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Pulitzer-Winning AP Investigation Raises Questions Over U.S. Tech Firms’ Role in China’s Surveillance and Persecution

On May 4, the 2026 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting was awarded to a team from the Associated Press for a seven-part investigative series examining the global expansion of surveillance technologies linked to China. The three-year investigation spanned three continents and drew on extensive sources, including leaked emails and databases, extensive corporate and government documents, procurement records, public filings, and interviews with over 100 individuals.

The reporting highlighted the involvement of major global technology firms, including IBM, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Oracle, Cisco Systems, Seagate Technology, and NVIDIA. One example cited was collaboration between a Chinese defense contractor and IBM in developing the “Golden Shield Project,” a nationwide surveillance system used for internet monitoring and social control. Other cases included Dell’s marketing of AI-enabled tools with features such as “ethnicity recognition,” and Thermo Fisher Scientific promoting DNA testing kits tailored to specific ethnic groups.

The investigation found that while companies often stated they were not responsible for how their products were used, marketing materials sometimes directly referenced law enforcement applications tied to the communist party’s social control agenda, including terms such as “stability maintenance,” “key individuals,” and projects like the Golden Shield and “Sharp Eyes” systems. The reporting also noted that cooperation extended beyond technology to include training exchanges, with some Chinese law enforcement officials infamous for suppressing human rights reportedly participating in overseas programs.

The reporting has drawn renewed attention to legal and human rights concerns, including the case known as the “Falun Gong practitioners’ lawsuit against Cisco Systems,” in which plaintiffs allege the company helped develop surveillance systems used for persecution. The case has received significant attention in U.S. legal and human rights circles, with proceedings reaching the Supreme Court of the United States. The AP investigation suggests that such involvement was not limited to a single company but reflects a broader pattern of corporate participation in surveillance- and persecution-related projects.

Source: Epoch Times, May 8, 2026
https://www.epochtimes.com/gb/26/5/7/n14759007.htm

China and Turkey Explore Local Currency Trade to Reduce Dollar Dependence

China has proposed that Turkey make greater use of local currencies — the Turkish lira and the Chinese yuan — in bilateral trade, according to a report by Turkish newspaper Yeni Akit.

The proposal emerged during a joint conference titled “Connecting Markets, Creating Opportunities: Trade and Financial Cooperation,” co-organized by the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) and the Aegean Exporters’ Association of Turkey. Participants discussed the broader use of local currencies as an alternative to the US dollar in trade settlements, alongside topics such as expanding Turkey-China trade volumes, developing new areas of cooperation, and improving financing access for Turkish exporters.

Muhammet Öztürk, coordinator of the Aegean Exporters’ Association, noted that the organization represents more than 8,000 member companies from the agricultural and industrial sectors. He said Turkey’s total exports are expected to reach $18.5 billion by the end of 2025.

Öztürk also highlighted strong recent momentum in Turkey-China trade: Turkish exports to China grew 35 percent in the first four months of this year, reaching $1.2 billion, while exports from Aegean region companies rose 24 percent to $209 million over the same period.

The push to settle trade in local currencies reflects a broader trend among countries seeking to reduce reliance on the US dollar in international commerce. For Turkey, whose lira has faced prolonged depreciation pressure, the practical implications of such an arrangement remain to be seen, though the talks signal a deepening of economic ties between Ankara and Beijing.

Source: Sputnik News, May 15, 2026
https://sputniknews.cn/20260515/1071297374.html

Nepal Weighs Allowing Chinese Humanoid Robot to Climb Mount Everest

Nepalese authorities are considering approving a Chinese humanoid robot, the Unitree G1, for a climb up Mount Everest, according to a report by the Kathmandu Post citing Nepal’s Tourism Department. If approved, the expedition could pave the way for using robots to clean up waste and monitor glacial conditions on the world’s highest peak.

The proposal comes from a collaboration between U.S. nonprofit Geologic Dome and Nepali company Fourteen Peaks Expedition, which have jointly applied for permission to deploy the Unitree G1 during the 2026 spring climbing season. The plan calls for a 52-day research expedition in the Everest region.

Himal Gautam, director of Nepal’s Tourism Department, confirmed that the proposal is under review. “After receiving the proposal, we consulted with the Ministry of Tourism,” he said. “The ministry has asked relevant departments to draft a framework covering risks, fee structures, and related matters. Permits will be issued once the main guidelines are established.”

The project’s broader goal is to explore whether humanoid robots can eventually assist with garbage removal on Everest, track glacial changes, and support operations in high-risk mountaineering scenarios. However, a significant hurdle remains: Nepal currently has no legal framework governing non-human climbers. As a result, even if a permit is eventually granted, the earliest the expedition could realistically proceed is the fall or winter of 2026.

No specific costs or fees were mentioned in the original report, so no currency conversion is needed this time.

Source: Sputnik News, May 17, 2026
https://sputniknews.cn/20260517/1071346016.html

Trump-Xi Summit in Beijing: Limited Thaw, Lasting Rivalry

U.S. President Donald Trump departed Beijing on Friday following a high-profile summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping, with French newspapers Le Figaro and Libération both marking the meeting as a significant moment in recent U.S.-China relations — though from notably different angles.

On the surface, the summit projected optimism. Trump declared the two sides had reached “fantastic” and “dream-like” commercial deals beneficial to both nations, while Xi described the visit in more measured diplomatic terms as “historically significant,” emphasizing a “constructive and stable” bilateral relationship.

A key topic was the escalating Middle East crisis. Trump claimed Xi personally assured him that China would not supply military equipment to Iran and would help ease tensions around the Strait of Hormuz — a concession Trump framed as a major diplomatic win. However, Beijing simultaneously signaled that the conflict “should not have happened,” implying shared blame on the U.S. and Israel. China’s posture — limited cooperation without full alignment with Washington — reflects its realist approach to the region, where its own energy security depends heavily on Gulf shipping routes.

On trade, Trump announced Chinese commitments to purchase 200 large Boeing aircraft and increase imports of American oil and agricultural products. Le Figaro viewed these deals relatively favorably, highlighting their potential to ease bilateral trade tensions. Libération was more skeptical, characterizing the announcements as largely symbolic, with deep structural competition in technology, semiconductors, artificial intelligence, and rare earths remaining unresolved.

Taiwan remained the most sensitive flashpoint. Xi had previously warned against stronger U.S. support for Taiwan, while Secretary of State Rubio reaffirmed that American policy had not changed.

Both papers ultimately read the summit as a “limited de-escalation” rather than genuine reconciliation — a mutual, temporary effort to stabilize relations without addressing the underlying rivalry.

Source: Radio France International, May 15, 2026
https://rfi.my/Chde

CNA: Apple Started Price War in Chinese Mobile Phone Market

Primary Taiwanese news agency Central News Agency (CNA) recently reported that, amid soaring global memory prices and a declining mobile phone market in China this year due to price hikes by several manufacturers, Apple China just bucked the trend by lowering prices on its iPhone 17 series, reducing all models by RMB 1,000 (approximately US$147). Huawei quickly followed suit, lowering prices on its high-end phones. This move puts even greater pressure on other brands.

According to International Data Corporation (IDC), smartphone shipments in China reached 69.01 million units in the first quarter of this year, a year-over-year decrease of 3.3 percent. Huawei and Apple have not raised prices this year, while other Chinese brands have successively raised prices to reflect the higher cost of memory chips.

Memory chip prices have surged dramatically this year. According to Counterpoint Research, prices jumped 50 percent to 55 percent in the first quarter compared to the previous quarter. The increase is expected to rise further by 80 percent to 85 percent in the second quarter.

Source: CNA, May 16, 2026
https://www.cna.com.tw/news/acn/202605160158.aspx

Russia and North Korea Reportedly Plan Five-Year Military Cooperation Framework

Russia and North Korea are reportedly preparing a rare five-year military cooperation plan that could significantly accelerate Pyongyang’s military modernization in areas such as conventional weapons, satellites, nuclear-powered submarines, and next-generation missile systems. According to reporting cited by Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post, based on Russia’s TASS, Russian Defense Minister Andrey Belousov stated during an April 26 meeting in Pyongyang with Kim Jong Un that Moscow is prepared to sign a long-term military cooperation plan covering 2027 to 2031. He described bilateral ties as having reached an “unprecedentedly high level.”

Analysts note that Russia rarely establishes medium- to long-term military cooperation frameworks with foreign countries, typically reserving such arrangements for key strategic partners such as Belarus and India. This has led to assessments that North Korea may be entering a higher tier within Russia’s strategic framework. The reported initiative follows North Korea’s involvement in the Russia–Ukraine war since 2024, with estimation that Pyongyang has deployed 15,000 troops in support of Russian operations.

Experts cited in the report indicate that Russia could assist North Korea in enhancing capabilities in nuclear submarine technology, satellite systems, drone and missile production, as well as joint artillery and ammunition manufacturing. Some analysts also suggest that deepening Russia–North Korea military ties could raise concerns in Beijing, as closer alignment between Moscow and Pyongyang may reduce China’s influence over developments on the Korean Peninsula.

Source: Aboluo, May 11, 2026
https://www.aboluowang.com/2026/0511/2382326.html

China’s Foreign Ministry: China Willing to Work with Russia to Promote a More Just and Equitable Global Governance System

Xinhua News Agency reported that at a regular press briefing on May 11, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun responded to remarks by Vladimir Putin following the May 9 Victory Day celebrations. Putin had stated that Russia–China strategic coordination has become a key pillar in preventing conflict and maintaining global strategic stability.

Guo said that China and Russia are comprehensive strategic partners of coordination in the new era. He noted that, in recent years, under the strategic guidance of Xi Jinping and Putin, bilateral relations have maintained a high level of development and contributed stability to an increasingly uncertain global environment.

He added: “China is willing to work with Russia to continue to uphold the spirit of permanent good-neighborliness and friendship, comprehensive strategic coordination, and mutually beneficial and win-win cooperation, continuously strengthen cooperation in various fields, and promote the building of a more just and equitable global governance system.”

Source: Xinhua, May 11, 2026
https://www.xinhuanet.com/20260511/3d3844f7f0d14190bf7fd06a9a23eb35/c.html

Sanctioned Chinese Satellite Firm Defiantly Posts Job Ads, Mocks U.S. “Surprise”

A Chinese satellite imagery company based in Hangzhou has responded to U.S. government sanctions with a bold recruitment drive and a thinly veiled mockery of Washington’s actions, calling the designation an unexpected “surprise.”

The company, MizarVision, was among four entities added to a U.S. sanctions list on May 8. American authorities alleged that the firms had supplied satellite imagery of U.S. facilities in the Middle East to Iran, posing a threat to the safety of American personnel and those of partner nations.

According to reports, the U.S. State Department stated that MizarVision had published open-source imagery of U.S. military activity during what was designated “Operation Epic Fury” — a joint U.S.-Israeli military operation against Iran launched in late February of this year.

Just two days after the sanctions were announced, MizarVision posted a recruitment notice on Chinese social media Weibo on May 10. The announcement declared that the more complex the external environment, the more focused the company would be on building solid technology and robust products. It concluded with a pointed aside: “External forces occasionally send us some ‘surprises,’ but we’ve always been the kind of people who smile, take it in stride, and keep pushing forward” — a clear dig at the U.S. sanctions.

The company is looking to hire AI algorithm and multimodal fusion engineers, as well as industry application development engineers, among other roles.

Founded in 2021, MizarVision specializes in global multimodal sensor data fusion and geospatial intelligence. During the U.S.-Israeli military operation against Iran, the company repeatedly posted data and imagery on Weibo tracking U.S. military movements in the Middle East, including the locations of major naval assets such as the aircraft carriers USS Lincoln and USS Gerald R. Ford.

Source: Central News Agency (Taiwan), May 13, 2026
https://www.cna.com.tw/news/acn/202605130302.aspx