Chinese isn’t exactly a language under threat, but a proposal that one of Hong Kong’s top universities should allow more teaching in English must be resisted on principle. Today’s South China Morning Post reports that Chinese University—and let’s put the stress on the first word of that name—is considering the use of …
Asia
Get Out and Vote!
Jimi
Michelle
Jaime Florcruz, dean of foreign correspondents in China, now with CNN, formerly TIME Beijing bureau chief (the picture of him was taken in our office), is looking to be one of the 8 foreign torch bearers in the upcoming Olympic torch relay. He and his daughter are both seeking to carry the torch in a selection process …
Will the Communist Party turn Democratic?
(Warning: Inside Baseball on Chinese politics: those not interested should change channels now)
There is increasing speculation ahead of the opening of the 17th Communist Party National Conference on October 15th that the fierce factional struggle now going on behind the scenes may result in the elevation of the new Shanghai Party …
Spreading Harmony in China
The Communist Party’s national congress is coming up later this month, which must be part of the reason why the word “harmonious” is ubiquitous in China. “Harmonious society” is the catch phrase for the Hu Jintao-Wen Jiabao policy to spread the wealth and eliminate some of the inequities of China’s raging capitalism. It’s a serious …
Pre-Conference Jitters….and Torture
It’s common knowledge in Beijing that the police get very, very uptight before big political meetings. Every spring before the National People’s Congress, dissidents are harassed and hundreds of sad petitioners rounded up from their hovels and forcibly sent back to their home provinces. This is my first time in Beijing before the mother …
Props to Yao
Yao Ming came out and apologized to his team yesterday. So what it exactly did the big one do to merit such contrition? He will miss some pre-season training and a media day because of his obligations to the Special Olympics, which will be held next month in his hometown of Shanghai. Given the sort of behavior that usually leads to an …
Xi’an Splendors
FREDERICK.J. BROWN / AFP / Getty Images
Visiting China’s ancient capital of Xi’an for the first time I am reminded that however much you read and hear about a place the reality is always far different. Having spent quite a while researching a novel that was set in part in Chang’an, as the city was called in the Tang dynasty, I …
“Survivor” Goes to China
Survivor, one of the most popular TV shows in the U.S., has just kicked off its fifteenth season, this time in China. The show claims to be the first major American TV series to be filmed entirely in China. Here’s how the episode re-cap describes the show: “Transported back in time, 16 Americans from various walks of life begin the …
Five Ring Circus
Stanley Ho Buys the Horse
Earlier this month Ling wrote here about an upcoming auction of a statue of a horse’s head looted from the Summer Palace. Now gambling tycoon Stanley Ho has purchased the head for $8.84 million and donated it to China. Our story is here. Also, Geoffrey Fowler has an interesting piece over at the Wall Street Journal on gaming moguls and …
Corruption on the Run…….?
So Chi Yaoyun, a deputy director general of the Communist Party’s Discipline Inspection Commission, says corruption is declining. Taking reporters on a tour of the Commission’s new building in Beijing, the official who is one of those charged with keeping Party members in line and graft-free, apparently admitted there was a problem but …
Asian Weeklies Rise Again
Interesting to see that the folks over at Asia Weekly are celebrating their first six months of publication by announcing they have secured a publication agreement in Singapore. The magazine, based in Beijing and helmed by veteran journalist and respected China specialist Jasper Becker, is bucking the current online trend and the fact …
Scalping the Olympics
Our new colleague in Beijing Lin Yang writes:
In China having connections can make all the difference. But when the first-stage ticket sales plan for the 2008 Olympics was announced earlier this year, the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympics –or the vaguely sinister-sounding BOCOG– vowed to give everyone an equal chance: …