Ma Xingrui’s Downfall Sparks Speculation Over CCP Internal Power Struggles
Ma Xingrui (马兴瑞), a member of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Politburo and former Party Secretary of Xinjiang, was officially announced to have fallen from power on April 3 after being absent from public view for eight months.
Ma, 66, is originally from Yuncheng, Shandong Province, and is reported to have close ties to Xi Jinping’s wife, Peng Liyuan, as they are both from Shandong. After being removed from his post as Xinjiang Party Secretary in July last year, he was reassigned as deputy head of the Central Rural Work Leading Group, a position he held until his dismissal.
His career was marked by cross-regional and cross-sector experience: he rose as a technocrat in China’s aerospace sector before entering local politics in Guangdong, where he served as head of the provincial Political and Legal Affairs Commission, Party Secretary of Shenzhen, and Governor of Guangdong. He was later transferred to Xinjiang and promoted to the CCP Politburo at the 20th Party Congress.
Some overseas commentators suggest that Ma’s downfall points to internal power struggles within the CCP leadership and may indicate a weakened Xi Jinping as he has to cut an associate loyal to him (and his wife).
Independent political commentator Cai Shenkun offered another perspective in an interview with New Tang Dynasty TV (NTDTV) on April 3, stating that while the case appears to involve corruption, it may have exposed a complex and concealed network of relationships—something highly sensitive within the CCP system. He alleged that Ma’s wife, Rong Li, provided Hong Kong insurance policies worth millions to tens of millions of yuan to the spouses and children of senior officials. These exchanges, framed as personal favors rather than bribery, reportedly involved a wide network of individuals and could contribute to form political alliances or even foster factionalism. Xi would view it as a potential threat to his authority and will not tolerate it.
Source: Epoch Times, April 4, 2026
https://www.epochtimes.com/gb/26/4/4/n14734648.htm
China Faces Rising Social Security Dropout Rates
Recent online analyses of social security data from several Chinese cities—including Lishui, Baiyin, Xuancheng, Tongling, Foshan, and Pu’er—suggest varying levels of contribution gaps between eligible contributors and actual payments. Estimates indicate that the highest non-payment rate was in Lishui, Zhejiang Province, at about 55.2 percent, followed by Baiyin, Gansu Province (41.2 percent) and Xuancheng, Anhui Province (30.2 percent), with lower rates in other cities. These calculations, based on publicly available data, have circulated online and sparked discussion.
A separate circulating estimate suggests that by the first quarter of 2025, approximately 42 million people nationwide may have stopped contributing to urban employee pension schemes, representing about 17.8 percent of participants. The trend appears more pronounced among individuals aged 25 to 35, with some observers attributing it to uncertainty about future returns from the pension system.
Under China’s social security system, individuals are generally required to continue contributions when unemployed or self-employed. However, some individuals report prioritizing immediate living expenses over long-term pension payments, particularly amid income volatility and economic uncertainty.
Source: Radio Free Asia, March 31, 2026
https://www.rfa.org/mandarin/shehui/2026/03/31/china-economy-social-security-pension-insurance/
India’s New Certification Rules Block Chinese Surveillance Equipment
Reports from Indian media indicate that India will implement a “soft ban” on Chinese surveillance equipment starting April 1. Under the new rules, all surveillance products sold in India must pass security certification under the STQC (Standardization Testing and Quality Certification) framework. Industry sources say devices using Chinese chipsets are unlikely to receive approval, effectively freezing sales of major Chinese brands such as Hikvision and Dahua, which have long held a significant share of the Indian market.
Rather than issuing a direct ban, India is using technical regulations to restrict market access. The new requirements mandate vulnerability testing and disclosure of key components, particularly the country of origin of system-on-chip (SoC) components. According to industry reports, authorities are effectively denying certification to products that rely on Chinese chips. Since leading Chinese brands depend heavily on such supply chains, the policy cuts off their ability to comply with the new standards.
The rules were introduced in April 2024 with a two-year transition period, Chinese companies have tried but been unable to obtain certification. As the April 1 deadline approaches, uncertified products will lose market access. The policy has already begun reshaping the market: Chinese brands, which previously accounted for roughly one-third of market share, are seeing a sharp decline, while Indian manufacturers—using non-Chinese components and localized systems—are rapidly expanding their presence. While the government frames the move as a cybersecurity measure, industry observers widely view it as a form of industrial protection under the “Make in India” initiative.
Source: Net Ease, March 31, 2026
https://www.163.com/dy/article/KPA33EMI05563S5U.html
China’s Ministry of State Security Warns Officials: “The Dining Table Is Not a Safe Zone”
China’s Ministry of State Security (MSS) has issued a public warning through its official WeChat account, cautioning government officials with access to classified information about the espionage risks lurking at social dinners. The statement signals a continued push by Beijing to tighten internal security among personnel handling sensitive state matters.
According to the MSS, foreign intelligence operatives may use the guise of friendly gatherings, consultations, or business investment meetings to host banquets, using the relaxed atmosphere to gradually extract classified information from unsuspecting officials. By building rapport over food and drink, spies can subtly probe for details about sensitive and classified projects.
The ministry stressed that “the dining table is not a vacuum zone,” and that those in classified positions must remain vigilant in every word and action. It noted that some officials, when flattered or loosened by alcohol, have lowered their guard and casually disclosed state secrets in an attempt to appear important or knowledgeable.
The MSS also warned that foreign spies may attempt to lure classified personnel into bringing sensitive documents or electronic devices to such gatherings. Officials are instructed to decline any dinner invitations that could compromise their impartiality, avoid contact with individuals of unclear identity, and follow the principle of “no contact unless absolutely necessary.”
The statement reminded officials to “remember that careless words cause trouble,” and to refrain from discussing state secrets, internal work matters, undisclosed policy documents, key data, or personnel arrangements in casual settings. The MSS reaffirmed that China’s Law on Guarding State Secrets explicitly prohibits the disclosure of classified information through private social interactions or personal communications.
The warning reflects Beijing’s broader and intensifying counterintelligence campaign targeting everyday social situations as potential security vulnerabilities.
Source: Sputnik News, April 4, 2026
https://sputniknews.cn/20260404/1070605523.html
China’s Universities Rapidly Cutting Traditional Majors Amid AI and Market Pressures
Driven by the rise of artificial intelligence, shifting employment trends, and structural changes in industry, Chinese universities have been accelerating the elimination of academic programs in recent years. Traditional majors in management, languages, the arts, and select engineering and humanities disciplines have become the primary targets for cuts.
Shanghai University of Electric Power recently reviewed a restructuring plan proposing to add three new programs — resource recycling science, smart grid information engineering, and energy economics — while discontinuing enrollment in environmental engineering, optoelectronic information science, and information and computational science, and fully eliminating its public administration department.
The trend is widespread. Zhejiang University of Finance and Economics halted enrollment in eight programs in 2025, including urban management, Japanese, and logistics management, while scrapping its public administration and digital media arts departments entirely. Hubei University of Arts and Science similarly announced plans to eliminate several programs including logistics engineering and automotive service engineering.
Statistics cited in the report show that between 2020 and 2024, the five most frequently eliminated majors nationwide were information management and information systems (160 programs cut), public administration (138), information and computational science (123), marketing (104), and product design (93).
Arts programs have also faced heavy cuts. At this year’s national political advisory sessions, a university party secretary made headlines by announcing the elimination of 16 undergraduate programs and tracks, including translation and photography. Jilin University suspended 19 programs, six of them in the arts. Analysts note that AI has particularly disrupted the design and arts fields.
Sichuan University has trimmed its total number of programs from 144 to 105 since 2019 — a reduction of 39 — as part of a broader national push to expand science, engineering, and medicine programs while scaling back oversaturated fields like economics, management, and the arts.
Source: Central News Agency (Taiwan), April 4, 2026
https://www.cna.com.tw/news/acn/202604040059.aspx
China Expands Digital Yuan Network to 22 Operators
China’s central bank has announced the addition of 12 new institutions to its digital yuan operating network, bringing the total number of authorized operators to 22 following the latest expansion.
The newly added institutions include China CITIC Bank, China Everbright Bank, Hua Xia Bank, China Minsheng Bank, Guangfa Bank, Shanghai Pudong Development Bank, Zheshang Bank, Bank of Ningbo, Bank of Jiangsu, Bank of Beijing, Bank of Nanjing, and Bank of Suzhou. These institutions will begin offering digital yuan services once they have completed the necessary business and technical preparations.
The expansion is closely tied to China’s broader push to promote its digital yuan pilot program, which was launched in late 2019. The pilot has since grown to cover Beijing and numerous other major cities across the country.
The People’s Bank of China stated that it will continue to expand the roster of operating institutions in an orderly manner, guided by principles of market orientation and the rule of law. The central bank emphasized its intention to further stimulate the enthusiasm and creativity of market participants, while fostering an open, inclusive, and fair competitive environment for the development of the digital yuan.
In a related international development, Russian Central Bank Governor Nabiullina noted that Russia’s digital ruble platform is technically prepared to connect with the systems of other countries, signaling potential cross-border interoperability between the two nations’ central bank digital currencies in the future.
Source: Sputnik News, April 3, 2026
https://sputniknews.cn/20260403/1070591389.html
DeepSeek Down for Over 12 Hours without Being Repaired
Shanghai-based Chinese financial news site East Money recently reported that, around 9:35 PM on March 29th, well-known Chinese AI provider DeepSeek flagged a “Major Outage”. This sudden outage persisted until the following morning without being resolved.
During this extended period of no service, social media platforms across China were quickly filled with related discussions. DeepSeek officially announced several fixes, but in reality, the entire outage lasted at least half a day before the issue was truly resolved. During this extended 12-hour downtime, netizens’ reactions shifted from initial “understanding and support” to “give me back my productivity,” and finally to “have you guys run away?”
As the capabilities of large-scale models continue to improve, system load is also increasing accordingly. Taking 1M-Tokens long contexts as an example, while supporting more complex tasks, it also significantly increases computing power consumption. Infrastructure such as optical modules, liquid cooling systems, and GPU clusters still constitute the underlying support for current AI services. With the combined pressure of high-frequency calls and long text interactions, the continuous rise in computing power costs has become an industry consensus.
Publicly available data shows that in the first quarter of 2025 alone, DeepSeek’s daily active users surged from 120 million to 200 million, an increase of nearly 70 percent. However, sources familiar with the matter revealed that during the same period, DeepSeek’s computing power increased only by 8.3 percent.
Source: East Money, March 30, 2026
https://finance.eastmoney.com/a/202603303688405329.html
China’s Commercial Rocket Tianlong-3 Launch Fails
According to a report by Singapore-based Lianhe Zaobao, the large liquid-fueled rocket Tianlong-3, developed by Chinese commercial aerospace company Space Pioneer (Tianbing Technology), failed during its launch on April 3. The rocket lifted off from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center at around 12:17 p.m., but experienced a flight anomaly that led to mission failure. The company said it would conduct a full review and implement corrective measures.
The launch had originally been scheduled for April 2 but was postponed, possibly due to weather conditions. Tianlong-3 is designed as a heavy-lift rocket capable of carrying more than 20 tons to low Earth orbit and is intended to compete with leading international launch vehicles such as SpaceX’s Falcon 9. It is also designed to deploy up to 36 satellites in a single mission.
This is not the rocket’s first setback. During a test in June 2024, Tianlong-3 accidentally lifted off and crashed, catching fire, though no casualties were reported. The latest failure underscores ongoing challenges in China’s commercial space sector as it works to develop high-capacity launch capabilities.
Source: Lianhe Zaobao, April 3, 2026
https://www.zaobao.com.sg/news/china/story20260403-8837860