At least 19 killed, dozens injured after road collapses in southern China | News

Some 30 people are being treated in hospital after they were trapped in their vehicles when the road caved in early on Wednesday morning.

At least 19 people have been killed after part of a highway collapsed in southern China’s Guangdong province.

State broadcaster CCTV reported a 17.9-metre (58.7-foot) stretch of the S12 highway between Meizhou city and Dabu county caved in at about 2:10am on Wednesday (18:10 GMT on Tuesday), trapping dozens of people in 18 vehicles.

As of 11:45am (03:45 GMT), “19 people have been confirmed dead, and 30 are receiving all-out emergency care in hospital”, CCTV reported.

It added that the lives of those in hospital were “not currently at risk” but did not go into detail on their injuries.

Social media footage shared by local news outlets showed flames and smoke rising from a deep, dark pit into which the cars appeared to have fallen.

Authorities have sent about 500 people to the site to help with the rescue operation, CCTV reported.

The cause of the collapse was not specified.

Guangdong has been hit by a series of extreme weather events in recent weeks, from heavy rain to flooding and a deadly tornado.

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Rival Palestinian groups Fatah and Hamas meet in China | News

Beijing says two sides took part in in-depth and candid dialogue on promoting Palestinian reconciliation.

Rival Palestinian groups Fatah and Hamas have met in China for talks on potential reconciliation.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing confirmed on Monday that the groups’ representatives had met recently. The respective rulers of the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip have competed for years, but the Israeli war in the besieged enclave has provoked further talks on Palestinian reconciliation.

The two groups visited China to partake in an in-depth and candid dialogue on the prospect, Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian said. He did not specify when the meeting took place.

“The two sides fully expressed their political will to achieve reconciliation through dialogue and consultation, discussed many specific issues and made positive progress,” he added.

“China and Palestine share a traditional friendship. We support Palestinian factions in achieving reconciliation and increasing solidarity through dialogue and consultation. We will continue to work actively towards that end.”

Representatives from the two groups, as well as other political factions, met in Moscow earlier this year to discuss the potential formation of a unified Palestinian government.

After defeating Fatah in 2007, Hamas has been the de facto ruler in Gaza since 2007, when it defeated President Mahmoud Abbas’s long-dominant party in parliamentary elections and pushed its rival out of the enclave for its refusal to recognise the result of the vote.

The two groups have ruled the occupied Palestinian territory – the Gaza Strip and the West Bank – ever since.

China has historically been sympathetic to the Palestinian cause and supportive of a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict.

Beijing has been calling for an immediate ceasefire since the start of the Israel-Gaza war in October, when a Hamas offensive resulted in the deaths of about 1,139 people, according to Israeli tallies.

Hamas and other armed groups also took about 250 captives during the offensive, with dozens of people still being held in Gaza.

In response, Israeli forces have killed at least 34,535 people in the Gaza Strip, mostly women and children, according to the Ministry of Health in the coastal enclave.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has called for an “international peace conference” to end the war.

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Philippines and China in new confrontation at Scarborough Shoal | South China Sea News

Manila says its coastguard ship was damaged after being hit by water cannon; Beijing says it ‘expelled’ Philippine boats.

The Philippines has accused China of “dangerous maneuvers and obstruction” and reinstalling a barrier at the disputed Scarborough Shoal, which Beijing blockaded and seized from Manila in 2012.

Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) spokesman Jay Tarriela said two Philippine vessels on maritime patrol encountered four China Coast Guard (CCG) ships and six vessels from its maritime militia in the area on Monday morning.

One of the ships was struck by water cannon from one of the CCG ships about 12 nautical miles (22km) from the shoal, while the other – a PCG vessel – was hit by water cannon fired from two of the CCG ships when it was about 1,000 yards (914 metres) away from the shoal, which the Philippines calls Bajo de Masinloc.

Writing on social media platform X, Tarriela said the ship’s railing and canopy were damaged.

A video accompanying the post showed water cannon hitting the port side of the boat as well as the starboard side closer to the bow.

“This damage serves as evidence of the forceful water pressure used by the China Coast Guard in their harassment of the Philippine vessels,” he wrote.

On Tuesday, Beijing claimed it had “expelled” Philippine vessels from the area, a traditional fishing ground that also provides shelter in stormy weather.

Tarriela said China had also reinstalled a barrier about 415 yards (380 metres) long across the entrance to the shoal, which lies about 220km (137 miles) off the coast of the Philippines and within its exclusive economic zone (EEZ). Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), an EEZ extends some 200 nautical miles (about 370km) from a country’s coast.

China first installed the barrier last year, but the Philippines removed it in September saying it breached international maritime law.

The Philippines and China have been involved in multiple incidents in and around the disputed reef in the South China Sea, which Beijing claims almost in its entirety under a nine-dash line that an international tribunal ruled in 2016 to be without merit.

Manila took its case to the tribunal after China seized Scarborough Shoal more than a decade ago.

China has ignored the ruling and continued to press its claim.

Brunei, Malaysia and Vietnam also claim the parts of the sea around their coasts.



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On ‘China’s Instagram’, women find a space to discuss the routine and taboo | Social Media

Taipei, Taiwan – Alice Guo sparked a flurry of interest on Xiaohongshu, the Chinese social media and e-commerce platform, when she decided one day in 2021 to share advice on preparing for a job interview.

Chinese-born Guo was living in Toronto at the time, grounded by the COVID-19 pandemic after years of bouncing between jobs in Vancouver, Hong Kong, New York, Los Angeles and Shanghai.

“I started to do a few posts and one day, I just posted about the interview process that got me into a venture capital firm,” Guo, who is in her early 30s, told Al Jazeera.

“I woke up the next day, just all of a sudden, it went from maybe like 20 followers to 500 followers overnight.”

Before long, Guo’s page, called “Ali is Working Hard” in Chinese, built up an audience of about 45,000 followers, drawn by a mix of professional advice and updates on her daily life in Canada.

Guo’s page is among the countless accounts on Xiaohongshu that have tapped into a user base primarily made up of young, highly-educated women, both in major Chinese cities and in emigrant communities overseas.

Though lacking the global name recognition of Facebook, Instagram or X, Xiaohongshu has become the go-to platform for Millennial and Gen-Z Chinese women since its launch in 2013 – as just a set of humble PDF documents offering travel advice.

The platform, which has been described as China’s answer to Instagram, had 200 million monthly active users in 2022, according to self-reported data, about 70 percent of whom were women.

About 70 percent of Xiaohongshu’s users are women [Aly Song/Reuters]

While Xiaohongshu translates as “Little Red Book” in English – the same name as Mao Zedong’s famous text – the platform shares little else in common with the Chinese leader’s collection of speeches and writings.

Rather than promoting revolutionary values, the platform, which combines blog posts and short videos, exemplifies China’s post-Communist consumerist culture, which is aspirational, ambitious and globally minded.

And for women in a society where political dissent is tightly controlled and socially conservative attitudes hold sway, Xiaohongshu has become something of a sanctuary for like-minded peers to freely discuss topics of common concern.

Users share content on an expansive range of issues, from relatively uncontentious topics like work life and fashion, to semi-taboo – albeit not overtly political – topics like divorce, domestic violence, and perceptions that women who have not gotten married and had children by their early 30s are failures or undesirable.

“Those are all stereotypes, but it’s there. It’s real and it creates anxiety,” Daniela, a Xiaohongshu user who asked to be only referred to by her first name, told Al Jazeera.

“And, of course, a lot of really talented women with amazing backgrounds are facing really big career challenges,” added Daniela, who posts content related to women’s career advancement and empowerment to her more than 125,000 followers.

Despite Beijing’s heavy censorship of the Internet, discussions on contentious issues are often allowed on Xiaohongshu, especially if they focus on personal experiences rather than greater systemic issues in Chinese society.

Still, there are red lines.

One Xiaohongshu user, who asked to not be named, told Al Jazeera that posts she made about her experience of freezing her eggs were deleted, even though the Chinese government is pushing women to have more children.

Discussions about fertility treatments have been censored on Xiaohongshu even as the Chinese government is trying to encourage women to have more babies [China Photos/Getty Images]

The platform has also cracked down on some displays of conspicuous consumption, warning users to be more “empathetic” and not flaunt their wealth as it is “still out of reach for a large proportion of people”.

Users have similarly been discouraged from over-editing their photos and videos.

Part of Xiaohongshu’s appeal is that it embodies a polished, or “jinzhi,” feminine aesthetic that requires “not only money, but also cultural and educational capital” to attain, setting it apart from more male-dominated platforms like WeChat and Weibo, according to Jia Guo, a professor in gender and cultural studies at the University of Sydney.

“Jinzhi has always been a big part of Xiaohongshu,” Guo told Al Jazeera. “What is behind this jinzhi lifestyle is classed consumer culture in post-socialist China and classed distinction of taste. Not only money, but also cultural and educational capital is needed to be jinzhi. Such a middle-class urban lifestyle is popular on Xiaohongshu and it is highly gendered too – often presented by young women.”

Since it was founded more than a decade ago, Xiaohongshu has also become adroit at understanding its users, thanks to its “game changer” algorithm, said Sheng Zou, an assistant professor at Hong Kong Baptist University who researches the digital economy.

Zou said that Xiaohongshu users often cite the algorithm as being part of its allure.

“Most would agree that the algorithm is precise and effective in detecting and/or predicting their content preferences or aspects of their identity, more so than some other popular apps that they are using,” Zou told Al Jazeera.

“You can go really deep into different communities,” James Hsu, a Taiwanese-Canadian based in China who uses Xiaohongshu to promote coaching and consulting services, told Al Jazeera, explaining how a “lot of influencers actually set up group chats that you can just join by going to their profile page”.

“It feels more like an actual resource than just like pure entertainment, because you could definitely go in there to learn things like hard skills, or soft skills, like how to start a business, like how to interview for a job, and there are many, many cross-sections with that,” Hsu said.

Profit problems

Despite its loyal and growing following, Xiaohongshu has struggled until recently to make money.

In its early days, Xiaohonghsu had a strong e-commerce component, where Chinese consumers could source reliable foreign products – a boon in a country rife with fake goods and knockoffs.

The platform gradually shifted over the years towards lifestyle and educational content, and more recently, with the rise of short-form video, livestream shopping and influencer brand deals.

Olivia Plotnick, the founder of the Shanghai-based marketing agency Wai Social, said that Xiaohongshu appears to have found its niche with such deals.

“They’ve had a lot of problems trying to monetize for the past several years, and I think they’ve potentially found a good way to do it with livestreaming recently,” Plotnick told Al Jazeera.

These deals do not come cheap, as Chinese influencers can charge between three and five more times than their Western counterparts, Plotnick said.

An influencer with 10,000 followers can command $300 to $500 per post, while an influencer with upwards of 300,000 followers can command $5,000, she said.

Plotnick said such partnerships are attractive for brands as Xiaohongshu has always been strong at raising brand awareness, even if its e-commerce component lags behind retail giants like Taobao and Tmall.

Meanwhile, the platform stands apart from competitors thanks to a livestreaming style that provides a “quiet luxury” feel, she said.

The approach appears to be paying off.

Alibaba is among the major investors in Xiaohongshu [Aly Song/Reuters]

Xiaohongshu, whose top investors include Alibaba, Tencent and United States-based GGV Capital, made its first profit last year, taking in $500m on revenues of $3.7bn, the Financial Times reported in March, citing people briefed on the matter.

Xiaohongshu did not reply to a request for comment.

As it seeks to shore up its financial position, Xiaohongshu has also been trying to diversify its user base.

Despite boasting some 200 million users, its customer base is still small in comparison with platforms such as Weibo, Douyin and WeChat, which claim between 600 million and 1.2 billion-plus users.

Xiaohongshu’s drive to grow its user base includes outreach efforts to men and those living outside of China’s “tier one” and “tier two” cities, such as Beijing and Shanghai.

Xiaohongshu is also gaining traction outside mainland China, including in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Western cities with large Chinese diaspora populations, such as Toronto, where Alice Guo of “Ali is Working Hard” is based.

Guo said one-third of her audience comes from North America and she is an avid consumer of diaspora-created content herself.

“It’s like my Yelp, it’s like my Google. So if I want to find where to eat, what to eat, I look for it on Xiaohongshu. Especially in Toronto, there are tonnes of Chinese, so almost every single restaurant has a good review, and I can find some content on it,” Guo said.

“If I want to read a book and know how good it is, I go to Xiaohongshu for it. And then if I want to know about makeup, I go to Xiaohongshu.”

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Tornado kills five, causes widespread destruction in China’s Guangzhou | Weather News

The tornado struck China’s southern city at the weekend, devastating several communities.

People are cleaning up in China’s southern city of Guangzhou after a tornado struck at the weekend killing at least five people and injuring dozens more.

Aerial photos published by state media showed the scale of the devastation after the tornado tore through several communities in Guangzhou’s Baiyun district on Saturday afternoon during a thunderstorm.

The images showed block upon block of devastation in the hardest-hit areas with a few clusters of buildings standing amid the destruction, a truck overturned on its side and cars crushed by rubble. The sheet metal roofs on some buildings had been torn off.

The tornado emerged during a major storm that brought strong winds and hail [Douyin@Antique via AP Photo]

The extreme weather was the latest to hit China’s industrial heartland after torrential rain last week caused serious flooding and killed four people in Guangdong, China’s most populous province. The area is home to 127 million people and thousands of factories that power the country’s export sector.

At least 33 people were injured and some 141 factories damaged in Saturday’s tornado, Xinhua reported.

Such weather systems are not unusual in China.

In September, 10 people were killed after a tornado struck Suqian, Jiangsu Province, in the country’s east.

In 2021, two tornadoes struck the country in one day, killing 12, including eight in the central city of Wuhan.

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Elon Musk meets China’s No 2 official in Beijing | Technology

Telsa CEO’s unannounced visits comes as Chinese carmakers are promoting rival models at the Beijing Motor Show.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has met with China’s No 2 official on an unannounced visit to Beijing.

Musk’s meeting with Chinese Premier Li Qiang comes as Chinese carmakers are promoting their latest electric vehicles at the Beijing Motor Show taking place from April 25 to May 5.

During their meeting on Sunday, Li told Musk that he hoped the United States would engage with China on “win-win” cooperation, citing Tesla’s operations in China as a successful example of working together, Chinese state media reported.

“China’s very large-scale market will always be open to foreign-funded firms,” Li was quoted as saying.

“China will stick to its word and will continue working hard to expand market access and strengthen service guarantees.”

Musk said in a post on X that he was “honoured” to meet the No 2 official.

“We have known each other now for many years, since early Shanghai days,” Musk said.

Musk’s visit was not announced in advance and it is unclear whether his itinerary might include a visit to the Beijing auto show, where Chinese carmakers are showing off electric vehicles that compete directly with Tesla’s models.

The billionaire entrepreneur’s trip comes just over a week after he cancelled a scheduled visit to India to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi due to “very heavy Tesla obligations”.

Tesla operates its biggest manufacturing plant outside the US in Shanghai, where about half of its vehicles are produced.

The electric car maker has been struggling with sluggish sales, in part due to fierce competition from Chinese brands.

Tesla’s vehicle deliveries fell by 8.5 percent in the first quarter, contributing to a 40 percent slide in its stock price since July.

The company last week reported profits of $1.1bn in the first quarter, down from $2.51bn a year ago.

Musk earlier this month told staff in a memo that the company would lay off more than 10 percent of its global workforce so that it would be “lean, innovative and hungry for the next growth phase cycle”.

Chinese auto giant BYD dethroned Tesla as the world’s biggest electric vehicle maker in the last three months of 2023, although the Austin, Texas-based company reclaimed the title in the first quarter of this year.

Musk has made multiple trips to China in recent years, wrapping up his most recent visit in June last year.

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‘Create harmony’: Q&A with China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi | Israel War on Gaza News

In an interview with Al Jazeera, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi stressed the need to correct what he described as the historical injustice suffered by the Palestinian people.

Underlining that the world needs to take urgent action, he added that China would work with the international community on efforts to implement a ceasefire and secure access to aid.

He also categorically rejected any forced displacement or collective punishment of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, stressing that peace would be only achieved by attaining justice for the Palestinians and resolving the security concerns of all parties.

Below is the interview with Wang Yi. It has been edited for length and clarity.

Al Jazeera: You have dedicated a significant portion of your last news conference to speak about the war in Gaza. What are the steps that China can take to exert pressure to reach an immediate ceasefire?

Wang Yi: The continuation of the conflict in Gaza has led to a humanitarian catastrophe that should not have happened. Over about half a year, the conflict has led to killing and wounding more than 100,000 people as well as the displacement of more than a million.

The international community must act immediately. Achieving a ceasefire and ending hostilities as soon as possible is our top priority at the moment.

Thanks to the joint efforts exerted by all parties, the Security Council has recently adopted the first resolution calling for a ceasefire since the outbreak of the conflict. This is a binding resolution that should be implemented effectively to achieve an immediate, permanent and unconditional ceasefire.

Second, it is necessary to guarantee the arrival of humanitarian aid in a sustainable way and without any obstacles – this is a moral responsibility that cannot be delayed.

Since the beginning of the conflict, China has categorically opposed the forced displacement of Palestinian civilians and the collective punishment of the population of Gaza. We have supported the prompt establishment of a humanitarian relief mechanism and have consistently provided aid to the Gaza Strip.

China will continue collaborating with the international community to mobilise efforts to implement the ceasefire resolution, ensuring the protection of civilians and guaranteeing the prompt, safe, and sustainable delivery of humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza without obstacles.

Third, it is necessary to prevent the conflict from expanding to stop the situation from getting out of control. The recent escalation between Iran and Israel is the most recent manifestation of the potential for the Gaza conflict to expand.

China calls on the concerned parties to maintain restraint to avoid further escalation. We will continue our efforts to support peace and stability in the Middle East and to contribute to de-escalation.

Fourth, it is necessary to correct the historical injustice that the Palestinian people have suffered for a long time. This will represent a radical solution to the conflict in Gaza. The ordeal in Gaza has proven once again that the longstanding denial of the Palestinian people of their legitimate national rights is at the root of the Middle East conflict.

We cannot end the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, uproot the soil that feeds extremist and hateful ideas, and establish permanent peace in the region without bringing about justice for the Palestinian people, really implementing the two-state solution and politically addressing the legitimate security concerns of all parties.

China is keen on continuing its efforts with the international community to enhance cooperation and to continue its firm support of the just cause of the Palestinian people to restore their legitimate national rights.

We will continue our firm support of reconciliation among Palestinian factions through dialogue and support Palestine in its efforts to receive full membership in the United Nations and to establish an independent state where “Palestine is ruled by Palestinians”.

We call for the immediate convening of an international peace conference with wider participation and more credibility and effectiveness as well as drawing up a schedule and a roadmap for the implementation of the two-state solution to achieve a just, comprehensive and permanent solution to the Palestinian cause as soon as possible.

Such a solution would lead to peaceful co-existence between Palestine and Israel where the Arab and Jewish nations can live in harmony.

Al Jazeera: How do you see the escalation in the Red Sea, especially as the Chinese Ministry of Defence has announced that it will send naval ships with officers and special forces units on board to escort commercial ships?

Wang: The Red Sea is an international waterway that is important for transport. Maintaining peace, security and safety in the Red Sea contributes to the smooth functioning of international industry and supply chains, which is in the interest of the countries of the region and the international community.

China has expressed its deep concern about the continuous and longstanding escalation of the situation in the Red Sea and its negative repercussions for countries of the region, especially those bordering the Red Sea. China has adopted a very clear position on the Red Sea situation that can be summarised as follows:

First, operations that target civilian ships passing through the Red Sea must be stopped. There is no justification for the targeting of civilians.

Second, the international community must cooperate to ensure the safety of navigation in the Red Sea in accordance with the law. All parties must play a role in de-escalating tensions.

Third, the root cause of the escalation of the situation in the Red Sea is the conflict in Gaza. It is, therefore, necessary to achieve a ceasefire and stop the fighting in Gaza as soon as possible to avoid an expansion of the conflict.

Fourth, the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the countries bordering the Red Sea, including Yemen, must be preserved.

Since the escalation of the situation in the Red Sea, China has maintained contact with all parties and made efforts to calm the tensions. China respects the legitimate demands of countries in the region and is keen on enhancing coordination with them. China continues to work with the international community to play a constructive role in restoring peace, security and safety in the Red Sea as soon as possible.

I should clarify that the escort missions conducted by the Chinese Navy have no connection to the current situation in the Red Sea, they are part of the escort missions in the Gulf of Aden and off the coast of Somalia that were authorised by the Security Council.

Since 2008, the Chinese navy has sent 45 consecutive fleets of more than 150 ships that have successfully completed their missions of expelling pirates and providing humanitarian relief, contributing positively to the preservation of the safety of navigation in the concerned waters.

China will continue to implement the international safety initiative and exert sustained efforts to build a common future for humanity with concrete steps.

Al Jazeera: What is the Chinese position regarding the Ukrainian crisis?

Wang: The Chinese position towards the Ukrainian crisis is constant, clear and transparent: China has nothing to do with this conflict, it did not create the crisis, yet it did not watch from afar.

China has been trying, over the past two years, to reach a ceasefire and end the fighting. President Xi Jinping has had deep personal communications with country leaders, including the leaders of Russia and Ukraine, insisting that peace negotiations are the only way out of the crisis and urging all parties to work together to provide favourable conditions to solve the crisis politically through dialogue.

China has also issued a position paper, sent a special representative to the concerned countries several times, undertook shuttle mediation, and sent messages clarifying China’s position and encouraging all parties to find common grounds, overcome differences and reach an agreement.

At the moment, there are still risks of escalation of the crisis, which is why the international community should enhance collaboration and mobilise its efforts to achieve peace and take concrete steps towards calming the situation. We must always insist on a political solution.

No conflict or war ends on the battlefield, but rather at the negotiating table. China supports the convening at an appropriate time of an international peace conference that is acceptable to the Russian and Ukrainian sides with the participation of all parties equally. There, peace plans can be discussed, fairly, to achieve a ceasefire as soon as possible.

We must always insist on an objective and just position, there is no magic wand to solve the crisis. All parties should start with themselves.

They should create favourable conditions to end the fighting and launch peace negotiations after building mutual trust. We must always insist on treating the crisis by addressing its symptoms and causes simultaneously.

Resolving the root of the crisis requires deeper thinking about the security issue. Insisting on unilateral, absolute security and arbitrarily restricting other countries’ security will ultimately lead to imbalance and conflict in the region.

China is willing to work with the international community to uphold the vision that the security of nations is indivisible and support the notion of mutual, integrated, cooperative and sustainable security. The reasonable security concerns of all parties should be respected and a regional security arrangement that is balanced, effective and sustainable should be established.

Al Jazeera: How do you assess the situation in the Taiwan Strait given the close relationship between Taiwan and the US and the continuation of US arms sales to Taiwan?

Wang: Taiwan has always been an indivisible part of China. The Cairo Declaration, which was issued by the governments of China, the United States and the United Kingdom in 1943, states clearly that Taiwan, which Japan had stolen, should be returned to China.

Article 8 of the 1945 Potsdam Declaration which aimed to end World War II stipulates that “the terms of the Cairo Declaration shall be carried out”. UN resolution No. 2758 confirms the One China principle.

These binding international resolutions constitute part of the post-war international order. They have solidified the legal and historical basis of the fact that Taiwan is an indivisible part of China and therefore the Taiwan question is purely an internal Chinese issue.

How it is to be unified with the motherland is an internal issue of the Chinese people on both sides of the Strait. We will exert our utmost efforts with the best intentions to achieve reunification peacefully, but at the same time, our red line is very clear: Not allowing anyone to separate Taiwan from China in any shape or form.

The current situation in the Taiwan Strait is generally stable, but there are dangerous challenges, the biggest of which comes from the separatist activities of the Taiwan independence movement and the acts of interference and sabotage of external powers.

The Taiwan independence movement is the troublemaker and disrupter of stability, the independence of Taiwan must be rejected firmly to maintain peace in the Taiwan Strait. Some countries repeat calls for maintaining peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait, while secretly and rapidly providing separatists with weapons and equipment.

These actions increase the risk of conflict and confrontation and they pose a serious threat to peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait and the region. China will not stand idly by and ignore these actions. No one can underestimate the firm resolve and will, as well as the tremendous ability of the Chinese people to defend the nation’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.

President Xi Jinping affirmed that the full reunification of the motherland meets the aspirations of the people and represents an inevitability of history that no power can stop. China will definitely achieve complete reunification and Taiwan will certainly return to the bosom of the homeland.

We are certain that the international community, including countries in the Middle East, will continue to adhere to the One China principle and will support the just cause of the Chinese people to achieve reunification and combat separatist activities calling for the independence of Taiwan.

Al Jazeera: How does China see the US presidential elections and the future of Sino-American relations?

Sino-American relations concern the well-being of the two peoples and the future of humanity and the world

Last November, President Xi Jinping held a successful meeting with his American counterpart, Joe Biden, in San Francisco at the latter’s invitation.

The two reached a future-oriented understanding and the Chinese position on improving Sino-American relations is sincere. Having predictable, sustainable, healthy, and stable relations between China and the United States represents a blessing for the two peoples and the peoples of the world.

At the same time, we have seen that American misunderstanding of China still exists, and its wrong policy of containing China is still ongoing.

The US has recently continued to woo its so-called allies to inflame the situation in regional waters, accelerate the formation of the “China containment system”, tighten unilateral sanctions, and impose a technological blockade on China.

The US shouldn’t always look at the world from a Cold War perspective or a zero-sum mentality, and must not always say one thing and do another. The peoples of the world and the peoples of the Middle East are aware of who stands on the right side of history and justice.

What China brings to this world is cooperation, development, stability and mutual gain. There is no force capable of obstructing China’s development and renaissance because of its huge internal dynamism and inevitable historical logic.

The US presidential elections are internal affairs, China has not and will not interfere in the internal affairs of other countries.

The Chinese and American peoples must continue communication and cooperation. China and the United States, as two major countries, must find the right way to deal with each other, regardless of who wins the presidential elections.

The three principles proposed by President Xi Jinping, namely: mutual respect, peaceful coexistence, cooperation and mutual gain are the basis on which we rely in Sino-American relations.

In the recent phone call between President Xi Jinping and President Joe Biden, at the latter’s request, President Xi Jinping once again indicated that two countries as important as China and the United States shouldn’t sever communication and dealings between them and certainly should not go into conflict and confrontation.

They must create harmony and give priority to stability and maintaining credibility.

Sino-American relations will not return to what they were, but they must and can certainly develop towards a better future.

China is ready to work with the US to achieve cooperation based on mutual gain, serving the interests of the world, and effectively assuming its international responsibilities.

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US TikTok’s future in jeopardy as Biden signs ban bill: What’s next? | Explainer News

The US Senate has overwhelmingly approved a bill that would ban TikTok unless its Chinese owner, ByteDance, divests from the video-sharing app in nine months amid concerns that the company poses a national security threat.

TikTok has denied the Chinese government could access users’ data and has dubbed the bill, which was passed by a 79-18 vote, as unconstitutional. The bill was attached to a measure to provide a $95bn emergency aid package for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan.

President Joe Biden has said he will sign it into law on Wednesday.

What do we know about the TikTok ban, and what happens next?

Why the ban on TikTok? How will it impact TikTok?

ByteDance bought the popular karaoke app Musical.ly and relaunched it as TikTok in 2017. It is one of the fastest-growing apps in the US, and has 150 monthly subscribers, more than half of them ages 18-34. In 2023, the platform boasted more than one billion monthly active users globally and a revenue of $120bn, of which $16bn comes from the US.

The app’s growing influence has drawn the attention of spy agencies and US lawmakers who have expressed fear that TikTok might share users’ data with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), a claim the company has denied. The data, some say, could also be used by China to spread misinformation that could harm the democratic process.

“For years, we’ve allowed the Chinese Communist Party to control one of the most popular apps in America. That was dangerously shortsighted,” said Senator Marco Rubio, the top Republican on the US Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. “A new law is going to require its Chinese owner to sell the app. This is a good move for America.”

In December 2022, the US Congress banned the use of the app on any federally issued device or network. Several other countries have followed suit, imposing curbs on the use of TikTok in government offices. India banned the app in 2020, when there were 200 million subscribers in the wake of border skirmishes.

The widely popular app has also been accused of pushing pro-Palestine content – a claim the company has denied. TikTok’s young users (ages 16-24) in the US, who form 60 percent of its total users, sympathise with Palestine, the company said last November.

TikTok’s executives have been grilled during multiple congressional hearings. In March of last year, the company’s Chief Executive Shou Zi Chew assured lawmakers that TikTok had taken steps to safeguard user data.

The company has also invested $1.5bn to store TikTok in the US, and Oracle, a US-based multinational corporation, would provide the cloud and storage services for the project. It has also taken measures to separate its US operations from its Chinese parent company.

China’s Foreign Ministry has said that the US allegations were not backed by evidence and the ban would undermine fair competition. Several Chinese tech firms have been blacklisted by the US amid a war over the internet and technology between Washington and Beijing.

Last week, Apple said Beijing had ordered it to remove Meta Platforms’ WhatsApp and Threads from its App Store in China over Chinese national security concerns.

If ByteDance refuses to divest the company, the app would lose access to app stores, web hosting and network providers.

Until the nine-month deadline, TikTok will remain active in the US. The US president can grant an extension of the deadline for 90 more days if the company is seen as progressing on the terms set in the law.

What can TikTok do now?

While TikTok is able to operate in the US, for now, the company executives and attorneys will have to fight on legal grounds.

“This unconstitutional law is a TikTok ban, and we will challenge it in court. We believe the facts and the law are clearly on our side, and we will ultimately prevail. The fact is, we have invested billions of dollars to keep US data safe and our platform free from outside influence and manipulation,” TikTok said in a statement on Wednesday.

TikTok is set to challenge the bill on First Amendment grounds and TikTok users are also expected to again take legal action. A US judge in Montana in November blocked a state ban on TikTok, citing free speech grounds. The US Constitution guarantees the right to free speech under the First Amendment.

The American Civil Liberties Union said banning or requiring divestiture of TikTok would “set an alarming global precedent for excessive government control over social media platforms … If the United States now bans a foreign-owned platform, that will invite copycat measures by other countries.”

Senator Ron Wyden, a Democrat, said he was concerned the bill “provides broad authority that could be abused by a future administration to violate Americans’ First Amendment rights”.

In 2020, former US President Donald Trump attempted to legislate his own TikTok ban, but he has somewhat done a reversal on banning the popular social media app while campaigning for another term in office. On Monday, Trump posted on his Truth Social platform: “Just so everyone knows, especially the young people, Crooked Joe Biden is responsible for banning TikTok.”



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China ‘gravely concerned’ over EU raids on security equipment company | Economy

Diplomatic mission condemns raids on Dutch and Polish offices of Chinese company Nuctech.

China has expressed “grave concern” over raids carried out by European officials on a Chinese company that manufactures security equipment.

EU competition regulators on Tuesday raided offices of Chinese company Nuctech in the Netherlands and Poland as part of a probe into unfair state subsidies.

In a statement on Thursday, China’s mission to the EU said it deplored the “unannounced inspections” and criticised Brussels for not raising its concerns with the company or Chinese authorities directly.

“The Chinese side believes that the EU’s unannounced inspections interferes with the order of fair competition in the market, clearly jeopardises the positive atmosphere of trade and economic cooperation between China and the EU, and strikes a strong shock to the confidence and sense of security of all foreign companies in the EU, including Chinese ones,” the mission said.

“It also highlights the further deterioration of the EU’s business environment and sends an extremely negative signal to all foreign companies operating in the EU. Protectionism cannot bring prosperity, and suppressing others will only weaken competitiveness of one’s own.”

The EU should “abide by its commitment to open market and the principles of a level playing field, and stop using all kinds of excuses to unreasonably suppress and impede the Chinese companies,” the mission added, expressing hopes for cooperation and exchanges in an “open, fair and equitable way”.

The remarks come after the China Chamber of Commerce to the EU (CCCEU) on Wednesday expressed “serious concern” over the raids.

“The European side manifested its intention to weaponise the Foreign Subsidies Regulation as a tool to suppress lawfully operating Chinese companies in Europe,” the chamber said in a statement.

“The CCCEU expresses its strong dissatisfaction with the European side’s raids on companies set up by Chinese enterprise in the EU without prior notice and without solid evidence.”

Nuctech, which manufactures scanning equipment for airports and border crossings, has said it is cooperating with authorities and committed to “defending its reputation of a fully independent and self-supporting economic operator”.

The European Commission said it carried out the raids as a “preliminary investigative step” after receiving indications that an unnamed company may have received foreign subsidies that could distort the market.

The raids were the first such action taken by the commission since it adopted the Foreign Subsidies Regulation in July last year amid concerns about market distortions caused by foreign subsidies.



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‘Absolute power’: After pro-China Maldives leader’s big win, what’s next? | Elections News

Very few expected Maldivian President Mohamed Muizzu’s party to win Sunday’s parliamentary elections, that too by a landslide. For this was a man whose triumph in the presidential poll last year came by a fluke.

Back then, the 45-year-old mayor of the capital Male entered the presidential race only at the eleventh hour as a proxy candidate, after the country’s Supreme Court barred the leader of the opposition, former President Abdulla Yameen, from contesting the vote over a bribery conviction.

On campaign banners and posters, it was Yameen’s face that featured most prominently. And at campaign rallies, the seat at the front and centre stood empty, reserved for the jailed leader.

Muizzu wooed voters on promises to free Yameen and see through the politician’s “India out” campaign to end what they called New Delhi’s outsized influence in Maldives – an archipelago home to 500,000 people in the Indian Ocean – and expel Indian military personnel stationed there.

But soon after his election win in October, Muizzu and Yameen – who was moved to house arrest – fell out, prompting the president-elect to set up a separate party, the People’s National Congress (PNC). Amid the bitter split, it looked as if Muizzu would face an uphill battle to obtain enough support in Sunday’s parliamentary polls, especially as the opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) – which controls a supermajority in the outgoing parliament or Majlis – still appeared strong.

But Muizzu’s PNC swept the vote last weekend.

The party won 66 seats, while its allies took nine, giving the president the backing of 75 legislators in the 93-member house – enough to change the constitution if he wishes to. The MDP meanwhile won only 12 seats. And Yameen’s party won none.

Muizzu now has “absolute power”, said Ibrahim Ismail, a former legislator and founder of the Mandhu College in Male. “This level of majority is not a good thing. You can expect no checks or balances on the president’s power.”

Ismail, who played a key role in drafting the constitution of Maldives, said he feared a return to “tyranny”, nearly two decades after Maldivians ushered in a multiparty democracy. “The PNC is really not a proper political party. It is not coming from the ground up,” he said. “It was formed during Muizzu’s rise to power and there is no one, no structures in the party to hold him to account. Basically, every member who has been elected to parliament on the PNC ticket is at the mercy of the president.”

This win also gives the president “almost total power over the judiciary”, Ismail said. “It is likely that there will be changes to the courts, quite possibly the replacement of the entire bench of the Supreme Court. And if the judges want to retain their position, they may be forced to compromise their judicial independence, paving the way for tyranny,” he said.

Equally concerning, Ismail said, is that the government “can virtually rewrite the constitution”, potentially weakening provisions ensuring fair elections and imposing term limits on elected officials.

India ties at all-time low

The signs are already worrying.

Although Muizzu promised not to go after his opponents during the presidential campaign, one of the first actions his government carried out in power was to cut off online access to several critical news and satire websites.

The government did backtrack after a public outcry, however.

“I foresee serious challenges for Maldives’s democracy,” said Ahmed “Hiriga” Zahir, managing editor of the Dhauru newspaper. “There are concerns over transparency. The Muizzu government has failed to disclose expenses on the presidential palace as well as the number of political appointments it has made,” the veteran journalist said. “And there has been virtually no interaction between the government and the media six months into his term. If this goes on, and if there is no sizeable opposition, it will be tough for our democracy.”

Still, Zahir said, the Maldivian public was likely to turn on Muizzu in the next election if he fails to deliver on campaign pledges.

The president – a civil engineer by profession – campaigned on promises to boost infrastructure development, of which the most spectacular was establishing a brand new population centre on an island reclaimed from the sea connected to the capital by an underwater tunnel.

It is unclear, however, if he can deliver on these megaprojects.

The tourism-dependent island nation’s debt stands at about 113 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP), more than half of it owed to China and India, amounting to about $1.6bn each. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) in February warned that the country was at risk of high debt distress and called for “urgent policy adjustments”, including reforms to healthcare and subsidy programmes as well as bloated state-owned enterprises.

“The situation is pretty challenging,” said Mark Bohlund, senior analyst at REDD, a London-based financial intelligence provider. “I think the Maldives will need external support in some form. Whether it be from India, China or the Middle East.”

But so far, very little help has been forthcoming.

Ties with India – which often steps in to bail out Maldives, including during the COVID-19 pandemic – are at an all-time low, due to Muizzu’s efforts to expel the 75 Indian military personnel stationed in the country. The troops operate two India-donated Dornier aircraft that assist in medical evacuations and rescue operations. New Delhi has agreed to replace them with civilians and the last batch are to leave Maldives by May 10.

Relations came under further strain when three of Muizzu’s deputy ministers made derogatory comments about Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in January, branding him a “clown” for launching a campaign to boost tourism on India’s Lakhswadeep islands, located north of the Maldivian archipelago.

The row resulted in Indian social media activists calling for a boycott of Maldives tourism. Arrivals from India – which was the largest source of tourists last year – have since plummeted.

‘A lot of leverage’ for China

Muizzu has had little help from partners in the Middle East too.

He was scheduled to visit Saudi Arabia soon after his inauguration in November, but the visit was abruptly called off without explanation. The president did visit Turkey and the United Arab Emirates, but there have been no public offers of financial aid.

China, too, so far has appeared reluctant.

Despite Muizzu making a visit in January to Beijing, where Chinese President Xi Jinping called him an “old friend”, it is not clear what help, if any, was offered. Maldivian media reported that China agreed to provide grant assistance to Maldives — although the amount was not disclosed — and said it would consider restructuring debt repayments, a large chunk of which is due in 2026.

According to REDD, however, the restructuring of Chinese debt alone is unlikely to be sufficient for Maldives to avoid increased external debt distress because of an Islamic bond worth $500m that is also reaching maturity in 2026.

A former senior government official, who spoke to Al Jazeera on the condition of anonymity, said China may now be more amenable given Muizzu’s landslide win. “China has a lot of leverage,” the ex-official said, and will likely seek favours in return, including the ratification of a Free Trade Agreement that has languished since 2014 and access to key east-west trade routes that Maldives straddles. Indian and Western diplomats have previously expressed worries this access may pave the way for China to secure an outpost in the Indian Ocean.

David Brewster, senior research fellow at the National Security College in Australia, was sceptical that Maldives would allow a Chinese military presence, even if it meant the alleviation of its financial woes.

“Certainly China will have a lot of leverage, but I would be very surprised if there is any military presence. Because the consequences of that in terms of Maldives’s relations with India and other countries will be so severe,” he said, noting that Maldives now also has “very large debt to India”.

Taking the example of neighbouring Sri Lanka, another nation highly indebted to China and which suffered a financial crisis in 2022, Brewster wondered just how much help Beijing may offer.

“In Sri Lanka, China was not particularly helpful in terms of renegotiating debt and alleviating their debt. So we don’t know what Beijing will do in the Maldives,” he said. “In Sri Lanka, it was India that came in with the large loan and really helped the country get through the crisis, while all international debts were rescheduled. And it was only after that China grudgingly agreed to a debt deal itself,” he said.

Maldives, he said, most likely will need to go to the IMF very soon.

“It’d be interesting to see how that plays out, whether China will be interested in playing a constructive role or not,” he added.

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