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Monday, 31 March 2014

Philippine ship dodges China blockade to reach South China Sea outpost

The Philippine government vessel made a dash for shallow waters around the disputed reef in the South China Sea, evading two Chinese coastguard ships trying to block its path to deliver food, water and fresh troops to a military outpost on the shoal.


The cat-and-mouse encounter on Saturday, witnessed by Reuters and other media invited onboard the Philippine ship, offered a rare glimpse into the tensions playing out routinely in waters that are one of the region’s biggest flashpoints.


It’s also a reminder of how assertive China has become in pressing its claims to disputed territory far from its mainland.


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China’s leader Xi in first visit to European Union

China’s president is meeting with the top officials of the European Union to discuss the two sides’ close business ties and their wider diplomatic relations.


Xi Jinping on Monday became the first Chinese leader to visit the headquarters of the 28-country EU in Brussels.


The EU is China’s largest trading partner, while China is Europe’s second-largest, trailing only the U.S. China and Europe trade well over 1 billion euros worth ($1.37 billion) a day.


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China seizes $14.5 billion in assets from family, associates of former security chief

Chinese authorities have seized assets worth at least $14.5 billion from family members and associates of retired domestic security chief Zhou Yongkang, who is at the center of China’s biggest corruption scandal in more than six decades, two sources said.


More than 300 of Zhou’s relatives, political allies, proteges and staff members have been detained or questioned in the past four months, said sources who were briefed on the investigation.


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China increases minimum wage rates

The U.S. isn’t the only large nation currently dealing with wage issues for its lowest-paid workers.


In China, where city and provincial governments set minimum wage standards, a number of regions are moving to raise employee pay. Starting in April, the minimum wage for workers in Shanghai will rise to $293 per month (1,820 Chinese yuan), the highest in mainland China. And over the past several weeks, both Shandong Province in eastern China and the city of Shenzhen, a major manufacturing base just across from Hong Kong, have raised their minimum pay scales.


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Thousands Protest Taiwan’s Trade Pact With China

Tens of thousands of people gathered for a protest outside Taiwan’s Presidential Office Building in downtown Taipei on Sunday, stepping up pressure on President Ma Ying-jeou to re-examine a trade deal with Beijing that has sparked an occupation of the legislature by students for nearly two weeks.


Sunday’s protest is the latest demonstration since the unilateral passage of the trade pact by the ruling Chinese Nationalist Party, or the Kuomintang, during a first reading without bipartisan deliberation on March 17. The protesters, who say the negotiations between Taipei and Beijing weren’t transparent and are worried China will exert more control over Taiwan’s economy, aim to tap into growing skepticism over increasing cross-Strait economic ties and Taipei’s rapprochement with Beijing since President Ma took office in 2008.


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Friday, 28 March 2014

China Hints it is Ready to Reach for Stimulus

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said economic growth should be maintained at a “reasonable pace,” in the latest hint that the government is ready to reach for stimulus measures if the current slowdown worsens.


With economic indicators showing a soft start to the year for China, economists have said that reaching the government’s growth target of “about 7.5%” is looking doubtful. A series of investment banks have cut their forecasts for China’s economy. Both J.P. Morgan and Bank of America Merrill Lynch now project 7.2% gross domestic product growth this year.


China has the capability and confidence to keep growth at a “reasonable pace,” Mr. Li said in remarks to a meeting of provincial leaders in the northeastern province of Liaoning on Wednesday and that were reported by the official Xinhua News Agency on Friday.


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Wall Street Is Lifted by Encouraging China Report

Stocks rose on Wall Street after the opening bell on Friday, lifted by remarks from China’s premier that the Chinese government was ready to take steps to support its economy.


The Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.27 percent and the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index was up 0.35 percent. The Nasdaq composite added 0.34 percent.


Despite the early rise, major indexes were on track for a negative week, with the Nasdaq set for its biggest weekly decline since 2012 as investors took profit in high-growth names. Trading has been volatile throughout the week, with sentiment largely driven by geopolitical uncertainty. The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index turned nearly flat for the year on Thursday.


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Manila raises stakes with Beijing, seeks arbitration over South China Sea

The Philippines will file a case against China over the disputed South China Sea at an arbitration tribunal in The Hague next week, subjecting Beijing to international legal scrutiny over the increasingly tense waters for the first time.


Manila is seeking a ruling to confirm its right to exploit the waters in its 200-nautical mile exclusive economic zone (EEZ) as allowed under the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), its team of U.S. and British lawyers said.


A ruling against China by the five-member panel of the Permanent Court of Arbitration could prompt other claimants to challenge Beijing, experts said. But while legally binding, any ruling would effectively be unenforceable as there is no body under UNCLOS to police such decisions, legal experts said.


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Greg Torode and Manuel Mogato, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1iI42Gq

China angrily denounces Japan for Russia-Crimea analogy

China denounced Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Friday for drawing an analogy between Russia’s behaviour in Crimea and China’s actions in the disputed East and South China Seas, accusing Abe of hypocrisy.


Japan’s Kyodo news agency said Abe raised the issue at a G7 meeting in The Hague this month, warning that China was trying to change the status quo through coercion, and said something similar to Russia’s seizing of Crimea could happen in Asia.


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Ben Blanchard and Kiyoshi Takenaka, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1iI42Gi

China’s Xi in Germany on European tour

Chinese President Xi Jinping is meeting German Chancellor Angela Merkel on the latest leg of a several-country visit to Europe.


Xi was expected to oversee the signing of several business agreements during Friday’s visit to Berlin.


China and Germany are two of the world’s leading exporters, and they had a total trade volume last year of 140.4 billion euros ($193 billion) — making China Germany’s third-biggest trade partner.


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Thursday, 27 March 2014

WTO Ruling Draws Muted China Response

China gave a muted response to losing a global trade case over rare-earth minerals, with both government and industry saying they were weighing options.


The foreign ministry said it was assessing the ruling by the World Trade Organization, reiterating a Commerce Ministry statement late Wednesday. The Association of China Rare Earth Industry likewise said it is studying the impact of the WTO ruling on the country’s rare-earth enterprises.


The WTO decision ruled in favor of a complaint from the U.S., the European Union and Japan accusing Beijing of violating trade rules by imposing quotas on exports of rare earths, which are used to manufacture a range of crucial technologies from smartphones to missile-defense systems. China has said the restrictions are in place for environmental-protection reasons.


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Wayne Ma, Wall Street Journal via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1jAaClH

Most Chinese Cities Fail Pollution Standard, China Says

Only three of the 74 Chinese cities monitored by the central government managed to meet official minimum standards for air quality last year, the Ministry of Environmental Protection announced this week, underscoring the country’s severe pollution problems.


The dirtiest cities were in northern China, where coal-powered industries are concentrated, including electricity generation and steel manufacturing. The ministry said in its announcement, which was posted on its website on Tuesday, that in the broad northern region that includes the large cities of Beijing and Tianjin as well as the province of Hebei, which surrounds Beijing, the air quality standards were met on only 37 percent of days in 2013. Beijing, with 20 million people, did so on only 48 percent of days, the ministry said.


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Edward Wong, New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1lpxB2O

China Detains Suspect for Spreading Rumor Leading to Bank Run

Chinese police detained a person suspected of spreading rumors that triggered several bank runs in eastern Jiangsu province and urged the public not to believe or disseminate the speculation.


A person surnamed Cai was taken into custody on March 26, according to a statement on the Yancheng city police’s official microblog. The investigation is ongoing, the police said. Yancheng is in Jiangsu province’s north.


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China to Boost Cybersecurity

China’s defense ministry said it would take measures to boost cybersecurity after reports this week alleging the U.S. spied on Chinese technology company Huawei Technologies Co. and several Chinese leaders.


Speaking at a monthly briefing, defense ministry spokesman Geng Yansheng said the revelations “exposed the hypocrisy and despotism of the U.S. side.”


Though Mr. Geng didn’t specify how China would seek to boost its defenses against cyberattacks, China in February set up a new high-level committee on cybersecurity, over which Chinese President Xi Jinping presides.


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Paul Mozur, Wall Street Journal via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1foOnI3

Frankfurt Said to Become Yuan Hub With Accord to Mark Xi Visit

The Bundesbank and the People’s Bank of China will probably sign a memorandum of understanding tomorrow to enable clearing and settlement of yuan trades in Frankfurt, Germany’s financial capital, according to a person familiar with the agreement.


The central banks are set to sign the accord to coincide with a visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping to Berlin, where he will meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel, said the person, who asked not to be identified because the deal isn’t public. The agreement will take Frankfurt, the seat of the European Central Bank, a step closer to becoming a yuan offshore hub.


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Angela Cullen, Bloomberg News via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1lpxAvW

Wednesday, 26 March 2014

China Export Quotas on Metals Violate World Trade Law, Panel Finds

China has broken international trade law by restricting the export of rare earth elements and other metals crucial to modern manufacturing, a World Trade Organization panel said Wednesday. That conclusion opens the possibility that Beijing will face trade sanctions from the United States, which brought the case, and the European Union and Japan.


China produces more than nine-tenths of the global supply of the strategically important metals, which are essential to a host of modern applications including smartphones, wind turbines, industrial catalysts and high-tech magnets. Prices soared in 2010 after Beijing cut export quotas by about 40 percent, to just over 30,000 tons, saying the restrictions were necessary on environmental grounds.


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David Jolly, New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/P1XVCc

China says supports international financial aid for Ukraine

China’s foreign ministry said on Wednesday that international financial bodies ought to be offering aid to Ukraine to ensure its economic stability, though it stopped short of saying whether Beijing would participate in such efforts.


Ukrainian Finance Minister Oleksander Shlapak says he is negotiating with the International Monetary Fund for a loan package of $15 billion (£9.07 billion) to $20 billion (£12.09 billion) because the economy had been severely weakened by months of political turmoil and mismanagement.


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Ben Blanchard, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/P1XVlC

On Visit to China, Michelle Obama Eases In Some Political Messages

Michelle Obama’s weeklong trip to China seemed to start as a spring break holiday with her mother and daughters but has turned out to include far more substance — and politics — than the cheerful advocate of fitness and healthful eating she often displays at home.


At a high school here on Tuesday, Mrs. Obama pointedly told students that the United States championed “the right to say what we think and worship as we choose,” even as she conceded that Americans still lived those ideals imperfectly and that minorities had struggled to overcome a legacy of discrimination.


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Jane Perlez and Mark Landler, New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/P1XS9x

Bank of England, People’s Bank of China in Deal to Settle Yuan Trades

Britain moved a step closer Wednesday to cementing its status as the Western hub for financing and trade in the Chinese yuan with an agreement to set up the first official clearing service for the currency outside Asia.


Chancellor George Osborne said the Bank of England and the People’s Bank of China will sign a memorandum of agreement on Monday to cover how they will share in the operations, with a clearing bank to be named later.


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Clare Connaghan and Margot Patrick, Wall Street Journal via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1jvBlQy

Deal-Making Ahead As China President Visits France

Chinese President Xi Jinping was the toast of France as he embarked on a state visit — and what better time just days after China ended an anti-dumping, anti-subsidy investigation of French wine.


Deal-making and commemorations of a half-century of French diplomatic ties with Communist China were the order of business during Xi’s three-day visit, part of his European tour. French officials said the signing of dozens of commercial accords large and small — from nuclear energy to aerospace to agribusiness, even including a possible sausage deal — were being lined up.


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Tuesday, 25 March 2014

US First Lady Urges Chinese Students to Aim High

U.S. first lady Michelle Obama encouraged rural Chinese students to aim high and get a good education despite humble roots, in a speech Tuesday that was delivered via satellite technology to remote communities in southwestern China.


She cited herself, basketball star LeBron James and Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz as examples of people with modest backgrounds succeeding, during her 15-minute presentation at Chengdu No. 7 High School in Sichuan province.


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Didi Tang, Associated Press via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1hm276P

World Bank Presses for China Urbanization

The World Bank on Tuesday unveiled a wide-ranging plan to spur urbanization in China, calling for greater access for farmers to the nation’s cities, better social services when they arrive and protection of their land rights to promote sustainable economic growth and reduce social tensions.


The report by the World Bank and the Development Research Center, a top Chinese think tank, also called for major reforms to the financing of local governments to give them the money needed to pay for stepped up services for millions of new residents, allowing them to impose new taxes and fees and in turn reduce their dependence on land sales for income.


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William Kazer, Wall Street Journal via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1nXqnVV

Editor Leaves Bloomberg, Citing China Coverage

Ben Richardson, an editor at large in Asia at Bloomberg News, announced his resignation on Monday, citing the company’s handling of an investigative report in China late last year.


He is the third reporter or editor to leave the organization since several news organizations reported last November that Bloomberg had declined to publish an investigative article that explored financial ties between one of the wealthiest men in China and the families of top Chinese leaders.


“I left Bloomberg because of the way the story was mishandled, and because of how the company made misleading statements in the global press” afterward, he said in an email to the media news site Romenesko. He also wrote that Bloomberg employees faced legal action if they spoke out publicly.


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Ravi Somaiya, New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1hm28HS

China says Japan nuclear stockpile move step in right direction

China said on Tuesday that Japan’s agreeing to turn over sensitive nuclear material of potential use in bombs to the United States was a step in the right direction, but that it had other material it still needed to hand over.


The leaders of Japan and the United States, meeting at a nuclear security summit in the Netherlands, said that hundreds of kilograms (pounds) of material of potential use would be downgraded and disposed of.


“China welcomes the reaching of this deal,” the Foreign Ministry said in a statement. “We appreciate and support the United States’ hard efforts to collect sensitive nuclear materials from overseas.”


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Ben Blanchard, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1hm22Ab

Obama Seeks China Backing on Russia as NSA Clouds Talks With Xi

President Barack Obama sought to encourage Chinese criticism of Russia on Ukraine, while Chinese President Xi Jinping pressed Obama about a reported U.S. breach of the servers of China’s largest phone-equipment maker, as the leaders met today.


During their talks in the Netherlands while attending the Nuclear Security Summit, Obama also raised concerns about China holding up visas for U.S. news organizations and told Xi he wants the U.S., China and other Asian nations to resolve competing claims in the South China Sea to ease tensions there.


The focus of the conference has been overtaken by the crisis in Ukraine. Obama arrived earlier today for the talks in The Hague with world leaders seeking to mobilize opposition to Russia’s incursion into Crimea.


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Julianna Goldman and Mike Dorning, Bloomberg News via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1hm22jr

Malaysian PM says missing jetliner crashes in Indian Ocean as search intensified

New analysis of satellite data suggested that missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 had crashed in the southern Indian Ocean, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Monday.


Najib released the sad news at a hastily-convened press conference in Kuala Lumpur, capital of Malaysia.


The prime minister said the UK Air Accidents Investigation Branch and Inmarsat, the UK company that provided the satellite data, have concluded that “the missing jetliner flew along the southern corridor,” and its last position was in the middle of the Indian Ocean, west of Perth, Australia.


He also said the type of analysis used to investigate the mystery of the jetliner has never been used before.


“This is a remote location, far from any possible landing sites,” said Najib, adding that more details will be announced at a press briefing Tuesday morning.


The families of those aboard were also called into a meeting to hear the news.


In a text message sent to the families before Najib announced the news, Malaysia Airlines said “MH370 has been lost and none of those on board survived.”


Screaming and crying were coming from a room in a Beijing hotel where families of the passengers onboard gathered and a significant number of stretchers were rushed to them.


Search for the missing jet continued on Monday in the vast Indian Ocean.


Both Chinese and Australian planes spotted some suspicious objects in the southern Indian Ocean in search for the missing plane, but whether the objects were related to the missing jet had not been confirmed.


The crew aboard a Chinese IL-76 plane saw two relatively big floating objects with many small white ones scattered within a radius of several kilometers.


The searchers then relayed the information to the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA), asking the Australian side to send other planes to the area of interest for further examination while making their way back to the air base.


However, a U.S. P-8 aircraft was unable to locate the suspicious objects that the Chinese planes have spotted, AMSA said in a tweet.


Later on Monday, an Australian aircraft spotted two objects in the ocean, different from those found by a Chinese plane earlier, and they can be retrieved within hours or around early Tuesday at the latest.


“The crew on board the P-3 Orion reported seeing two objects, the first a grey or green circular object and the second an orange rectangular object,” Prime Minister Tony Abbott told the parliament on Monday.


Abbott said Australia did not know whether any of these objects in the southern Indian Ocean were from the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370. “They could be flotsam,” he said.


A total of 10 aircraft joined Monday’s search for MH370 whose whereabouts has remained unknown since it vanished on March 8 on its way from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, carrying 239 people.


The search has zeroed in on two areas of 59,000 square km to 68,500 square km respectively.


Meanwhile, the U.S. Pacific Command has ordered the Pacific Fleet to move a black box locator into the region, according to a U.S. Navy statement released on Sunday.


In the statement, the U.S. Navy stressed that the deployment of the locator, namely the Towed Pinger Locator 25 (TPL-25), was only a “precautionary measure in case a debris field is located.”


The French Foreign Ministry also said on Sunday that France will mobilize further satellite means to help find the missing MH370 after its satellite images showed “floating debris” in the southern Indian Ocean.


The announcement reduced some mystery shrouded around the missing plane but the exact location of the plane requires further search.






Xinhua News via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1jpCIA3

Monday, 24 March 2014

Top J.P. Morgan Executive in China to Leave Bank

One of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.’s top China executives plans to leave the company, according to an internal memo, amid a continuing probe of the U.S. bank’s Asian hiring practices.


Fang Fang, 48 years old, will step down as chief executive for China investment banking and vice chairman of investment banking in Asia after more than a decade with the bank, the memo said.


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Wall Street Journal via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1jxei3j

Obama, China’s Xi pledge cooperation and joke about first lady

U.S. President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping pledged cooperation between their countries and chatted about first lady Michelle Obama’s recent trip to Beijing when they met prior to a nuclear summit on Monday.


In remarks to reporters ahead of their meeting, Obama said he and Xi would discuss the situation in Ukraine, denuclearization of North Korea, and fighting climate change.


Obama said the bilateral relationship between the two countries was as important as any in the world.


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Steve Holland and Jeff Mason, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/Q8kGFH

After Reports on N.S.A., China Urges Halt to Cyberspying

The Chinese government called on the United States on Monday to explain its actions and halt the practice of cyberespionage, after news reports said that the National Security Agency had hacked its way into the computer systems of China’s largest telecommunications company.


The reports, based on documents provided by the former security contractor Edward J. Snowden, related how the spy agency penetrated servers owned by the company, Huawei, and monitored communications by its senior executives in an effort to discover whether the executives had links to the Chinese military. The operation also sought to exploit the company’s technology and gain access to the communications of customers who use Huawei cellphones, fiber optic cables and network hubs.


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Andrew Jacobs, New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/Q8kDKe

New worries on China growth as flash PMI shows contraction

China’s manufacturing engine contracted in the first quarter of 2014, a preliminary private survey showed on Monday, raising market expectations of government stimulus to arrest a loss of momentum in the world’s second-largest economy this year.


The weaker-than-expected survey knocked the country’s main share index and other Asian markets off early highs, and lopped around a quarter of a U.S. cent from the Australian dollar, which is often used as a proxy for Chinese risk.


The flash Markit/HSBC Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to an eight-month low of 48.1 in March from February’s final reading of 48.5. The index has been below the 50 level since January, indicating a contraction in the sector this year.


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Adam Rose, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1jxeiQI

China Fines Nu Skin $540,000 for Illegal Sales and Claims

Nu Skin Enterprises Inc. was fined $540,000 in China for selling items illegally and making product claims it couldn’t verify, part of a government probe into alleged abuses by the direct seller of skin and hair cleansers.


Six sales employees were also fined $241,000 for unauthorized promotional activities, the Provo, Utah-based company said in a statement today, about two months after the investigation was announced by the Chinese government. The move sparked optimism that Nu Skin can now get back on track in the world’s second-largest economy, sending its stock up the most in 16 years in New York trading.


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Liza Lin, Bloomberg News via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/Q8kFSn

Sunday, 23 March 2014

A New Perspective on the Rule of Law in China

The 2014 sessions of the National People’s Congress (NPC) and the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) attracted unprecedented global attention. The new Chinese leadership just completed its first year in office and made significant progress in changing officials’ working style, expanding a crackdown on corruption, deepening reform, exercising scientific management, lessening social injustice, increasing attention to people’s livelihoods, engaging in a foreign policy of peace, and combining a rich country with a strong military. As such, huge changes are taking place in China, and public satisfaction has increased. According to a CCTV report, big data indicates that the US ranks the fourth on the list of the top ten countries showing interest in China’s “two sessions”. This may be because what China does will have a bearing on American interests. In today’s international political environment, the two sides taking off their Cold War lenses and adopting a new perspective is key to exploring a new model of big country relationship.


陈群 A New Perspective on the Rule of Law in China

Chen Qun



The new perspective should allow people to see constant progress in China’s rule of law. As NPC spokeswoman Fu Ying pointed out at a press conference on March 4, “China has had its socialist legal system with Chinese characteristics since 2010. It is an important achievement in China’s effort to rule the country according to law.” The Chinese legal system demonstrates five features. First, it now has complete sets of laws. By 2010, there were already 239 laws, over 690 administrative regulations and more than 8,600 local laws. Second, grassroots autonomy has become a basic political system with extensive implementation of Organic Law of the Villagers’ Committee and development of local rules governing election of villagers’ committees. Third, democratic centralism is practiced in various aspects of the operations of the Communist Party of China (CPC) including leadership, organization, election and supervision, with open management of party affairs and soliciting of opinions concerning major policy decisions. Fourth, the multiple regulations on the supervision and performance assessment of cadres and the Civil Servant Law increased democracy in employment and human resources. Fifth, it is moving towards a judicial system with special features. Over 35 reform measures in legal actions and procuratorial supervision, and 60 measures to optimize the structure and functions of judicial organs have been implemented.


The new perspective should also allow people to see huge changes in rule of law in the past year. Since President Xi Jinping vowed to build China into a country under the rule of law, judicial reforms in six areas have been strengthened: the human, fiscal and material resources for courts and procuratoriates below provincial levels are centralized to the provincial level to allow judicial allocation of jurisdiction certain independence from administrative divisions; the operational mechanism for judicial power and the accountability system for the presiding judge and the collegial panel have been further improved; procedures on commutation, parole and release for medical treatment are now strictly regulated; mechanisms to prevent, redress and account for misjudgment have been made more robust with a strict requirement to observe the exclusionary rule; the rule that complaint reporting involving law and litigation should be handled strictly according to law and through legal procedures is established; and the reeducation through labor system is abolished. All of these measures have contributed to the advancement of China’s rule of law. For example, the abolition of the reeducation through the labor system has put an end to the “most complained and most irrational” judicial mechanism that had been in existence for over half a century since 1955, removing long-standing problems of human rights violation or abusive retaliation by government officials. The separation between administrative and jurisdictional divisions contains local government’s intervention in judicial operations. The accountability system for the presiding judge and the collegial panel strengthened the functions of courts and procuratoriates to independently exercise their powers. With judicial openness to strengthen supervision by the people and government-sponsored whistleblowing website, the public is ab;e to expose and hold accountable corrupt officials. Building China into a country under rule of law is an important topic of the NPC and CPPCC sessions. According to Fu Ying, “the NPC and its Standing Committee has done a lot to improve the national system to punish and prevent corruption. We have made or revised the Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure Law, Civil Servant Law, Anti-Money Laundering Law, Government Procurement Law and the Tendering and Bidding Law etc..” The above-mentioned reforms represent new breakthroughs in advancing the rule of law in China.


The new perspective should further allow people to see that China is exploring a new form of government. Some US politicians and the public have an epistemic paradox: China, a single-party authoritarian state, has achieved in 30 years what the West had done in 300 years and passed Japan in 2010 to become the second largest economy in the world. Should such an epistemic paradox be changed? Should there be some new reflections over the Chinese form of government? John Naisbitt in his China’s Megatrends writes that China is creating an entirely new social, economic and political system, that by balancing the top-down and bottom-up political orders China has forced a unique “vertical democracy different from the horizontal one of the West, and that China will not only change the global economy but also challenge Western democracy with its own model in coming decades. While the US has a system of two party elections, China has multi-party consultation. Such differences originate from their varying civilizations, with respective strengths and shortcomings. They should therefore learn from each other.


There are of course still many problems in China such as corruption, polarization and privileged classes. We need the rule of law to constantly develop and improve, and we need to rebuild our morals and values. Many deputies to the NPC and CPPCC sessions point out that because of China’s unsteady rule of law, constant efforts have to be made to allow every progress towards and to modernize government administration. And we, the people, do expect a new China under the rule of law.


Chen Qun is Former Vice President of the China Law Press.






Chen Qun, former VP of the China Law Press via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1jkNmYI

Friday, 21 March 2014

Michelle Obama Begins Good-Will Tour in China

Michelle Obama, on the first day of a good-will tour to China with her daughters and her mother, tried her hand on Friday at three quintessentially Chinese specialties: calligraphy, table tennis and mathematics.


Her hostess was China’s first lady — though strictly speaking there is no such title in China — Peng Liyuan, the wife of President Xi Jinping and a glamorous, nationally known singing star.


The meeting was expected to be a show of spontaneity and broad smiles, the bonding of two women with big personalities who rose from humble backgrounds and who would have much in common, as they toured a high school and visited the Forbidden City in the heart of Beijing.


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EU, China end wine dispute ahead of Xi’s European tour

China and the European Union have reached a deal to end a dispute over European wine exports to China, the latest sign of improving ties and just days before China’s president visits Europe.


Beijing opened an inquiry last year into whether Europe was selling wine in China at unfairly low prices. The move was widely seen in Europe as retaliation over EU efforts to hit Chinese solar panels with punitive import duties.


The solar panels dispute was resolved, but China had pressed ahead with the wine case, saying it was a separate issue despite European expectations that the inquiry would also be dropped.


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Taiwanese Students Refuse to End Protest Against China Trade Deal

Taiwanese protesters opposing a controversial trade deal with China said Friday they would continue to occupy the legislative building until the government retracts the signed pact that has spurred heated debates in Taiwan.


The seizure of the Legislative Yuan started on Tuesday, when hundreds of college students pushed through the building’s metal gates and stormed into the main meeting chamber. Protesters gave President Ma Ying-jeou an ultimatum—respond to their demands by noon Friday or else face more protests.


The student protesters asked Mr. Ma, who also heads the ruling Chinese Nationalist Party, or Kuomintang, to immediately retract the service trade pact signed with Beijing last June and establish a legally binding mechanism to monitor all agreements across the Taiwan Strait in the future.


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Thursday, 20 March 2014

Investors see decade of risk ahead for real estate

Poll shows concern that asset bubble will burst


Chinese investors see real estate, stocks and precious metals as the riskiest assets this year and over the next 10 years, according to a survey released on Thursday by Franklin Templeton Investments, a unit of United States-based Franklin Resources Inc.


The survey was based on 517 Chinese investors aged 25 to 65, with average assets available for investment of 1.1 million yuan ($176,600).


Among the respondents, 48 percent said real estate will be one of the three riskiest investments in 2014.


That figure rises to 55 percent over the next 10 years. Stocks and precious metals ranked second and third.


About 37 percent of Chinese investors think the potential of an asset bubble bursting is the major threat to the market in 2014. Another 24 percent said the same of China’s economic slowdown.


“Property oversupply, shadow banking and funds being withdrawn from emerging markets may be risks in the Chinese real estate market,” said Amy Wang, chief representative of Franklin Templeton Investments’ Beijing office.


Real estate is also expected to be the most profitable: 24 percent said it can be the best performer of 2014. Stocks and commodities (excluding metal) followed with 15 percent each.


“Urbanization can be a driving force for the Chinese real estate market, which brings big investment opportunities,” said Wang.


Although the A-share market’s performance in 2013 fell short of expectations, Chinese investors are still optimistic about it this year: 51 percent believe the stock market will rise in 2014, in contrast with 19 percent who expect a slide.


Chinese investors expect the average rate of return for their entire portfolios this year to be 12 percent, lower than the 13.2 percent anticipated in the survey of 2013.


Looking out 10 years, they expect an average rate of return of 16.2 percent, down from 18.3 percent last year.


Wang said investors all over the world, and not just in China, have lowered their expectations.


Still, the vast majority of Chinese investors remain optimistic about reaching their financial goals: 82 percent of the respondents expect to meet their targets in 2014, consistent with 2013.


Investment sentiment has cooled markedly toward precious metals, with only 8 percent of respondents perceiving it as the top performer in 2014, compared with 22 percent in 2013.


The survey also found that Chinese investors focus on the short and medium term: 58 percent evaluate the success of an investment opportunity within a one-year period, while only 13 percent wait three to five years or longer to evaluate their investment performance.


“Chinese investors are more reactive to short-term fluctuations and vulnerable to temporary volatility.


“Generally speaking, investors with a longer investment horizon are capable of making better decisions, especially when the market outlook is unclear,” said Wang.


The US and Canada are the most favored overseas markets for Chinese investors.


Almost two-thirds of respondents plan to invest outside the Chinese mainland. High-yield bonds, US equities and emerging and frontier market equities are their top picks.


By Cai Xiao (China Daily)






China Daily via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1r39rfB

Experts warn as yuan dips further

The yuan’s fall against the US dollar will discourage fund inflows, put pressure on domestic liquidity, and may prompt the Chinese government to loosen its monetary policy, according to analysts.


The yuan dived to a one-year low against the greenback at one point on Thursday, in a slump that may mark the end of the Chinese currency’s decade-long appreciation.


After closing at 6.1965 against the dollar on Wednesday, the yuan opened on Thursday at 6.2080. It fell to 6.2334 at one stage, the lowest since March 4, 2013, before a slight recovery saw it close at 6.2275.


The fall comes as the People’s Bank of China, the central bank, set the daily reference rate for the currency 109 basis points lower at 6.1460, the lowest so far this year.


The yuan has lost more than 1 percent against the dollar this month, on the back of a 1.38 percent record dip in February that is widely believed to have been a central bank maneuver to chase away speculators betting on one-way appreciation of the yuan.


However, on March 11, Zhou Xiaochuan, the central bank governor, denied any intervention, saying the yuan’s retreat had been driven solely by market forces.


The central bank doubled the yuan’s daily trading band against the dollar to 2 percent last weekend, in a move seen by currency market observers as a move to end the yuan’s steady appreciation over the past 10 years.


Liu Dongliang, an analyst with China Merchants Bank, said: “The yuan will be more volatile. The era of slow and one-way appreciation is over.”


Investors turned to the US dollar on Thursday after Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen hinted at an interest rate rise next year.


The Fed announced that it is scaling back the monthly bond-buying program, known as quantitative easing, by another $10 billion, to $55 billion. It is widely expected that it will announce an end to the program in October.


Yellen said at a news conference that she sees a period of “around six months or that type of thing” between the end of quantitative easing and the first rate increase, meaning an interest rise could come as early as March next year.


A rate rise could attract funds back to dollar assets and weaken emerging-market currencies, including the yuan.


Bank of America Merrill Lynch pared its year-end forecast for the yuan against the dollar to 6.05 from 6.02, meaning that the yuan will see its first year-on-year decline since 2009.


It also expects the central bank to widen the yuan’s daily trading band to 4 percent in the second half of this year from 2 percent.


Standard Chartered has revised its end-of-June forecast for the yuan to 6.06 from 6.01, while maintaining its year-end target of 5.92, while Barclays has also reduced its year-end forecast, to 6.05 from 5.95.


On Wednesday, the central bank said Chinese banks’ net foreign exchange purchases totaled 128.25 billion yuan ($20.71 billion) in February, indicating that traders and investors have become less willing to hold yuan.


Net foreign exchange purchases by banks are a major source of liquidity in China, and a slowdown in such growth would mean that already tight money policy is becoming tighter.


Zhang Zhiwei, an analyst in Hong Kong with Nomura Securities, said in a research note on Thursday that he had seen increasing concern over growth among Chinese lenders, and forecast a possible round of policy easing in the second quarter.


Chen Fengying, head of the World Economy Research Institute at the Contemporary International Relations Research Institute, said a weaker yuan will benefit exports and help industries including steel, textiles and automobiles.


But Chinese airlines’ balance sheets have been hit by the yuan’s depreciation, as they usually buy planes through leased financing and pay in dollars, but their income is denominated in yuan, experts said.


Li Xiaojin, a professor at China Aviation University in Tianjin, said that generally speaking the entire aviation industry will lose 700 million yuan if the currency depreciates by 1 percent.


By GAO CHANGXIN in Shanghai and WANG WEN in Beijing (China Daily)






China Daily via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1r39sQK

Michelle Obama starts landmark trip

After a long journey from Washington, US first lady Michelle Obama landed in Beijing on Thursday evening, starting her long-awaited trip to China with a big smile and a wave.


When Obama, in an elegant black dress, stepped out of the plane with her mother and two teenager daughters, dozens of reporters that had waited in the airport for hours incessantly clicked their camera shutters.


Though nobody from the delegation spoke to the media, the first lady’s brief debut spread quickly on Chinese media and micro blogs, where users discussed what she would wear and eat, and how she will interact with Chinese first lady Peng Liyuan.


“It is another innovation in the history of Chinese diplomacy” and helps both sides’ leaders strengthen their personal relations, said Ruan Zongze, vice-president of the China Institute of International Studies.


Ruan was referring to the latest “creative” laid-back meeting between President Xi Jinping and his US counterpart, Barack Obama, at the Sunnylands resort in California last June, soon after Xi assumed office.


Peng, Xi’s wife, accompanied her husband on the Sunnylands visit but did not meet Michelle Obama, who was in Washington. Her absence left some Chinese disappointed and more excited about the “make-up” meeting.


On Friday, Michelle Obama, a Harvard-educated lawyer, is to spend almost the whole day with Peng. The two first ladies will visit a high school in Beijing, stroll inside the Forbidden City, eat Peking duck and watch a performance together.


“The meeting of the two first ladies shows that China is more open and is getting more involved with the international community,” Ruan said.


The US side also kept a high-profile tone about the first lady’s third solo trip abroad. The White House website dedicated a special page for the visit and released a detailed schedule of the weeklong, three-city tour before her arrival. Michelle Obama will post a daily travel blog, including videos and photos, to share her experience in China. She will also record video responses and engage directly with young people on social media.


Earlier this month, Obama visited the Washington Yu Ying Public Charter School — a Chinese immersion school — to get tips on her China visit from schoolchildren. She also encouraged students to follow her trip.


Chen Mingming, former Chinese ambassador to New Zealand and Switzerland, said although Obama said she would focus on education and youth empowerment, her Chinese trip should not be interpreted as a personal visit.


“It reflects the importance Barack Obama attaches to Washington’s relations with Beijing,” said Chen, referring to her previous solo visit to African countries on behalf of the US president.


Chen also noted that Michelle Obama taking along her mother, Marian Robinson, and two daughters, Malia and Sasha, reflects a smart characteristic of US diplomacy.


“It is like saying that ‘Not only do my husband and I cherish relations with China, our whole family all support the relations’,” Chen said, adding the move can easily trigger resonance in family-oriented China and bring the leaders closer to the ordinary people of both countries.


The Obamas will also tour the Great Wall; see the Terracotta Warriors of Xi’an, capital of Shaanxi province; and visit a panda reserve in Chengdu, Sichuan province. Obama will also deliver speeches on bilateral cooperation in education during the tour.


“The colorful episode in China-US diplomacy will serve as a strong complement to exchanges of the two presidents and raise friendly emotions toward each other among peoples of the two nations,” said Ruan.






China Daily via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1lV4f9K

Chinese vessels set out for S. Indian Ocean, multinational search for suspicious debris resumes

More Chinese vessels will set out for the southern Indian Ocean to search for the missing Malaysian jetliner, while the multinational search operation for suspicious debris of MH370 resumes on Friday.


Chinese rescue vessels Haixun 01 and Nanhaijiu 101 will sail off to the search area in the southern Indian Ocean, more than 3,000 km southwest off Perth, Australia, where possible MH370 debris was found on Thursday through satellite imagery.


Haixun 31 and Nanhaijiu 115 will also head for the southern Indian Ocean and three more Chinese naval ships have already moved toward the suspected waters.


Meanwhile, China Maritime Search and Rescue Center has contacted the State Oceanic Administration of China in order to send Chinese icebreaker for Antarctic research Xuelong, or Snow Dragon, now anchored in Perth, to the search area as soon as possible.


On Thursday, Chinese President Xi Jinping and Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott held a phone conversation over possible objects from the missing MH370.


Xi said many countries, including Australia, participated in search and rescue and China thanked Australia for its role in the operation along the southern corridor, a search area stretching from Indonesia deep into the southern Indian Ocean.


Although search and rescue is undergoing difficulties due to the complicated circumstances in relevant waters, Xi said, full efforts should be made as long as there is still a gleam of hope.


He voiced the hope that Australia and other relevant parties would continue to do their utmost in the search and inform China of developments as soon as possible.


Abbott said Australia had dispatched aircraft and warships to the sea area in the southern Indian Ocean and would continue to make every effort in the search and rescue and in investigation.


Meanwhile, the U.S. Defense Department on Thursday reaffirmed that the United States will continue with full effort to search for MH370, and Pentagon made it a priority to try to find it.


“We’re putting as much effort into it across the scope of our capabilities as — as is needed,” Pentagon Press Secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby said.


“I think the Navy and 7th Fleet have been doing a terrific job keeping people informed of what the U.S. Navy is doing in the search,” he said, adding that the search effort and the investigation are being led by the Malaysian government.


The U.S. 7th Fleet spokesman William Marks told Xinhua on Thursday in an email interview that the U.S. Navy P-8, which flied from Perth to the suspected sea areas, did not see any debris associated with aircraft wreckage.


The spokesman said the P-3 on Thursday shifted its focus south, searching in vicinity of the Cocos Islands, adding that it will be a no-flying day for the P-3 on Friday for routine maintenance.


Also in an email interview, a DigitalGlobe spokesperson told Xinhua on Thursday that the company provided the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) with the satellite images of possible MH370 debris.


The satellite images were captured on March 16 by the company’s WorldView-2 satellite at a resolution of approximately 50 cm.


The multinational search for the Boeing 777-200 aircraft, carrying 227 passengers and 12 crew members en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, has entered its 14th day since it mysteriously disappeared from radar in the early hours of March 8.


Australia said Friday that the bad weather has still limited visibility of the search area for locating the suspected debris, and the search mission in the southern Indian Ocean would last several days.


“It is a large area and the weather is difficult (to search),” Andrea Hayward-Maher, Media Liaison Officer of the AMSA, told Xinhua.


Search planes from Australia, the United States and New Zealand will continue the hunt on Friday, while merchant boats are also heading to the 23,000 square km search zone.


According to the latest release of the AMSA, five aircrafts will be involved in Friday’s search for MH370.


A RAAF P3 Orion has already departed for the search area, and a civil Gulfstream jet, two more RAAF P3 Orion and the U.S. Navy P8 Poseidon aircraft will depart for the search area later.


In addition, a Norwegian ship has arrived in the search zone on Thursday night and another merchant ship is due to arrive on Friday night, Andrea said.






Mandy Peng via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1r34FyI

Bloomberg Should Have Rethought Articles on China, Chairman Says

The chairman of Bloomberg L.P. said in a speech here on Thursday that the company should have reconsidered articles that deviated from the core of its coverage, business news, in light of the huge potential for its products in the Chinese market.


Bloomberg, the financial data and news company, relies on sales of its terminals, which are ubiquitous on bankers’ desks around the world, for around 82 percent of its $8.5 billion in revenue. But sales of those terminals in China declined sharply after the company published an article in June 2012 on the family wealth of Xi Jinping, at that time the incoming Communist Party chief. Following its publication, officials ordered state enterprises not to subscribe to the service.


Acknowledging the vast size of the Chinese economy, the world’s second biggest after that of the United States, the chairman, Peter T. Grauer, said, “We have to be there.”


Read Full Article HERE






Neil Gough, New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1eWBxRc

First annual profit drop in 14 years spurs China Mobile spending on 4G

China Mobile Ltd, the world’s largest mobile carrier by subscribers, will spend more this year to bolster its 4G mobile network to counter its first annual profit drop in 14 years.


The company blamed pressure from messaging services like the WeChat mobile app from Tencent Holdings Ltd and said on Thursday it will increase capital spending by 22 percent to 225.2 billion yuan ($36.34 billion). One-third of this, or 75 billion yuan, will go to expanding the high-speed 4G service it launched in December.


China Mobile also said it plans to sell 100 million 4G devices and have 50 million 4G users by the end of the year, following the January launch of Apple Inc’s iPhone on its network.


Read Full Article HERE






Paul Carsten and Yimou Lee, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1eWBzbR

U.S.-Grown Phallic Mollusk Banned In China

They may look peculiar, but geoducks—giant bivalves that hail from West Coast waters—are a delicacy in Asia. Ordinarily, U.S. shellfish growers export them by the millions of pounds—and tens of millions of dollars—every year. Except this year.


An import ban by China has temporarily torpedoed the trade. Now a U.S. delegation will head to China this week to plead the clams’ case.


They are extraordinary by any measure: The biggest weigh 16 pounds. The oldest live up to 160 years. Unlike lesser clams, whose puny bodies can be contained discreetly their shells, the big bruisers exceed their shells’ dimensions. To protect themselves from their two predators (man and sea otters), they burrow deep into the seabed. To get oxygen and nutrients, they project a three-foot neck-like siphon up into the water.


Read Full Article HERE






Alan Farnham, ABC News via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1eWBxk2

What’s Michelle Obama doing in China?

U.S. first Lady Michelle Obama arrived in China on Thursday for a weeklong visit that will avoid politics and focus on education and people-to-people contacts.


Mrs. Obama’s schedule includes a speech to Chinese and American students at Peking University and visits to the cities of Xi’an in the west and Chengdu in the southwest. She is traveling with her mother and two daughters.


On Friday, she is to spend the day with Peng Liyuan, the wife of Chinese President Xi Jinping.


Read Full Article HERE






Didi Tang, Associated Press via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1eWBx3x

With Russia, as With China, Unnerved U.S. Allies Seek Reassurances

Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. found himself in a fraught but familiar place this week: holding the hands of American allies fearful of being bullied by a larger, aggressive neighbor.


This time, it was Poland and the Baltic states, rattled by Russia’s move to annex Crimea and its potential designs on the rest of Ukraine. Three months ago, it was Japan and South Korea, unnerved by China’s sudden imposition of an air defense zone in the East China Sea.


The cases differ in obvious respects: The tensions in Asia have eased somewhat after the Chinese government showed prudence in policing its air defense zone, while in Europe, the confrontation with Russia over Crimea seems to be only escalating.


Read Full Article HERE






Mark Landler, New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1g5HwYg

Wednesday, 19 March 2014

Tour adds ‘new dimension’ to ties

US first lady Michelle Obama will arrive in Beijing on Thursday afternoon to kick off a weeklong, three-city tour of China that analysts said will further advance relations between Beijing and Washington.


Chinese first lady Peng Liyuan will join Obama on a visit to the Forbidden City on Friday and welcome Obama, her daughters Malia and Sasha as well as her mother Marian Robinson for a private dinner event, according to the White House.


This will be the first visit to China by a US first lady without the accompaniment of the US president.


The Obamas will also tour the Great Wall; see the Terracotta Warriors of Xi’an, capital of Shaanxi province; and visit a panda reserve in Chengdu, Sichuan province. Michelle Obama will also deliver speeches on bilateral cooperation in education during the tour.


Chinese experts hailed the visit as “a new dimension in the architecture of Sino-US relations” and said Michelle Obama’s every step and syllable along the tour will send shockwaves through the media outlets of both countries.


“Michelle Obama is expected to convey the US message of family values, education and people-to-people exchanges to the Chinese public. Americans can also take this opportunity to learn about China’s beauty and amicability,” said Li Haidong, a US studies researcher at China Foreign Affairs University in Beijing.


Douglas Paal, vice-president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, said the visit is evidence that the US and China have a mutually beneficial and trusting relationship at the highest levels of government.


“I expect there to be attention to education, health and children, which are themes that should resonate positively with the people of China,” Paal said. “The Obama daughters are getting a great spring break vacation.”


Li said the US first lady is considered a mouthpiece of the US president because her remarks on important issues have to be first approved by her husband.


Personal visits to foreign countries by US first ladies, which date back to the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt during World War II, have become an important duty and responsibility for contemporary first ladies.


US first ladies Hillary Clinton, Laura Bush and Michelle Obama have made 37 foreign trips without their husbands at their sides over the past 20 years.


“Issues that the first ladies are concerned about range from healthcare, education and women’s rights,” said Da Wei, director of the department of American studies under the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations in Beijing.


On Saturday, Michelle Obama will speak at the Stanford Center at Peking University, where she will meet with Chinese and American students. China is the largest source of foreign students to US universities, while a growing number of US students are learning Mandarin — including 15-year-old Malia, the Obamas’ eldest daughter.


Orville Schell, director of the Center on US-China Relations at the Asia Society in New York, said the first lady’s visit to China is the perfect prelude to a meeting next week between the US and Chinese presidents in The Hague. President Xi Jinping and US President Barack Obama will meet in the Netherlands on the sidelines of the Nuclear Security Summit. Obama is also expected to visit Beijing during November’s APEC Economic Leaders’ Meeting.


By Pu Zhendong in Beijing and Chen Weihua in Washington ( China Daily )






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China real estate firm at risk of bankruptcy

Another one bites the dust: A Chinese real estate developer is on the verge of bankruptcy, and is expected to default on millions in debt — the latest sign the government is willing to let some pawns fall as it moves toward a more market-oriented economy.


Zhejiang Xingrun Properties, based in China’s southeast coast, won’t be able to pay back 3.5 billion yuan ($565 million) in bank and other debts, according to state media. The company’s largest creditors include major state-owned banks, but government help doesn’t appear to be on the way. China’s central bank has denied reports that it was in emergency negotiations with the company, according to a statement on its official microblog.


Xingrun’s problems are coming to light less than two weeks after the country saw its first corporate bond default, a significant event as China has previously arranged last-minute rescues to save troubled companies. Premier Li Keqiang, one of China’s top leaders, suggested last week that more company defaults will be unavoidable going forward.


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Sophia Yan, CNN Money via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1nEoaP1

Politics Won’t Be on First Lady’s China Itinerary, Aides Say

Michelle Obama’s trip to China starting on Wednesday will be nonpolitical, the White House says, a “people-to-people exchange” emphasizing the importance that both nations place on education. As if to underscore the point, no reporters are traveling with the first lady, and she does not plan to give interviews while there.


But with the United States and China locked in disagreements over trade, cyberweapons, territorial claims and, as always, human rights — and with President Obama preparing to meet with President Xi Jinping next week at a nuclear summit meeting — political overtones will be almost impossible to avoid.


“Politics can be imposed,” said Melanne Verveer, who accompanied Hillary Rodham Clinton to China in 1995 as the first lady’s chief of staff. “People will want to put a political spin on the trip.”


Read Full Article HERE






David S. Joachim, New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1gQNlES

China Calls Japan’s Forced Labor `Serious Crime’ Amid Lawsuit

Japan’s use of forced labor during World War II was a “serious crime,” China Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said today, after a Chinese court accepted a lawsuit against two Japanese companies accused of the practice.


The Beijing No. 1 People’s Court agreed yesterday to hear a lawsuit brought by 40 former workers and their family members against Mitsubishi Materials Corp. and Nippon Coke & Engineering Co., the state-owned Global Times newspaper said.


The laborers and their families demanded 1 million yuan ($161,000) compensation for each victim as well as an open apology in both Chinese and Japanese newspapers, including the People’s Daily and Asahi Shimbun, according to the newspaper.


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Henry Sanderson, Bloomberg News via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1gQNo3n

China’s smog driving top foreign talent away – U.S. business survey

China’s smog is making it harder for foreign firms to convince top executives to work in the country, the American Chamber of Commerce in Beijing said on Wednesday, offering some of the strongest evidence yet on how pollution is hurting recruitment.


Some 48 percent of the 365 foreign companies that replied to the chamber’s annual survey, which covers businesses in China’s northern cities, said concerns over air quality were turning senior executives away.


Pollution is “a difficulty in recruiting and retaining senior executive talent”, said the report. The 2014 figure is a jump from the 19 percent of foreign firms that said smog was a problem for recruitment in 2010.


Read Full Article HERE






Natalie Thomas, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1nEoa1o