China Warns Taiwan Against Provoking Conflict

Via Washington Post, from the Reuters today: “Armed conflict may be unavoidable if Taiwan keeps provoking China and pushing for independence, one of Beijing’s top Taiwan policy-makers said on Monday, but he spelt out a condition for reopening dialogue. Wang Zaixi, vice minister of the mainland’s policy-making Taiwan Affairs Office, told Reuters in a rare […]

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China Barrels Ahead in Oil Market

From LA Times: “Surging Chinese demand, which has helped drive up oil prices to record levels in the last year, is expected to rise by double-digit growth rates annually for the next 15 years. Although crude prices have settled back in recent days to less than $50 a barrel, China’s rapid economic expansion is almost […]

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SARS and the media

Thomas Abraham, former editor of the South China Morning Post, has written a new book – Twenty-first Century Plague: The Story of SARS – criticizing the media’s role during the SARS crisis in 2003. In order to prevent future outbreaks, he argues, journalists need to do a better job of keeping the public informed: “‘When […]

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To become a 21st century hegemon, China will need toshare its wealth

As part of the Guardian’s weeklong special about China, Isabel Hilton writes that in order for China to reach global superpower status, it first has to “share the internal wealth and build a more equal, well-educated society.” She writes, “Only two big ideas now survive from Mao’s copious outpourings: one is a truculent nationalism that […]

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China sees more energy shortages

From China Daily: “China’s hunger for electricity will create more shortages through early 2005 in the country’s booming coastal areas — the main driver behind growth in the world’s seventh largest economy, CCTV said on Sunday. But despite predicted consumption growth of 13.5 percent in the fourth quarter of 2004 and 12.7 percent in the […]

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China tests radar surveillance aircraft

From the Big News Network: “The Chinese military has said it developed a radar surveillance aircraft and has been testing the first models for deployment in the Taiwan Strait. The Chinese airborne warning and control system, known as AWACS, uses advanced radar systems mounted on a Russian-made Il-76 transport aircraft, the Washington Post reported Saturday. […]

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Chinese take the ‘gangsta’ out of rap

Via indystar.com, the Los Angeles Times had an interesting article today about hip-hop music in China. “China, accomplishing what millions of disapproving American parents could not, has tamed hip-hop music. Instead of often obscene and violent inner-city tales, Wang and other leading rappers here are taking to the stage with lyrics that glorify national pride, […]

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Protests: A Chinese Growth Industry

A WSJ article (November 10, 2004) reports that, in an attempt to deal with the increasing numbers of Chinese who are swarming government offices to demand their rights, Chinese legislators are considering banning public gatherings outside state buildings. This short-sighted response fails to address the root cause of the protests, which have been increasing in […]

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White House Rejects Trade Case Vs. China

Both Xinhua and the AP have reported on the White House’s rejection of a request by members of Congress that the US bring a case against China at the WTO for manipulating its currency to gain unfair trade advantages: “In a statement, Neena Morjani, a spokeswoman for U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick, said that the […]

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China Urges Calm Over Submarine Dispute

From AP via Washington Post: “Japan and China should try to resolve their differences calmly, China’s ambassador to Japan said Saturday, a day after Tokyo filed a protest with Beijing over the intrusion of a Chinese nuclear submarine. The incident has strained relations between two of Asia’s biggest economic and military powers.”

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Government organizes trip for China’s Internet elite to improve their ‘political quality’  

From the Interfax today: Internet Media Association recently organized an educational trip for China’s leading Internet media companies with support from the Internet Affairs Bureau of China’s State Council. Internet Executives participating in the trip included NetEase Founder Ding Le and Sohu Founder Charles Zhang, two of the richest men in China. …… “The trip, […]

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Learned behaviour

From the South China Morning Post (via: China Study Group): “Migrant workers on the mainland are enrolling in a Shenzhen college to improve their job prospects – and their self esteem.”

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Great firewall of China

From the Guardian (via: China Study Group): “By the end of this year, the country will have the second-largest online community in the world, monitored by an alleged 30,000 internet police. How do the Chinese feel about this?”

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Japan demands apology from China over sub intrusion

From Japan Today:“Japan on Friday determined that a suspected nuclear submarine that intruded Wednesday into Japanese waters belongs to the Chinese Navy and lodged a strong protest with China. Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura summoned Minister Cheng Yonghua, the No. 2 official at the Chinese Embassy in Tokyo, to the ministry in the evening and lodged […]

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