China crimps contact between Tibetans abroad and in Tibet, RFA survey shows

Like most Tibetans who live in exile in neighboring India, Kelsang Gyatso had long relied on free social media chat apps to talk to his family members back home in Markhan county in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR).

But that changed last year when the Chinese government stepped up its surveillance measures and restricted online communications between Tibetans and their family members and friends abroad.

“I was able to communicate with my family and relatives back in Tibet using social media chat apps, [but] the communication was completely cut off a few months back due to greater surveillance and restrictions,” Gyatso told RFA.

Part of Chamdo prefecture, Markham county (in Chinese, Mangkang) is an area rich in agricultural, water and mineral resources. Residents of depend on farming and animal husbandry to make a living.

“It’s very worrisome not having any information on how they are doing, and I’m sure it’s the same for them also not knowing about my well-being,” said Gyatso, who in 2000 fled his impoverished hometown, located in the TAR’s far west and bordering China’s Sichuan and Yunnan provinces.

Chinese authorities in the TAR and Tibetan areas of nearby Chinese provinces restrict freedoms of religion, expression, movement, and assembly, and ignore residents’ concerns about mining and land grabs by local officials, who routinely rely on force to subdue those who complain or protest, human rights groups say.

Authorities have intensified surveillance of Tibetans over the past decade under the leadership of Chen Quanguo, the TAR Communist Party chief from 2011-16 and the figure widely associated with setting up a system of mass internment camps for Muslim Uyghurs in Xinjiang, a restive region north of Tibet, where he led the party from 2016 until last year.

“Chen’s system combines hyper-securitization and militarization with efforts to accelerate the political and cultural transformation of local people. Its stated aim is ‘breaking lineage, breaking roots, breaking connections, and breaking origins’ of Tibetans and Uyghurs,” said the International Campaign for Tibet in a December 2018 report.

“Surveillance technologies that have sparked outrage internationally because of their use in Xinjiang were trialed in Tibet,” the Washington-based rights group said.

Tibet, a formerly independent Himalayan country, was invaded by China in 1950 and has been governed by China’s ruling Communist Party ever since. There are some 6.3 million Tibetans living in China and as many as 200,000 living in India, Nepal and Bhutan.

A map showing the location of Markham county in the Tibet Autonomous Region. Credit: RFA
A map showing the location of Markham county in the Tibet Autonomous Region. Credit: RFA

Harassment and punishment

Human Rights Watch’s latest World Report, an annual review of human rights practices and trends around the globe, noted that an announcement in November 2020 that the government was tightening controls on online communications it claimed undermined national unity was followed by an uptick in reported detentions of Tibetans in 2021 for alleged online offenses.

“Tibetans who contacted people outside China were harassed and punished, regardless of the content of their communications,” said the report by the New York-based rights group.

The authorities’ increasingly hardline policies have made it more difficult for Tibetans in exile to communicate with their families and friends back home, said Tibetan sources inside and outside the region.

RFA’s Tibetan Service recently surveyed 215 Tibetans living in India about the communication flow between them and their relatives and friends inside the TAR, with half of the respondents saying that there had been a complete breakdown in contact because of stepped-up Chinese restrictions and monitoring of residents in recent years.

Forty-four of the respondents said that maintaining contact with those inside the TAR has become very challenging in the last two years.

Tibetans in India rely mostly on the Chinese instant messaging app WeChat to communicate with their family members in the TAR.

Geshe Lobsang Yeshi, Tibet coordinator at the Kirti Monastery in Dharamsala, India, home of the Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, and the Tibetan government in exile, agreed.

“Nowadays, it’s not only politically sensitive conversations but anything you discuss with Tibetans outside that is regulated,” he said. “For instance, there is a specific office set up in [the TAR’s] Ngaba region that regulates and examines the cell phones of local Tibetans.”

To make matters worse, since June 2020, the Indian government has banned more than 200 Chinese apps, starting with about 59 popular applications in the first round, including WeChat, saying that they pose a threat to national security.

The move has hampered communication between some Tibetans in exile and people in the TAR. RFA’s survey found that only 10 percent of respondents were affected — mostly older Tibetans or those who did not know how to use a virtual private network to skirt Chinese internet censorship and blockages.

An exile Tibetan Buddhist nun uses her mobile phone as she waits with others in a line to receive free rations distributed by a Tibetan Buddhist monk during a lockdown to curb the spread of the coronavirus in Dharmsala, India, April 28, 2020. Credit: Associated Press
An exile Tibetan Buddhist nun uses her mobile phone as she waits with others in a line to receive free rations distributed by a Tibetan Buddhist monk during a lockdown to curb the spread of the coronavirus in Dharmsala, India, April 28, 2020. Credit: Associated Press

Prohibiting money transfers

China has been tracking Tibetans in Tibet communicating with those in exile to shut down the flow of information to the outside world, according to sources inside Tibet who provide information to communities abroad.

The Chinese government also has started prohibiting the transfer of money from Tibetans in the TAR to outside recipients, they said.

RFA reported in October 2020 that a Tibetan herder, Lhamo, and her cousin, businessman Tenzin Tharpa, were detained for sending money to family members and others living in India. Lhamo died after being tortured in Chinese custody, while her cousin was still being held by police.

The survey results indicated that it is even more difficult for Tibetans in exile involved in political campaigns and protests against the Chinese government, dignitaries, and journalists to communicate with their families inside Tibet.

“It is a fact that Chinese authorities specifically harass and surveil family members of Tibetans in exile who are usually actively involved in political campaigns, and journalists,” said a Tibetan journalist living in India who requested anonymity for safety reasons.

“My family members back home were also questioned many times in the past by the Chinese authorities who continue to do so,” he added.

Three survey respondents living in Qinghai province told RFA that they had received calls from Chinese authorities urging them to move to the TAR.

Authorities told them that a new Chinese government policy would allow them to reunite with their families in the TAR and that officials would take care of processing the required documents and provide other necessities, the Tibetans in Qinghai said.

“Lately, I’ve been receiving calls from Chinese officials in Tibet asking me to return home,” said a Tibetan who now lives in India.

The Chinese government also sent officials to his home in Tibet and interrogated his parents, taking photos and recording videos of them, said the man, who declined to give his name for safety reasons.

“It worries me now, and because of the growing scrutiny, I’m scared, too,” he said.

Translated by Tenzin Dickyi for RFA’s Tibetan Service. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.

Better OFW protection via expanded insurance – Bello

Overseas Filipino workers are assured of greater protection amid the global health crisis with the expanded compulsory insurance coverage for rehires or ‘Balik-Manggagawa’ and direct hires.

Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III, who chairs the governing board of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA), said on Sunday the guidelines have been issued implementing DOLE Department Order No. 228, Series of 2021, or the Expanded Compulsory Insurance Coverage for Rehires and Direct Hires.

“The pandemic has left our migrant workers vulnerable to various risks and perils. By expanding the compulsory insurance coverage, we aim to extend the protection to all OFWs, at no cost to our workers,” Bello said.

The mandatory insurance coverage of OFWs provided for under existing laws and POEA rules and regulations shall now include rehires or ‘Balik-Manggagawa’ and direct hires. The guidelines are spelled out in POEA Memorandum Circular No. 10 signed by POEA Administrator Bernard Olalia, and released last week.

The insurance policy shall be effective for the duration of the migrant worker’s employment contract and assures coverage in case of death, disability, repatriation, medical emergency, and litigation.

It provides for at least US $15,000 survivor’s benefit in case of accidental death; at least US $10,000 survivor’s benefit in case of natural death; and at least US $7,500 disability benefit.

The insurance policy also covers repatriation, including transport of the worker’s personal belongings, when his/her employment is terminated by the employer without any valid cause or terminated by the employee with just cause.

In case of death, the insurance provider shall arrange and pay for the repatriation or return of the worker’s remains.

It also provides for subsistence allowance benefit of at least US $100 per month for a maximum of six months for a migrant worker who is involved in a case or litigation, and money claims arising from the employer’s liability which may be awarded or given to the worker in a judgment or settlement of his/her case in the National Labor Relations Commission.

The insurance policy also covers medical evacuation, medical repatriation, and compassionate visit by one family member of a migrant worker who is hospitalized and confined for at least seven consecutive days.

The insurance coverage shall be secured by the recruitment/manning agency at no cost to the OFW, while the expense for the insurance coverage of rehires and direct hires shall be borne by the foreign employers or the workers themselves subject to a full refund upon the first day of the latter’s arrival at the worksite or country of destination.

Only reputable private insurance companies duly registered and currently accredited with the Insurance Commission are qualified to provide the insurance coverage.

The guidelines on the expanded compulsory insurance coverage shall be observed during the period of the public health emergency due to COVID-19 and shall remain in force until the full completion of the national government’s vaccination program.

An extension of the implementation of the memorandum circular may be granted at any time by the Labor Secretary as conditions and circumstances may warrant.

Source: Department Of Labor and Employment Republic of Philippines

Chinese Premier to Step Down ahead of Leadership Change

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang announced Friday that he would step down within a year. The message came at a press conference in which he compared the increasingly difficult task of managing the economy to climbing a high mountain with “less oxygen.”

“This is the last year I will be premier,” Li, 66, said. His announcement came as no surprise because Chinese premiers and Cabinet members cannot serve more than two terms, and Li’s second term expires next year.

While not unexpected, the announcement will be of interest to foreign governments and multinational companies, which closely observe leadership and political changes in the world’s second-biggest economy for clues to its future direction.

China’s elite groups, which include party officials, military brass and businesspeople, have changed drastically in recent years. This is partly due to President Xi Jinping’s signature anti-corruption campaign, which has gained steam since he took office in 2012 and has resulted in prison sentences for thousands of officials.

Though the latest leadership change is along predicted lines, Friday’s announcement is significant because China is now struggling with the political and economic fallout of the Ukraine war. The ruling Chinese Communist Party, or CCP, appears keen to go ahead with its succession plans without allowing the Ukraine war and other new developments to interrupt it.

“One would think China needs tried and tested economy managers to deal with the new situation. But this is not happening because disrupting the succession system can harm the party,” said a Chinese businessman with links to the CCP who wished to remain anonymous while discussing politics.

The ruling party will likely go ahead with the succession plan that was adopted during an amendment to the constitution in 2018, which dropped the two-term limit for anyone holding the post of president. This was widely interpreted as a guarantee that Chinese President Xi Jinping would not just get a third term but remain in the position for life.

But reports emanating from inside the party suggest that Xi may be considering a different role for himself. He may become the party chairman, a post held by its founder, supremo Mao Zedong.

Climbing mountain

At the press conference, the premier candidly discussed the difficulties in managing the Chinese economy. The government expects the economy to grow by 5.5% in 2022. Morgan Stanley has forecast 5.3%, and ING Bank 4.8%.

“It’s like climbing a high mountain,” Li said, discussing the challenges in meeting development targets amid intense headwinds caused by domestic and international issues.

“If you want to climb a 1,000-meter mountain, and then want to climb 10% higher, then 100 meters is fine. However, if you want to climb a 3,000-meter mountain and then want to climb 5% higher, it will be 150 meters. And the conditions will also have changed, with lower air pressure and less oxygen.”

Source: Voice of America

Malaysia’s Leading Coalition Wins Another Key State Election

JOHOR BAHRU– Malaysia’s Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition, led by the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), scored another key election victory late last night, winning over control of Johor state.

The coalition took 37 out of 56 state assembly seats, granting it a two-thirds majority in the state assembly, according to the election commission as of 11:40 p.m. local time.

The state election was triggered after the chief minister of the state, Hasni Mohammad, received consent from the Johor ruler, Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar, to dissolve the state assembly. Hasni justified the move due to the state government only having a majority of one seat.

The state election is notable for being the first since the implementation of a new law that lowered the voting age to 18, and allowed for unregistered eligible voters to be automatically added to the electoral roll.

BN, which had governed Malaysia since the country’s independence in 1957, lost the state and also lost control of the government for the first time, after being defeated by the Pakatan Harapan (PH) coalition in the national and state polls in 2018.

However, it has since enjoyed a strong revival, winning a string of by-elections and winning the state election in Malacca in Nov last year by a landslide.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Speech by Minister of State for Education Gan Siow Huang at AI for Kids (AI4K®) Storybook Launch

Mr Laurence Liew, Director, AI Innovation, AI Singapore

Mr Koo Sengmeng, Senior Deputy Director, AI Innovation, AI Singapore

Mr Gavin Chua, APAC Head, Stakeholder Engagement, Meta

Ms Catherine Lau, Assistant Chief Executive, National Library Board

Parents, Children, Ladies and Gentlemen

1. A very good morning to all of you. The AI4K® programme was launched in 2019 to introduce AI literacy to upper primary school children aged 10 to 12. Today, AI Singapore is releasing a book on artificial intelligence (AI) that is written specifically for lower primary school children. I am excited that this initiative encourages our young readers to find out more about new technologies such as AI and helps our children embrace digital technologies from a young age.

2. Our children are growing up in a digital world where technology and social media have become interwoven into our everyday lives. COVID-19 has also accelerated the pace of digitalisation in the global economy, and reshaped the way we live, work and play. Our children will require digital skills to harness technology safely, responsibly and effectively. This is why the Ministry of Education (MOE) launched the National Digital Literacy Programme in 2020 to help our students acquire various digital skills throughout their education journey.

3. MOE will continue to enrich teaching and learning through the thoughtful use of Educational Technology (EdTech). EdTech offers promising opportunities to enhance student engagement and personalise learning experiences. For instance, new technologies, including AI-enabled ones, can help provide more customised learning experiences for each child, and provide quick feedback to improve their learning. AI technologies can also support our teachers in automating some administrative or manual processes.

4. As we continue to enhance digital literacies in school, we will also need to build stronger partnerships to develop innovative solutions that can provide enhanced learning opportunities for all. I am happy to know that AI Singapore has worked closely with community and industry partners like Meta and the National Library Board to make this book accessible for our young learners, including children from less privileged backgrounds.

5. I hope that this book not only piques children’s interest in learning more about AI, but also serves as a first step towards building a lifelong love of gaining knowledge and digital skills, preparing them to be confident digital learners.

6. Thank you.

Source: Ministry of Health, Singapore

China Records Nearly 3,400 Daily Virus Cases In Worst Outbreak In 2 Years

Chinese health authorities reported nearly 3,400 COVID-19 cases on Sunday, double the previous day, forcing lockdowns on virus hotspots as the country contends with its gravest outbreak in two years.

A nationwide surge in cases has seen authorities close schools in Shanghai and lock down several northeastern cities, as almost 19 provinces battle clusters of the omicron and delta variants.

The city of Jilin has been partially locked down, with hundreds of neighborhoods sealed up, an official announced Sunday, while Yanji, an urban area of nearly 700,000 bordering North Korea, was fully closed off.

China, where the virus was first detected in late 2019, has maintained a strict ‘zero-COVID’ policy enforced by swift lockdowns, travel restrictions and mass testing when clusters have emerged.

But the latest flare-up, driven by the highly transmissible omicron variant and a spike in asymptomatic cases, is challenging that approach.

Zhang Yan, an official with the Jilin provincial health commission, admitted Sunday that local authorities’ virus response so far had been lacking.

“The emergency response mechanism in some areas is not robust enough, there is insufficient understanding of the characteristics of the omicron variant… and judgment has been inaccurate,” he said at a government press briefing.

Residents of Jilin have completed six rounds of mass testing, local officials said. On Sunday the city reported over 500 cases of the omicron variant.

The neighboring city of Changchun — an industrial base of 9 million people — was locked down Friday.

The smaller cities of Siping and Dunhua, both in Jilin province, were locked down Thursday and Friday, according to official announcements.

The mayor of Jilin and the head of the Changchun health commission were dismissed from their jobs Saturday, state media reported, in a sign of the political imperative placed on local authorities to squash virus clusters.

COVID-zero?

But fatigue with the strict approach has been showing in China, with officials increasingly urging softer and more targeted measures to contain the virus, while economists warn that tough clampdowns are hurting the economy.

As cases have climbed since late February, the response in different parts of the country has been generally softer and more targeted compared to December, when the city of Xi’an and its 13 million people were locked down for two weeks.

In China’s biggest city, Shanghai, authorities have increasingly moved to temporarily lock down individual schools, businesses, restaurants and malls over close-contact fears rather than mass quarantines.

Long lines have been seen outside hospitals in the city as people rush to obtain a negative COVID test.

As cases rise, the country’s National Health Commission announced Friday that they would introduce the use of rapid antigen tests.

The kits will now be available online or at pharmacies for clinics and ordinary citizens to buy for “self-testing,” the health commission said.

Although nucleic acid tests will continue to be the main method of testing, the move suggests China may be anticipating that official efforts will not be able to contain the virus.

Last week, a top Chinese scientist said the country should aim to co-exist with the virus, like other nations, where omicron has spread like wildfire.

But the government has also made clear that mass lockdowns remain an option.

Chinese Vice Premier Sun Chunlan, who frequently telegraphs top-level thinking on the pandemic response, on Saturday urged regions to quickly pounce on and clear outbreaks.

Source: Voice of America