ChinaFile Recommends
08.21.13China Vanke Chairman Wang Shi Defends Right to Speak out on Politics
South China Morning Post
Property tycoon Wang Shi has defended the rights of businessmen like himself to speak up on political issues, citing disgraced Politburo member Bo Xilai’s efforts to enlist his support for his controversial campaigns.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.21.13Dispatches From Xinjiang: Cultural Appropriation And The Singer Luo Lin, a.k.a. “Dao Lang”
Beijing Cream
Luo Lin has in effect claimed ownership over a whole group of people, a sacred landscape and spiritual practice.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.21.13Steven Spielberg Aiming to Make a Film with Zhang Yimou in China
Guardian
Renowned American director seeks collaboration with respected Chinese director on “international film”—their first possible contact since his withdrawal as consultant to Bejing Olympics in protest.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.21.13China to Phase Out Use of Prisoners’ Organs for Transplants
Reuters
China will phase out its decades-long practice of using the organs of executed prisoners for transplants from November as it pushes to mandate the use of organs from ethical sources.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.21.13Japanese visits to shrine on war anniversary anger China
Reuters
Japan's prime minister sent an offering to a shrine for war dead on the anniversary of Japan's World War II defeat, drawing harsh complaints from China and South Korea and risking tentative ties.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.21.13About That Tiananmen Tank Man Image In Cirque du Soleil’s Beijing Show
Beijing Cream
On opening night of Cirque du Soleil’s Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour in Beijing, the highly sensitive the Tiananmen Tank Man image was displayed on the giant big-screens above the stage in Wukesong MasterCard Arena.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.21.13The Shadow from Yasukuni
Project Syndicate
Around this time of year, speculation in Asia always runs high as to whether Japan’s prime minister or other prominent politicians will visit the Yasukuni Shrine to honor, among others, more than a thousand indicted war criminals.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.21.13Where Is China’s Gorbachev?
Atlantic
Why China hasn't had—and isn't likely to have—a political reformer in the mold of the former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.
Caixin Media
08.19.13Infrequent Flying Snarls Civil Aviation Sector
Getting away for a little surf and sand ought to be easy for Beijingers like Mr. Wang, who recently boarded one of the daily, four-hour flights that link the capital and sub-tropical Hainan Island in China’s far south.But airport delays seriously...
The NYRB China Archive
08.15.13The Man Who Got It Right
from New York Review of Books
1.Near the beginning of Simon Leys’ marvelous collection of essays is an odd polemic between the author and the late Christopher Hitchens, fought out in these very pages. Leys takes Hitchens to task for attacking Mother Teresa in a book entitled The...
ChinaFile Recommends
08.13.13No 'How-To' Book from the West Can Curb Corruption in China
South China Morning Post
Roots of corruption are unique everywhere and, in China, it stems from a disconnect between political authority based on a selfless moral claim and economic realities.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.13.13What’s China Got Against the U.S. Constitution?
Global Post
The Communist Party mouthpiece, People’s Daily, attacked America’s constitutional structure, claiming that “there is no such thing as democracy and freedom under U.S. constitutional governance.”
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08.12.13Prominent Chinese Activist Releases Jail Video
Wall Street Journal
Supporters of Chinese lawyer Xu Zhiyong have released a video, filmed inside an undisclosed detention center, of the prominent rights activist proclaiming his willingness to pay any price for social progress.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.08.13From Maoist Criminal to Popular Hero?
New York Times
At a time of rampant corruption and social injustice, many see Bo Xilai as a charismatic leftist who at least dared to challenge the status quo of organized crime and official self-dealing and to revive Mao’s socialist, egalitarian ideals. ...
ChinaFile Recommends
08.08.13Is This Lazy Panda China’s Zuckerberg?
Bloomberg
State-owned China Network Television has installed more than 30 cameras at a panda reserve in Western China, designed a fancy website providing access to the cameras, launched a mobile app so the pandas can be watched on-the-go, and then...
Postcard
08.08.13Portraits of the Faceless
Nine years ago, photographer Katharina Hesse began to make portraits of North Korean defectors. To protect their identities she asked only that they “give something” of themselves to the photographs. Her subjects bury their faces in their hands, or...
Media
08.08.13Chinese State Media: Online Critics “Incite Political Unrest”
While the Internet has become the site of almost constant political arguments in China, few articles have generated as much debate as a recent piece by blogger Wang Xiaoshi. On August 1, Xinhua News Agency, a state-run media outlet, posted Wang’s...
Conversation
08.07.13What Will Come out of the Communist Party’s Polling the People Online?
David Wertime:Simon Denyer’s recent article (“In China, Communist Party Takes Unprecedented Step: It Is Listening,” The Washington Post, August 2, 2013) provides a valuable look at some of the ways that Chinese authority mines domestic micro-...
ChinaFile Recommends
08.07.13Chinese Judges Disciplined for Cavorting With Prostitutes
New York Times
Two judges and an official of the Shanghai high court have been expelled from the Communist Party and dismissed from their jobs after being seen on video apparently consorting with prostitutes in glitzy nightclubs.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.06.13Opposing Editorials Reflect Ideological Rift in Communist Party
South China Morning Post
The People’s Daily and Study Times, ran editorials expressing their opposing views on the issue of constitutionalism: limiting the government’s power by a higher system of laws that protects citizens’...
Books
08.05.13China Threat?
From the long-term threat of nuclear war between the U.S. and China, to the disappearance of the African elephant due to Chinese demand for ivory, each week brings a new round of critique and denunciation of the risks China poses to the stability of the entire planet. While critics raise a certain number of fundamental questions that bear asking about this nascent superpower, the answers put forth are usually based on ideological or economic considerations. Lionel Vairon systematically challenges these views in this first English language edition of China Threat?With an incisive review of China’s economic strategy, deployment of resources, national defence, political reform, ethnicity and religion, terrorism, and developments in human rights, Vairon amply demonstrates that China poses no threat to the world. On the contrary, China Threat? shows that China’s peaceful rise should be a matter of positive news across the globe. —CN Times Books {chop}
ChinaFile Recommends
08.05.13The Chinese Communist Party Has Embraced the Internet—For Public Polling
Atlantic
Beijing has started to glean political intelligence from the same systems they restrict access to.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.05.13Life in a Toxic Country
New York Times
Before this assignment, I reported from Iraq, where foreign correspondents talked endlessly of the variety of ways in which one could die. I survived those threats, only now to find myself wondering: Is China doing irreparable harm to me and my...
ChinaFile Recommends
08.05.13China Media on the Snowden Saga
BBC
Media in China see further embarrassment for the United States after whistleblower Edward Snowden gets temporary asylum in Russia.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.05.13Japan Looking for Ways to Restart Top-Level Meetings with China
Asahi Shimbun
Japan and China have not held high-level meetings since the Japanese government placed the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea under national ownership in September 2012.
ChinaFile Recommends
08.01.13China Condemns U.S. Senate Over Sea Dispute Resolution
Reuters
China said on Thursday it had lodged a formal complaint with the United States after the U.S. Senate passed a resolution expressing concern about Chinese actions in the disputed East and South China Seas.
Conversation
08.01.13How Dangerous Are Sino-Japanese Tensions?
Sino-Japanese relations do not look promising at the moment. Obviously, the Diaoyu-Senkaku dispute is not the only factor in play but it does focus nationalist passions on both sides. Yet both countries are capable of wiser conduct if their leaders...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.31.13Ties With Japan Face ‘Grim Test,’ China Naval Researcher Writes
Bloomberg
“Japan, of course, wants to have it both ways; it wants to share in the dividends from China’s economic growth, while maintaining a hardline stance in its relations with China,” Xing wrote. “It is therefore extremely unlikely that there will be any...
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07.31.13China's Bo To Plead guilty, But Maybe Not To All Charges
Reuters
Disgraced Chinese leader Bo Xilai has agreed to plead guilty at a trial likely to be held within weeks, three sources said, in an apparent bid to earn a more lenient sentence and allow authorities to close the door on the country's biggest...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.30.13China Threat? Former French Diplomat Says No
Forbes
Former French diplomat Lionel Vairon believes that the fear of a rising China results from the inability of Western countries to recognize China’s legitimate national interests. China will become problematic only if dominant powers attempt to...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.29.13GAPPRFT Portfolio Published
China Digital Times
As part of a government restructuring program initiated at the National People's Congress in March, the General Administration of Press and Publications was merged with the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.29.13Myanmar-China Gas Pipeline Goes Into Operation
Global Post
As well as diversifying China's sources of fuel, by supplying energy to the vast and less developed west the Myanmar-China gas pipeline could help Beijing's attempts to promote economic growth there.
Caixin Media
07.29.13Why a Reporter Feels Sympathy for an Airport Bomber
These past few years as a reporter, I have met some people with nothing left to live for and now another person can be added to the list. Ji Zhongxing, the disabled man who set off a bomb in a Beijing airport on July 20, is that person.Ji and I are...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.29.13China Orders Government-Debt Audit as Growth Risks Rise
Bloomberg
China will start a nationwide audit of government debt this week as the new Communist Party leadership investigates the threats to growth and the financial system from a record credit boom. The State Council, under Premier Li Keqiang,...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.29.13Chinese, With Revamped Force, Make Presence Known in East China Sea
New York Times
The large number of Chinese and Japanese maritime vessels in dangerous proximity in the East China Sea at a time of high tensions over the islands has raised alarm in Washington about clashes that could lead to larger conflict.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.29.13Europe and China Agree to Settle Solar Panel Fight
New York Times
The European Union’s trade chief said on Saturday that a deal had been reached with China to settle a dispute over exports of low-cost solar panels that had threatened to set off a wider trade war between two of the world’s largest economies.
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07.29.13Fallen Leader Is Indicted in China
New York Times
Bo Xilai, the disgraced former Communist Party official, was indicted on Thursday on criminal charges of bribery, corruption and abuse of power, paving the way for a prominent trial expected to start within weeks.
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07.29.13China Sets Timeline for Resolving Bo Xilai Scandal
Bloomberg
China set a timeline for the prosecution of disgraced Politburo member Bo Xilai, moving to resolve a scandal that overshadowed a once-in-a-decade transfer of power and tested the unity of new Communist Party leaders.
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07.29.13China Orders Ban on New Government Buildings
New York Times
The new directive, which bans the construction of government buildings for the next five years, showed clear signs of being a continuation of the anticorruption campaign, describing the ban as “important for building a clean government” and...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.29.13Former China Party Highflier Bo Xilai Is Charged With Corruption
WSJ: China Real Time Report
The indictment accuses Mr. Bo of taking advantage of his position "to seek profits for others" and accepting an "extremely large amount" in money and property, Xinhua said. "He also embezzled a huge amount of public money...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.29.13Chinese VP’s Visit to North Korea Prompts Détente Watch
WSJ: China Real Time Report
All eyes will be watching for signs of détente over North Korea’s nuclear-weapons program when Chinese Vice President Li Yuanchao becomes the highest-ranking among China’s new leadership to visit Pyongyang this week.
Environment
07.25.13Comment: Polluters Shouldn’t Be the Judge of Other Polluters
from chinadialogue
If the law sets a criminal to catch other criminals what do you think those criminals will think? My colleagues have discovered that new legislation threatens to do just that.A new draft revision of the Environmental Protection Law is now online for...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.25.13Bo Xilai Charged With Corruption, Bribery, Abuse of Power
Bloomberg
“Defendant Bo Xilai used his official state position to seek benefits, illegally accepted an extremely huge amount of property from others, embezzled a huge amount of public money, and abused his power, resulting in huge losses to the nation and the...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.25.13China Orders Ban on New Government Buildings
New York Times
The ban is the latest in a series of initiatives by President Xi Jinping to discourage corruption and foster frugality at a time of broad popular resentment against high-living bureaucrats.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.25.13Former China Party Highflier Bo Xilai Is Charged With Corruption
Wall Street Journal
The indictment accuses Mr. Bo of taking advantage of his position “to seek profits for others” and accepting an “extremely large amount” in money and property, Xinhua said.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.25.13Chinese VP’s Visit to North Korea Prompts Détente Watch
WSJ: China Real Time Report
The visit comes directly after China and the U.S. held their annual Strategic & Economic Dialogue in Washington, in which how to handle North Korea was a major area of discussion, although the two countries still have not agreed on a course...
Conversation
07.25.13The Bo Xilai Trial: What’s It Really About?
China has charged disgraced senior politician Bo Xilai with bribery, abuse of power and corruption, paving the way for a potentially divisive trial. But what’s at stake goes beyond the fate of one allegedly corrupt official: Is it really a fight...
Reports
07.24.13Throttling Dissent: China’s New Leaders Refine Internet Control
Freedom House
This special report is based on the 2013 China chapter of Freedom House’s annual Freedom on the Net survey. As the home of one of the most systematically controlled and monitored online environments in the world, China will no doubt retain its...
Conversation
07.23.13What Would a Hard Landing in China Mean for the World?
Barry Naughton:Paul Krugman in a recent post (“How Much Should We Worry About a China Shock?” The New York Times, July 20, 2013) tells us NOT to worry about the impact of a slowing China on global exports, but to be worried, very worried about the...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.23.13Ai Weiwei Talks Edward Snowden, Nationalism, and Fighting Boredom
Blouin Artinfo
“Nationalism is a very old concept, and it has become weaker during globalisation,” Ai told ARTINFO. “But from the Snowden incident, we can see that even if nationalism is weak, its power structures still exist.”
ChinaFile Recommends
07.22.13Why It’s News That China’s President Stood In The Rain With His Pants Rolled Up
Quartz
Xi—who has promised to tackle government corruption and lavish spending by officials—is trying to counter an image of elitism in dress, plain speech, and a few gestures of openness rarely seen at the upper rungs of China’s communist party.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.22.13A Reformist Chinese Leader? Stop Fooling Yourself
Time
Headline after headline - about the intractability of corruption, the death of a watermelon vendor or a petitioner's desperate attempt to draw attention to this plight by detonating an explosive device at a Beijing...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.22.13The View From Beijing: The Elusive 'China Threat'
Huffington Post
China, while rising for over 30 years under a benign Western umbrella, is still several decades away from challenging the West on an equal footing - and it is far from certain that China will ever want to do so except perhaps in East Asia.
ChinaFile Recommends
07.22.13America’s Global Image Remains More Positive than China’s
Pew Global
China is viewed favorably in just half (19 of 38) of the nations surveyed excluding China itself. Beijing’s strongest supporters are in Asia – in Malaysia (81%) and Pakistan (81%) – and in the African nations of Kenya (78%), Senegal (77%) and...
ChinaFile Recommends
07.22.13Young Chinese People May Just Not Be That Into Western-Style Democracy
Atlantic
A new study shows that the country's youth have an increasingly lukewarm attitude about democratic political systems. At a minimum, surveys like these bolster emerging Chinese public intellectuals who are championing Chinese...
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07.18.13Chinese Whistleblower Blinded in Acid Attack
Telegraph
Li Jianxin, an amateur Chinese whistleblower who posted embarrassing pictures of Party officials’ luxury cars, was rammed by a car, blinded with acid, and had two of his fingers cut off.
Conversation
07.18.13Xu Zhiyong Arrested: How Serious Can Beijing Be About Political Reform?
Donald Clarke:When I heard that Xu Zhiyong had just been detained, my first thought was, “Again?” This seems to be something the authorities do every time they get nervous, a kind of political Alka Seltzer to settle an upset constitution. I searched...
Viewpoint
07.16.13CFIUS and the U.S. Senate’s Anti-China Bug
Last week, senators from both parties finally came together for a common objective: stopping the $4.7 billion sale of America’s largest pork producer to China. Their reason? The sale of Smithfield Farms to a Chinese company, Shuanghui, could pose a...
Conversation
07.16.13What’s the Senate’s Beef with China’s Play for American Pork?
Last week the U.S. Senate held hearings to question the CEO of meat-producer Smithfield Farms, about the proposed $4.7 billion sale of the Virginia-based company to Shuanghui International, China’s largest pork producer. The sale is under review by...