As China Blog readers may recall, last March I took a handful of Chinese brews across the Pacific to participate in the beer brackets, an unofficial companion to the annual NCAA men’s basketball tournament. There were a few surprising performances from the Middle Kingdom, but overall Chinese beers did not fare well in the competition. …
Asia
Administrative Note on Comments
IN the comments on the Coke Huiyuan post one commenter has put up three extremely long articles that are completely unrelated to the topic, causing some of his fellow commenters to complain. Generally speaking, we try to leave the comments section untouched except in cases of profanity, racism, hate speech etc. However, I do agree with …
Coke and Huiyuan: The Other Side of the Coin
My post about Huiyuan and Coke was not meant to be fair and balanced, to use a poisoned phrase. Indeed, this is a blog and supposed to be provocative and sometimes downright unfair, right? However, occasionally commenters point out particularly egregious lapses as bcredux did in this case:
….the US has already set the tone by denying
…
Coke and Huiyuan: The Real Rules for Foreigners Buying Chinese Companies
So the Finanace Ministry rejected Coca Cola’s $2.5 billion bid for China’s biggest juice maker, Huiyuan. The pruchase would have broken the new anti-monopoly law, apparently. There’s plenty of good balanced analysis out there from the likes of Bloomberg and others about why this happened. But over at the China Law Blog, we get a …
Gripping Openers: Congrats to David RR
Congrats to David rr who correctly ID-ied the opening lines quoted below as from Earthly Powers (actually a a mere 649 pages in the Penguin paperback) by the prolific Anthony Burgess. For the record, and as a nod to Mr. Burgess, whose masterful touch with the 81st birthday I had forgotten, here’s the actual opening:
It was the afternoon
…
Best Story Opening Of the Year?
Story openings –ledes in reporter jargon–have to grab, whether they be for a five hundred word news piece or a thousand page novel (“I was in bed with my catamite when Ali the butler knocked on the door to say the bishop had arrived for tea” –or something along those lines would probably keep you reading on, wouldn’t it? And, yes, it …
Ask Jackie Chan
Jackie Chan is known from Hong Kong to Hollywood as an action star who does his own stunts. Now he’s playing a dramatic role in Shinjuku Incident, a thriller about the lives of illegal Chinese workers in Japan. Submit your questions for Jackie Chan here, then read the interview in an upcoming issue of TIME magazine.
SARS Hero Seeks Apology
Dr. Jiang Yanyong, a Chinese military surgeon who became a national hero after exposing Beijing’s cover-up of SARS cases, has asked the government to apologize for the way he has been treated since his 2003 revelation. (Reuters has details here.) My former colleague Susan Jakes first reported Jiang’s revelations in the spring of 2003. …
U.S.-China Naval Scuffle: Relax Everything is Fine. Or Is It?
The incident in which a “civilian U.S. survey ship” (actually by all accounts a vessel designed specifically to enhance submarine tracking) was harassed by five Chinese vessels 75 miles off Hainan Island (where China happens to have a huge submarine base) has been dismissed smoothed over by top leaders meeting in Washington. Secretary of …
China has Killed “Hundreds of Thousands” in Tibet, Dalai Lama
One of our commenters complained that I had not noted that the Dalai Lama said that China had killed “hundreds of thousands of Tibetans” in the interview I cited. Actually, it was a different speech, which you can read about here. He also said, among other things that Tibet had been turned into a “hell on earth” and that Tibetans could …
And Now a Message from Kobe Bryant
Kobe Bryant, maybe you’ve heard of him. Perhaps you’ve booed him when the Los Angeles Lakers are up against your home team. But if you’re an NBA fan in China, you probably love him. His jersey is the number one seller here. During the Beijing Olympics he got cheers on par with Yao Ming. Now he even has a Chinese language blog. TIME’s …
Foreign Correspondets Club of China on Haraassment of Reporters in Tibetan Areas
Herewith a statement just issued by the Foreign Correspondents Club of China about the experiences of some of my colleagues reporting in Tibetan areas of China proper at this very sensitive time. The events are entirely predictable but no less dispiriting, particularly coming on the heels of a government crackdown on the ability of both …
Explosions in Tibetan Areas
A couple of small explosions in Tibetan areas of Qinghai Province have damaged a police car and a fire truck, wire reports say. A sign of things to come? Apparently the Dalai Lama thinks so. He told a German newspaper he is worried about an “explosion” of violence and said he had heard that Han Chinese living in Tibetan areas were arming …