sabato 26 agosto 2017

Weekly News Roundup: Dispatches from the Silk Road Economic Belt


Chinese investors warned of dangers that lie in wait along the new Silk Road

Public and private institutions are mapping risks for participants in Belt and Road Initiative (Scmp)

China defends Pakistan after Trump calls Pakistan a terrorist haven 
A survey conducted by Pew Research Centre in 2014 showed that Pakistan is China’s strongest supporter in Asia as 78 percent of Pakistanis view China favourably. The strong preference doesn’t come out of nothing. China seems to be the only nation that dare to defend Pakistan against the United States. On 21 August, the U.S. President Donald J. Trump issued his grand strategy in Afghanistan and South Asia, aiming to comprehensively crush terrorism in the region. Hua implied that the United States hasn’t fully recognized Pakistan’s efforts in the international community. Of course, as the nation which does fully recognize Pakistan’s sacrifice, China also “supports the international community in enhancing the international counter-terrorism cooperation and forming synergy.” (TheDiplomat)


China committed to help bring peace to Afghanistan, but Pakistan’s role in process must be respected, says top diplomat
China’s top diplomat Yang Jiechi said during a phone call with US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Wednesday that his government was committed to bringing peace to Afghanistan, but also called on the Trump administration to recognise the role of Pakistan in the process. (Scmp)

U.S. Shift Boosts Afghans, Risks Pushing Pakistan Toward China
The Trump administration’s new Afghan strategy bolstered Kabul in its fight against the Taliban, but officials and analysts in Pakistan warned that Washington’s approach risks fueling the 16-year war in Afghanistan and encourages Islamabad to deepen ties with China. (WSJ)

TRUMP BEWARE: PAKISTAN’S LUCK PLAYING CHINA CARD IS TURNING
When the bin Laden raid sent US-Pakistan ties into a tailspin, Beijing rebuffed the advances of Islamabad. But six years on, as relations head south once again, China’s calculus has changed (scmp)

Chinese company seeking railway revival to invest in Afghan marble sector
A delegation of Qin Gen Industrial Company of China, headed by deputy general manager Li Yingjun, has met officials with Afghan Chamber of Commerce and Industries (ACCI) and a number of businessmen and emphasized on joint efforts to enhance cooperation on infrastructures including railway connectivity and trade under the Belt and Road Initiative.Expressing interest in investment in Afghan minerals extraction, Li said the company wants to invest in marble filed and its import. (Xinhua)

Central China transportation hub sees 200 Sino-European freight trains this year
Central China's Wuhan city, a transportation hub, has seen more than 200 Sino-European freight trains so far this year, said local authorities on Saturday. As of Friday, 100 freight trains between China and Europe have left Wuhan, and the city received 103. A total of 18,000 containers were carried, up 41.5 percent from last year, according to Wuhan Asia-Europe Logistics which runs the trains. By May 13 this year when the 1,000th Sino-European freight train left China, the country had 51 Sino-European freight train routes, with trains from 28 Chinese cities travelling to 29 cities in 11 European countries. (People's Daily)

Eurasia high speed railway from Germany to China can be built by 2026
Construction of the Eurasia high speed railway (HSR) connecting Europe to China can be completed by 2026, Russian Railways said in its presentation available with TASS. Construction start at different segment varies from 2018 (Moscow - Kazan HSR) to 2023 (Krasnoye-Moscow and Chelyabinsk - Zolotaya Sopka). The project can be financed with participation of the Russian Direct Investment Fund, BRICS New Development Bank, Eurasian Development Bank, Silk Road Fund and Russia-China Investment Fund, according to Russian Railways. (TASS)

China recruits 30,000 teachers, police, civil servants to move to Xinjiang
Chinese authorities in the troubled northwestern region of Xinjiang have launched a massive nationwide recruitment drive seeking tens of thousands of new police officers, civil servants, teachers, academics, and airline staff. Dangling incentives like free housing, household registration documents, and bonuses, the Xinjiang regional government alone is recruiting more than 12,000 staff out of the 30,000 or more jobs now on offer. Most of the jobs listed by the search engine Sohu require applicants to pass a "political test," while the scope of the advertising and benefits appears geared to majority Han Chinese from elsewhere in the country. RFA

Canadian Journalist Briefly Detained in Xinjiang
Canadian journalist Nathan VanderKlippe, The Globe and Mail’s Beijing-based Asia correspondent, was detained in Elishku Township, Xinjiang on August 23 for over three hours. VanderKlippe in 2014 won an Amnesty International media award for his reporting on Uyghur repression and violence in Xinjiang amid an ongoing terror crackdown in the region. His detention came as foreign journalists in China are experiencing increased harassment, and as state security policies in Xinjiang continue to tighten. (chinadigitaltimes.net)

Loudspeakers from mosques removed in Qinghai to eliminate noise
The Hualong Hui Autonomous County in Northwest China's Qinghai Province has removed over 1,000 loudspeakers from mosques to eliminate noise pollution, according to a report by local newspaper Haidong Times.Loudspeakers were removed from 355 mosques within three days recently in the county with a large Muslim population which is under Haidong city, according to a Friday report that was later deleted. A screen grab of the report is still circulated online.The report said the Hualong government has organized various departments and institutions including the Islamic Association to tackle noise pollution caused by numerous local mosques. (Global Times)

China's Other New Security Concern -- Its Ethnic Kyrgyz
Earlier this month, Qishloq Ovozi looked at China's recent worries about its ethnic Kazakhs and now there is information China has similar concerns about its ethnic Kyrgyz citizens.The Kazakhs and the Kyrgyz are Turkic peoples and the vast majority are Muslims, two distinctions from Han Chinese that are the reasons for Beijing's relatively newfound and increasing unease. (rferl)

Exclusive: China's 'big four' banks raise billions for Belt and Road deals - sources
China's largest state-owned commercial banks are raising tens of billions of dollars to fund the country's Belt and Road investment push, according to people familiar with the matter, bolstering Beijing's ambitions as private capital pulls back. (Reuters)

Is China Winning the Scramble for Eurasia?
Roads, railways and other new connections are reshaping the Eurasian supercontinent and creating new forms of competition as well as cooperation. (National Interest)


CENTRAL ASIA

Russian tanker cuts through Arctic to Asia in record time
A Russian-owned tanker, built to traverse the frozen waters of the Arctic, completed a journey from Europe to Asia in record time this month, auguring well for the future of shipping as global warming melts sea ice. The Christophe de Margerie, a 300m tanker built specifically for the journey, became the first ship to complete the Northern Sea Route without the aid of specialised ice-breaking vessels, said the ship's owner, Sovcomflot, in a statement. (straitstimes)

Kyrgyzstan: Prosecutions Thin Ranks of Presidential Contenders
Two major names in Kyrgyzstani politics have been sentenced to long terms in jail so far in August. Local analysts contend the cases are politically motivated.With presidential election coming up in mid-October, analysts argue the timing of the convictions is not coincidental. They suggest that the cases likely were intended to help members of the ruling elite retain their grip on power. (Eurasianet)

Dushanbe police stop 8,000 women for failing to wear veil correctly
Campaign to "correct" mode of Islamic dress. According to government sources, the veil is a tool to identify women belonging to terrorist groups. (Asia News)

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