Tuesday, 28 December 2021

As Xi’an Goes Hungry, Propagandists Praise “Noodles Helping Noodles”

Early reports on Xi’an’s lockdown—the strictest since the 2020 Wuhan lockdown, according to Chinese state media—indicate that hunger is a problem in the city of 11 million people. Food prices have soared and residents are unable to go to grocery stores, many of which are closed or understocked. Xi’an regulators responded with a mandate that 20 e-commerce platforms stabilize prices and supply, but efforts to resupply the city may take time. In the meantime, some residents have taken to Weibo with desperate pleas: “Can anyone save me? […] I’m about to starve at home. There was no one taking my orders online … Please help me. It’s OK if it’s expensive, I just want to have some groceries. I’m desperate.”

In response to the crisis, the Wuhan Catering Association loaded three trucks with 300,000 masks and 12,800 portions of hot and dry noodles, a local delicacy, and sent them to Xi’an. They hung a banner from one of the trucks that proclaimed: “Hot and Dry Noodles Fight for Xi’an Biang Biang Noodles,” the latter a Xi’an staple. People’s Daily, the Party’s flagship media outlet, picked up the story and crafted a hashtag #HotandDryNoodlesAreReallyFightingforXi’anBiangBiangNoodles that briefly trended on Weibo, where it was seen 140 million times and reposted by 82 media outlets, as of now. 

A truck loaded with hot and dry noodles prepares to depart.

In online posts during times of crisis, the Chinese state has often used anthropomorphized food as a stand-in for those affected. During the Henan floods, stranded residents were caricatured as bowls of soup. During the H&M boycott, online nationalists “stood” with Xinjiang cotton rather than with Xinjiang people. The cutesy representations of citizens in crisis rub many the wrong way. On Weibo, many people expressed their distaste for People’s Daily’s formulation: “Again with these meaningless comparisons! Is speaking normally too much to ask?” Another added: “I’ve got no idea why Biang Biang noodles have become synonymous with Xi’an. As someone who grew up here, I’ve never eaten them, and they’re not something Xi’an locals have often.”

What’s more, the comments section of the original People’s Daily post reflected concerns that the donated food would be consumed by officials, and worries by residents about where their next meal would come from. The top comment read, “I’m thankful for outsiders’ donations to Xi’an, but we haven’t seen anything since the lockdown. Food prices are unspeakably high and most things are unavailable. It’s not at all like what the Xi’an government is telling the outside world.”

The comments section for the People’s Daily post is filled with anguish over food.



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/12/as-xian-goes-hungry-propagandists-praise-noodles-helping-noodles/

Xinjiang Party Secretary Replaced; Walmart, Intel Hit by Nationalist Anger

Chen Quanguo, the Xinjiang Party Secretary sanctioned by the U.S. last year for his role in the mass internment of Uyghurs, has been replaced. Former Guangdong Governor Ma Xingrui has taken over his role. At The Guardian, Vincent Ni reported on the reshuffle and its potential implications:

The state-owned Xinhua news agency said in a brief announcement on Saturday that Ma Xingrui, the governor of the coastal economic powerhouse Guangdong province since 2017, had replaced Chen Quanguo as the Xinjiang party chief. Chen will move to another role.

The change came amid a wider reshuffle ahead of next year’s 20th party congress, scheduled for the autumn. It is not clear whether the move signals a rethink in China’s overall approach to Xinjiang. Beijing would be sensitive to any interpretation that it was bowing to international pressure.

Some Chinese observers have noted Chen may be promoted further during the party congress. Others say his replacement, Ma, may focus more on the region’s economic development. [Source]

Chen, a Politburo member, was appointed Xinjiang Party Secretary in 2016 after holding the same position in Tibet from 2011, where he was associated with an aggressive security regime targeting local unrest. His new position, if there is one, has not been announced, and it remains unclear whether his departure from Xinjiang may signal any easing of the harsh security crackdown in the region:

Ma Xingrui is a consummate technocrat, “an actual rocket scientist” who once headed China Aerospace Science & Technology Corporation, which has become a notable launchpad for promotions in recent years. Nikkei Asia speculates that Ma’s promotion will pave the way for his appointment to the Politburo. As pointed out by Lizzi C. Lee of Chinese media outlet Wall St TV, Chen and Ma’s first days in office were quite different. Chen stressed “stability” in conference calls, while Ma toured sites related to economic development:

For now, the region remains an area of international concern. Credible allegations of forced labor plague a myriad of Xinjiang-made products, prompting the U.S. to pass an import ban earlier this month. A number of international companies have attempted to weed Xinjiang products out of their supply chains to avoid U.S. sanctions. This in turn has sparked nationalist boycotts of foreign retailers. H&M was infamously mobbed online and boycotted offline after stating its “deep concern” about forced labor in Xinjiang’s huge cotton industry. The latest target of a nationalist boycott is American retailer Walmart. Would-be digital sleuths found that Sam’s Club (a Walmart subsidiary) listed Xinjiang-sourced products, mostly fruits, as out of stock in the wake of the U.S. ban on Xinjiang goods. Screenshots of the search results for “Xinjiang” on Sam’s Club app went viral, drawing over 170 million views on Weibo. At The Wall Street Journal, Liza Lin reported on the latest nationalistic boycott of a foreign conglomerate:

Walmart, for its part, was dragged into the controversy on Friday after users wrote on domestic social-media platforms—including Weibo, a Twitter-like microblogging service, and Zhihu, a Quora-like question-and-answer forum—that they were unable to find products typically sourced from Xinjiang on online stores operated by Walmart and Sam’s Club China. Sam’s Club is Walmart’s members-only wholesale retail chain.

[…] The Wall Street Journal found no Xinjiang product listings on Walmart and Sam’s Club’s China e-commerce stores. However, a visit to a Walmart store in Beijing’s central business district on Saturday found red dates sourced from Xinjiang still stocked on its shelves.

[…] The American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai said in September that 30% of retail and consumer companies polled in its most recent business survey cited public backlash and consumer boycotts as a top concern, the highest among the major industries covered by the business lobby. More than one-tenth of the companies said they had reduced planned investments in China because of concerns about consumer boycotts. [Source]

Walmart’s competitors wasted no time touting the Xinjiang products they had on display, in an apparent attempt to use nationalism to gobble Walmart’s marketshare:

U.S. chipmaker intel found itself in a similar position to Walmart after it advised suppliers to abstain from sourcing products from Xinjiang in the wake of the U.S.’s import ban. Bloomberg News reported that Intel, having decided “prudence” is the better part of valor, apologized to Chinese consumers:

The chipmaker sent a letter asking suppliers not to use any labor or products sourced from Xinjiang “in order to ensure compliance with U.S. legal requirements,” it said in a WeChat statement Thursday. The company had no other intention and did not mean to express a position on the matter, according to the statement.

“We thank everyone for raising their questions and concerns and respect the sensitivity of the issue in China,” Intel said. “As a multinational company, we operate in a constantly evolving and complex global environment and should adopt a prudent attitude. For causing trouble to our esteemed Chinese customers, partners and the general public, we express our sincere apologies.”

Intel’s apology comes after social media users this week seized on the issue to criticize the U.S. firm. The lead singer of TFBoys — one of China’s most popular boy bands — Wang Junkai said it will terminate all partnerships with the U.S. company immediately, according to a statement by his studio Wednesday. The studio said it had repeatedly asked Intel to “express a correct stance,” but the chipmaker had yet to respond.

“National interests trump everything!” the studio wrote in its post. [Source]



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/12/xinjiang-party-secretary-replaced-walmart-intel-hit-by-nationalist-anger/

Wednesday, 22 December 2021

For Shame: Hong Kong’s “Pillar of Shame” Dismantled Under Shroud of Darkness

Following months of legal wrangling by University of Hong Kong (HKU) administrators, Hong Kong’s “Pillar of Shame”—artist Jens Galschiøt’s powerful memorial to the victims of the 1989 Tiananmen Massacre—was stealthily dismantled and carted away in the middle of the night on Wednesday. Observers first reported that the area surrounding the pillar was fenced off to obscure it from view, and that a cargo container was brought in by crane

As the work was taking place, there was a heavy security presence, entry to the area was strictly prohibited, and journalists were discouraged from filming or taking photos. A report from SCMP described the scene:

Workers in safety helmets were seen around the sculpture, while a mobile crane stood by. Shovelling and digging noises could be heard coming from behind the curtains.

About a dozen security guards stopped people from approaching the sealed-off area, but they did not reply to questions on the work being carried out or the reasons for the cordon. When asked if the pillar was being dismantled, one of the guards, however, replied: “Yes, working on it.” [Source]

Workers were later seen carting away rubble, and the statue appears to have been dismantled into at least two pieces and transported away from the campus. Numerous media outlets captured stirring, funereal images of workers in yellow construction helmets moving portions of the white-shrouded sculpture.

A bitter irony of the removal is that the artwork itself was conceptualized to thwart any attempts to remove it or to erase the history it memorializes. As artist Jens Galschiøt explained in his statement on the project:

In situations where the authorities have committed the atrocity, the sculpture (representing the victims) will be very difficult for them to move. Whatever their reaction might be, it will have a symbolic value. If they hide the Pillar away in a warehouse, they will be insulting the victims by sentencing them to oblivion. They will thus be adding to the power of a symbol that is meant to highlight the struggle of the bereaved for remembrance. If they blow it up, they are displaying brutality when they probably are more interested in keeping a low profile. They risk appearing extremely aggressive if they repeat their atrocities, this time against the symbol of the event. On the other hand, if they accept the sculpture, they accept a monument in memory of events that they probably would prefer to forget. [Source]

In an interview with the BBC Newshour, the sculptor expounded on the symbolism of removing an object that pays such respectful homage to the dead:

The artwork – which features dozens of twisted bodies and anguished faces – was one of Hong Kong’s few remaining public memorials to the Tiananmen Square crackdown in Beijing.

[…] Mr Galschiot said removing the statue was “really brutal” and likened it to the destruction of gravestones.

“This is a sculpture about dead people and [to] remember the dead people in Beijing in ’89. So when you destroy that in this way then it’s like going to a graveyard and destroying all the gravestones,” he told the BBC’s Newshour programme. [Source]

Hong Kong’s Pillar of Shame is but one of several artworks in a series created by Galschiøt to remind citizens around the world of certain shameful historical events which must never be allowed to recur. In an article about Beijing’s attempts to rewrite history, The Atlantic’s Timothy McLaughlin described past commemorations in Hong Kong, which has been home to this particular sculpture since 1997:

An orange cenotaph of pained, contorted bodies constructed as a memorial to protesters killed in the massacre, it was put on permanent public display to serve, as its creator, Jens Galschiøt, wrote in 1997, as a test of the authorities’ “guarantees for human rights and freedom of expression in Hong Kong.” The pillar was staged at the University of Hong Kong, the city’s oldest and most prestigious institute of higher learning, in 1998, after being displayed at other campuses.

[…] Students and activists gathered every spring to ceremonially wash the structure, which across its base reads, “The old cannot kill the young forever.” The ritual was the first in a sequence of events held every year in Hong Kong to mark the anniversary of the Tiananmen massacre culminating with the candlelight vigil. Now, though, the pillar is caught in a sort of purgatory—unwanted by the university, which has tried to remove it but faced fierce resistance, and Galschiøt’s attempts to retrieve it have gone unanswered. The awkward situation is representative of the city itself, not entirely subjugated by Beijing but not as free, open, or vibrant as it once was.

“Many things in the past in Hong Kong that were treated as normal and being a kind of symbol that Hong Kong is still enjoying freedom and a high degree of autonomy … are now facing challenges,” Richard Tsoi, the secretary of the now-dissolved alliance [the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China], told me. [Source]

Several days before the statue was removed, The Standard reported on ongoing efforts by the artist to retrieve his statue:

On a newsletter shared on Twitter, Galschiøt said the situation is “completely unresolved”.

“I have offered to take it to Denmark, but they will not respond to my inquiries and my request that I, and those who are going to help, will not be arrested, if I come to Hong Kong to pick up the sculpture,” he wrote.

The sculptor said he feared that 2022 will be the year that the sculpture will be destroyed and removed by “an increasingly aggressive and brutal Chinese regime”.

He said thousands of Pillar of Shames are being 3D printed around the world and are being used for creative actions, such as protests against the Winter Olympics in China in February, he said. [Source]

The secretive removal is but the latest in a long string of attempts, driven by the Chinese government in Beijing as well as local officials, to roll back Hong Kong’s civil liberties and curtail democratic participation, academic independence, journalistic freedom, and the ability to commemorate historical events in ways that challenge CCP dominance over the historical narrative. Katie Tam and Zen Soo of the Associated Press delved into the backdrop to these recent events

The dispute over the Pillar of Shame comes as Hong Kong authorities crack down on political dissent in the city, following the implementation of a national security law that appeared to target much of the pro-democracy movement.

The security law, which outlaws secession, subversion, terrorism and foreign collusion to intervene in the city’s affairs, was imposed by Beijing on Hong Kong following months of anti-government protests in 2019.

Over 100 pro-democracy figures and activists have been arrested under the national security law, which has been criticized as rolling back freedoms promised to Hong Kong when it was handed over to China by the British. [Source]

In a November 2021 opinion piece for The New York Times, Shui-yin Sharon Yam and Alex Chow drew a parallel between efforts to remove the pillar and the broader destruction of academic freedom and civil society in Hong Kong, cautioning that “Hong Kong’s universities have fallen”:

Now university administrations in Hong Kong are punishing students for voicing dissenting views on campus. By abandoning their neutral role and dedication to free speech, the universities have gone from realms of political enlightenment to theaters of state surveillance and policing.

Taken together, the removal of the pillar and the incapacitation of the student unions amount to effectively uprooting Hong Kong’s civil society. Both academic and political freedoms suffer with their forced absence. [Source]

Following the pillar’s removal, the Council of the University of Hong Kong issued a statement claiming that the decision to remove the iconic sculpture was based on a combination of external legal advice and potential safety/liability risks due to the “fragile” condition of the statue. 



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/12/for-shame-hong-kongs-pillar-of-shame-dismantled-under-shroud-of-darkness/

Xi’an Goes into Lockdown

Authorities in Xi’an have locked down the entire city after reporting over 100 new coronavirus cases. China has employed lockdowns, mass testing, and centralized quarantines to pursue a “zero-covid” strategy. The Xi’an lockdown is the latest demonstration of resolve on the part of the Chinese leadership to take immediate and often drastic action to stem the tide of the infectious disease. At The Wall Street Journal, Liyan Qi reported on the lockdown of this city of thirteen million people:

Since Dec. 9, the city in the northwest of China has confirmed more than 140 Covid-19 cases, city officials said at a briefing.

[…] After Xi’an officials announced the stay-at-home order Wednesday afternoon, local residents rushed to grocery stores to stock up on food. The city, known for its terra-cotta warriors, allows one family member to do grocery runs every two days.

[…] Many college students in Xi’an, which is home to dozens of universities, resorted to social media to vent about the lockdown, with some worrying that the lockdown will prevent them from taking upcoming graduate-school entrance exams. [Source]

Xi’an residents thronged local stores, hoping to secure supplies before the lockdown went into effect. The government says new supplies will be brought in on Thursday:

In the days before the lockdown, Xi’an’s health code application crashed due to excessive use, inconveniencing local residents. A Weibo rumor held that fixing the crashed app was delayed because engineers could not access the building without displaying green codes on the health app—the very app that they were tasked with repairing. Chongqing’s Shangyou News (上游新闻) reported that the company responsible denied the rumor, but seemed unwilling to elaborate. Residents cannot ride buses, take taxis, or enter certain buildings without a green code. When health codes turn yellow—whether due to potential exposure or “spacial-temporal proximity”—people can find themselves stranded in their apartments or, worse, caught in a Kafka-esque cycle of testing and entry bans. Residents speak of “guarding the green horse,” a homophone for a green QR code, to describe their efforts to maintain the green codes that allow them freedom of movement.

Cao Siqi and Yu Xi of state-run tabloid Global Times provided further detail on Xi’an’s epidemic situation:

These strict measures came after a city-wide nucleic acid testing program starting from Sunday, which detected 42 cases on Monday and 52 cases on Tuesday. So far, the outbreak has affected five other cities – Xianyang and Yan’an in Shaanxi, Zhoukou in Central China’s Henan Province, Dongguan in South China’s Guangdong Province, and Beijing.

[…] Some people questioned why the city has conducted a full-scale epidemiological survey at this early stage, since the specific transmission route is still not clear, and there is a lack of clear correlation among various transmission chains. Some said compared with a survey in Tianjin, in which the movements of patients could be pinpointed to minutes, the results in Xi’an were incomplete and unclear.

[…] “A larger number of sporadic cases have not yet been linked to the current transmissions, which indicated that there has been hidden transmission in Xi’an,” Lu Hongzhou, head of the Third People’s Hospital of Shenzhen and member of the expert committee of national disease control and prevention, told the Global Times on Wednesday. [Source]

COVID is not the only disease plaguing Xi’an. At South China Morning Post, Zhuang Pinghui reported on a concurrent outbreak of a separate deadly disease in Xi’an, haemorrhagic fever:

The disease is predominantly caused by hantavirus. Rodents are the main source of infection and it can be transmitted by a rodent bite or by eating food or water contaminated by a rodent. It transmits mostly from animal to people and spread from human to human is extremely rare.

The Xian Centre for Disease Control and Prevention said in a statement on Sunday that haemorrhagic fever was currently at its peak. It said the disease’s early symptoms were similar to the onset of respiratory infectious diseases such as a common cold and the centre urged residents not to ignore symptoms or wait to be treated.

[…] According to the Shaanxi CDC 2020 work report, a total of 1,834 cases of haemorrhagic fever were reported in the province last year, up 90.05 per cent from 965 cases in 2019. [Source]

Lockdowns are more common along China’s borders, which are perceived as vectors of disease, fairly or not. Two cities in Yunnan and Xinjiang have been subject to months-long, rolling lockdowns throughout the pandemic. At The Washington Post, Lily Kuo reported on the less-noticed lockdown of a city of 200,000 along the southern border:

The city of Dongxing, which borders Vietnam in China’s southern Guangxi province, on Wednesday ordered all households to quarantine at home until further notice after a resident tested positive during a routine screening, according to state broadcaster CCTV. Schools, public transportation and most businesses, except for supermarkets and pharmacies, were temporarily shuttered as authorities launched a campaign to test everyone in the city.

Customs processing in the city, the entry point for a million tons of goods annually from Vietnam, was also halted while the Chinese Embassy in Hanoi asked Chinese citizens in Vietnam not to return by land.

[…] China’s pursuit of a stringent “zero covid” policy has resulted in increasingly strict border controls and quarantines and frequent lockdowns across the country. According to Vietnam’s state-controlled Hanoi Times, more than 6,000 trucks carrying fruit have been stranded along the Chinese-Vietnamese border for several weeks. [Source]

 



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/12/xian-goes-into-lockdown/

Photo: Photo [a street in the Muslim quarter of Xi’an], by Bruno Abreu

In the Muslim quarter of Xi’an, China, a busy, narrow alley is bustling with motorcycles, passersby, shoppers, food stalls, colorful signs and two-story buildings strung with visible power lines.

Photo [a street in the Muslim quarter of Xi’an], by Bruno Abreu (CC BY-NC 2.0)



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/12/photo-photo-a-street-in-the-muslim-quarter-of-xian-by-bruno-abreu/

Photo: Qiandao Lake, Zhejiang, by Air Shih

A small, tree-topped island in a lake, with the far shore just visible through mist in the background

Qiandao Lake, Zhejiang, by Air Shih (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/12/photo-qiandao-lake-zhejiang-by-air-shih/

Tuesday, 21 December 2021

Peng Shuai Interview Leaves Much Unanswered

A pro-Beijing Singaporean state-controlled news outlet’s brief interview with Peng Shuai has raised more questions than it answered. A reporter for Lianhe Zaobao pulled Peng aside for an ostensibly unscheduled interview along the sidelines of a Shanghai event promoting cross-country skiing. Peng did not deny an assertion that she authored the Weibo post that set the saga in motion, but claimed that she never accused anyone of sexual assault, contradicting the language in her original post. She stated that CGTN’s tweeted screenshot of an English-language email to Women’s Tennis Association CEO Steve Simon was a faithful translation of her original Chinese draft. Peng further stated she has freedom of movement and is not under surveillance, but is not planning to leave China any time soon:

At The New York Times, Chris Buckley reported on Peng’s interview and international skepticism that her comments were made freely:

Ms. Peng made the comments in an interview that was published on Sunday by a Singaporean newspaper. But the retraction appeared unlikely to extinguish concerns about her well-being and suspicions that she had been the target of well-honed pressure techniques and a propaganda campaign by Chinese officials.

[…] After this latest interview, a spokesperson for [the Women’s Tennis Association] said it still had not been able to make independent contact with Ms. Peng. And the association said in a statement, “We remain steadfast in our call for a full, fair and transparent investigation, without censorship, into her allegation of sexual assault, which is the issue that gave rise to our initial concern.”

[…] There was no mention of Ms. Peng’s latest comments in Chinese state media, which operates inside a wall of censorship. [Source]

To many observers, Peng seemed uncomfortable during the interview, and could not recall the dates of her video-conferences with the International Olympic Committee. She also declined to answer questions about her activities in Beijing. Peng also claimed that her Weibo post, shared with her 574,000 followers, was “a matter of personal privacy.” Peng was accompanied by Ding Li, a man who claims to be her friend and had previously posted multiple videos of her in Beijing. A number of state media employees and Ding posted videos and photographs of Peng in Shanghai:

Peng’s Weibo account remains dormant and the mere mention of her name triggers swift censorship. She has yet to post on the internet or communicate to the general public without an intermediary. The videos of her conversation with the IOC have not been made public. Peng stated she needed CGTN’s help with a translation of her email to Simon but, as noted by Peter Dahlin of Safeguard Defenders, Peng speaks nearly fluent English.

The identity of the reporter who interviewed Peng—who had been unreachable by foreign outlets and remains so to all but Lianhe Zaobao—further muddied the waters:

At Business Insider, Bill Bostock reported that Peng’s short disappearance and new public persona bears hallmarks of the control methods the state has employed against Jack Ma, Fan Bingbing, and Ai Weiwei:

“They keep these people and they try to find some sort of arrangement,” Konstantinos Tsimonis, a lecturer in Chinese society at the Lau China Institute at King’s College London, told Insider after Peng first disappeared.

[…] “Proximity to the top levels of power — fame, money, power, a Nobel peace prize — do not buy you any added protection,” Sophie Richardson, China director at Human Rights Watch, told Insider last month.

“This case has laid bare for yet another large global audience the truly arbitrary nature of power the Chinese government and party wield,” she said, referring to Peng. “This happens all the time, this is the norm, not the exception.” [Source]

International organizations have reacted in markedly different ways to Peng’s plight. The WTA remains steadfast in its demands for a full and transparent investigation into Peng’s accusations against Zhang Gaoli, and withdrew from China in early December saying that it would not return until its concerns over Peng’s safety could be addressed. At Sports Illustrated, Jon Wertheim reported on the WTA’s decision to leave the country at great financial cost:

In the WTA’s case, there was consensus. From players of all levels. From the alumnae. From their agents. From the WTA Board. [WTA royalty Martina Navratilova] notes that for years it was axiomatic that there were “three T’s” that were considered taboo to the Chinese government: Tibet, Taiwan and Tiananmen. “Now, we can add a fourth: tennis.”

[…] There was a central, inconvenient truth, an open secret: The players had little use for China. There was something unseemly about this nakedly transactional relationship. The events were often staged in arenas devoid of fans and in uncomfortable situations. One example: When Shenzhen held the WTA Finals event in 2019, players could see Chinese tanks positioned menacingly in the direction of adjacent Hong Kong. In the stadium parking lot, Chinese soldiers practiced riot drills, preparing to squelch pro-democracy protests.

Factor in the travel, time zone adjustment, language barrier, even the traffic, and it’s no surprise that players developed a habit of withdrawing from events in China just before a tournament’s start, often with dubious injuries. Consider: While China figured prominently in the WTA’s business model, Serena Williams hasn’t played an event in the country since 2014. [Source]

The International Olympic Committee has taken a different route. The IOC has consistently turned a blind eye to human rights abuses in China and seems determined to sweep the Peng Shuai incident under the rug. Senior IOC member Dick Pound told a German radio show that there was “nothing wrong with China” hosting the Olympics. At The New York Times, Li Yuan detailed how three powerful actors—a foundation run by the son of the IOC’s former president, the Chinese government, and the IOC itself—combine to silence criticism of China:

“One of [the Samaranch Foundation’s] bigger donors is the sportswear maker Anta, which pledged to continue using cotton from Xinjiang, where forced labor was used amid the government suppression of Uyghurs and other Muslim minority groups. Anta’s chief executive sits on the foundation’s board.

[…] It celebrated the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China in a 2019 post on its website, calling it a “love letter.” Earlier this year, it organized a nationwide red-themed running race for middle school students for the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Chinese Communist Party.

[…] Then during another online media briefing this week, he urged for a “need to be discreet” in Ms. Peng’s situation. “Everybody should be concentrating on the well-being of Peng Shuai and not trying to use this for any other purpose,” he said. [Source]



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/12/peng-shuai-interview-leaves-much-unanswered/