Category: China

  • MIL-OSI China: Shaolin festival opens with over 2,500 kung fu practitioners

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    The opening ceremony of the 13th Zhengzhou International Shaolin Wushu Festival was held in Dengfeng of Zhengzhou, Henan province, on Saturday.

    With 2,560 kung fu practitioners from 56 countries and regions participating in the competition, the festival provides an opportunity to immerse themselves in the rich heritage and culture of Shaolin kung fu.

    Sven Husmann, 50, expressed his enthusiasm for attending the opening ceremony, emphasizing the event’s role as cross-cultural exchange and mutual learning.

    “We aim to get the spirit of this festival and carry it back to Germany upon our return to Europe,” he remarked,

    The festival showcased a diverse range of activities, including traditional Shaolin Wushu competitions, an international fight competition, and US-China youth training camp.

    People also witnessed Khmer Boxing, a traditional Cambodian martial art, at the Shaolin Temple.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese drama merges Western symphony, Peking Opera to tell paper-making legend

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    An actor performs the poetry drama “Ein Heldenleben — Cai Lun”, a Chinese drama about the legendary inventor of paper-making, in London, Britain on Oct. 17, 2024. (Xinhua/Li Ying)

    A Chinese drama about the legendary inventor of paper-making, who lived nearly 2,000 years ago, premiered in London on Thursday night, captivating the audience with a sensory spectacle that blends Western classical music with elements of Chinese culture.

    At LSO St Luke’s, two actors dressed in Peking Opera attire delivered their recitative lines in the traditional style, accompanied by an orchestra performing Richard Strauss’s symphonic poem Ein Heldenleben.

    “I think it’s incredibly unique and imaginative, and I’m amazed at how the drama of the story seems to fit so amazingly well with the music,” Alison Kiln told Xinhua after watching the show, adding that she had never experienced a live performance as “amazing” as this before.

    Based on Strauss’s iconic composition, the symphony poetry drama “Ein Heldenleben — Cai Lun” offers a glimpse into the life and emotional struggles of Cai Lun, the inventor of the paper-making process during China’s Han Dynasty (202 B.C.-220 A.D.).

    Running for just one night, the show was co-presented by the Chen Xinyi Art Centre from Shanghai and the Fidelio Orchestra.

    Speaking to Xinhua before the show, Raffaello Morales, conductor and founder of the London-based orchestra, said that while it is not the first instance of combining different art forms, the integration of symphony and Peking Opera represents a new exploration. When he first learned about this potential collaboration in 2023, he found it to be a “very interesting proposition.”

    “At the end of the day, I think the tension that you have on stage always brings something creative and something worthwhile,” he said.

    Chen Xinyi, the director of the production, told Xinhua that she believed the show would be “aesthetically satisfying” and hoped it would help people from overseas learn about the great individuals of China, their personalities, and their inspiring spirits.

    The 86-year-old director and playwright has been involved in over 150 productions throughout her career. For the past two decades, she has explored the fusion of drama and symphony, resulting in nine productions of symphonic poetry drama.

    Created in 2020, the production has toured several cities in China, including Shanghai and Hangzhou. 

    Actors perform the poetry drama “Ein Heldenleben — Cai Lun”, a Chinese drama about the legendary inventor of paper-making, in London, Britain on Oct. 17, 2024. (Xinhua/Li Ying)

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Beijing plans to vastly expand autonomous driving test area

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    Beijing plans to significantly expand its high-level autonomous driving demonstration area to approximately 3,000 square kilometers between the fourth and sixth ring roads, more than double the size of the city’s six urban districts, an official said on Friday.

    Since the launch of China’s first high-level autonomous driving demonstration zone in September 2020, the city has successfully developed intelligent infrastructure across 600 square kilometers, said Wang Lei, director of the Beijing High-level Autonomous Driving Demonstration Zone Work Office, during the 2024 World Intelligent Connected Vehicles Conference.

    The expansion is part of the Chinese capital’s efforts to position itself at the forefront of autonomous driving technology development.

    The demonstration zone has issued road test permits to 33 companies, covering nearly 900 vehicles with a combined autonomous driving test mileage of over 32 million kilometers, accounting for more than a quarter of the total national autonomous test mileage.

    Major companies such as Baidu, Pony.ai and JD.com are among those participating in the project, piloting various autonomous applications, including passenger vehicles, unmanned deliveries and autonomous patrol services.

    The demonstration zone will continue to expand in both scale and the diversity of application scenarios, Wang said.

    Beijing is also working on new legislation to regulate the burgeoning autonomous driving sector.

    Driven by advanced technology, supportive regulations and strong investor enthusiasm, the autonomous driving industry is rapidly moving toward large-scale commercial use, with China revving up efforts to foster tech-intensive new growth engines.

    By the end of August, Chinese public security authorities had issued 16,000 test licenses for autonomous vehicles, with some 32,000 kilometers of roads nationwide opened for autonomous vehicle testing, according to the Ministry of Public Security.

    Global consulting firm McKinsey & Company projects that China will become the world’s largest market for self-driving vehicles, with revenue from such vehicles and mobility services exceeding 500 billion U.S. dollars by 2030.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China issues regulations on export control of dual-use items

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    Chinese Premier Li Qiang has signed a decree of the State Council to unveil regulations on export control of dual-use items, which will take effect on Dec. 1, 2024.

    Upholding a holistic approach to national security, the regulations, consisting of six chapters and 50 articles, were formulated to maintain international peace, coordinate high-quality development with high-level security, and improve export control capabilities of dual-use items.

    Dual-use items mean goods, technologies and services that may be used either for civil purposes or for military purposes or to contribute to an increase in military potential, especially to design, develop, produce or use weapons of mass destruction and their means of delivery.

    According to trade facilitation measures included in the regulations, the registration system of exporters for dual-use items will be abolished, and the transparency and standardization of export control policies for dual-use items will be enhanced.

    The regulations also include detailed measures for license management, control list and supervision of export control of dual-use items.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Symposium held in Islamabad on China-Pakistan cooperation to drive modernization

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    Khalid Mahmood (C), chairman of the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad (ISSI) Board of Governors, speaks at the Hong Ting Forum held in Islamabad, Pakistan, Oct. 18, 2024. The Hong Ting Forum themed “Understanding China-Pakistan All-Weather Strategic Cooperative Partnership and Chinese-style Modernization Development Path” has been held in Pakistan’s federal capital city of Islamabad. The symposium held on Friday drew about 100 participants, including diplomats, scholars, and media representatives. It was co-convened by Xinhua News Agency and the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad (ISSI), an Islamabad-based think tank. (Xinhua/Ahmad Kamal)

    The Hong Ting Forum themed “Understanding China-Pakistan All-Weather Strategic Cooperative Partnership and Chinese-style Modernization Development Path” has been held in Pakistan’s federal capital city of Islamabad.

    The symposium held on Friday drew about 100 participants, including diplomats, scholars, and media representatives. It was co-convened by Xinhua News Agency and the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad (ISSI), an Islamabad-based think tank.

    Speaking at the event, Shi Yuanqiang, minister of Chinese Embassy in Pakistan, said that China is ready to share development opportunities with the rest of the world.

    “China and Pakistan are good neighbors and all-weather strategic cooperative partners, and mutually beneficial cooperation benefits both countries,” he added.

    Masood Khalid, former Pakistani ambassador to China, said the third plenary session of the 20th Communist Party of China Central Committee has adopted a grand strategic blueprint for Chinese-style modernization.

    “Pakistan greatly value our time-tested relationship with China, and both countries are tied in a relationship which is unbreakable,” Khalid said, adding that Pakistan should learn from the development model of Chinese-style modernization to embark on the path of self-reliance and better benefit both nations and regional development.

    Mudassar Iqbal, deputy director of Associated Press of Pakistan, said that China’s approach to modernization is not only benefiting its own people but also contributing to global development.

    “The ironclad friendship between Pakistan and China will enable the two countries to stand and move forward side by side and forge a future of shared prosperity and unshakable friendship,” he added.

    Hassan Daud Butt, senior advisor at the China Study Center of the Sustainable Development Policy Institute, an Islamabad-based think tank, said that Pakistan should fully utilize the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) to expand cooperation with China in various fields such as industry, agriculture, science and technology, digital economy, green energy and technological innovation.

    On the occasion, Khalid Mahmood, chairman of the ISSI Board of Governors, said efforts should be stepped up by the media and think tanks of Pakistan and China to contribute to deepening the all-weather strategic cooperative partnership between the two countries. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese company begins construction of crucial Neno-Ligowe road in Malawi

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    A Chinese company, together with local officials, on Friday announced the commencement of the Neno-Ligowe road construction in Ligowe Village of Neno, one of Malawi’s isolated districts.

    Neno, a border district with Mozambique in southern Malawi, is known for its mountainous terrain and poor roads, which become impassable during the rainy season.

    According to Neno District Council Official Brightone Mphinga, the Neno-Ligowe road, a 20 km stretch, is vital for the people of Neno as it will not only facilitate the transportation of people and goods, especially farm produce, but also improve access to health and education services in the area.

    Mphinga told Xinhua that the arrival of China Railway 20th Bureau Group Corporation Limited (CR20) to announce the start of the project is an assurance that the long-awaited road will soon be realized.

    He said that the poor condition of the road has long deprived the people of Neno of essential services, including healthcare and education.

    “This is a crucial project for us, and we are very grateful. We want to assure the CR20 company that the District Commissioner’s office, along with all government offices and local communities, will work together to provide all necessary support until the project is completed,” Mphinga said.

    Chief Mlauli, the area’s highest traditional authority, echoed Mphinga’s sentiments, pledging continued community support to ensure smooth progress. He said that the road’s completion will significantly boost the local economy, making it easier and more affordable for farmers to transport crops such as Irish potatoes, cowpeas, tangerines and oranges to market.

    CR20 Project Manager Deng Jing reassured the people of Neno that the company will deliver a high-quality, durable road within the 18-month contract period. He also called for support from local authorities and the community to ensure the project’s success.

    CR20 has already mobilized more than 10 dump trucks and excavators at the site, with nearly 100 Chinese and Malawian workers ready to begin construction.

    The Neno-Ligowe Road project involves upgrading the existing dirt road, which is often impassable, to a 9.5-meter-wide asphalt-paved route. The road is critical for transportation and socio-economic development in the region, connecting Mwanza, a major border post, to Ntcheu, a commercial hub for farm produce in central Malawi.

    Since 2018, CR20 has implemented several projects in Malawi, contributing to local capacity building through employment for over 5,000 Malawians, as well as training and mentorship programs. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Death toll from Israeli airstrikes on Lebanon reaches 2,448, injuries up to 11,471

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    The death toll from Israeli airstrikes on Lebanon since the beginning of the Israel-Hezbollah conflict has reached 2,448, with injuries up to 11,471, according to a report on Saturday.

    The report, released by the Disaster Risk Management Unit at the Lebanese Council of Ministers, said that 30 people were killed and 135 others wounded by Israeli airstrikes on Lebanon in the past 24 hours.

    Meanwhile, 82 airstrikes and shelling were recorded in different areas, mostly concentrated in southern Lebanon, bringing the total number of attacks since the beginning of the Israeli “aggression” to 10,415, it said.

    According to the report, 1,094 accredited shelters have been opened to accommodate and receive displaced persons, and the number of certified shelters having reached their maximum capacity has reached 901.

    The report said that the Lebanese General Security had recorded 337,972 Syrian nationals and 138,005 Lebanese crossing into Syria since Sept. 23, the time when the Israeli army launched an unprecedented, intensive air attack on Lebanon, dubbed “Arrows of the North,” in a dangerous escalation with Hezbollah.

    Since Oct. 8, 2023, Hezbollah and the Israeli army have been exchanging fire across the Lebanese-Israeli border amid fears of a broader conflict as the war between Hamas and Israel continues in the Gaza Strip. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Drone from Lebanon targets Netanyahu’s residence

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    This photo taken on Oct. 19, 2024 shows a blocked road near Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s private residence in the northern coastal town of Caesarea, Israel. A drone launched from Lebanon on Saturday was targeting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s private residence in the northern coastal town of Caesarea, said the prime minister’s office. The office said Netanyahu and his wife were not at home at the time and the drone attack caused no casualties. (JINI via Xinhua)

    A drone launched from Lebanon on Saturday was targeting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s private residence in the northern coastal town of Caesarea, said the prime minister’s office.

    The office said Netanyahu and his wife were not at home at the time and the drone attack caused no casualties.

    According to a statement issued by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), the drone hit a house in Caesarea. Israeli media, citing sources, reported that the house was not the prime minister’s residence.

    The IDF also said two other drones launched at the time into Israel were successfully intercepted.

    Following the launch, air defense sirens were heard at Glilot Base in central Israel, where Unit 8200, an elite cyber intelligence unit, is located. 

    This photo taken on Oct. 19, 2024 shows a blocked road near Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s private residence in the northern coastal town of Caesarea, Israel.A drone launched from Lebanon on Saturday was targeting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s private residence in the northern coastal town of Caesarea, said the prime minister’s office.The office said Netanyahu and his wife were not at home at the time and the drone attack caused no casualties. (JINI via Xinhua)

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Remarks by Vice President Harris at a Campaign Event | Lansing,  MI

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    UAW Local 652Lansing, Michigan
    5:31 P.M. EDT
    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Hey, everybody.  Hey.  (Applause.)  Hey, everyone.  Good afternoon.  Good afternoon, everyone.
    Oh, it’s good to be in the house of labor.  Good afternoon.  (Applause.)  Good afternoon.
    Ben, I want to thank you for your leadership.  I just said to him, I mean, what a leader he is.  You know, I just — first of all, it’s so good to be in the house of labor, and it’s so good to be with people who understand the dignity of work and fight for it every day.  And it’s not an easy fight, but it’s a good fight.
    And I thank you for all that you do, Ben, and everybody who is here.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Thank you.  Thank you.  Thank you. 
    So, it’s wonderful to be back in Michigan and to be with so many incredible leaders, including, of course, Representative Slotkin.  Where is she?  She’s — there you are.  (Applause.)  Who we must elect to the United States Senate.  (Applause.)  And we will.  I’m counting on that.
    State Senator Hertel, let’s send him to the United States House of Representatives.  (Applause.)  There you are.
    And a special thanks to the brothers and sisters of United Auto Workers.  Thank you for all that you are, all that you do, and the warm welcome.  (Applause.) 
    And, of course, for generations in Lansing and across our country, union members have helped lead the fight for fair pay, better benefits, and safe working conditions, and every person in our nation has benefited from your work. 
    You know, everywhere I go, I tell people, you may not be a union member, but you better thank unions — (applause) — for the five-day work week, for sick leave, for paid family leave and vacation time, because we are all clear: Collective bargaining benefits our entire nation — our entire nation.  (Applause.) 
    Because here’s the deal.  When union wages go up, everybody’s wages go up.  When union workplaces are safer, everyone’s workplace is safer.  So, thank a union.  (Applause.)  Thank a union. 
    And the bottom line is when unions are strong, America is strong.  Unions have always fought to make our nation more equal, more fair, and more free.  And in this election, everything we have fought for, for years in this movement — in this movement, for unions and for labor, is on the line. 
    And I’m about to talk about it in real terms because we always have real talk with each other, and your members can afford nothing less, which has been why I appreciate your leadership. 
    This election is about two very different visions for our nation: one that’s trying to take us backward — him — and ours that is about moving forward and about the future.  (Applause.)  We fight — we fight for a future where we protect the freedom to organize, where we understand the importance of collective bargaining. 
    You know, I sometimes say to young people — and, by the way, have you noticed how, when you look at the polling, younger workers coming into the workforce, they get it and they understand the power and the nobility of unions. 
    And I always say to people, look, here’s the thing about collective bargaining.  Everybody should want that, when there’s a negotiation, the outcome would be fair.  Right?  Who’s going to argue with that?  Everybody should want that — that there will be a fair outcome in a negotiation. 
    All right.  So, if we start from there — we’re all reasonable people — then let’s think about it.  If you’re talking about the worker, the one worker trying to negotiate against the corporation, is that outcome going to be fair? 
         AUDIENCE MEMBERS:  No.
    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  No.  The disparity in power is too great.  So, collective bargaining, it’s a simple, simple and important point.  You let the workers organize so that the collective, together, who have the same concerns, the same issues, can be banded together to have equal power in a negotiation, because the whole point is the outcome of the negotiation should be fair.  That’s what collective bargaining is about.  That’s what unions are about.  (Applause.)
    It’s about basic fairness, and it’s about the dignity of work, understanding all workers deserve to be treated with dignity and respect.  That’s what we’re talking about when we talk about this movement and the strength of the movement and the importance of keeping it going. 
    We talk about, then, our knowledge about the importance of building a future where we tap into the ambition of the American people, where we build what I call an “opportunity economy” — right? — so every American has an opportunity to own a home, to buy a car, to build wealth, to start a business.
    And I will always — it is my pledge to you — put the middle class and working people first.  I come from the middle class, and I will never forget where I come from.  (Applause.)  I will never forget where I come from.  I know where I come from.
    Hard work is good work.  Hard work is good work and must receive the value to which it is due, which means understanding the value of the worker.  (Applause.) 
    And we know we cannot have a strong middle class without American manufacturing.  Over the last three and a half years, we brought manufacturing back to America, creating 730,000 manufacturing jobs — (applause) — with your help — with your help.  We announced the opening of more than 20 new auto plants in the United States, and we did it by investing in American industry and American workers.  (Applause.)
    And I will make sure America, not China, wins the competition for the 21st century.  (Applause.) 
    So, under my plan, it’s about investing in the industries that built America, like steel, iron, the great American auto industry.  And we will ensure that the next generation of breakthroughs, from advanced batteries to electric vehicles, are not just invented but built right here in America by American union workers.  (Applause.)  Because it is they and you who have proven how to get the job done.  (Applause.)
    And as part of that vision, we will invest in manufacturing communities like Lansing.  We will retool existing factories, hire locally, and work with unions to create good-paying jobs, including, by the way, jobs that do not require a college degree. 
    And I’mma tell you why.  And I’mma tell you why, because I’m really clear that a college degree is not the only measure of the skills and experience of the qualified worker, and we need to understand — (applause) — we need to understand that. 
    In fact, it is my pledge that, as president, I’m going to do a critical assessment of federal jobs to look at those that don’t require a college degree so we can start talking about good jobs based on the skill and experience of the worker and not random measures of who can do what.  And I plan on, then, challenging the private sector to do the same.  (Applause.)
    And we will importantly protect the pensions of union workers and retirees.  (Applause.)  Again, it’s about the dignity of work, which includes the dignity of retirement.  After a lifetime of working hard, let’s talk about the dignity of retirement, the dignity of aging. 
    And that’s why, as attorney general, I sued the big banks to return hundreds of millions of dollars to workers and their families after their pensions were mismanaged.  This is not new to me.  I’ve done that work. 
    As a United States senator, I pushed for legislation to rescue workers’ pensions without cutting the benefits that workers had earned. 
    And, as vice president, I worked alongside then-Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh, and we, for a year, worked on what we needed to do with the federal workforce, which was in our direct power, to increase the ability for collective bargaining and to ensure that they have all the resources they need to grow in terms of organizing. 
    As vice president, I also helped to do the long overdue work to protect the pensions of more than 1 million union members.  And yesterday, I announced the protection of the full earned pension benefits of more than 22,500 union workers and retirees in Michigan under the Detroit Carpenters’ Pension Fund.  (Applause.) 
    Because, again, just to put a fine point on it, when it comes to your pension or Social Security or Medicare, these are retirement benefits you have earned.  This is not about a giveaway.  You’ve earned it.  And it must be protected, and it must be respected — after decades of hard work, that you receive it.  And honoring these benefits must be an ironclad commitment.  (Applause.)
    Now — now let’s talk about, you know, the guy on the other side.  Let’s talk about Donald Trump for a minute.  Shall we?  So —
         AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Booo —
    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  And because he has a very different view.  Now, in all seriousness, he has a very different view of workers, of hard work, of the dignity of work.  You guys — we know it.  We know it. 
    He tries to, you know, do his rhetorical thing at — at rallies like he understands what it means to earn a living.  No, you understand what I’m saying.  He pretends that he understands workers and the hard work and the battle workers face every day to get their due wages and benefits. 
    Well, we’re not falling for the okey-doke, because we know — we know what he has said, and we know what he has done.  (Applause.)  He who called Social Security a Ponzi scheme.  He called it a Ponzi scheme.  He recommended we raise the retirement age to 70.  Can you imagine, if you are required to work to 70?  He who intends to cut Social Security and Medicare?
    You know, we know how many people — their only source of income is their social security check.  Talk about — right? — is the value about dignity in retirement, dignity in aging.  And remember, he was the only one — he said he was going to be the only one who could bring back America’s manufacturing jobs.  You know how he talks.  (Deepens voice.)  “I’m the only one,” right?  (Laughter.)  You know how he talks.  (Laughter and applause.) 
    And then, because we’re too busy watching what he’s doing to hear what he’s saying, we know America lost nearly 200,000 manufacturing jobs when he was president — okay? — including tens of thousands of jobs right here in Michigan.  And those losses, we know and we’ll note, started before the pandemic — okay? — making Donald Trump one of the biggest —
         AUDIENCE:  Losers!
    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  — losers of manufacturing jobs in American history. 
    And his track record for the auto industry was a disaster.  He promised workers in Warren that the auto industry would — I’m going to quote — “not lose one plant” under his presidency.  Then American automakers announced the closure of six auto plants when he was president, including General Motors in Warren and Stellantis in Detroit.  Thousands of Michigan autoworkers lost their jobs.
    And if he wins again, we can expect there would be more of the same, because we know what he has done.  And we know that we’re going to focus on the work, not the words, when it comes to Donald Trump, and we know where he took us the last time.
     And check this out.  Donald Trump’s current running mate — because you know the job was open, right?  (Laughter.)  You know, like, when people go for an interview — especially the young people, they’ll go for an interview, and they’ll sit down and they’re in the interview, and they’ll say, “Why is the job open?”  (Laughter.)  Well, we know why that job was open.  (Laughter.)
    So, Donald Trump’s running mate recently suggested that if they win, they would threaten the Grand River Assembly plant right here in Lansing —
         AUDIENCE:  Booo —
    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  — the same plant that, with your help, our administration protected earlier this year, saving 650 union jobs.  (Applause.)  Right? 
    And I do believe some of the union workers from Grand River are here with us today.  So, you know what I’m ta- — (applause) — so, you know I’m talking about.  You know what I’m talking about.  And Trump’s running mate called your jobs “table scraps,” right?
    So, let me just say — needless to say — I will always have your back — (applause) — and will keep fighting to make sure that you keep your jobs right here in Lansing and keep these most noble and important jobs for America’s strength.  That’s the work you all do. 
    You know, Donald Trump, he also promised that he was going to stop offshoring.  Remember that?  Then he cut taxes for corporations that shipped 200,000 jobs overseas during his presidency — cut the taxes for those corporations — okay? — and awarded nearly half a trillion dollars in federal contracts to companies that were offshoring jobs.  Okay?  Follow the money.
    He gave your tax dollars to companies that were sending your jobs overseas.  And we got to get the word out to all of the brothers and sisters in labor to remind them of what this dude does — right? — what he actually does.  (Applause.)
    Because, make no mistake, Donald Trump is no friend to labor. 
         AUDIENCE:  No!
    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  He is no friend to labor, and we’ve got to listen to what he says.  Know that — you know that famous saying: Listen when people tell you who they are. 
    In fact, can we roll the clip?  (Laughter.)  Let’s see.  There we —
    (A video clip is played.)
         AUDIENCE:  Booo —
    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Right?  Right.  Right.
     So, of course, that last bit, he was talking about Shawn Fain, who — who represents nearly a million active and retired autoworkers.  Okay?  So, that’s about a million autoworkers, active and retired. 
     Donald Trump — listen to his words: He’s saying that autoworkers are essentially engaged in child’s play, that children could do it.  Listen to what he says. 
    I’m telling you, he — you know, he’s got his club, and I’m going to tell you, union workers are not part of his club.  Let’s be clear about that.  No matter what he does at his rallies, let’s be clear about that, right?
    He thinks that the value of your work is essentially meaningless.  That’s what he’s saying, to compare it to child’s work? 
    When we here know the work you do is complex.  You do it with great care.  You work hard.  You are highly skilled.  You are highly trained.  And the best autoworkers in the world is who you are — the best in the world — (applause) — the best in the world.
     And the fact is, Donald Trump’s comments are the talk of someone who has had everything handed to him. 
    AUDIENCE MEMBER:  That’s exactly right.
    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  I know it’s right.  (Laughter.)  It is — I know.  It is. 
    This man, you know, who never had to work a job that came with calloused hands or an hourly wage — right? — someone who got handed $400 million on a silver platter and did what with it?  Filed bankruptcy six times.  (Applause.)  Come on.  Come on. 
    He will never understand the life of a United Auto Worker — he will never understand that — people who work hard for everything they have, who take great pride in a job well done, who understand what it represents to their family and the future of their family.  Again, I go back to the dignity of hard work. 
    So, let us be clear.  Donald Trump’s insults to American workers is not exclusive to that video.  Okay?  So, that was just a moment.  Kind of think of it as the commercial break in my speech.  (Laughter.)
    But his comments are not only that, because Donald Trump has been a union buster his entire career.  He has called union leaders, quote, “Dues Sucking” people.  Okay?  He said that he supports so-called right-to-work laws, quote, “100 percent.”  Okay?  He bragged and joked with a billionaire buddy about mass firing striking workers and lowered labor standards and made it easier for companies that break the laws to get federal contracts. 
    Donald Trump encouraged automakers of Michigan so they could pay their workers less — encouraged them to move so they could pay their workers less.  Okay?  And when the UAW went on strike to demand the higher wages you deserve, Donald Trump went to a nonunion shop and attacked the UAW.  He said striking and collective bargaining don’t make, and I’m going to quote, “a damn bit of difference.” 
    So, here’s the bottom line, Donald Trump’s track record is a disaster for working people.  And he is, I believe, an existential threat to America’s labor movement.  And everything he intends to do, if he is reelected, is also spelled out in that Project 2025. 
    So, to read it and to know it is to know he intends to launch a full-on attack on unions and the freedom to organize.  Okay?  He will ban public-sector unions, roll back workplace safety protections.  Read it when you have some time.  Google it, everybody who’s watching.  Look, mak- — he will make it easier for companies to deny overtime pay for workers and appoint a union buster to run the Department of Labor.  Be sure of that.  Be sure of that. 
    So, to all the friends here, I say what you already know.  It’s time to turn the page.  (Applause.)  Let’s just turn the page.  (Applause.)  Turn the page.  (Laughs.)  Because America is ready to chart a new way forward, and we are not —
         AUDIENCE:  Going back!
    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  — going back.  We are not going back.  (Applause.)
    AUDIENCE:  We’re not going back!  We’re not going back!  We’re not going back!
    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  No, we are not going back.  We’re not going back.  We’re not going back.
    AUDIENCE:  We’re not going back!  We’re not going back!  We’re not going back!
    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  We’re not going back because, as UAW always does, we are going to push forward.  We are going to push forward. 
    And it all comes down to this.  Look, you all have taken time out of your busy lives to be here this afternoon, and we are all here together because we know the stakes in this election are so high. 
    We are all here together because we love our country.  (Applause.)  We love our country.  And I do believe it is one of the highest forms of patriotism, the expression of the love of our country, to fight for our ideals.  And that’s what this is about. 
    This is not, at the end of the day, a fight against something; this is a fight for something.  (Applause.)  This is a fight for something, including the fight to realize the promise of America.  After all, that’s what unions have always done.  It’s about understanding the promise of America, which has to include the promise that we should make to the workers of America.
     So, we have 18 days to get this done.  It’s not a lot of time.  Okay?  And we know this is going to be a tight race until the very end.  We are the underdog.  But make no mistake, we will win.  (Applause.)  We will win.  We will win.  We will win, I’m telling you.
    It’s going to be hard work, but we like hard work.  Hard work is good work.  (Applause.) 
    And ultimately, we will win because we know what we stand for.  (Applause.)  And when you know what you stand for, you know what to fight for.  (Applause.)  Right?We stand for opportunity.  We stand for dignity.  And we stand for the future.  (Applause.)
    And so, I’ll close by saying, and when we fight —
         AUDIENCE:  We win!
    THE VICE PRESIDENT:  — we win.
     God bless you.  God bless America.  (Applause.)
                                   END                 5:57 P.M. EDT

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Mountaineering Safety Promotion Day 2024 and 55th Anniversary of the CAS Mountain Search and Rescue Company held (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         The Civil Aid Service (CAS) held the Mountaineering Safety Promotion Day 2024 and the 55th Anniversary of the CAS Mountain Search and Rescue Company with various government departments and mountaineering organisations today (October 20) at the Free Space, Kwun Tong Town Centre with a view to enhancing public awareness of hiking safety and reducing accidents arising from mountaineering activities amid celebrations of the 75th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China.

         Speaking at the opening ceremony, the Commissioner of Police, Mr Siu Chak-yee, said that the mountaineering safety promotion day can help members of the public acquire essential safety knowledge and skills, and enhance their awareness of potential dangers. He praised the CAS for its outstanding contribution to protecting the lives of hikers as an indispensable member of Hong Kong’s emergency rescue system. At the opening ceremony, Mr Siu also presented certificates to those who had successfully completed the Mountain Casualty Handling Course and awarded a trophy to the winning team of the 55th Anniversary of the CAS Mountain Search and Rescue Company Competition.

         Other attending guests included the Director of Fire Services, Mr Andy Yeung, as well as representatives from the Government Flying Service; the Auxiliary Medical Service; the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department; the Office of the Communications Authority; the Hong Kong Observatory; the Leisure and Cultural Services Department; the Lands Department and various mountaineering organisations.
     
         Game booths were set up to promote mountaineering safety, whereas a wide range of mountaineering equipment, such as digital maps, watches for recording rescuer locations, high-resolution live broadcasting cameras and the Unmanned Aircraft System, were showcased. In addition, to enhance public understanding of mountain rescue work, CAS members also demonstrated techniques of mountain search and rescue missions and handling procedures of injured persons. To mark the 55th anniversary of the CAS Mountain Search and Rescue Company this year, a designated booth was also set up to introduce the Mountain Search and Rescue Company as well as showcase the equipment used over the years.
     
         Other highlights included a rescue demonstration by the Fire Services Department rescue dogs and a performance by police dogs. A recruitment exercise of CAS adult members and cadets was also conducted at the event.                           

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Global: More than money: The geopolitics behind Saudi Arabia’s sports strategy

    Source: The Conversation – Canada – By Aaron Ettinger, Associate Professor, International Relations, Carleton University

    There’s a saying in sports journalism: “The answer to all your questions is money.” But in the case of Saudi Arabia’s massive sports investment programs during the reign of Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, money is not the whole story.

    In a simple sense, there is a clear profit motive. With US$925 billion in assets in 2023, Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund exists to convert oil revenues into even greater national income.

    Last year, the country’s Public Investment Fund reported $36.8 billion in profits. Since 2016, it has spent $51 billion on sports properties.

    The point is not to turn bin Salman into the world’s greatest sports impresario. Rather, it’s that he’s seeking to improve the economic and geopolitical situation of Saudi Arabia through sports investments while ensuring the long-term survival of the Saudi regime.

    Beyond Newcastle United, LIV Golf

    Investing in sports is a common way for developing countries to announce their arrival on the global stage. Instead of one-and-done mega events, Saudi Arabia is pursuing a more dispersed and diverse approach.

    The Public Investment Fund’s highest profile investments are well known, especially the 2021 purchase of Newcastle United of the English Premier League and the LIV golf tour that challenged the PGA’s decades-long dominance of the sport.

    Beyond golf and soccer, Saudi Arabia has also spent dizzying sums on lower profile investments in esports, wrestling and motorsports. In other games, like chess and snooker, the profit motive is less clear.

    The logical conclusion is that Saudi Arabia treats its sports investments as a loss leader — an unprofitable activity meant to stimulate more profitable activity somewhere else. In the words of Public Investment Fund’s 2022 annual report, international investment pools “allow Saudi Arabia to extend its global reach and influence.”

    But what does that really mean?

    ‘Sportswashing’

    The conventional term for Saudi Arabia’s strategy is sportswashing, the practice of reputation-laundering in the hopes that a cleaner national image will translate into soft power on the world stage.




    Read more:
    Sportswashing is just about everywhere – but it may be backfiring on the countries that do it


    But that explanation doesn’t go far enough. For bin Salman, the suite of sports investments and properties is only a small part of a larger strategy to prepare Saudi Arabia for a 21st century when global oil demand is expected to fall by mid-century and geopolitics will become more complicated.

    This is no secret: Saudi Arabia’s official grand strategy — Vision 2030 — envisions the complete modernization of the country’s economy and foreign policy. Saudi Arabia’s sports diplomacy is therefore part of a broader geopolitical strategy to prepare Saudi Arabia for an era of multipolarity, when power is distributed among several states.

    Sports diplomacy also normalizes western financial and political engagement with the Saudi regime. Internationally, bin Salman wants to cultivate economic and security relationships with entities whose interests align with those of the Saudi royal family and the Saudi state, thereby ensuring the long-term health of both.

    Regular interactions between Saudi Arabia and the West create an understanding that Riyadh is a “normal” place to do business — and if it’s good business, there is no reason to risk the relationship with too much rancour over its authoritarianism and abysmal human rights record. Sports investing, in short, is a Saudi hedge against western abandonment.

    The allure of the big payday

    To western eyes, the most troubling implication of Saudi sports investment is the normalization of authoritarian capitalism — economic freedom without political freedom — as a feature of the emerging international order.

    Along with China, Russia, Singapore and others, Saudi Arabia represents an alternative to western democratic capitalism as a pathway to development.

    This would be surprising to a previous generation of scholars and policymakers who once thought that free markets and free societies were a self-reinforcing phenomenon.

    But given the staying power of authoritarian capitalism, doing business with dictators and strongmen has become inevitable and even desirable in some cases. In the sports world, few have resisted the charms of a huge payday.

    Closely related to authoritarian capitalism is democratic backsliding. Around the world, the quality of democracy and freedom is eroding, and the slow-drip normalization of economic intercourse with authoritarian capitalists is part of that erosion.




    Read more:
    Could the world’s autocrats successfully plot to defeat the West?


    How to proceed?

    So can anything be done? Western states have options, but they’re limited.

    After all, Saudi Arabia’s investments are legal and eagerly sought after by both private and public sectors.

    Western officials can put up resistance to the awarding of mega events to authoritarian states. But mewling about problematic hosts means little unless liberal democracies are prepared to pay the hosting costs themselves, which they are increasingly unwilling to do.

    Meanwhile, authoritarians are eager to host mega events and attract the prestige that comes with them. Currently, for example, Saudi Arabia is the sole bidder for the 2034 FIFA World Cup.

    Countries could try regulatory intervention to delimit the extent of Saudi influence. National security is often used as a pretext for blocking foreign investments in strategically important sectors, like ports and 5G wireless networks.

    Saudi plan is working

    But golf and video games do not rise to the level of national security concern, so American regulators are unlikely to step in. Political intervention from the United States Congress or the White House is even less likely. Saudi Arabia is a key part of the American strategy on the Middle East to confront Iran, and quibbling too intensely about human rights or sports investment is not worth the strategic costs.

    The genius of Saudi Arabia’s enterprise is that it’s power projection by consent. Investors and fans want what bin Salman is selling, governments have limited recourse and critics are left to grasp at standard, out-dated arguments.

    For Saudi Arabia, however, its sports charm offensive is about more than money. It’s about an investment in the future prosperity and security of the kingdom and the longevity of the Saudi dynasty. So far, the plan is working.

    Aaron Ettinger does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. More than money: The geopolitics behind Saudi Arabia’s sports strategy – https://theconversation.com/more-than-money-the-geopolitics-behind-saudi-arabias-sports-strategy-240512

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI China: China unveils obesity diagnosis, treatment guidelines

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, Oct. 20 — China’s National Health Commission has released its first set of guidelines aimed at standardizing the diagnosis and treatment of obesity.

    Over past years, China has witnessed an upward trend in the morbidity rate of its overweight and obese population, according to the guidelines issued by the commission.

    As an independent disease and a major causative factor for multiple chronic diseases, obesity has become a major public health issue in China, ranking as the sixth leading risk factor for death and disability in the country, the guidelines say.

    They provide detailed guidance and regulations in the areas of clinical nutrition, medication therapy, surgical treatment, behavioral and psychological intervention, and exercise intervention for obesity, ensuring the safety and quality of medical care while protecting the health rights of patients, said Zhang Zhongtao, director of the guideline drafting committee and deputy head of Beijing Friendship Hospital.

    Experts emphasize that most overweight and obese cases are caused by unhealthy lifestyles. The fundamental solution is to maintain a healthy lifestyle, which includes a balanced diet and appropriate exercise to keep weight within a healthy range.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s PCT international patent applications top world for 5 consecutive years: WIPO chief

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    China’s PCT international patent applications top world for 5 consecutive years: WIPO chief

    HANGZHOU, Oct. 20 — China’s international patent applications via the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) ranks first in the world for five consecutive years, said the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) chief during the ongoing 2024 International Association for the Protection of Intellectual Property (AIPPI) World Congress.

    During the congress that opened Saturday in Hangzhou, east China’s Zhejiang Province, WIPO Director General Daren Tang said it is a milestone that the congress is being held in China for the first time.

    Tang said in a video that in the mid-1990s, when China joined the PCT of the WIPO, the annual number of international patent applications via the PCT framework was only about 100, and by 2023 the number reached about 70,000.

    According to AIPPI President Shoichi Okuyama, in recent years, the number of intellectual property applications in China has grown rapidly, and China has become the country with the most international patent applications, meaning that China’s sci-tech innovation capacity has made great progress.

    China has been working hard to formulate and improve relevant laws on intellectual property protection and has maintained active communication and exchanges with other international parties, he added.

    China became the first country in the world to have more than 4 million valid domestic invention patents. The number of applications for international patents via the PCT, design patents in the Hague System and international trademarks under the Madrid System rank among the top in the world.

    Held from Saturday to next Tuesday, the congress attracted about 2,300 industry insiders from 92 countries and regions for in-depth discussions on cutting-edge and hot issues in the field of intellectual property.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China to support listing of innovative SMEs on Beijing Stock Exchange, ‘new third board’

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    China to support listing of innovative SMEs on Beijing Stock Exchange, ‘new third board’

    BEIJING, Oct. 20 — China will intensify its support for the listing of high-quality innovative small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) on the Beijing Stock Exchange and the “new third board,” a financing platform designed for SMEs.

    This initiative is outlined in a strategic cooperation agreement signed by the Beijing Stock Exchange, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), and the National Equities Exchange and Quotations during the Annual Conference of Financial Street Forum 2024 on Sunday.

    According to the agreement, the three parties will enhance their coordination and collaborate in areas such as institutional synergy, company cultivation and work coordination to form a cohesive force that promotes the development of these enterprises.

    They also aim to assist the enterprises in effectively utilizing capital market tools like mergers and acquisitions, restructuring, and equity incentives to achieve high-quality development.

    So far, China has cultivated about 141,000 innovative SMEs that use specialized, sophisticated technologies to produce novel or unique products, including 14,600 “little giant” firms, according to data from the MIIT.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese, European delegates attend forum on beautiful countryside

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    HANGZHOU, Oct. 20 — Nearly 200 people from home and abroad attended a forum on beautiful countryside in Deqing County, east China’s Zhejiang Province, during which an initiative on building beautiful countryside was released.

    At the China-Europe Forum on Beautiful Countryside held Friday, the participants, including representatives from 11 European countries, four international organizations, as well as businesses and non-governmental organizations, discussed topics such as the development of featured agricultural industries, the integration of agriculture, culture and tourism, and the building of low-carbon villages and towns.

    The Deqing Initiative released at the forum proposed various actions on developing rural industries, building low-carbon villages, improving rural public services and strengthening cooperation and exchanges.

    During the forum, participants also visited achievements and progress in China’s rural revitalization, such as rural culture and featured industries, digital village and rural governance in Zhejiang.

    Themed “join hands for building beautiful and harmonious countryside in China and Europe,” the event was organized by the international cooperation department of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-Evening Report: What makes Chinese students so successful by international standards?

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Peter Yongqi Gu, Associate Professor, School of Linguistics and Applied Language Studies, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington

    Getty Images

    There is a belief widely held across the Western world: Chinese students are schooled through rote, passive learning – and an educational system like this can only produce docile workers who lack innovation or creativity.

    We argue this is far from true. In fact, the Chinese education system is producing highly successful students and an extremely skilled and creative workforce. We think the world can learn something from this.

    In a viral video earlier this year, Apple CEO Tim Cook highlighted the unique concentration of skilled labour that attracted his manufacturing operations to China:

    In the US, you could have a meeting of tooling engineers, and I’m not sure we could fill the room. In China you could fill multiple football fields.

    To which Tesla CEO Elon Musk quickly responded on X: “True”.

    When South African President Cyril Ramaphosa visited the Shenzhen headquarters of electric vehicle manufacturer BYD earlier this year, he was surprised to learn the company was planning to double its 100,000-strong engineering taskforce within the coming decade.

    He might not have been so surprised had he known Chinese universities are producing more than ten million graduates every year – the foundation for a super-economy.

    The ‘paradox of the Chinese learner’

    Chinese learners achieve remarkable success levels compared to their Western – or non-Confucian-heritage – counterparts.

    Since Shanghai first participated in the PISA educational evaluation in 2009, 15‑year-olds in China have topped the league table three out of four times in reading, mathematics and science.

    How can a supposedly passive and rote Chinese system outperform its Western counterparts? A number of Australian scholars have been studying this “paradox of the Chinese learner” since the 1990s.

    Their research shows those common perceptions of Chinese and other Asian learners are wrong. For example, repetition and meaningful learning are not mutually exclusive. As one Chinese saying goes:

    书读百遍其意自现 – meaning reveals itself when you read something many times.

    What can Western education learn?

    An emphasis on education is a defining feature of Chinese culture. Since Confucianism became the state-sanctioned doctrine in the Han Dynasty (202BCE–220CE), education has entered every fabric of Chinese society.

    This became especially true after the institutionalisation of the Keju system of civil service examinations during the Sui Dynasty (581CE–618CE).

    Today, the Gaokao university entrance examination is the modern Keju equivalent. Millions of school leavers take the exam each year. For three days every July, Chinese society largely comes to a standstill for the Gaokao.

    While the cultural drive for educational excellence is a major motivation for everyone involved in the system, it is not something that is easily learned and replicated in Western societies.

    However, there are two principles we believe are central to Chinese educational success, at both the learner and system levels. We use two Chinese idioms to illustrate these.

    The first we call “orderly and gradual progress” – 循序渐进. This principle stresses patient, step-by-step and sequenced learning, sustained by grit and delayed gratification.

    The second we call “thick accumulation before thin production” – 厚积薄发. This principle stresses the importance of two things:

    • a comprehensive foundation through accumulation of basic knowledge and skills
    • assimilation, integration and productive creativity only come after this firm foundation.
    Technique to art: weekly calligraphy lessons have been mandatory in Chinese primary and middle schools since 2013.
    Getty Images

    Knowledge, skill and creativity

    The epitome of orderly and gradual progress is the way calligraphy is learned. It goes from easy to difficult, simple to complex, imitating to free writing, technique to art. Since 2013, it has been a mandatory weekly lesson in all primary and middle schools in China.

    The art of Chinese writing embodies patience, diligence, breathing, concentration and an appreciation of the natural beauty of rhythm. It teaches Chinese values of harmony and the aesthetic spirit.

    “Thick accumulation” can be illustrated in the way students study extremely hard for the national Gaokao examination, and also during tertiary education. This way they accumulate the basic knowledge and skills required in a modern society.

    “Thin production” refers to the ability to narrow or focus this accumulated knowledge and skill to find and implement creative solutions in the workplace or elsewhere.

    Ways of learning

    On the face of it, the emphasis on gradual and steady progress, and on accumulation of basic knowledge and skills, may look like a slow, monotonous and uninspiring process – the origin of those common myths about Chinese learning.

    In reality, it boils down to a simple argument: without a critical mass of basic knowledge and skills, there is little to assimilate and integrate for productive creativity.

    Of course, there are problems with Chinese learning and education, not least the fierce competitiveness and overemphasis on examinations. But our focus here is simply to show how two basic educational principles underpin Chinese advances in science and technology in a modern knowledge economy.

    We believe these principles are transferable and potentially beneficial for policymakers, scholars and learners elsewhere.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. What makes Chinese students so successful by international standards? – https://theconversation.com/what-makes-chinese-students-so-successful-by-international-standards-238325

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI China: China to support listing of innovative SMEs on BSE

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    This photo taken on Feb. 17, 2023 shows a view of the Beijing Stock Exchange in Beijing, capital of China.[Photo/Xinhua]

    China will intensify its support for the listing of high-quality innovative small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) on the Beijing Stock Exchange and the “new third board,” a financing platform designed for SMEs.

    This initiative is outlined in a strategic cooperation agreement signed by the Beijing Stock Exchange, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), and the National Equities Exchange and Quotations during the Annual Conference of Financial Street Forum 2024 on Sunday.

    According to the agreement, the three parties will enhance their coordination and collaborate in areas such as institutional synergy, company cultivation and work coordination to form a cohesive force that promotes the development of these enterprises.

    They also aim to assist the enterprises in effectively utilizing capital market tools like mergers and acquisitions, restructuring, and equity incentives to achieve high-quality development.

    So far, China has cultivated about 141,000 innovative SMEs that use specialized, sophisticated technologies to produce novel or unique products, including 14,600 “little giant” firms, according to data from the MIIT.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese EVs stand out at Paris Motor Show

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    People visit the pavilion of Chinese carmaker BYD at the 2024 Paris Motor Show during the media day in Paris, France, Oct. 14, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]

    The 2024 Paris Motor Show concluded on Sunday, with electric vehicle (EV) manufacturers from China, Europe and the United States showcasing their latest models as competition in the global EV market intensifies.

    Automakers from these regions displayed their vehicles side by side at the event, offering attendees the chance to compare technologies, pricing, and quality firsthand.

    “People are ready to fight against climate change and drive EVs, but not at any cost,” said Serge Gachot, director of the Paris Motor Show, stressing that prices are a major concern.

    He added that Chinese manufacturers are using innovation to bring down costs, making them formidable competitors globally.

    Amid ongoing trade tensions and concerns over potential tariffs on imported Chinese EVs, demand for affordable, high-quality EVs has outpaced protectionist sentiment. Test drives of Chinese models were popular among European attendees, with many praising their advanced features and value for money.

    People visit the pavilion of the Guangzhou Automobile Group Co., Ltd. (GAC Group) at the 2024 Paris Motor Show during the media day in Paris, France, Oct. 14, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]

    Cost competitiveness

    Several major European carmakers unveiled low-cost EVs, which analysts say is a response to the cost competitiveness posed by Chinese competitors. French carmaker Renault presented its Twingo E-Tech electric prototype, set to debut in 2026 at a price below 20,000 euros (21,748 U.S. dollars).

    Renault also showcased its R4 and R5 electric models, while its Dacia brand promoted the Spring model, price said to be under 20,000 euros (21,748 dollars). BMW introduced budget-friendly MINI models, including a Chinese-made version, alongside premium options like the 5-door Aceman.

    Data from research firm JATO show the average retail price of a battery EV in China was around 31,000 euros (33,710 dollars) in the first half of 2023, compared to 66,000 euros (71,770 dollars) in Europe and 68,000 euros (73,945 dollars) in the United States.

    While European manufacturers work to lower prices, Chinese EV makers are attracting attention with their cutting-edge technology, high-quality vehicles and luxurious interiors offered at more competitive prices. A standout moment at the show was the AITO 9 model, which completed a 15,000-kilometer journey from Chongqing to Paris over 38 days, crossing 12 countries.

    Maxime, a 15-year-old French attendee, marveled at the vehicle’s design and high-end entertainment systems. “The car feels like a world of technology. I could sleep here all day,” he said.

    At BYD’s booth, another attendee called Vanessa was particularly impressed by the luxury Yangwang U8 SUV and the Sealion 7 model. She mentioned that she used to drive a Renault, but after seeing Chinese EVs, she said that Chinese EVs offer superior quality, advanced technology, and stylish interiors compared to European models in the same price range.

    A woman visits the pavilion of Chinese carmaker FAW-Hongqi at the 2024 Paris Motor Show during the media day in Paris, France, Oct. 14, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]

    Cooperation over competition

    Despite geopolitical risks, many automakers emphasized the importance of cross-border collaboration in an increasingly competitive market. The Paris Motor Show provided a platform for industry players to exchange ideas and explore partnerships.

    In recent years, cooperation between Chinese and Western companies has expanded. Tesla’s Shanghai Gigafactory has become a global production hub, while Renault’s Dacia Spring, developed in China, is a top seller in Europe.

    At the motor show, Leapmotor, in collaboration with Stellantis, unveiled the B10-a compact electric SUV that will be produced in Poland for European consumers.

    Carlos Tavares, CEO of Stellantis, said that the global automotive industry stands to gain from the collaboration, highlighting the significant demand for affordable, high-quality EVs and how their partnership would help meet this need.

    Leapmotor International CEO Xin Tianshu noted that such collaboration leverages each company’s strengths. “Leapmotor brings technology and cost advantages, while Stellantis offers global sales and manufacturing capacity,” he said.

    “The debut highlights Leapmotor’s rapid growth in Europe, with over 200 dealers already established across 13 markets, aiming to reach 500 sales points by 2025,” Leapmotor revealed.

    Nicolas Caillault, CEO of Car East France and a dealer for China’s Hongqi brand, emphasized the crucial role of international cooperation. “The United States needs China, and Europe needs China. It is a must for us to cooperate,” he said.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: 1st China-Europe freight train for CIIE 2024 arrives in Shanghai

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    This year’s first “Jinbo” China-Europe freight train arrives at the Minhang Station in Shanghai, east China, Oct. 20, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]

    The first “Jinbo” China-Europe freight train carrying exhibits for the 7th China International Import Expo (CIIE) arrived at the Minhang Station in Shanghai on Sunday, marking the fourth consecutive year that CIIE exhibition products have been transported to Shanghai via the China-Europe freight train service.

    “Jinbo” is short for CIIE in Chinese. The train, which traveled more than 11,000 km over 21 days, is loaded with 76 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) of containers of goods valued at about 100 million yuan (about 14.08 million U.S. dollars), including cosmetics and mechanical equipment.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese-made tunneling machine passes milestone

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    A technician examines equipment inside the world’s largest shield machine for railway construction in April before it began operation. [Photo/Xinhua]

    The world’s largest shield machine for railway construction, a tunneling device with a diameter of 15.4 meters, excavated its 1,000th ring segment on Sunday to reach 2 kilometers, a milestone in the construction of a tunnel beneath the Yangtze River for a high-speed railway.

    The achievement also means that the shield machine, called Linghang, which was independently developed by China, is pressing ahead to a higher level of construction difficulty, according to China Railway Tunnel Group Co, constructor of what will be a 14.25-km underwater railway tunnel linking Shanghai’s Chongming Island with Taicang, a city in Jiangsu province.

    “With a gradual, slight downward slope, the pressure from the surrounding water on the construction project is escalating. Many parts of the tunnel to accommodate railway tracks in both directions are to be built at 89 meters underneath the river, where the water pressure is 0.9 megapascal — as enormous as holding six people on a fingernail,” said Fu Bowei, the project’s deputy chief engineer.

    “Such gigantic water pressure places high demands on the performance of our equipment and technologies,” Fu said, adding that the 128-meter-long shield machine began work in April.

    High-speed trains are expected to run at a maximum speed of 350 km/h inside the tunnel — the world’s highest speed in underwater tunnels — and outside the tunnel.

    According to Shanghai’s Jiefang Daily, the tunnel will be ready for the operation of the Shanghai-Nanjing-Hefei high-speed railway by the end of 2029.

    So far, tunnel construction has crossed the embankment on the north side of the Yangtze River and proceeded more than 1,100 meters into the riverbed, and the excavation environment has changed from soft soil to sandy formation.

    “Moreover, hard cement is contained in the environment, which makes the shield cutter easy to wear during tunneling. The shield machine is equipped with a system to detect tool wear. Whenever wear is detected, we make corresponding adjustments,” said Fu.

    “Also, the construction is currently under a protection area for aquatic products, and we must optimize tunneling parameters, including those regarding slurry pressure, thrust and advancing speed, to make its operation adaptable to the environment,” he said.

    The entire tunneling project needs to cross nearly 20 risk sources, including the protection areas for aquatic products as well as docks and parks, said Fu.

    Liu Jianping, deputy manager of the project, said eight smart construction systems, integrating technologies such as cloud computing and virtual and real integration, as well as artificial intelligence inspection, are being deployed.

    These smart systems will be used in tunneling, assembly, prefabrication, transportation, ventilation, detection and management and control.

    The Shanghai-Nanjing-Hefei high-speed railway is the eastern section of the Shanghai-Chongqing-Chengdu high-speed route, and is an important part of the high-speed rail corridor along the Yangtze River in the nation’s “Eight Vertical and Eight Horizontal” rail network.

    The project will create a fast new channel between a megacity cluster with Shanghai as the core as well as two city clusters centered on Nanjing and Hefei.

    It is expected to further bring cities in the Yangtze River delta closer to one another, serving the coordinated development of the Yangtze River Economic Belt and promoting the integrated development of the delta region.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Israeli army demolishes UNIFIL observation tower, fence

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    A bulldozer of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on Sunday “deliberately demolished” an observation tower and perimeter fence of a UN position in Marwahin, a town in southern Lebanon, the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) said.

    “Breaching a UN position and damaging UN assets is a flagrant violation of international law and Security Council Resolution 1701,” the UNIFIL said in a statement on social media platform X, reminding the IDF and all actors of their obligations “to ensure the safety and security of UN personnel and properties and to respect the inviolability of UN premises at all times.”

    The IDF has repeatedly demanded that the UNIFIL vacate its positions along the Blue Line and has deliberately damaged UN positions, the UN mission said.

    Despite the challenges, “peacekeepers remain in all positions. We will continue to undertake our mandated tasks,” the UNIFIL stressed.

    Israeli forces have attacked UNIFIL positions in Lebanon several times over these days, causing injuries among UN peacekeepers and sparking criticism from the international community.

    The assaults took place as the Israeli army, since Sept. 23, has been launching intensive airstrikes on Lebanon in a dangerous escalation with Hezbollah. It has also conducted what it said was a “limited” ground operation across the border, allegedly to cripple Hezbollah capabilities.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s railway cargo transportation rises in Q3

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    This aerial photo shows a freight train loaded with auto parts, home appliances and textile products pulling out of the Xiahuayuan railway cargo terminal in Zhangjiakou, north China’s Hebei Province. [Photo/Xinhua]

    China’s railway network transported 1.004 billion tonnes of cargo in the third quarter of this year, marking a year-on-year increase of 3.8 percent and setting a new record for freight volume in a single quarter, official data showed Sunday.

    China’s railway industry has been improving its transportation services and efficiency to support the high-quality development of the economy, according to China State Railway Group Co., Ltd.

    During this period, railways handled 520 million tonnes of coal, up 3.5 percent year on year.

    The company said it will further speed up the development of a modern railway logistics network to facilitate domestic and international economic circulations, and reduce logistics costs.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chrysanthemum flowers enter harvest season in Liupanshui, SW China

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    Chrysanthemum flowers enter harvest season in Liupanshui, SW China

    Updated: October 21, 2024 08:39 Xinhua
    Workers harvest chrysanthemum flowers at a planting base in Dawan Town of Liupanshui, southwest China’s Guizhou Province, Oct. 19, 2024. The harvest season for Chrysanthemum flowers has arrived in Liupanshui recently. In recent years, industries related with chrysanthemum flowers have been encouraged in Liupanshui to increase the income of local people. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo shows workers harvesting chrysanthemum flowers at a planting base in Dawan Town of Liupanshui, southwest China’s Guizhou Province, Oct. 19, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo shows workers carrying harvested chrysanthemum flowers at a planting base in Dawan Town of Liupanshui, southwest China’s Guizhou Province, Oct. 19, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo shows workers harvesting chrysanthemum flowers at a planting base in Dawan Town of Liupanshui, southwest China’s Guizhou Province, Oct. 19, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Workers harvest chrysanthemum flowers at a planting base in Dawan Town of Liupanshui, southwest China’s Guizhou Province, Oct. 19, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Workers check the drying condition of chrysanthemum flowers at a processing workshop in Dawan Town of Liupanshui, southwest China’s Guizhou Province, Oct. 19, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo shows workers promoting chrysanthemum flower products via livestreaming at a planting base in Dawan Town of Liupanshui, southwest China’s Guizhou Province, Oct. 19, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo shows a chrysanthemum flower planting base in Dawan Town of Liupanshui, southwest China’s Guizhou Province, Oct. 19, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: ‘Three-Body’ awarded China’s best TV drama

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    “Three-Body,” the live-action television adaptation of the science fiction novel “The Three-Body Problem,” claimed the best TV drama as China’s national TV arts award unveiled on Sunday.

    The drama’s director Yang Lei received the honor of the best TV drama director of the China TV Golden Eagle Award, which was unveiled in Changsha, central China’s Hunan Province.

    In his acceptance speech, Yang said that Chinese science fiction faces challenges. He said whenever science fiction is mentioned, audiences tend to immediately think of Western sci-fi stories and movies.

    “When I was creating ‘Three-Body,’ I wanted to take a different path. I hoped it would be a Chinese sci-fi story, one that has a sense of Chinese identity,” he said, adding that he approached the filming with a realist perspective.

    He went on to say that the rapid advancement of China’s technology has provided fertile ground for science fiction to grow. He calls on all Chinese sci-fi creators to make full use of Chinese elements in their work to bring the dream of science fiction into reality and to let the universe shine for Chinese science fiction.

    Since its release in January 2023, the 30-episode drama has received critical acclaim. It was rated 8.7 out of 10 by over 480,000 viewers on China’s popular review platform Douban as of Sunday.

    It is the live-action television adaptation of the Hugo Award-winning science fiction novel “The Three-Body Problem” by Liu Cixin. “The Three-Body Problem” is the first book of a sci-fi trilogy that revolves around physicist Ye Wenjie’s contact with the Trisolaran civilization existing in a three-sun system and the centuries-long clashes that follow between earthlings and the aliens.

    Fans of “Three-Body” expressed their excitement after the series received the award.

    “I’m so excited! A uniquely Chinese path for science fiction has been explored,” said a Chinese fan named Wang Jingyi.

    “When I first read the book, I was blown away. I always wondered how it could be brought to life on screen until I watched Yang Lei’s incredible adaptation,” said Artur Furdey, a British viewer.

    Liu Cixin, the author of the novel, expressed his satisfaction with the adaptation of his work that has been well-received by the audiences.

    “It will take time for Chinese science fiction to take root in the hearts of the public. I hope we can work together to create more and better works,” Liu said.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China to advance doctoral programs in science, engineering, agriculture, medicine

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    China has announced plans to strengthen its development of doctoral programs in the science, engineering, agriculture and medical science disciplines.

    The development of doctoral programs in basic and emerging disciplines and in interdisciplinary fields will also be boosted, according to a set of guidelines on deepening the comprehensive reform of doctoral education that were recently unveiled by the general offices of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council.

    The proportion of professional doctoral programs should be increased, the guidelines also say.

    They also pledge efforts to accelerate the construction of disciplines related to key fields, step up the integration of various disciplines, and explore new paths for international exchange and cooperation.

    Last month, the Ministry of Education announced that top overseas universities — especially those focused on science and engineering — are encouraged to operate joint education programs with their counterparts in China.

    The ministry said that the country plans to support top universities in expanding their education capacities, and to establish several advanced research universities.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Chinese listed companies to receive loans for share buybacks, increasing shareholdings

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    More than 20 Chinese listed companies on Sunday announced that they have signed agreements with financial institutions or obtained commitment letters to secure loans for share buybacks and increasing shareholdings.

    The announcements came after China’s central bank launched a special re-lending facility aimed at guiding banks to provide loans to listed companies and their major shareholders for buybacks and increasing shareholdings on Friday.

    The initial re-lending scale is 300 billion yuan (about 42.09 billion U.S. dollars) at an interest rate of 1.75 percent. The facility can be applied to various types of companies regardless of their ownership, according to the central bank.

    To actively respond to and fully leverage the policy tool introduced by the relevant regulatory body for supporting share buybacks, the company on Oct. 19 signed a credit agreement with the Bank of China to obtain a credit line of no more than 900 million yuan, which will be used for the company’s share buybacks in the A-share market, Sinopec said in an online statement published Sunday.

    Sinopec also revealed that its controlling shareholder China Petrochemical Corporation signed an agreement with the bank to obtain a credit line of 700 million yuan. This funding will be used by the corporation to increase its shareholdings in Sinopec within the A-share market.

    Other companies that have announced plans to secure loans for share buybacks or increasing shareholdings include China Merchants Port Group Co., Ltd. and Sinotrans Limited.

    The re-lending facility offers low-cost funds to financial institutions, which in turn helps to reduce the financing costs for listed companies and major shareholders, said Tian Lihui, head of the Institute of Finance and Development at Nankai University.

    It also helps enhance the inherent stability of China’s capital market, maintain the stable operation of the market and boost market confidence, Tian added.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Expanding coal mines – and reaching net zero? Tanya Plibersek seems to believe both are possible

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Quiggin, Professor, School of Economics, The University of Queensland

    Federal Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek’s recent decision to approve expansion plans for three New South Wales coal mines disappointed many people concerned with stabilising the global climate.

    Two of these mines, Narrabri and Mount Pleasant in New South Wales, featured in the high-profile but ultimately unsuccessful Living Wonders court case, intended to force the federal government to take account of climate damage done by coal mine approvals. A lawyer involved in the case said Plibersek’s decision showed a refusal to “recognise their climate harms”.

    Why did Plibersek sign off on this? She has argued the mines will abide by domestic industrial emissions rules. As her spokesperson told the ABC:

    The emissions from these projects will be considered by the minister for climate change and energy under the government’s strong climate laws.

    But these laws apply only to emissions produced in Australia, which in this case will be from extracting and transporting coal and the relatively small amount of coal burned here. Most of the coal will be exported and burned overseas. Australian laws do not count those much larger emissions.

    The government is effectively washing its hands of the far larger emissions created when the coal is burned overseas. Since taking office, the Albanese government has approved seven applications to open or expand coal mines. Just this week, NSW Treasurer Daniel Mookhey said his state would keep exporting coal into the 2040s.

    This reasoning doesn’t stack up. If we stopped expanding coal mines, coal would get more expensive – and we would accelerate the global shift to clean energy.

    How can more coal be compatible with net zero?

    Under the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate action, nations must publicly commit to domestic emissions reductions goals and are expected to steadily ramp up ambition.

    But these emissions cuts are domestic only – we don’t measure the emissions we enable by exporting coal and gas.

    The Albanese government has increased domestic ambition by committing to a 43% reduction on 2005 figures by 2030. This seems to be a substantial advance on the 26-28% commitment made by the previous government. In reality, internal tensions in the Morrison Coalition government handed Labor an unintentional gift.

    In 2021, estimates suggested Australia was already on track for a 35% reduction. But internal opposition among Coalition backbenchers stopped Morrison announcing this as a target. As a result, Labor’s change looks about twice as impressive as it should.

    Still, progress is happening. Domestically, Australia is now burning less and less coal.



    But in terms of exports, the government’s position – clear in Plibersek’s decision as well as the government’s plan to keep gas flowing for decades – is as long as there is a demand for coal and gas from other countries, Australia will be ready and willing to meet it.

    Most of the coal unlocked by Plibersek’s decision will go overseas, given NSW exports 85% of its coal to partners such as Japan, China, South Korea and Taiwan.

    How does the government defend this?

    Expanding coal mines while maintaining a public commitment to net zero is a consistent theme between this government and its predecessor, which also committed to net zero. It meets a minimal interpretation of our legal obligations under the Paris Agreement, but maintains the planet’s path towards dangerous warming.

    In her statement of reasons given in 2023 as to why the Mount Pleasant mine expansion should be permitted, Plibersek and the Labor government offer several defences.

    The first is she is simply acting in accordance with Australian law, as the project would comply with “applicable Commonwealth emissions reduction legislation”. This is a weak reed, to put it mildly. The Albanese government, with the support of Greens and independents, can change the law whenever it chooses.

    In reality, the government has steadfastly resisted pressure to include a “climate trigger” in Australia’s environmental approval processes. Their resistance is relatively new – as recently as 2016, Labor policy included a climate trigger for land clearing.

    Labor’s second defence has often been dubbed the “drug dealer’s defence”. That is, if Australia didn’t export coal, other producers would take our place. As Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has put it:

    policies that would just result in a replacement of Australian resources with resources that are less clean from other countries would lead to an increase in global emissions, not a decrease.

    As I’ve argued previously, this defence doesn’t work. Coal is subject to a rising cost curve – if we stopped exporting it, new or expanded production from other sources would cost more to extract and hence be priced higher. More expensive coal would, in turn, accelerate the global energy transition. We do have agency – we could choose not to unlock more coal.

    Finally, Plibersek claims emissions from burning Mount Pleasant coal – estimated at over 500 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent over the mine’s extended lifetime – would not be “substantial” relative to total global emissions. For context, Australia’s total emissions are now less than 500 million tonnes a year.

    This “litterbug’s defence” suggest Australia’s emissions – whether produced domestically or exported – are not big enough to make a difference. This is not true – we are now the second largest exporter of emissions globally, after Russia. That is due largely to coal.



    Are fossil fuel exports untouchable?

    There’s a huge gap between global pledges to cut emissions and the reductions needed to actually achieve the Paris targets. Most countries we export coal and gas to are not yet on a path to achieve the reductions in emissions necessary to stabilise the global climate – though China’s emissions may, remarkably, be about to decline.

    That’s why we need to press for decarbonisation at every stage of the energy system, from extraction of coal, oil and gas to the financing of new carbon-based projects as well as at the point where the fuel is burned and emissions produced generated.

    The problem for Australia is we sell a lot of coal and gas – more than ever before. So even as solar and wind energy begins to displace coal and gas in domestic power generation, our coal and gas exports seem all but untouchable.

    We should be saddened but not surprised at this pattern. The Albanese government seems guided by the principle of doing nothing to generate substantial opposition – and to count on the fact a Dutton Coalition government would do even less.

    John Quiggin is a former member of the Climate Change Authority

    ref. Expanding coal mines – and reaching net zero? Tanya Plibersek seems to believe both are possible – https://theconversation.com/expanding-coal-mines-and-reaching-net-zero-tanya-plibersek-seems-to-believe-both-are-possible-241007

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: FS attends APEC Finance Ministers’ Meeting in Peru (with photos/video)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         â€‹The Financial Secretary, Mr Paul Chan, began his visit in Lima, Peru, yesterday (October 20, Lima time) to attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Finance Ministers’ Meeting (FMM) and related activities.

         In the morning, Mr Chan attended the Finance Ministers’ Retreat. The meeting focused on discussing the fiscal policies of economies and several specific topics, including tax administration, promoting quality infrastructure development, and the digital transformation of financial services.

         Mr Chan introduced the latest developments in Hong Kong regarding these topics. He specifically shared Hong Kong’s experience in issuing retail bonds to support infrastructure projects that benefit the economy and people’s lives. He highlighted that this arrangement allows residents to participate in advancing infrastructure projects, and providing them with a safe, reliable, and stable investment option, while also raising funds for these projects. This approach achieves the dual goals of supporting inclusive finance and infrastructure development. Mr Chan also shared Hong Kong’s progress in promoting the digitalisation of financial services, including ongoing optimisation of the fintech ecosystem, launching regulatory sandboxes to test and promote innovative projects across various financial sectors, and facilitating data sharing between small and medium-sized enterprises and banks to facilitate business lending.

         In the afternoon, Mr Chan attended the High Level Event on Sustainable Finance under FMM, engaging in in-depth discussions with attending finance ministers and representatives from various business sectors on the strategies for the development of sustainable finance and transition finance, governance frameworks, and international cooperation. Mr Chan outlined the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government’s emission reduction targets and action strategies set forth in the “Hong Kong’s Climate Action Plan 2050.” He also shared Hong Kong’s latest developments as a leading green finance centre in Asia, including the issuance of green and sustainable bonds, participation in the formulation of relevant international standards and climate disclosure guidelines, talent training, and promoting transition finance to build a thriving green and sustainable finance ecosystem. Moreover, a steering group comprising all financial regulators has been established to drive related efforts.

         Mr Chan also met with Vice Minister of Finance of China Mr Liao Min, as well as several representatives from participating economies, including the Minister of Economy and Finance of Peru, Mr José Arista Arbildo; the Minister for Transport and Second Minister for Finance of Singapore, Mr Chee Hong Tat, and Deputy Minister of Finance of Thailand Mr Paopoom Rojanasakul, to discuss deepening bilateral cooperation and exchange views on common concerns. In these bilateral meetings, Mr Chan introduced Hong Kong’s latest economic situation and various policy measures set out in the Policy Address delivered by the Chief Executive recently. 

         In the evening, Mr Chan attended the welcome reception for the FMM.

         Mr Chan will continue to attend the FMM today (October 21, Lima time).                        

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI China: Intelligent auto sector speeding up

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    People visit the exhibition booth of AITO, an NEV brand jointly developed by Huawei and Chongqing-based automaker Seres, during the 2024 World Intelligent Connected Vehicles Conference in Beijing, capital of China, Oct. 17, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]

    China is vrooming to shape the future of intelligent connected vehicles, with creation of a new industry road map underway, and is aiming for greater advancements in autonomous driving, high-end supply chains and global cooperation, according to government officials, company executives and industry experts.

    Jin Zhuanglong, minister of industry and information technology, said the country will draft a comprehensive development plan for the intelligent connected vehicle, or ICV, industry, with the aim of harmonizing vehicle-road integration and enhancing software and hardware collaboration in the sector.

    The term “intelligent connected vehicles” basically refers to “smarter” cars equipped with advanced technologies like artificial intelligence that enable them to communicate with other vehicles, the cloud and infrastructure like roads.

    “Now, China has basically formed a comprehensive industrial system spanning chips, sensors, computing platforms, chassis control and vehicle-cloud connection for the ICV industry,” Jin said at the 2024 World Intelligent Connected Vehicles Conference, which ended on Saturday in Beijing.

    Jin also said that accelerated steps will be taken to formulate a regulatory system for high-level autonomous driving.

    Another official of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said at the conference that China’s self-driving cars are “nearing readiness for public roads”, with a group of autonomous driving vehicles awaiting evaluation and permission for the final rollout.

    The remarks came as President Xi Jinping said that science and technology should spearhead the advancement of Chinese modernization, during a recent inspection tour of East China’s Anhui province, where he took a close look at high-tech products including intelligent connected vehicles at an exhibition of scientific and technological innovations.

    Buoyed by such accelerated efforts in developing high-tech and intelligent connected vehicles, Lei Jun, founder of tech heavyweight Xiaomi Corp, said at the conference that the company is expected to meet its goal of delivering 100,000 Xiaomi SU7s — electric vehicles launched by the company as a venture into the ICV sector — by November, which is ahead of its year-end target.

    Li Shufu, chairman of Chinese automaker Geely Holding Group, said that Chinese automakers are racing into a new stage of development with intelligence as their core competitiveness. Like many leading car companies, Geely has made progress in human-machine interaction, intelligent driving, chips and low-orbit satellites, he said.

    Such confidence was also expressed by international players. Ralf Brandstaetter, chairman and CEO of Volkswagen Group China, said, “China is the future of the global automotive industry, and we are committed to being part of this journey in the era of intelligent connected vehicles.”

    In addition to building its largest development center outside Germany in Hefei, the capital of Anhui province, Volkswagen is strengthening cooperation with Chinese manufacturers like Xpeng and local high-tech companies such as Horizon Robotics, operating system provider Thundersoft and battery maker Gotion High-Tech Co, he said in a video speech to the conference on Thursday.

    By 2027, the German automobile manufacturer will launch 40 new models in China across all brands, including more than 20 new energy vehicles, which clearly demonstrates its commitment to the Chinese market, he emphasized.

    The latest data from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology showed that China is home to nearly 400 “little giant “companies in the intelligent connected vehicle sector. The term “little giant companies” refers to small and medium-sized enterprises that typically specialize in niche sectors, command high market share and boast strong innovative capacity.

    To support the rapid expansion of the sector, more than 50 cities across China have designated over 32,000 kilometers of test routes for ICVs and upgraded 10,000 kilometers of roads with smart technologies.

    Despite China’s momentum in the ICV industry, some company executives still see room for improvement. Yu Chengdong, executive director of Huawei Technologies Co, said that while the 5G smartphone penetration rate has reached over 85 percent in China, less than 10 percent of the nation’s passenger vehicles use 5G.

    “The integration of 5G into the ICV sector should be put into place, as it will generate economic growth and enhance the global competitiveness of the sector as a whole,” he said.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: Native Americans call for action against violence, trafficking of indigenous women at annual parade

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    People participate in the 3rd Annual National Indigenous Peoples of the Americas Parade in New York, the United States, on Oct. 19, 2024. [Photo/Xinhua]

    Indigenous Americans urged efforts against long-standing violence and sex trafficking of indigenous women during the 3rd Annual National Indigenous Peoples of the Americas Parade in New York on Saturday.

    “We’re still going missing and we’re still not being reported as missing,” Junise Golden Feather Bliss, a member of the Seaconke Wampanoag Tribe, told Xinhua at the parade, which was attended by Native Americans from over ten tribes from the United States, Canada, and Central and South America.

    In the United States, 40 percent of the women who are sex trafficked are identified as Native, and Native women are constantly being targeted by violence with 96 percent of cases not reported, Bliss said.

    “We’re here to bring awareness of the ‘red hand movement’ that’s been going across Indian country. … Too many of our women have been gone, missing and murdered since historical times,” Bliss said.

    A group of participants held a banner reading “No more stolen sisters” and “healing prayers.” Bliss said that a healing prayer was held with the hope that the next generations would be able to find the clan mothers, the traditional elders and resources.

    Beside allocation of resources, attention should be paid to policy and data collection to address the issue, she said.

    Organized by the Lenape Native Americans, the half-day parade marched through traditional Lenape hunting grounds from Madison Square Park to Union Square along Broadway. Indigenous Americans demonstrated their costumes, music, dances and storytelling.

    “We honor all the indigenous people of the world. … Anybody that’s been through genocide, anybody that has been put down by another culture,” said Carla Alexander, chief of the Deer Clan of the Ramapough Lenape Nation.

    “We try to lift up all the cultures so that everybody gets along in love and peace,” said Alexander.

    Atsila Firebird Graywolf noted that New York City has thousands of indigenous people who live off Indian reservations. “People don’t think that Native Americans still exist or we don’t celebrate,” Graywolf said.

    “The parade gives us an opportunity to show our beauty and that we’re still here,” Graywolf added.

    A group of Native Americans chanted “We’re still here” during the parade. The words were also printed on some participants’ T-shirts.

    MIL OSI China News