The ever excellent Rebecca McKinnon has a comprehensive blog post on Skype’s problems over the news that the Chinese government has been monitoring some of the free call service’s text messages in China. As I say, it’s pretty comprehensive and addresses the whole issue of large foreign companies and their problems resolving the …
Asia
Life of the Party: The Bright Side of Financial Turmoil
Like everyone else, I am trying to figure out what the financial turmoil currently gripping the U.S. means, particularly for China. In speaking with economists there’s an underlying but consistent theme that seemed a tad counter-intuitive: this could be a good thing for China and also for the Communist Party. First off, the inevitable …
The Problem With Beijing’s New Car Rules
Beijing has announced a new set of restrictions on automobiles aimed at retaining some of the clean air the city enjoyed during the Olympics. My sense is that the benefits will be mild at best and that the exercise risks wasting the enthusiasm residents have for some sort of long-term solution to the pollution problem. The new rules, …
China Walking on Air
So the taikonauuts as some someone branded them (a bizarre formulation; hangtianyuan is the usual word) made it home safely yesterday. Watching China’s first space walk live on television the previous day was fascinating. It is a tremendous breakthrough, as President Hu Jintao told one of he astronauts, considerably more important in …
The Coming Plenum: The Center Cannot Hold
My headline will no doubt make the eyes of many of our readers glaze over. But for those of you interested in the inner workings of politics in the Communist Party–and after all what that comes down to is how China is run–there is an insightful look ahead to the Party’s imminent Plenum by veteran Zhongnanhai-ologist Willy Lam at the …
Born To Run
Why, it’s just like old times.
There is a run on Hong Kong’s Bank of East Asia (BEA). It started, apparently, on Tuesday night with the dissemination of anonymous text messages that suggested the bank was on the verge of collapse. The next day, thousands were queuing at branches all over the city to withdraw their money.
It should be …
Another Darwin Award Candidate from China
Amidst all the depressing news surrounding us it is sometimes necessary to feature something, well, completely silly. I couldn’t call this only in China (see the previous post on these lines here) as people all over the world do stupid stuff and put it on the internet. Here’s a young Chinese guy who says he’s just bought a bazillion …
“A Typical Day in the Life of a Happy Chinese”
This is a spoof diary of a day in the life of an ordinary Chinese that has been circulating on the web recently (in Chinese here, for example). I have edited out large chunks as it gets pretty repetitive, though that of course is the point. The excellent translation is courtesy of Chris Hughes of the London School of Economics and …
China Plans Spacewalk
Here’s our story on China’s upcoming Shenzhou VII mission and plans for the country’s first spacewalk.
Nobel Peace Prize for Hu Jia and Zeng Jinyan?
Jailed Chinese activist Hu Jia and his wife, Zeng Jinyan, have made the early list of favorites for this year’s Nobel Peace Prize. From the Associated Press:
(OSLO, Norway) — The annual guessing game about who will get the 2008 Nobel Peace Prize focused this year on a possible human rights rebuke for China.
Experts said the coveted
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Heads Up
Our take on milk powder and other recent disasters here.
Seeing Sichuan Through the Survivors’ Lenses
Lin Yang on an exhibition of post-earthquake photos from Sichuan:
A special section at the 2008 Pingyao International Photography Festival is dedicated to 50 residents of the quake-stricken town of Wenchuan. They recorded life after the quake with point-and-shoot cameras donated by …
Ask Wayne Wang
The director of The Joy Luck Club revisits the theme of Chinese-American identity with two new films this fall. Click here to submit your questions for Wayne Wang, then look for the upcoming interview in TIME.