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Chinese Ministry of Public Security Warns of Color Revolution in the Video, “Who Wants to Overthrow China the Most?”

In mid-December, the Chinese Ministry of Public Security, on its official site, published a short video film of a microblog to remind the public to remain vigilant against a color revolution.

The video, titled, Who Wants to Overthrow China the Most?, lasts 7 minutes, 24 seconds with a brief caption on the narratives and background music. The video opens with the accusation that the ‘color revolution’ has successfully driven many countries into war and led to divisions; it warned that the devil’s claws have also stretched to China.

The video displayed footage of a series of demonstrations that rights activists from the Mainland held and showed multiple human rights lawyers being arrested and pleading guilty. The video criticized that some people try to stir up group events as a way to trigger a color revolution and they “use overseas NGOs to nurture ‘agents’ so as to create the social basis for a color revolution.”

A significant section in the video displays Hong Kong’s demonstrations over the past two years and claims that Hong Kong is a base for a “color revolution.”

At the ending, the video displays the captions that [China] should drive “color revolution out of China.” It also represents that this is a long-lasting war and that it is “everyone’s responsibility to resist the color revolution.”

The video was reposted on the official microblog sites of the Central Committee of the Communist Youth League, Qiushi magazine and other sites as well.

Source: Duowei, December 20, 2016
http://china.dwnews.com/news/2016-12-20/59789387.html

Xinhua: Shijiazhuang Smog Caused PM2.5 Index to Rise over 1000

Xinhua recently reported that heavy smog covered the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region starting on December 16. The situation worsened on the 19th. Shijiazhuang, the capital city of Hebei Province, suffered a record high pollution level of over 1000 for both PM2.5 and PM10 indexes. Some monitoring stations even recorded 1015 for PM2.5 and 1132 for PM10. Ten cities in Hebei Province declared Code Red emergency status. Hebei is the province that surrounds Beijing. Its capital city Shijiazhuang is only 163 miles away from Beijing.

PM2.5 particles are air pollutants with a diameter of 2.5 micrometers or less, small enough to invade even the smallest airways. These particles generally come from activities that burn fossil fuels, such as traffic, smelting, and metal processing. The World Health Organization (WHO) considers a PM2.5 number below 25 to be safe. The U.S. Embassy in Beijing recorded a PM2.5 of 522 on December 4, 2011. Not long after that, China started monitoring the level of PM2.5. New York’s PM2.5 peak level was 68 on October 5, 2013. <Editor’s note: DW reported that, according to a scientific paper published by the independent research group Berkeley Earth, bad air contributes to 1.6 million deaths a year or roughly 17 percent of all deaths in China; a study reported in the New York Times indicated that, in 2013, 916,000 deaths were related to PM2.5 exposure.>

Source: Xinhua, December 19, 2016
http://news.xinhuanet.com/2016-12/19/c_1120144849.htm
DW, August 17, 2015
http://www.dw.com/en/how-smog-is-killing-thousands-daily-in-china/a-18653814
New York Times, August 17, 2016

 

China’s Defense Ministry: Underwater Drone Handed over to U.S.

According to a terse statement that the News Bureau of China’s Ministry of National Defense issued, at noon on December 20 in related waters of the South China Sea, and after friendly consultation between the Chinese and U.S. sides, the handover of a U.S. underwater drone was carried out smoothly.

A New York Times report on its Chinese website noted that China did not mention that the presence of the U.S. Navy in the South China Sea had caused the tension between the two countries. BBC Chinese also reported the expectation that China would take the opportunity of returning the underwater drone to demand that the U.S. reduce its reconnaissance activities in the South China Sea.

There was no such expression in the Defense Ministry’s one sentence statement issued within hours of the hand over.

On December 17, a spokesperson from China’s Defense Ministry issued a statement confirming that, on the afternoon of December 15, a Chinese naval lifeboat located an unidentified device in the waters of the South China Sea. In order to prevent the device from causing harm to the safety of navigation and personnel of passing vessels, the Chinese naval lifeboat verified and examined the device in a professional and responsible manner.

Upon examination, the spokesperson noted, the device was identified as an underwater drone of the United States. The Chinese side decided to hand it over it to the U.S. in an appropriate manner. Both sides maintained communication on the issue. The spokesperson added, “We regret that,” after commenting, the U.S. side’s unilateral move to dramatize the issue in the process was inappropriate and not conductive to its settlement.

The spokesperson also emphasized that for a long time, the U.S. military has frequently dispatched vessels and aircraft to carry out close-in reconnaissance and military surveys within Chinese waters. According to a statement that the spokesperson published on the Defense Department’s website on December 17, “China resolutely opposes these activities and demands that the U.S. side stop such activities. China will continue to be vigilant against the relevant activities on the U.S. side and will take necessary measures in response.”

Sources:
China’s Defense Ministry website, December 20, 2016,
http://www.mod.gov.cn/topnews/2016-12/20/content_4767292.htm
New York Times Chinese website, December 20, 2016,
http://cn.nytimes.com/china/20161220/china-returns-us-drone/
BBC Chinese, December 18, 2016,
http://www.bbc.com/zhongwen/simp/chinese-news-38359622
Xinhua News Agency, December 18, 2016,
http://news.xinhuanet.com/politics/2016-12/18/c_1120137584.htm

Global Times: U.S. Demands the Return of the UUV; Major General Says We Will Collect What Should Be Collected

Following the incident in which the Chinese Navy captured the U.S. unmanned underwater vehicle in the South China Sea on December 15, China’s state media Global Times reported on an interview of some Chinese military officers about the incident. Below is an excerpt from their report:

Wu Shicun, President of the China South Sea Research Institute, said that the issue of the foreign media’s so-called international waters [where the incident happened] represents only one side of the opinion from the United States. There is no (such explanation) in the Convention on the Law of the Sea.

Wu believes that the calm in the South China Sea is only temporary. Because the core problem has not been resolved (including Sino-U.S. competition in the South China Sea, geopolitical competition, and a power struggle over sea rights), the United States is back. Therefore, this may represent a trend in the South China Sea — the conflict is heating up as the U.S. returns again with deep intervention.

In answering the question “whether China is getting stronger and stronger in the ability to control the South China Sea issue, and will not let the United States do whatever it wants,” Wu answered that “it is very obvious” and added that the Chinese military will be very confident in dealing with the issue. The strategic situation of the South China Sea will gradually change with China’s Nansha reef-related facilities being in place.

He said that China’s capturing the U.S. unmanned underwater vehicle sends the following signal: The United States performs close reconnaissance, threatening our country’s security. China has counter-measures. In the 2001 the plane crash incident and the 2009 “USNS Impeccable” event, China had “no choice but to suffer in silence” in many regards. That era may be gone forever.

Yang Yi, Major General and former director of the Strategic Research Institute of the National Defense University, claimed that China should “capture whatever should be captured,” and now they (the United States) “can stop us.”

Yang Yi also believes that, when Trump comes to power, the Sino-US conflict around the South China Sea may become more intense.

Yang said that [since] Americans “sent this thing to our door,” it could not be more natural for us to take it home and study it. If the United States becomes even noisier, it only indicates that it is that much more guilty.

Source: Global Times (Huanqiu), December 17, 2016
http://mil.huanqiu.com/observation/2016-12/9825473.html

People’s Daily: Japanese and U.S. Military Aircrafts Spied on China’s Air Combat Capabilities

People’s Daily recently reported that Chinese Air Force aircraft encountered close interference from Japanese aircraft as they flew over the Miyako Strait during routine open-sea exercises. Two Japanese F-15 fighter jets launched jamming decoys against the Chinese aircraft. Another eight Japanese F-15 fighter jets as well as two U.S. electronic warfare aircraft covered the two Japanese fighters. Chinese military experts expressed the belief that Japan and the United States were jointly spying on China’s air combat capabilities. In response to China’s complaint, the Japanese Ministry of Defense refused to admit the launching of the decoys and called the Chinese description of the situation “unreal.” According to reports that the Taiwanese media published, the Japanese did mobilize ten F-15 fighters and the U.S. deployed one EP-3 and one RC-135 reconnaissance aircraft.

Source: People’s Daily, December 14, 2016
http://military.people.com.cn/n1/2016/1214/c1011-28947065.html

Mainland Movie Market Sees Sharp Decline in Box Office

Well-known Chinese news site Sina recently reported that the Mainland movie market is suffering a dramatic free-fall. According to the latest statistics, the total box office from April to September saw a ten percent decline year-over-year. The Chinese Mainland commercial movie market has been on a path of rapid growth for many years. It has been one of the fastest growing industries in China. The year-over-year growth rate in 2015 was 50 percent. Many experts expressed the belief earlier that China will beat the United Sates to become the largest movie market in the world and will reach a US$10 billion domestic box office level in 2016. However, the movie industry is now seeing a negative growth rate at the point of only three weeks from the end of the year end. Analysts suggested that the primary reasons for the decline are the significant reduction in discounted tickets, as well as the government’s crack-down on cinemas that forge box office statistics.

Source: Sina, December 14, 2016
http://finance.sina.com/bg/usstock/sinacn/20161214/23561535489.html

Liaoning Carrier Live-Fire Exercises Revealed Battle Group Lineup

Well-known Chinese news site Sina recently reported that, for the first time, the Chinese Navy took its aircraft carrier to engage in live-fire exercises. The Exercises were conducted within the North Sea Fleet and involved tens of vessels as well as aircraft. Although not all the details were revealed, multiple models of destroyers and frigates were part of the battle group. However, from the official video report, a large-scale Model 051C missile air-defense destroyer named “Shenyang” was identified, which was equipped with the Russian SA-N-6 long range vertical launching missile system. The battle group also included vessels with anti-submarine and anti-ship roles. The wide coverage of roles showed that this exercise was a full-scale carrier mission. On the aircraft side, the KA-31 took on the early-warning task. J-15 ship-borne fighter jets played the main combat role; they carry the YJ-83K anti-ship missile, the PL-12 mid-range air-to-air missile, the PL-9 dogfight missile, and the YJ-91 anti-radiation and anti-ship dual-task supersonic cruise missile. On board the Liaoning aircraft carrier, the “Sea FL-10” air defense missile served its missile interception capabilities in the exercises. The full mission concluded successfully with both offensive and defensive aspects.

Source: Sina, December 16, 2016
http://mil.news.sina.com.cn/jssd/2016-12-16/doc-ifxytqav9476806.shtml

Sing Pao Daily News: Hong Kong Liaison Office Director Created Civil Associations in Order to Accumulate Wealth Illegally

On December 16, [Hong Kong] Sing Pao Daily News published an article revealing that Zhang Xiaoming, the Director of the Liaison Office, had established a large number of associations in order to perform “united front work” and used them for the illegal accumulation of wealth.

The article said that the Hong Kong people were very happy when they learned that Leung Chun-ying will no longer be running for the office of Chief Executive and were particularly happy when they realized that Zhang Xiaoming had been absent from at least four public events. They hope that Beijing will not let Zhang come back to Hong Kong any more, which would be their best Christmas gift.

The article revealed that, during Zhang’s tenure, the number of Hong Kong-based associations has soared, with at least 10 newly established associations last year, compared to just four in 2013.The article explained that Zhang established these associations for the purpose of doing united front work and to control elections, using the votes and support activities [that Beijing desired]. However, these associations also became the source he used for corruption and to collect money.

Source: Sing Pao Daily News, December 16, 2016
http://www.singpao.com.hk/index.php?fi=hot&id=14149