Amid growing discontent, a jump in the number of Chinese seeking to move to Canada

The number of Chinese applying to emigrate to Canada rose 15 percent during the July-September quarter, the latest indication of widespread public dissatisfaction with life in China, particularly under the harsh anti-virus restrictions of the past three years that have hamstrung economic growth and curbed individual freedoms.

Canada’s Department of Immigration and Citizenship received 9,925 applications from Chinese people for permanent residency during the third quarter, up 15 percent from the same quarter of 2021.

The exodus, mostly of middle-class families and high-earning corporate professionals who have the wherewithal to relocate, has been dubbed the “run” phenomenon, using a Chinese character that sounds a little like the English word “run.”

Lin Litong, who came to Canada as a student six years ago, said he’s not surprised by the trend.

“There was a saying that became popular 10 or 20 years ago — voting with one’s feet,” Lin told Radio Free Asia. “There is a deep sense of discontent running through the entire business and political elite and all through the middle class.”

“It’s about regaining a sense of safety and security,” he said. “It doesn’t matter if people say life is more complex in foreign countries … at least people feel safe.”

China’s “10-point” announcement on Dec. 7 that it would loosen some aspects of the zero-COVID restrictions in the wake of mass protests across the country didn’t appear to have had much effect on keyword searches for “emigration,” which have been spiked several times since the Shanghai lockdown that began in late March.

While keyword searches on WeChat and Baidu saw spikes in searches for “10-point plan” and “no more PCR tests,” searches for “emigration” also doubled to nearly 120 million on the day of the announcement.

Vote of no confidence

China announced strict curbs on “non-essential” overseas travel by its nationals in May, amid a surge in immigration inquiries after weeks of grueling mass testing, lockdowns and forcible mass transportation to quarantine camps. 

Reports have also surfaced on social media of people leaving China for foreign study having their passports clipped and invalidated as they boarded planes, and also from people who had been denied passports when they applied for them. In April, Chinese residents were ordered to hand over any valid passports to the authorities for “safe-keeping.”

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People protest in solidarity over COVID-19 restrictions in mainland China, during a commemoration of the victims of a fire in Urumqi outside the Chinese consulate in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Nov. 29, 2022. Credit: Reuters

Shanghai resident Xiao Zhang said the upsurge in searches for “emigration” was a kind of vote of no confidence in the government.

“This sudden uptick in discussions about emigration recorded by the WeChat Index was linked to the official announcement relaxing zero-COVID controls,” Zhang said. “Many people seem to think that the current ban on overseas travel is directly linked to the zero-COVID policy, so they think that once those rules are relaxed, they have a better chance of getting out [of China].”

But in reality, Zhang said he thinks the exit ban has more to do with controlling people and capital outflows. So while the government may relax immigration rules, he suspects it will be for only a short window.

Immigration consultation

Meanwhile, business has been booming in recent years for immigration consultants, although there are signs of a potential crackdown on that sector too, with reports emerging of immigration consultants being hauled in for questioning by state security police. 

Immigration consultant Huang Tianle said Canada’s immigration policies tend to favor younger people, meaning that Chinese parents often send their children to study there to obtain the legal right to remain.

He said the current wave of Chinese emigration to Canada was preceded by a similar wave of people leaving Hong Kong after China launched a citywide crackdown on dissent and political opposition in the wake of the 2019 protest movement.

Many remain politically engaged even after leaving China, with considerable support seen on Canadian university campuses for the recent wave of anti-lockdown protests in Chinese cities.

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The Hon Hsing Athletic Club performs a dragon dance outside of the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden in Chinatown in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, Feb. 5, 2022. Credit: Reuters

Bai Yun, a musician and poet living in Canada, said she had composed a song in honor of the “white paper” movement, so named because of the blank sheets of A4 printer paper held up by protesters, that was sung at a recent rally in Toronto.

“Can you hear the sound of the dawn, a window opening to face the sun?” the crowd sang.

Sunny Sonam, chairman of the Toronto branch of the Tibetan Youth Association, said he was optimistic that people have a clearer idea of the way forward, despite the tailing off of public protests on the streets of Chinese cities in recent days.

“People realize that enough is enough,” Sonam said. “It’s terrible when power is concentrated in the hands of one person.”

“Of course this wave of protests will slowly dissipate as zero-COVID restrictions are lifted, but people now know that standing together is an effective way to make their voices heard.”

Propaganda machine

There are signs the Chinese Communist Party’s censorship and propaganda machine is fighting back against the exodus of well-heeled professionals.

While the #emigration hashtag on social media typically garners tens of thousands of daily views, much of the content focuses on the disadvantages of living overseas, suggesting some kind of intervention by the ruling Communist Party’s “public opinion management” system. 

At their peak, search queries for the keyword “emigration” hit 70 million several times during the Shanghai lockdown between March and May, and 130 million immediately afterwards. The same keyword also showed peaks on Toutiao Index, Google Trends and 360 Trends between April and the end of June 2022. 

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People attend a candlelight vigil commemorating the anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen square massacre in Beijing, standing outside of the Chinese consulate in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, June 4, 2022. Credit: AFP

More recently, the hashtags #escapefromGuangzhou and #escapefromZhengzhou were trending amid COVID-19 lockdowns in those cities.

Shanghai-based Xu Xiangcheng, who works in education, said he has been preparing to leave China since the national security crackdown on Hong Kong in 2019.

Xu, who is in his 40s, said that he was educated in the communist system, but that his generation has a deep affinity for Hong Kong and Taiwan. “Hong Kong means a lot to us.”

Giving up the dream

He said he once had a fantasy that he could do something to “make Chinese society better,” but the “forcible occupation of Hong Kong by the Communist Party and the suppression of such ideas there made me think I didn’t want my kids getting an education in this kind of environment,” he said. “So I made up my mind to emigrate three years ago.”

Xu said many of his friends have the same idea.

“They didn’t decide this until this year, because the situation deteriorated,” he said. “I feel that there is no hope for this place, so I have to leave.”

While Xu has been in contact with an immigration consultancy, his plans were hugely hampered by the zero-COVID policy.

“I have run into problems preparing the materials to support my visa application, because there is always so much [bureaucratic] back and forth in China,” he said. “A lot of documents are unavailable due to lockdowns.”

“Schools are suspended and my bank is closed, along with government departments, which makes things very difficult,” he said.

“Things are really miserable”

Henan-based current affairs commentator Li Fatian said there are plenty of rural residents who are hoping to leave, too.

“Small and medium-sized enterprises have been hit hard by the pandemic restrictions,” Li said. “There are no jobs, and businesses are still paying rent despite being forced to close their doors.”

“This stupid, one-size-fits-all policy makes it impossible for a lot of people to survive [in China],” he said. “Things are really miserable right now.”

Li said many migrant workers have been forced back to rural areas by lockdowns, which has likely defused wider anti-government unrest due to lower population density and less access to timely information.

Current affairs commentator Fang Yuan said most people now want to escape the strict anti-virus rules, one way or another, even if leaving the country isn’t an option.

“The exodus from large, medium and smaller cities to rural areas is the main form of escape, or fleeing cities under lockdown,” Fang said. “It’s disruptive to daily life, because these are essential workers.”

Translated and edited by Luisetta Mudie. Edited by Malcolm Foster.

Mongolia’s Foreign Trade Up 27 Percent In First 11 Months

ULAN BATOR, Dec 11 (NNN-XINHUA) – Mongolia saw its foreign trade turnover grow 26.6 percent year on year, to 19 billion U.S. dollars in the first 11 months of this year, local media reported yesterday, citing the Mongolian Customs General Administration (MCGA).

 

Mongolia registered a surplus in foreign trade balance, as exports exceeded imports by around 3.2 billion dollars, with mining products accounting for the majority of the mineral-rich country’s total exports, in the Jan-Nov period, the MCGA data showed.

 

During the period, China remained Mongolia’s top export destination, with its major imports, including mining and agricultural products, according to the MCGA.

 

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Cambodia Offers Cash Handouts To 360,000 Families Affected By Inflation, Floods

PHNOM PENH, Dec 11 (NNN-AKP) – Cambodia, yesterday, began to provide cash handouts to almost 360,000 households, with about 1.3 million people, affected by inflationary pressures and recent floods, a senior official said.

 

“The government is expected to spend 31 million U.S. dollars for inflationary pressure-hit families, and 15 million dollars for recent flood-stricken families, for three months (from Dec to Feb),” said Chan Narith, undersecretary of state of the Economy and Finance Ministry.

 

According to a directive, signed by Cambodian Prime Minister, Samdech Techo Hun Sen last week, those affected families had been identified by the Ministry of Planning, to receive cash assistance based on areas.

 

Those in the capital, Phnom Penh, will receive 25 U.S. dollars per family, with each household member getting an additional seven dollars, and those in provincial towns will be given 22 dollars, with each household member provided an additional six dollars, while those in rural areas will receive 20 dollars, with each household member getting an additional five dollars.

 

Recent flood-hit households in Phnom Penh and 15 provinces will receive 20 dollars for each family, with each member getting an additional four dollars, according to the directive.

 

The World Bank said, in its Cambodia Economic Update, released on Wednesday that, rising global energy, fertiliser and food prices, prompted a surge in inflation in the country, saying that, consumer price inflation accelerated to 7.8 percent in June, but eased to 4.9 percent in Aug, 2022.

 

“Inflation is particularly harmful to poor households,” the bank’s report said.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Malaysia Reported 1,315 New COVID-19 Infections, Five More Deaths

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 11 (NNN-BERNAMA) – Malaysia reported 1,315 new COVID-19 infections as of midnight, bringing the total tally to 5,009,767, according to the health ministry.

 

There was one new imported case, with 1,314 cases being local transmissions, data released by the ministry showed.

 

Another five deaths have been reported, taking the death toll to 36,753.

 

The ministry reported 2,601 new recoveries, pushing the total number of cured and discharged to 4,953,837.

 

There are currently 19,177 active cases, with 73 of them being held in intensive care units and 50 in need of assisted breathing.

 

The country reported 1,783 vaccine doses administered yesterday, and that, 86.1 percent of the population have received at least one dose, 84.3 percent are fully vaccinated, 49.8 percent have received the first booster and 1.9 percent have received the second.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Cambodia Celebrated Ninth Sea Festival After Two-Year Break

PREAH SIHANOUK– Cambodia organised its ninth annual Sea Festival here yesterday, after a two-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, attracting tens of thousands of revellers.

 

Speaking at the opening ceremony, Prime Minister, Samdech Techo Hun Sen said, the kingdom is expected to receive around two million tourists in 2022, and the number of foreign tourists will return to the pre-COVID-19 level of seven million in 2026 or 2027.

 

“The royal government of Cambodia has considered tourism as a priority sector, and as the ‘green gold,’ contributing to the national socio-economic development,” he said.

 

He added, tourism effectively contributed to cultural preservation and protection of the environment and natural resources and will help the kingdom achieve its development goals of becoming “an upper-middle income country by 2030” and “high-income country by 2050.”

 

Organised in different coastal provinces every year, the Sea Festival was aimed at promoting the country’s coastal areas to tourists, and encouraging the protection of maritime resources, Tourism Minister, Thong Khon, said.

 

The two-day festival features live concerts, artistic performances, food and beverage show, trade fair, fireworks and sports, he added.

 

Cambodia’s coastline, registered as a member of the most beautiful bays in the World-Bays Club in 2011, stretches 450 km over four south-western provinces of Preah Sihanouk, Kep, Kampot and Koh Kong.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

US Keeps Eye on China’s Space Activities for Potential Risks

The U.S. is closely monitoring Chinese activities that potentially threaten American assets in space as debris rapidly accumulates in low Earth orbit, the head of United States military operations in space said Friday.

Commander of U.S. Space Command Army Gen. James Dickinson also cheered the overwhelming passage in the United Nations of a resolution that countries not conduct direct-ascent antisatellite tests that create vast fields of space debris, which endanger satellites and space stations.

Of the four countries that have conducted such ASAT tests, the United States was the only one that voted in favor, while China and Russia voted no and India abstained.

“We can’t continue to contribute to the debris that we find in the space domain,” Dickinson said in a telephone news conference with reporters in Asia. Most of that debris lies in crucial low Earth orbit, which has become “congested, competitive and contested,” he said.

Even tiny shards of metal can pose a danger and the number of objects is growing rampantly. Space Command is now tracking more than 48,000 in near Earth orbit, including satellites, telescopes, space stations and pieces of debris of all sizes, up from 25,000 just three years ago, Dickinson said.

China in 2003 became the third government to send an astronaut into orbit on its own after the former Soviet Union and the United States. Its program has advanced steadily since.

The Chinese space program drew rare international criticism after it conducted an unannounced test in 2007 in which it used a missile to blow up a defunct Chinese satellite, creating debris that continues to pose a hazard.

Beijing believes that “space is a very important piece to not only their economic or the global economic environment, but also the military environment, so we continue to watch that very closely as they continue to increase capabilities,” Dickinson said.

The secretive Chinese program is run by the ruling Communist Party’s military wing, the People’s Liberation Army, precluding it from participating in the International Space Station or engaging in most forms of cooperation with NASA.


Proceeding with little outside help, China last month launched the last of three modules for its own space station, which briefly hosted six Chinese astronauts in space during a turnover of the three-person crew. It also has rovers on the moon and Mars and is planning a crewed lunar mission sometime in the future.

With U.S.-China tensions high over Taiwan, the South China Sea, trade and technology, space is increasingly becoming a potential flash point. In addition, the Pentagon last week released an annual China security report that warned Beijing would likely have 1,500 nuclear warheads by 2035, and that it has provided no clarity on how it plans to use them.

China continues to “build capabilities that, really quite frankly, hold most of our assets at risk in the space domain,” Dickinson said.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has further showed space to be a “contested domain that must be protected. It’s a role that we at U.S. Space Command take very seriously,” he said.

“I’m seriously focused on our pacing challenge, China,” Dickinson said, using a description of Beijing that has become standard in the Pentagon. “The unified stance of our allies and partners is critical in countering the coercion and subversion that threatens the international rules-based order here in the Indo-Pacific and beyond,” Dickinson said.

 

 

 

Source: Voice of America