Eat, Memory: Orange Crush – Yiyun Li

From the New York Times Magazine: The year I turned 16, a new product caught my eye. Fruit Treasure, as Tang was named for the Chinese market, instantly won everyone’s heart. Imagine real oranges condensed into a fine powder! Equally seductive was the TV commercial, which gave us a glimpse of a life that most […]

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Millions of workers in China aren’t getting paid – Tim Johnson

From Knight-Ridder, via the Miami Herald: Tang Jianliang, a 34-year-old migrant worker, stood forlornly on a sidewalk outside the construction site where he works in this booming southern city. Cement dust coated his old clothing. “I haven’t been paid in four months,” Tang said. He’s not alone. China estimates that millions of migrant workers are […]

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Western stars rising in the east – Fraser Newham

From the Guardian: “Uncle Dashan! Uncle Dashan!” In a smart bookshop in Chongqing city, deep in the humid heart of Sichuan, boys in new sneakers and girls with ribbons in their hair clamour for attention from the most famous foreigner on Chinese TV. Toronto-born Mark Rowswell – or, as he is known to a fifth […]

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The dragon at Detroit’s gate – Gal Luft

From Asia Times: With their market share sliding, their bonds downgraded to junk and their quarterly reports showing 10-digit losses, the Big Three – DaimlerChrysler, Ford and General Motors – are facing a challenge far more formidable than the Japanese onslaught of the 1970s. With 1.3 billion people, an economy growing at a sustained rate […]

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Study urges more private healthcare in China – Justine Lau

From the Financial Times: China needs to transform its incentive system for doctors and provide clearer treatment guidelines to reduce wasted health resources, according to a study by McKinsey. The country should also encourage more private insurance products to address a growing demand for better healthcare in the urban areas and cut the share of […]

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President Hu to visit US in April, says report – Le Tian

From China Daily: President Hu Jintao is set to visit the United States in April, Hong Kong-based Wenweipo reported yesterday, citing diplomatic sources. Both sides have reached a preliminary agreement on Hu’s April visit to Washington, while negotiations on the exact date and arrangements for the visit are ongoing, the report said. See also “US […]

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China announces tenth human case of bird flu – Reuters

From Reuters: China announced on Monday its tenth official human case of bird flu infection after a 29-year old woman from the west of the country was diagnosed with the H5N1 virus. A notice on the health ministry’s Web site said the woman ran a shop in a farmgoods market in Jinhua town in Sichuan […]

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Beneath the roof of the world – Isabel Hilton

From the Guardian: The three-year journey that inspired first Stick Out Your Tongue and then Red Dust was taken 20 years ago, and the book itself was banned in China in 1987. In Lhasa, when he arrived, the Chinese were celebrating the 20th anniversary of the “liberation” of Tibet, a miserable festival of flags and […]

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Testing China’s Web Tolerance – Bruce Einhorn

From Business Week: In the U.S., China’s control of the Internet — and the role of American companies in helping the Chinese government censor it — is once again a hot-button issue. Following the news that Microsoft (MSFT), at Beijing’s request, axed the writings of a Chinese blogger, critics are up in arms. Congressional hearings […]

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China Brief: Special Issue on Social Stability in China – Wenran Jiang, David Kelly and Li Fan

From The China Brief: Editor’s Note: This special issue of Jamestown’s China Brief is released just as the Chinese government revised its figures upward on the incidence of domestic social unrest. Yesterday, January 19, the Public Security Bureau revealed that the government recorded 87,000 “public order disturbances” in 2005″a 6.6 percent increase from figures for […]

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Gov’t Seeking to Deport Chinese Scholar – Matthew Barakat

From AP, via ABC News: Nearly five years ago, the U.S. government exerted high-profile diplomatic pressure on China to secure the return of scholar Gao Zhan, a researcher at American University whom Beijing believed was a spy for Taiwan. Now, the Department of Homeland Security is pushing with equal vigor to have her deported back […]

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