ChinaFile Recommends
06.10.14How “Rogue” Is China's Aid?
Washington Post
Moisés Naím has called Chinese development assistance “rogue aid,” claiming that it is nondemocratic and harmful to progress and to average citizens.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.09.14Young Chinese Twitter User Arrested for Proposing Method to Spread Truth About June 4th Massacre
China Change
On Monday China’s state-run media outlet China News (中新网) reported that Beijing police had arrested a 22-year-old female for posting an article on Twitter that teaches how to use a pseudo base station “to send illegal information.”
ChinaFile Recommends
06.09.14State Firms Barred from Vietnam Contract Bids
South China Morning Post
Vietnamese and Chinese ships have been clashing since China set up an oil rig near disputed island in the South China Sea last month. Tensions over the move caused anti-China riots in Vietnam.
Books
06.09.14Voices from Tibet
Tsering Woeser and Wang Lixiong are widely regarded as the most eloquent, insightful writers on contemporary Tibet. Their reportage on the economic exploitation, environmental degradation, cultural destruction, and political subjugation that plague the increasingly Han Chinese-dominated Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) is as powerful as it is profound, ardent, and analytical in equal measure, and not in the least bit ideological. Voices from Tibet is a collection of essays and reportage in translation that captures the many facets of an unprecedented sea change wreaked by a rising China upon a scared land and its defenseless people. With the TAR in a virtual lockdown after the 2008 unrest, this book sheds important light on the simmering frustrations that touched off the unrest and Beijing’s stability über alles control tactics in its wake. The authors also interrogate longstanding assumptions about Tibetans’ political future. Woeser’s and Wang’s writings represent a rare Chinese view sympathetic to Tibetan causes, one that should resonate in many places confronting threats of cultural subjugation and economic domination by a non-indigenous power. —Hong Kong University Press {chop}
ChinaFile Recommends
06.08.14From China with Pragmatism
New York Times
Americans see patronage as corruption, but Chinese recognize that giving money in a red envelope is good manners and important social grooming, and unrelated to graft.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.08.14Beijing, Vatican Prepare to Resume Talks for the First Time Since 2010
South China Morning Post
Meeting said to be in the works, but recent anti-church actions could complicate dialogue.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.06.14Newton Student Penalized for Democracy Notes in China
Boston Globe
High school senior Henry DeGroot was visiting a school outside Beijing on a semester abroad this year when he decided to make a point by writing prodemocracy messages in the notebook of a Chinese student.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.06.14Iowa Signs Historical Cooperation Agreement With China
Des Moines Register
Iowa’s economic ties with China deepened Thursday as the state signed a cooperation agreement with the Ministry of Commerce of the world’s second-largest economy.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.05.14China Under-Reports Defence Spending, Says US
BBC
China has under-reported its 2014 defense spending by about 20%, according to an annual report put out by the US defense department.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.05.14China Admits to Failures Over Air Quality
USA Today
Only three cities, or 4.1%, of the 74 major Chinese cities subject to air quality standards met the national standard for good air quality in 2013.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.05.14The Astrophysicist of Tiananmen
Motherboard
Fang Lizhi, the prominent astrophysicist, was incredulous when, In January 1987, when Deng Xiaoping launched the slogan “modernization with Chinese characteristics.”
Media
06.05.14A Time-Lapse Map of Protests Sweeping China in 1989
Twenty-five years ago in the southern Chinese province of Hunan, a group of small-town high school students listening to shortwave radio heard news of a deadly crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators nearly 1,000 miles away in the capital of...
ChinaFile Recommends
06.05.14China Escalates Its War on American Tech Firms
Time
The Chinese government, angered by Washington's charge that Beijing engages in cyberspying, is looking for some payback.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.05.14Exiled Tiananmen Leader Slips into China
New York Times
Zhou Fengsuo, 47, a student leader in 1989, spent two days in the capital—visiting Tiananmen Square and a detention center where his friends are being held—before the authorities caught him on June 3.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.14Scientists Warn Against China’s Plan to Flatten Over 700 Mountains
Guardian
Environmental consequences of removing hills to create more land for cities not considered, academics say in Nature paper.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.14Never Before Seen Tiananmen Square Photos Found in Shoebox
China Girls
I was searching through my parents’ photos for a piece I was writing on Tiananmen Square and my father, when I stumbled across two rolls of negatives that appeared to be from the 1989 student democracy protests in Tiananmen Square.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.14Where the Flame Still Burns
Economist
Hong Kong is the only place on Chinese soil where large public commemorations of the Tiananmen massacre take place; elsewhere memorials of the June 4th crackdown remain strictly forbidden.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.14After Tiananmen Square, New Lives On A New Continent
NPR
After the democracy protests were crushed in 1989, many thought China would turn inward. Instead, a million Chinese citizens moved to Africa. Howard French discusses his book China's Second Continent.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.14The Tiananmen Square Massacre, According to WikiLeaks
Medium
Diplomatic cables chronicle China’s quashing of pro-democracy movement.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.14See What China Sees When It Searches For “Tiananmen” and Other Loaded Terms
Quartz
Blocked on Weibo is one of the most interesting websites on the internet: A list that explains the search terms that are censored on China’s massive microblogging site Weibo.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.1425 Years Later, Tiananmen Square Still Colors U.S.-China Relations
U.S. State Department
Today, the United States is asking of the Chinese government what we have asked for 25 years: to provide the fullest possible accounting of the Tiananmen events and to stop retribution against those who wish to remember them.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.1425 Years Later, Lessons From Tiananmen Square Crackdown
National Geographic
A quarter century after democracy protests ended in bloodshed, Chinese still clamor for clean government and courts.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.14Remarks by President Obama at at 25th Anniversary of Freedom Day
Office of the Press Secretary
Barack Obama reminds Poles that while they voted for democracy twenty-five years ago this day, China crushed pro-democracy protests in Beijing's Tiananmen Square.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.14As China Booms, So Does Popular Unrest
CBS News
In the quarter-century since the crackdown in Beijing's Tiananmen Square, China's economy has thrived and presented the world with an historic milestone. But at what cost to its people?
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.14In Pictures, Remembering the Tiananmen Square Massacre
Mashable
Twenty-five years ago on Wednesday, the Chinese government, acting under martial law, deployed 200,000 troops into Beijing's Tiananmen Square.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.14Tiananmen at Twenty-Five: "Victory Over Memory"
New Yorker
Today, technology and globalism are prying open the lives of China’s people. But, in matters of politics and history, the Party is determined to silence even the “few flies” that Deng Xiaoping once described as a bearable side effect of an open...
ChinaFile Recommends
06.04.14Hong Kong Recalls Tiananmen Killings, China Muffles Dissent
Reuters
Tens of thousands of people held a candlelight vigil in Hong Kong to mark the bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protesters 25 years ago in Beijing's Tiananmen Square, while mainland China authorities sought to whitewash the event.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.03.14Marking 25th Anniversary of China's Tiananmen Square Takes Creativity
Los Angeles Times
Every year, political activists try to commemorate those who died in the 1989 crackdown at Tiananmen Square, and the Chinese government tries to prevent them, a cat-and-mouse game as classic as "Tom and Jerry."
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06.03.14Stuart Franklin: How I Photographed Tiananmen Square and 'Tank Man'
Guardian
The Magnum photographer tells his story of the 1989 protests, from peaceful demonstration to bloody crackdown, the iconic 'tank man' – and how hamburgers gave him his big break.
Media
06.03.14A Day to Remember/A Day Forgotten
China’s suppression of the memory of the June 4 massacre of demonstrators in Beijing in 1989 is a perennial and important subject of commentary. Much written on the subject is excellent, but little I’ve seen describes repressed memory in action as...
Viewpoint
06.03.14China’s Maritime Provocations
Last weekend I attended the Shangri-La Dialogue, an annual gathering of Asian, European, and American defense and military officials and strategic experts in Singapore hosted by the London International Institute of Strategic Studies. China sent a...
ChinaFile Recommends
06.03.14China Follows USA With Emissions Pledge
USA Today
One day after the United States said it would slash carbon emissions from existing power plants by 30% below 2005 levels, China, the world's largest emitter of greenhouse gases, said it would set an absolute cap on its emissions by 2016.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.03.14China Swaps Gusto for Rigor as It Learns From Africa
Bloomberg
Cowed by capricious commodity prices, political instability and a string of lost investments, Chinese financiers aren’t as gutsy as when state-owned giants whipped up business abroad 15 years ago.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.03.14Tiananmen, Forgotten
New York Times
To my generation, the widespread patriotic liberalism that bonded the students in the early 1980s feels as distant as the political fanaticism that defined the preceding decades.
Culture
06.03.14A Visit to Hong Kong’s June 4th Museum
Every Saturday in Hong Kong, volunteer curator and translator C.S. Liu helps guide visitors through the first permanent museum dedicated to the history of the Tiananmen Square massacre of June 4, 1989 in Beijing.At the entrance to the June 4th...
Features
06.03.14Voices from Tiananmen
This Wednesday marks the 25th anniversary of the deadly suppression of the 1989 Tiananmen protests on June 4. It has been a quarter of a century of enormous change in China, but one key fact of life in that country has not changed: its leaders...
The NYRB China Archive
06.03.14The Tanks and the People
from New York Review of Books
Twenty-five years ago, before the Tiananmen massacre, my father told me: “Son, be good and stay at home, never provoke the Communist Party.”My father knew what he was talking about. His courage had been broken, by countless political campaigns...
ChinaFile Recommends
06.02.14Tales of Army Discord Show Tiananmen Square in a New Light
New York Times
In a stunning rebuke to his superiors, Major General Xu Qinxian said the Tiananmen protests were a political problem and should be settled through negotiations, not force.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.02.14China Escalating Attack on Google
New York Times
The authorities in China have made Google’s services largely inaccessible in recent days, a move most likely related to the government’s broad efforts to stifle discussion of the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square demonstrations.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.02.14Malaysia Seeks Code of Conduct for South China Sea
Wall Street Journal
Malaysia urged a rapid conclusion to creating a long-stalled code of conduct in the South China Sea, as tensions grow over conflicting territorial ambitions in Asian waters between Beijing and neighboring countries.
ChinaFile Recommends
06.02.1425 Years After the Tiananmen Crackdown
Creative Time Reports
The Asian American Arts Centre responded to the June 1989 events with an open-call exhibition of artworks related to the uprising and its suppression called “China: June 4, 1989.” To commemorate the event's 25th anniversary, Creative Time...
ChinaFile Recommends
06.02.14A Media Mogul, Alone on the Island
Foreign Policy
Hong Kong's fiery beacon of the free press, Apple Daily, is under threat from shadowy forces. Can it survive if Beijing wants it dead or quiet?
Conversation
06.02.1425 Years On, Can China Move Past Tiananmen?
Xu Zhiyuan:Whenever the massacre at Tiananmen Square twenty-five years ago comes up in conversation, I think of Faulkner’s famous line: “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.”Some believe that China’s economic growth and rise to international...
Video
06.02.14Cairo in Chinese
When Shen Yitong left her home in China to study French at Cairo University in 2008, she didn’t know that she would come to think of Egypt as a second home, or that she would see revolution come upon the country so suddenly. Her parents came from...
The NYRB China Archive
06.02.14‘You Won’t Get Near Tiananmen!’: Hu Jia on the Continuing Crackdown
from New York Review of Books
Hu Jia is one of China’s best-known political activists. He participated in the 1989 Tiananmen protests as a fifteen-year-old, studied economics, and then worked for environmental and public health non-governmental organizations. A practicing...
Reports
06.01.14Decoding China’s Emerging “Great Power” Strategy in Asia
Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)
The course charted by China’s reemergence as a great power over the next few decades represents the primary strategic challenge for the U.S.-Japan security alliance and for the East Asian security landscape writ large. If China’s economic, military...
ChinaFile Recommends
05.31.14American Businesses in China Feel Heat of a Cyberdispute
New York Times
Chinese officials are ramping up political and economic pressure on the United States following indictments against five members of the Chinese Army on charges of economic cyberespionage.
ChinaFile Recommends
05.30.1425 Years On, No Fading of Tiananmen Wounds, Ideals
Associated Press
While China's economy, society and cities have transformed in the last 25 years, Tiananmen demonstrators and their supporters are keen to remind the world that other things haven't changed.
ChinaFile Recommends
05.30.14Abe’s Attempt to Corner China Through Diplomacy
Diplomat
Japan is reaching out to Southeast Asia and seeking to control the discourse around its new security policy.
ChinaFile Recommends
05.30.14Obama Says the U.S. Will Lead the World for the Next 100 Years. China Disagrees.
Washington Post
The Global Times, China’s state-run nationalist-leaning newspaper, later challenged that view, asking, “America wants to lead the world for another 100 years, but with what?”
ChinaFile Recommends
05.29.14China Scrambles to Adjust to Baby Boomlet
Wall Street Journal
China's health officials are taking steps to accommodate two million more births annually after a landmark decision last year to relax population controls.
ChinaFile Recommends
05.29.14Missing Plane Believed to Be Beyond Search Area
New York Times
The search area in the Indian Ocean that recovery teams have been scouring for more than a month is probably not the final resting place of a missing Malaysia Airlines jetliner.
ChinaFile Recommends
05.29.14India’s Modi and China’s Xi: Frenemies, or Just Plain Enemies?
Time
With two nationalists in power, relations between the world’s two most populous nations could turn even frostier.
ChinaFile Recommends
05.28.14China is Stealing a Strategic March on the US
Financial Times
Bit by bit Beijing is creating new facts, and with each incident, it throws down the gauntlet.
ChinaFile Recommends
05.28.14China’s Two Problems with the Uyghurs
Los Angeles Review of Books
Beijing has two problems with the Uyghurs, the Turkic-speaking, Central Asian people from China’s northwestern Xinjiang region. One problem is terrorism; the other problem is civil rights.
ChinaFile Recommends
05.28.14China Cleans Up the Internet by Squelching Dissent
Businessweek
A new government campaign aims to crack down on spreading “rumors” and harmful information through chat groups on instant messaging services such as Tencent’s WeChat.
Excerpts
05.28.14‘Staying’—An Excerpt from ‘People’s Republic of Amnesia’
Zhang Ming has become used to his appearance startling small children. Skeletally thin, with cheeks sunk deep into his face, he walked gingerly across the cream-colored hotel lobby as if his limbs were made of glass. On his forehead were two large,...
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05.28.14China Sentences 55 in Xinjiang Mass Trial
Reuters
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.
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05.27.14ChinaFile Recommends
05.27.14Why Vietnam Can’t Count on Its Neighbors to Rally Against China
Businessweek
China knows Vietnam can do little to stop it; while an appeal by Vietnam to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations could make the fight more equal, it’s not likely to be very effective.