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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/35079508

Archived

[...]

The Brazilian government believes it has sufficient room to increase import tariffs instead of resorting to more aggressive measures like quotas, should a wave of industrialized goods from China flood the local market. The risk of such a redirection to Brazil has grown in the wake of the global tariff escalation set off by U.S. President Donald Trump.

[...]

Since the beginning of the trade tensions, Brazil has been closely monitoring any potential uptick in the flow of Chinese-made goods to its domestic market, in an effort to “separate the wheat from the chaff.”

“It’s crucial that we base our actions on clear data: to determine whether there is indeed a flood of products or not,” said a Brazilian government official, who noted that so far, no significant increase has been observed.

[...]

If Chinese products do end up being rerouted to Brazil in large volumes, authorities see an increase in import duties as a more straightforward tool to deploy. The government source emphasized that there is legal leeway under both World Trade Organization (WTO) and Mercosur rules to implement such measures.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34919089

Archived

In occupied Crimea, corrupt notaries are helping transfer ownership of Ukrainians’ apartments to Russian military personnel. It’s just one of several schemes the Kremlin-installed authorities are using to strip Ukrainians of their property — especially those who refused to take Russian citizenship.

[...]

The dispossession of property has become one of Russia’s tools for pushing Ukrainians out of Crimea. The Kremlin has led a sweeping campaign of so-called “nationalization,” which spiked in 2014–2015 and has since expanded in scope following Russia’s full-scale invasion.

“In 2022, they added a new category — citizens of so-called ‘unfriendly countries,’” said Mykyta Petrovets, a legal expert at Ukraine’s Regional Center for Human Rights. “That includes basically all European nations — and of course, Ukraine. If you oppose Russian aggression or support sanctions, your property can be confiscated on that basis alone.”

People on a beach in the Black Sea resort city of Yevpatoria, Crimea. April 29, 2025.

[...]

‘Erasing Ukrainian presence’

[...]

In March 2020, Vladimir Putin signed a decree designating nearly the entire [Crimean] peninsula as a so-called “border territory” of the Russian Federation — a move that banned “foreigners” from owning land in Crimea. According to legal expert Mykyta Petrovets, the decree became yet another tool for property dispossession.

“They gave landowners about a year to sell or transfer their property,” Petrovets said. “After that, the process became essentially forced sales through the courts. Now, many of these plots are being auctioned off.”

Under Ukrainian law, nothing has changed — Ukrainian citizens still legally own their land. But the Russian-installed authorities in Crimea have begun publishing lists of addresses and cadastral numbers for properties they intend to confiscate. According to documentation collected by the Regional Center for Human Rights, over the past three years, the number of Crimean land parcels registered to so-called “foreign nationals” has dropped by 50 percent — from over 11,000 to just 5,000.

[...]

After the annexation of Crimea in 2014, Ukraine’s Justice Ministry filed an inter-state lawsuit with the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), accusing Russia of systematic human rights violations in the occupied territory — including the illegal seizure of property. In June 2024, the court ruled in Ukraine’s favor. It declared Russia’s actions unlawful, including the imposition of Russian law in Crimea.

[...]

Meanwhile, Russian officials continue to publicize their efforts to seize and redistribute property in Crimea. Larisa Kulinich, the Russian-installed minister for property and land relations in Crimea, recently announced that 900 properties were “nationalized” in 2024. The sale of those assets, she claimed, brought 2.8 billion rubles ($34.9 million) into the regional budget. Many of the confiscated properties are now being offered as rewards to Russian soldiers fighting against Ukraine.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34854176

"Since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, investigators from the National Police of Ukraine have initiated 154,153 criminal proceedings for crimes committed on Ukrainian territory by servicemen of the armed forces of the Russian Federation and their accomplices," a statement reads.

According to the Ukrainian National Police:

  • 137,828 cases were opened under Article 438 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine (war crimes);
  • 9,340 under Article 110 (encroachment on the territorial integrity and inviolability of Ukraine);
  • 4,430 under Article 111-1 (collaborative activities);
  • 324 under Article 111 (high treason), among others.

[...]

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Cross posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34808510

Sharing a dirty cell with a dozen others, constant sleep deprivation, cells with lights on 24-hours a day; poor hygiene and forced labour. These are some of what prisoners in Chinese jails are subjected to, according to Australian citizen Matthew Radalj, who spent five years at the Beijing No 2 prison – a facility used for international inmates.

Radalj, who is now living outside China, has decided to go public about his experience, and described undergoing and witnessing severe physical punishment, forced labour, food deprivation and psychological torture.

[...]

"I was in really bad shape when I arrived. They beat me for two days straight in the first police station that I was in. I hadn't slept or eaten or had water for 48 hours and then I was forced to sign a big stack of documents," said Radalj of his introduction to imprisonment in China, which began with his arrest on 2 January, 2020.

The former Beijing resident claims he was wrongfully convicted after a fight with shopkeepers at an electronics market, following a dispute over the agreed price to fix a mobile phone screen.

He claims he ended up signing a false confession to robbery, after being told it would be pointless to try to defend his innocence in a system with an almost 100% criminal conviction rate and in the hope that this would reduce the time of his incarceration.

Court documents indicate that this worked at least to some extent, earning him a four-year sentence.

Once in prison, he said he first had to spend many months in a separate detention centre where he was subjected to a more brutal "transition phase".

[...]

During this time prisoners must follow extremely harsh rules in what he described as horrific conditions.

"We were banned from showering or cleaning ourselves, sometimes for months at a time. Even the toilet could be used only at specific allotted times, and they were filthy - waste from the toilets above would constantly drip down on to us."

[...]

The "good behaviour points system" [...] was a way – at least in theory – to reduce your sentence.

Prisoners could obtain a maximum of 100 good behaviour points per month for doing things like studying Communist Party literature, working in the prison factory or snitching on other prisoners. Once 4,200 points were accumulated, they could in theory be used to reduce prison time.

If you do the maths, that would mean a prisoner would have to get maximum points every single month for three-and-half years before this could start to work.

Radalj said that in reality it was used as a means of psychological torture and manipulation.

He claims the guards would deliberately wait till an inmate had almost reached this goal and then penalise them on any one of a huge list of possible infractions which would cancel out points at the crucial time.

These infractions included - but were not limited to - hoarding or sharing food with other prisoners, walking "incorrectly" in the hallway by straying from a line painted on the ground, hanging socks on a bed incorrectly, or even standing too close to the window.

[...]

Former British prisoner Peter Humphrey, who spent two years in detention in Shanghai, said his facility had a similar points calculation and reduction system which was manipulated to control prisoners and block sentence reductions.

"There were cameras everywhere, even three to a cell," he said. "If you crossed a line marked on the ground and were caught by a guard or on camera, you would be punished. The same if you didn't make your bed properly to military standard or didn't place your toothbrush in the right place in the cell.

"There was also group pressure on prisoners with entire cell groups punished if one prisoner did any of these things."

One ex-inmate told the BBC that in his five years in prison, he never once saw the points actually used to mitigate a sentence.

Radalj said that there were a number of prisoners - including himself - who didn't bother with the points system.

So authorities resorted to other means of applying psychological pressure.

These included cutting time off monthly family phone calls or the reduction of other perceived benefits.

[...]

But the most common daily punishment involved the reduction of food.

The BBC has been told by numerous former inmates that the meals at Beijing's No 2 prison were mostly made up of cabbage in dirty water which sometimes also had bits of carrot and, if they were lucky, small slivers of meat.

[...]

To make things worse, they were made to work on a "farm", where they did manage to grow a lot of vegetables, but were never allowed to eat them.

Radalj said the farm was displayed to a visiting justice minister as an example of how impressive prison life was.

But, he said, it was all for show.

"We would be growing tomatoes, potatoes, cabbages and okra and then – at the end of the season – they would push it all into a big hole and bury it," he added.

[...]

Another prisoner said they would occasionally suddenly receive protein, like a chicken leg, to make their diet look better when officials visited the prison.

[...]

"You start to go crazy, whether you like it or not, and that's what solitary is designed to do… So you've got to decide very quickly whether your room is really, really small, or really, really big.

"After four months, you just start talking to yourself all the time. The guards would come by and ask 'Hey, are you okay?'. And you're like, 'why?'. They replied, 'because you're laughing'."

Then, Radalj said, he would respond, in his own mind: "It's none of your business."

[...]

Another feature of Chinese prison life, according to Radalji, was the fake "propaganda" moments officials would stage for Chinese media or visiting officials to paint a rosy picture of conditions there.

He said, at one point, a "computer suite" was set up. "They got everyone together and told us that we'd get our own email address and that we would be able to send emails. They then filmed three Nigerian guys using these computers."

The three prisoners apparently looked confused because the computers were not actually connected to the internet - but the guards had told them to just "pretend".

"Everything was filmed to present a fake image of prisoners with access to computers," Radalj said.

But, he claims, soon after the photo opportunity, the computers were wrapped up in plastic and never touched again.

[...]

Radalj said many of the prisoners had no way of letting their families know they were in jail.

[...]

[After he was released from prison], just before he had boarded the plane in Beijing a policeman who had escorted him to the gate had used Radalj's boarding pass to buy duty free cigarettes for his mates.

"He said don't come back to China. You're banned for 10 years. And I said 'yeah cool. Don't smoke. It's bad for your health'".

The officer laughed.

[...]

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Cross posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34812757

Archived

Ukrainians, regardless of age, gender, and profession, were abducted or persecuted in all territories occupied by Russia. Over 80% of these individuals experienced violence and were illegally detained in inhumane conditions, as reported by the Media Initiative for Human Rights (MIHR).

[...]

Initially, people were held at pumping stations, enterprises, in railway station buildings, schools, etc. Russians also kept Ukrainians in pits at their own positions or in the middle of fields. Subsequently, the prisoners were transferred to police stations, temporary detention facilities, or prisons in the temporarily occupied territories (TOT). Later, the occupiers attempted to transfer as many civilians as possible to Russia.

According to the MIHR, Russia currently holds at least 1,908 Ukrainian civilians. There, Ukrainians can remain for years without any legal status or/ and incommunicado (without the ability to contact their relatives). Russia is initiating criminal cases against some individuals on fabricated charges. During their detention, people are tortured to confess to “crimes” they did not commit, as well as for the amusement of their captors.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34885845

Archived

Social media has been buzzing recently with claims that China has been dropping food and medical supplies to Gaza from the air.

The posts, which feature footage of a C-17 aircraft releasing pallets of aid, have been widely shared, with captions praising China’s humanitarian efforts and presenting it as a contrast to Western inaction. However, a closer look at the evidence shows that these claims are simply not true.

[...]

The viral videos and images typically show a C-17 aircraft performing airdrops. Social media users, including popular profiles on TikTok, have posted messages claiming that the Chinese Air Force flew over Egypt to deliver aid to Gaza. One widely circulated post stated: “Chinese airforce flew over Egypt to reach Gaza to provide humanitarian aid.” Others paint China as a humanitarian powerhouse, taking bold action where others haven’t.

[...]

The problem with these claims? China doesn’t even operate the C-17 aircraft. The C-17 Globemaster III is a large military transport plane used mainly by the United States and several allied countries, but not by China. That fact alone should be enough to raise doubts.

[...]

Investigations into the footage reveal that most of the clips circulating online actually show a United States aid airdrop over Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza, from March 2024. The same tower and parachutes seen in the misleading videos confirm that these clips have been repurposed to create a false narrative. This key detail debunks the notion that Chinese planes were involved.

[...]

Despite the dramatic presentation, there’s no credible evidence that Chinese planes have been involved in any airdrop missions to Gaza.

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Cross posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34730196

Archived

Growing numbers of Ukrainian women in areas recaptured from Russian occupation are starting to speak about the sexual violence they experienced at the hands of Russian soldiers. The watershed moment comes from the amplitude and nature of the crimes, says Inna Shevchenko, a Ukrainian feminist activist and author of “A Letter from the East”.

[...]

The cases of sexual violence documented today in Ukraine took place in the areas that were temporarily occupied by Russia and are now liberated. While prosecutors have registered 344 cases of conflict-related sexual violence since the start of the invasion, women’s groups believe the real number runs in the thousands.

Inna Shevchenko, the author of “A Letter from the East”, spoke to numerous women who returned from Russian captivity and testified as to what they witnessed: widespread, repeated and targeted sexual violence – inflicted not just on civilian and military women but also on men.

“The taboo around sexual violence has begun to break, not because society has suddenly evolved, but because the cruelty of Russian crimes has forced the unspeakable to be said.”

[...]

Certain women old enough to be grandmothers have begun speaking about their rapes at village meetings in Kherson region to raise awareness. “In the face of such barbarity, silence becomes a form of collective abandonment. And it is these voices, fragile but courageous, that are breaking the wall of silence,” said Shevchenko.

[...]

Ukraine’s parliament passed a bill last November to formally recognise conflict-related sexual violence under the law, paving the way for a national policy on these types of crimes. The law will give victims the right to be recognised as survivors and to receive reparations.

She said applications will be filed through a national “Register of Damage” which will collect accounts of the crimes, including material losses. Mezentseva-Fedorenko called the passage of the law a “great achievement” though she admitted that it does little to address the trauma of victims.

[...]

Russian forces currently occupy around 20 percent of Ukraine, and the circumstances of the inhabitants there are murky because of Russian surveillance, limits on media access and internet restrictions.

“We cannot even estimate the real scale of crimes which are currently happening in the territories that are still occupied,” said Shevchenko.

“The horror continues there, in the silence imposed by the occupation.”

[Edit typo.]

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Cross posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34731504

Archived

[...]

Russia's economy is experiencing a sharp slowdown in growth, according to a report released by the governmental statistics agency Rosstat on May 16.

Gross domestic product (GDP) only grew by 1.4% in the first quarter of 2025 – a notable decline from 4.5% growth in the previous quarter and 5.4% in the same period last year, the Moscow Times reported, citing Rosstat data.

The latest data from Rosstat came in below expectations: the Russian Economic Development Ministry estimated GDP growth at 1.7% and Bloomberg analysts predicted 1.8% growth.

According to Egor Susin, an executive from Gazprombank (the third largest bank in Russia, currently under sanctions), Rosstat's data show a "sharp slowdown in the economy."

[...]

Some aalysts point to Central Bank policies, sanctions, supply difficulties, and high inflation as reasons for the economy's decline.

Moreover, "the situation is complicated by low oil prices," Raiffeisenbank analysts note, as oil and gas revenues fell 10% from January to April.

A recent report from the Stockholm Institute of Transition Economics (SITE) also revealed that, despite narratives from the Kremlin, Russia’s economy is under increasing strain from its war in Ukraine and Western sanctions.

A recent Reuters calculation sees Russia's oil and gas revenue -the most important source of cash for the Kremlin, accounting for about a quarter of total federal budget proceeds- falling by a third in May 2025 from a year earlier to 0.52 trillion roubles ($6.48 billion), the lowest level since July 2023 amid weaker oil prices and a stronger rouble.

As Moscow and Kyiv discuss potential peace deals, the Russian economy may face another shock if military spending is reduced. Conversely – if peace talks fail – Europe and the United States may impose additional sanctions on Russia, putting further strain on its economy.

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Cross posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34743645

Archived

At the Port of Anping in Tainan, Taiwan's ancient capital, a large cargo ship named Hong Tai 58 sits decaying and riddled with rust.

Once ruled by a pirate warlord named Koxinga, who drove out Dutch colonists in the 1662 siege of Fort Zeelandia, Tainan is now where this crumbling vessel and its captain have been detained since February.

One of the ship's anchors is missing, likely left lying on the seabed about 10 kilometres west.

There, it's alleged the captain instructed his sailors to zigzag over the top of Taiwan-Penghu No. 3 communications cable, which connects the 100,000 residents of the outlying Penghu Islands to the rest of Taiwan and the world.

There are 24 of these vital arteries which connect Taiwan to the beating heart of the modern world — the internet — and China has been accused of sabotaging several, including two just this year.

Even though the Chinese Communist Party has never ruled Taiwan, Beijing has labelled what it calls "reunification" as essential to the full rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.

[...]

Communications weren't impacted in Penghu in February.

But the Penghu archipelago sits much nearer to Taiwan's main island, showing how willing Beijing is to encroach closer and closer in its efforts to pressure the self-ruled democracy.

[...]

The Hong Tai 58 was flying under a flag of convenience, registered to the nearly landlocked African nation of Togo.

Its crew and captain are Chinese, and the Taiwanese coastguard alleges it is funded by China.

Prosecutors say the ship's movements were erratic in the days before the cable was cut, and tracking data shows it had been hanging around the area for some time.

[...]

The cutting of Penghu's telecommunications cable was the second act of alleged Chinese sabotage just this year.

In January, the Trans-Pacific Express Cable System north of Taiwan was cut in another set of suspicious circumstances.

Authorities alleged a Cameroon-registered, Hong Kong-owned freighter named the Shunxing 39 was responsible, and requests were made for help from South Korea as the vessel was headed towards Busan.

The ship's owner at the time denied the ship had cut the cable, calling it a "normal trip".

Weeks later, Taiwan's digital affairs ministry declared that 10 of its undersea cables would be classified as "critical infrastructure", which comes with extra security and increased government oversight.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34601620

China’s government should free the 11th Panchen Lama Gendun Choki Nyima and his parents, whom Chinese authorities forcibly disappeared on May 17, 1995, and who have not been seen for 30 years, Human Rights Watch said today.

The Panchen Lama and the Dalai Lama, Tibet’s religious leader, have historically played key roles in recognizing the other’s successor. As the current 14th Dalai Lama will celebrate his 90th birthday on July 6, the question of his succession—and the future of Tibetan Buddhism and the Tibetan people—is becoming increasingly urgent.

“The Chinese government kidnapped a 6-year-old and his family and have disappeared them for 30 years to control the selection of the next Dalai Lama and thus Tibetan Buddhism itself,” said Yalkun Uluyol, China researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Concerned parties should press the Chinese government to end this cruelty and secure the freedom of Gendun Choki Nyima and his family.”

The Chinese government forcibly disappeared the then 6-year-old on May 17, 1995, three days after the Dalai Lama recognized him as the 11th Panchen Lama. Even pictures of Gendun Choki Nyima, along with those of the Dalai Lama, are prohibited in Tibet.

[...]

Authorities also detained Jadrel Rinpoche, the abbot of Tashi Lhunpo Monastery who oversaw the search for the Panchen Lama’s reincarnation, and arrested more than 30 monks from the monastery. Jadrel Rinpoche’s whereabouts and well-being are also unknown.

[...]

[Edit typo.]

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Archived

GD Culture (GDC) Group, a NASDAQ-listed company claiming to be a TikTok e-commerce platform with links to China, 8 employees and no revenue reported in 2024, pledges $300M that it plans to use to purchase Bitcoin and the $Trump meme coin, as per a SEC (Security and Exchange Commission) filing on May 11.

According to the filing, GDC said it plans to allocate its budget to Bitcoin and TRUMP using proceeds from a private stock placement to an unnamed entity based in the British Virgin Islands, a jurisdiction known for its secrecy and favorable tax status.

[...]

Until now, GD Culture Group has had a minimal public footprint. Its operations in China and reliance on a Chinese-owned platform like TikTok gave it little visibility in Western capital markets. But that changed dramatically when it revealed plans to raise hundreds of millions of dollars through a two‑year “equity line” (also called a committed‑equity facility) with a single accredited investor.

[...]

Should the transaction proceed as filed, GDC’s assets could balloon from just $14 million at the end of 2024 to potentially more than $300 million.

[...]

The timing of the move is especially contentious. Lawmakers in Washington are debating a proposed ban on TikTok, citing national security concerns over its Chinese ownership. President Trump has expressed support for a deal allowing the platform to continue operating in the US, a position at odds with many in Congress.

GD Culture Group’s announcement directly intersects with this policy debate. Ethics experts argue that any financial gain for the Trump family linked to such a decision would represent an apparent conflict of interest.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34514936

Archived

[...]

At the beginning of March 2025, non-governmental government (NGO) sources confirmed that Zhang will soon be tried on the charge of ‘picking quarrels and provoking trouble’, a charge often used by Chinese authorities to suppress journalists, writers and human rights defenders. The date of her trial is still unknown, as she remains detained in the Pudong Detention Center in Shanghai, facing an additional up to five years in prison if convicted.

Zhang Zhan was apprehended by the police on 28 August 2024, only three months after completion of an earlier four-year sentence under the same charge, while travelling to her hometown in the Shaanxi province in northwest China. In the weeks leading up to this incident, Zhang kept reporting on the harassment of activists in China on her social media accounts.

Her first detention was deemed arbitrary under international human rights law by the United Nation’s Working Group on Arbitrary Detention in a 2021 opinion. In a November 2024 letter to the Chinese government, nine UN Special Procedures mandates raised lengthy concerns about patterns of repression against Zhang Zhan, alongside 17 other human rights defenders, requesting the government take measures to prevent any irreparable damage to life and personal integrity, and halt the violations of her human rights. The government’s three-line response on Zhang Zhan’s status merely asserted that ‘her legitimate rights and interests have been fully protected’.

China remains one of the most repressive countries for freedom of speech and press, ranks 178th out of 180 in the 2025 Reporters without Borders (RSF)’s World Press Freedom Index, and is the world’s leading jailer of journalists and writers, according to data from the Committee to Protect Journalists, RSF, and PEN America.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34476106

Archived

[...]

Taiwanese authorities have suspected Chinese sabotage of the cables near Taiwan's waters, while EU leaders have pointed to Russia for likely being responsible for the breaches in the Baltic.

"Taiwan and our European friends should work closely together on this issue," [former Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen] said of the disruptions, calling for the "sharing [of] best practices" to more effectively respond to escalating attacks on their critical infrastructure.

More broadly, Tsai urged democracies to work together on addressing abuses of open information platforms.

[...]

Taiwan is "an ideal partner for European countries" as they step up efforts to address disinformation and manipulation campaigns perpetrated by authoritarian regimes with the aim of eroding democratic institutions, said Tsai, who left office last May after completing two four-year terms.

According to Tsai, Taiwan has "gained unique experience and developed innovative tools to counter malign influence" through its extensive exposure to cyberattacks, disinformation operations and large-scale military drills.

The former president also praised the ongoing collaborations between Taiwan and Lithuania initiated during her tenure, during which Taipei opened a representative office in Vilnius and Vilnius established a trade office in Taipei.

[...]

Ties between the two [Lithuania and Taiwan] have faced challenges since 2021 [over] Beijing's punitive economic measures against Lithuania and concerns within Lithuanian society about the political and economic repercussions of deepening such a relationship.

[...]

After visiting Lithuania, Tsai will travel to Denmark and later the United Kingdom.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34418234

[This is an op-ed by Tenzin Dorjee, senior researcher and strategist at the Tibet Action Institute and lecturer in the discipline of political science at Columbia University, and James Leibold, professor of politics and Asian studies at La Trobe University in Melbourne, specializing in Chinese ethnic policy, nationalism, and authoritarian governance.]

In the more than seven decades since Chinese troops stormed into Tibet to claim authority over the Himalayan region, the Tibetan people have been forced to endure the dismantling of their religious institutions, the erasure of their cultural identity, and most recently, the displacement of their language. The few features of traditional Tibetan life to have escaped eradication, such as Tibetan architecture and Buddhist festivals, have been subjected to sinicization campaigns. The scale of the transformation has produced the common lament that not much is left of Tibet today except its name. Now Beijing plans to change that too.

Several years ago, China’s hawkish English-language Global Times tabloid began using the term “Xizang” instead of “Tibet.” Other Chinese media outlets and state agencies soon followed suit. Now the Xizang toponym — which is the pinyin romanization for the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) — is finding compliance from governments and institutions beyond the People’s Republic of China (PRC).

Beijing is attempting to fundamentally alter the global public understanding of Tibet, and is doing so by adopting a well-honed strategy of linguistic imperialism, one that operates at three separate levels: the discursive, the territorial, and the civilizational. But why is Beijing intent on displacing a name with deep history and wide usage, and why is it unwilling to let Tibet stand as the name of the Tibetan people’s homeland?

[...]

In recent years, the term Tibet has become inextricably linked to the movement for Tibetan self-determination. The phenomenal success of the transnational Tibet movement in the nineties and the early aughts, when the cause captured the imagination of a generation of activists and students around the world, has rendered the name of the place inseparable from the slogan “Free Tibet.” By replacing Tibet with Xizang, Beijing aims to depoliticize the global discourse surrounding the Tibetan homeland and paper over the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)’s colonial occupation, religious persecution, and human-rights abuses in Tibet.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/29544539

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/29544531

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/29544481

So what does the West want to do with Gaza ?

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34400694

Archived

Uyghur genocide committed by China was brought up at the Ethical Trade Conference in Norway

Concentration camp witness Sayragul Sauytbay detailed the Uyghur genocide, including forced labour, at the Ethical Trade Conference 2025. She called on the government to avoid complicity through trade with China in the ongoing genocide.

The Ethical Trade Conference 2025 was hosted by Ethical Trade Norway at Dansens Hus in Oslo on April 29, 2025, under the theme “Make Sustainability Great Again!” The conference marked the 25th anniversary of the organization and brought together over 300 attendees from business, labour unions, government, and civil society. Sayragul Sauytbay, Vice President of the East Turkistan Government in Exile (ETGE), spoke at the opening of the conference, Norway’s leading event for ethical and sustainable commerce.

Sauytbay, an ethnic Kazakh from East Turkistan and a prominent witness to the Chinese concentration camps, offered a pressing testimony regarding the ongoing genocide and crimes against humanity perpetrated by the Chinese government against the Uyghurs, Kazakhs, Kyrgyz, and other Turkic ethnic groups. Drawing from her experiences as an educator forced into Chinese concentration camps, she detailed instances of mass internment, torture, forced labour, and indoctrination.

She pointed out that almost one million children from the Uyghur, Kazakh, and other Turkic communities have been forcefully removed from their families and placed in Chinese state-operated boarding schools and orphanages, where they undergo political indoctrination intended to erase their cultural and religious identities.

Sauytbay cautioned that without full transparency and ethical due diligence, continued political and economic engagements with China could render the government of Norway and Norwegian businesses morally and legally complicit in the atrocities committed by the Chinese state.

She asserted that the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) serves as a key tool in China’s strategy for global domination, enabling the Chinese Communist Party to extend its authoritarian influence under the pretext of development and trade.

[...]

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34399225

The European Parliament overwhelmingly passed a resolution condemning Russia’s forcible deportation and Russification of Ukrainian children, calling it a "genocide" aimed at erasing Ukrainian identity and demanding the unconditional return of all abducted minors.

According to the resolution, Russia targeted vulnerable groups of children for deportation, including orphans and children from low-income families; whereas Ukrainian human rights activists uncovered Kremlin documents dated prior to the full-scale invasion which laid out plans to remove Ukrainian children and bring them to Russia under the guise of “humanitarian evacuations”;

Since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, Ukraine has identified over 19,500 children who were illegally transferred to Russia, Belarus, or Russian-occupied territories. Fewer than 1,300 have been returned. However, many experts say that the real number is much higher. Citing the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab, the actual figure is estimated to be as high as 35,000 as of March 2025.

Russia's Vladimir Putin signed a decree in May 2022 providing a simplified procedure for the acquisition of Russian citizenship for Ukrainian children; whereas many of the deported children are forced to endure “re-education” facilities, meant to instill pro-Russian sentiments though “military-patriotic” training while others have been forcibly adopted into Russian families; whereas Russia opened a cadet school for abducted Ukrainian children, creating a direct pipeline into the federal security forces.

Russia is conducting a “systematic, intentional, and widespread” campaign of forced adoption and Russification. Many children are enrolled in organizations like Yunarmiya, or the “Young Army,” which trains minors in military skills and indoctrinates them with loyalty to the Kremlin, the Ukrainian newspaper Kyiv Independent reports.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has already issued arrest warrants for Russian President Vladimir Putin and Children’s Rights Commissioner Maria Lvova-Belova in connection with the abductions.

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Cross posted from https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34345715

Archived

Original Bloomberg link (paywalled).

One of China’s largest online recruitment platforms has quietly stopped providing wage data it’s compiled for at least a decade, making it more difficult to gauge the health of the world’s biggest labour market just as it comes under strain from US tariffs.

Zhaopin Ltd has yet to publish its reports on average wages companies offered to new hires in 38 key cities for the past two quarters. It’s previously released them regularly within the first month after each quarter ended.

Beijing-based Zhaopin didn’t reply to a request for comment.

The missing numbers extend a pattern in China of data providers discontinuing or pausing statistical releases. Alternative figures on employment have become especially sparse, depriving economists and investors of information about a subject that’s grown more sensitive due to soaring youth unemployment, widespread salary cuts and lay-offs.

Zhaopin’s last report, published in early October, showed a decline in salaries from a year ago in the three months ended September, in a resumption of a downward trend that started in mid-2023. The figures it provided were one of the few independent statistical sets that reflected broad-based wage changes across the country.

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Such alternative data has become increasingly important in assessing China’s employment conditions in recent years. Many economists think the official measurements — including the jobless rate and income statistics — have failed to fully capture the extent of stress on the labour market from the economy’s slowdown.

China Institute for Employment Research, a think tank based in Beijing, stopped making its quarterly labour market reports and indexes publicly available since 2022. China Dissent Monitor, which documented protests including those triggered by labour disputes, suspended its work earlier this year after USAID funding was withdrawn by the Trump administration.

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China’s ability to shield its labour market from the trade war is critical to the prospects of the world’s second-largest economy, which is counting on domestic consumers to offset the fallout from US tariffs of as much as 145%. Weak income growth and household expectations have been a major factor behind sluggish consumption in recent years.

While policymakers have pledged to lift wages, the immediate outlook for employment is actually changing for the worse. As many as 16 million jobs are exposed to China’s exports to the US, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc’s estimates.

A total of eight million jobs could be lost over the next two years, based on the last time both exports and the property sector contracted in 2015 and 2016, according to Capital Economics Ltd.

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In an effort to better gauge the labour market situation, Capital Economics recently constructed an index based on data including those from purchasing managers’ index surveys and Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business’s poll on firms’ labour costs.

While the index largely used to move in sync with the official jobless rate, it’s been painting a much weaker picture since mid-2024.

“Chinese policymakers will probably find ways to keep the published unemployment rate close to their ‘around 5.5%’ target for this year,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard of Capital Economics. “But this may mask broader weakness in the labour market,” he said in a Wednesday report.

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Cross posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34330409

Archived

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This March, Stanford’s President, Dr. Jonathan Levin, received a letter from the Select Committee on the CCP detailing the security risks China poses to STEM research. For years, concerns about Chinese espionage have quietly persisted at Stanford. Throughout our investigation, professors, students, and researchers readily recounted their experiences of Chinese spying, yet they declined to speak publicly. One student who experienced espionage firsthand was too fearful to recount their story, even via encrypted messaging. “The risk is too high,” they explained. Transnational repression, $64 million in Chinese funding, and allegations of racial profiling have contributed to a pervasive culture of silence at Stanford and beyond.

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After interviewing multiple anonymous Stanford faculty, students, and China experts, we can confirm that the CCP [Chinese Communist Party] is orchestrating a widespread intelligence-gathering campaign at Stanford. In short, “there are Chinese spies at Stanford.”

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Speaking at a China Town Hall event, the former U.S. National Security Council’s Director for China, Matthew Turpin, characterized the threat of Chinese espionage at Stanford:

"The Chinese state incentivizes students to violate conflicts of commitment and interest, ensuring they bring back technology otherwise restricted by export controls.”

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A China expert, familiar with Stanford, who wished to remain anonymous, confirmed that of the approximately 1,129 Chinese International students on campus, a select number are actively reporting to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). China’s 2017 National Intelligence Law mandates that all Chinese citizens support and cooperate with state intelligence work regardless of location.

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One Chinese national at Stanford spoke to us on this very issue under conditions of anonymity:

“Many Chinese [nationals] have handlers; they [CCP] want to know everything that's going on at Stanford. This is a very normal thing. They just relay the information they have.”

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Another Stanford student shared an incident involving their professor's encounter with suspected Chinese espionage. According to the student, the professor recounted needing to schedule a meeting with a Chinese student. When the student declined, citing a mysterious reason, the Professor asked why. The student replied, “You know why.” The professor continued to inquire, only to receive the cryptic response, “I cannot tell you that.” Finally, the professor revealed that the student admitted to meeting a CCP handler.

This issue has been under discussion at Stanford since 2019, as highlighted by a Stanford Daily article that featured interviews with anonymous Chinese nationals. One Chinese student remarked, “Whether peer monitoring exists at Stanford is moot; it’s the possibility that keeps people cautious about what they say. If it exists, I’m not going to be surprised.”

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34188137

Taiwan’s president, Lai Ching-te, has compared his nation to the European countries heading for conflict with Nazi Germany in the 1930s, in a punchy speech commemorating the end of the second world war in Europe.

“Eighty years after the end of the European war, the message of history is clear. Today, 80 years later, we share the same values ​​and face similar challenges as many of the democracies that participated in the European war,” Lai said to a group of foreign dignitaries gathered in Taipei.

Lai’s speech comes at a time when Taiwan is facing increasing military pressure from China. It is the first time Taiwan has officially commemorated the end of the second world war in Europe.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/34118585

Hong Kong authorities’ unjust arrests of the father and brother of the prominent US-based activist Anna Kwok is an escalation of the Chinese government’s use of cross-border repression, 87 international and diaspora rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, said today in two joint statements.

Anna Kwok’s father, Kwok Yin-sang, 68, was arrested and formally charged under a national security law that carries a punishment of up to seven years in prison. Her brother was also arrested and later released on bail.

“The Hong Kong authorities took an unprecedented action by charging the family member of an exiled activist with a national security crime to try to silence her,” said Yalkun Uluyol, China researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Foreign governments should respond to this assault on basic liberties by speaking up about the case and taking concrete actions to protect their citizens and residents from the Chinese government’s long arm.”

The groups said that foreign governments should put in place effective measures to protect exiled activists and other critics of the Chinese government from Beijing’s transnational repression.

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