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      German chancellor urges Xi Jinping to press Russia to end Ukraine war, saying ‘China’s word carries weight’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 17 April - 00:48

    Olaf Scholz says Chinese president agreed to back June peace talks that Russia is not attending while Xi says efforts for a resolution must involve both sides

    Germany’s chancellor, Olaf Scholz, says he has urged Xi Jinping to press Russia to end its “senseless” war in Ukraine and that the Chinese president has agreed to back a peace conference in Switzerland.

    Scholz said after a meeting with Xi in Beijing on Tuesday that “China’s word carries weight in Russia”.

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      German chancellor urges Chinese industry bosses to play fair in EU market

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 15 April - 14:11

    Olaf Scholz says European cars should have equal access to Chinese customers

    The chancellor of Germany has urged industry bosses in China to play fair by not overproducing cheap goods or infringing copyright rules.

    Speaking on a three-day visit to China where he is travelling with leading business representatives and three government ministers, Olaf Scholz said he, in turn, would encourage the European Union not to be driven by self-interested protectionism, in which governments restrict international trade to help domestic companies.

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      China and Taiwan are destined for ‘reunification’, Xi tells former president

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 10 April - 12:25

    Chinese leader used meeting with Ma Ying-jeou to promote peaceful ‘reunion’ as only alternative to annexation, say analysts

    Xi Jinping has met the former Taiwan president Ma Ying-jeou, in what analysts said was an attempt to promote peaceful unification as the only alternative to military annexation of Taiwan.

    Ma, who was leading a student delegation to China, met Xi in Beijing at the Great Hall of the People, a venue typically reserved for foreign leaders meeting with senior Chinese officials. Xi used the meeting to emphasise his belief that Taiwan and China were destined for what he terms “reunification”.

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      Lies, ideology and repression: China seals Hong Kong’s failed-state fate | Simon Tisdall

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Saturday, 23 March - 16:00

    The former British territory was a flawed success. Xi Jinping has ended that with the punitive and hastily passed article 23

    So farewell, Hong Kong. The vibrant, pulsating city-state that grew, under British rule, into one of the world’s great financial, business, cultural and tourism hubs has finally been brought to heel. Browbeaten, abused, silenced. Trust Xi Jinping, China’s dementor president, to suck out all the joy. Last Wednesday was the UN’s International Day of Happiness. But it was a sad, bad day for Hong Kong.

    That was the moment residents woke up to the news that Hong Kong’s puppet legislature, acting on Beijing’s orders, had unanimously abolished its right to think, speak and act freely. Eating noodles is a seditious act now, if the noodles have secret foreign connections. Under new security laws , known as article 23, life imprisonment awaits those who defy the behemoth to the north.

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      Who congratulated Putin on his election victory and what does it say about global alliances?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 19 March - 05:45

    While the Russian election results were condemned in the west, the reaction across Asia, Africa and Latin America show a new global dynamic is emerging

    After Vladimir Putin’s landslide presidential election victory on Sunday, western governments lined up to characterise the win as unfair and undemocratic.

    The elections underlined the “depth of repression” in Russia, according to British foreign minister David Cameron, while the US state department said the jailing and disqualification of opponents meant the process was “ incredibly undemocratic ”.

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      China may be facing too many economic obstacles to hit its ambitious growth target for 2024

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 14 March - 00:07

    Fighting deflation, a sinking property market and weak internal demand, Beijing has set itself a challenging goal in 2024

    Chinese leaders who have been predicting an end to the country’s deflation would have been heartened by official statistics this week showing consumer prices had increased for the first time in six months .

    The news came as the ruling Communist party used its annual gathering in Beijing to declare the economy would clock up growth of “around 5%” in 2024 . However in his speech, Premier Li Qiang warned dutiful delegates they “should not lose sight of worst-case scenarios and should be well prepared for all risks and challenges”.

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      The Guardian view on supply chains: not only just in time, but just in case | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 11 March - 18:36 · 1 minute

    Countries are placing a higher priority on resilience and security in the wake of the pandemic and as tensions grow

    In 2012, shortly before becoming China’s top leader, Xi Jinping visited the Port of Los Angeles to discuss boosting trade. What then looked like a locus of cooperation has now become another site for suspicion as Sino-American relations remain tense. Last month, the Biden administration announced $20bn of funding for port infrastructure, much of it to replace cargo cranes that have almost all been made by a state-owned Chinese firm. The US is concerned because the sophisticated pieces of equipment manage information about containers and their contents, their origins and their destinations – and can be remotely programmed and controlled. It wants to restart domestic production of the cranes, which have not been made in the US for decades.

    The move comes amid a much broader economic rethinking: what the EU foreign affairs chief, Josep Borrell, last year described as “a paradigm shift from the primacy of open markets to the primacy of security; from ‘just in time’ to ‘just in case’”. The pandemic was a wake-up call, forcing nations to scrutinise their supply chains, and ask whether they had sacrificed resilience for efficiency. The climate crisis is already affecting logistics: low rainfall in Panama has forced the authorities to limit vessels using the canal . Cyber-attacks by criminal actors are another concern. The Japanese port of Nagoya was put out of action by a ransomware attack last summer. But current conflicts and geopolitical divides are driving the changes.

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      Rare glimpse inside China’s halls of power as Beijing hosts major political event amid high security

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Saturday, 9 March - 13:40

    ‘Two Sessions’, the country’s most high-profile political forum, is open to the world, but protests in Beijing will meet with a tough response

    Across Beijing, security guards stand shivering. Residents of the heavily monitored capital city are used to encountering security guards, members of an urban management force called chengguan , and police officers every few blocks. But this week, as China hosts its biggest political meetings of the year, even more muscle has turned up in Beijing.

    Since Monday, Beijing has been hosting the Two Sessions , concurrent meetings of China’s top political consultative body and its rubber-stamp parliament, the National People’s Congress (NPC). The meetings, which are expected to finish on Monday, are China’s most high-profile annual political event, in which thousands of delegates gather inside the Great Hall of the People, an enormous Communist-era building that looms over the western edge of Tiananmen Square.

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      China sets modest GDP target as it faces regional tensions and an ageing population

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 5 March - 02:08

    Premier Li Qiang tells annual gathering that the global economy and problems closer to home are presenting hurdles for China’s post-Covid recovery

    China set its target for GDP growth at 5%, in line with analysts’ expectations for another year of modest ambitions for the economy, amid regional tensions and its demographic crisis.

    China’s premier, Li Qiang, spoke of the “challenges” facing China’s leaders as he delivered his annual government work report on Tuesday. He cited the global economy and regional tensions as hurdles for China’s recovery, as well as domestic issues such as low consumer demand in a challenging labour market.

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