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Hong Kong Seeks to Amend Film Censorship Bill

The Hong Kong government recently announced that it has submitted an amendment of the 2021 Film Censorship Bill to the Legislative Council. The amendment contains requirements for the film inspectors to determine whether the release of films they inspect will be detrimental to national security. It also empowers the Chief Secretary of Administration to revoke any previously issued approval if the inspectors believe that the release of certain films violates national security.

One senior Hong Kong director who wants to remain anonymous told the Central News Agency that it takes more than just a director to make a film. When they assessed whether to make a film in the past, they mainly focused on the box office revenue and audience reaction. Now, however, from the directors to the production companies, they must consider political issues too. Politics will be above everything, including the original creation and any business concerns. It is also hard to figure out where the red line is, that is, whether it violates national security.

Source: Central News Agency, August 29, 2021
https://www.cna.com.tw/news/acn/202108290055.aspx

Taiwanese Artists and Celebrities Attacked for Posting Messages to Cheer on Taiwanese Olympic Athletes

Beijing tried to downplay Taiwan during the Olympics in Tokyo. It demanded that people use, “Chinese Taipei” instead of “Taiwan.” It cut off the television signal during the award ceremony after two Taiwanese badminton players beat the duo from the mainland and won the gold medal. It also tried to suppress and intimidate Taiwanese celebrities for political reasons. During the recent Olympic games, two high-profile Taiwanese celebrities were attacked because they posted messages to cheer on Taiwanese Olympic Athletes.

Dee Hsu, a formal Taiwanese talk show host was denounced for being Taiwan pro-independence after she posted messages on Instagram cheering for Taiwan Olympic athletes. Four mainland companies terminated their sponsorship agreements with Hsu. Another mainland company that sponsored her daughter also terminated the contract.

Taiwanese singer Jolin Tsai was also attacked for her posting in which she cheered for Taiwanese athletes. She was accused of being a Taiwan independence activist and told that, because of it, she shouldn’t come to China to make money.

In addition to these recent incidents, on numerous occasions, Beijing has been bullying celebrities from Taiwan. The following includes only a partial list of incidents:
1. Kulilay Amit, who goes by A-mei as her stage name, sang the Taiwan national anthem at the presidential inauguration in 2000. Beijing banned her for four years.
2. At the 2010 Tokyo Film Festival, Beijing insisted that the Taiwan delegation must be introduced as the “Taiwan, China delegation.” The Taiwan delegation disputed this and, as a result, chose to skip the red carpet celebration.
3. In 2013, Zhang Xuan, a Taiwanese singer took a Taiwan National flag from a fan during a concert in Manchester England and told the crowd that the flag is the national flag from her hometown. As a result, her concert, scheduled for later in the year in Beijing, was cancelled.
4. In 2015, Chou Tzu-yu, a Taiwanese singer performed for a Korean band. She was accused of being a pro-Taiwan Independent activist for introducing herself as Taiwanese and for holding a Taiwan flag in her hand in one of her TV appearances in Korea. Chou had to publicly apologize on her Weibo account.
5. In 2016, Taiwan actor Dai Liren lost his role in a movie because the communist youth league posted on its official weibo account that Dai is pro-independence. Dai denied the claim.
6. In 2017, Doris Wang performed a live song in a TV program that Taiwan public television broadcasted. Because the name of the song is called “Beautiful Island,” Wang was accused of being pro-independence. The recording company forced her to apologize. Otherwise they would have imposed hefty fines on her.
7. In 2018, Guangdong Provincial Press, Publication and Radio Bureau banned “My Dear Boy” a Taiwanese television series, because it accepted funding from the Taiwan Ministry of Culture.

8. In 2018, the movie, “Missing Johnny,” was banned in China because actor Lawrence Ko was a “pro-independence activist.”
9. The movie, “Hello Mr. Billionaire,” achieved an impressive box office success in China. Vivian Sung, the lead actress from Taiwan was accused to being pro-independence because she said in one of her earlier interviews that her favorite country is Taiwan. Sung had to issue an apology on weibo.

Source: Epoch Times, August 3, 2021
https://www.epochtimes.com/gb/21/8/3/n13134587.htm

RSF Concerned over RTHK’s Partnership with Chinese Statement

On August 9, Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s Chief Executive, announced that Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK) will establish a long-term partnership with the Chinese state media “China Media Group (CMG).” Reporters Without Borders (RSF) issued a statement on August 11 expressing concerns that RTHK will become China’s political propaganda outlet in Hong Kong.

Cédric Alviani, head of the RSF  East Asia bureau, said in the statement that the “Hong Kong government, which has already censored an overwhelming amount of contents and imposed a talk-show hosted by Chief Executive Lam, will find in this partnership a perfect pretext to force RTHK to distribute Chinese propaganda contents.” Alviani denounced that “increased interference from the Hong Kong government against RTHK’s editorial freedom is a blatant violation of freedom of the press despite the principle being enshrined in the Basic Law.”

In its statement, RSF stated that the radio stations in Hong Kong have suffered from harassment and censorship which has intensified since Patrick Li, the new Director of Broadcasting, took office on March 1. A number of  programs have been suspended and hundreds of old films have been removed from RTHK’s online archive. Social media accounts have also been censored. Carrie Lam even personally hosted a show to promote the subject of the unpopular election reform.

RSF pointed out that China Central Radio and Television (CMG) is known as “Voice of China,” and it has national television stations (CCTV, China Global Television Network) and domestic and foreign radio stations (Central People’s Broadcasting Station and China Radio International) under its umbrella. These media must compulsorily broadcast the content of the Chinese Communist Party’s political propaganda in accordance with communist China’s law.

In 2019, RSF published a separate report titled, “China’s Pursuit of a New World Media Order.” It exposed Beijing’s strategic plan to control foreign information and its threat to global press freedom.

Sources:
1. Central News Agency, August 11, 2021
https://www.cna.com.tw/news/acn/202108110140.aspx
2. European Country of Origin Information Network, August 11, 2021
https://www.ecoi.net/en/document/2058088.html

Taiwan Language Learning Center Enters the U.S. Chinese Language Learning Market

China’s Confucius Institutes have been investing heavily overseas to promote foreigners being able to learn Chinese and Chinese culture. It is viewed as Beijing’s measure to enhance its “soft power.” In recent years, Confucius Institutes have been accused of interfering in academic freedom, conducting intelligence collection and other unwanted tasks. Since 2017, many Confucius Institutes in the U.S. have closed down.

This year, Taiwan began to explore the international Chinese language teaching market very actively. The Overseas Chinese Affairs Committee under the Taiwan Executive Yuan announced in June that it will set up 20 “Taiwan Chinese Language Learning Centers” in the U.S., Great Britain, Germany, France and other countries. Seventeen of them will be in the United States.

According to the statistics from the National Association of Scholars (NAS), in 2017, there were 103 Confucius Institutes in the U.S. As of July 9 of this year, the number had dropped to 41. Many other schools will also close Confucius Institutes later this year or next year.

Last October, the U.S. switched the cover of its official language learning website to the landmark Taipei 101 building in Taiwan. Last December, the U.S. signed the “Taiwan-U.S. Education Initiative” and launched the language teaching cooperation. It also increased the quota of the number of teachers from Taiwan who would teach in the United States.

In March,  21 U.S. congressmen wrote to the Secretary of Education. They stated that, after the U.S. closed Confucius Institutes, there was still a high demand for learning Chinese and Chinese culture. They suggested that the U.S expand Taiwan-U.S. education initiatives. The letter stated that the cooperation between Taiwan and the U.S. in education can limit the influence of communist China and ensure freedom of speech. It will be an alternative option to be used instead of the Confucius Institutes.

Source: BBC, August 13, 2021
https://www.bbc.com/zhongwen/simp/world-58170293

Sputnik: China’s Mask Exports More Than Tripled

According to the data from the Peterson Institute for International Economics, China has increased its total exports of personal protective equipment (PPE) by nearly three times.

In 2019, China’s total PPE exports reached US$ 22.9 billion, and in 2020 they will reach US$88.1 billion.

The total amount of China’s exports of PPE to the EU increased from US$3.9 billion in 2019 to US$ 23.4 billion in 2020. As for Russia, according to data from the Russian Customs Service, the total imports of medical PPE and disinfection products from China has increased from US$570 million in 2019 to US$2.01 billion in 2020.

The total amount of China’s exports of PPE to the U.S. has increased from US$7.1 billion to US$24.6 billion.

It is reported that China’s substantial increase in the production of PPE didn’t stop the price of this product from rising in 2020. Among its products, the price of a mask in April 2020 increased by 720.8 percent compared to December 2019.

Source: Sputnik, August 6, 2021
https://sputniknews.cn/china/202108061034216950/

Japan Announced Missile Plan to Deal with China’s Threat

According to the Japanese newspaper, Yomiuri Shimbun, in 2022, to prevent China from crossing the first island chain, Japan will deploy a missile force on Ishigaki Island. The island is 300 kilometers (186 miles) away from the coast of Taiwan.

Yomiuri Shimbun quoted an official from Japan’s Ministry of Defense who mentioned that an army force of 500 to 600  is expected to be deployed on Ishigaki Island. One of the troops will be equipped with shore-to-ship missiles and surface-to-air missiles, and the other will be a security force that can respond to armed attacks and large-scale natural disasters. The missile range will cover northern Taiwan just to deter China.

In addition, Japan’s Ministry of Defense is also planning to install electronic warfare units on the U.S. Island before the end of 2023 and build a new Self-Defense Force base on Magog Island.

On August 3, Japan’s Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi told the Financial Times that, as China continues to increase its security threat to Taiwan, the international community should pay more attention to Taiwan. Other experts also believe that China’s threat to Taiwan has caused a backlash in other Asian countries.

Source: Deutsche Welle, August 5, 2021
https://p.dw.com/p/3yYxN

Swiss Student Lost PhD Fellowship after He Criticized China

A Swiss media exposed that a professor at the University of St. Gallen suspended the academic relationship he had with a PhD student because the student criticized China. The university also ended the student PhD fellowship with the university.

On August 3, Neue Zürcher Zeitung, a Swiss, German-language newspaper reported that a PhD student at the University of St. Gallen lost his PhD fellowship after tweeting a criticism of China. The incident took place in March 2020. The student goes by the name of Oliver Gerber as pseudonym. Gerber told the media that his professor received “an angry email” from China complaining that Gerber had spread “neo-Nazi” content on twitter. The professor terminated his academic ties with Gerber and also warned Gerber that he should moderate his political speech on the social media platform. A couple of days later, Gerber received a notification from the University of St. Gallen that they disabled his school email.

Gerber began his PhD research on environmental pollution at the University of St. Gallen in the spring of 2017. The subject is closely related to China. Gerber received a three-year government scholarship from a university in Wuhan, China. He met his Chinese girlfriend while he was in Wuhan, but he soon discovered that China’s censorship system affected his academic studies. When he submitted an article about re-education camps, he was given the lowest score.

Before Christmas in 2019, Gerber returned to Switzerland for the holiday. However, he couldn’t return back to Wuhan because of COVID. He began to use Twitter to condemn the Chinese government for the initial coverup of the new pandemic and for the repression in Xinjiang. He also criticized Xi Jinping. He said he was only active on Twitter for 10 days and had 10 followers.

The University of St. Gallen portrayed a different version of why Gerber was dismissed. It alleged that Gerber requested the cancellation of his registration at the University of St. Gallen while he was in China and denied that the University is influenced by China.

In recent years, Swiss universities have expanded their cooperation with China. The University of St. Gallen currently has 15 project agreements with China. However, the school emphasized that the department where Gerber was enrolled did not receive funds from China.

Source: Radio Free Asia, August 5, 2021
https://www.rfa.org/cantonese/news/sw-study-08052021091941.html

Beijing Cracks Down on Private Tutoring Sector

In order to encourage families to have more children, Beijing has launched a series of policies to reduce the cost of raising a child. It has banned private tutoring activities and cracked down on home purchases in good school districts. Prestigious private schools have also become targets.

On July 24, the State Council issued an opinion to scrutinize and regulate off-campus institutions including a suspension on approving new private tutoring institution applications and a requirement that existing agencies be converted into non-profit entities. It directed that all training institutions be prevented from being listed on the stock market for financing purposes and they were also banned from using foreign teaching materials.

On July 30, after the Central Committee held a meeting on carrying out the “three-child” policy, the Ministry of Education issued a notice stating that it will ban teachers from hosting paid supplementary lessons for middle school and elementary school students outside of school hours or from engaging in monetary or gift exchanges with parents.

The crackdown order that the provincial government is carrying out has turned private tutoring activities into an underground business. For example, Hebei Province has set up a dedicated tipping portal so that the public can report private tutoring activities. Guangdong Province has incorporated a crackdown effort as part of its “anti-gang crime” measures. Hubei Province placed the Office of Combating Pornography and Illegal Activities in charge of the crackdown on private tutoring agencies.

Meanwhile, shares of Chinese tutoring firms plummeted in both the Hong Kong and the U.S. stock markets. Between the top three off-campus education and training institutions, New Oriental, the Beijing Science and Technology Education Corporation and K12, they lost a total of approximately 128.7 billion yuan (approximately US$19.85 billion) in market value during the two trading days of July 23rd and 26th.

Sources:
1. Radio Free Asia, July 30, 2021
https://www.rfa.org/mandarin/yataibaodao/shehui/ac-07302021070407.html

2. Epoch Times, July 30, 2021
https://www.epochtimes.com/gb/21/7/30/n13128035.htm