Fighting Beijing’s long arm of repression

Young Chinese people in the United States are taking a stand against Beijing’s growing willingness to extend enforcement of party censorship and police surveillance among Chinese nationals and their relatives overseas, including through unapproved “police service stations” in other countries.

Governments around the world have launched investigations into these “service stations” run on foreign soil by the provincial police department in the southeastern province of Fujian, while activists and dissidents have spoken out about threats and retaliation by the state security police or pro-China businessmen overseas.

There are growing signs that U.S. police are willing to arrest people suspected of being agents of the Chinese state, amid growing protests against what young activists are calling transnational repression by the Communist Party.

Ning Ning, who asked to be identified by a nickname for fear of reprisals, said state security police came looking for her parents because she was linked to a petition critical of Communist Party leader Xi Jinping on Change.org.

Having lived in the United States for 10 years, she has chosen to fight back from a place of greater freedom, she told Radio Free Asia.

“The Chinese Communist Party thinks it can shut people up by hauling them in to ‘drink tea’ and other methods,” she said in a reference to being summoned for questioning by the feared state security police. “But the thing they don’t really want to face up to is that while this may silence people temporarily, public dissatisfaction will deepen.”

“And when that dissatisfaction is given the right opportunity, even stronger resistance will erupt,” Ning Ning said.

Social media helps and hurts

Transnational activists rely heavily on social media to stay in touch with their home countries, and this makes them more vulnerable to being targeted by their home governments for monitoring, experts told an Orion Policy Institute seminar in October 2022.

Yet a Twitter survey focusing on transnational repression by Chinese agents found that only half of respondents who had been harassed or threatened overseas had reported the incident to U.S. law enforcement.

Washington-based non profit Freedom House called on governments in a February 2022 report to start systematically recording cases of transnational repression, based on an internationally agreed definition of the term, then ensure that law enforcement officials, personnel at key agencies, and those working with refugees and asylum seekers are trained to recognize the targeting of exiles and diasporas.

When state security police contacted Ning Ning and asked her to delete or edit the petition, she reported the incident to the FBI, in the hope of raising awareness of the issue in the United States.

“I hope that I can bring about change through my own actions,” she said. “I wanted people in the United States to realize how serious transnational repression by the Chinese Communist Party is.”

“I also wanted to send a message to [Chinese] people here, that they don’t have to suffer this in silence, just because it won’t make headline news or be sensational enough,” Ning Ning said. “We have to speak out about our experiences, to bring about a change in the whole of society.”

Zhou Fengsuo, executive director of the New York-based NGO Human Rights in China said the group is already focusing its efforts on helping the victims of transnational repression.

‘Victims’

Zhou, Ning and a handful of other people staged a protest outside the Capitol on March 22, holding up a placard that read: “We are the victims of the CCP’s transnational repression. We stand against the CCP’s transnational repression.”

“This is a pretty shocking thing, that victims are often afraid to speak out because they’re worried about their families,” Zhou told Radio Free Asia.

“People [like Ning Ning] who engage in active resistance are rare,” he said. “People from China, students from China are clearly under threat from the Chinese authorities, and the U.S. government must respond proactively to that threat.”

Fellow protester A Gui, who declined to give his full name citing reasons of personal safety, said it was “like a tug of war, with everyone pulling for their own team,” he said. “If we all pull together, then we can through our willpower pull justice a bit closer to our side.”

Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley, who was among the sponsors of the Transnational Repression Policy Act introduced on March 15, called for a comprehensive approach to the issue.

“The U.S. must take a stand and pursue a whole-of-government approach to address the rising tide of transnational repression whenever and wherever it occurs,” Merkley said in comments emailed to Radio Free Asia.

The bill would aim to hold foreign governments and individuals accountable “when they stalk, intimidate, or assault people across borders, including in the United States,” according to a news release on the Senate website. 

The bill aims to make the issue a key foreign policy priority and prioritize diplomacy that addresses the issue, it said.

“It’s terrible when authoritarian regimes oppress their people at home, but it’s an unacceptable act of aggression to target dissidents in other countries,” Merkley said. “Journalists, writers, activists, and everyday people who have spoken truth to power in their country are too often intimidated and blackmailed while living abroad.”

Meanwhile, Ning Ning still hides her real name when talking to journalists, and disguises herself when protesting in public.

“Look at how I have to dress up, just to criticize the Chinese Communist Party, because I know how bad their transnational repression really is,” she said. “Can you imagine a U.S. citizen wearing a mask and a hat just to criticize their government’s policies?” 

Translated by Luisetta Mudie. Edited by Malcolm Foster.

Two Killed In Another Landslide In Western Indonesia

A landslide, triggered by heavy rain, damaged a worship centre and killed two people, in the Indonesian province of West Sumatra yesterday, a local official said.

The disaster took place at around 6.00 a.m. local time, in Agam Regency of the western province. Bambang Warsito, head of the regency’s disaster mitigation agency, told local media that, the two victims were inside the worship building hit by the landslide.

He said, the landslide in the area was caused by torrential rains since Friday.

Disasters like floods and landslides often occur in Indonesia during the rainy season.

Source: Nam News Network

S. Korean police search for 2 Kazakhstanis who fled airport

South Korean police are trying to capture two Kazakhstanis who fled Incheon International Airport on Sunday, after they were denied entry into the country for unspecified reasons, officials said.

The two foreigners climbed over a fence near the airport runway at around 4 a.m., according to the airport police. It remains unclear why they were denied entry into South Korea.

“At the moment, we have identified who they are, and we are tracking them,” a police officer said on condition of anonymity.

Police are currently checking security footage to track the two Kazakhstani nationals.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Ewon urges cooperatives to be involved in franchising

Entrepreneur Development and Cooperatives Minister Datuk Ewon Benedick is urging every cooperative in the country, in particular, Sabah to be involved in franchising.

He said to support the move, his ministry through Perbadanan Nasional Bhd (Pernas) has allocated a total of RM50 million this year in various schemes to assist entrepreneurs involved in franchising cooperatives.

“Interested cooperatives can contact the ministry or Pernas to find out more about financing facilities available,” he told reporters after officiating the Kota Marudu Mart Koperasi Usahaniaga Berhad Small and Medium Industries (SMI) product centre here today.

Ewon also said that based on the data available until December last year, there are 15,315 cooperatives registered nationwide with a membership of over seven million people.

He said a total of RM16.99 billion in share capital and membership fees were recorded by the cooperatives, with total assets accumulated amounting to RM159.9 billion.

Ewon also said Sabah has 1,706 registered cooperatives with 343,230 members with shares and accumulated fees totalling RM220 million, and accumulated assets valued at RM826.44 million with turnover standing at RM437.15 million.

Meanwhile, he said a total of 62 entrepreneurs have joined the Business in Transformation (BIT) programme to work on various products and over 400 entrepreneurs have registered under their respective products.

“The BIT programme is a transformation programme to turn small traders to become more competitive and systematic in running their businesses to be more profitable and to expand them more effectively,” he said.

Meanwhile, he said state and federal governments will continue to strengthen their cooperation to implement various entrepreneurial development programmes in line with the main agenda of the Unity Government led by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim to develop Malaysia MADANI.

“Entrepreneurial programmes implemented by agencies under the federal government in Sabah today with the cooperation of state government agencies is proof of the government’s commitment to aid entrepreneurs including those in rural areas,” he added.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

Nonbanking firms’ real estate financing risks loom large amid sluggish housing market

The loan exposure of nonbanking financial companies to real estate project financing (PF) has spiked to an alarming level in recent years, posing potential credit risks amid a decline in the housing market, industry data showed Sunday.

The volume of exposure by insurance companies, securities firms, credit card companies and savings banks had stood at 115.5 trillion won (US$88.8 billion) as of the end of September last year, according to data from the Bank of Korea.

That includes 91.2 trillion won in loans and 24.3 trillion won in loan guarantees.

Provided that the average exposure level was 100 in 2017, the current exposure level in financing and credit card companies reached 432.6, followed by savings banks at 249.8, insurers at 204.8 and securities firms at 167.

“The exposure in almost all the nonbanking sector is practically at a record-high level,” a BOK official said.

The rise in loan delinquency ratios in the nonbanking sector is also adding to the woes.

The delinquency ratio in real estate PF loans extended by securities firms jumped to 8.2 percent in September last year, compared with 3.7 percent at the end of 2021.

The corresponding figures for credit card companies and savings banks also rose to 1.1 percent and 2.4 percent, respectively, from 0.5 percent and 1.2 percent.

The BOK called for closer attention toward the potential insolvency risks related to real estate PFs in the nonbanking sector, advising market players to take steps to minimize uncertainties and beef up financial soundness.

Financial Supervisory Service Gov. Lee Bok-hyun said last week the financial authorities are working to prevent such risks from becoming a “trigger point” for certain construction companies or others in related industries.

“We’re making efforts to spread the risks so that we can prevent an excess in the loan extensions in one particular sector, or risks from happening all at once,” Lee told reporters Friday.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Samsung chief visits chip parts manufacturing unit in China

Samsung Electronics Executive Chairman Lee Jae-yong has visited a semiconductor components manufacturing site in China run by a Samsung affiliate, the company said Sunday, in the first such trip to the neighboring country in three years.

Lee visited the manufacturing facility in Tianjin, operated by Samsung Electro-Mechanics Co., on Friday and checked the multilayer ceramic capacitors (MLCC) production line, Samsung Electronics said.

It marked Lee’s first visit to a Samsung plant in China in three years as the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted business trips. Lee last visited Samsung Electronics’ key chip plant in Xian in May 2020.

Samsung Electro-Mechanics mainly develops and manufactures advanced electronics and mechanical components, including chip parts, such as MLCCs, that control the flow of the current in a circuit and semiconductor substrates. The Tianjin MLCC line went into operation in 2021.

Lee met with Chen Min’er, the party secretary of the Tianjin city, for discussions on business cooperation. Chang Duck-hyun, CEO of Samsung Electro-Mechanics, and Choi Joo-sun, CEO of Samsung Display, also attended the meeting.

Lee arrived in Beijing on Thursday to attend the China Development Forum, a high-profile annual forum set to run from Saturday till Monday.

Apple Inc. CEO Tim Cook, Pfizer Inc. CEO Albert Bourla and Cristiano Amon, CEO of Qualcomm Technologies Inc., are expected to be present at the forum.

The forum takes place amid mounting tension between Washington and Beijing after the U.S. government earlier this week released national security guardrails for its Chips Act, limiting business activities of chipmakers receiving federal subsidies to block China from getting access to key chip technologies.

Samsung, the world’s largest memory chip maker, runs a chip manufacturing plant in the Chinese city of Xian, which is responsible for some 40 percent of Samsung’s global NAND flash production. In Suzhou, the chipmaker operates a semiconductor packaging factory.

Source: Yonhap News Agency