Tag Archives: China

Yesterday.

International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach held a video phone call with three-time Olympian Peng Shuai amid a wave of global concern about Peng’s wellbeing and whereabouts.

Via CNN:

Since Friday evening, a steady stream of photos and videos purporting to show a smiling Peng going about her life in Beijing have surfaced on Twitter — all posted by individuals working for Chinese government-controlled media and the state sport system, on a platform blocked in China.

The apparent propaganda push was followed Sunday by a video call between Peng and International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Thomas Bach, during which the three-time Olympian insisted she is “safe and well, living at her home in Beijing” and “would like to have her privacy respected,” according to a statement from the IOC.

The flurry of “proof of life” videos came amid a firestorm of global concern for Peng, who disappeared from the public eye for more than two weeks after taking to social media to accuse former Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli of coercing her into sex at his home — an explosive and politically sensitive allegation that triggered blanket censorship in China.

Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai has finally appeared in public. But here’s why the worries aren’t going away (CNN)

BBC

Yesterday.

Interesting times.

Meanwhile…

Um.

Previously: A Great Bunch Of Lads

Xi Jinping, President of the People’s Republic of China

This morning.

Via NDTV:

China banned reality talent programmes Thursday and ordered broadcasters to promote more masculine representations of men, in a wide-ranging crackdown on “immoral” pop culture Beijing believes is leading young people astray.

Broadcast and TV institutions must not screen idol development programmes or variety shows and reality shows,” China’s broadcast regulator, the National Radio and Television Administration said, in a raft of new regulations.

The regulator ordered broadcasters to resist “abnormal aesthetics” such as “sissy” men, “vulgar influencers“, stars’ inflated pay and performers with “lapsed morals

China Bans Reality Talent Shows In Major Showbiz Crackdown (NDTV)

Getty

From top: Minister for Education Norma Foley; Department of Education briefing note

Last night/This morning.

Mandarin Chinese using simplified script was introduced as a new subject on the Leaving Cert curriculum in 2019. Ireland is the only country to refuse to accept traditional script.

Via RTÉ

Controversy already surrounds the new exam over a ban on traditional Chinese characters, used in Hong Kong and Taiwan, in favour of China’s simplified script, which the Department said was more suitable for beginners.

RTÉ has learnt that the Department of Education signed a memorandum of understanding with China’s Ministry of Education agreeing “support for implementation of the Leaving Certificate curriculum, particularly in relation to teacher supply and teacher training”.

In response to a request for a copy of the agreement and minutes of a meeting with Chinese officials in July 2019, a Department spokesperson said that the Chinese Ministry of Education and the Chinese Embassy would first need to be consulted “to ensure there is no objection to the release” and in order to “maintain codes of good practice and courtesy.”

Some academics argue that the Communist Party has an interest in promoting its script above alternative writing systems because they provide a gateway to diverse political and historical narratives, at odds with its own.

New questions over China’s role in Leaving Cert exam (RTÉ)

Meanwhile…

RollingNews

Yesterday’s Irish Times’ advertorial for the Chinese Communist Party

This morning.

Via Irish Times Letters:

I resent the publication of the Chinese government ad in yesterday’s Irish Times.

Comparing China to Ireland is an insult.

They talk about looking after the “wellbeing” of the Chinese people and the development of the country.

Is forced sterilisation looking after people’s wellbeing?

Is imprisoning protesters democratic?

Is silencing that optician who broke the scandal of coronavirus democratic? I think not.

I am saddened that the Irish Times published this propaganda, money is not everything.

Tina Dermody,

County Wicklow

Irish Times Letters

Meanwhile…

The advertorial talks about the CCP’s commitment to the “wellbeing of the Chinese people”. Tell that to the millions of Uighurs in China’s west who have been terrorised, imprisoned or surveilled and are having their culture erased. Or speak to feminist activists who have been jailed or forced into exile for calling out gender discrimination.

Or consider the lawyers who have been imprisoned for taking on human rights cases. Even Marxist activists have been detained for supporting more worker’s rights. The party indeed may be committed to “wellbeing”, but the party gets to define what wellbeing means.

China’s self-penned praise calls for dose of scepticism (, Irish Times)

Yesterday: A Great Bunch Of Lads

Thanks Lilly

 

Mick Wallace MEP

Yesterday.

Via The Global Times:

‘As the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Communist Party of China (CPC) is approaching, Mick Wallace shared his views on issues including the CPC’s role in China’s development, differences between Western political parties and the CPC, and what Europe can learn from China, in an interview with Global Times (GT) reporter Yu Jincui.’

Global Times: “China’s rise and development have upset many Western countries. But you have said that the EU should learn something from China’s development. Why do you think so? What aspects do you think the West can learn from China?”

Wallace: “The reason that we can learn something from China is because Europe is not doing a great job serving the interest of its people. I think facing great challenges, the Chinese have done remarkably well, given the size of the population. The system of the government is serving the people better whereas the system of governments in Europe is serving its business first.

“The biggest challenge for the European Union in the future is that it has to have a better relationship with the citizens of Europe. Right now, because the EU is a neoliberal club, it puts the interest of big business before those of the ordinary people. That’s a huge challenge for the EU because Europe has to change. It has to prioritize the interests of the ordinary citizens of Europe, instead of advertising the interest of big business. Because if it doesn’t, then it is going to lose the support of the people of Europe. So that’s the big challenge for Europe. I think we can learn lessons from China who are doing a better job in looking after the concerns of the ordinary citizens than the Europeans are doing at the moment.

“When the people need help, the government of any country should be there for the people. They should prioritize the interest of the people. And that’s the approach that we should have. For me, you don’t measure the quality of a government by the size of GDP, you measure it by how well it looks after those who most need help.

GT: “How do you evaluate the role that the Communist Party of China (CPC) has played in China’s development over the past few decades? Why can the CPC lead China to move forward and achieve rapid development?”

Wallace: “I believe in a system of government where the government works for everybody and not just for the few. And the CPC has obviously played a strong role in helping so many hundreds of millions in China to move out of poverty. That’s been a remarkable achievement. It couldn’t have been done under the capitalist system. China could not have made the same progress with a capitalist system. So the CPC deserves a lot of credits for the progress that China has made.”

GT: “In your opinion, what are the major differences between the CPC and Western political parties?”

Wallace: “The majority of parties in Europe favor the capitalist system and the capitalist system doesn’t look after the interests of all the people. It’s exactly the interest of some people, but not all of them. Whereas a proper communist system looks after the concerns of all, I’m sure the Communist Party system in China is not perfect either. And I know that you have a lot of people with crazy amounts of money as well. But at the same time, I do think the fact that you have moved so many people out of poverty over the last number of years just shows that you’re doing something right.”

GT: “Some pundits predict the collapse of the CPC, while others hype up purported threats the CPC poses to the West. How do you view these voices? Where do those misunderstandings come from?”

Wallace: “Communist parties have failed to survive in most countries of the world. Would that be pressure on the change? The people who have the most money in China might like things to be done different. That is a challenge to any communist system if people with a lot of money in any country become very powerful, they would challenge that communist way of thinking. So that’s a danger that China has to be careful of. I think it’s important that China doesn’t embrace neoliberalism.”

GT: “The US and some other Western countries attacked the CPC and have even sanctioned some Party members. But such acts have increased Chinese society’s support for the CPC. Why have the Western attacks failed to alienate Chinese people from the CPC?”

Wallace: “You shouldn’t worry so much about the criticism from the [Western] people. They criticized China because they don’t want China to be doing so successful. They will criticize you anywhere if you do something well. You shouldn’t worry about them.”

GT: “How does China’s development over the past few decades contribute to the world?”

Wallace: “China is investing in a lot of countries at the moment, like in Africa and Latin America, and it’s not using guns. They don’t use guns and bombs like the Americans do. But still, I think it’s important that if China is going to invest in countries, it should always be in the interest of the citizens of that country and not just in the interest of China. The world powers will always go to other countries to make investment, to access minerals and whatever. It’s important that China doesn’t copy the ways of the West who have exploited many countries for several hundred years. And it’s important that China doesn’t become like them and exploit these countries as well. You can operate in these countries, you can do business with these countries. It’s important that China does it in a fair manner.”

Good times.

Western parties should learn from CPC in care for people: EU MP (Global Times)

This morning.

Meanwhile…

Full page ad in today’s Irish Times extolling the Chinese Communist Party and explaining why it has such ‘solid support’ from the Chinese people

This morning.

Um.

“In 2020, China won the trade war, science and technology war, and especially the biological war…

“The Western model has failed, the 500-year maritime civilization is doomed, the CCP has won and will lead the way of the modernization in the new era after the biology revolution…

“…the U.S. was beaten back to its original shape.”

Ping Chen, a professor at Peking University and senior researcher at the CCP-affiliated think tank China Institute of Fudan University.

Gulp.

Anyone?

The Chinese Communist Party is ‘up to its neck’ in the world’s woes (Sky News Australia)

John Sudworth (left) and Yvonne Murray

This afternoon.

The BBC’s Beijing correspondent John Sudworth has left China and moved to Taiwan following pressure and threats from the Chinese authorities.

Via BBC:

He and his family were followed to the airport and into the check-in area by plainclothes police officers. His wife, Yvonne Murray, is the China correspondent for the Irish public broadcaster RTE.

Sudworth, who has won awards for his reporting on the treatment of the Uyghur people in the Xinjiang region, left Beijing with his family.

The BBC says it is proud of his reporting and he remains its China correspondent.

Meanwhile, Ms Murray said:

“Two of our children were born in China, they all speak fluent Chinese, so for them it is home and it’s particularly distressing for them facing the reality that they might never be able to go back, as long as the Chinese state is so determined to target and punish journalists for simply doing their job.

“But we will try to hold on to the memories we’ve made. China is an extraordinarily colourful, culturally rich country. Friendships we forged with Chinese people over the years can’t be taken from us.

The secret police who followed us as we left – while a sad departing memory – can’t erase all the other happy memories.”

BBC China correspondent John Sudworth moves to Taiwan after threats (BBC)

Irish reporter leaves China after rise in surveillance (RTÉ)

Pics: BBC/RTÉ

Xi Jinping, then Vice-President of the People’s Republic of China, now its leader, sampling an Irish Coffee during his three day visit to Ireland in 2012

This morning.

Via Breakingnews:

1,088 Chinese citizens have paid up to €1 million to live in Ireland in a Government cash-for-residency scheme.

The money has gone into housing, nursing home and other projects.

The Irish Times reports that Department of Justice figures reveal that non-EU citizens have given €826.5 million to businesses and charities here in return for the right to live in the Republic since 2012.

Chinese citizens accounted for 1,088 of 1,166 investors since the start of the Immigrant Investor Programme (IIP).

It must be our climate.

They have a yen for it.

Over 1,000 Chinese citizens pay up to €1m for Irish residency (Breakingnews)

RollingNews