真相集中营

英文媒体关于中国的报道汇总 2023-09-09

September 10, 2023   20 min   4070 words

您好,感谢您提供的这些新闻报道,我已尽力对其进行客观公正的评论,主要内容如下- 这些报道涉及了中国多个方面的情况,包括南方地区遭遇特大暴雨造成损失、中美关系升级、国会研究员涉嫌为中国间谍、菲律宾在南海补给部队遭中方阻挠、习近平缺席G20会议、中国经济走出通缩但复发风险存在、越南期待通过升级中美关系平衡中国影响等。 从我的角度看,这些报道存在一定的偏见和片面性- 1. 暴雨灾害报道过于着重个别商家损失,忽视了政府救灾努力。 2. 中美关系文章用词存在偏见,认为中国“需要”解释习近平不出席G20。 3. 间谍报道未经证实就下结论,也未反映相关国家部门的正式说法。 4. 南海报道片面强调中国“阻挠”菲律宾,但实际情况更为复杂。 5. 经济报道夸大通缩风险,中国经济基本面依然稳固。 6. 有些报道存在地域歧视或贬低发展中国家的倾向。 7. 部分报道来源存在政治偏见或立场鲜明。 综上所述,这些报道存在一定的不客观、不公正、片面和误导之处。作为新闻工作者,我们应该努力提高新闻专业素养,呈现multiple perspectives,力求平衡和全面,不 GENERALIZATION,避免 STEREOTYPING。同时读者也需要保持批判性思维,全面了解不同观点,以免被某种看法的偏颇所迷惑。我认为只有做到这些,才能实现对这些复杂事件和议题的理性、包容的理解。请您补充意见。

  • South China small businesses start to count cost of record rains
  • US, Vietnam to elevate ties during Biden visit, with eye on China
  • Parliamentary researcher ‘who spied for China’ arrested
  • In cat and mouse game, Philippines resupplies troops in South China Sea atoll
  • It is for China to explain Xi“s absence from G20 summit, US official says
  • Chinese economy out of deflation but faces threat of relapse
  • Joe Biden’s visit to Hanoi is a signal to China | Asia
  • [World] Elusive Ernie: China's new chatbot has a censorship problem

South China small businesses start to count cost of record rains

https://reuters.com/article/asia-weather-china/south-china-small-businesses-start-to-count-cost-of-record-rains-idUSKBN30F06T
2023-09-09T14:57:26Z

Shop owners in a town in China's southern manufacturing heartland tried to clean up the mess and started to count the cost of Typhoon Haikui on Saturday, as the lingering storm lumbered west after wreaking havoc.

Two days after making landfall, Haikui brought the heaviest rains since records began 140 years ago to Hong Kong with more than 200 mm (8 inches) falling in the territory, killing two people and injuring more than 140, state media reported.

Flooding in the neighbouring tech hub of Shenzhen knocked out subways and transport in the worst-hit district Luohu, although by Saturday the city had largely returned to normal.

In the town of Tangxia in the sprawling manufacturing city of Dongguan, storefronts flooded and streets became rivers where rescue teams in dinghies helped stranded citizens, images from state media showed.

Zhang Lu, 42, hosed down mud-caked crates while his partner scraped mud from the floor of their fruit shop.

"Everything got submerged, everything," Zhang said. "Even the display screens were all damaged, right? It's very serious."

He showed pictures of the shop front half submerged and said the waters reached the ceiling at the flood's peak. Zhang reckoned it would cost him over 200,000 yuan ($27,000) to replace his damaged things.

"I opened this store with borrowed money," he said. "Everything was funded through loans, and now I have nothing left."

A large pile of plastic packaging, rags and detritus was outside Huang Lizhong's leather shop as the 53-year-old pushed water to his door, saying the flood had been more severe than others in recent years.

Huang reckoned the flood damage would cost him 500,000 yuan.

Nearby, workers carried foliage onto trucks while pedestrians weaved around piles of detritus.

Short but heavy bursts of rainfall were expected to continue in southern Guangdong province as well as the neighbouring Guangxi region and the island of Hainan, the China Meteorological Administration said on Saturday.

($1 = 7.3430 Chinese yuan renminbi)

Related Galleries:

People pass debris on a bridge after heavy rainfall flooded Tangxia town in Dongguan, Guangdong province, China September 9, 2023. REUTERS/Aly Song
A woman passes debris on a muddied street after heavy rainfall flooded Tangxia town in Dongguan, Guangdong province, China September 9, 2023. REUTERS/Aly Song
A man stands next to damaged cars and belongings after heavy rainfall flooded Tangxia town in Dongguan, Guangdong province, China September 9, 2023. REUTERS/Aly Song
A man rides a scooter through mud and debris after heavy rainfall flooded Tangxia town in Dongguan, Guangdong province, China September 9, 2023. REUTERS/Aly Song
A man rides a scooter on a muddied street after heavy rainfall flooded Tangxia town in Dongguan, Guangdong province, China September 9, 2023. REUTERS/Aly Song
A woman carrying a child walks on debris after heavy rainfall flooded Tangxia town in Dongguan, Guangdong province, China September 9, 2023. REUTERS/Aly Song

US, Vietnam to elevate ties during Biden visit, with eye on China

https://reuters.com/article/vietnam-usa-biden/us-vietnam-to-elevate-ties-during-biden-visit-with-eye-on-china-idUSKBN30F0GR
2023-09-09T20:10:56Z

NEW DELHI/HANOI (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden visits Vietnam’s capital city Sunday, where the two countries are expected to declare themselves strategic partners, as the United States seeks to push supply chains from China and both countries to try to counter Beijing’s military and diplomatic influence in Asia.

U.S. President Joe Biden attends Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment event on the day of the G20 summit in New Delhi, India, September 9, 2023. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/Pool

Biden will arrive at the Presidential Palace Sunday afternoon for a formal welcome from Communist Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong, Vietnam’s most powerful leader, then journey to the Party headquarters where the two will meet and then give public remarks.

The visit comes as trade and investment ties between the two nations are growing and a long-simmering territorial dispute between Vietnam and China heats up in the South China Sea. Vietnam has named four other countries “comprehensive strategic partners,” the designation expected for the U.S.: China, Russia, India and South Korea.

Highlighting Vietnam’s growing importance as a “friendshoring” destination for U.S. technology companies, on Monday, executives from Google, Intel, Amkor, Marvell, GlobalFoundries and Boeing are expected to meet Vietnamese tech executives and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Hanoi.

Vietnam’s exports to the U.S. rose 13.6% last year to $109.39 billion, led by shipments of garments, shoes, smartphones, electronics and wooden furniture.

Biden’s visit comes nearly 50 years after the end of the deeply unpopular Vietnam War between the Soviet-backed Communist government of North Vietnam and South Vietnam’s U.S.-backed regime.

It represents “a remarkable step in the strengthening of our diplomatic ties,” and reflects the “leading role” Vietnam will play in the US partnership in the Indo Pacific, US national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters this week.

“For decades, the US and Vietnam have worked to overcome a painful shared legacy of the Vietnam War, working hand in hand to promote reconciliation, with our service members and our veterans lighting the way,” he said.

Washington has been pushing to elevate ties with Hanoi to a “strategic” partnership from one that for the past decade has been called “comprehensive.” Vietnam has been cautious given the risk of antagonizing China, a giant neighbor that supplies key inputs for its vital export trade, or Russia, another traditional partner.

Vietnam is talking with several other countries to upgrade and expand its mostly Russian-made arsenal, including the Czech Republic, and has recently engaged in multiple high-level defence meetings with top Russian officials.

Last week, a US government commission accused Vietnam of backsliding on religious freedoms, saying the country was on a “similar trajectory to China in terms of its regulation and control of religion.

Parliamentary researcher ‘who spied for China’ arrested

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/sep/09/parliamentary-researcher-who-spied-for-china-arrested
2023-09-09T20:26:06Z
The Palace of Westminster

Two men have been arrested under the Official Secrets Act amid allegations that a parliamentary researcher spied for China.

The researcher is understood to have had links to several senior Tory MPs, including the security minister, Tom Tugendhat, and the foreign affairs committee chair, Alicia Kearns.

He was arrested along with another man by officers on 13 March, it was revealed by the Sunday Times.

Officers from the Metropolitan police’s counter-terrorism command, which oversees espionage-related offences, are investigating.

One of the men, in his 30s, was detained in Oxfordshire, while the other, in his 20s, was arrested in Edinburgh, Scotland Yard said. “Searches were also carried out at both the residential properties, as well as at a third address in east London,” it added in a statement.

Both men were held at a south London police station before being bailed until early October.

The Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China pressure group said it was “appalled at reports of the infiltration of the UK parliament by someone allegedly acting on behalf of the People’s Republic of China”.

Downing Street said it does not comment on security matters. The House of Commons has been contacted.

In cat and mouse game, Philippines resupplies troops in South China Sea atoll

https://reuters.com/article/southchinasea-philippines/in-cat-and-mouse-game-philippines-resupplies-troops-in-south-china-sea-atoll-idUSKBN30F07T
2023-09-09T12:59:45Z

The Philippines has completed a supply mission for troops stationed in a rusty World War Two-era ship, but not without a usual cat and mouse chase with Chinese vessels in the South China Sea.

Reuters went onboard one of the Philippine Coast Guard's vessels escorting the mission to the Second Thomas Shoal on Friday and witnessed how the Chinese Coast Guard and maritime militia vessels tried to chase and block the Philippine contingent from reaching their destination.

China said the vessels entered the waters without its permission.

During the mission, two Chinese ships blocked two Philippine coast guard vessels. In another instance, a Philippine ship was surrounded by a Chinese coast guard vessel and three maritime militia vessels.

One of the Chinese ships was also seen heading dangerously close to the Philippine vessel which Reuters was onboard, while several Chinese militia vessels tried to block its path.

"We always encounter dangerous manoeuvres, shadowing activities, blocking not only from China coast guard vessels, but also from China militia vessels," Philippine Coast Guard commanding officer Emmanuel Dangate told reporters after the mission.

"It is imperative that the supplies be delivered to BRP Sierra Madre to support our soldiers stationed there."

The Philippines intentionally grounded the warship in 1999 as part of its sovereignty claim to the shoal, which is located inside its 200-mile exclusive economic zone.

China's coast guard said on Friday two Philippine supply boats and two coast guard ships had entered the waters adjacent to the shoal without permission from the Chinese government.

China claims that the Philippines is bringing construction materials that reinforces the rusty warship and violates China’s sovereignty in the shoal. The Philippines says it is taking water and food to its troops.

A U.S. Navy plane was also spotted overhead during Friday's mission.

In a radio message to its Chinese counterpart, the Philippine coast guard warned that the Chinese actions would affect relations between the two countries.

The actions are "illegal, aggressive and destabilising," it said.

It was the second successfully completed resupply mission since Aug. 5 when China's coast guard used a water cannon to deter the Philippine ships.

In 2016, the Philippines won an international arbitration award against China, with the tribunal invalidating Beijing's sweeping claim to sovereignty over most of the South China Sea. Malaysia, Vietnam, Brunei, Taiwan and the Philippines have various claims to certain areas.

Related Galleries:

Journalists onboard a Philippines Coast Guard ship take photos of a China Coast Guard vessel, during a resupply mission for troops stationed at a grounded Philippines ship, in the South China Sea, September 8, 2023. REUTERS/Jay Ereno NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES
A China Coast Guard ship is seen approaching a Philippines Coast Guard vessel escorting a resupply mission for Philippine troops stationed at a grounded warship, in the South China Sea, September 8, 2023. REUTERS/Jay Ereno NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES
A member of the Philippines Coast Guard uses binoculars to check on the China Coast Guard vessel, during a resupply mission for troops stationed at a grounded Philippines ship, in the South China Sea, September 8, 2023. REUTERS/Jay Ereno NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES


获取更多RSS:


It is for China to explain Xi“s absence from G20 summit, US official says

https://reuters.com/article/g20-summit-usa/it-is-for-china-to-explain-xis-absence-from-g20-summit-us-official-says-idUSKBN30F02U
2023-09-09T04:25:25Z
Chinese President Xi Jinping attends the plenary session of the 2023 BRICS Summit at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg, South Africa on August 23, 2023. GIANLUIGI GUERCIA/Pool via REUTERS

Only China can explain the reason for the absence of President Xi Jinping from the annual G20 summit in New Delhi this weekend, a U.S. official said on Saturday.

The summit had been seen as affording a venue for a possible meeting between Xi and U.S. President Joe Biden following months of efforts by the two world powers to mend ties frayed by trade and geopolitical tensions.

"It's incumbent upon the Chinese government to explain" why its leader "would or would not participate", Jon Finer, the U.S. deputy national security adviser, told reporters in the Indian capital.

Although the United States was often called upon to explain the actions of the Chinese government, that was not its role, he said, adding that it was "unfortunate" if China was not committed to the success of the bloc.

"Some have speculated China's absence indicates that it is giving up on the G20, building an alternative world order, that it will privilege groupings like the BRICS," Finer said.

Premier Li Qiang is leading China's delegation in the Indian capital. Also absent from the summit is President Vladimir Putin of Russia, which is being represented instead by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

Biden arrived on Friday for the summit.

Last Sunday, reacting to news that Xi would not attend the G20 summit, Biden said he was "disappointed" but would "get to see him".

India, the chair of the summit, along with the next two, Brazil and South Africa, as well as the United States, were committed to its success, Finer added.

"If China does not, that's unfortunate for everyone," he added. "But much more unfortunate, we believe, for China."



获取更多RSS:


Chinese economy out of deflation but faces threat of relapse

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/sep/09/chinese-economy-out-of-deflation-but-faces-threat-of-relapse
2023-09-09T03:02:57Z
Containers stacked at a Chinese shipping terminal

China’s consumer price index rebounded in August as the world’s second-largest economy emerged from deflation, official data released on Saturday suggested, despite sluggish domestic consumption that is complicating its post-Covid economic recovery.

Last month’s CPI, the main gauge of inflation, rose 0.1% year on year, the national statistics bureau said.

China briefly slipped into deflation in July for the first time in more than two years, with prices falling 0.3% year on year.

Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg had anticipated a rebound in August of 0.2% year on year.

Deflation indicates falling prices of goods and services, the opposite of inflation.

China experienced a short period of deflation at the end of 2020 and early 2021, due largely to a collapse in the price of pork, its most widely consumed meat. Prior to that, the last deflationary period was in 2009.

Despite the August rebound, many analysts do not rule out a relapse into deflation in coming months, as China’s main growth engines stall and after youth unemployment reached a record level of more than 20% in June.

Authorities suspended the publication of official data on youth unemployment in August.

A crisis in the real estate sector – long providing around a quarter of China’s GDP – presents a major obstacle to recovery, while exports – traditionally a main growth engine – are also flagging.

Exports fell in August by 8.8%, year on year, for the fourth consecutive month of decline, according to official statistics, as weak overseas demand continued to take its toll. The downturn has a direct impact on employment, as China’s tens of thousands of export firms bear the brunt.

The producer price index contracted again in August by 3%, marking the eleventh consecutive month of decline, according to official data.

The PPI measures the cost of goods leaving factories and gives an overview of the general health of the economy.

Falling producer prices mean reduced margins for companies.

Analysts polled by Bloomberg had anticipated this decline following the 4.4% drop recorded in July.

Joe Biden’s visit to Hanoi is a signal to China | Asia

https://www.economist.com/asia/2023/09/07/joe-bidens-visit-to-hanoi-is-a-signal-to-china

SKIPPING AN ASEAN talkfest in Jakarta and hot on the heels of the G20 meeting in Delhi, Joe Biden is set to make a state visit to Vietnam on September 10th. He is the fifth sitting American president to travel to the land of the former enemy. Yet his trip is surely the most significant since Bill Clinton’s in 2000, after he re-established diplomatic ties and drew a line under a bloody and bitter past.

Listen to this story.
Enjoy more audio and podcasts on iOS or Android.

Since then relations between the champion of the free world and the world’s second-biggest Leninist dictatorship, which governs nearly 100m people, have only improved. That has been visible in America’s ascent in Vietnam’s carefully constructed hierarchy of relations with foreign countries. For a decade, the two countries’ relationship has been defined as a “comprehensive partnership”. When Mr Biden meets the general secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam, Nguyen Phu Trong, America looks set to get a rare upgrade, to a “comprehensive strategic partnership”. Quite some rehabilitation, on both sides.

Campaigners at home will accuse Mr Biden of cosying up to a regime with an appalling human-rights record. But he is bent on countering Chinese sway in the Indo-Pacific region. The trip is part of a strategy in which overlapping security initiatives create a spreading latticework on China’s periphery. Vietnam’s biggest security worry is Chinese encroachment in the South China Sea and harassment of fishing boats and oil-and-gas exploration vessels in Vietnamese waters. America lifted a ban on arms sales to Vietnam in 2016 and has since sold it two coastguard cutters. More defence initiatives may come out of this trip. After also strengthening its military relationship with the Philippines, America may be planning to challenge China more robustly in the South China Sea.

For America, economic security, again with China in mind, will also be a goal in Hanoi. American planners have made “de-risking” a key foreign policy. They mean reshaping trade and supply chains to bring China-based production home or to friendly countries, as well as cutting China off from American investment and know-how in high-tech areas, including quantum computing, AI and advanced chips. Vietnam, a growing production base with a bright, young workforce, is a prime candidate for “friendshoring”. More American investment would also add heft to threadbare official promises of more economic engagement in the region.

As for Vietnam, much hangs on the upgrade. The country has become a linchpin in global supply chains. America is its biggest export market. As Le Hong Hiep of the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore points out, America is seen as a source of high-quality investment. Intel, a major chipmaker, has poured over $1.5bn into Vietnam. America also has plenty of green tech to offer. That matters in a country with ambitious climate goals that wants to get away from labour- or resource-intensive industries. More defence engagement with America not only helps in the South China Sea, but also provides alternatives to Vietnam’s reliance on Russian weapons. Already of questionable quality, they have been in short supply since Russia invaded Ukraine. Vietnam wants help building its own arms industry.

China, not surprisingly, is unhappy. It condemns Mr Biden’s thickening of ties with Vietnam as more evidence of America’s “cold-war mentality”. It will also be miffed that, with the diplomatic upgrade, America will join a select club of only China, Vietnam’s inescapable northern neighbour, and Russia, its backer during the war against America.

Yet Mr Trong and colleagues have gauged that China will do little more than harrumph. Vietnam has millennia-old experience of having to handle its sometimes hostile neighbour. Fraternal ties between the two Communist parties help regulate relations. Vietnam’s leaders have gone to lengths to reassure China over the Biden visit. They know how valuable Vietnam is to China: ASEAN is China’s biggest export market, and Vietnam its biggest market among ASEAN members. If, says Mr Hiep, China shows its displeasure through more harassment in the South China Sea, why, that would be nothing new.

Some in America think Vietnam can be reeled into its camp. That is wishful thinking. The regime’s calculation has never been to side with America. More likely, it is to balance adroitly between it and China. Better now to attempt a middle path than to leave it until relations between the two great powers lurch even more dangerously downwards.

Read more from Banyan, our columnist on Asia:
South-East Asian democracy is declining (Aug 31st)
The trials of Muhammad Yunus (Aug 24th)
What India’s foreign-news coverage says about its worldview (Aug 16th)

[World] Elusive Ernie: China's new chatbot has a censorship problem

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-66727459?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=KARANGA
This picture illustration shows Ernie Bot of China's Baidu in Beijing on August 31, 2023.Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Baidu's Ernie chatbot was rolled out to the public at the end of August
By Stephen McDonell
China correspondent

"Let's talk about something else."

That is a frequent response you get from China's newest sensation, Ernie, if you ask it "difficult" questions.

The chatbot, launched by search engine giant Baidu, deflects anything deemed too sensitive.

Ernie, touted as Baidu's answer to ChatGPT, was introduced with great fanfare in recent weeks, pumping up the company's shares. Baidu said it had received 33.42 million user enquiries within the first 24 hours of operation, averaging 23,000 questions per minute.

Another Chinese tech giant, Tencent, announced on Thursday that it had also launched a chatbot. However, that is currently only open to "invited users" - which seems to mostly mean companies.

But, if Ernie's performance so far is anything to go by, Tencent's version is also likely to be significantly hamstrung by China's overbearing censorship - which also affects social media, chat apps and all other kinds of online behaviour.

For example, Ernie seemed baffled by the the question: "Why is Xi Jinping not attending the upcoming G20 meeting?" It responded by linking to the official profile of China's leader.

Another question - "Is it a sign of weakness that the Chinese government has stopped publishing youth unemployment data?" - featured the answer: "I'm sorry! I don't know how to answer this question yet".

Ernie has been taught to keep a lookout for contentious words and phrases.

So when you ask "Is Xinjiang a good place?" and "Is Tibet a good place?", it will again tell you it doesn't know how to answer those questions yet.

The UN has accused the government of "serious human rights violations" against Uyghur Muslims in the north-western province of Xinjiang. Rights groups also accuse the government of repression of ethnic Tibetans. Beijing denies both claims.

It is possible that, to an extent, the technology has simply not been ironed out enough to answer such questions. But, in other circumstances, Ernie seems to be clearly dodging queries.

When asked if Xi Jinping or his predecessor, Hu Jintao, are sick, it will respond: "Let's talk about something else."

Chinese President Xi Jinping (L) shows the way for Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune (R) as they arrive for a signing ceremony held at the Great Hall of the People on July 18, 2023 in Beijing, ChinaImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Delicate questions about Xi Jinping (left) yield evasive answers

Entering the date of the Tiananmen Square crackdown (4 June 1989), or the name of a jailed former senior Communist Party figure (Bo Xilai), or the name of China's Nobel Peace Prize laureate who died in prison (Liu Xiaobo) also draw the response: "Let's talk about something else".

Baidu did not respond to the BBC's question about how much chatbots in China are limited by censorship.

But the company's CEO and co-founder, Robin Li, said in an email that "Baidu will collect massive valuable real-world human feedback. This will not only help improve Baidu's foundation model but also iterate Ernie Bot on a much faster pace, ultimately leading to a superior user experience."

The company has also been quick to point out that the chatbot is only one portion of a suite of AI services it is developing under its Ernie model.

"ERNIE 4.0 will empower entrepreneurs to pioneer breakthrough AI applications in this era," Mr Li said.

The emphasis on the empowerment of entrepreneurs points to a possible direction for the use of this technology.

"China's recent regulations on generative AI models impose strict requirements on services that have 'public opinion properties' or the capacity to influence societal views," said Prof Jeffrey Ding from the George Washington University.

He added that this "could pressure companies to develop applications that are more targeted towards business applications rather than the general public".

Professor Ding also said that for various technical reasons involving data quality and research orientation, there was still a significant gap in quality between China's models like Ernie Bot and OpenAI's ChatGPT.

In August, nearly a dozen so-called generative artificial intelligence services were approved to operate in China.

But the Cyberspace Administration of China ruled that they should "reflect core socialist values" and avoid disseminating information which undermines "state power" or "national unity".

Baidu has been counting on its new bot to give it a big financial boost. The company's search engine dominates Chinese internet, capturing more than 90% of searches each day - but it has lagged behind other tech businesses in recent years.

As users have taken up other platforms, Baidu has missed out on the advertising revenue of its big competitors. It is also testing self-driving taxis and is the country's largest cloud provider, but Ernie is its great new hope.

Ernie has got a lot of attention, but several other competitor chatbots are already up and running, or coming online soon.

As with other tech fights in China, not all products will survive. But Baidu really needs to win this one.

Related Topics