s Marine Department. The government agency told CNN on Friday that it hadn’t been notified about when the yacht would depart for its next destination.

    As of Friday afternoon, the Nord was seen flying a Russian flag, with the name of its home base, “Vladivostok,” emblazoned on its stern. A few people, apparently crew members dressed in uniform, were spotted on the vessel’s deck.

    Mordashov is one of Russia’s wealthiest billionaires, with an estimated net worth of $18.7 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. That’s down by $10 billion so far this year, according to the wealth tracker.

    The tycoon is chairman of Severstal, a Russian steel and mining giant that at last count had 54,000 employees across 69 countries.

    The US State Department sanctioned him and Severstal in June, in addition to three of Mordashov’s other companies, his wife and two adult children.

    In a statement at the time, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that the Treasury Department was taking further action to “degrade the networks allowing Russia’s elites, including President [Vladimir] Putin, to anonymously make use of luxury assets around the globe.”

    But the United States isn’t the only country cracking down. Several superyachts tied to Russian businessmen have been seized this year in high-profile cases around the world, including in Spain, Germany and the United Kingdom.

    Mordashov has challenged sanctions against him in European courts. In May, he argued that an EU court should annul the decision to add him to a list of those penalized over the Russian invasion of Ukraine, according to European Union filings.

    “I have absolutely nothing to do with the emergence of the current geopolitical tension and I do not understand why the EU has imposed sanctions on me,” he said this spring, at the beginning of the war, according to TASS, Russia’s state news agency.

    Nord seen anchored in Hong Kong on Friday, Oct. 7, just minutes by boat from the city's central district.

    Hong Kong may provide some refuge. Reached for comment by CNN on Friday, the Hong Kong Marine Department said that it would “not comment on any individual cases of vessel entry.”

    The city requires overseas yacht owners to gain permission from authorities to enter, including showing proof of insurance, according to the Marine Department.

    “We note that certain countries may impose unilateral sanctions against certain places on the basis of their own considerations,” it said.

    But the government “does not implement, nor do we have the legal authority to take action on, unilateral sanctions imposed by other jurisdictions,” the department added, saying only that it would enforce “sanctions imposed by the United Nations Security Council.”

    On Tuesday, Hong Kong leader, Chief Executive John Lee, said the city had “no legal basis” to act on Western-imposed sanctions – referring to the United States– but “will comply with any United Nations resolution on sanctions.”

    Lee himself is among nearly a dozen people sanctioned by the US in 2020 for undermining the city’s autonomy and democratic processes, to which he described as a “a very barbaric act” on Tuesday.

    “Hong Kong respects the rule of law. As an international financial city, Hong Kong’s regulatory system is on par with international standards. We will not do anything that has no legal basis,” Lee said.

    Russia and China — of which Hong Kong is a part — are two of the five members on the Security Council with veto power. Russia has consistently vetoed resolutions on the council in recent months, impeding action on Ukraine.

    Severstal did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Mordashov on Friday.

    MarineTraffic, the global maritime analytics provider, shows that the Nord arrived in Hong Kong this week after a seven-day journey through the Sea of Japan and East China Sea.

    It’s hard to know exactly why the crew chose to come to the Asian hub now, said Michael Maximilian Bognier, a yacht broker with Next Wave Yachting in Hong Kong.

    But he noted that the port of Vladivostok could get relatively cold in the winter, making it tougher to maintain such a vessel.

    “Not [an] ideal climate to keep a boat like that,” Bognier told CNN.

    Asked whether the lack of sanctions could be a draw, Bognier acknowledged the current political climate wasn’t helping.

    “This could be a reason why she’s here,” he said, referring to the yacht. “It could be a free ticket.”

    It’s rare to see proof of direct ownership of such lavish vessels. Bognier noted, however, that word usually got around about top industry sales and said it was common knowledge that Mordashov was the owner of the yacht.

    “Running a boat this size is almost [like] running a city or a business,” he added.

    The Nord was built by German shipping giant Lürssen.

    “This is definitely one of the most iconic yachts,” said Bognier. “It’s got a very flat bow, not unlike an aircraft carrier actually. That’s a very distinctive feature about this yacht. So it’s very, very difficult, let’s say, to mistake it for something else.”

    Sky-high carrying costs could make it tough for even the world’s wealthiest to maintain such assets. Bognier estimated that it could range from approximately $45 million to $70 million just to keep the yacht running each year, not factoring in variable costs of fuel or maintenance after any long journeys.

    That would break down to an average bill of $100,000 to $200,000 a day.

    The Nord is seen in Hong Kong on October 7, 2022.

    The Nord yacht boasts two helipads, and would likely have an extensive staff on board, including a full-time chef, fitness instructor, massage therapist, and possibly a helicopter pilot, according to Bognier.

    “When we talk about boats this size, these are standard items,” he said.

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  • Taiwanese politician on what would happen if China annexed Taiwan | 60 Minutes

    Taiwanese politician on what would happen if China annexed Taiwan | 60 Minutes

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    Taiwanese politician on what would happen if China annexed Taiwan | 60 Minutes – CBS News


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    “If they annex Taiwan, people like me… will be perished,” Taiwanese Politician Wang Ting-Yu tells 60 Minutes if China annexes Taiwan, it’s unlikely to honor existing freedoms. His proof? Look at Hong Kong. cbsn.ws/3ytLyHI

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  • ICYMI: A look back at Sunday’s 60 Minutes

    ICYMI: A look back at Sunday’s 60 Minutes

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    Life in Taiwan with China flexing its military might; Witnessing the aftermath of Hurricane Ian; Southern Baptist Convention President Bart Barber speaks with Anderson Cooper.

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  • China’s cyber assault on Taiwan

    China’s cyber assault on Taiwan

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    In August, as China captured the world’s attention with its large-scale military exercises off Taiwan, another offensive was taking place more subtly in the digital realm. 

    Across social media, fabricated stories claimed that China was evacuating its citizens from Taiwan and missiles were targeting a local airport, just days after U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had arrived on the island. 

    At the same time, messages appeared on hacked digital signage in 7-Eleven convenience stores throughout Taiwan that had been changed to read: “Warmonger Pelosi, get out of Taiwan!” At a train station in the southern port city of Kaohsiung, altered digital signs called Pelosi “an old witch.” 

    Hackers even brought down Taiwanese president Tsai Ing-wen’s official government website for around 20 minutes. 

    The cyber front to China’s offensive against Taiwan was in full swing. 

    “We are already at war,” Kitsch Yen-Fan, assistant director for the Global China Hub at the Atlantic Council, told 60 Minutes. “This is a constant thing.”

    Taiwan has ranked as the biggest target for foreign disinformation in the world for the last nine years, according to a 2022 report by the Digital Society Project, a venture of the Swedish institute Varieties of Democracy. Taiwanese politicians and researchers say the of the majority of those attacks originate from China. 

    Data show that cyberattacks targeting Taiwan spiked ahead of Pelosi’s visit to the small island in August, both in hacking attempts and in disinformation that spread across popular social media platforms, like Facebook, YouTube, and LINE, an instant messaging app popular in Taiwan. 

    “Fake news on social media is a way for [China] to pave the way for their eventual operation,” Kitsch said. “They want to basically sway public opinions, demoralize the public, [to] make their eventual takeover that much easier, which is actually what the Russians were trying to do in Ukraine.”

    According to Kitsch, many of the users posting false information in apps like LINE appear as everyday Chinese citizens, not government spies. They work to build trust with the Taiwanese people in their chat groups by initially posting innocuous information, such as supermarket discounts or activities at a local temple.

    “And they would have the credibility so when people look at the story, their first reaction is, ‘Oh. This guy can’t be lying to me. He just told me about that great discount last week,’” Kitsch explained. 

    Cybersecurity experts say the fabricated or misleading posts are part of a Chinese disinformation campaign intended to hurt Taiwanese morale. It is also designed to sow distrust of the U.S., one of the island’s strongest allies, fostering doubt among Taiwanese that the U.S. would come to their aid in the event of a kinetic war.

    One post 60 Minutes saw in the LINE app featured a video of a White House press conference that was falsely captioned with an ominous fabricated statement from the press secretary: “The United States will forsake Taiwan in case of an invasion.”

    Puma Shen, the director of DoubleThink Lab, a research group that focuses on Chinese influence campaigns in Taiwan and around the world, told 60 Minutes this is part of China’s disinformation campaign to paint the U.S. as an enemy. 

    “When I ask the college students here in Taiwan which is the country that disseminates this information to Taiwan, about 20 percent of them said U.S.A. and Japan,” Shen said. 

    Disinformation is not the only front of China’s cyber war. Cyberattacks might also come in the form of disruption and hacking attempts — both large-scale attempts on infrastructure and smaller-level assaults on digital targets, including denying access to or defacing government websites. 

    Taiwanese parliament member Wang Ting-Yu told 60 Minutes that data from Taiwanese intelligence show that approximately 20 million cyberattacks target the island each day. China, Wang said, is the source of the overwhelming majority of them. 

    When it comes to cyberattacks, Wang said that, while Taiwan does not engage in counter assaults, it does protect itself. 

    “Taiwan is an IT island. We are good at high technology…” he explained. “We are under these kinds of attack for a period of time. So our capability to counter these kind of activities — we are quite good at that.”

    The video above was produced by Brit McCandless Farmer and Will Croxton. It was edited by Will Croxton.

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  • Life in Taiwan with China flexing its military might | 60 Minutes

    Life in Taiwan with China flexing its military might | 60 Minutes

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    Life in Taiwan with China flexing its military might | 60 Minutes – CBS News


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    Lesley Stahl reports from Taiwan, where many seem unmoved by the shows of military force China has recently carried out.

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  • As tensions with China rise, life goes on in Taiwan

    As tensions with China rise, life goes on in Taiwan

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    Ever since Mao Tse Tung won China’s civil war in 1949 and the losing anti-communist side fled to a small, nearby island, Beijing has insisted that that island, Taiwan, is an integral part of the mainland. The U.S. has walked a tightrope, respecting that “One China” policy, but maintaining a special relationship with Taiwan, today a progressive, thriving democracy. 

    In September, President Biden vowed on this broadcast that the U.S. will protect Taiwan. This past week, the Taiwanese government said China aims to normalize its military pressure on the island, that escalated after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited in August with its largest military drill ever.

    In a display of frightening military might, China subjected Taiwan to three days of continuous sorties, with over 100 warplanes, a barrage of ballistic missiles and warships that encircled the island. Delivering a loud and clear message: that China could choke Taiwan any time it wanted to.  

    Lesley Stahl: You think they’re going to invade?

    Lee Hsi-min: This is not a matter of if they will invade, it’s a matter of when they will invade.

    Admiral Lee Hsi-min, who used to head Taiwan’s armed forces, has been ringing alarm bells for years because as China’s military has been growing, Taiwan’s is shrinking. The number of soldiers in uniform has been cut in half over the years, the length of mandatory service has been reduced to just four months, and Admiral Lee complains that the government has been buying the wrong weapons for years: tanks and jets from the United States instead of smaller portable missiles.

    taiwanscreengrabs01.jpg
      Admiral Lee Hsi-min

    Lesley Stahl: What I gather you think the military needs are these stingers and javelins and drones, exactly what they need in Ukraine.

    Lee Hsi-min: Yeah. It’s the truth.

    Lesley Stahl: And you’re not getting them now because –they’re giving them to Ukraine?

    Lee Hsi-min: No. We already ordered it. In my view, not enough. But however, we began to order them. But we have not yet received any. Because other countries also have kind of similar requirements. We are not on the top list. But we need now. We need now.

    Lesley Stahl: Did the Taiwanese military waste all those years buying those big weapons?

    Lee Hsi-min: I believe so, you know, but we don’t have time to waste anymore. 

    Taiwan doesn’t get U.S. military aid, it buys the weapons. But the manufacturers can’t keep up with the demand. The Taiwanese have already purchased about $14 billion worth of weapons that they have yet to receive. We were surprised that few here seem to share the admiral’s sense of urgency.

    Here in Taiwan, you’d never know that the dragon to the north recently sent warships to surround the island. People told us over and over, “no big deal” China’s been doing versions of that for 70 years. While much of the world thought an invasion was imminent, polls showed that a majority of Taiwanese think that’s unlikely any time soon, if ever. 

    And that’s reflected in what we saw in the capital, Taipei, where life goes on uninterrupted. Morning traffic flows normally. Shoppers do what they always do, during the day and at night. 

    We saw old people painting outdoors; and teenagers practicing hip-hop routines – despite the threat from the north.

    Wang Ting-yu: This kind of threat is our daily life.

    taiwanscreengrabs02.jpg
      Wang Ting-yu

    Wang Ting-yu, a parliamentarian from southern Taiwan, says a kind of war has already started.   

    Wang Ting-yu: China, they try to annex Taiwan for past 50 years. They try all different kind of way. Maybe I can give you very concrete figures: there are 20 million cyberattacks, per day.

    Lesley Stahl: Per day?

    Wang Ting-yu: Yes, every day.

    Wang, who sits on Parliament’s Foreign Affairs and National Defense Committee, took us to a high-security lab where engineers track those attacks.  

    Engineer: This is Taiwan here.

    Lesley Stahl: Ah, okay.

    Engineer: A small island. But we are proud of it. 

    A map shows the attacks from China in real time as they hit Taiwan.  

    Lesley Stahl: It’s so close to China.

    Engineer: Yeah. Unfortunately.

    Lesley Stahl: So is China hoping to defeat Taiwan without firing a single shot?

    Wang Ting-yu: They dream like that.

    Lesley Stahl: “They dream.”

    Wang Ting-yu: They desperately dream like that. 

    He says on top of cyber warfare, they’re trying to sabotage Taiwan’s thriving economy and intimidate politically-powerful groups, like the farmers and fishermen in Wang’s home district of Tainan who’ve been hit especially hard with a series of export bans.


    In Taiwan, outnumbered and outgunned but preparing with resilience training | 60 Minutes

    02:24

    Lesley Stahl: When Speaker Pelosi was here, China, we’re told, banned 1,000 products. Taiwanese products.  A lot from your region down here.

    Wang Ting-yu: It do hurt, do damage to some individual businesses. 

    Like the fish industry. 

    Lesley Stahl: Is there any grouper here? 

    90% of grouper exports went to China last year.

    But suddenly in June, Beijing banned Taiwan’s grouper, devastating the fishermen. Boxes and boxes of fish piled up. China also went after pineapples, crushing farmers like this young couple.

    taiwanscreengrabs07.jpg
    A farming couple in Taiwan

    Man Farmer: (translation) It devastated us.  Our pineapples got stuck in Taiwan and we lost $60,000 U.S. dollars.

    Lesley Stahl: And I understand the ban was sudden, like that. No warning.

    Woman Farmer: No warning. 

    The government fought back with a “Freedom Pineapple” campaign to entice everyone to buy and eat a lot of pineapples.

    Lesley Stahl: Oh my gosh, it’s so sweet. 

    Wang Ting-yu: Our housewives, they have a voice, “Let’s eat pineapple on our dining tables.”

    Lesley Stahl: Everybody’s eating pineapple.

    Wang Ting-yu: Military, they have lunch, they have dinner – provide pineapples.   

    We found a fairly prosperous country, a leading exporter of bicycles and other sports gear. This tiny island is a tech giant — in agriculture innovation and, above all, in semiconductors. Taiwan is practically the world’s only source of the thinnest microchips, manufactured almost exclusively by one company: TSMC. 

    China relies on these as does the rest of the world for things like iPhones, advanced computers, and car components. 91-year-old Morris Chang, TSMC’s founder, explains why a lot of people here think the chips protect them from Xi Jinping’s attacking.

    taiwanscreengrabs08.jpg
      Morris Chang

    Lesley Stahl: I’ve heard this expression, Silicon Shield or Chip Shield, talking about your company.

    Morris Chang: Well, it means that perhaps because our company provides a lot of chips to the world maybe somebody will refrain from attacking it. If that person’s priority is for economic well-being I think they will refrain from attacking.

    Lesley Stahl: What if the priority is to come here and nationalize your company within, you know, One China?

    Morris Chang: If there’s a war, I mean, it would be destroyed. Everything will be destroyed.

    Wang Ting-yu: China says — some of the Chinese Communists say:  Let’s invade Taiwan and occupy TSMC, make it become party-owned company. Then we will be a superpower! United States and Japan and Europe – we don’t supply them chips, they will follow Chinese orders! But that’s naïve.

    Lesley Stahl: Why is that naïve? 

    Wang Ting-yu: Not only chip company, even a sausage company – you need a recipe! You need human capital! You need to know how to manufacture, manufacturing that kind of product.

    Lesley Stahl: If there is reunification, what would happen to you?

    Wang Ting-yu: Die.

    Lesley Stahl: Die?

    Wang Ting-yu: Yeah. If they annex Taiwan, people like me, a lot, will be perished.

    Beijing has sanctioned Wang Ting-yu personally for being outspokenly pro-Taiwan’s independence. He passionately defends the country’s progressive democracy. We saw campaign billboards everywhere, validating the island’s commitment to clean elections and freedom of speech. Beijing has promised that if there were re-unification, Taiwan could maintain many of its freedoms.

    And yet, in 2019, China broke a similar promise to Hong Kong. Protests led to beatings, arrests, and stripping of democratic rights. It hit home in Taiwan and led to President Tsai Ing-wen, leader of the aggressively anti-reunification party, winning re-election in a landslide.

    President Tsai Ing-wen in 2019: We are firmly resolved to defend our freedom, democracy and way of life.

    Given what happened in Hong Kong and the recent military escalation, we were curious why the people are so stoic.  

    Asked if they’re in denial, or apathetic, a Taiwanese writer said it’s kind of like global warming: “you know it’s there’s and it’s going to get worse…  but mostly people go about their lives. What can one individual really do?” 

    taiwanscreengrabs09.jpg
      Jack Yao

    But then the taiwanese watched the Ukrainians stand up to the Russians. It so inspired Jack Yao, a young Taipei coffee vendor, that he went there to help the fight.

    Lesley Stahl: Did you go because you’re Taiwanese?

    Jack Yao: Yeah. Because –

    Lesley Stahl: What’s the connection?

    Jack Yao: Just, like, in the Ukraine situation and our situation – it’s very alike. They also have big neighbors. And they was the communists. And we have to face the China communists. And then they want to attack us. They always want to attack us.

    Lesley Stahl: Was it in your mind that if you go to fight for Ukraine, other people will come here and fight for Taiwan–

    Jack Yao: Yes!! Yeah.

    What the Ukrainians have done is raising a question here in Taiwan: if that small democracy can stand up to its menacing neighbor – why can’t we? You see civil defense classes sprouting up – like one on how to identify Chinese fake news during an attack… 

    And a night class in the park on how to operate two-way radios in morse code in case the internet is knocked out.

    Enoch Wu: We want our students to be able to apply a tourniquet within 30 seconds.

    Enoch Wu, a former special forces soldier, is running training workshops in how to treat bullet and shrapnel wounds and conduct search and rescue.  

    And Admiral Lee wants to take it a step further, calling on the government to arm Taiwan’s citizens and create a volunteer force like Ukraine’s. 

    Lee Hsi-min: If Ukraine can do that, why not Taiwan? You know, I’m trying to convince more people that it’s important because this is a symbol of the deterrence. Determination!

    Lesley Stahl: So you’re proposing what, I guess I would call, the Ukraine model. 

    Lee Hsi-min: Similar. Ukraine people really inspire our people.  But do our people change fast enough? I don’t think so.

    Lesley Stahl: Do you think that Taiwanese have that same kind of determination?

    Wang Ting-yu: I strongly believe this. Because we cherish how we live. We love peace, we don’t like war, but we won’t cede our democracy, our life for peace. That’s surrender.

    Lesley Stahl: Is there a chance you’ll surrender?

    Wang Ting-yu: No, not a chance. Never.

    Produced by Shachar Bar-On and Jacqueline Williams. Associate producer, Jinsol Jung. Broadcast associate, Wren Woodson. Edited by Peter M. Berman.

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  • Elon Musk may want a WeChat for the world. It won’t be easy to build | CNN Business

    Elon Musk may want a WeChat for the world. It won’t be easy to build | CNN Business

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    Hong Kong
    CNN Business
     — 

    Elon Musk is taking inspiration from China’s top social media platform, WeChat, while planning a future for Twitter. And while he has shared very few details of his ambition for an app for everything, experts say it won’t be easy to achieve.

    The Tesla

    (TSLA)
    CEO said late Tuesday that he wanted to create a new app called “X” after buying Twitter.

    “Buying Twitter is an accelerant to creating X, the everything app,” he tweeted.

    Musk’s comment came on the heels of news that he had once again reversed course and decided to follow through with his bid to buy Twitter for $44 billion, a price originally agreed back in April.

    The acquisition would put the world’s richest man in charge of one of the most influential social networks around, after months of acrimony and bitter U-turns.

    Now, Musk’s intention to build out what’s assumed to be a multipurpose platform has drawn comparisons to “super-apps” in Asia, essentially one-stop shops that do it all for users.

    Several tech companies in the region have already succeeded with their own versions of such applications. Chief among them is WeChat, the platform that is owned by Chinese tech giant Tencent

    (TCEHY)
    and sometimes described as Facebook

    (FB)
    , Twitter

    (TWTR)
    , Snapchat

    (SNAP)
    and PayPal

    (PYPL)
    all rolled into one.

    More than a billion users, primarily in mainland China, rely on the social network to do virtually everything — from ordering groceries to booking a yoga class to paying bills — without leaving the app.

    Elsewhere in Asia, people have also flocked to apps such as Grab (GRAB) in Singapore and Malaysia, or Line in Japan. Grab was initially best known as a ride-hailing service provider, while Line gained popularity as a messaging app, and both have since branched out significantly to offer other features.

    Musk has not been shy about his desire to emulate the success of WeChat. In June, at a town hall with Twitter employees, he compared the American company’s potential to that of Tencent’s ubiquitous service in China.

    “I think an important goal for Twitter would be to try to include as much of the country, as much of the world, as possible,” said the billionaire businessman. “You basically live on WeChat in China because it’s so usable and helpful to daily life, and I think if we can achieve that, or even get close to that at Twitter, it would be an immense success.”

    Musk isn’t the only prominent US tech leader taking cues from China: Previously, Facebook

    (FB)
    CEO Mark Zuckerberg also suggested that WeChat should be a case study for his company.

    For now, Musk has yet to outline his plans for X. But analysts say he would face numerous challenges.

    First: the fiercely competitive landscape. To some extent, WhatsApp, Facebook, YouTube, TikTok and practically “everything” are trying “to become super-apps as well,” said Ivan Lam, a senior research analyst at Counterpoint Research based in Hong Kong.

    “To try to become a super-app, it’s actually very hard,” he said in an interview.

    Xiaofeng Wang, a principal analyst at Forrester who focuses on digital marketing and engagement strategies in Asia Pacific, echoed that view, noting that the industry had only become more saturated in recent years.

    “When WeChat first launched extended services beyond social, there weren’t that many established competitors in related businesses yet,” she told CNN Business.

    “For example, when WeChat Pay was first launched, there [weren’t] any well-established mobile payment services in China yet … While in the US, there are already PayWave, Apple Pay, Google Pay, PayPal, Venmo.”

    Companies trying to branch out in the sector could also face considerable pushback from policymakers, according to Wang.

    “The more flexible regulatory environment in China at the time gave internet companies like Tencent and Alibaba more room to extend to a wide range of businesses. WeChat benefited from that and grew into a super-app,” she said.

    “It would be a lot harder now, given the stricter anti-monopoly regulations in China and it would be certainly harder for Twitter or the future X to do that in the US,” she added.

    Perhaps the core challenge, however, is simply trying to be everything for everyone.

    Lam noted that many successful “super-apps” have typically targeted specific audiences, making it easier to tailor a suite of services to their needs. That would be tough to replicate globally — and could mean that Twitter or X would need to also focus on certain regions to get off the ground, he said.

    Musk has acknowledged the uphill battle. On Tuesday, a Twitter user posited that “it would have been easier to just start X from scratch,” prompting the billionaire to respond that Twitter was an important part of the plan.

    “Twitter probably accelerates X by 3 to 5 years, but I could be wrong,” Musk wrote.

    Wang said that Forrester’s research had shown there were fundamental differences in how Western and Chinese users viewed social media, making it harder for Western companies “to build the same level of trust.”

    “Putting the ambitions aside, it may be a lot more difficult to create a super-app like WeChat in the West,” she concluded.

    — Clare Duffy contributed to this report.

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  • OPEC output cut ‘unhelpful and unwise,’ US Treasury chief says

    OPEC output cut ‘unhelpful and unwise,’ US Treasury chief says

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    The oil cartel OPEC’s choice to pare back oil supply will harm the global economy and especially developing countries, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told the Financial Times in an interview published Sunday.

    “I think OPEC’s decision is unhelpful and unwise — it’s uncertain what impact it will end up having, but certainly, it’s something that, to me, did not seem appropriate, under the circumstances we face,” Yellen said, adding that “we’re very worried about developing countries and the problems they face.”

    The cartel of 13 oil-producing countries on Wednesday agreed to reduce production by 2 million barrels a day as of November, in the context of an already tight market and rising world inflation in part caused by high energy prices.

    OPEC’s move marks a victory for Russia against the EU and the U.S. — Russia’s a major oil producer and an OPEC+ country that cooperates with the cartel. Ever since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, the West has been imposing economic sanctions against Russia, including on its oil sector, and encouraging other countries around the world to follow suit. Despite this effort, Moscow continues to sell its oil to countries like India, China and Turkey.

    OPEC took the decision despite a flurry of trips by EU and U.S. leaders to Saudi Arabia in recent weeks to try to convince the country’s crown prince and new Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman to ramp up oil production to fight inflation.

    The world oil price already started to rise after the announcement on Wednesday, moving from around $86 to over $93 per barrel.

    Meanwhile, Moscow congratulated “the truly balanced, thoughtful and planned work” of OPEC countries which served to “oppose the actions of the United States,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said in a TV interview broadcasted on Sunday.

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    Sarah Anne Aarup

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  • Elon Musk Backs China Special Zone For Taiwan That’d Be “More Lenient Than Hong Kong” — Report

    Elon Musk Backs China Special Zone For Taiwan That’d Be “More Lenient Than Hong Kong” — Report

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    Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, suggested in an interview published on Friday that Taiwan become a special administrative zone of China, according to a report in The Guardian.

    Musk told the Financial Times: “My recommendation … would be to figure out a special administrative zone for Taiwan that is reasonably palatable, probably won’t make everyone happy. And it’s possible, and I think probably, in fact, that they could have an arrangement that’s more lenient than Hong Kong,” the Guardian reported.

    Tesla, though headquartered in the U.S., made about half of its cars last year in mainland China, the world’s largest auto market.

    Chinese Communist Party-led Beijing claims sovereignty over democratic, self-governed Taiwan; the two sides have been divided since the end of a civil war in China in 1949.

    Musk was born in South Africa and is currently a U.S. citizen. He has a fortune worth $219 billion on the Forbes Real-Time Billionaires List today.

    The auto entrepreneur also waded into global politics recently by suggesting that the Ukraine cede the Crimea to Russia, drawing criticism from Ukraine.

    See related posts:

    Taiwan Businesses Support Reduction in Dependence on Mainland China

    Warren Buffett-Backed BYD’s Sales Soared To Record In September

    @rflannerychina

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    Russell Flannery, Forbes Staff

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  • ‘Genocide denial’: Anger as debate on Xinjiang rejected

    ‘Genocide denial’: Anger as debate on Xinjiang rejected

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    The UN Human Rights Council has voted not to debate the treatment of the Uighurs and other mostly Muslim minorities in China’s northwestern region of Xinjiang even after the UN’s human rights office concluded the scale of the alleged abuses there may amount to “crimes against humanity“.

    The motion for a debate on the issue was defeated by 19 votes to 17, with 11 countries abstaining in a decision China welcomed and others condemned as “shameful”.

    Many of those who voted “no” were Muslim-majority countries such as Indonesia, Somalia, Pakistan, UAE and Qatar. Among the 11 countries that abstained were India, Malaysia and Ukraine.

    “This is a victory for developing countries and a victory truth and justice,” Hua Chunying, China’s foreign affairs spokesperson tweeted. “Human rights must not be used as a pretext to make up lies and interfere in other countries’ internal affairs, or to contain, coerce & humiliate others.”

    The UN first revealed the existence of a network of detention centres in Xinjiang in 2018, saying at least one million Uighurs and other ethnic minorities were being held in the system. China later admitted there were camps in the region, but said they were vocational skills training centres necessary to tackle “extremism”.

    Amid leaks of official government documents, investigations by human rights groups and academics, and testimony from Uighurs themselves, China has lobbied hard to prevent any further probe into the situation in Xinjiang.

    Former UN Human Rights Commissioner Michelle Bachelet, who first called for “unfettered” access to the region in 2018, was only allowed to visit in May, in what appeared to be a tightly-choreographed visit.

    Her report (PDF) on the situation was also pushed back and was only released on August 31, minutes before her term was due to end.

    While it did not mention the word “genocide”, it found that “serious human rights violations” had been committed, and said “the extent of arbitrary and discriminatory detention of members of Uyghur and other predominantly Muslim groups … may constitute international crimes, in particular crimes against humanity.”

    The Uighurs are a mostly Muslim Turkic people who differ in religion, language and culture from China’s majority Han ethnic group.

    ‘Genocide denial’

    The United States, which called for the debate, condemned the latest vote.

    “The inaction shamefully suggests some countries are free from scrutiny and allowed to violate human rights with impunity,” Michele Taylor, the US representative to the Human Rights Council, said in a statement. “No country represented here today has a perfect human rights record. No country, no matter how powerful should be excluded from Council discussions — this includes my country, the United States, and it includes the People’s Republic of China.”

    In the wake of the UN report, Uighur groups had urged the UN Human Rights Council to establish a commission of inquiry to independently examine the treatment of Uighurs and other minorities in China and called on the UN Office on Genocide Prevention to immediately conduct an assessment of the risks of atrocities, including genocide and crimes against humanity in Xinjiang.

    They expressed disappointment at Thursday’s outcome, with the Campaign for Uyghurs noting that Beijing had been “actively trying to suppress” the report “at every level”.

    “Some member states have adopted China’s genocide denial,” the group’s Executive Director Rushan Abbas said in a statement. “They should consider the consequences of allowing one powerful country to effectively have impunity for committing genocide.”

    Alim Osman, president of the Uighur Association of Victoria in Melbourne, Australia, told Al Jazeera he was disappointed and angry at the decision.

    “That even a debate on the human rights situation is not allowed by few a countries which have economic ties with the Chinese regime clearly shows on the international stage that their moral obligation to defend human rights is for sale, therefore corrupting the UN itself,” he said. “The UN needs urgent reform.”

    Beijing has been lobbying hard against the findings of a long-delayed UN report into the situation in Xinjiang, which warned of possible ‘crimes against humanity’ [File: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP]

    Human rights groups also condemned the vote.

    In a strongly-worded statement, Amnesty International’s Secretary General Agnes Callamard said the decision protected the perpetrators rather than the victims of abuses.

    “For Council member states to vote against even discussing a situation where the UN itself says crimes against humanity may have occurred makes a mockery of everything the Human Rights Council is supposed to stand for.” Callamard said in a statement.

    “Member states’ silence — or worse, blocking of debate — in the face of the atrocities committed by the Chinese government further sullies the reputation of the Human Rights Council.

    “The UN Human Rights Council has today failed the test to uphold its core mission, which is to protect the victims of human rights violations everywhere, including in places such as Xinjiang.”

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  • Video: 视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻

    Video: 视觉调查:李文亮医生的最后时刻

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    时报的视觉调查团队审阅了李文亮的医疗记录,独家采访了一位目击了抢救过程的医生,揭示了关于李文亮病情和死亡的重要新细节。

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    Muyi Xiao, Isabelle Qian, Tracy Wen Liu, Drew Jordan and Jeff Bernier

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