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Chinese Singer Accusing Ukraine for Killing Its Own People

Chinese singer Wang Fang blamed Ukraine for killing its own people, creating episode number two after her visit to the Mariupol Opera House in Ukraine, where she sang the Russian patriotic song “Katyusha.” The actions of Wang and the group she was with, known as the “Chinese self-media delegation,” drew strong criticism from the Ukrainian government and the international community, since Russia bombed the Opera House, resulting in the deaths of hundreds, including many children.

Upon returning to Moscow, the four people from the group held a press conference. Wang said, “When I saw that the Ukrainian Nazis were killing the children in the Donbass, a wave of anger went through me, so I decided to come to the Donbass to help the children.” Her husband, Zhou Xiaoping, an internet writer known for promoting communist and leftist ideologies, placed blame on Ukraine rather than Russia for the destruction of the theater. He also echoed Russian propaganda by asserting that Russia was protecting the local population from NATO attacks.

Source: China News Center, September 11, 2023

王芳、周小平接受俄罗斯媒体采访,声称马里乌波尔歌剧院是北约轰炸的

Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Explains China’s Foreign State Immunities Act

China recently passed the Foreign State Immunities Act, and the Chinese Embassy in the United States provided an explanation from the Foreign Ministry’s spokesperson regarding this legislation.

Question: The Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress of China has recently considered and adopted the Law on Immunity of Foreign States. The Law adjusts China’s previous position of “absolute immunity” to authorize Chinese courts to accept cases in which a foreign State is the defendant. May I ask why China has made this adjustment?

Answer: …

The Law on the Immunity of China and provides exceptions to it, making it clear that Chinese courts may exercise jurisdiction over lawsuits arising from the non-sovereign acts of foreign States, such as lawsuits involving disputes over commercial activities, related personal injuries and property damages, and may, under strictly limited conditions, take coercive measures against property of a foreign State in connection with its commercial activities. This is fully consistent with international law and the practice of States.

As a responsible Power, China firmly upholds the principle of the sovereign equality of States, will protect the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese citizens and legal persons, and will respect the immunities that foreign States are entitled to under international law.

Source: Chinese Embassy at the U.S. website, September 5, 2023
http://us.china-embassy.gov.cn/lcbt/wjbfyrbt/202309/t20230905_11138002.htm

Scholar: China’s Gender Imbalance Leaves Over 30 Million Men Without Prospects for Marriage

China has had a persistently high sex ratio at birth (more males than females) for around 40 years. This gender imbalance has led to over 30 million Chinese men being unable to find wives, according to Professor Yuan Xin of Nankai University. By 2021, there were around 239 million single people aged over 15 in China, but Yuan says 15 is too young to define “single” and the real number is lower. However, the decades-long gender imbalance has created many “passive singles” – men who cannot find wives due to the shortage of women. From 1980-2021 around 35 million more males were born than females. This means at least 30 million men will not be able to marry locally. The competition for marriage is increasing, with rises in bride prices and marriage costs. The stability of marriages may also decline. Young single men may cause social instability and older single men will lack family support. Restoring a normal sex ratio at birth is very difficult now. The gender imbalance will persist throughout life cycles, so a coordinated national response is needed. It is inaccurate to say singles have higher spending power – they may just meet basic needs and not stimulate consumption. If desire is universally low, consumption will not rise. In summary, China’s long-term gender imbalance has created many involuntary single men, posing economic and social challenges that require an active policy response.

Source: Central News Agency (Taiwan), September 11, 2023
https://www.cna.com.tw/news/acn/202309110243.aspx

Chinese Capital Sweeps Japan and U.S.’s ‘Friendship-Shoring’ Countries

Chinese companies are aggressively investing in and shifting production to countries like Vietnam, Thailand and Mexico – areas seen by Japan and the US as alternatives to rely on instead of China. This is part of Japan and the US’s efforts towards “friend-shoring”, moving supply chains to friendly nations, but China is gaining ground.

From January to June 2023, China’s direct investment in Vietnam rose 37% year-on-year to $2.7 billion, far exceeding other countries like South Korea. Chinese firms offer wages in Vietnam more than twice the average to attract workers, making it hard for Japanese companies to maintain production bases. Overall, China’s direct investment balance in major ASEAN countries reached $52 billion in 2021, surpassing the US.

In Thailand, China’s direct investment from January to June accounted for over 20% of the total, ranking first and 70% higher than Japan. Thailand is becoming a production base for Chinese EV companies, shaking Japan’s auto dominance there. Similarly in Mexico, Chinese auto parts companies are increasing investments, approaching the levels of the US in 2022.

This illustrates risks to supply chains as China dominates certain critical materials like gallium and nickel. For example, 70% of nickel smelters in Indonesia, which produces half of global nickel, are owned by Chinese firms. Japan is losing ground, with Sumitomo abandoning a planned refinery to be replaced by a Chinese company.

While Japan and the US aim to exclude China from material processing and parts production, China’s dominance means it could choke exports. This risks Japan and the US’s goals for EV production if China limits exports. To compete, Japan and the US need to adopt strategies like joint R&D with local nations rather than just focus on friend-shoring. Overall, China is gaining advantage over Japan and the US in critical supply chain investments across Asia and Latin America.

Source: Nikkei Chinese, September 11, 2023
https://zh.cn.nikkei.com/china/ccompany/53259-2023-09-11-08-42-52.html

Xi Jinping Orders Comprehensive Improvement of Troops’ Ability for War Preparation

Chinese Communist Party leader Xi Jinping inspected the 78th Army Group on September 8th, ordering improvements in war preparedness and ability to fight. Xi emphasized implementing the military strategic policy and innovations in management and operations for the new era’s strong army concept.

Xi was accompanied by Vice Chairman Zhang Youxia of the Central Military Commission. Xi said the 78th Army Group needs to enhance military struggle preparation, strengthen specialized training in difficult courses, build new high-quality combat capabilities, and integrate joint combat systems.

Xi also said Communist Party building in the troops must be strengthened to implement the spirit of the All-Military Party Construction Conference. This will increase creativity, cohesion and combat effectiveness of Party organizations. Grassroots troop education and high levels of centralized unity and stability are also crucial.

The second round of thematic education should be carefully organized to solve troop development bottlenecks, solve officer and soldier problems proactively, and create new progress in army group construction.

In July, Xi visited the Eastern Military Zone authorities, saying war and combat planning should be deepened, joint combat command systems strengthened, and combat-oriented training conducted to accelerate capability improvements for winning.

The Eastern Military Zone covers six provinces near the Taiwan Strait and East China Sea. Xi’s recent visits emphasize building up China’s military strength and readiness for conflict, particularly regarding Taiwan.

Source: Central News Agency (Taiwan), September 11, 2023
https://www.cna.com.tw/news/acn/202309110135.aspx

Lianhe Zaobao: Financing from China’s Four Major Banks to Russia Surged

Singapore’s primary Chinese language newspaper Lianhe Zaobao recently reported that, since the outbreak of the Ukrainian war last year, Western institutions have imposed a series of sanctions on Russia, and banking institutions have also stopped operations in Russia. However, China’s Big Four banks are lending billions of dollars to Russia, filling the gap left by Western banking institutions. China’s four largest banks, including Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Agricultural Bank of China, China Construction Bank and Bank of China, have quadrupled their exposure to Russia since the war began. At the beginning of 2022, the total loans of the four major banks in Russia were US$2.2 billion. According to the Russian Central Bank, in the 14 months to the end of March this year, this figure increased to nearly US$10 billion. This is part of China’s push to make the Chinese Yuan a global currency that will replace the U.S. dollar. More than 70 percent of trade settlements between Russia and China have been using local currencies. Almost all the currency used by China to purchase Russian oil in the past year was RMB. Before the war, more than 60 percent of Russia’s exports were paid in U.S. dollars and Euros, with RMB accounting for less than one percent.

Source: Lianhe Zaobao, September 5, 2023
https://www.kzaobao.com/shiju/20230905/146186.html

China’s Top Computer Server Manufacturer Suffered Major Profit Decline

Well-known Chinese news site Sina (NASDAQ: SINA) recently reported that, with the advent of the artificial intelligence era, the traditional CPU server market has gradually shrunk, and new AI servers have soared. However, Inspur Information is subject to tight supply of GPUs, and it has not been able to jump onto the bandwagon. According to the global server market report for the third quarter of 2022 released by Gartner, Inspur ranked first in China, and second in the world, after Dell, with a global market share of 10.3 percent. However, in the first half of this year, Inspur’s server revenue fell by 29.03 percent year-over-year. Its net profit in the second quarter of this year suffered a year-over-year decrease of 81.46 percent. Inspur explained that its server product revenue was “affected by factors such as the tight supply of global GPUs and related special chips.” With the short supply of AI chips by Nvidia and Intel, the company emphasized that “the raw materials of the domestic server industry are currently mainly imported.” If there are major changes in supply, it will have an impact. Inspur’s server products are highly dependent on upstream chip suppliers. The company’s 2019 annual report showed that Intel and Nvidia are its top two suppliers respectively. Since 2020, Inspur has no longer published information about its main suppliers.

Source: Sina, September 7, 2023
https://finance.sina.com.cn/tech/csj/2023-09-07/doc-imzkwctn6755618.shtml

HKTDC: Chinese Companies Planning Overseas Business

Hong Kong Trade Development Council (HKTDC) recently published a research study on Mainland companies’ overseas strategy changes when Belt and Road is now at its 10-year anniversary. The research focused on companies in the Canton Greater Bay Area and the Yangtze River Delta Region. The study found that, in the face of the slow recovery after the pandemic and the increasing business challenges in traditional overseas markets affected by geopolitical factors, many Mainland companies have adjusted their “going global” strategies. Around 83.9 percent of the companies surveyed said they are facing various challenges caused by geopolitical tensions, insufficient market demand, and financing difficulties, etc. Nearly 90 percent of the companies have plans to develop international business in the next one to three years. As many as 72.8 percent of the companies hope to explore business opportunities in RCEP and other Belt and Road emerging markets. They mainly plan to expand international business in four major areas: logistics and transportation (28.8 percent), marketing and sales (26.9 percent), investment and factory establishment (23.3 percent), and overseas procurement (15.9 percent). Successfully conducting international business requires extensive professional service support to assist them in planning and risk management. The study shows that the services most needed include: marketing and e-commerce (97 percent), financing and risk management (89.9 percent), product standards and ESG service support (89.2 percent), as well as tax planning and compliance (88 percent).

Source: HKTDC, September 5, 2023
https://research.hktdc.com/sc/article/MTQ3MTQ1NjU4OA