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To Protect the Future, Hold China to Account

They need 129 votes to push the resolution. They have 116. Lets see what happens.

There are 195 officially recognized countries in the world so that leaves us with 13 out of 64 votes. Nothing wrong with my math though even though it’s not my strength. The 2 countries I am leaving out are China itself and take a guess for the 2nd country :)
 
India should do deal with China as well, no point taking on China, instead call in a favor.
 
India should do deal with China as well, no point taking on China, instead call in a favor.

China doesn’t do favors and it will be a disaster to ask them for a favor especially during a vulnerable time. In fact going against them and making them feel responsible might at least lead them to do some
PR stunt to help out neighboring countries.
 
China doesn’t do favors and it will be a disaster to ask them for a favor especially during a vulnerable time. In fact going against them and making them feel responsible might at least lead them to do some
PR stunt to help out neighboring countries.

We did a Sikkim deal with them. In current scenario they need backers and being our powerful neighbors we should back em, shouldnt give into western powers unless they are offering something more substantial.
 
China’s leaders shun masks at political event

After a two-month delay due to the pandemic, China’s annual parliamentary sessions, known informally as the “two sessions”, opened today.

These events see the country's top leadership, along with thousands of officials and business leaders, meet to outline new laws and strategies for the year ahead.

Earlier reports in the country suggested that this year’s National People's Congress (NPC), the top legislative body, and the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, the leading national advisory body, would be shorter, and that fewer people would be in attendance than in previous years.

But the latter has certainly not been shown to be the case. The CPPCC opened with a full audience of attendees. Some have been filmed on national television shaking hands with each other outside Beijing's Great Hall of the People.

There are 2,158 members of the CPPCC National Committee. Those attending today's event are all shown wearing masks but the same cannot be said about China’s top leadership, the Politburo.

President Xi Jinping, and other key officials, have been filmed and photographed attending the events without face coverings.

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No annual growth target for China, a first in decades

China took the rare move of not setting an annual growth target this year after the coronavirus battered the world's second-largest economy and ravaged global growth.

Instead, given "great uncertainty" caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, Beijing will "give priority to stabilising employment and ensuring living standards", Premier Li Keqiang told the opening of the National People's Congress.

It is the first time China has not set a gross domestic product goal since the government started to publish such targets in 1990.
 
Trump wants to decouple from China, where once US was encouraging to trade with the Chinese, once they started coming out of it not so well, they have been throwing tariffs at them, starting trade wars, and trying to get other countries to join the boycott with the campaign against Huawei 5G stake in Britain.

Thing is though, the western world has also benefited a lot from trade with China, we sell movies there, football tv rights and so on. Is a trade boycott going to benefit America? I am interested to see what form making China pay will take. Also if they will take it lying down.

Check what UK is doing now with Huawei, Britain giving in too

https://www.theguardian.com/technol...ced-to-reduce-huaweis-role-in-uks-5g-networks
 
Once a year the Chinese foreign minister holds a highly-orchestrated press conference on the sidelines of the National People’s Congress. The questions are vetted and the answers prepared so the responses can be seen as a clear message from Beijing to the world.

Wang Yi said he hoped American people’s lives would soon return to normal but that it was “regrettable that a political virus [was] also spreading in the US, jumping at any opportunity to attack and slander China”.

He called on the US to stop “wasting precious time”, adding that people were dreaming if they thought China would pay compensation for damage caused by the pandemic.

The foreign minister also defended the World Health Organization, saying those countries which had ignored its advice were now “paying a heavy price”.
 
Wuhan lab had three live bat coronaviruses: Chinese state media

The Chinese virology institute at the centre of US allegations it may have been the source of the COVID-19 pandemic has three live strains of bat coronavirus on-site, but none match the new global contagion, its director has said.

Scientists think COVID-19 -- which first emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan and has killed more than 340,000 people worldwide -- originated in bats and could have been transmitted to people via another mammal.

But the director of the Wuhan Institute of Virology told state broadcaster CGTN that claims made by US President Donald Trump and others the virus could have leaked from the facility were "pure fabrication".

In the interview filmed on May 13 but broadcast Saturday night, Wang Yanyi said the centre has "isolated and obtained some coronaviruses from bats".

"Now we have three strains of live viruses... But their highest similarity to SARS-CoV-2 only reaches 79.8 percent," she said, referring to the coronavirus strain that causes COVID-19.

One of their research teams, led by Professor Shi Zhengli, has been researching bat coronaviruses since 2004 and focused on the "source tracing of SARS", the strain behind another virus outbreak nearly two decades ago.

"We know that the whole genome of SARS-CoV-2 is only 80 percent similar to that of SARS. It's an obvious difference," she said.

"So, in Professor Shi's past research, they didn't pay attention to such viruses which are less similar to the SARS virus."

- Plans for more labs -

Conspiracy rumours that the biosafety lab was involved in the outbreak swirled online for months before Trump and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo brought the theory into the mainstream by claiming that there is evidence the pathogen came from the institute.

The United States and Australia have called in recent weeks for an investigation into the origins of the pandemic.

Chinese scientists have said that the virus first emerged at a market selling live animals in Wuhan, though officials in Beijing more recently cast doubt about its origins.

Chinese Foreign minister Wang Yi on Sunday blasted what he called efforts by US politicians to "fabricate rumours" about the pathogen's origins and "stigmatise China".

He said China would be "open" to international cooperation to identify the source of the novel coronavirus, as long as any investigation is "free of political interference".

The World Health Organization has said Washington offered no evidence to support the "speculative" claims about the Wuhan lab.

The Wuhan lab has said it received samples of the then-unknown virus on December 30, determined the viral genome sequence on January 2 and submitted information on the pathogen to the WHO on January 11.

Wang Yanyi said in the interview that before it received samples in December, their team had never "encountered, researched or kept the virus".

"In fact, like everyone else, we didn't even know the virus existed," she said. "How could it have leaked from our lab when we never had it?"

At a press conference Sunday, Zhao Chenxin, deputy secretary-general of the National Development and Reform Commission, said every Chinese prefecture must have its own P3 laboratory to ramp up preparations against infectious diseases.

Apart from the P3 lab plans -- the second-highest biosafety classification for labs handling pathogens -- Zhao said each city should also have a lower-level P2 laboratory so they could "quickly respond in a major epidemic".

The Wuhan institute has both P3 and P4 labs.
https://news.yahoo.com/wuhan-lab-had-three-live-bat-coronaviruses-chinese-033127544.html
 
World Health Organization officials have renewed praise for China in response to the COVID-19 outbreak, citing its "openness" to the prospect of scientific inquiries involving foreign experts into the origins of the novel coronavirus.

Dr. Michael Ryan, the WHO's emergencies chief, pointed to "day-to-day" discussions with colleagues in China. He said the UN health agency and many governments are eager to understand the animal origins of the virus, "and I am very pleased to hear a very consistent message coming from China, which is one of openness to such an approach."
 
The central Chinese city of Wuhan announced on Friday that it had cleared all hospital cases of Covid-19 where patients have exhibited symptoms.

State newspaper Global Times said that “the last three Covid-19 patients in Wuhan have recovered and been discharged from hospital” - a development that has been met on Chinese social media with mass praise.

At its peak, there were more than 50,000 confirmed cases in the city, the original epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak.

However, it is worth noting that China omits from its data any cases where patients have tested positive for Covid-19, but have not exhibited symptoms. It began recording these separately from 1 April.

Over the last couple of weeks, Wuhan carried out an extensive drive to test all 11 million of its citizens so that it could record all such cases. According to the Hubei provincial health commission, 217 people who are asymptomatic are still under medical observation.
 
China denies delay in sharing virus information - AP

The Chinese health minister denied delays in sharing coronavirus information in response to an Associated Press investigation that found the World Health Organization (WHO) was frustrated by a lack of transparency by Beijing during the early days of the virus outbreak.

At a news conference on Sunday, where China issued an official report on the fight against COVID-19, Ma Xiaowei, director of China's National Health Commission, denied China stalled or attempted a cover-up during the virus outbreak, saying the AP report "seriously violated the facts".

"It took time to accumulate evidence, deepen understanding, and grasp the characteristics of the novel coronavirus," Ma said.
 
US Republican Senator Rick Scott has accused China of trying to "sabotage" the development of a coronavirus vaccine.

Speaking to the BBC's Andrew Marr programme, he said that China had "decided to be an adversary".

"We've got to get this vaccine done. Unfortunately we have evidence that communist China is trying to sabotage us or slow it down," Scott said.

"If we, or England does it first, or anybody in Europe, we're all going to share. China won't share."

Responding to a question about what evidence he had to justify his comments, he said: "There's evidence... it came through our intelligence agency... there's evidence that they've been trying to sabotage or slow it down.

"It's frustrating what China did to all of us... they lied about this, and we could have prepared better."

China says it briefed the US about the coronavirus as early as 4 January, when the disease was still largely unknown.

President Xi Jinping has also said that a vaccine - if or when it is created by China - will be distributed globally, "which will be China's contribution to ensuring vaccine accessibility and affordability in developing countries".
 
China has said today that senator Rick Scott should present the evidence for his accusation that Beijing is trying to slow down or sabotage the development of a Covid-19 vaccine by western countries. Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying made the remarks during a daily briefing on Monday, responding to the Republican senator’s comments during an interview with the BBC. Scott declined to give details on the evidence when asked during the interview but said it had come through the intelligence community.
 
It doesn't matter who makes the vaccine. What matters is it reaches everywhere.

There should be no politics when it comes to vaccine.
 
China, scientists dismiss Harvard study suggesting COVID-19 was spreading in Wuhan in August

LONDON (Reuters) - Beijing dismissed as “ridiculous” a Harvard Medical School study of hospital traffic and search engine data that suggested the new coronavirus may already have been spreading in China last August, and scientists said it offered no convincing evidence of when the outbreak began.

The research, which has not been peer-reviewed by other scientists, used satellite imagery of hospital parking lots in Wuhan - where the disease was first identified in late 2019 - and data for symptom-related queries on search engines for things such as “cough” and “diarrhea”.

The study’s authors said increased hospital traffic and symptom search data in Wuhan preceded the documented start of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic in December 2019.

“While we cannot confirm if the increased volume was directly related to the new virus, our evidence supports other recent work showing that emergence happened before identification at the Huanan Seafood market (in Wuhan),” they said.

Paul Digard, an expert in virology at the University of Edinburgh, said that using search engine data and satellite imagery of hospital traffic to detect disease outbreaks “is an interesting idea with some validity.”

But he said the data were only correlative and - as the Harvard scientists noted - cannot identify cause.

“It’s an interesting piece of work, but I’m not sure it takes us much further forward,” said Keith Neal, a professor of the epidemiology of infectious diseases at Britain’s Nottingham University.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying, asked about the research at a news briefing on Tuesday, said: “I think it is ridiculous, incredibly ridiculous, to come up with this conclusion based on superficial observations such as traffic volume.”

The Harvard research, which was posted online as a so-called ‘preprint’, showed a steep increase in hospital car park occupancy in August 2019.

“In August, we identify a unique increase in searches for diarrhea which was neither seen in previous flu seasons or mirrored in the cough search data,” it said.

Digard cautioned that by focusing only on hospitals in Wuhan, already known to be the epicenter of the outbreak, “the study forces the correlation.”

“It would have been interesting - and possibly much more convincing - to have seen control analyses of other Chinese cities outside of the Hubei region,” he said.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...as-spreading-in-wuhan-in-august-idUSKBN23G0OM
 
Flights between the central Chinese city of Wuhan, the city where the Covid-19 pandemic began, and the capital city Beijing resumed on Tuesday after Beijing lowered its health emergency status from medium to low risk.

According to the official China Daily, a single round-trip flight operated by China Southern Airlines is now running between the two cities, and travellers are no longer required to go into quarantine for 14 days.

Before the pandemic, Wuhan International Airport was a major transit hub connecting Chinese flights from the far east and west.

But during the pandemic, Wuhan experienced 76 days of strict lockdown. Transport in and out of the city was limited to emergency aid.
 
China's government has strongly rejected a preliminary study by US researchers suggesting the coronavirus may have been circulating in the city of Wuhan, where the first cases where reported, since August 2019.

The new paper by experts at Boston University and Harvard, which has not been peer-reviewed, is based on photos of parking lots at Wuhan hospitals and search trends on Baidu, the Chinese search engine.

It says that while they cannot definitively affirm the data found was linked to the virus, it supports conclusions by other studies suggesting that the virus began circulating earlier than the first reported cases, which were late last year.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying dismissed the study as "full of holes" and "crudely manufactured", saying it was evidence of coordinated efforts in the US to "deliberately create and disseminate disinformation against China".

"Some US politicians and media acted like they found buried treasure and wantonly spread [the study], treating it like new proof that China concealed the epidemic," Hua was quoted by AFP news agency as saying.

The US and others have repeatedly accused China of a lack of transparency about the outbreak and its origins.
 
Twitter has removed more than 170,000 accounts it says were tied to an operation to spread a Chinese government disinformation campaign.
Some of those posts were about the coronavirus outbreak, the social media platform said.
The company said "a core network" of 23,750 highly active accounts had been deleted, along with another 150,000 "amplifier accounts".
A Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman said that Beijing itself was the victim of disinformation and called on Twitter to shut down accounts that were critical of China.
Twitter also revealed it had shut down more than 1,000 Russia-based misinformation accounts.
 
Beijing areas locked down due to new virus cluster

BEIJING: Dozens of people tested positive for the coronavirus in Beijing as parts of the city were locked down on Saturday after the emergence of a new cluster linked to a wholesale food market.

People were ordered to stay home at 11 residential estates in south Beijing’s Fengtai district and the nearby Xinfadi market was closed as authorities raced to contain the outbreak that has fuelled fears of resurgence in local transmission.

Most of the six new domestic infections reported on Saturday were linked to the meat and vegetable market, health officials said, which provides much of the capital’s food supply.

Official news agency Xinhua reported at least one of the cases was “severe”. But another 45 asymptomatic cases — which China counts separately — were detected after mass testing of nearly 2,000 workers at the market on Friday, city health official Pang Xinghuo later told reporters.

Another worker tested positive at a farmers’ market in the city’s northwestern district of Haidian — a close contact of one of the confirmed cases linked to Xinfadi.

Beijing’s first Covid-19 case in two months, announced on Thursday, had visited Xinfadi market and had no recent travel history outside the city.

China’s domestic outbreak had been brought largely under control through strict lockdowns that were imposed after the disease was first detected late last year.

These measures had mostly been lifted as the infection rate dropped, and the majority of recent cases were citizens living abroad who were tested as they returned home during the pandemic.

Among the six new domestic cases announced on Saturday were three Xinfadi market workers, one market visitor and two employees at the China Meat Research Centre, seven kilometres away. One of the employees had visited the market last week.

Authorities closed the market, along with another seafood market visited by one of the patients, for disinfection and sample collection on Friday.

Reporters saw hundreds of police officers, many wearing masks and gloves, and dozens of paramilitary police deployed at the two markets, with no one allowed to leave Xinfadi.

Officials in Fengtai — which has more than two million residents — announced on Saturday that the district has established a “wartime mechanism” to deal with the fresh wave.

Police cars were patrolling the streets outside blocked-off neighbourhoods and a reporter saw one bus carrying workers in hazmat suits.
https://www.dawn.com/news/1563427/beijing-areas-locked-down-due-to-new-virus-cluster
 
Authorities in China have reported 57 new cases, the country's highest daily jump since mid-April.

The National Health Commission said 38 were locally transmitted, with 36 of them in Beijing.

Since yesterday, lockdown measures have been re-introduced in some localities of the capital after dozens of new infections were discovered. Many have been linked to a local market, which has been closed. Eleven residential compounds nearby have also been sealed off, with resident only allowed to leave for essential shopping.

More than 84,000 cases have been reported in China, according to Johns Hopkins University, along with 4,638 deaths.

The country has relaxed many of its containment measures after the ruling Communist Party declared victory over coronavirus in March. But a recent rise in cases has sparked fears of a second wave of infections.
 
New wave of COVID-19 cases from Beijing market spreads to Liaoning

BEIJING (Reuters) - After weeks with almost no new coronavirus infections, Beijing has recorded dozens of new cases in recent days, all linked to a major wholesale food market, raising concerns about a resurgence of the disease.

There had been almost no new cases in the city for almost two months until an infection was reported on June 12, and since then the total number has climbed to 51, including eight more in the first seven hours of Sunday.

According to the city’s health authority, contact tracing showed all the infected people had either worked or shopped inside Xinfadi, said to be the largest food market in Asia, or had been in contact with someone who was there.

“Beijing has entered an extraordinary period,” city spokesman Xu Hejian told a news conference on Sunday.

The market was closed before dawn on Saturday and the district containing the market put itself on a “wartime” footing.

The Beijing outbreak has already spread to the neighbouring northeastern province of Liaoning. According to the provincial health authority, the two new cases confirmed in Liaoning on Sunday were both people who had been in close contact with confirmed cases in Beijing.

At least 10 Chinese cities, including Harbin and Dalian, have urged residents not to travel to the capital or to report to authorities if they have done so recently.

Huaxiang, a neighbourhood in the same district as the food market and which has one of China’s biggest used car centers, raised its epidemic risk level to high on Sunday, becoming the only neighbourhood in the country to be on high alert. This status means there can be no economic activity until the outbreak is controlled.

As of 3 p.m. on Sunday, 10 neighbourhoods in Beijing, such as Financial Street, had raised their risk levels from low to medium.

“Beijing will not turn into a second Wuhan, spreading the virus to many cities all over the country and needing a lockdown,” a government epidemic expert told Health Times on Sunday, referring to the city where the epidemic in China first emerged late last year.

Zeng Guang, former chief epidemiologist at Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention and currently a senior expert with the National Health Commission, predicted that the outbreak will likely be controlled after the initial spike of a few days, according to the report by Health Times, a paper run by state media People’s Daily.

Like other countries around the world, China is concerned to prevent a second wave from emerging after easing lockdowns that hammered its economy earlier this year.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...jing-market-spreads-to-liaoning-idUSKBN23L01I
 
China’s media strike downbeat note on new surge

Chinese state media have often emphasised the importance of spreading zhengnengliang or “positive energy” online.

And in the face of a crisis, they often also stress the good work being done by the authorities, medical specialists and people in the wider community.

This is what makes its downbeat tone regarding a surge of Covid-19 cases in Beijing so striking.

With 39 locally transmitted cases confirmed today, the newspapers are hinting that the prospect of a second wave hitting is very real.

Vice Premier Sun Chunlan has warned that “the risk of the Beijing epidemic spreading is very high”, while the newspaper of the ruling Communist Party urged people to wear masks because "some people have not been vigilant”.

China responded to earlier concerns about cases in other provinces by quickly mass testing communities, which has so far proven successful. It is hoping the same approach will work in Beijing.
 
China's response to COVID-19 better than U.S.'s, global poll finds

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Far more people around the world think China has responded well to the COVID-19 pandemic than those who think the United States has done a good job, a poll by the Alliance of Democracies Foundation showed on Monday.

The survey of more than 120,000 people from 53 countries by the think tank and German polling data firm Dalia Research found that even in democratic countries, 45% of people thought their governments had limited too many freedoms during the pandemic.

“COVID-19 is also a litmus test for democracy,” said Anders Fogh Rasmussen, chairman of the Alliance of Democracies Foundation and a former NATO secretary general.

“It should act as a wake up call to democratic leaders that people want more democracy and freedom after COVID-19,” he said.

More than 60% of people surveyed thought China had responded well to the pandemic, while only a third around the world thought the U.S. response had been effective. Just over half of those surveyed in the United States thought their government had responded well, however.

The survey found that most Chinese think the United States has a negative influence on democracy globally.

Greece, Taiwan, Ireland, South Korea, Australia and Denmark were the countries where the largest proportions of people said their governments had responsed well to the crisis. People in Brazil, France, the United States, Italy and the UK felt their governments handled the situation badly.

Separately, the study showed that a majority of the world thinks it is likely or somewhat likely that a foreign power will influence the results of their next election.

The two countries that worried the least about foreign interference were China and Russia. Ahead of the U.S. presidential election in November, 55% percent of Americans think that interference is very or somewhat likely.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...er-than-u-s-s-global-poll-finds-idUSKBN23M1LE
 
Over 100 cases in new Beijing Covid-19 outbreak: WHO

More than 100 cases of Covid-19 have been officially recorded in the fresh outbreak in Beijing, the World Health Organization has said.

As lockdown restrictions ease and countries in Europe lifted their borders, the WHO warned countries to stay on alert for a possible resurgence of Covid-19 infections.

The UN health agency said it understood no new deaths have been reported thus far in the Chinese capital but added that given Beijing’s size and connectivity, the outbreak was a cause for concern.

WHO director general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a virtual press conference:

Even in countries that have demonstrated the ability to suppress transmission, countries must stay alert to the possibility of resurgence.

Last week, China reported a new cluster of cases in Beijing, after more than 50 days without a case in that city. More than 100 cases have now been confirmed.

The origin and extent of the outbreak are being investigated.

Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s Covid-19 technical lead, told the news conference: “My understanding is that there are no deaths associated so far” with the Beijing outbreak.

WHO emergencies director Dr Mike Ryan said that countries which have implemented an immediate and comprehensive spread of measures have generally been able to contain new clusters.

“However, Beijing is a large city and a very dynamic and connected city, so there is always a concern,” he said.

“And I think you can see that level of concern in the response of the Chinese authorities, so we are tracking that very closely.”

He said the WHO had offered assistance and support to the Chinese authorities leading the probe, and may reinforce its own team in Beijing in the coming days as the investigation grows. He added:

A cluster like this is a concern and it needs to be investigated and controlled - and that is exactly what the Chinese authorities are doing.

Nearly 75% of recent cases come from 10 countries, Tedros said, mostly in the Americas and South Asia.

However, there were increasing numbers of cases in Africa, eastern Europe, central Asia and the Middle East, he added.
 
Earlier we reported that a cluster of new cases connected to a Beijing market in China is causing serious concern.

Now all schools have been ordered to close in an effort to contain the outbreak.

The first case, linked to a market, was recorded on Thursday and cases have been rising since then. Beijing had not seen any new cases for more than 50 days before this.

Schools and universities reopened just a few weeks ago, but now classes will once again go online. Entertainment venues will also close, and people must be tested before they will be permitted to leave the capital.
 
Beijing, China - Nelson Quan had no idea he had been locked into his compound in the Yuquan district of Beijing until he arrived at the front gate and saw the barricade.

Four days earlier, on June 11, Beijing had reported its first COVID-19 case in almost two months. Now, Quan's community and at least 27 others are forced to stay at home while they await the results of their nucleic acid virus tests. No one is allowed in, or out.

"Two months of things loosening up, and life feeling like it's going to be normal, and all of a sudden we're back to where we were in February," Quan said in a phone call.

Quan lives just steps from Yuquan East Market, which gets its produce from Xinfadi, the enormous wholesale market identified as the origin of the latest outbreak. Located in the southwestern part of the city, Xinfadi supplies more than 80 percent of the city's fruits and vegetables, and tens of thousands of people are estimated to go there every day.

Beijing has reported 137 new cases since the cluster was identified, not including three suspected and six asymptomatic cases. Neighbouring provinces Hebei, Liaoning, Sichuan and Zhejiang have also reported new cases linked to travellers arriving from Beijing.

China's Vice Premier Sun Chunlan has called for decisive action, warning that the risk of the virus spreading again is "very high". Senior city government official Xu Ying put Beijing in "wartime mode" to contain the virus, invoking fears of another sweeping lockdown across the city with accompanying restrictions on movement.

Trace and test

In the communities placed under "closed management", it may indeed feel like the beginning of another period of deprivation, but the approach the authorities have taken so far is quite the opposite of a "sweeping lockdown", said Holly Snape, an expert on Chinese policy at the University of Glasgow's School of Social and Political Sciences.

She noted that the communities under lockdown are only a small proportion of the 7,120 across the capital, which is home to more than 20 million people.

"What they're doing is essentially a process of rapidly pinpointing, on a massive scale, points of potential risk," she said. "It combines swift moves to find the origin, cut off transmission and contain the spread - with tracking down, tracing and testing."

According to government officials, 100,000 "epidemic control workers" have been deployed to the affected areas to organise testing where necessary, take temperatures, make banners to caution residents about hygiene practices, take registration details at the door to apartment compounds that remain open, and more.

The government has also called on companies and communities across the capital to survey employees and residents regarding any travel to the affected neighbourhoods in recent weeks. Individuals designated high-risk will be quarantined and tested immediately.

Among additional safety measures, the city's schools have again closed, only weeks after students returned to campuses. Bars, indoor sports and entertainment venues will also shut, according to an announcement earlier on Wednesday; and more than 60 percent of commercial flights in and out of the city have been cancelled.

However, for the vast majority of Beijing residents, "wartime mode" is not currently about curbing movement, but about getting people to recognise the risks and adopt a more cautious approach, says Snape.

Need for caution
"I think that this is more about putting people on their guard and reminding them to perform their own protective behaviours, prompting everyone to do their bit," she said.

China Beijing
Paramilitary police officers stand guard next to the now-closed Xinfadi market, where the June outbreak began [Roman Pilipey/EPA]
Over the past few weeks, much of the city had relaxed as zero new cases were reported for 55 consecutive days, and the government all but declared victory over the outbreak.

On June 6, the city's emergency response had been lowered to Level 3; down from Level 1 (the highest) in the earlier months of the year. Enforcement of restrictions had become more sporadic, and in some cases had been dropped entirely.

After the recent outbreak, Beijing has returned to Level 2. Although residents in most parts of the city are still free to move around, restrictions are back in full force: temperature checks at the entrance of shopping centres, apartment compounds, office buildings, retail shops as well as other measures including stringent checking of the "jiankangbao", a QR-scanned code that confirms that a person has not been flagged as high-risk.

Many Beijing residents are bracing for a return to the "lockdown" conditions of earlier this year. Although the city never officially required people to stay indoors, even at the height of the outbreak, most people opted to self-quarantine. With all businesses closed at the time, there was little reason to leave home anyway.

Restaurant and small business owners received the news of this new outbreak "like a punch in the gut," said Hsu Li, who owns a stake in a local restaurant.

Optimism crushed
While temporary restaurant closures during the first wave of cases were tough, people understood they needed to buckle down and deal with it, Li said. Now the prospect of a second wave has arrived just as restaurants were on the verge of recovering.

"Everyone was pumped to reopen again, getting staff hired and trained, so then hearing the news that our supply chains have been cut off from these markets was a blow - it's more the pent-up optimism and expectation getting crushed suddenly," Li said of his disappointment.

For some restaurants this is more than a punch to the gut - it is a "knockout punch", he said. "The second wave basically means that a lot of operators will have to throw in the towel." Li's restaurant has survived due to a generous landlord who waived the rent for four months, but many have been less fortunate, he said.

For families whose children are now back at home following the closures of local schools, the new cases mean that a return to normality could be months away.

"The current situation is not very promising," said Millie Yang, whose 11-year-old son had finally returned to school in early June after months of staying almost exclusively indoors. He had struggled with the isolation, and was relieved to see his friends again, she said. Now he is back home, taking classes online.

The similarities between Beijing's new cases and how the outbreak unfolded in Wuhan has left Yang feeling "a bit panicked", she said. "There are many uncertainties."

Adapting to the virus
Government epidemiological expert Zeng Guang told the state-run Health Times newspaper: "Beijing will not turn into a second Wuhan, spreading the virus to many cities all over the country and requiring a national lockdown."

Other government experts have said the outbreak in the capital differs from Wuhan because the genome sequencing of virus samples collected from Xinfadi suggest the strain of the virus is from Europe, although some have questioned whether or not the virus can be identified by geographically specific variation.

Zhang Yuxi, chairman of Xinfadi Market, announced that positive samples had been collected from a cutting board that had been exposed to imported salmon. However, government officials noted that environmental samples taken from elsewhere in the market had also tested positive.

Other experts have noted that even if the cutting board did include samples of this particular strain, there is no clear evidence that the cutting board was not exposed to the virus prior to being used to cut the fish. In the meantime, imports of salmon have been suspended.

Containing the new outbreak will be a "mammoth task", Snape said, but is one the government is tackling rigorously with an eye towards keeping business and life as "normal" as possible.

"I think this approach recognises that the virus is not going away anytime soon," Snape said. "We don't know yet how it will develop, and we have to learn to live with and adapt to deal with it in a way that enables life to continue while minimising the impact."

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/06/beijing-fears-wave-coronavirus-200617074319379.html
 
China has reported 28 new virus cases for the past day with 21 of them again in the capital. Beijing has seen a sudden spike over the past days.

The new cluster in the capital has lead to new restrictions being put in place and whole neighbourhoods getting sealed up again. The new outbreak is thought to have started in a large food market.

Before the new spike, Beijing had gone 57 days without a local case.
 
Beijing desperate to avoid Wuhan-style lockdown

Papers in Beijing are warning people that the number of cases of Covid-19 is “likely to increase” over the next few days and are encouraging people not to leave the city.

But authorities are desperate to avoid a lockdown similar to the one the original Chinese epicentre Wuhan experienced in January. Police spokesman Pan Xuhong told media the city had “taken decisive measures to strictly manage Beijing’s outbreak”, by locking down medium and high-risk communities - but “that does not mean the city is closed”.

People who have the virus, are close contacts with people who do, or those who are feverish, have been told they must not leave the city. The same applies to those who have visited the Xinfadi wholesale market since 30 May – the site where the latest outbreak is believed to have originated.

However, most people have already been given strict instructions not to even leave their homes since the city announced its return to "war-time status" on Tuesday.

Since 11 June, 158 people have tested positive for Covid-19 in Beijing - 21 of them in the past 24 hours.

Wuhan’s strict 76-day lockdown had a devastating impact on the local economy.
 
China finds heavy coronavirus traces in seafood, meat sections of Beijing food market

BEIJING (Reuters) - China has found the trading sections for meat and seafood in Beijing’s wholesale food market to be severely contaminated with the new coronavirus and suspects the area’s low temperature and high humidity may have been contributing factors, officials said on Thursday.

Their preliminary report comes as the country’s capital tackles a resurgence of COVID-19 cases over the past week linked to the massive Xinfadi food center, which houses warehouses and trading halls in an area the size of nearly 160 soccer pitches.

The latest outbreak infected more than 100 people and raised fears of wider contagion in China.

Among the patients who work at the Xinfadi market, most serve at seafood and aquatic product stalls, followed by the beef and mutton section, and patients from the seafood market showed symptoms earlier than others, Wu Zunyou, chief epidemiologist at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said at a daily briefing on Thursday.

Low temperatures favorable to viral survival as well as high humidity might be possible explanations for why seafood markets could be a source of outbreaks based on a preliminary assessment, Wu said, cautioning that further investigation was necessary.

China has halted imports from European salmon suppliers this week amid fears they may be linked to the recent outbreak in Beijing.

Health officials have also warned against eating raw salmon after the virus was discovered on chopping boards used for imported salmon, although the origin of the outbreak is not known.

Low standards of hygiene in wholesale food markets and vulnerabilities in its food supply chain need to be urgently addressed, a leading body of the ruling Communist Party said this week.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...sections-of-beijing-food-market-idUSKBN23P20T
 
China races to prevent virus second wave

China imposed travel restrictions on nearly half a million people near its capital on Thursday to contain a fresh coronavirus outbreak as deaths surged in other parts of the world.

The threat of a second wave hitting China, which had largely brought the virus under control, and rising tolls in Latin America and South Asia underscore the global challenge in slowing down the pandemic that has killed more than 450,000 people.

The world economy has also taken a hit, with the US Labour Department saying another 1.5 million American workers filed for unemployment benefits last week, bringing the number of people laid off, at least temporarily, by Covid-19 to 45.7 million.
 
Beijing cluster 'may be European strain'

Chinese officials have released genome data for the coronavirus traced to a recent cluster in Beijing, saying they noted similarities to a European strain.

China has shared the data with the World Health Organisation amid pressure to make the findings public.

This comes after Beijing reported nearly 200 fresh Covid-19 infections after months. Tens of thousands are being tested in the city, where neighbourhoods are under lockdown and schools shut. The cluster has been traced to a sprawling wholesale market in the city.

But scientists are cautious over drawing early conclusion about the link.

"It is possible that the virus now causing an outbreak in Beijing travelled from Wuhan to Europe and now back to China," Ben Cowling, a professor at the University of Hong Kong's School of Public Health, told AFP news agency.

But he added that patient zero hadn't been identified yet and that it may be too late to find out how the latest cluster started.
 
Beijing to test all delivery workers amid rise in cases

Tests are being carried out on all food and parcel delivery workers in the Chinese capital, Beijing, to detect traces of coronavirus in an effort to curb a new outbreak in the city.

The nucleic acid tests are expected to be completed within the next week, the Global Times reports. Almost 2.3 million such tests have already been carried out in Beijing, officials say.

This type of test involves a swab sample taken from the back of a person's throat or respiratory tract, which is then tested for the presence of the coronavirus' genome.

Beijing has in the past week seen a spike of Covid-19 cases - almost all of which have been linked to a huge wholesale food market.
 
China bans some US chicken imports, PepsiCo products

China banned imports from a top US poultry producer and ordered a Beijing Pepsi factory to close Sunday as authorites clamped down on food production and distribution amid a new coronavirus cluster in the capital.

Health officials also reported 22 new virus cases in Beijing, where they have tested more than two million residents as they seek to contain a wave of new infections linked to a wholesale market in the capital.

Imports of frozen chicken from Tyson Foods have been "temporarily suspended", the General Administration of Customs said, after a virus outbreak was found at one of the company's production facilities in the US.

US food and drinks giant PepsiCo was also ordered to shut down one of its snack-making plants in Beijing after several employees tested positive, company spokeswoman Fan Zhimin said.
 
'Breeding ground for a pandemic': Dog meat still on sale in China, despite new guidelines

Dogs are still being butchered and sold for meat in markets in Yulin, southern China, despite central government reclassifying them as companions, not livestock.

An NGO (non-governmental organisation) has warned the continued trade in dog meat could pose public health risks in the form of novel diseases.

Dr Peter Li, China policy specialist at Humane Society International, told Sky News: "We understand that pandemics are caused by a huge concentration of animals of different species - animals with compromised immune systems.

"A lot of dogs are such animals, in great concentration, and with huge psychological and physical problems. Dog meat is a potential breeding ground for a pandemic."

Chinese activists visiting Yulin estimated that 400 dog and 200 cat carcasses were being sold each day this week, ahead of an annual dog meat festival that has taken place since at least 2010.

Distressing footage provided exclusively to Sky News shows stalls hanging with dog carcasses. Dogs still alive are kept in a cramped cage next to a butchery table.

Earlier this year, China's Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs changed its animal classification so that dogs are no longer classed as livestock.

These are only guidelines, not law. But Shenzhen and Zhuhai, both in southern Guangdong province, became the first cities to ban the sale of dog meat earlier this year.

The guidelines appear to have diminished dog meat sales in Yulin, in neighbouring Guangxi province, even if the trade continues.

Activists said all sales had been consolidated into one market. Some traders told the activists they were worried their stalls would be shut down closer to the festival, which starts on Sunday.

One slaughterhouse operator told them it was now more difficult to import dogs into Guangxi because of a government crackdown on transporting live animals between provinces.

This year, China banned the trade and consumption of wild animals, in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

The vast majority of Chinese people do not eat dogs.

A survey commissioned by the China Animal Welfare Association in collaboration with Humane Society International in 2017 found 64% of Chinese people want to see an end to the Yulin festival, and 51.7% think the dog meat trade should be banned entirely.

Dr Li told Sky News: "In the long run, it is really important that China starts legislating a national law to ban the dog meat industry.

"Because this industry is supported by a host of illegal and immoral activities against China's own laws, and for China's reputation and for the safety of the people, and also for the protection of minors, it must be ended."

https://news.sky.com/story/breeding...sale-in-china-despite-new-guidelines-12012054
 
China has reported nine new cases in Beijing over the past 24 hours.

That’s down from 22 the previous day, and the first time it has been in single figures for more than ten days.

More than 230 cases have been recorded in the recent Beijing "spike". The outbreak was linked to a large food market, and triggered lockdowns and travel bans in neighbourhoods across the city.
 
Beijing’s patient zero gets praise online

Despite recent concerns in China about a potential second wave of Covid-19, media have been calling on netizens to praise Beijing’s patient zero, a 52-year-old man who has been affectionately termed “Uncle Xicheng”.

“Uncle” is a common term of affection, and Xicheng is the name of the district he lives in. The man, surnamed Tang, contracted Covid-19 on 11 June and was the first patient in an outbreak that saw 236 people testing positive.

Today, people have been seeing footage of “Uncle Xicheng” on local broadcaster Beijing TV. He thanks social media users “for their concern” from his hospital bed and says: “I am now in a stable condition, and will definitely fight this virus!”

On Friday, the official China Daily noted that Mr Tang had been winning mass praise as “thanks to his great memory, he has contributed much to narrowing down the source of the infection”.

Doctors at the hospital he is being treated at also praised him for wearing a mask and riding a bicycle to the hospital to prevent other people from coming into contact with him.

Mr Tang’s online fame is helping China turn the tide domestically on stigma related to Covid-19. After the initial outbreak in the central city of Wuhan, the city’s local economy suffered significantly, as people became nervous about using services or products from the area.

Media are hoping that Mr Tang’s response and openness about the virus will prevent people from hiding their symptoms or feeling ashamed if they test positive.
 
Beijing coronavirus cases to see 'cliff-like' drop this week: expert

BEIJING (Reuters) - China’s capital will see a “cliff-like” drop in new cases in a recent outbreak of the novel coronavirus by the end of this week with efforts to cut chains of transmission underway, a disease control expert said.

The city of more than 20 million people reported its first case of a new spike in infections on June 11, linked to a sprawling wholesale food centre.

In all, 236 people have been infected in the worst outbreak in Beijing since the novel coronavirus was identified at a seafood market in the central city of Wuhan late last year.

Beijing reported on Monday nine new cases had been confirmed the previous day, sharply down from 22 a day earlier.

“If you control the source, and cut the chain of transmission, the number will have a cliff-like drop,” Wu Hao, a disease control expert from the National Health Commission, told state television in an interview aired late on Sunday.

Millions of people in Beijing have had their daily lives upended by the resurgence of the disease over the past 11 days, with some fearing a city lockdown is imminent.

But Wu said Beijing was not headed for a “flood-like” lockdown, unlike early efforts in Wuhan when little was known about the virus, adding that lockdown tactics had been more targeted this time.

To control the spread of the virus, Beijing has designated four neighbourhoods as high-risk and 39 as medium-risk, as of Monday.

People can leave and enter the medium-risk neighbourhoods, with temperature checks and registration, but apartment blocks with two confirmed cases or more are totally locked down.

In high-risk neighbourhoods, an entire residential compound is locked down if there is even one infection there.

To identify carriers, Beijing has been conducting tests on people it deems are in higher-risk groups such as restaurant workers and food and parcel couriers.

Residents in some low-risk neighbourhoods have also been tested. As of Saturday, about 2.3 million Beijing residents had been tested.

Though people are concerned, most are resigned to the need to be on guard for some time.

“We’ve to live with the virus for the long term before a vaccine is available,” said Bill Yuan, 28, an IT worker.

“There might be a few new infections all the time. If it happens, we’ve to stay alert for a while and quarantine. Then go back to work when it’s gone.”

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...liff-like-drop-this-week-expert-idUSKBN23T0SA
 
Another 13 cases in Beijing

Beijing has recorded another 13 virus cases, taking the recent total to 249.

The city had previously gone 57 days without a locally transmitted case but a cluster, linked to a huge food market, broke out earlier this month.

The city responded to the outbreak by banning people from at least 27 neighbourhoods from leaving the city, while others needed a negative test before they could leave.

Across China, 22 new cases were reported on Tuesday.
 
We did a Sikkim deal with them. In current scenario they need backers and being our powerful neighbors we should back em, shouldnt give into western powers unless they are offering something more substantial.
[MENTION=151383]Local.Dada[/MENTION] i was wrong , my bad underestimated the sly dragon.
 
China posts a further decline in infections

China reported a further decline in newly confirmed cases of the coronavirus on Friday, with 13 cases.

Eleven were in Beijing, where mass testing has been carried out following an outbreak that appears to have been largely brought under control.

The other two cases were brought by Chinese travellers from overseas, according to the National Health Council.
 
China virus cases stabilise as Italy sees drop in deaths

China has extended Covid-19 tests to newly reopened salons amid a drop in cases. No positive cases were found in Beijing’s beauty and barber shops in a further sign that the city’s recent outbreak has been largely brought under control.

According to AP, Beijing officials have temporarily shut a huge wholesale food market where the virus spread widely, reclosed schools and locked down some neighborhoods. Anyone leaving Beijing is required to have a negative virus test result within the previous seven days.

According to Italy’s Health Ministry data, there were eight deaths of infected patients since Friday, raising the nation’s known toll in the pandemic to 34,716.

There were 175 new cases, bringing the overall count of confirmed Covid-19 cases in the country where Europe’s outbreak first exploded to 240,136. In a sign the country was emerging from the crisis, fewer than 100 infected patients were occupying ICU beds nationwide for the first time since the very early days of the outbreak.
 
New China outbreak 'linked to food market'

More now on the strict lockdown that China has imposed near Beijing in an effort to contain a fresh outbreak of the virus.

Nearly half a million people have been barred from travelling in and out of Anxin county in Hebei province.

The latest spike is linked to a food market in Beijing, the South China Morning Post reported.

The city has ramped up testing in response to the outbreak, an official told a press conference on Sunday.

"We are also rolling out large scale screening to key regions and key populations," Zhang Qiang said. "We have already tested all the people that need to be tested."

Beijing reported its first case from this outbreak on 11 June, and since then more than 300 people have tested positive for Covi-19.
 
Beijing ramps up testing capacity, reaching a third of city's population so far

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Beijing has ramped up coronavirus testing efforts and has tested about a third of the Chinese capital’s population so far, a city official said on Sunday, as authorities seek to control an outbreak stemming from a wholesale market in mid-June.

As of Sunday noon, Beijing had collected 8.29 million patient samples for testing and completed 7.69 million tests, Zhang Qiang, an official from Beijing’s municipal committee, told a press conference.

“This means we have already tested all the people that need to be tested. We are also rolling out large scale screening to key regions and key populations (of the city) and improve our capability of testing,” said Zhang, adding that Beijing was also receiving medical support from other provinces.

Beijing reported its first case from the outbreak at Xinfadi market on June 11 and 311 people in the city of over 20 million have tested positive for the virus since then.

According to Zhang, the testing is being done in batches and includes workers from the market and residents in surrounding neighbourhoods. Students, front-line medical staff, and workers in the transportation, banking, supermarkets, express deliveries and beauty salon industries will also be tested.

Zhang added that Beijing’s daily testing capacity has increased to 458,000 per day.

China on Sunday reported 17 new coronavirus cases, of which 14 were from Beijing.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...hird-of-citys-population-so-far-idUSKBN23Z0FR
 
China has reinstated a strict lockdown near Beijing, affecting around 400,000 people, after a small surge in cases.

The restrictions have come into force in Anxin country in Hebei province.

Only essential workers are allowed to leave their homes, while one member of a household is allowed to go out once a day to shop for necessities.

After the pandemic emerged in China at the end of last year, the country has managed to get new infections to a consistently low level.

To avoid a second wave, even small surges are taken very seriously by the country's health authorities.
 
Extra precautions in Beijing

The Chinese capital Beijing has only reported seven new cases of Covid-19 today, taking the total number of cases to 325 since one person tested positive on 11 June.

The national Global Times newspaper signals optimism about this latest outbreak being under control, saying that “the number of confirmed cases in Beijing might go down to zero in around one week”.

But nevertheless, the city is taking no chances at easing lockdown unnecessarily, and is in fact only implementing stricter regulations.

Today, media note that the capital city has doubled its quarantine period from 14 days to 28 amid concerns from scientists that this outbreak actually could “be more contagious than the one in Wuhan”. Most of those currently in quarantine are reportedly “workers from the beef and lamb sector”.

The worst affected area of the city, the Fengtai District, has also introduced technologies that can help efforts to ensure that areas are disinfected.

Global Times shows how “mini tank” robots, costing some 66,000 yuan ($9,326; £7,596) have been deployed in the area, capable of disinfecting 10,000 square metres an hour!
 
Beijing lifts some lockdowns as virus cases drop

Beijing has lifted several lockdowns imposed to control a fresh coronavirus outbreak and reported just three new cases in the city, raising hopes that the cluster had been brought under control.

The Chinese capital had closed off dozens of residential compounds and carried out mass testing last month after hundreds of infections raised fears of a virus resurgence.

But five residential communities that have had no new virus cases during a control period were released from lockdown on Tuesday, state media reported, as the city relaxed curbs.
 
China urges coronavirus testing capacity ramp-up in preparation for potential outbreaks

BEIJING (Reuters) - China’s local governments and medical institutes should ramp up and reserve coronavirus testing capacity in preparation for increased demand amid potential outbreaks, national health authorities said on Thursday.

Local authorities should have emergency response plans to be able to swiftly expand nucleic test capacity, the National Health Commision said in a guideline on its website.

Nucleic acid test results should be delivered within six hours for patients at fever clinics and within a day for those who volunteer to be tested, according to the guideline.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...aration-for-potential-outbreaks-idUSKBN24317R
 
China detains professor who criticised Xi over coronavirus

Chinese authorities detained a law professor who published essays criticising President Xi Jinping over the coronavirus pandemic and accusing him of ruling “tyrannically”, AFP reported.

Xu Zhangrun, a rare outspoken critic of the government in China's heavily censored academia, was taken from his home in suburban Beijing by more than 20 people, one of his friends said on condition of anonymity.

Xu published an essay in February blaming the culture of deception and censorship fostered by Xi for the spread of the coronavirus in China.

China's “leader system is itself destroying the structure of governance”, Xu wrote in the essay that appeared on overseas websites, adding the chaos in the virus epicentre of Hubei province reflected systemic problems in the Chinese state.
 
Beijing reports zero new cases for first time since market outbreak

Beijing has reported no new cases of coronavirus for the first time since an outbreak emerged at the Chinese capital's main wholesale market last month.

City authorities say they have tested more than 11 million people for COVID-19 since June 11.


Pang Xinghuo, deputy director of Beijing's centre for disease control, said the outbreak was "stabilising and improving".
 
China could have done more to aid world's COVID-19 response, top U.S. health official says

U.S. coronavirus task force response coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx said that the United States and other countries could have had a stronger initial response to COVID-19 if China had been more forthcoming about key features of the virus.

At a panel held by the Atlantic Council, a U.S. think tank, Birx said the United States would have been more focussed on identifying COVID-19 patients without symptoms if China has shared information about the frequency with which COVID-19 patients, particularly young people, are asymptomatic.

“I have to say if we had known about the level of asymptomatic spread, we would have all looked at this differently,” Birx said at the panel. “That’s usually the initial countries’ responsibility ... and I think that did delay across the board our ability to really see or look for this.”

Birx said that public health officials had originally assumed that only 15 to 20% of COVID-19 patients are asymptomatic when in fact that number is at least 40%.

“We were looking for people with symptoms. We should have looked for anyone who would have been exposed,” she said.

President Donald Trump has levelled blame at China for the outbreak, saying the country should have warned the world much sooner.

China’s United States embassy told Reuters in a statement that China has been open, transparent and responsible since the pandemic broke out.

“We notified the [World Health Organization] of the epidemic, shared the genome sequencing of the virus, carried out international cooperation and helped other countries affected, all at the earliest time possible,” the statement said. “These are plain, internationally recognised facts, which cannot be denied or erased by anyone.”

The United States saw a 27% increase in new cases of COVID-19 in the week ended July 5 compared with the previous seven days.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...p-u-s-health-official-says-idUKKBN2482Y8?il=0
 
WHO advance team on way to China to set up probe into virus origin

An advance team from the World Health Organization (WHO) has left for China to organise an investigation into the origins of the coronavirus, a spokeswoman said.

The two WHO experts, specialists in animal science and epidemiology, will work with Chinese scientists to determine the scope and itinerary of the investigation, WHO spokeswoman Margaret Harris told a UN briefing.

"They are gone, they are in the air now, they are the advance party to work out the scope," she said.

The WHO will have no role in an independent panel, announced on Thursday, to review the global handling of pandemic, Harris said, adding: "From now on it is completely hands off".
 
According to a research piece I read, had the governments responded 1 month earlier, the death rate would have reduced by 95%.

Yes, Western governments were slow to react but the Chinese government needs to be held to account for not disclosing the spread of the pandemic in their soil.
 
Covid-19 has killed at least 561,551 people since the outbreak emerged in China last December, according to a tally from official sources compiled by AFP on Saturday.

At least 12,580,980 cases of coronavirus have been registered in 196 countries and territories. Of these, at least 6,706,700 are now considered recovered.

The tallies, using data collected from national authorities and information from the World Health Organization (WHO), probably reflect only a fraction of the actual number of infections.
 
Beijing sees no new cases for more than 10 days

The Chinese capital of Beijing has recorded no new cases for an 11th consecutive day, around a month after a new outbreak emerged in the city- linked to one of its biggest markets.

The outbreak, which eventually went on to infect more than 250 people, prompted a partial lockdown. But the chief epidemiologist from China’s CDC has now said Beijing’s outbreak has been “basically reined in”.

Overall China reported 10 new cases on Friday - nine of which were imported.
 
Japan reveals 87 companies eligible for 'China exit' subsidies

TOKYO -- Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry on Friday unveiled the first group of Japanese companies to subsidize for shifting manufacturing out of China to Southeast Asia or Japan.

Eighty-seven enterprises will receive a total of 70 billion yen ($653 million) to move production lines, in a bid to reduce Japan's reliance on its large neighbor and build resilient supply chains.

Thirty of these will shift production to Southeast Asia, including Hoya, which produces hard-drive parts and will move to Vietnam and Laos.

Sumitomo Rubber Industries will make nitrile rubber gloves in Malaysia, while Shin-Etsu Chemical will shift production of rare-earth magnets to Vietnam.

The other 57 companies will head to Japan.

Household goods maker Iris Ohyama currently produces face masks at Chinese plants in the port city of Dalian, Liaoning Province, and Suzhou, west of Shanghai, with nonwoven fabric and other main materials procured from Chinese companies.

With the help of subsidies, the company will begin producing face masks at its Kakuda factory in its home base in Miyagi Prefecture in northern Japan. All material will be prepared locally, independent of overseas suppliers.

Hygiene products maker Saraya, whose offerings include alcohol-based sanitizer, also qualifies for the subsidy.

Eligible companies include producers of aviation parts, auto parts, fertilizer, medicine and paper products, with the roster incorporating such big names as Sharp, Shionogi, Terumo and Kaneka.

The government earmarked 220 billion yen in the fiscal 2020 supplementary budget to create a subsidy program to encourage companies to move plants to Japan. Of that amount, 23.5 billion yen was set aside to promote the diversification of production sites from China to Southeast Asia.

Early in the coronavirus outbreak, Japan experienced a severe challenge in sourcing such items as masks, many of which come from China.

https://asia.nikkei.com/Economy/Japan-reveals-87-companies-eligible-for-China-exit-subsidies
 
China's western city Urumqi enters 'wartime mode' after reporting 16 coronavirus cases

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Urumqi, the capital of China’s far western region of Xinjiang, has gone into “wartime mode” and launched an emergency response plan after the city reported 16 new coronavirus cases on Friday.

State broadcaster CCTV cited unnamed officials as telling a press conference on Saturday that the city had suspended gatherings and ordered communities to restrict visits to other households.

It urged people not to make unnecessary trips outside the city and ordered infection tests for anyone who needed to leave Urumqi, aiming to prevent the spread of the virus. It has also carried out city-wide free infection tests, officials told the press conference as part of what the officials termed a “wartime” response.

On its official Weibo account on Saturday the regional government said all recent new infections and asymptomatic cases reported in the autonomous region were in Urumqi.

Rui Baoling, director of the disease control and prevention centre in Urumqi, told the news conference that recent cases in the city were associated with a cluster of activities, with all confirmed cases and asymptomatic infections reported in Tianshan District, CCTV said. She didn’t say what activities were involved.

“The epidemic has developed rapidly,” Rui was quoted saying.

Xinjiang, home to most of China’s Uighur ethnic minority, has so far mostly avoided the worst of the coronavirus pandemic which erupted in the central Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.

As of July 17, the region reported a total of 17 coronavirus cases, plus 11 asymptomatic cases. Another 269 people were under medical observation, according to the regional health commission.

It reported another 12 asymptomatic cases as of noon on Saturday.

SOURCE OF INFECTION

The city launched an emergency response plan on Friday to analyse confirmed cases and asymptomatic infections, state broadcaster CCTV reported, adding the government would carry out epidemiological investigations to trace the source of the infection in order to make sure no one was missed.

“The epidemic situation is generally controllable,” Rui was quoted as saying to state media.

Epidemic control measures in the city have led to the cancellation of more than 600 scheduled flights at Urumqi Diwopu International Airport, or more than 80% of the usual daily total, figures from aviation data firm Variflight showed.

Urumqi also suspended subway services from late Thursday.

Including the 16 cases in Urumqi, China reported 22 new coronavirus cases on the mainland for July 17, up from 10 a day earlier, the health authority said on Saturday. Six others were imported cases.

China reported 14 new asymptomatic patients, up from five a day earlier.

China’s capital Beijing suffered a flare-up of coronavirus infections last month, in response to which the government re-imposed strict control measures that were used across the country earlier in the year to stifle the first wave of infections. The measures appear to have controlled the outbreak.

As of Friday, mainland China had 83,644 confirmed coronavirus cases, the health authority said. The COVID-19 death toll remained at 4,634.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-reporting-16-coronavirus-cases-idUSKCN24J01L
 
U.S. accuses Chinese nationals of hacking spree for COVID-19 data, defense secrets

The U.S. Justice Department on Tuesday indicted two Chinese nationals over their role in what the agency called a decade-long cyber espionage campaign that targeted defense contractors, COVID researchers and hundreds of other victims worldwide.

U.S. authorities said Li Xiaoyu and Dong Jiazhi stole terabytes of weapons designs, drug information, software source code, and personal data from targets that included dissidents and Chinese opposition figures. They were contractors for the Chinese government, rather than full-fledged spies, U.S. officials said.

U.S. Assistant Attorney General for National Security John Demers said at a virtual press conference the hackings showed China “is willing to turn a blind eye to prolific criminal hackers operating within its borders.”

“In this manner, China has now taken its place, alongside Russia, Iran, and North Korea, in that shameful club of nations that provides safe haven for cybercriminals in exchange for those criminals being on call for the benefit of the state.”

Messages left with several accounts registered under Li’s digital alias, oro0lxy, were not immediately returned. Contact details for Dong were not immediately available.

The Chinese Embassy in Washington referred Reuters to recent Chinese Foreign Ministry comments that “China has long been a major victim of cyber thefts and attacks” and its officials “firmly oppose and fight” such activities.

The indictment mostly did not name any companies or individual targets, but U.S. Attorney William Hyslop, who spoke alongside Demers, cited “hundreds and hundreds of victims in the United States and worldwide.” Officials said the probe was triggered when the hackers broke into a network belonging to the Hanford Site, a decommissioned U.S. nuclear complex in eastern Washington state, in 2015.

Li and Dong were “one of the most prolific group of hackers we’ve investigated,” said FBI Special Agent Raymond Duda, who heads the agency’s Seattle field office.

A July 7 indictment made public on Tuesday alleges that Li and Dong were contractors for China’s Ministry of State Security, or MSS, a comparable agency to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. The MSS, prosecutors said, supplied the hackers with information into critical software vulnerabilities to penetrate targets and collect intelligence. Targets included Hong Kong protesters, the office of the Dalai Lama and a Chinese Christian non-profit.

As early as Jan. 27, as the coronavirus outbreak was coming into focus, the hackers were trying to steal COVID-19 vaccine research of an unidentified Massachusetts biotech firm, the indictment said.

It is unclear whether anything was stolen but one expert said the allegation shows the “extremely high value” that governments such as China placed on COVID-related research.

“It is a fundamental threat to all governments around the world and we expect information relating to treatments and vaccines to be targeted by multiple cyber espionage sponsors,” said Ben Read, a senior analyst at cybersecurity company FireEye.

He noted that the Chinese government had long relied on contractors for its cyberspying operations.

“Using these freelancers allows the government to access a wider array of talent, while also providing some deniability in conducting these operations,” Read said.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-u...r-covid-19-data-defense-secrets-idUKKCN24M27N
 
China asked by U.S. to close consulate in Houston

BEIJING - The Chinese Foreign Ministry said Wednesday that the country has been asked by the United States to close its consulate general in Houston, in a move that would inflame already strained tensions between the world's two major powers.

"On July 21, the U.S. abruptly demanded that China's consulate general in Houston cease all operations and events," the Foreign Ministry said, criticizing Washington for "seriously" violating international law.

It remains unknown why the United States has called on China to shut down its consulate general in Houston in the southern state of Texas.

"The unilateral closure of China's consulate general in Houston within a short period of time is an unprecedented escalation of its recent actions against China," the Chinese ministry said.

"We urge the U.S. to immediately revoke this erroneous decision. Should it insist on going down this wrong path, China will react with firm countermeasures," the ministry added.

According to Chinese state-run media, the United States has given China 72 hours to close the consulate general.

U.S. media reported, citing the Houston Police Department, that documents were being burned in the courtyard of the consulate general in the city on Tuesday night, although the Chinese Foreign Ministry said it has been operating "in a normal manner."

Sino-U.S. relations have been significantly deteriorating since China decided to enact a national security law for its territory Hong Kong, sparking concerns about an erosion of human rights and freedoms in the former British colony.

Late last month, the National People's Congress Standing Committee, China's top legislative body, went on to enact the security law, prohibiting acts of secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces in Hong Kong.

Under China's "one country, two systems" policy, Hong Kong was promised it would enjoy the rights and freedoms of a semiautonomous region for 50 years following its return to Chinese rule in 1997.

Beijing and Washington have also been at odds over several other issues such as business practice, trade, Taiwan and the South China Sea ahead of the U.S. presidential election in November, in which President Donald Trump is seeking a second term in the White House.

https://english.kyodonews.net/news/...sked-by-us-to-close-consulate-in-houston.html
 
Hong Kong sets new virus record

Hong Kong has reported 113 new coronavirus infections, a new daily record as a sudden surge in cases shows no signs of slowing despite ramped up social distancing rules.

The finance hub was one of the first places to be struck by the virus when it emerged from central China.

But the city had impressive success in tackling the disease, all but ending local transmissions by late June.

However, infections have spiked again this month and doctors say a new outbreak is spreading out of control in the densely packed territory of 7.5 million people.
 
China reports highest daily tally in more than a month

China has reported 46 new Covid-19 cases, the highest daily tally in more than a month, as it took steps to stem recent outbreaks that have infected more than 160 people at opposite ends of the country.

Authorities confirmed 22 cases in Urumqi, a city in the Xinjiang region in the country’s far west, the official Xinhua News Agency said. That raised the total in the local outbreak to 137 since the first case was detected 10 days ago.

Another 13 cases were confirmed in Liaoning province in the northeast, bringing the total there to 25, almost all in the city of Dalian. China has recorded 83,830 cases and 4,634 deaths since the pandemic began.
 
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Sunday rejected reports of China's Wuhan lab operating “covert operations” in Pakistan and creating "anthrax-like pathogens" as a politically motivated and fake story.

The Foreign Office, in a statement on Sunday, said the story was composed of distortion of facts and fabrications that quote anonymous sources.

“There is nothing secret about the Bio-Safety Level-3 (BSL-3) Laboratory of Pakistan referred to in the report. Pakistan has been sharing information about the facility with the States Parties to the Biological and Toxins Weapons Convention (BTWC) in its submission of Confidence Building Measures,” the Foreign Office said.

It added that Pakistan's bio safety lab is meant for diagnostic and protective system improvement by Research and Development (R&D) on emerging health threats, surveillance and disease outbreak investigation.

“Pakistan strictly abides by its BTWC obligations and has been one of the most vocal supporters for a strong verification mechanism to ensure full compliance by the States Parties to the Convention,” the Foreign Office noted

“The attempt to cast aspersions about the facility is particularly absurd against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has highlighted the need for better preparedness in the areas of disease surveillance and control and international collaborations in that regard, consistent with Article X of BTWC,” it added.

Earlier this week, a report titled “China's Wuhan lab operating ‘covert operations’ in Pakistan, creating ‘anthrax-like’ pathogens" in The Klaxon, an online magazine, had claimed China’s Wuhan lab has set up operations in Pakistan as part of a broader offensive against India and Western rivals.

According to the report, the secret facility was allegedly making anthrax-like pathogens which could be used in biological warfare.

The report while citing “highly credible intelligence sources” had claimed the programme was being entirely funded by China.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/299830-pa...b-creating-anthrax-like-pathogens-in-pakistan
 
For the seventh day in a row, mainland China has reported an increased number of cases of Covid-19. The country's media are urging people nationwide to not stop being vigilant, to continue wearing masks and avoid large gatherings.

In the last 24 hours, 105 symptomatic people have tested positive for Covid-19 nationwide. China records its asymptomatic results separately, so the number of people who have tested positive for Covid-19 is in fact much higher.

Most people who have tested positive live in the city of Urumqi in northwestern Xinjiang. Ninety-six have tested positive with symptoms there in the last 24 hours. However, these findings may simply be the results of mass testing, which the city has been carrying out aggressively since a woman in her 20s tested positive on 15 July.

The same goes for the city of Dalian in northeast Liaoning province, where five people have tested positive with symptoms. One person tested positive on 22 July, leading to an outbreak.

The main area of concern at the moment is just outside of the mainland: Hong Kong. More than 3,000 people have so far tested positive, more than 100 for two consecutive days. China’s leading respiratory expert, Zhong Nanshan, has told media today that the city should undergo mass testing.

However, as Hong Kong is an autonomous region with its own conditions, and has not followed the mainland’s strict lockdown procedures, it is not yet clear whether this will go ahead.
 
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday said his relationship with Chinese President Xi Jinping has frayed in the wake of the novel coronavirus pandemic and that he has not spoken to his Chinese counterpart in a long time.

“I used to have a very good relationship with him,” Trump told Fox Sports Radio in an interview, citing their Phase One trade deal hammered out last year and signed in early 2020. “I had a great relationship with President Xi. I like him, but I don’t feel the same way now.”

Trump said his feelings changed amid COVID-19.

“I certainly feel differently. I had a very, very good relationship, and I haven’t spoken to him in a long time.”

Trump, who is seeking re-election in the Nov. 3 U.S. election, made challenging China a key part of his 2016 presidential campaign and touted his friendly ties with Xi during much of his first term in office as he sought to make good on his trade deal promises.

But he said on Tuesday that the fallout from the outbreak was worse than the conflict over trade. “This is a thousand times the trade deal what happened with all of the death and ... the world had to shutdown. It’s a disgrace,” he told Fox.

First reports of the virus emerged from China in late 2019 and it has now infected more than 20 million people and killed at least 735,369 worldwide, including at least 5.1 million cases and at least 163,160 deaths in the United States.

U.S.-China ties have also frayed over Beijing’s crackdown in Hong Kong and the disputed South China Sea, among other issues.

Asked about the arrest of pro-democracy advocates in Hong Kong under China’s new security law, as well as issues over Taiwan, Trump pointed to his administration’s steps to end Hong Kong’s special trading status. He did not address the arrest of Hong Kong’s Apple Daily owner Jimmy Lai, one of the city’s most prominent activists.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and White House national security adviser Robert O’Brien on Monday said the United States was troubled by Lai’s arrest.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...hinas-xi-changed-after-covid-19-idUSKCN2571QM
 
China has reported only nine new cases of Covid-19 in the north-west region of Xinjiang, the area of the mainland with the largest current outbreak.

This is in stark contrast to two weeks ago. At the end of July more than 100 new cases were being reported each day in the region.

There were local lockdowns across the capital city of Urumqi – the area hardest hit - during the Islamic holiday of Eid al-Adha.

This affected a significant proportion of the city’s population, given that 20% of Urumqi’s population is made up of Uighur (12%) and Hui (8%) Muslims.

The Urumqi outbreak began on 15 July. In total, more than 19,000 people were placed under medical observation.

Communities were swiftly locked down while medical staff sent from 10 different regions carried out mass testing on the city’s population of 3.5 million.

There were never any major concerns that the Xinjiang outbreak might lead to a second wave. The Chinese government watches Xinjiang's citizens very closely, more so than in other regions of the country. It is the area where China has been internationally criticised for detaining huge numbers of Muslims in re-education camps.
 
China state media defends Wuhan pool party

China's state media has come to the defence of a theme park in Wuhan which hosted a massive music festival and pool party over the weekend and raised concern about COVID-19 when pictures and videos were widely shared overseas.

The Global Times said the packed event was a sign of life returning to normal in a city that spent 76 days in lockdown and accused critics of "sour grapes". The virus first appeared in Wuhan late last year.
 
Europe Just Declared Independence From China
As the EU navigates an increasingly Sino-American world, it finally sees the need to stand together, even against Beijing.


China’s diplomats were already having a terrible year in Europe, but this week they managed to make it even worse. At this rate, Chinese President Xi Jinping may achieve the dubious feat of alienating the Europeans faster and further than even U.S. President Donald Trump is doing.

Xi’s overarching objective in the region is to prevent the European Union and the U.S. from ganging up against China. He was hoping for a breakthrough at a summit with EU leaders scheduled for Sep. 14. Originally slated to take place in Leipzig, it’ll be a video conference instead, owing to the pandemic. But the stakes are high. So Xi this past week dispatched his foreign minister, Wang Yi, to five European countries for some preparatory sweet talk. Talk there was; it just wasn’t sweet.


Wang showed up hoping to hear the softer tones to which he’s accustomed from Europeans, who remain more eager than the Americans to keep trading and doing business with China. Instead, he was surprised at the amount of resistance he was picking up underneath the formal niceties.

But those dissonances were as nothing compared with his stopover in Berlin. Speaking to German reporters, Wang lashed out at the president of the Czech Senate, Milos Vystrcil, who had taken a delegation to visit Taiwan, which China considers part of its territory. Vystrcil would “pay a heavy price,” threatened Wang, fuming that the Czech’s “betrayal” made him “an enemy of 1.4 billion Chinese people.”

This elicited a prompt response from Heiko Maas, Germany’s foreign minister. Standing next to Wang at their joint press conference, Maas reminded his visitor that “we as Europeans act in close cooperation” and demand respect, and that “threats don’t fit in here.” The EU wouldn’t become a “plaything” in the Sino-American rivalry, he added. Colleagues from France, Slovakia and other European countries quickly backed him up.

In the ritualized world of diplomatic jargon, this moment signaled not only a new European tone but also a new direction. For years, many European countries, and above all Germany, did their best for commercial reasons to look the other way as China violated human rights, took advantage of Europe’s open markets and bullied some of its Asian neighbors. Those times appear to be over.

The list of grievances against China has simply become too long. It starts with the crackdown on Hong Kong and the suppression of the Uighurs in Xinjiang — China insists that both topics, like the Taiwanese question, are internal matters and none of the world’s business. Then there’s China’s saber-rattling in the South China Sea, and of course its rapacious approach to business.

To ameliorate the latter, the summit on Sept. 14 was originally meant to formalize a better relationship for mutual investment between the EU and China. But after years of negotiations, the Europeans are fed up with China’s intransigence over the many ways its state-owned or state-guided firms buy into the EU’s single market to distort competition or snaffle up technologies. Rather than facilitate Chinese investment in Europe, the EU is starting to restrict it.

That said, there are still limits on how far Europe, relative to the U.S., will go in opposing China. Noah Barkin, an American China watcher based in Berlin and currently at the German Marshall Fund, thinks that whereas the U.S. aims to “decouple” its economy from China’s, the EU merely wants to “diversify.”

That explains why some European countries, notably Germany, are still sitting on the fence about whether or not to ban Huawei Technologies Co., a Chinese telecoms giant, from supplying the kit for the forthcoming 5G networks. It also explains why France, with support from Germany and others, is trying harder to keep the whole Indo-Pacific region — basically, all the bits around China — free and prosperous.

More than the U.S., the Europeans realize that it’s not enough to check Chinese might wherever possible because they must also seek Chinese cooperation wherever necessary to solve global problems, from climate change to the next pandemic. Above all, the Europeans are hoping that the rivalry between China and the U.S., like that between Imperial Germany and Britain before 1914, doesn’t slide into a hot war in which the EU would be forced to choose sides.

For Europe, the goal is to retain a modicum of autonomy in a world increasingly dominated by two unreliable superpowers. If Joe Biden becomes the next U.S. president, the EU will try to partner with its traditional ally in bringing that about. If Donald Trump stays in office, Europe will accelerate its — admittedly modest — efforts to become equidistant. Either way, China’s diplomats are well advised to change their bearing in future visits.

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-09-05/europe-just-declared-independence-from-china
 
Europe Just Declared Independence From China
As the EU navigates an increasingly Sino-American world, it finally sees the need to stand together, even against Beijing.


China’s diplomats were already having a terrible year in Europe, but this week they managed to make it even worse. At this rate, Chinese President Xi Jinping may achieve the dubious feat of alienating the Europeans faster and further than even U.S. President Donald Trump is doing.

Xi’s overarching objective in the region is to prevent the European Union and the U.S. from ganging up against China. He was hoping for a breakthrough at a summit with EU leaders scheduled for Sep. 14. Originally slated to take place in Leipzig, it’ll be a video conference instead, owing to the pandemic. But the stakes are high. So Xi this past week dispatched his foreign minister, Wang Yi, to five European countries for some preparatory sweet talk. Talk there was; it just wasn’t sweet.


Wang showed up hoping to hear the softer tones to which he’s accustomed from Europeans, who remain more eager than the Americans to keep trading and doing business with China. Instead, he was surprised at the amount of resistance he was picking up underneath the formal niceties.

But those dissonances were as nothing compared with his stopover in Berlin. Speaking to German reporters, Wang lashed out at the president of the Czech Senate, Milos Vystrcil, who had taken a delegation to visit Taiwan, which China considers part of its territory. Vystrcil would “pay a heavy price,” threatened Wang, fuming that the Czech’s “betrayal” made him “an enemy of 1.4 billion Chinese people.”

This elicited a prompt response from Heiko Maas, Germany’s foreign minister. Standing next to Wang at their joint press conference, Maas reminded his visitor that “we as Europeans act in close cooperation” and demand respect, and that “threats don’t fit in here.” The EU wouldn’t become a “plaything” in the Sino-American rivalry, he added. Colleagues from France, Slovakia and other European countries quickly backed him up.

In the ritualized world of diplomatic jargon, this moment signaled not only a new European tone but also a new direction. For years, many European countries, and above all Germany, did their best for commercial reasons to look the other way as China violated human rights, took advantage of Europe’s open markets and bullied some of its Asian neighbors. Those times appear to be over.

The list of grievances against China has simply become too long. It starts with the crackdown on Hong Kong and the suppression of the Uighurs in Xinjiang — China insists that both topics, like the Taiwanese question, are internal matters and none of the world’s business. Then there’s China’s saber-rattling in the South China Sea, and of course its rapacious approach to business.

To ameliorate the latter, the summit on Sept. 14 was originally meant to formalize a better relationship for mutual investment between the EU and China. But after years of negotiations, the Europeans are fed up with China’s intransigence over the many ways its state-owned or state-guided firms buy into the EU’s single market to distort competition or snaffle up technologies. Rather than facilitate Chinese investment in Europe, the EU is starting to restrict it.

That said, there are still limits on how far Europe, relative to the U.S., will go in opposing China. Noah Barkin, an American China watcher based in Berlin and currently at the German Marshall Fund, thinks that whereas the U.S. aims to “decouple” its economy from China’s, the EU merely wants to “diversify.”

That explains why some European countries, notably Germany, are still sitting on the fence about whether or not to ban Huawei Technologies Co., a Chinese telecoms giant, from supplying the kit for the forthcoming 5G networks. It also explains why France, with support from Germany and others, is trying harder to keep the whole Indo-Pacific region — basically, all the bits around China — free and prosperous.

More than the U.S., the Europeans realize that it’s not enough to check Chinese might wherever possible because they must also seek Chinese cooperation wherever necessary to solve global problems, from climate change to the next pandemic. Above all, the Europeans are hoping that the rivalry between China and the U.S., like that between Imperial Germany and Britain before 1914, doesn’t slide into a hot war in which the EU would be forced to choose sides.

For Europe, the goal is to retain a modicum of autonomy in a world increasingly dominated by two unreliable superpowers. If Joe Biden becomes the next U.S. president, the EU will try to partner with its traditional ally in bringing that about. If Donald Trump stays in office, Europe will accelerate its — admittedly modest — efforts to become equidistant. Either way, China’s diplomats are well advised to change their bearing in future visits.

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-09-05/europe-just-declared-independence-from-china

If China hadn’t attacked us , would had supported (vocally lol) Chinese against Europeans..
 
Two Australian news outlets have removed their reporters from China over what they say is a diplomatic standoff.

The Australian Broadcasting Corporation's Bill Birtles and the Australian Financial Review's Mike Smith landed in Sydney on Tuesday.

Chinese authorities questioned both men before their departure. The ABC reported Birtles was "not asked about his reporting or conduct in China".

Relations between Australia and China have deteriorated in recent years.

Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne said consular officials had assisted the pair - the only reporters for Australian media currently in China.

"Our embassy in Beijing and consulate-general in Shanghai engaged with Chinese government authorities to ensure their wellbeing and return to Australia," she said in a statement on Tuesday.

The AFR reported that Chinese authorities had questioned the journalists about Cheng Lei, an Australian journalist for Chinese state media who has been detained since last month.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-54066869
 
Xinjiang: US to block some exports from Chinese region

The US has ordered border officials to block shipments of clothing, computer parts and other products made at select locations in China's Xinjiang region.

The move is the latest by the Trump administration to put pressure on China over its treatment of Xinjiang's Uighur Muslims.

The US said the sites use forced or prison labour.

China is believed to have detained more than one million people from Xinjiang, citing security risks.

It has said its programmes, which have included transferring detainees to manufacturing sites, provide job training and education and are necessary to combat terrorist and separatist threats.

Washington and Beijing have repeatedly clashed over the practices, with the US accusing the country of human rights abuses.

The orders on Monday "send a clear message to the international community that we will not tolerate the illicit, inhumane, and exploitative practices of forced labour in US supply chains," Mark A. Morgan, acting commissioner of US Customers and Border Protection agency, said.

"The Trump administration will not stand idly by and allow foreign companies to subject vulnerable workers to forced labour while harming American businesses that respect human rights and the rule of law."

The orders the US announced on Monday fall short of the region-wide ban that it had considered. Officials said, however, they were still exploring that possibility.

"Because of its unique nature, being, applying to a region as opposed to a company or a facility, we are giving that more legal analysis," Department of Homeland Security acting secretary Kenneth Cuccinelli said.

"We want to make sure that once we proceed that it will stick, so to speak."

China produces about 20% of the world's cotton with most of it coming from Xinjiang. The region is also a major source of petrochemicals and other goods that feed into Chinese factories.

This month, US entertainment giant Disney came under fire for shooting parts of its new Mulan film in Xinjiang.

Other firms have faced calls for consumer boycotts due to alleged ties to the region.

The orders issued on Monday apply to:

Products made at Lop County No. 4 Vocational Skills Education and Training Centre

Hair made at Lop County Hair Product Industrial Park

Clothing made by Yili Zhuowan Garment Manufacturing Co. Ltd. and Baoding LYSZD Trade and Business Co.

Cotton produced and processed by Xinjiang Junggar Cotton and Linen Co., Ltd

Computer parts from Hefei Bitland Information Technology Co., Ltd. in Anhui, China

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/business-54155809.
 
Former MI6 man suspected of selling information to undercover Chinese spies

A British businessman, formerly of MI6, is under investigation for allegedly selling information to undercover spies from China, a Whitehall official says.

Fraser Cameron, who runs the EU-Asia Centre think tank, is suspected of passing sensitive information about the EU to two spies allegedly posing as Brussels-based journalists.

He is alleged to have exchanged the information for thousands of Euros.

But Mr Cameron told The Times the allegations were "ridiculous".

The businessman, who worked for Britain's Secret Intelligence Service from 1976 to 1991, says he has no access to any "secret or confidential information".

Mr Cameron, who has also worked for the Foreign Office and European Commission, Htold Politico that the allegations "are without foundation", saying he has "a wide range of Chinese contacts as part of my duties with the EU-Asia Centre and some of them may have a double function".

A senior Whitehall official, who asked not to be named, told the BBC the investigation had been a long-running joint inquiry between British and Belgian intelligence and claimed that a breakthrough had come in recent months.

He said this was a great example of how closely British intelligence worked with its European partners.

The BBC's security correspondent Frank Gardner says there have been growing fears about the extent of covert Chinese intelligence-gathering in Europe, including over sensitive negotiations between the EU and Britain over Brexit.

Belgium's state security service is quoted by the Financial Times as saying Mr Cameron's alleged actions posed "a clear threat towards the European institutions" based in the Belgian capital.

The investigation is reportedly being run by Belgium's federal prosecutors.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-54213041.
 
NYPD officer charged with spying for China

A New York City Police Department officer has been charged with acting as an illegal agent for China.

Tibet-born Baimadajie Angwang is accused of reporting on the activities of Chinese citizens in the New York area and assessing potential sources of intelligence in the Tibetan community.

The naturalised US citizen, who worked for the police department's community affairs unit, was arrested on Monday.

If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of 55 years in prison.

According to prosecutors, Angwang is also employed by the US Army Reserve, working as a civil affairs specialist.

He is accused of being in contact with two officials at the Chinese consulate.

Aside from reporting on Tibetans in the city, he allegedly provided the consulate with access to senior NYPD officials through invitations to official events.

Angwang told his Chinese official handler that he wanted to be promoted within the NYPD so that he could assist China and bring the country "glory", court documents said.

Angwang is also accused of committing wire fraud, making false statements and obstructing an official proceeding.

Court documents said he received "multiple substantial wire transfers from the PRC [People's Republic of China]".

According to the documents, his father is a retired member of China's army and a member of the Communist Party of China. His mother is also a member of the party and a former government official.

"As alleged in this federal complaint, Baimadajie Angwang violated every oath he took in this country. One to the United States, another to the US Army, and a third to this Police Department," NYPD Commissioner Dermot F Shea said in a statement.

Tibet, a remote and mainly Buddhist territory, is governed as an autonomous region of China. Beijing says the region has developed considerably under its rule.

But rights groups say China continues to violate human rights, accusing Beijing of political and religious oppression - something Beijing denies.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-54244018.
 
Trump to tell U.N. it 'must hold China accountable for their actions' on virus

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump will tell the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday it “must hold China accountable for their actions” related to the coronavirus pandemic.

“The Chinese government, and the World Health Organization – which is virtually controlled by China – falsely declared that there was no evidence of human-to-human transmission,” Trump will say, according to excerpts released ahead of delivery.

“Later, they falsely said people without symptoms would not spread the disease ... The United Nations must hold China accountable for their actions,” he will say.

Trump taped his speech on Monday at the White House for delivery remotely to the General Assembly, which convened virtually this week.

The president promised to distribute a vaccine and said: “We will defeat the virus, we will defeat the virus, and we will end the pandemic” and enter a new era of prosperity, cooperation and peace.

Trump, a frequent critic of the United Nations, also said in the excerpts that if the UN is to be effective, it must focus on “the real problems of the world” like “terrorism, the oppression of women, forced labor, drug trafficking, human and sex trafficking, religious persecution, and the ethnic cleansing of religious minorities.”

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...able-for-their-actions-on-virus-idUSKCN26D1W4
 
Donald Trump and Xi Jinping offered starkly contrasting responses to the coronavirus pandemic on Tuesday, with the US president blaming Beijing for unleashing a “plague” on the world – and his Chinese counterpart casting the fight against the virus as an opportunity for international cooperation.


In his recorded video address to the annual UN general assembly, Trump unleashed an assault on China largely pitched at a domestic audience.

Speaking as the US death toll from Covid-19 passed 200,000, Trump promised a “bright future” but said the world “must hold accountable the nation which unleashed this plague on to the world: China.”

Trump also took the opportunity to attack the World Health Organization – falsely describing it as “virtually controlled by China” – and again claiming that the international body had said there was no evidence of human-to-human transmission.

The UN general assembly has itself been remade by the pandemic, reduced to a virtual event for the first time in its 75-year history, but sharp differences over the international response to coronavirus – and the contrasting world orders being offered by China and the US – were on clear display.

Trump promised to distribute a vaccine and said, “We will defeat the virus, and we will end the pandemic” and enter a new era of prosperity, cooperation and peace.

The US president also reprised his criticism of the UN, arguing that it should focus on what he described as “the real problems of the world” such as “terrorism, the oppression of women, forced labor, drug trafficking, human and sex trafficking, religious persecution, and the ethnic cleansing of religious minorities”.

In introducing Xi’s remarks, China’s UN ambassador Zhang Jun immediately hit back, saying China “resolutely rejects the baseless accusations against China. The world is at a crossroads. At this moment, the world needs more solidarity and cooperation, but not confrontation.”

The message of co-operation was repeated throughout the Chinese leader’s speech, in which Xi posed as the UN’s friend and offered the body extra cash to find a Covid vaccine, vowing Beijing has “no intention to fight either a cold war or a hot one with any country”.

Xi said: “We will continue to narrow differences and resolve disputes with others through dialogue and negotiation. We will not seek to develop only ourselves or engage in zero sum game. Unilateralism is dead.”

Xi said: “No country has the right to dominate global affairs, control the destiny of others or keep advantages in development all to itself.” He added that no nation should be the “bully or boss of the world”.

Echoing the sentiments of the UN secretary general António Guterres, Xi called for a global response to the epidemic, co-ordinated by the WHO – from which Trump has withdrawn and his presidential rival Joe Biden has promised to rejoin.

China, its image damaged by its early handling of the virus and subsequent heavy-handed diplomacy, has nevertheless found its influence at the UN growing, as Trump vacates territory that American diplomats once dominated.

Xi made no direct rebuke of Trump but said: “Any attempt of politicizing the issue or stigmatization must be rejected.” He added that his country had no desire for “hegemony, expansion or sphere of influence”.

In another implicit rebuke to the US, Xi sought to portray China as the country embracing modernity.

He said: “Burying one’s head in the sand like an ostrich in the face of economic globalization, or trying to fight it with Don Quixote’s lance, goes against the trend of history. Let this be clear: the world will never return to isolation.”

Trump tried to broaden his attack on China’s handling beyond Covid by condemning China’s carbon emissions record as well as its dumping of plastic.

He said: “Those who attack America’s exceptional environmental record while ignoring China’s rampant pollution are not interested in the environment. They only want to punish America. And I will not stand for it.” He made no mention of China’s human rights record.

But Xi seemed prepared for Trump’s unlikely line of attack, saying China was on course to reach zero carbon emissions by 2060. He added China would achieve a peak in carbon dioxide emissions before 2030.

The Chinese leader also signalled his intention to boost China’s commitments under the Paris climate agreement – from which Trump has withdrawn the US.

In his opening address, Guterres tried to galvanise the 193-member assembly to acknowledge the world was at a 1945 moment, requiring unprecedented co-operation to prevent the world splitting into two competing empires.

Warning that “we are moving in a very dangerous direction,” Guterres said: “Our world cannot afford a future where the two largest economies split the globe in a great fracture. A technological and economic divide risks inevitably turning into a geo-strategic and military divide. We must avoid this at all costs.”

But he also nailed his political colours to the mast, saying the populists and nationalists had failed to tackle Coronavirus, and again urged world leaders to follow the science, and to recognise that the coronavirus was only a dress rehearsal for the challenges ahead.

Guterres won support from the Russianpresident Vladimir Putin, who proposed a high-level conference to spread research on a coronavirus vaccine. He called for the WHO to be given greater powers.

The first leader to speak was Jair Bolsonaro, who used the occasion to deny that he had mishandled his country’s coronavirus crisis, and to claim that Brazil had been wrongly portrayed as an environmental villain.

Even as fires continue to rage in the Pantanal, the world’s largest tropical wetlands, Bolsonaro claimed Brazil had been the victim of a “misinformation campaign”.

Environmental advocates blame Bolsonaro for emboldening illegal ranchers and land speculators who set fire to land to increase its value for agricultural use.

Brazil has seen more than 137,200 coronavirus deaths – second only to the US – and Bolsonaro has faced accusations of catastrophically mismanaging the crisis by dismissing its severity and undermining containment measures.

In a speech which also seemed directed more to a domestic audience, Bolsonaro once more questioned the need for lockdown measures, and blamed the press for “politicizing” the disease, which has infected 4.6 million Brazilians.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/sep/22/trump-china-xi-beijing-united-nations
 
Foreign workers to be allowed to return to China

According to the Chinese Foreign Ministry, given the relative success of coronavirus prevention and control measures here, entry requirements to the country have been eased.

From 28 September, those with valid foreign worker residence permits - as well as people in the family reunion category - will again be allowed into China without any extra permissions.

Earlier this year, as the health emergency spread, entry to China was stopped for all foreigners without special clearance.

However, now the virus situation has stabilised in the country which saw the first clusters.

The announcement also says that foreign workers whose visas have expired in recent months can apply for new ones at Chinese embassies and consulates.

For the moment, quarantine remains necessary upon arrival.
 
Covid-19: China's Qingdao to test nine million in five days

The Chinese city of Qingdao is testing its entire population of nine million people for Covid-19 over a period of five days.

The mass testing comes after the discovery of a dozen cases linked to a hospital treating coronavirus patients arriving from abroad.

In May, China tested the entire city of Wuhan - home to 11 million people and the epicentre of the global pandemic.

The country has largely brought the virus under control.

That is in stark contrast to other parts of the world, where there are still high case numbers and lockdown restrictions of varying severity.

In a statement posted to Chinese social media site Weibo, Qingdao's Municipal Health Commission said six new cases and six asymptomatic cases had been discovered.

All the cases were linked to the same hospital, said the state-run Global Times.

The Chinese authorities now have a strategy of mass testing even when a new coronavirus cluster appears to be relatively minor, correspondents say.

Read more: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-54504785
 
Shanghai airport Covid scare sparks 'chaotic' mass testing

A string of positive Covid tests at Shanghai's Pudong airport has sparked mass testing of thousands of people amid reportedly chaotic scenes.

Authorities requested all cargo staff come for testing on Sunday.

Official pictures released of the testing appear to show an orderly, calm process.

However, other videos believed to be of the mass testing show officials in hazmat suits corralling large, yelling crowds into a restricted space.

Many of the videos have since disappeared, and state media have not reported on any chaos, saying only that more than 16,000 people were tested overnight.

According to China's Global Times newspaper, mass testing began on Sunday afternoon after several cargo workers and close contacts tested positive.

Shanghai has reported at least seven local cases since 9 November, mainly involving this group, following five months with no new infections.

Pictures accompanying the newspaper's report show neat and orderly queues, with lines winding inside the airport's multi-storey carpark.

But posts on Chinese social media platform Weibo paint a different picture, saying the testing turned into chaos when too many workers flooded into the site, pushing it beyond capacity.

One video shows workers with face masks being channelled through a carpark by staff in full hazmat suits, with people shouting and pushing.

The videos were all taken down by Monday morning.

According to Chinese news agency Xinhua, the cargo workers will now be given regular tests and those in high-risk jobs will also be given vaccines.

While no Chinese vaccine is fully approved yet, some frontline workers like medical staff have already received a dose.

The coronavirus pandemic first started in China in late 2019, but through rigorous lockdowns the country managed to bring infections down. Over the past months it has had only small, sporadic local outbreaks.

Mass testing has been one of the tools the Chinese government has used to track any outbreaks, including in May testing the 11 million-strong population of Wuhan, the city where the novel coronavirus was first identified.

The total number of confirmed cases in China stands at just over 92,000 since the beginning of the pandemic, with a death toll of just over 4,700, according to Johns Hopkins University research.

China does not include asymptomatic cases in its official tally.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-55039627
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/usa-china-stocks/update-1-u-s-congress-passes-bill-that-could-delist-chinese-stocks-from-u-s-markets-idUSL1N2II36R

Chinese firms on U.S. exchanges threatened by bill headed to Trump's desk

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives passed a law to kick Chinese companies off U.S. stock exchanges if they do not fully comply with the country’s auditing rules, giving President Donald Trump one more tool to threaten Beijing with before leaving office.

The measure passed the House by unanimous voice vote, after passing the Senate unanimously in May, sending it to Trump, who the White House said is expected to sign it into law.

“The Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act” bars securities of foreign companies from being listed on any U.S. exchange if they have failed to comply with the U.S. Public Accounting Oversight Board’s audits for three years in a row.

While is applies to companies from any country, the legislation’s sponsors intended it to target Chinese companies listed in the United States, such as Alibaba, tech firm Pinduoduo Inc and oil giant PetroChina Co Ltd..

Measures taking a harder line on Chinese business and trade practices generally pass Congress with large margins. Both Democrats and Trump’s fellow Republicans echo the president’s hard line against Beijing, which became fiercer this year as Trump blamed China for the coronavirus ravaging the United States.

Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen, who co-authored the bill with Republican Senator John Kennedy, said in a statement that American investors “have been cheated out of their money after investing in seemingly-legitimate Chinese companies that are not held to the same standards as other publicly listed companies.”

Kennedy said China was using U.S. exchanges to “exploit” Americans. “The House joined the Senate in rejecting a toxic status quo,” he said in a statement.

The act would also require public companies to disclose whether they are owned or controlled by a foreign government.

The American Securities Association praised passage of the bill saying it was necessary to protect Americans from “fradulent companies controlled by the Chinese Communist Party.”

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‘NON-DISCRIMINATORY ENVIRONMENT’

The Chinese embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said before the vote that it was a discriminatory policy that politically oppresses Chinese firms.

“Instead of setting up layers of barriers, we hope the U.S. can provide a fair and non-discriminatory environment for foreign firms to invest and operate in the U.S.,” Hua told a news conference.

A spokesman for Alibaba pointed to a comment on the bill from May, when it was passed by the Senate. Chief Financial Officer Maggie Wu told investors the firm would “endeavor to comply with any legislation whose aim is to protect and bring transparency to investors who buy securities on U.S. stock exchanges.”

Chinese authorities have long been reluctant to let overseas regulators inspect local accounting firms, citing national security concerns.

Officials at China’s securities regulator indicated earlier this year they were willing to allow inspections of audit documents in some circumstances, but past agreements aimed at solving the dispute have failed to work in practice.

Shaun Wu, a Hong Kong-based partner at law firm Paul Hastings, said increased enforcement against Chinese companies was likely even though Democrat Joe Biden will become president in January.

He said if the bill becomes law, “all Chinese companies listed in the U.S. will face enhanced scrutiny by the U.S. authorities and inevitably consider all available options.”

This could include listing in Hong Kong or elsewhere, he said. Several U.S.-listed Chinese firms, including Alibaba and KFC China operator Yum China, have recently carried out secondary listings in Hong Kong.

Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; additional reporting by Alex Alper in Washington and Alun John in Hong Kong; Editing by Alistair Bell, Chris Sanders and Lincoln Feast.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
 
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