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Friday, 30 May 2014

Hagel to Caution China on Overplaying Hand in Region

U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said he will meet with a senior Chinese military official during a security conference in Singapore and caution him about escalating territorial conflicts in the Asia-Pacific region.


Hagel is scheduled to meet with Lieutenant General Wang Guanzhong, deputy chief of general staff of China’s People Liberation Army and part of the country’s delegation to the annual Shangri-La security conference this weekend.


The U.S. has “a huge interest” in keeping sea lanes in the region open for commerce, Hagel told reporters on board his military aircraft heading to Singapore. Hagel said he also planned to discuss tensions between China and Vietnam over the South China Sea in “some specific terms.”


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Gopal Ratnam, Bloomberg via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1mQq9MN

Extensive Security Displays Follow Attacks in China

Following a series of deadly terrorist attacks, Chinese cities have seen an increase in public displays of security. In Beijing, the police battled mock rioters on Thursday in a drill to respond to “mass disturbances.” Some of the Chinese capital’s subway stations have begun airport-style security checks, creating long lines of passengers waiting behind security fencing.


Hundreds of thousands of neighborhood watch volunteers have been tasked with looking out for suspicious people, the Beijing Youth Daily reported Friday. Even cobblers and newsstand vendors have been called upon to report suspicious activity, the newspaper said.


The mass turnout of ordinary citizens to participate in security in Beijing follows the measures put in place for the 2008 Olympics and large political gatherings, when even small backstreets were surveyed by residents with red arm bands, many of them retirees who earn small stipends participating in their neighborhood watch. As of March 1, those who pass along information that contributes to uncovering terrorists activities can earn up 40,000 renminbi, about $6,500, China Daily reported.


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Austin Ramzy, New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1prC7zH

China tech firms gain from cyber barbs, Snowden revelations

Chinese software companies such as Neusoft Corp and China National Software & Service Co Ltd (ChinaSoft) are picking up sales and expanding their marketing as China trades cyber spying accusations with the United States.


For Neusoft, one of China’s biggest software solutions providers, that includes selling more networking products and information security software to government and state-owned clients, while introducing higher-value integrated hardware and software packages and consulting services.


“It’s understandable for a country to strengthen its information security and cyber security while maintaining its independence and control,” Lu Zhaoxia, senior vice president of Neusoft told Reuters. “In the U.S. and Japan, core systems are all domestic.”


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Kazunori Takada and Matthew Miller, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1mQq6R0

All eyes on pig exchange rate

It will never get the same attention as the Chinese currency, but another exchange rate is quietly straining every nerve of the market, from policymakers to farmers: the hog-to-corn ratio.


The exchange rate is closely monitored as a critical reference and a key indicator of inflation. It is used to speculate on changes in policy in a broader context.


Pork is the staple meat in China and is a heavyweight in the basket of prices used in calculating the Consumer Price Index (CPI). The ratio of live hog sales prices at farms to wholesale corn price, calculated by the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), rebounded to 5.29 on Wednesday after it fell to a five-year low of 4.6 in April. When the ratio is above 6, pig farmers can start thinking about profits.


Live pig prices have fluctuated wildly in recent years, raising concerns that volatility could bleed into monetary and fiscal policy due to the CPI weighting.


The weak pig-to-corn rate in the past year has meant Anhua Agricultural Insurance dishing out compensation of 4.1 million yuan ($660,000) to 143 pig farmers in Beijing this month.


“With the compensation, I feel a little bit better,” said Cao Xueyi, a veteran pig farmer who got 94,000 yuan for his loss of 1.08 million yuan last year. To help stabilize pork prices, Anhua started selling price insurance last year to offset losses incurred through pig price declines.


“Insurance of live pig prices is a very good way to protect farmers from huge losses,” said Tuo Guozhu, an insurance professor with the Capital University of Economics and Business.


The NDRC has also intervened, buying frozen pork on the market for national reserves in March and May, which raised the national average hog price to 11.14 yuan per kilogram by April 30, ending 19 weeks of decline.


Oversupply has been blamed for the price decline since the beginning of this year. Farmers sold 716 million live pigs last year, 20 million more than 2012.


As the government aims for CPI growth of around 3.5 percent this year, with continuing prudent monetary policy and proactive fiscal policy, too weak or too strong an inflation reading might prompt the central bank to adjust its monetary policy.


“We are not sure whether changes in supply and demand have happened yet, because only price increases for two consecutive months can send a clear signal,” said Feng Yonghui, chief analyst with the monitoring website souzhu.com. “So far, we’ve seen no obvious reduction in pig production capacity.”






Xinhua News via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1lWuqv0

China’s most populous province relaxes one-child policy

China’s most populous province of Henan on Thursday relaxed its family planning policy to allow couples to have a second baby if either parent is an only child.


Henan, which has a population of 106 million, became the 25th among a total of 31 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities on the mainland to relax the birth policy.


An amendment to the province’s Population and Family Planning Regulations was passed by the Standing Committee of the Henan Provincial People’s Congress, the local legislative body, on Thursday.


Under the new policy, the province is expected to see an additional 50,000 to 80,000 newborns each year in the next few years, said Wang Liying, director of the policy and regulation department under the provincial health and family planning commission.


The relaxation will not affect population control targets for the five-year period to 2015, said Wang.


China’s family planning policy, put in place in the late 1970s, was designed to curb population growth.


The relaxation came as the country is coping with a declining labor force and an aging population.






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

China allows private investment in army equipment

China will open its defense sector to private enterprises by relaxing market access for military products.


Concrete measures will include lowering market access requirements, reducing approval procedures, improving the pricing mechanism for military products and taxation policy, according to the People’s Liberation Army’s General Armament Department.


The department said it will open a website for military procurement, regularly publicizing information on the demand for weapons and other equipment.


It will strive to ensure a fair market competition to encourage private enterprises to participate in the research, production and maintenance of military equipment.


China began addressing private investment in defense sector in 2010 and pledged equal treatment to private investors in the industries and state-owned military enterprises in a 2012 guideline.






Xinhua News via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1oQ9BVS

Thursday, 29 May 2014

Southeast Asian pivot? Japan seeks larger regional role as China feuds with neighbors

China’s moves to assert its territorial claims in the South China Sea are giving fresh impetus to a Japanese push to play a bigger role in regional security, adding to the growing strains between the two Asian rivals.


Japan said this week it is exploring whether it can accelerate a proposal to supply patrol boats for Vietnam, which is embroiled in a tense standoff at sea with China after Beijing moved an oil rig into disputed waters. In a similar deal, Japan agreed in December to lend 18.7 billion yen ($183 million) to the Philippines to purchase 10 Japanese-made boats.


The vessels are a tangible sign of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s effort to deepen ties with Southeast Asia in the face of China’s expanding maritime ambitions. He is likely to stress Japan’s commitment to regional stability in a speech to Asia-Pacific defense ministers in Singapore on Friday night.


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Associated Press via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1pB3ZhY

China Warns on Proposed New Missile Defense System for Seoul

China warned against the deployment of a proposed U.S. missile-defense system in South Korea, saying such a move would unnecessarily raise regional tensions.


The U.S. is weighing a plan to deploy an advanced missile-defense system in South Korea as a counterweight to North Korea, according to defense officials.


The $950 million Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense battery is designed to intercept short, medium and intermediate missiles.


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Te-Ping Chen and Alastair Gale, Wall Street Journal via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1nxszDE

China Planning for Extra 2 Million Babies Per Year

China is preparing for 2 million extra babies a year as a result of a loosening of its “one child” birth limits that will allow more couples to have two children, health officials said Thursday.


The ruling Communist Party introduced birth limits in 1980 to curb population growth and demand for water and other resources. Most urban couples are allowed one child and face fines and other penalties for additional births. Pressure to enforce limits has led local officials to force women to abort fetuses or to be sterilized, even though such measures are illegal.


The party announced in November that couples in which one parent was an only child would be allowed to have a second baby in some areas. Previously, both parents had to be an only child to qualify for this exemption.


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Associated Press via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1lU7ufR

China Seen Outspending U.S. Drillers to Chase Shale-Gas Boom

China’s effort to catch up with the U.S. in developing shale gas and become more energy independent is coming at a big cost: It’s spending four times as much developing some fields, according to a new report.


Holding the world’s biggest potential reserves of natural gas in shale rock, China will spend billions of dollars in trying to close a gap with the shale leader, which is about a decade ahead in developing the energy resource, according to a study by Bloomberg New Energy Finance released today.


The emergence of shale projects in Asia and Europe affects global gas and oil prices and is changing the energy agendas of governments from London to Beijing. In China, leaders mandated national targets for their producers such as state-owned China Petroleum & Chemical Corp. (386), known as Sinopec.


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Benjamin Haas, Bloomberg via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1oy26p0

Wednesday, 28 May 2014

Action plan drawn up to counter cyberthreats

The measures include dealing with online attacks launched from abroad


Chinese network security and technology companies have taken measures to tackle increasingly serious online threats, including attacks from overseas.

More sophisticated online threats from abroad have led to enterprises looking at ways to tackle the problem.


For example, greater importance has been placed on cybersecurity in recent years by Qihoo 360, a Chinese network security company with more than 5,000 employees.


Since 2010, the number of employees responsible for providing security services and maintenance for other users in the company has increased by at least five times, vice-president Tan Xiaosheng told China Daily.


Tan made the comment during a national cybersecurity conference in Shantou, Guangdong province.


The number of employees responsible for the company’s own security had risen to 40, compared with just five in 2010, Tan said.


“We have improved our security technology products and services with the aim of effectively coping with cyberattacks, no matter where they come from,” he said.


The United States has become the source of the most attacks on Chinese users. From March 19 to May 18, 2,077 servers in the US controlled 1.18 million computers in China via Trojans or botnets, while 2,016 IP addresses launched 57,000 backdoor attacks on 1,754 Chinese websites.


The US has been accused of hacking and eavesdropping on Chinese leaders, government agencies and companies in recent years.


The figures follow an announcement by the US Department of Commerce last week that five Chinese military personnel were being charged with hacking computers of US companies.


Sun Jianguo, deputy chief of general staff of the People’s Liberation Army, said on Tuesday in Shanghai that the US was the biggest cybersecurity attacker and it should be sued by most countries.


“It is ridiculous that the US says espionage on political and military intelligence is a normal practice but that collecting business intelligence is a crime. Isn’t political and military secrecy more essential to a country’s existence and security?”


Ruan Zongze, vice-president of the China Institute of International Studies, said Washington had stirred new “provocations” in cyberspace targeting China as it attempted to disguise its own eavesdropping scandal revealed by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden, and divert public anger to China as a scapegoat.


“Cybersecurity calls for concerted global efforts to frame regulations, but the US has been running in the opposite direction,” Ruan said.


Yu Haibo, president of TOPSEC, another company providing information security products and services in China, said he had doubled the number of researchers and engineers devoted to cybersecurity in the past year.


The company now has about 500 employees engaged in boosting security technology and promoting related products, of which more than 100 are members of a think tank.


He welcomed cybersecurity being elevated on a national level and said enterprises like his played an important role in preventing online attacks, especially from abroad.


Li Yuxiao, director of the Institute of Internet Governance and Law under Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, said the participation of companies was effective in preventing cybersecurity breaches.


He suggested that the government strengthen Internet security cooperation with other countries.


By CAO YIN in Shantou, Guangdong, and PU ZHENDONG in Beijing (China Daily)






Mandy Peng via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1kMJL4d

Chinese writer wins prestigious Kafka Prize

Chinese writer Yan Lianke, who has penned more than 20 novels and short stories, won the Czech Franz Kafka Prize on May 27, becoming the first Chinese person to win the award, the Oriental Morning Post reported.


Yan receives a bronze sculpture of Kafka and $10,000 awarded by the Prague-based Franz Kafka Society.


“I know this prize which is famous around the world. Many writers I know or like have won this prize,” Yan told the newspaper.


The 56-year-old Beijing-based writer was trained at a PLA school, and his early writing was mainly about army life.


Later he changed direction to rural topics. His works are translated into many languages and are read widely. He was a finalist for the 2013 Man Booker International Prize.


Yan occasionally finds himself caught up in controversies that have kept some of his books from being published.


“There must be some people saying I won the prize for ‘controversy’, but I believe it’s misunderstanding. What they really care about is creation and art per se,” he said.


British newspaper The Guardian once described Yan as “one of China’s most interesting writers and a master of imaginative satire”.


The Franz Kafka Prize has been awarded since 2001 and past winners include Philip Roth, Harold Pinter, Amos Oz and Haruki Murakami. Yan will collect his award in Prague in October.






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

Terrorism still most direct threat to America: Obama

U.S. President Barack Obama said here on Wednesday that he believes terrorism remains the most direct threat to America at home and abroad in the foreseeable future.


The president made the remarks while addressing the Class of 2014 graduation ceremony at the prestigious United States Military Academy at West Point.


Obama, however, stressed that the United States must shift its counterterrorism strategy, calling the practice of invading every country that harbors terrorist networks “naive and unsustainable.”


Drawing on the successes and shortcomings of its experience in Iraq and Afghanistan, America should “more effectively partner with countries where terrorist networks seek a foothold,” said Obama.


Citing Afghanistan as an example, he said that the United States has trained hundreds of thousands of Afghan soldiers and police to do the security job in their own country, and that America’s combat mission in the Central Asian state will be over by the end of this year.


Obama announced on Tuesday that the last American solider would leave Afghanistan at the end of 2016.


“Now, as we move to a train-and-advise mission in Afghanistan, our reduced presence there will allow us to more effectively address emerging threats in the Middle East and North Africa,” he said in the West Point speech.


The president added that he is calling on the U.S. Congress to support a new Counterterrorism Partnership Fund of up to 5 billion dollars, which will help train, build capacity and facilitate partner countries on the frontlines.


Obama emphasized that the partnership he has described does not eliminate the need to take direct action when necessary to protect America itself, but such direct action must “uphold standards that reflect our values.”


The president also pledged that he will increasingly turn to the military to take the lead and provide information to the public about the U.S. efforts, to be more transparent about both the basis for U.S. actions and the manner in which they are carried out.


Stating that his administration’s “bottom line” is to secure America’s leadership role on the world stage, Obama reiterated the principle he put forward at the outset of his presidency, that the United States will use military force, unilaterally if necessary, when its core interests demand it.


However, when issues of global concern that do not pose a direct threat to the United States are at stake, “the threshold for military action must be higher,” he said.


Instead of going it alone, the United States must mobilize allies and partners to take collective action, and also must broaden the tools to include diplomacy and development, sanctions and isolation, appeals to international law and — if just, necessary and effective — multilateral military action, he elaborated.


“We must do so because collective action in these circumstances is more likely to succeed, more likely to be sustained, and less likely to lead to costly mistakes,” he added.


Political analysts here believe that the president was actively defending his foreign policy stance on a range of controversial issues, including Syria, Iran and Ukraine.


The United States Military Academy (USMA) at West Point, also known as West Point, is a four-year coeducational federal service academy located in West Point, New York. It has been educating and training leaders of character for the U.S. Army and for the nation for more than 200 years, providing a 47-month leader-development program steeped in academic rigor, military discipline and physical challenges.


Some 1,064 USMA cadets received their diplomas during Wednesday ‘s graduation ceremony, throughout which Obama stayed on the platform, shaking hands with and patting on the shoulders of the excited new grads.






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

Chinese general labels U.S. No.1 cyber thief

A Chinese general on Tuesday called the United States the world’s leading cyber thief, saying the U.S. cyber spying force should be charged by other countries.


“In terms of both military and political intelligence and trade secrets, the United States is the world’s No.1 cyber thief and its spying force should be indicted,” Sun Jianguo, deputy chief of General Staff of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army, said on the sidelines of an international security seminar.


The U.S. Justice Department last week announced an indictment against five Chinese military officers on allegations of commercial cyber theft. “It is ridiculous for the U.S. side to say that cyber espionage on political and military intelligence is common practice while the theft of commercial secrets is illegal,” Sun said.


“As far as a country’s security is concerned, isn’t the political and military intelligence more important than commercial secrets?” Sun said.


Sun said the U.S. move is like “a thief crying ‘stop thief’,” which seriously violates the norms guiding international relations and undermines China-U.S. relations.






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

China Tries to Limit Damage From Cyber Spying Spat

China tried Wednesday to cool a dispute with Washington over cyber spying, reminding the United States of its need for Chinese help over North Korea and appealing to it not to hurt cooperation in anti-terrorism and other areas.


The effort at damage control, despite the outraged tone of Beijing’s rejection of spying allegations last week, reflects the importance of commercial and political ties between the two biggest economies. It comes at a time when Beijing is embroiled in a territorial dispute with Vietnam and is trying to persuade other governments to avoid getting involved.


“The row between China and the United States over cyber security should not become a rift to undermine the two sides’ cooperation on other issues of common concern,” the government’s Xinhua News Agency said in a commentary.


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admin via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1oKEdIi

China to boost funding for local governments that cut emissions

China will boost funding to regions that do well in reining in air pollution and punish laggards, the cabinet has decided, as Beijing pushes local governments to step up the war on smog.


The fight on crippling pollution that prematurely ends hundreds of thousands of lives annually has risen to near the top of the national agenda, but is still ignored by some local governments that remain focused only on growing their economies.


Beijing now promises more money to regions that do well on cutting emissions of pollutants such as sulphuric dioxide and nitrous oxide.


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Stian Reklev, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1oKEdrS

China sentences 55 in Xinjiang mass trial

Local officials in China’s western Xinjiang region held a public rally for the mass sentencing of criminals on Tuesday, handing out judgements for 55 people and at least three death sentences for crimes such as “violent terrorism”, state media said.


The public sentencing, reminiscent of China’s revolutionary era rallies, attracted a crowd of 7,000 at a sports stadium in Yining city in the northern prefecture of Yili.


Photos showed packed stadium bleachers and trucks parked on the sports field loaded with prisoners in orange vests being guarded by armed police.


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bljworldwide via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1isApXe

China Banks Bad-Debt Ratio Seen Rising to Most Since 2009

China’s biggest banks are poised to report the highest proportion of bad debts since 2009 after late payments on loans surged to a five-year high, indicating borrowers are struggling amid an economic slowdown.


The nation’s 10 largest lenders reported overdue loans reached 588 billion yuan ($94 billion) at the end of 2013, a 21 percent increase from a year earlier to the highest level since at least 2009. The rise in late payments portends more losses on soured loans for banks in coming months as China’s slowing economy crimps companies’ earnings, while a government crackdown on non-bank funding makes it tougher for borrowers to get new credit or finance older debt.


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bljworldwide via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1isAomd

China Not Making as Many Millionaires as It Used To

China’s millionaire machine has slowed, suggesting that the country’s economic weakness is reaching the top of the economy.


China’s millionaire population grew 3.6 percent last year, adding 100,000 millionaires and bringing its total millionaire count to 2.9 million, according a new report by the Chinese wealth website Hurun. The growth rate marks a sudden slowdown from the double-digit millionaire growth in China in recent years.


By contrast, the U.S. added 640,000 millionaires last year, bringing its total to 9.63 million, according to Spectrem Group. Spectrem defines millionaires as households with investible assets of $1 million or more.


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Tuesday, 27 May 2014

Close call as China scrambles fighter jets on Japanese aircraft in disputed territory

Territorial tensions between China and Japan have flared after a close encounter between their military jets in disputed airspace over the East China Sea.


The neighboring rivals accused each other of potentially triggering a dangerous incident, after two pairs of Chinese fighter jets were scrambled and flew unprecedentedly close to a Japanese OP-3C surveillance plane and a YS-11EB electronic intelligence aircraft Saturday.


The fly-bys occurred in airspace claimed by both countries as part of their “air defense identification zones,” while China carried out joint maritime exercises with Russia at the weekend.


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China Tensions Grow After Vietnamese Ship Sinks in Clash

Hair-trigger tensions in the South China Sea escalated Tuesday as China and Vietnam traded accusations over the sinking of a Vietnamese fishing vessel in the vicinity of a Chinese oil rig parked in disputed waters off Vietnam’s coast.


The incident was almost certain to aggravate the already charged diplomatic and economic tensions between China and Vietnam, whose relations have plummeted to the worst in decades following anti-Chinese riots two weeks ago that killed at least four people.


In the latest incident, a Chinese vessel rammed and sank a Vietnamese fishing boat about 17 nautical miles southwest of the rig on Monday afternoon, the state-run Vietnamese television network, VTV1, reported. All 10 crew members were rescued, the network said.


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Jane Perlez, New York Times via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1kHGkMp

China’s state-owned sector told to cut ties with U.S. consulting firms

China has told its state-owned enterprises to sever links with American consulting firms just days after the United States charged five Chinese military officers with hacking U.S. companies, the Financial Times reported on Sunday.


China’s action, which targets companies like McKinsey & Company and The Boston Consulting Group (BCG), stems from fears the firms are providing trade secrets to the U.S. government, the FT reported, citing unnamed sources close to senior Chinese leaders.


“We haven’t received any notification of this kind,” said Margaret Kashmir, a spokeswoman for Strategy& – formerly Booz & Company – in an email, adding that serving clients in China and globally continues to be the company’s main priority.


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Hilary Russ, Reuters via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1ml5Ntl

China Said to Study IBM Servers for Bank Security Risks

The Chinese government is reviewing whether domestic banks’ reliance on high-end servers from International Business Machines Corp. (IBM:US) compromises the nation’s financial security, people familiar with the matter said, in an escalation of the dispute with the U.S. over spying claims.


Government agencies, including the People’s Bank of China and the Ministry of Finance, are asking banks to remove the IBM servers and replace them with a local brand as part of a trial program, said the four people, who asked not to be identified because the review hasn’t been made public.


The review fits a broader pattern of retaliation after American prosecutors indicted five Chinese military officers for allegedly hacking into the computers of U.S. companies and stealing secrets. Last week, China’s government said it will vet technology companies operating in the country, while the Financial Times reported May 25 that China ordered state-owned companies to cut ties with U.S. consulting firms.


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China’s logistics growth further slows

The growth of China’s logistics industry continued to slow in the first four months of 2014 due to shrinking demand amid an economic slowdown, new data showed on Monday.


The total value of goods transported by logistics services increased 8.5 percent year on year to 64.2 trillion yuan (10.4 trillion U.S. dollars), according to the National Development and Reform Commission.


The growth rate was 0.1 percentage points lower than the first quarter and 0.9 percentage points lower compared to the same period last year.


The commission said that the industry’s efficiency has been improving as the growth of logistics expenditure was slower than that of the value of goods transported.


Combined logistics expenditure in the Jan.-April period totaled 3.1 trillion yuan, up 8.0 percent from a year ago.


The China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing forecast in mid-May that the logistics sector will improve later this year and the growth for the whole year will be around 9 percent.






Xinhua News via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/SJ3qIg

MH370 satellite data made public

Malaysia’s Department of Civil Aviation and British satellite firm Inmarsat on Tuesday released the data used to determine the path of missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, following mounting calls from passengers’ relatives for greater transparency.


Relatives of passengers on the missing flight said they had received the data report compiled by Inmarsat and Malaysian officials and they published it on their Facebook page.


The data communications log comprises 14 pieces of data from seven “handshakes,” or pairs of numbers, between the aircraft and the satellite, Inmarsat said last week. One number is time information, the other is frequency.


The Boeing 777 with 239 passengers and crew disappeared on March 8 during a scheduled service between Kuala Lumpur and Beijing, and is believed to have gone down in the Indian Ocean, off western Australia.






Xinhua News via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/SJ3qI5

Sunday, 25 May 2014

Chinese, Russian warships return to Shanghai from joint drill

All warships participating in the China-Russia joint naval drill returned to a Shanghai port Sunday.


The Chinese and Russian navies on Saturday concluded real combat drill on the East China Sea, with real weapons being used.


A total of 14 warships, two submarines, nine airplanes and six helicopters from both sides took part in the three-day drill named “Joint Sea-2014″.


Tian Zhong, deputy commander of the Chinese Navy and the Chinese director of the “Joint Sea-2014″, told reporters in Shanghai that the drill fulfilled its goals.


Chinese and Russian navies improved their cooperation in planning, organizing and operating combat missions, Tian said.


In the drill, the two navies carried out diversified missions and deployed various monitoring and communication technologies while their personnel, from seamen to officers, interacted fully, he said.


“Holding joint drills will be the most important, regular and systematic way of cooperation between the two navies,” he said.


As two major countries in the Asia-Pacific region, China and Russia have common interests and shared responsibilities to maintain peace and stability in the region, Tian said.


“Building of comprehensive relations of strategic cooperation and partnership between China and Russia and their armed forces will help the two countries cope with new threats and challenges, develop concrete cooperation between their navies and jointly maintain and promote peace and stability in the region,” he said.


The two countries have a new type of relationship between major players, instead of military allies, he said, adding that their cooperation does not target a third country.


Fedotenkov, deputy commander of Russian Navy and Russian director of the drill, told reporters that in the drill Chinese and Russian navies learned from each other and improved their capacity of carrying out joint military missions.


“The two navies conducted the joint drill under complex circumstances and fulfilled the set targets,” he said. “Despite complicated environment and harassment from a third country, we completed all missions.”


Russian and Chinese fleets should take the peacekeeping responsibilities not only in the Asia-Pacific but also a broader area of the world, he said.


Besides the Pacific Fleet that took part in this drill, Russia would like to include its Black See Fleet and Baltic Fleet in future cooperation with Chinese navy, he said.


Commanders of the two navies will hold discussions on the drill on Monday, while China’s Zhengzhou missile destroyer and Russia’s Varyag missile cruiser will be open to citizens in Shanghai for visit on the same day.






Mandy Peng via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1mdhH8u

23 terror, religious extremism groups busted in Xinjiang

Police in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Regions have busted 23 terror and religious extremism groups and caught over 200 suspects in May, according to the regional public security department on Sunday.


The groups were busted by police in south Xinjiang’s Hotan, Kashgar and Aksu prefectures, where the majority of the population are Muslim Uygurs, according to the department.


More than 200 explosive devices were also seized in the police raids.


Many of the suspects were in their 20s and 30s, who watched terror video and audio through the Internet and electric storages and learned how to make explosives. They exchanged their experiences of making explosives and propagating Jihad through chatting tools, text messages and illegal preaching sites, according to the department.


In 2013, the East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), listed by the United Nations Security Council as a terrorist group, produced 107 terror video and audio episodes, some of which were spread to China, according to Nuriman Rozi, a senior police officer with the regional public security department.


Many of the terror suspects seized in recent years were instigated by those terror video and audio products to carry out terrorist activities, he said.


Xinjiang started a one-year campaign against terrorist violence on Friday. The campaign will last until June 2015 with Xinjiang as the major battleground.


The region saw its bloodiest day in five years on Thursday when 39 innocent people were killed in a terrorist attack.


The campaign will focus on terrorists and religious extremist groups, gun and explosive manufacturing dens and terrorist training camps.


Legal, procuratorate and public security authorities in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region issued a joint statement on Saturday, calling for law-breakers who are involved in terrorist activities to surrender to get lenient punishments.


The statement forbids people to organize, lead or join any terrorist groups. It bans people from implementing or instigating terrorist violence. It also prohibits people from directly or indirectly funding, supporting or harbouring terrorist activities, terrorist organizations and terrorists.


The statement also bans people from manufacturing, trading, transporting, publicizing, copying and holding propaganda materials or electric storages with terrorist violence and religious extremism contents.


Manufacturing, trading, transporting, storing and holding guns, ammunitions, flammable and combustible materials as well as knives under strict control are also prohibited.






Mandy Peng via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1mdhF0i

Japanese air intrusion on joint exercise ‘dangerous’

Ministry urges Tokyo to stop acts of reconnaissance on Chinese navy


The intrusion of two Japanese reconnaissance aircraft into a China-Russia joint navy exercise is against international law and can make the already volatile relations between China and Japan more complicated, analysts said.


China and Russia conducted a weeklong naval exercise in the East China Sea, which officially concludes on Monday, and issued no-fly notices days before the exercise.


However, a Japanese OP-3C surveillance plane and a YS-11EB electronic intelligence aircraft intruded into the airspace of China’s East China Sea Air Defense Identification Zone on Saturday morning where the exercise was being held.


China reportedly had to deploy two SU-27s to intercept the intruders.


On Sunday, the Ministry of National Defense criticized Japan for the move, saying it seriously violated international law and globally accepted norms, and “could have easily caused a misunderstanding and even led to a mid-air accident”.


Zhang Junshe, a researcher at the PLA’s Naval Military Studies Research Institute, said Japan often sends military vessels and aircraft to interfere in the training of the Chinese navy at close quarters, “which has posed a huge disturbance”.


Observers also said Japanese defense authorities have hyped the technical details in the latest airspace confrontation, which claimed the Chinese jet fighters flew dozens of meters from the Japanese aircraft, while they deliberately shied away from the fact that Japan’s military aircraft were “doing something wrong”.


Tokyo should stop its act, “otherwise Japan will bear all consequences from this”, the Chinese defense ministry said.


The Chinese military aircraft are entitled to safeguard the country’s airspace security and exercise necessary recognition and precautions toward external aircraft that enter the Chinese ADIZ, it said.


The Japanese Self-Defense Forces have conducted many reconnaissance and interference missions on drills conducted by the Chinese military.


Early in 2010, Chinese Ambassador to Japan Cheng Yonghua criticized Japan’s reconnaissance as “running against the spirit of mutual understanding and mutual trust”.


During the China-Russia naval drill last July, Japan dispatched aircraft and vessels to closely trail the Chinese warships, according to Du Wenlong, a senior researcher at the PLA’s Academy of Military Science.


Jiang Xinfeng, another researcher at the academy, said Japan’s defense policies toward China are becoming explicitly coercive and even confrontational.


Tokyo “has overreacted to and misinterpreted” the growth of China’s national defense capabilities, Jiang said.


By Zhang Yunbi (China Daily)






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China issues white paper on human rights

The Chinese government on Monday released a white paper detailing the progress made in human rights in 2013, highlighting enhanced social fairness, justice and freedom of speech.


“China’s progress in its human rights undertaking is there for everybody to see, and every unbiased and reasonable observer can draw a fair conclusion,” said the white paper, published by the State Council Information Office under the title “Progress in China’s Human Rights in 2013.”


The white paper, elaborating the government’s achievements in improving people’s right to development, said “China’s development provides all Chinese people with the opportunities to develop themselves, serve society, make successes in their life and realize their dreams.”


Aiming at promoting social fairness, justice and the people’s well-being, the Chinese government comprehensively deepened the reform, promoted various undertakings in the economic, social and cultural fields, and safeguarded the people’s rights to equal participation and development in 2013, the report said.


The people’s living standards have risen steadily, as China continuously improves the urban and rural residents’ clothing, food, accommodation, and transportation conditions, it said.


Although not very developed, China has put in place a social security system, which is the world’s largest and suitable to China’s current social conditions, the report said.


“Both urban and rural residents, especially people in straitened circumstances, can live in dignity, with their basic living conditions better ensured,” it said.


“China’s democracy and legal system have been further strengthened,” the report said.


The country’s rural and urban areas for the first time realized the same ratio of deputies to the represented population in the election to the National People’s Congress (NPC) deputies in 2013.


China also took an important step forward in building a clean government, as it has restricted the use of power and cracked down on corruption.


The country has further upgraded its governance system and capacity. The exercise of power is more procedure-based, government work is more transparent, and public freedom of speech is better ensured, it said.


Internet has “dramatically” expanded the space of freedom of speech, the report said. “Internet has become one of the most important channels for the public to express its opinion.”


Chinese netizens post and forward 250 million microblog messages and over 20 billion WeChat and other instant messages every day, figures from the report show.


China has abolished the system of reeducation through labor after more than 50 years of operation, and adopted multiple measures to curb the practice of extorting confessions by torture and prevent unjust, false and erroneous litigation, it noted.


China has continued to provide preferential policies for ethnic minorities, and made sure they can enjoy and exercise their rights according to law, the report said.


China has also accelerated the comprehensive development of various social, economic and human rights protection undertakings in regions inhabited by ethnic minorities, including the Xinjiang Uygur and Tibet autonomous regions.


Disabled people are in a better position to participate in social life as equals with their various rights well protected and an improved public service system in place, according to the report.


Striving to build “a beautiful China,” the country has speeded up its ecological progress, increased financial input, strengthened environmental protection, punished environmental crimes, it said.


The Chinese government provided some 338.3 billion yuan in 2013 for conserving energy and protecting the environment, seeing a 14.2 percent year-on-year growth, according to the report.


“The pursuit of the improvement of human rights never ends, for there is always room for better human rights conditions,” the white paper said.


“China is now reaching for a higher goal in its human rights undertaking,” it said.


The report, however, noted that China is still a large developing country, with conspicuous problems of unbalanced, uncoordinated and unsustainable development.


Greater efforts are needed to bring higher standards to human rights protection.


The white paper is China’s 11th report on human rights since the government began releasing such reports in 1991. The tenth report was released in 2013.






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Friday, 23 May 2014

US commander warns of China-Vietnam standoff

The U.S. military commander in the Pacific warned Friday that the risk of a miscalculation that could trigger a wider conflict in a tense territorial standoff between China and Vietnam is high and urged both nations to exercise restraint.


Adm. Samuel Locklear also urged Southeast Asian nations and China to hasten the drafting of a legally binding “code of conduct” to prevent territorial rifts from turning into armed conflicts that could threaten the region’s bustling economies.


Southeast Asian diplomats have accused China of delaying the start of negotiations for such a nonaggression pact while it tries to consolidate its control of disputed territories.


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W.T.O. Sides With U.S. in Dispute Over Chinese Car Tariffs

The World Trade Organization sided with the United States on Friday in a dispute over punitive Chinese tariffs on American exports of cars and sport utility vehicles.


China had already lifted the tariffs in question but American officials declared it a victory, citing the decision as the latest in a series of rulings that it has won against Beijing.


“China has had 14 years — 14 years — to start playing by the rules,” said Senator Debbie Stabenow, a Michigan Democrat, at a news conference in Washington. “But instead we see illegal and improper activities over and over again. As long as China keeps up this illegal behavior, we can and must respond with these kinds of strong enforcement actions.”


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Russia, China Veto UN Move to Refer Syria to ICC

Russia and China on Thursday vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution referring the Syrian crisis to the International Criminal Court for investigation of possible war crimes, prompting angry responses from the proposal’s supporters who said the two countries should be ashamed.


This is the fourth time Russia and China have used their veto power as permanent council members to deflect action against the government of President Bashar Assad. The 13 other council members voted in favor of the resolution.


More than 60 countries signed on to support the French-drafted measure, in a dramatic demonstration of international backing for justice in the conflict which has sent millions fleeing and killed more than 160,000, according to activists.


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China Gives Former Mining Tycoon Death Sentence

A Chinese court Friday sentenced to death mining tycoon Liu Han on charges he headed a murderous criminal gang, a verdict that illustrates the seriousness of an anticorruption shake-up that has taken down dozens of government and business personalities.


The 48-year-old entrepreneur built his Sichuan Hanlong Group into one of the largest private enterprises in southwestern China. But he did it as the boss of a mafia-like organization that operated like a violent “big bully” using kidnapping and murder to upset economic and social order, according to the decision handed down Friday by the Xianning People’s Intermediate Court in Hubei province.


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Chinese state media says five suicide bombers carried out Xinjiang attack

Five suicide bombers carried out the attack which killed 31 people in the capital of China’s troubled Xinjiang region, state media reported a day after the deadliest terrorist attack to date in the region.


The incident, which occurred in Urumqi on Thursday morning, was the second suicide attack in the capital in just over three weeks. A bomb and knife attack at an Urumqi train station in late April killed one bystander and wounded 79.


The government recently launched a campaign to strike hard against terrorism in Xinjiang, blaming Islamists and separatists for the worsening violence in the resource-rich western region bordering central Asia. At least 180 people have been killed in attacks across China over the past year.


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Thursday, 22 May 2014

More Focus on Responsibilities in Upgraded Sino-African Ties

Chinese President Xi Jinping visited Tanzania, South Africa and Congo-Brazzaville immediately after the annual sessions of the National People’s Congress and Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference last March. Li Keqiang just concluded his first Africa trip as Chinese premier, visiting Ethiopia, Nigeria, Angola, Kenya, and the African Union headquarters from May 4 to 12.


The two high-profile visits in one year fully displayed the current Chinese leadership’s continuous emphasis on developing Sino-African relations and enhancing South-South cooperation. During his visit, Premier Li proposed to actively promote Sino-African collaboration in industry, finance, poverty alleviation, ecological and environmental protection, personnel and cultural exchanges, and peace and security. Each of the six areas has a specific roadmap and overall program, presenting an “upgraded version of Sino-African All-round Cooperation” that is true to its name.


Reading between the lines of Premier Li’s elaboration of the blueprint for the upgraded version of Sino-African cooperation, one can feel the emphasis on “contribution” and “responsibility”.


Every time when I visited Africa, I heard African friends expressing heart-felt praises of and respect for China’s economic achievements and its becoming the world’s second largest economy. Though China remains a developing country in per capita GDP, growing comprehensive national strength allows us to make long-term plans for Sino-African relations from a broader perspective, and contribute more to African development. Li proposed during his visit to try to raise Sino-African trade to around $400 billion by 2020, doubling current volume, and to increase direct investment in Africa from the current $25 billion to $100 billion. Chinese loans to African countries will increase another $10 billion, expanding the promised lending quota to $30 billion. Besides, he pledged to help Africa build networks of high-speed rails, expressways, and regional air transport, realizing the African dream of connecting all African capitals with high-speed rails, facilitating African integration. Undoubtedly, all the six projects and three networks meet African needs. Each of them has created a stir in Africa. And the successful implementation of each will bring tangible changes there, and become a hallmark of Chinese contribution to African development.


While contributing to local progress in Africa and the rest of the world, China, as its national strength grows, must also assume due responsibilities. In the past dozen years, with the rapid expansion of interactions and the diversification of participants in cooperation programs, problems and challenges have emerged along with achievements, which Premier referred to as “growing pains”.


While visiting Angola (where there are 260,000 Chinese citizens, nearly one-fourth of Chinese population in Africa), Li convened a special meeting with representatives of Chinese companies and local Chinese chamber of commerce. While emphasizing government efforts to protect Chinese citizens’ rights and interests overseas and limelight on consular protection, Li also asked Chinese firms to strictly follow laws and rules of resident countries, and assume due responsibilities for project quality, commodity quality, consumer rights and interests, as well as for local communities and environment. In Kenya, he visited the memorial ivory burning site with the Kenyan president, displaying Chinese sincerity and resolution for collaboration in the crackdown on illegal poaching and ivory trafficking. Li also announced a Chinese government aid of $10 million to help Africa promote wild life protection, biodiversity preservation, and sustainable development. Li also vowed to support transfer of labor-intensive industries from China to Africa, localization of Chinese industries, and jobs creation in African countries; and to earmark more than half of Chinese aid for Africa, with special emphasis on such public-welfare programs as poverty alleviation, public health, and disaster prevention.


Such responsibilities also found expression in the inclusiveness of development-aid programs for Africa. Premier Li stated at the World Economic Forum Africa Summit that, with a combined population upwards of 2.3 billion, China and Africa will not only improve livelihoods of their own peoples, but also promote balanced progress of the world economy by enhancing cooperation. This is in itself the greatest inclusive growth the world over. Helping Africa develop, allowing almost one-third of human beings share the fruit of growth through mutually beneficial cooperation, China will contribute tremendously to balanced development of the world economy and humanity’s overall progress. That will be an important manifestation of China’s role as a responsible big country. Li also stated that Chinese cooperation with Africa will follow the principle of “Africa needs, Africa agrees, Africa participates”, and that the formats of cooperation should include three-party and multi-party ones. In fact, China and the United States have conducted several rounds of consultations over cooperation on African development, with topics covering peace and security, peace-keeping, climate change, and humanitarian relief. And the two parties have had preliminary cooperation in peace talks between Sudan and South Sudan, joint operations against Somali pirates, and anti-terror endeavors in Nigeria.


From Li’s Africa trip, we have seen an upgraded version of Sino-African relationship, and felt the strong Chinese sense of responsibility. On its own way to national rejuvenation, China should maintain a balance between “righteousness” and “interest” and be faithful to its moral obligations.


He Wenping is a Senior Fellow at the Chahar Institute and a Research Fellow with the Institute of West Asia and Africa Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.






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Hanoi’s charges ‘irresponsible’

Expert: Philippines, Vietnam form front to challenge China on territory


Beijing slammed Hanoi on Thursday for “making irresponsible accusations” against China on the international stage, following Vietnam’s decision a day earlier to consider pursuing legal action over China’s islands in the South China Sea.


The issue is being internationalized and complicated, observers said, as Vietnam may align with the Philippines and follow Manila’s example and file a case at an international court, a development one analyst said indicated a “front” was being formed against China.


During a visit to Manila on Wednesday, Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung said Hanoi was considering various “defense options” against China, including legal action, Reuters reported.


Dung did not elaborate on the other options being considered, but at a joint news conference with Philippine President Benigno Aquino Dung said Vietnam and the Philippines “call on countries and the international community to continue strongly condemning China and demanding China immediately end the violations”. However, Aquino did not mention the territorial tensions with China in his speech.


Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said at a news conference on Thursday that Vietnam is simply confusing right and wrong.


“As for who is challenging another country’s sovereignty, who is creating tensions and who is sabotaging peace and stability in the South China Sea, facts speak louder than words,” Hong said.


Last year, Manila submitted a case to a UN arbitration tribunal in The Hague challenging China’s claims in the South China Sea. Beijing has refused to participate, insisting that the best way to resolve matters is bilateral talks.


On Thursday, Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister Vu Duc Dam said the country is closely watching how the Philippines fares in an international court over its maritime dispute with China, according to Reuters.


Wu Shicun, president of the National Institute for South China Sea Studies, said: “It is pretty obvious that Vietnam and the Philippines are forming a front to confront China on the South China Sea issue as the two countries have both been stirring trouble recently in regional waters and have demanded that ASEAN release a statement on this issue.


“Beijing’s measures to respond to the apparently anti-China alliance forged by Vietnam and the Philippines should vary given the different conditions of the two countries,” Wu said.


“Bilaterally, China and Vietnam have open and smooth communication channels, which ushers in the possibility for more diplomatic consultations to solve problem. For the Philippines, China should take multiple measures, including economic ones, to pull Manila back to the negotiating table,” Wu said.


Li Guoqiang, deputy director of the Center for Chinese Borderland History and Geography at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said Hanoi and Manila tend to perceive China as a common opponent and therefore share similar policy options, but it is unlikely that the two countries will frame an “anti-China coalition”.


“Vietnam and the Philippines have different interests in the South China Sea. They are playing different roles and have a different influence in the region,” Li said. “A coalition against China will risk great damage to their ties with China, which neither of them can afford.”


“In the big picture, the two countries should realize that the South China Sea does not account for the entirety of relations,” he added.


On May 2, Vietnam sent military ships to harass Chinese oil drilling operations around Zhongjian Island in the Xisha Islands, well within China’s territorial waters. Anti-China protests in Vietnam followed and soon turned violent, claiming the lives of two Chinese citizens and injuring hundreds of others.


“China repeatedly asked the Vietnamese to stop the violence. However, instead, they turned a blind eye,” Hong said.


Hong said Vietnam should immediately end the maritime harassment, punish the perpetrators of the riots and compensate for the property damage.


By Pu Zhendong (China Daily)






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Russia, China veto draft UN resolution on Syrian civil war

Russia and China, two permanent members of the UN Security Council, on Thursday wielded veto power over a draft resolution which is intended to refer the Syrian civil war to the International Criminal Court (ICC).


The unadopted draft resolution, proposed by France, received 13 votes in favor and two against.


“The draft resolution has not been adopted owing to the negative votes of permanent members of the council,” said Oh Joon, the South Korean permanent representative to the United Nations, who holds the rotating council presidency for the month of May.


The Thursday vote at the 15-nation UN body made it a fourth double veto by Russia and China on a West-drafted resolution on Syria.


Syria is not a state party to the Rome Statute which established the ICC, so the only way the Middle East country can be referred to The Hague-based tribunal is by the Security Council.


Under the UN Charter, the adoption of a draft resolution requires nine votes in favor and the absence of a negative vote by any of the five permanent members of the Security Council.


France, another permanent council member, circulated the draft resolution among the council members on May 12 in a bid to refer the Syrian civil war, current in its fourth year, to the ICC for review of alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity.


“The Security Council reaffirms its strong condemnation of the widespread violations of human rights law by the Syrian authorities and pro-government militias, as well as the human rights abuses and violations of international humanitarian law by non-State armed groups, all committed in the course of the ongoing conflict in the Syrian Arab Republic since March 2011,” said the draft resolution.


After the council vote, Vitaly Churkin, the Russian UN ambassador, said at the Security Council that the vetoed draft resolution, if adopted, would “lay the ground for the eventual outside military intervention” in Syria.


Churkin blamed France, which initiated the draft resolution, for trying once again to “create a pretext for armed intervention in the Syrian conflict,” while “fully aware of the failure it will meet” in the wake of the council vote.


“It is striking that there is not a single word on the political settlement and the negotiation process among the Syrians ” mentioned in a communique at the end of the May 15 meeting on Syria in London, he said.


Citing the case of Libya, Churkin said the referral to the ICC would not help resolve the crisis.


The Security Council has previously referred Libya and Sudan’s Darfur to the ICC.


“We call on our Western colleagues to abandon the futile, dead-end policy on Syria,” he said.


“We share their emotions caused by the crisis in Syria, which has been dragging on for far too long,” Churkin said, referring to the countries sponsoring the draft resolutions.


Russia has already voiced its opposition to the referral of Syria to the ICC. On Wednesday, Churkin called a “public stunt” the planned council vote.


The Geneva communique, issued in June 2012 on the principles of accountability and national reconciliation in Syria, will continue to serve as the basis for “the core efforts” to strive for the political solution to the Syrian crisis, he said. “We are convinced that the justice in Syria will eventually prevail.”


“Those guilty of perpetrating grave crimes will be punished,” he said. “But in order for this to happen, peace is first needed, first and foremost.”


Also speaking at the council after his vote, Wang Min, the deputy Chinese permanent representative to the United Nations, said that China “has serious difficulties” with the draft resolution.


“What is most urgently needed now is to urge the government of Syria and opposition to immediately start a ceasefire and end violence so that the third round of the Geneva negotiations can be resumed to push forward the political process and start the political transition,” Wang said.


Little progress has been achieved at the two round of peace talks between the Syrian government and opposition in Geneva in February this year. The international community is striving for the third round of negotiations in order to bring an end to the Syrian conflict, which has reportedly left some 150,000 Syrian people dead over the past more than three years.


“Under the current circumstances, to forcibly refer the situation of Syria to the ICC is neither conducive to building trust among all the parties in Syria, or to the early resumption of the negotiations in Geneva, it will only jeopardize the efforts made by the international community to push forward the political settlement,” he said.


“We believe that at a time when there is a serious divergence of views concerning the draft resolution among all sides, the Security Council should continue to hold the consultations, rather than forcibly push for a vote on the draft resolution, so as not to undermine the unity in the council or obstruct the coordination and cooperation in the council in dealing with the questions such as Syria and other major serious issues,” he said.


The Thursday vote came just days before international Syria mediator Lakhdar Brahimi is scheduled to step down on May 31.


“It is clear in this case that no side in this tragedy is innocent,” said UN Deputy Secretary-General Jan Eliasson, who was addressing the Security Council on behalf of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.






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Terror fight ‘must be intensified’

The latest attack in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region highlights the need to intensify the fight against the growing threat of terrorism at multiple levels, according to security analysts and experts.


Ma Pinyan, a senior anti-terrorism researcher, said there had been a growing number of attacks and there was also the possibility that more people had become terrorists despite a crackdown on extremist activities in recent years.


“Not enough efforts are being made to solve terrorism at its roots,” said Ma, deputy director of the Ethnic and Religious Study Center at Xinjiang Academy of Social Sciences.


“The ideological basis for terrorism is religious extremism. The extremists have increased their efforts to indoctrinate people.”


On Thursday morning, two cars without license plates plowed into people at an open-air market in Urumqi, the regional capital, with the occupants throwing explosives into the crowds.


The attack killed 31 people and injured at least 94 others. The Ministry of Public Security described it as “an extremely severe terrorist incident”.


It was the second terrorist attack in Urumqi in less than a month. On April 30, a railway station explosion killed three people, including two attackers, and injured 79 others.


Xinjiang Party chief Zhang Chunxian said in March that the penetration of religious extremism had led to more attacks.


Tourism decline


Meng Nan, a Central Asian studies researcher at Xinjiang University, said the terrorists had become more focused and sophisticated in their attacks.


They chose the morning market for the latest attack because they could cause maximum panic, Meng said.


The attacks in Xinjiang would trigger a decline in the number of tourists to the region during the peak season, he said.


Besides economic damage, such attacks “can attract the attention of anti-China forces in the West, who will support the terrorists with funding or weapons”, Meng added.


Ma said the timing of the attack, which came as China was hosting the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia in Shanghai, also meant that it was deliberately provocative.


He said modern forms of communications had also made the fight against terrorism more challenging.


All these factors meant that counterterrorism efforts must be intensified and carried out at all levels, the experts said.


Liu Lei, Xinjiang military command commissar, said religious extremists in the region tended to recruit jobless young people from rural areas.


He said most members of the violent or terror-related groups cracked in Xinjiang in recent years were jobless and aged between 10 and 25.


More must be done to ensure that people at the grassroots had jobs so that they did not fall prey to extremists, Liu said.


Ma said China needed to strengthen counterterrorism cooperation with Afghanistan and Pakistan, which were increasingly becoming bases for the planning of attacks and training of terrorists in Xinjiang.


Effective measures


A special law on counterterrorism was urgently needed, Ma said.


Dai Peng, a professor at People’s Public Security University of China, said the nation should enhance its capacity to combat terrorism in terms of intelligence gathering at border areas.


Basic counterterrorism measures also included cutting terrorists’ sources of funding and weapons, Dai said.


“Police should take effective measures to cut off their source of funding. Whenever banks discover the illegal inflow or outflow of funds by suspected terrorists, they should freeze the accounts immediately.”


Police and customs officials should maintain the pressure in cracking down on arms smuggling, he said.


Meng said the government should improve cooperation on information gathering and sharing with other countries to target terrorists at home and abroad who increasingly used the Internet to spread their extremist activities.


Security checks and patrols at public places such as hospitals, schools, shopping malls and theaters must be strengthened because those areas were major targets for terror attacks, Meng said.


Everyone should stay on high alert for suspected terrorists and report them to the authorities immediately, Meng said, adding that a consensus should be reached — that terror attacks could cause huge damage to all ethnic groups and nationalities.


Zhang Yan and Cui Jia contributed to this story.


By XU WEI and WANG QIAN (China Daily)






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Terror attacks kill dozens in China’s tense Xinjiang region

A series of explosions tore through an open-air market in the capital of the volatile western Chinese region of Xinjiang on Thursday, killing dozens of people and wounding many more, state media reported.


China’s Ministry of Public Security said the attack in the heavily policed city of Urumqi was “a serious violent terrorist incident” and vowed to crack down on its perpetrators. President Xi Jinping called for the terrorists behind it to be “severely” punished.


Two SUVs slammed into shoppers gathered at the market in Urumqi at 7:50 a.m. Thursday, and explosives were flung out of the vehicles, China’s official news agency Xinhua said.


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As Xi speaks of conciliation, neighbors voice disquiet

Even as President Xi Jinping called this week for a new security concept for Asia, frictions between China and several of its neighbors underscored the challenges facing regional cooperation.


“No country should attempt to dominate or infringe upon the rights and interests of other countries,” Mr. Xi said in Shanghai on Wednesday at the fourth summit meeting of the Conference on Interaction and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia.


“We should abide by the basic norms governing international relations, such as respecting sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity; non-interference in internal affairs; respect social systems and chosen development paths,” he said, the state news agency Xinhua reported.


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Vietnam Threatens Legal Action Against China

Vietnam’s prime minister said Thursday for the first time that his country is considering legal action against China over its sovereignty claims in the South China Sea, a move that Beijing would likely fiercely oppose.


China claims nearly all of the South China Sea as its own, bringing it into conflict with the far smaller nations of Vietnam, the Philippines and three others that have rival claims. Beijing also has a territorial dispute with Japan over a cluster of islands in the East China Sea.


Last year, the Philippines filed a complaint against China before an international tribunal in The Hague to challenge the legality of its claims, antagonizing China. Beijing wants any disputes with countries to be resolved bilaterally even as it continues to engage in what many in the region regard as provocative assertions of its sovereignty in the waters.


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A Thirst for China

American investors are hungry for a Chinese Internet company, and it isn’t the Alibaba Group, China’s e-commerce giant. Instead, JD.com, an online retailer aspiring to become that country’s answer to Amazon.com, exceeded expectations for its initial public offering on Wednesday, raising $1.78 billion, DealBook’s Michael J. de la Merced writes. Even though the company has lost money for the last several years, its stock sale valued the company at $25.7 billion. Shares in JD.com will begin trading on the Nasdaq stock exchange on Thursday under the symbol JD.


Chinese companies like JD.com and Alibaba have drawn intense interest because they offer shareholders a way to tap China’s enormous growth. Indeed, though JD.com is coming to market at a time when the pace of technology I.P.O.s has slowed significantly, the number of orders for the retailer’s stock was said to have been 15 times oversubscribed. Much of the company’s appeal lies in the relatively unconquered Chinese e-commerce market.


Investors have directly compared JD.com to Alibaba, but the two operate differently. For one, JD.com maintains a significant amount of product inventory and owns much of its shipping and logistics network, whereas Alibaba serves primarily as a middleman between customers and sellers. In addition, Alibaba’s is a much less expensive operating model that gives the company its significant margins. By contrast, JD.com has reported a loss in each of the last five years, even as its sales have increased significantly.


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Wednesday, 21 May 2014

China’s PV industry opposes U.S. investigation

China’s photovoltaic (PV) industry issued a statement on Wednesday, opposing the United States’ second anti-dumping investigation on Chinese PV products.


Representatives from the China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Machinery and Electronic Products, China Renewable Energy Industry Association, China PV Industry Alliance and major manufacturers including Yingli Solar, Trina Solar pushed down a symbolic “wall of trade barriers” at a press conference in Shanghai on Wednesday.


The joint statement called for the U.S and China to solve the disputes through negotiations.


Chinese PV products are well received in the world for their low cost and efficiency, high quality and comprehensive after-sales services, without dumping and illegal subsidies at all, according to the statement.


Trade protectionism seriously hinders the industry development and will affect the development of U.S. real economy and employment, it said.


On Feb. 14 this year, the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) determined an affirmative indication regarding injury to the U.S. industry as part of the new anti-dumping (AD) and counterveiling duty (CVD) petitions against PV products from the Chinese mainland and Taiwan.


It was the second U.S. investigation against Chinese PV products after a similar one in 2011, which seriously affected the Chinese PV industry and hindered the development of U.S. PV application market.


The Chinese PV industry has been recovering since the second half of 2013 but encountered the unexpected second U.S. investigation in February.


The U.S. Department of Commerce is expected to release the preliminary CVD investigation result on June 2 and the preliminary AD investigation result on July 28 and release final results on Dec. 11. The USITC will determine whether to levy taxes on Jan. 26, 2015.






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Summit to reshape Asian security with new concept

Chinese President Xi Jinping proposed on Wednesday a new concept of Asian security which analysts said bears significant implications for regional stability and the rebalancing of global security.


Addressing the fourth summit of the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia (CICA) held in Shanghai, Xi envisioned a mechanism that stresses common, comprehensive, cooperative and sustainable security to tackle rising challenges facing the region with 67 percent of the world’s population and one third of the global economy.


In sharp contrast to the decades-old security scheme based on Cold War mentality, the new concept addresses Asia’s unique challenges shaped by its historical grievances, current tensions and potential risks, said Qu Xing, head of the China Institute of International Studies.


“We need to innovate our security concept, establish a new regional security cooperation architecture, and jointly build a shared and win-win road for Asian security,” Xi said.


One cannot live in the 21st century with the outdated thinking from the age of Cold War and zero-sum game, Xi said.


By stressing sustainable security supported by sustainable development, the concept also provides a framework under which Asia can aspire to its revival based on economic prosperity, stability and cooperation, Qu said.


In his proposal, Xi said Asia should oppose beefing up a military alliance targeted at a third party, and any attempt to dominate regional security affairs or infringe upon the legitimate rights and interests of other countries.


Security problems in Asia should eventually be solved by Asians themselves who are able to achieve regional peace and stability through cooperation, he said.


He urged countries in the region to insist on resolving disputes through peaceful means and oppose the arbitrary use of force or threats.


Provocations and escalation of tensions for selfish interests should also be opposed, he added.


Besides traditional security threats, Asia has found it difficult to respond effectively to non-traditional security threats including terrorism, transnational crimes, environmental security, cyber security, energy and resource security and major natural disasters which are clearly on the rise.


To build an Asian security mansion that could stand the test of wind storms, Xi said, “we need to focus on development, actively improve people’s lives and narrow down the wealth gap to cement the foundation of security.”


“We need to advance the process of common development and regional integration, foster sound interactions and synchronized progress of regional economic cooperation and security cooperation, and promote sustainable security through sustainable development,” the president added.


The summit came six decades after the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence was put forward by Asian countries and adopted as a guide to international relations, said Li Weijian, a researcher with Shanghai Institute for International Studies.


As an extension of the five principles, the new concept will not only provide significant guidance to promote peace and stability of Asia, but also add momentum to the rebalancing of the world’s economic and security dynamics, Li said.


STRONGER CICA


The summit was attended by leaders and representatives from 47 countries or international organizations, the largest scale in CICA’s 22-year history.


Huang Renwei, deputy dean of the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, said the summit reached wide and concrete consensus instead of empty talks.


Proposed solutions to the region’s most pressing issues have high feasibility, and, if implemented well, could drive the forum to an architecture with higher level, he said.


Calling the CICA the largest and most representative regional security forum with the largest number of participants, Xi proposed to make the forum a security dialogue and cooperation platform that covers the whole of Asia.


He called for enhancing the capacity and institutional building of the CICA, improving functions of the CICA Secretariat, and establishing a mechanism within the forum for defense consultations among member states.


Xi expected closer regional exchanges and cooperation in anti-terrorism, business, tourism, environmental protection, culture and people-to-people exchanges.


The Chinese president proposed to put in place a non-governmental exchange network for CICA parties through holding CICA non-governmental forums and other means, to increase the conference’s influence and promote regional security governance.


He also suggested strengthening the inclusiveness and openness of the CICA, and step up cooperation with other organizations in the region and expand dialogue and communication with other regions.


Xi’s comments were echoed by Russian President Vladmir Putin who called the CICA an effective mechanism to drive security cooperation in Asia.


It is highly expected that as China has taken over the CICA presidency for 2014 to 2016, the forum would further promote peace and cooperation as a balanced, equal and coordinated security construct that takes into consideration each country’s interests and concerns, he said.


Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev said expanding economic cooperation should top CICA’s agenda.


He believes the Silk Road economic belt envisioned by Xi could boost infrastructure development, laying a sound foundation for security cooperation among nations along the route that overlaps with the ancient trade itinerary connecting the East and the West.






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Explosions at Urumqi market cause deaths, injuries

An unknown number of people were killed and injured after explosions occurred Thursday morning at an open market in Urumqi, capital of northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.


All the injured were rushed to several hospitals, police said.


Witnesses said two cross-country vehicles driving from north to south ploughed into people in the market at 7:50 a.m. Explosives were thrown out of the vehicles.


One of the vehicles exploded in the market.


A business runner in the market told Xinhua he heard a dozen of big bangs.


The open air morning market is located near the Renmin Park in downtown Urumqi. Ambulance and police cars are parking at the entrance of Park North Street leading to the market.


Flames and heavy smoke were seen. The scene has been cordoned off.






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US must ‘get used to China’s rise’

Washington’s engagement in territorial issues ‘complicates problems’


Chinese and Western observers seemed to reach a consensus on Wednesday over President Xi Jinping’s proposal to establish a new framework for security cooperation in Asia, and he also sent a veiled warning to Washington.


“To beef up a military alliance targeting a third party is not conducive to regional common security,” Xi said without mentioning the United States when delivering a keynote speech at a regional security forum in Shanghai on Wednesday.


Provocation and escalation of tensions for selfish interests should be opposed, he told participants at the fourth Summit of the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia, including representatives from Japan, the Philippines and Vietnam.


Instead, Beijing is urging Washington to get used to China’s rise and take a proper role in the region, which is the world’s economic engine but is also prone to security threats.


“Someone who tries to blow out another’s oil lamp will set his beard on fire,” the president said, quoting a Kazakh proverb, drawing the attention of Kazakh reporters who were watching the live feed of the speech in the media center.


Xi’s remarks came amid recent escalating tension in the South China Sea as some Asian countries, especially those having territorial rows with China, have sought to reaffirm their security ties with Washington.


Pang Zhongying, a professor of international affairs at Renmin University of China, said: “It is time to tell the US it is not justified in interfering in Asia’s affairs, which have nothing to do with the country.”


Washington’s engagement in Asia’s territorial issues, for example, has complicated the problems and emboldened its allies, he said.


During an Asian tour last month, US President Barack Obama sought to reassure Washington’s traditional allies like Tokyo and Manila about its long-promised strategic pivot toward the Asia-Pacific, widely regarded as an attempt to counter China.


Ruan Zongze, vice-president of the China Institute of International Studies, said the alliance, a product of the Cold War, deepened divisions in Asia while weakening regional willingness for economic cooperation.


“Many countries tend to give up diplomatic efforts as they believe they can just rely on such an alliance to bolster their illegal claims over territory and sea,” Ruan said.


Xi spoke against a zero-sum, Cold War concept of security, saying “no country should attempt to dominate regional security affairs or infringe upon the legitimate rights and interests of other countries”.


Security problems in Asia should eventually be solved by Asians themselves, he said, reiterating China’s stance to resolve disputes peacefully and to oppose the arbitrary use of force or threats.


Jia Xiudong, a senior researcher on international affairs at the China Institute of International Studies, said, “A US role in Asia is not unthinkable for China, and its constructive role is very welcome in some multilateral problems.”


“But it’s a pity that what Washington is doing now is far from being constructive,” Jia added.


Pang said the US has to accept the fact that China is developing in an age of global transformation, but China is not building another alliance to target any third party.


By ZHAO SHENGNAN in Shanghai (China Daily)






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Few Barriers to China’s Push in South China Sea

China’s planting of an oil platform in contested waters off Vietnam drew robust complaints from Hanoi, a messy standoff between ships and violent protests among Vietnamese — but nothing to dislodge the rig and no broader pushback in the region.


Southeast Asian countries, with diverging interests and wariness of angering Beijing, are shunning any collective action that might halt China as it relentlessly nudges forward its sovereignty claims in disputed seas seen as a possible flashpoint for the world’s next major conflict.


Despite its accusations of Chinese bullying, Vietnam can expect little in the way of outside help as its patrol boats continue to spar with Chinese vessels guarding the rig in the South China Sea.


Read Full Article HERE






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China: American pivot to Asia needs ‘rebalancing’

The Obama Administration’s much-touted pivot to Asia, a careful balance between supporting U.S. allies and assuring China that America supports its rise, may need to be recalibrated, Chinese Ambassador to the U.S. Cui Tiankai told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on Tuesday.


“I’m not questioning the intention of the U.S. government,” Ambassador Cui said. “I’m looking at the effect, the results of the U.S. policies towards Asia, towards China and what they have done and said recently.”


“And honestly, I think the key to this rebalancing is to maintain a good relationship with everybody in Asia-Pacific, including particularly China. And in this sense, I think this policy of rebalancing might need some rebalancing itself.”


Read Full Article HERE






Mick Krever, CNN via CHINA US Focus http://ift.tt/1sUzzHu

China calls for new security pact with Russia, Iran

China’s president called Tuesday for the creation of a new Asian structure for security cooperation based on a regional group that includes Russia and Iran and excludes the United States.


President Xi Jinping spoke at a meeting in Shanghai of the Conference on Interaction and Confidence-building measures in Asia, an obscure group that has taken on significance as Beijing tries to extend its influence and limit the role of the United States, which it sees as a strategic rival.


“We need to innovate our security cooperation (and) establish new regional security cooperation architecture,” said Xi, speaking to an audience that included President Vladimir Putin of Russia and leaders of Central Asian countries.


Read Full Article HERE






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Cyberthief crying wolf

The US department of justice’s decision to charge five People’s Liberation Army officers for “business spying” is ill-advised, if not downright stupid.


The initial response from Beijing is that the charge is a pompous farce that will in no way advance American interests.


In addition to a flat denial of US accusations, which lack any credible evidence, Beijing has struck back, presenting proof that the US is “the present-day world’s biggest cyberthief”, and “the foremost state sponsor of cyberattacks on China”.


The statistical information about US cyber intrusions the Chinese authorities produced makes it difficult for Washington to proclaim its own innocence.


The US indictment appears particularly awkward because Washington is simply rubbing salt into its bleeding wound from Edward Snowden’s revelations. It is common knowledge that China, its military in particular, is the biggest online target of the omnipresent US National Security Agency and US Cyber Command.


It is thus a matter of course that Beijing should call the indictment a cock-and-bull story and a thief crying catch thief.


Nor can Washington expect any sympathy from Chinese Internet users. To them, the indictment is but an additional footnote to US hypocrisy.


The charges are said to underscore a longtime Obama administration goal to prosecute state-sponsored cyber threats. Yet the Snowden leaks seem to indicate that the NSA and US Cyber Command are the most formidable state-sponsored cyber threats in today’s world. If they can be exonerated for what they have done and are still doing, blaming anyone else is shameless double standards.


US Attorney General Eric Holder should know very well that an indictment like this has little chance of being executed. Those charged are far away in their home country, where neither the government nor the people accept the legitimacy of the US charges. More important, the charge itself is flawed in both moral and jurisprudential terms.


It is yet to be seen if Beijing will make a tit-for-tat response by prosecuting specific Americans, which will be fully justifiable. But Beijing has already determined to suspend the work of a joint panel on Internet security, on the grounds that the Americans lack sincerity in the dialogue to establish a cooperative approach to cyber security.


The indictment will prove a sorrowful miscalculation, because Washington has nothing to win and a lot to lose.






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