英文媒体关于中国的报道汇总 2025-08-21
August 22, 2025 89 min 18862 words
随手搬运西方主流媒体的所谓的民主自由的报道,让帝国主义的丑恶嘴脸无处遁形。
- For China and the Middle East, a Space Silk Road is written in the stars
- Brazil seeks China’s support to salvage maritime emissions pact opposed by Trump
- Mathematician Zhang Yitang says he left US for China due to political climate
- China turns up oil tap from Russia as purchases of US crude remain suspended in July
- Trump tariffs spark India-China reset, Chinese city’s biotech dream: SCMP daily highlights
- Philippines assures China of restraint after ship clashes – will tensions ease?
- DJI faces new challenger as China’s robot vacuum maker Dreame hires drone experts
- Did Zhuque-2E launch failure deal a blow to China’s Guo Wang satellite project?
- Chinese President Xi Jinping arrives in Tibet for landmark anniversary
- FAW, China’s oldest carmaker, eyes 10% of Leapmotor to boost stake in EV surge
- ‘Still believe in love’: China tycoon whose divorce gripped public, remarries ex-classmate
- Why has China sent research vessels to Scarborough Shoal after a collision?
- Chinese jeweller Laopu Gold shines as earnings nearly triple on sales bump at home, abroad
- China expands regulatory arsenal in fight against solar industry price wars
- Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Kabul for 3-way talks as Afghan-Pakistan tensions ease
- After Shaolin Temple scandal, China’s Buddhists urged to obey the law and pay taxes
- China’s EV industry expands ‘going global’ strategy, latest Tesla Model 3: 7 EV reads
- China-India talks: Narendra Modi praises ‘stable, predictable, constructive ties’
- Ex-China diver becomes merman performer, creates stunning underwater routines with artistry
- How the Philippines forced China to adjust historic mission to moon’s far side
- Australia, Philippines stage largest-ever drills: ‘denial of China’s aggression’
- China says it will highlight joint combat groups in next month’s military parade
- From mining to tourism, space ambitions of China’s Guangdong rival those of Elon Musk
- India-China thaw: rare earths, border headway as Trump turns up tariff heat
- As the US and China compete, Asean could play arbiter
- ‘Beautiful’ gun-toting China tactical police officer goes viral after hitting 10 bullseyes
- Is China poised to lead the world with combat-ready ‘loyal wingman’ FH-97 stealth drone?
摘要
1. For China and the Middle East, a Space Silk Road is written in the stars
中文标题:对于中国和中东来说,太空丝绸之路注定要实现。
内容摘要:这篇文章探讨了中国与阿拉伯国家在太空探索领域的合作,称其为“太空丝绸之路”。历史上,丝绸之路促进了中阿之间的贸易和文化交流,如今这一合作在太空探索的新时代重新焕发活力。阿拉伯国家特别是海湾国家,正在大力投资太空项目以实现经济多元化,并重塑其国际形象。随着与美国关系的紧张,他们越来越倾向于与中国合作,因为中国提供的技术支持没有附加条件。文章还指出,中国在太空领域逐渐崛起,并与阿拉伯国家建立伙伴关系,通过共同开发卫星和载人航天等项目,推动双边合作。总的来说,作者呼吁通过国际合作实现太空探索的共同利益,而非陷入竞争,强调太空是全人类的共同遗产。
2. Brazil seeks China’s support to salvage maritime emissions pact opposed by Trump
中文标题:巴西寻求中国支持,以挽救特朗普反对的海洋排放协议
内容摘要:巴西希望中国支持一项联合国倡议,以减少国际航运产生的温室气体排放。巴西港口与机场部长西尔维奥·菲略表示,巴西是国际海事组织(IMO)提出的净零框架的坚定支持者,期待中国在实施计划上的立场明确。该框架将要求未达燃油效率标准的海洋船舶自2027年起为其碳排放付费,从而促使清洁燃料的应用及帮助发展中国家向绿色技术转型。尽管美国特朗普政府对这一环保方案持反对态度,巴西仍寻求与主要参与国合作。中国在经历多次反对后,最近转而支持该框架,标志着其在气候措施上的立场变化。巴西与中方的合作将有助于推动这一协议的通过,菲略表示巴西全力支持达成共识。
3. Mathematician Zhang Yitang says he left US for China due to political climate
中文标题:数学家张益唐表示因政治气候离开美国返回中国
内容摘要:数学家张益唐于2023年6月从加州大学圣巴巴拉分校回国,现任中山大学香港高级研究院教授。他表示,由于中美关系紧张,许多中国学者正在考虑或已返回中国,他认为这是一个“正面的趋势”。张益唐在接受凤凰卫视采访时指出,尽管他的研究领域未受太大影响,但对于涉及计算机、芯片和军工相关的研究者而言,现今的美国环境相当严峻。他在数学领域取得了重要成就,包括解决了数论中的双质数猜想,开创了研究的先河。张益唐表示,研究数学不受地理限制,他希望能继续在中国开展研究,实现个人价值,并对回国的经历感到欣慰。
4. China turns up oil tap from Russia as purchases of US crude remain suspended in July
中文标题:中国从俄罗斯增加石油进口,而7月份美国原油采购暂停
内容摘要:2023年7月,中国的原油进口量保持强劲,达到4720万吨,同比增加11.5%。其中,来自俄罗斯的原油为871万吨,成为中国最大的原油供应国,同比增长16.8%;与此相比,中国自美国的原油进口已连续两个月暂停,最后一次进口是在5月。与此同时,中国还从沙特阿拉伯进口了747万吨的原油,增长16.6%。尽管西方国家对俄罗斯施加了制裁,但中俄之间的能源贸易依然加深,反映了双方在"无限制"合作关系下的依赖性。中国在前七个月内共进口了3.266亿吨原油,同比增加2.8%,俄罗斯占其中的17.7%。中国经济学家指出,增加的进口可能是出于库存需求,考虑到中国未来的能源消费峰值可能出现在2027年。此外,中国与美国的贸易关系仍在波动中,暂停美国原油的采购可能是中国的一种战略筹码。
5. Trump tariffs spark India-China reset, Chinese city’s biotech dream: SCMP daily highlights
中文标题:特朗普关税引发印中关系重启,中国城市的生物科技梦想:香港南华早报日报亮点
内容摘要:最近,中国和印度在外交上取得显著进展,这一变化的背后可能与美国有关。同时,中国广东省宣布将在商业航天领域进一步发展,提供财政和政策支持,以帮助公司建立低轨道卫星星座,推动太空矿业和太空旅游等未来行业的发展。此外,中国正努力将以古典园林著称的城市打造成生物技术创新的中心,力争成为中国的波士顿。与此同时,中国更新了2025年外国人在华生活指南,重点介绍合法工作和旅行的相关信息。同时,美国国土安全部宣布将包括铜、锂和钢铁等五个中国行业列为“高优先级”执法对象,因人权法限制自新疆地区的进口。此外,FH-97无人机被认为是中国首款具备作战能力的隐形无人机,可以与载人战斗机协同作战。
6. Philippines assures China of restraint after ship clashes – will tensions ease?
中文标题:菲律宾向中国保证克制,船只冲突后——紧张局势会缓解吗?
内容摘要:菲律宾与中国之间的海洋紧张局势因两艘中国舰船在南海斯卡伯勒礁附近发生碰撞而加剧。菲律宾官员重申将保持克制,并继续捍卫国家主权,尽管他们对中国的行为表示关切。菲律宾国家海洋委员会发言人亚历山大·洛佩斯表示,菲律宾海警将在西菲律宾海开展行动,不会通过增加海军存在来引发冲突。 分析人士认为,出于面子原因,中国可能在此后采取更强硬的立场,甚至可能加强对争议水域的控制。与此同时,菲律宾与美国和其他盟友的防务合作正在加深,尤其是在碰撞发生后不久,美国部署了一艘导弹驱逐舰。此外,菲律宾近期还与澳大利亚等国开展联合军事演习。尽管官员们强调克制,但分析人士警告该地区的紧张局势可能进一步升级。
7. DJI faces new challenger as China’s robot vacuum maker Dreame hires drone experts
中文标题:DJI面临新挑战,中国扫地机器人制造商Dreame招聘无人机专家
内容摘要:中国机器人吸尘器品牌Dreame Technology正在积极招募无人机专家,以在竞争日益激烈的市场中挑战市场领先者DJI。该公司在招聘平台发布了至少10个职位,包括无人机导航建模算法工程师和无人机测试飞行员,职位主要位于苏州和深圳。Dreame已经从DJI和美团等公司招聘人才,美团自2017年以来一直在开发无人机用于物流服务,并在2024年完成了超过20万单的配送。随着中国低空经济的发展,越来越多的初创企业进入无人机行业。尽管DJI占据约70%的市场份额,但技术的快速进步使其他硬件制造商能够开发自己的无人机。Dreame创始人余浩是清华大学的航空航天工程专业毕业生,此次扩展被视为对DJI近期进入机器人吸尘器市场的回应。数据显示,2023年第一季度全球机器人吸尘器出货量达到510万台,同比增长12%。
8. Did Zhuque-2E launch failure deal a blow to China’s Guo Wang satellite project?
中文标题:朱雀2E发射失败是否对中国的国王卫星项目造成了打击?
内容摘要:中国在发展广域网络卫星计划方面遭遇挫折,因民营火箭公司蓝箭空间的Zhuque-2E火箭上周在酒泉发射中心发射时发生故障。Zhuque-2E是蓝箭升级版火箭,曾在首次飞行中成功发射两个卫星。此次故障导致的失误可能影响到“国网”项目的四颗实验卫星,而“国网”致力于与SpaceX的Starlink竞争,计划到2027年将400颗卫星送入轨道。 尽管“国网”能够获得国家支持的火箭,但“千帆”项目的进展却不如预期,至今仅发射90颗卫星,计划在年底前完成648颗的部署。同时,蓝箭面临技术和财务的关键时刻,预计将在秋季推出可回收的Zhuque-3火箭。如果Zhuque-2E的问题源于其第二阶段设计,可能会延迟新火箭的准备时间,进而影响蓝箭在中国商业发射市场的竞争力。此外,蓝箭还刚刚开始在上海科技创新中心申请IPO,延误可能会削弱投资者信心。
9. Chinese President Xi Jinping arrives in Tibet for landmark anniversary
中文标题:中国主席习近平抵达西藏庆祝重要周年纪念活动
内容摘要:习近平于周三抵达西藏,参加庆祝西藏自治区成立60周年的活动,这是他担任中国国家主席以来首次出席此类十年一度的盛典。西藏自治区成立于1965年,是中国五个少数民族地区之一。习近平的访藏被视为对该地区重要性的认可,并展示了中国共产党对西藏工作的高度重视。 此次周年庆典的时机敏感,因为西藏流亡精神领袖达赖喇嘛上个月宣布的继任计划引发了北京的强烈反对,称其需遵循中国法律和传统。这一事态发展可能会加剧与中国政府的紧张关系。 在迎接习近平的场面中,西藏居民用传统礼节欢迎他,挥舞青藏特色的哈达和中国国旗。在会晤地区官员和宗教领袖时,习近平强调要推动高质量发展、环境保护和文化保护。尽管西藏经济在近年来取得显著成就,但西方对中国政府对西藏的治理措施提出批评,认为限制了宗教与文化的表达。
10. FAW, China’s oldest carmaker, eyes 10% of Leapmotor to boost stake in EV surge
中文标题:中国最古老的汽车制造商一汽瞄准乐普汽车10%的股份,借机在电动汽车热潮中提升股权
内容摘要:中国最古老的汽车制造商一汽集团计划收购电动车制造商Leapmotor的10%股份,此举旨在提高其在电动车市场的竞争力。投资将促进双方共同开发新车型、优化供应链管理及扩大海外市场。消息人士透露,两家公司正在就投资协议的最后细节进行协调,目的是控制成本并增强研发能力。此次交易使一汽成为中国首家持有电动车初创企业股份的国有车企。在电动车销量大幅增长的背景下,此举被认为能够推动更多国有企业与新兴电动车公司展开合作。Leapmotor自2015年成立以来表现突出,2023年10月获得Stellantis的16亿美元投资,显示出其在市场中的强劲走势。FAW则在历史上曾是中国汽车工业的象征,现正积极推进绿色和智能化发展。
11. ‘Still believe in love’: China tycoon whose divorce gripped public, remarries ex-classmate
中文标题:“仍然相信爱情”:中国富豪因离婚备受关注,娶回昔日同学
内容摘要:中国一位知名电子商务富豪李国庆,经历了六年的离婚争斗后,于2023年8月16日与同龄的前同学张丹红再婚。此次婚礼以“依然相信爱情”为主题,受到广泛赞扬。李国庆是当当网的联合创始人,曾与前妻于1996年结婚,但因离婚纠纷备受媒体关注。离婚过程中,双方互相指责,最终在2025年6月达成和解,前妻获得了当当网的完全控制权。 李国庆与张丹红的关系始于离婚后,张是德中混血经济记者,曾在德意志之声工作,两人在北大相识并深感婚姻的真谛。婚礼邀请嘉宾捐款支持贫困学校,体现了他们对社会责任的关注。李国庆的再婚选择打破了富豪普遍偏好年轻伴侣的刻板印象,获得了“纯爱”的美誉。许多人认为,成功男性的婚姻观应更多关注智力和精神契合,而非仅限于年龄与财富。
12. Why has China sent research vessels to Scarborough Shoal after a collision?
中文标题:中国为什么在碰撞后向黄岩岛派遣研究船?
内容摘要:近期,两艘中国研究船在斯卡伯勒浅滩附近活动,同时菲律宾海岸警卫队也在该地区巡逻。这一海域长期以来是中菲之间的争议焦点。中国自2012年实际控制该区后,菲律宾声称该区域属于其200海里专属经济区。上周,一艘中国海警船与中国海军驱逐舰与菲律宾海警船发生碰撞,导致菲律宾船只严重受损。 美国作为菲律宾的盟友,近期派遣导弹驱逐舰到该水域进行“航行自由”行动,遭到中国批评为“挑衅”。分析认为,中国派遣研究船可能表明其考虑在该地区使用水下无人机等设备,以提升情报收集和执法能力。尽管有增强存在的需求,中国预计不会立即进行填海造地,以免违反与东盟在南海行为宣言中的承诺。研究船的活动被视为加强对该区域环境和地形了解的正常举措。
13. Chinese jeweller Laopu Gold shines as earnings nearly triple on sales bump at home, abroad
中文标题:中国珠宝商老铺黄金因国内外销售增长,盈利几乎增长三倍,闪耀夺目。
内容摘要:中国珠宝商Laopu Gold在2023年上半年业绩大幅增长,净利润同比飙升290.6%,达到23.5亿元人民币(约合3.27亿美元),收入增长251%至124亿元人民币。公司成功归功于其高端市场定位,77.3%的顾客还会购买路易威登和卡地亚等国际奢侈品牌。尽管黄金价格上涨,Laopu的毛利率依然提高,因为该公司采用较为固定的定价策略,每年仅调整两到三次。 上半年,Laopu的海外收入增长了455%,达到16亿元人民币,而国内销售增长233%,达108亿元人民币。公司在亚洲主要城市的高档购物中心设立41家零售店,并在香港和新加坡扩展业务。分析师预计,随着夏季假期的到来,客户流量将增加,第二季度的收入和净利润有望继续增长。Laopu宣布每股派息9.59元,股价也在持续上涨。
14. China expands regulatory arsenal in fight against solar industry price wars
中文标题:中国在应对太阳能行业价格战中扩大监管工具箱
内容摘要:中国政府针对太阳能行业的价格战采取了更强硬的监管措施。北京召开了由企业和监管机构高层参与的座谈会,旨在打击过度竞争,并加强对新项目投资的监管,计划通过市场化和法治手段淘汰落后产能。工业和信息化部表示,将重点改进价格监测和产品定价机制,打击违法行为,如低于成本销售和虚假广告。同时,将采取措施确保产品质量,打击虚假性能评级和侵权行为,推动行业自律和公平竞争。此次会议吸引了更多监管机构参加,以确保整个太阳能产业链的健康可持续发展。尽管如此,仍有声音指出,太阳能模块价格在座谈会后持续低于成本,彰显出行业内竞争的激烈情况。
15. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Kabul for 3-way talks as Afghan-Pakistan tensions ease
中文标题:中国外长王毅在喀布尔进行三方会谈,阿富汗与巴基斯坦的紧张局势缓解
内容摘要:中国外交部长王毅最近访问喀布尔,与阿富汗和巴基斯坦的外长举行会谈,这是自2022年首次意外访问以来的首次此行。这次三方会谈着重讨论反恐和将中国-巴基斯坦经济走廊(CPEC)拓展至阿富汗的问题,标志着喀布尔与伊斯兰堡间的关系逐渐改善。 在过去几个月中,阿富汗与巴基斯坦之间的贸易和安全交流不断加深,尤其是对来自巴基斯坦的反政府武装组织塔利班的庇护问题的关注。尽管中巴两国尚未正式承认塔利班政权,但北京在背后充当了促进者的角色。在这次会议上,王毅重申了加强三国间执法和安全合作的必要性,强调了共同抵御外部干涉的重要性。 此外,王毅还访问印度,提升与新德里的合作关系。此次中巴阿间的关系改善引发了印度的担忧,尤其是在CPEC扩展问题上。
16. After Shaolin Temple scandal, China’s Buddhists urged to obey the law and pay taxes
中文标题:在少林寺丑闻之后,中国佛教徒被敦促遵守法律并缴纳税款
内容摘要:中国佛教协会近日对前少林寺住持释永信发出警告,强调佛教信徒应遵守法律、爱国并纳税。释永信因涉嫌挪用项目资金及寺庙资产,正在面临刑事调查,其行为已损害了中国佛教界的声誉。协会呼吁佛教 clergy,特别是领导人物,加强法治意识,警惕法律红线,并指出不应背叛国家、诽谤领导、逃税或违法。 释永信因将拥有1500年历史的少林寺转型为全球品牌而被称为“CEO和尚”,但也因过度商业化受到批评。新任住持释延乐则被认为与前任截然不同,他在任职期间坚持佛教传统,努力保留佛教文化。目前,少林寺已停止接受游客捐款,并取消了香火费,旨在改善寺庙管理和信仰环境。
17. China’s EV industry expands ‘going global’ strategy, latest Tesla Model 3: 7 EV reads
中文标题:中国电动车产业拓展“走出去”战略,特斯拉最新Model 3:七篇电动车阅读文章
内容摘要:中国电动车(EV)产业正积极向国际市场拓展,这是政府希望构建海外经济帝国的策略,旨在绕过国内的激烈竞争。特斯拉在此背景下推出了更长续航的Model 3,以争夺在国内高端市场的份额。尽管如此,最近EV在中国大陆的销售遇到瓶颈,部分车企开始遵循北京的号召,减少折扣,专注于盈利。与此同时,国内车企如比亚迪已在香港市场推出价格具有竞争力的新车型,迅速成为当地的市场领导者,超越了特斯拉。同时,吉利汽车在销量上升的情况下仍报告上半年利润下降,显示出市场的复杂性。此外,宁德时代在国内主要锂矿生产暂停,反映出北京对电池行业过剩产能的强硬态度。
18. China-India talks: Narendra Modi praises ‘stable, predictable, constructive ties’
中文标题:中印会谈:纳伦德拉·莫迪称赞“稳定、可预测、建设性的关系”
内容摘要:中国外交部长王毅近日在新德里与印度总理莫迪会谈,强调两国对话机制的恢复,促进了双边关系的改善。王毅与印度国家安全顾问达成共识,定期管理和控制边界,以维护边境地区的和平,并在条件允许时推进划界谈判。莫迪称赞两国关系的"稳定、可预测和建设性进展",认为这将对区域及全球和平与繁荣产生重要贡献。 双方同意建立专家组,以推动边界划定的早期成果,并设立应对边界问题的总体机制,补充现有的西部地区框架。尽管2020年拉达克地区的冲突导致双边关系紧张,但近期官方互访增多、限制有所放松。王毅强调,两国应视对方为伙伴,以稳妥的方式处理分歧,确保边界争端不影响更广泛的双边关系。此外,王毅提到在全球经济动荡中需要加强互利合作,共同应对挑战。
19. Ex-China diver becomes merman performer, creates stunning underwater routines with artistry
中文标题:前中国跳水运动员成为美人鱼表演者,创作令人惊叹的水下艺术表演
内容摘要:前中国职业跳水运动员肖松毅(22岁),因受伤退役后转行成为海洋馆的人鱼表演者。他在武汉的海洋馆中创造出结合力量与艺术的水下舞蹈 routines,迅速走红。尽管初入此行业面临诸多挑战,他通过自学民族与古典舞蹈,不断提升自己的表演技巧,目前已完成300至500场表演。 肖松毅在学校和演出之间忙碌,不时需要早起赶往其他城市。夏季时,他的月收入可达1万元人民币,商演每日薪资为2500元。他的表演受到游客热捧,尤其吸引了许多女性观众和儿童,引发了他们对童话的幻想。 肖松毅致力于在表演中展现男性柔情,认为男性人鱼的表演能为观众带来新鲜感和多样性。他的自律与体态也赢得了网络上的广泛赞誉。
20. How the Philippines forced China to adjust historic mission to moon’s far side
中文标题:《菲律宾如何迫使中国调整其月球背面历史使命》
内容摘要:中国的探月工程在实施嫦娥六号任务时,做出了重要的调整,以避免与菲律宾在南海的政治摩擦。嫦娥六号于2024年5月发射,从月球背面采集样本并于次月返回。根据最近发表的研究论文,工程师们调整了火箭的发射轨迹并延迟了火箭头部的分离,以将坠落的残骸区域移至远离菲律宾海域的位置,以应对菲律宾对中国火箭残骸落入其附近海域的持续投诉。这种改动使得坠毁区域远离了菲律宾所主张的管辖水域。此外,嫦娥六号的轨道也经过优化,以确保护航安全并避免经过某西亚国家的空域。虽然任务过程中有多处技术复杂的调整,但嫦娥六号成功地回收了近2公斤的月球样本,为未来的月球科学研究奠定了基础。
21. Australia, Philippines stage largest-ever drills: ‘denial of China’s aggression’
中文标题:澳大利亚和菲律宾进行史上最大规模演习:‘对中国侵略的拒绝’
内容摘要:澳大利亚与菲律宾于2025年进行史上最大规模的联合军事演习——“阿龙演习”,涉及3600多名士兵,地点近南海争议水域的仁爱礁。这次演习包括实弹演练、两栖登陆、空中支援和特种部队演练,旨在强化两国的防务合作,抵制中国在印太地区的扩张。演习吸引了来自美国、加拿大、日韩等国的观察员,反映出澳大利亚在维护地区安全方面的承诺。分析人士指出,这种合作是对中国行为的直接响应,特别是在南海日益紧张的局势中。与此同时,澳大利亚与菲律宾的关系在2023年提升至战略伙伴关系,涉及防御、海洋安全等多个领域。此次演习不仅强调了双方的军事协同,还为菲律宾进一步加强与其他国家的外交关系提供了平台。
22. China says it will highlight joint combat groups in next month’s military parade
中文标题:中国表示将在下个月的军事阅兵中重点展示联合作战部队
内容摘要:中国将在下个月的抗战胜利日阅兵式上展示人民解放军的联合作战能力,这是十年来首次举办。阅兵将聚焦由陆军、海军、空军及导弹防御等组成的“战斗导向联合编队”。中央军委联合 Staff Department 副主任吴泽克表示,9月3日在天安门广场飞行的飞机将以“模块化”和“系统化”形成编队,参与阅兵的多种先进军事装备将首次公开亮相。 自2015年习近平主席启动重大改革以来,解放军的指挥结构持续优化,已建立五大战区以促进各军种间的联合行动。阅兵活动预计将持续70分钟,并包括抗日战争歌曲的演唱。此外,已有多位外国领导人确认出席此次活动。北京目前正全力准备,社交媒体上流出包括高超音速反舰导弹和无人机在内的高端武器装备画面。
23. From mining to tourism, space ambitions of China’s Guangdong rival those of Elon Musk
中文标题:从采矿到旅游,中国广东的太空雄心与埃隆·马斯克不相上下
内容摘要:中国南方广东省近期宣布将进军商业航天领域,着重支持低轨道卫星星座系统的建设及其在太空矿业和旅游等未来产业中的应用。广东省政府发布政策,承诺对相关企业提供财政和政策支持,促使其扩大卫星应用产业。此外,广东还计划利用政府采购促进关键创新产品的发展,并鼓励地方政府给予奖励。 作为三年发展计划的一部分,广东将推动企业在卫星导航和遥感领域开展国际业务。尽管北京和上海已经在国家网络建设方面领先,广东作为中国最大的省级经济体,尚未培养出本土的卫星星座系统领军企业。 中国正在加速建设可与埃隆·马斯克的Starlink相媲美的卫星星座系统,近期的火箭发射次数显著增加,表明中国进入了快速建设阶段。此外,尽管面临挑战,如可重复使用火箭的试验发射失败,广东的努力和政策支持可能成为推动商业航天发展的重要力量。
24. India-China thaw: rare earths, border headway as Trump turns up tariff heat
中文标题:印度-中国关系解冻:稀土问题与边界进展,特朗普加大关税压力
内容摘要:印度与中国近期在外交方面取得重要进展,部分原因是受到美国加征关税压力的影响。印度同意中国关于缓解边境紧张关系的提议,并计划恢复直 flights与商业联系,特别是在稀土等战略领域探索贸易合作。此外,双方将成立专家小组,推动有争议地区的边界划定问题,显示出新德里在这一问题上的立场变化。 在加强双边贸易和投资流动的承诺中,中国还提前批准了稀土出口,配合印度总理莫迪即将出访中国。分析人士指出,尽管两国间仍存在深厚的互不信任,此次接触体现出双方在全球经济格局日益变化的背景下,寻求加强经济联系的务实尝试。 然而,专家们也警告道,尽管近期的外交动向带来了一丝和解的迹象,但两国之间依然存在重大挑战,彼此的信任度低,加之地缘政治因素,未来关系仍然面临不确定性。
25. As the US and China compete, Asean could play arbiter
中文标题:随着美国和中国竞争,东盟可能充当仲裁者
内容摘要:随着东盟(ASEAN)庆祝其58周年,该组织正处于国际秩序转型的关键时刻。美国和中国之间的竞争日益加剧,两国都认为历史在其一边。然而,东南亚国家并不完全依赖于任一方,选择保持战略自主。当前国际事务的规则多元化,东盟具备促进两大国达成共识的能力,成为非正式的调解者。通过增强内部团结和经济整合,东盟可以提升其在国际关系中的地位。文章指出,印度尼西亚作为东盟的事实领导者,体现了该组织的多样性,其政治和经济发展可为东盟复兴提供支撑。东盟在当前的国际环境中拥有更多选择空间,小国及中等国家可根据自身需求更灵活地选择其影响力来源。在这种情况下,东盟的战略一致性显得尤为重要,以便在大国竞争中有效发声。
26. ‘Beautiful’ gun-toting China tactical police officer goes viral after hitting 10 bullseyes
中文标题:“美丽”的持枪中国特警因射中10个靶心而走红网络
内容摘要:一名26岁的中国女警英伟敏因其出色的射击技巧而走红网络。在一段训练视频中,她成功地打中了所有10个靶心,展现了她冷静的风度和卓越的射击能力。英伟敏从小就梦想成为警察,2017年进入浙江警察学院,2021年毕业后积极参与前线的警务工作。她在破解复杂的跨境电商诈骗案件中发挥了重要作用,逮捕了嫌疑人并保存了重要证据。尽管因射击和侦查能力而受到广泛赞誉,英伟敏仍保持谦逊,认为应该主动接近群众,提升公众的反诈骗意识。她还参与创作反诈骗宣传剧,引发了网友们的热烈讨论和称赞。网友们对她的评价十分高,认为她既美丽又英勇,是一位了不起的女警。
27. Is China poised to lead the world with combat-ready ‘loyal wingman’ FH-97 stealth drone?
中文标题:中国是否准备凭借作战准备的“忠诚战翼”FH-97隐形无人机引领全球?
内容摘要:中国人民解放军计划在九月的胜利日阅兵中展示新型隐形攻击无人机FH-97。该机被视为中国首款可战斗的隐形无人机,能够与有人驾驶战机协同作战。近日,网络上流出的一些排练照片显示FH-97正在参与阅兵排练,预计将于9月3日的阅兵中首次亮相。这将使中国成为首个宣布部署完全作战忠诚副翼无人机的国家。FH-97由中国航天科技集团的子公司开发,设计初衷是作为有人机的智能助手,能提供传感器功能并储存弹药。据悉,FH-97可能还有更新型号在开发中。此无人机的成功展示,体现了中国在无人作战航空器领域的进步,并将增强其空中作战能力。
For China and the Middle East, a Space Silk Road is written in the stars
https://www.scmp.com/opinion/china-opinion/article/3322274/china-and-middle-east-space-silk-road-written-stars?utm_source=rss_feedThe Silk Road once connected China and the Arab world, stretching from Cordoba to Canton. The network not only fostered trade, but also cultural and intellectual exchange. Today, as humanity stands on the brink of a new age of exploration, this time of the cosmos, the stage is set to revive this historic partnership.
For Arab countries, especially the Gulf states, space exploration represents a way to diversify their economy and reinvent their image. They are investing billions in space exploration in a global space industry projected to be worth more than US$1 trillion by 2040.
This ambition is nothing new. The Arab space odyssey can be traced back to the Cold War. In 1985, a Saudi prince, flying aboard an American spacecraft, beat his Soviet-backed Syrian counterpart by two years and secured his place in history as the first Arab in space.
Yet it was the 21st century which would see Arab countries’ ambition to reach the stars really take flight. In 2023, Saudi Arabia achieved another landmark when a Saudi became the first Arab woman to visit the International Space Station (ISS). In 2020, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) made history when it became the first Arab country to reach Mars’ orbit.
Other Arab countries have also set their sights on space. Some have established space agencies while others are launching satellites into orbit or training astronauts.
Traditionally reliant on the United States in space exploration, Arab countries have increasingly turned to China as Arab-US relations soured over the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. For China, that Arab countries are “looking east” aligns with its interests, making this win-win cooperation a partnership written in the stars.
First, as space technology has both civilian and military applications, the US is wary of the dual-use potential given its commitment to preserve Israel’s military edge in the region. In contrast, China offers Arab countries access to its advanced technologies with no strings attached.
China dismisses the American narrative of a new space race as a Cold War mentality. Beijing’s philosophy is completely different, believing space technology should benefit people all around the world, not just a privileged few.
This is not just rhetoric. While the US has barred Nasa from working with China, the Tiangong space station welcomes foreign astronauts with open arms. The US-led Artemis Accords – which some critics argue favour the early birds who join up – stand in stark contrast with China’s emphasis on inclusive space governance.
For example, in 2023, China and Egypt jointly developed the MisrSat-2 satellite, with Egyptian scientists taking part throughout, from assembly and integration to testing. This level of technology transfer would have been unimaginable with Western partners, yet it is exactly what Arab countries need to fast track their progress in the new age of discovery.
In return, China takes one small step towards realising its vision of a community with a shared future for mankind, and one giant leap towards establishing the “Space Silk Road”. Where camels and dhows once traversed deserts and seas, rockets now fly above the skies. Yet the essence remains the same: the exchange of ideas, mutual benefit and the pursuit of a brighter future for all.
Second, China is the only competitor to the US in space. While China’s space programme still lags behind, it has caught up in some areas and even taken the lead in others. China is the only country besides the US to have landed and operated a rover on Mars, its Tiangong space station is the only alternative to the ageing ISS, and most notably, it is the only country to have landed a spacecraft on the far side of moon.
As US-Arab relations are once again put to the test, China stands as the only viable alternative. In exchange, China gains access to the lucrative Arab market and taps into Gulf countries’ many sovereign investment funds.
For example, in 2023, a delegation from the Saudi Space Agency held meetings with private Chinese companies to discuss the joint development of satellites and spacecraft. Inspired by SpaceX’s success, China has been encouraging private companies to participate in space exploration. With Arab countries in these private companies, China’s space industry as a whole stands to benefit.
The US, however, continues to throw up obstacles.
After the Rashid-1 rover crash-landed on the moon in 2023, the UAE decided to partner with China for its second attempt: the plan is for the Rashid-2 rover to hitch a ride aboard China’s Chang’e-7 mission next year. But the plan reportedly ran into an American roadblock – the International Traffic in Arms Regulations.
These American export control rules, meant to prevent US technology from falling into certain hands, are now hindering international cooperation. Since the Emirati rover would contain American components, there were concerns in the US that Chinese engineers could reverse-engineer the technology. It left the UAE with a difficult choice: to redesign the rover to exclude American components or end the collaboration with China.
But when one door closes, another opens. An outdated Cold War mentality cannot derail China-Arab space cooperation indefinitely. Space is the common heritage of humanity. Should any country choose competition over cooperation, they will find themselves trapped behind an imaginary iron curtain of their making.
Meanwhile, China and Arab countries will continue to push forward – light years ahead, their achievements will prove that humanity does not need to succumb to another space race and, instead, can enjoy a space renaissance built on collective progress.
Brazil seeks China’s support to salvage maritime emissions pact opposed by Trump
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy/article/3322577/brazil-seeks-chinas-support-salvage-maritime-emissions-pact-opposed-trump?utm_source=rss_feedBrazil is banking on China to support a landmark UN effort to cut greenhouse gas emissions generated by international shipping as governments prepare for a decisive October vote on the plan.
One of the staunchest supporters of the International Maritime Organisation’s proposed Net-Zero Framework, Brasilia is waiting for China to clarify its position on implementation of the plan, Ports and Airports Minister Sílvio Filho told reporters on Wednesday.
The situation is setting up a stand-off with the administration of US President Donald Trump, which generally opposes any environmental mandates.
The framework will require large ocean-going vessels that do not meet fuel-efficiency standards to pay for their carbon emissions starting in 2027.
Ships over the base-level target will be charged US$380 per tonne of greenhouse gases, measured in carbon dioxide equivalent, while those missing the stricter Direct Compliance target will pay US$100 per tonne.
Revenue from the system will be used to reward the application of cleaner fuels and support a “just transition”, helping developing countries adopt new green technologies.
It still needs formal adoption at an extraordinary IMO session set for October. If approved, companies would have to meet the full emissions requirements starting in 2028.
Filho said Brazil fully supports the framework. He outlined Brazil’s position during a Brazilian Foreign Press Association media briefing on US opposition to the climate initiative.
Negotiated in London, the IMO framework was approved by 63 countries, including Brazil, China and the European Union, while 16 opposed and 24 abstained.
The United States rejected the proposal outright, while China shifted course and supported it after years of resisting tougher climate measures.
The US has called the plan a “global carbon tax on Americans” that would raise energy and transport costs while benefiting competitors such as China. US officials have threatened retaliation against countries that back the deal, including possible tariffs and visa restrictions.
With the US opposing the framework, Filho said that Brazil is looking to other major players for support and that Chinese Ambassador to Brazil Zhu Qingqiao will meet Brazilian officials next week to “bring alternatives” and give the ministry a clearer position on implementation of the IMO agreement.
“We are working to reach consensus in October. Brazil is favourable; we are supporting this understanding,” Filho told reporters. “We expect China’s collaboration to also move this agreement forward.”
China has historically resisted ambitious climate measures at the IMO. For years it opposed strict deadlines such as achieving net-zero emissions “by 2050”, as specified in the agreement, preferring looser language like “around mid-century”.
It rejected proposals for a carbon tax on shipping, arguing such a tax would disproportionately burden developing nations and shift responsibility for climate actions away from richer countries.
Beijing has also criticised a “well-to-wake” method of counting fuel emissions, which takes into account the full life cycle of a fuel, from production and transport to its use on board a ship. Instead, China favoured a narrower “tank-to-wake” approach that only measures what comes out of a ship’s exhaust.
But in April, during fractious negotiations in London, China shifted course and voted in favour of the Net-Zero Framework.
At the same event on Wednesday, Anderson Pomini, head of the Santos Port Authority, said the difference between Washington and Beijing could already be seen on the ground.
Located in São Paulo state, Santos is home to Latin America’s largest port and the main gateway for Brazilian agricultural exports, such as soybeans, sugar and meat to China.
Pomini said that while the US has threatened retaliation, Chinese companies investing in Santos have complied with local sustainability rules.
He pointed to COFCO, a Chinese agribusiness firm building a nearly US$1 billion terminal in the port, which has joined an environmental programme and financed the recovery of degraded land for public use.
“One country imposes itself through threats of retaliation, while the other, although it raises complaints, adapts,” Pomini said, referring to Washington’s position.
“Meanwhile, the Chinese are adapting here in the Port of Santos to our rules that include environmental preservation,” he added.
He added that cooperation with Chinese firms at Santos went beyond infrastructure. The companies, he said, had signed onto the port’s sustainability certification effort, which encourages environmental best practices, and have contributed to community projects such as the redevelopment of a waterfront park.
Mathematician Zhang Yitang says he left US for China due to political climate
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3322381/mathematician-zhang-yitang-says-he-left-us-china-due-political-climate?utm_source=rss_feedMathematician Zhang Yitang, who joined Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou from California in June, has called the wave of Chinese researchers exiting the US a “positive trend”.
Zhang, known for his prime number research, told Phoenix TV, a partially state-owned broadcaster, in a programme aired on Monday that he had been thinking about returning to the mainland “in light of recent international political issues that have strained China-US relations”.
The Shanghai native, 70, is now a full professor at Sun Yat-sen’s newly established Institute of Advanced Studies Hong Kong. He left the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he taught mathematics, to work and live in the Greater Bay Area.
“Many Chinese scholars and professors in the US have already returned, and many others are still considering it,” Zhang said. “I think this is a positive trend.”
“My field is not greatly affected, but for researchers in computers, chips or anything related to the military industry, they need to be especially careful,” he warned. “The US is very strict about these areas now.”
Zhang said that one advantage of studying mathematics, especially theoretical mathematics, was not having to be tied to a particular place.
“For those in experimental science or experimental physics, without a laboratory or equipment, everything is off the table,” he added.
“The [Donald] Trump administration recently cut funding for many laboratory research programmes, which has left those in fields like biology in a tough situation.”
Zhang said he decided to join Sun Yat-sen in March after receiving several invitations from universities across China.
“The university planned for my return very meticulously. They waited until I was on the plane and had flown out of US airspace before announcing my appointment.
“When I landed in Guangzhou, a customs officer came on board to greet us. I was really touched,” he recalled. “It felt like the country valued and respected me highly.”
Zhang said he could continue his research in China, adding that he did “not want to be like a yellow fallen leaf, settling on the ground as if it were the end”.
The number theorist achieved acclaim in 2013 when he solved one of mathematics’ oldest problems: the twin primes conjecture.
The conjecture proposes that there are infinitely many pairs of prime numbers that differ by two. Zhang’s proof was the first to show that infinitely many prime pairs exist with a gap of less than 70 million.
His proof was significant because it established a finite upper limit for the gaps between infinitely many prime pairs, opening a path to further narrowing that distance, potentially all the way down to two.
Zhang has also made notable progress in solving the Landau–Siegel zeros conjecture, a key problem linked to the Riemann hypothesis, an unsolved problem in mathematics that concerns the distribution of prime numbers.
“At that time, a conference held in the western US to discuss this conjecture was attended by experts from around the world,” Zhang said of his 2013 proof. “I was not there. Their conclusion was that the problem was impossible to solve.”
“When I learned why they could not solve it, I realised that this might be my strength. In the end, I managed to solve it. In academia, it is best to maintain a sense of freshness and think about areas that others have not considered,” he added.
“Science is becoming increasingly difficult, and the time and cycles needed are growing longer. I do not worry about age – whether you are 30 or 40 – you just need to keep moving forward.”
After graduating from Purdue University with a PhD in 1991, Zhang struggled to find an academic position in the United States without a recommendation letter and worked as an accountant in a fast-food restaurant for seven years.
“Around 1991, when the Soviet Union collapsed, the Americans, quite cleverly, recruited many of the Soviet Union’s renowned mathematicians and physicists to the US,” he said. “Finding a job in the US was incredibly difficult for PhD graduates in those few years.”
“I did not give up because I felt that I could continue to research mathematics, which can be done anywhere,” Zhang added.
“Forty years later, I am back to my starting point, working in and serving my country.”
China turns up oil tap from Russia as purchases of US crude remain suspended in July
https://www.scmp.com/economy/global-economy/article/3322541/china-turns-oil-tap-russia-purchases-us-crude-remain-suspended-july?utm_source=rss_feedChina’s crude oil imports remained robust in July, fuelled by higher Russian shipments, while China’s purchases from the US remained suspended for a second straight month.
The latest customs data shows that the volume of inbound crude oil reached 47.2 million tonnes in July, up 11.5 per cent from a year earlier.
China purchased 8.71 million tonnes of crude oil from Russia, making it the top source of China’s crude imports last month, according to the official data. This marked a year-on-year increase of 16.8 per cent, with its northern neighbour supplying nearly a fifth of crude imports. Meanwhile, China’s last import of crude oil from the US was in May.
China also imported 7.47 million tonnes of crude oil from Saudi Arabia in July – a year-on-year rise of 16.6 per cent. Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Malaysia were China’s other top crude oil suppliers last month.
Over the first seven months of the year, China imported 326.6 million tonnes of crude, up 2.8 per cent from the same period in 2024. Russia accounted for 17.7 per cent of this year’s total.
Despite sweeping Western sanctions on Moscow, China has deepened energy trade with Russia amid their “no-limits” partnership declared in 2022. Russia has topped China’s crude oil imports in recent months.
Last year, Russia shipped a record 108.5 million tonnes to China, accounting for 19.6 per cent of its total crude imports and cementing Russia’s role as one of China’s top suppliers.
Even though the administration of US President Donald Trump has signalled possible tariffs on China as punishment for Beijing buying Russian oil, after having slapped a 25 per cent punitive levy on India over its continued purchases of Russian oil, Washington has so far stopped short of imposing secondary sanctions on Beijing.
US Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent on Tuesday defended that stance, arguing that China’s oil supply was more diversified than India’s, and that Beijing had not engaged in the kind of “arbitrage” seen by New Delhi.
He noted that China’s share of Russian crude had edged up to 16 per cent from about 13 per cent before the war in Ukraine, while India’s intake had soared from less than 1 per cent to as much as 42 per cent over the same period.
“So, this is a completely different thing,” Bessent told CNBC. “India is just profiteering. They are reselling.”
Xu Tianchen, senior China economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit, said the ramping up of oil imports was likely part of a stockpiling drive. China’s oil consumption is expected to peak in 2027, the International Energy Agency said in June.
“The difference between China and India is that China has the ability to cause pain to the US, while India does not,” Xu said. “Think about China responding to US tariffs by reimposing strict export controls on rare earths – is that something that the US can afford?
“It’s quite possible that China will continue to cease US oil imports. First, China has never relied on US oil. Second, withholding US oil purchases is probably a bargaining chip for China that could potentially become part of a broader deal between the US and China.
“In such a deal, China could resume oil imports in exchange for the US allowing more technology exports to China. But the deal would require a lot of political push from both countries, so let’s see how it goes.”
Last week, the US extended its tariff truce with China until November 10, keeping the current 10 per cent “reciprocal” tariff on Chinese imports in place until then.
Bessent noted how the Trump administration was “very happy” with the arrangement, calling China “the biggest revenue line in the tariff income”.
“We had put some countermeasures on them that we’ve taken off,” Bessent told Fox News. “So, I think right now the status quo is working pretty well.”
Trump tariffs spark India-China reset, Chinese city’s biotech dream: SCMP daily highlights
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/article/3322549/trump-tariffs-spark-india-china-reset-chinese-citys-biotech-dream-scmp-daily-highlights?utm_source=rss_feedCatch up on some of SCMP’s biggest China stories of the day. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider .
The world’s two most-populous countries made significant progress on the diplomatic front recently, and those championing such moves may have Washington to thank.
South China’s Guangdong province has announced its ambition to join the country’s race to expand its commercial space sector, promising financial and policy support for companies wanting to build low-orbit satellite constellation systems and promote their application in futuristic industries including space mining and space tourism.
Could a city best known for its classical gardens and ancient canals emerge as China’s answer to Boston – the global epicentre of biotechnology innovation?
China has updated the 2025 edition of its guide to living in China for expatriates, which addresses how to travel to or work in the country legally as a foreign national. Here, we attempt to break down the 22-page document to provide the most salient details, like how to apply for a residence permit, pay income tax and handle payments and benefits under the country’s social insurance.
The US Department of Homeland Security announced on Tuesday it is designating five new Chinese industry sectors, including copper, lithium and steel, for “high priority” enforcement under a human rights law restricting imports from China’s Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.
The FH-97, a single-engine, ground-attack uncrewed aircraft, has been described as potentially China’s first combat-ready stealth drone, capable of coordinated aerial warfare alongside crewed jets.
Chinese space engineers made small but deliberate changes to last year’s historic sample retrieval mission to the far side of the moon to avoid political friction in the South China Sea, according to a new paper.
Philippines assures China of restraint after ship clashes – will tensions ease?
https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/politics/article/3322558/philippines-assures-china-restraint-after-ship-clashes-will-tensions-ease?utm_source=rss_feedMaritime tensions between the Philippines and China have entered what analysts describe as a risky and potentially volatile phase after an accidental collision between two Chinese vessels near Scarborough Shoal, one of the most contested features in the South China Sea.
The rare mishap involving the vessels from the Chinese coastguard and navy during a high-speed chase of a Philippine coastguard ship has raised the risk of Beijing adopting a more aggressive posture as it seeks to save face, potentially leading to further tensions in the disputed waters, according to analysts.
Chester Cabalza, founding president of the International Development and Security Cooperation think tank in Manila, said the Chinese coastguard and navy could “launch a thousand assets from the sea, cyber, air, and ground to redeem its military image in the region” because of the “embarrassing collision”.
Nonetheless, officials in Manila reaffirmed the Philippines’ intention to exercise restraint while defending its sovereignty in response to the incident on August 11 and other subsequent maritime activities involving Chinese vessels.
“We will not be intimidated. And we will continue to have our presence felt to protect and defend sovereignty in our jurisdiction,” said Undersecretary Alexander Lopez, spokesman for the National Maritime Council, the government’s coordinating and policymaking body on maritime concerns, during a press briefing on Monday.
Borrowing a line from President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr, Lopez said: “Now, we do not intensify operations, we just respond.”
National Security Council spokesman Cornelio Valencia Jnr echoed the stance at the briefing, saying the Philippine coastguard – not the navy – would continue to lead operations in the West Philippine Sea.
“This is just to ensure the message to our Chinese friends that we are not escalating things,” he said.
The choice not to send in navy vessels was “not because we are cowards ... we are just being prudent”, Valencia Jnr added.
Lopez said: “Once you deploy a navy vessel, you come in warlike. Like you are taunting and challenging them. That is not the policy stance of our government. So we won’t provoke.”
Angelica Escalona, a foreign affairs department spokeswoman, said Manila had already conveyed “concern on the dangerous manoeuvres of the Chinese vessels” and was still assessing the appropriate diplomatic protest to file over the incident and China’s reported demand for compensation.
There had been 35 diplomatic protests filed with Beijing so far this year, said Escalona, adding that the Marcos administration hoped to address the latest incident in the next round of the bilateral consultative mechanism, in line with the president’s instructions “to manage the issue in a peaceful manner”.
Despite Manila’s restrained response, analysts believe the maritime row could worsen.
Lucio Blanco Pitlo, president of the Philippine Association for Chinese Studies, agreed that China would not let the incident pass without a robust response.
“The embarrassment from the collision of two Chinese government ships near Scarborough Shoal may compel China to double down in enforcing an exclusion zone around the contested shoal that would affect regular Philippine patrols and fishing activities in the rich fishing ground,” Pitlo said.
He added China might bolster its presence in the overlapping exclusive economic zones of Batanes and Taiwan “to dissuade Manila from interfering in the cross-Strait spat”.
Lopez confirmed that Chinese maritime presence in the area surged after the collision, with seven Chinese coastguard ships and 13 other vessels deployed near Scarborough Shoal over several days until August 14.
On August 15, one Chinese coastguard vessel, the CCG 3306, was seen loitering outside Manila Bay, according to Raymond Powell, director of Sea Light – a project by Stanford University’s Gordian Knot Centre for National Security Innovation.
“China seems determined to intercept and escort any Philippine ship moving in Scarborough Shoal’s general direction,” Powell said in a social media post.
On Wednesday, two Chinese research vessels – the Zhu Hai Yun and the Xiang Yang Hong 10 – were spotted near Scarborough by Sea Light, Powell said.
Defence and security analyst Collin Koh told This Week in Asia that China would be expected to tighten its maritime standard operating procedures after the collision. Chinese vessels could step up their interceptions of the Philippine coastguard’s operations to help fishermen around Scarborough Shoal or elsewhere in the West Philippine Sea while avoiding a repeat of the August 11 incident.
“In a gist, we shouldn’t expect the Chinese to back down just because of what happened on August 11. There’s too much at stake, and Beijing wouldn’t want to show weakness at this juncture,” said Koh, a senior fellow at the Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore.
Even as Manila’s officials stress that the Philippines will exercise restraint over the incident, the country is deepening defence cooperation with its allies.
Just days after the collision, the US deployed the guided-missile destroyer USS Higgins near Scarborough Shoal – a move that drew a protest by China.
On August 15, the Philippines launched joint amphibious and land drills with Australia. Australian destroyer HMAS Brisbane, Canadian frigate HMCS Ville de Quebec and Manila’s BRP Jose Rizal are expected to sail together in the South China Sea as a result of “flaring tensions” following the collision, according to Australian maritime security expert Jennifer Parker.
Several countries including South Korea, Japan and Australia have expressed their concern over the collision. In a speech at a forum in Jakarta on Wednesday, German Foreign Affairs Minister Johann Wadephul said: “China’s growing military assertiveness in the South China Sea not only threatens Asia’s security” but also “has a direct impact” on European security.
Commodore Roy Vincent Trinidad, a Philippine navy spokesman, said that more joint maritime activities were being planned involving “not only with the US but with other foreign partners, like-minded nations”.
Koh said a joint escort with allies such as the US might have “the potential of ameliorating China’s aggressive posture”.
“While we may expect Chinese forces to challenge the foreign presence alongside Philippine forces in these missions, I would find it hard to imagine them firing water cannon, for example.”
Nonetheless, Koh said there was a limit on how far allies could help the Philippines.
He cited the 1951 Mutual Defence Treaty, which calls for the US and the Philippines to help each other in case of an armed attack on either party in the Pacific, saying “political will” over its invocation could be a potential hurdle.
As for Manila’s non-US allies, “there are operational risks involved, and certainly these foreign allies and partners will prudently have to weigh them”, Koh said.
DJI faces new challenger as China’s robot vacuum maker Dreame hires drone experts
https://www.scmp.com/tech/article/3322510/dji-faces-new-challenger-chinas-robot-vacuum-maker-dreame-hires-drone-experts?utm_source=rss_feedDreame Technology, a Chinese brand known for its robot vacuum cleaners, is actively recruiting drone experts in what is seen as a move to compete with DJI, the dominant player in the market, amid growing competition from innovative hardware start-ups.
The company is advertising at least 10 positions – including drone navigation modelling algorithm engineer, drone test pilot, drone operations sales director and business director for the pan-aviation industry – according to job postings on the recruitment platform Boss Zhipin.
The roles will be based either in Dreame’s headquarters in Suzhou, a city in eastern Jiangsu province, or the Chinese drone hub of Shenzhen in southern Guangdong province, home to a vast drone supply chain network that supports DJI and other companies.
Dreame has already recruited talent from DJI and food delivery giant Meituan, according to news portal Sina, which first reported on the expansion. Meituan had been developing drones for its logistics service since 2017 and used them to deliver more than 200,000 orders in 2024, nearly doubling the volume from the previous year, the company said.
Dreame did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Wednesday.
China’s drone industry is attracting an increasing number of start-ups, as Beijing aims to develop a low-altitude economy. Antigravity, a drone brand incubated by leading action camera manufacturer Insta360, unveiled its first product last week: the A1 consumer drone featuring a built-in 8K 360-degree camera and pilot goggles.
While DJI maintains its position as the world’s largest vendor of consumer drones with an about 70 per cent market share, the rapid advancement of related technologies has empowered other hardware manufacturers to introduce their own drones.
Dreame founder Yu Hao is a graduate of Beijing’s prestigious Tsinghua University, where he majored in aerospace engineering and established the student association Skyworks, focused on aircraft research.
His company’s expansion appears to be a response to DJI’s recent foray into Dreame’s core market. Earlier this month, DJI launched its first robot vacuum cleaner Romo, said to be equipped with drone-level obstacle avoidance capabilities.
Worldwide shipments of robot cleaners reached 5.1 million units in the first quarter, a 12 per cent increase from a year earlier, according to market research firm IDC. China’s Roborock led the market with a 19 per cent global share, while Dreame ranked third with an 11 per cent share.
Did Zhuque-2E launch failure deal a blow to China’s Guo Wang satellite project?
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3322530/did-zhuque-2e-launch-failure-deal-blow-chinas-guo-wang-satellite-project?utm_source=rss_feedChina’s push to build broadband mega constellations could face further delays after one of the country’s leading privately developed rockets failed after take-off last week from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre in the Gobi Desert.
The Zhuque-2E – an upgraded version of the LandSpace rocket that saw the company beat SpaceX in the race to send the world’s first methane-fuelled projectile into orbit – experienced a flight anomaly after lift-off on Friday morning, the company said.
LandSpace apologised to its unnamed clients and pledged to conduct a transparent investigation into the failure of the rocket, which successfully placed two satellites on its maiden flight in November.
According to a Beijing-based space engineer who asked not to be named because of the issue’s sensitivity, the lost payload is widely believed to consist of four experimental satellites for Guo Wang, China’s state-backed network that aims to rival SpaceX’s Starlink.
The setback came a day after LandSpace – whose only active rocket is the Zhuque-2E – was named preferred bidder to launch orbiters for the Qianfan constellation, a Shanghai-backed initiative comparable in scale to Guo Wang’s planned nearly 13,000 satellites.
Both Guo Wang and Qianfan have stepped up launch efforts to meet their near-term deployment goals, but it is likely the Zhuque-2E failure may hit the Shanghai project harder, especially since it has not launched a single satellite since March.
Guo Wang, which aims to have 400 satellites in orbit by 2027, has so far launched 72, while Qianfan’s planned deployment of 648 by the end of this year remains stalled at 90.
However, as a national priority, Guo Wang has access to state-owned rockets, namely the LM-5B, 6A, 8, and 8A in the Long March family.
Adding to Qianfan’s potential woes, its second-ranked bidder, Space Pioneer, is struggling to recover from a high-profile mishap in June 2024 that stunned the industry and triggered tighter government safety rules.
The commercial operator said a structural problem was to blame for the unintentional lift-off of a Tianlong-3 during a static fire test, which ended with the rocket crashing and exploding in flames on the outskirts of the central Chinese city of Gongyi.
Friday’s failure could have deep consequences for LandSpace, which is at a pivotal moment both technically and financially, with the debut of its reusable Zhuque-3 expected in the autumn.
The Zhuque-2E is 47 metres (154 feet) tall and capable of lifting 6 tonnes into low Earth orbit or 4 tonnes to sun-synchronous orbit. Its first stage is powered by four Tianque-12A engines burning methane and liquid oxygen.
The rocket’s second stage shares a design heritage with the Zhuque-3. If the problem lies there, it could delay the new variant’s readiness at a time when several reusable rockets are competing to reach the launch pad this year.
A slip in schedule could weaken LandSpace’s standing in China’s fast-moving commercial launch race, with Space Pioneer, CAS Space and Galactic Energy all putting the finishing touches on their reusable contenders.
The setback has also come just weeks after LandSpace took the first steps in filing for a potential IPO on Shanghai’s tech-focused Star Market. Lingering doubts or delays could rattle investor confidence and complicate its fundraising ambitions.
Chinese President Xi Jinping arrives in Tibet for landmark anniversary
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/politics/article/3322542/chinese-president-xi-jinping-arrives-tibet-landmark-anniversary?utm_source=rss_feedXi Jinping has arrived in Tibet for events on Thursday to mark the 60th anniversary of the autonomous region, making him the first Chinese president to attend the once-a-decade activities.
He arrived in Lhasa at around noon on Wednesday accompanied by Wang Huning, China’s top political adviser and fourth-ranking official, and Cai Qi, the president’s chief of staff, according to state broadcaster CCTV.
The Tibet autonomous region was established in September 1965 and is one of five ethnic minority regions in the country. Yu Zhengsheng, then the fourth-ranking Politburo Standing Committee member, oversaw anniversary events in 2015.
Xi is also the only person to visit the region twice while president – his first trip was in 2021 for the 70th anniversary of the People’s Liberation Army’s entry into Tibet.
State news agency Xinhua said Xi’s attendance at the anniversary reflected the importance of the region.
“This is the first time in the history of the Communist Party and the country [that Xi has attended the event],” Xinhua said in an article on Wednesday. “It fully demonstrated the party leadership’s high regard for Tibet’s work and their sincere care for Tibetan cadres and the masses of all ethnic groups in Tibet.”
The anniversary comes at a tense time for the region’s spiritual leadership.
The Dalai Lama, Tibet’s 90-year-old spiritual leader in exile, announced his succession plan last month, maintaining that the Gaden Phodrang Trust, the office overseeing his reincarnation in India, has the sole authority to identify the next Dalai Lama.
Within hours, Beijing swiftly rejected his statement and insisted that the reincarnation must follow Chinese law and tradition, including the “golden urn” process, and be approved by the Chinese government.
The Dalai Lama’s new approach marks a clear break from tradition, observers say, likely escalating tensions with Beijing. China considers him a separatist, accusing him of inciting unrest in the 1980s and 2008. He denies these charges and advocates a “Middle Way” to maintain Tibetan culture and religious practices under Chinese sovereignty.
This year could also be an important time for China’s relations with India, which borders Tibet. China and India have overlapping territorial claims, which escalated into deadly clashes in 2020.
However, Beijing confirmed earlier this week that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will visit China at the end of the month for the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit, marking his first trip to China in seven years.
As Xi arrived in Lhasa, state media showed crowds lining the airport and streets, waving Tibetan ceremonial khatas, Chinese national flags and bouquets of flowers.
As Xi stepped onto the tarmac, he was greeted by residents holding bowls of barley. He picked up some barley and tossed it into the air, a traditional Tibetan blessing gesture, before waving to the crowd and walking along the red carpet, followed by Wang and Tibet party chief Wang Junzheng.
Xi’s route into Lhasa took him past a monument to the Sichuan-Tibet and Qinghai-Tibet highways, according to CCTV. The monument was built in 1984 to mark the 30th anniversary of the completion of the roadworks, which are of military and strategic importance in the region.
On Wednesday afternoon, Xi met various officials from the region, public security officers, and religious figures, including the Panchen Lama, the second-highest figure in Tibetan Buddhism, CCTV reported.
According to media reports in Tibet, rehearsals for the 60th anniversary activities began at 4pm on Sunday when the Potala Palace Square in central Lhasa was closed to visitors.
In a cover story on Tuesday, People’s Daily, the party’s mouthpiece, reviewed China’s decades of efforts to promote stability and development in Tibet.
It also referred to Xi’s visit to the region in 2021, when he described Tibet as being at a “new historical starting point” and emphasised the need for high-quality growth, environmental conservation, border security and cultural protection.
Despite dramatic economic achievements – such as lifting Tibet out of “dire poverty”, with all 74 impoverished counties and more than 628,000 registered poor people declared poverty-free by 2019 – Beijing’s administration of Tibet has long been a source of criticism from the West.
Critics and human rights organisations point to increased control over Tibetan Buddhism and cultural expression, restrictions on religious activities, and intensified security measures such as “grid policing”, which significantly limit travel and social interactions for Tibetans – accusations Beijing denies.
FAW, China’s oldest carmaker, eyes 10% of Leapmotor to boost stake in EV surge
https://www.scmp.com/business/china-business/article/3322527/faw-chinas-oldest-carmaker-eyes-10-leapmotor-boost-stake-ev-surge?utm_source=rss_feedFAW Group, mainland China’s oldest carmaker, plans to acquire a 10 per cent stake in Stellantis-backed electric vehicle (EV) maker Leapmotor, as the state-owned automotive giant looks to enhance its competitiveness in the segment, according to Cailian, a Shanghai-based financial news outlet.
The investment would pave the way for the two companies to jointly develop new EV models, fine-tune supply-chain management and bolster overseas expansion, the report said.
Leapmotor declined to comment, while FAW could not be immediately reached for comment on Wednesday.
Two sources with knowledge of FAW and Leapmotor’s thinking said the companies were putting the final touches on an investment agreement that would benefit both parties by controlling costs and boosting research and development.
The deal would make FAW China’s first state-owned carmaker to own a stake in an EV start-up.
“State-owned automotive giants lag behind their privately owned rivals in terms of electrification and new EV model development,” said Chen Jinzhu, CEO of consultancy Shanghai Mingliang Auto Service. “The equity investment is likely to spawn imitators as more state-owned companies look to enlist emerging EV companies to improve their technology and production efficiency.”
In July, deliveries of EVs – pure electric and plug-in hybrid cars – jumped 12 per cent to 987,000 units on the mainland, accounting for 54 per cent of overall car sales, according to the China Passenger Car Association.
FAW, the Chinese partner of Volkswagen and Toyota, delivered 28,500 EVs, 11.3 per cent of its total sales last month.
In March, FAW and Leapmotor signed a preliminary pact to jointly develop EVs and collaborate on supply-chain procurements.
Leapmotor, founded in 2015 by Zhu Jiangming, a veteran electronics engineer who also co-founded surveillance giant Dahua, is one of the big winners in the mainland’s EV industry this year.
Last month, the company delivered 50,129 vehicles for its third straight monthly sales record. In the first seven months of 2025, it sold a total 271,793 vehicles, up 150 per cent year on year.
In October 2023, Leapmotor received a US$1.6 billion investment from Stellantis, formerly Fiat Chrysler, giving the European carmaker a 20 per cent stake in the Chinese EV start-up.
Zhu, who is also the CEO of Leapmotor, said in late July that the company’s goal was to sell 4 million units a year, without elaborating on the time frame.
The company is known for its smart EVs priced at around 100,000 yuan (US$13,923), attracting thousands of young motorists willing to embrace new self-driving and in-car entertainment technologies.
FAW, China’s oldest carmaker and once a symbol of the Communist Party’s manufacturing might, is actively promoting green and intelligence-based development of the vehicle industry, its chairman Qiu Xiandong said in May 2024.
Its iconic Hongqi, or Red Flag, car was once viewed as a symbol of the mainland’s automotive sector.
Mao Zedong, one of the key founders of the People’s Republic, oversaw the establishment of the firm in 1953 with the help of the former Soviet Union. Former president Jiang Zemin spent six years working for FAW between 1956 and 1962, rising from an engineer to chief manager of the group’s power unit.
‘Still believe in love’: China tycoon whose divorce gripped public, remarries ex-classmate
https://www.scmp.com/news/people-culture/china-personalities/article/3322479/still-believe-love-china-tycoon-whose-divorce-gripped-public-remarries-ex-classmate?utm_source=rss_feedA 61-year-old Chinese business tycoon has remarried a woman the same age as him after a bitter six-year divorce battle.
The fresh nuptials, which challenge the stereotype of wealthy older men marrying much younger women, have earned the successful businessman widespread praise online.
Li Guoqing, 61, is a Peking University graduate and the co-founder and former CEO of Dangdang, one of China’s first and most well-known online book retailers.
Founded in 1999 with his former wife, Peggy Yu, Dangdang became a household name in China’s e-commerce sector. The two married in 1996 after dating for three months.
On August 16, Li married his new wife Zhang Danhong in a wedding with the theme “Still Believe in Love”.
The ceremony was attended by notable figures including Zhang Chaoyang, CEO of Sohu Inc, and Yu Minhong, founder and president of New Oriental Education & Technology Group.
Zhang Danhong, a German-Chinese, is a well-known economic journalist and former Deputy Director of the Chinese Department at Deutsche Welle.
She is also the author of the book From Charlemagne to the Euro: Europe’s Dream to Be Integrated.
Zhang went to Peking University and earned a degree in German Language and Literature.
Their wedding invitation clearly stated “No gifts or red envelopes” and encouraged guests to donate 500 yuan (US$70) to support the rural Tianzige Primary School and help underprivileged children.
“Two trains that once missed each other finally meet at the same station in our sixties. We still believe in the beauty of love,” the invitation read.
The path to their new life together was not easy.
Li revealed that Zhang had gone abroad in the early 1990s to pursue her career after graduation.
In an effort to win her back in 1995, he once promised her an array of riches if she would return to China and marry him.
Zhang, however, was furious and snapped back: “Why is it all about money?”
Li’s remarriage also follows a bitter and very public six-year divorce battle with his ex-wife Peggy Yu, which began in December 2018.
The dispute, which included public accusations of infidelity and financial impropriety from Yu, as well as an incident in which Li reportedly seized the company’s official seal, finally ended in June 2025.
The resolution saw Yu retain full control of Dangdang.com, while Li received a substantial cash settlement, the exact amount of which remains confidential.
In 2019, Li said: “If I marry again, I will not choose a businesswoman. I want someone pure and sweet, because I am just a pure and sweet guy myself. I cannot afford to be hurt a second time.”
He also implied that his relationship with Zhang began only after his divorce, countering speculation of an affair during his previous marriage.
Li’s choice has been widely praised online as a story of “pure love”.
Many other Chinese tycoons, such as Wang Shi, founder and chairman of China Vanke, the country’s largest real estate enterprise, who married Tian Pujun, who is 30 years his junior.
One online observer said: “Much respect to Li Guoqing. With his wealth, most men would have chosen someone younger. Instead, he married someone who is the same age and is also an intellectual.”
Another person said: “When successful men start valuing the wisdom of women their own age instead of calculating their youth, when marriage shifts from being a status symbol to a ‘soul contract’, we can truly see the possibility of love breaking free from prejudice.”
Why has China sent research vessels to Scarborough Shoal after a collision?
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy/article/3322497/why-has-china-sent-research-vessels-scarborough-shoal-after-collision?utm_source=rss_feedAt least two Chinese research vessels have been operating around Scarborough Shoal at the same time as a Philippine coastguard ship has been patrolling the disputed area of the South China Sea.
The Xiang Yang Hong 10, an ocean research vessel operated by China’s Ministry of Natural Resources, has been operating near the reef since last Friday, according to information from the satellite-based Automatic Identification System.
Another Chinese research vessel, the Zhuhai Yun, a maritime drone carrier, arrived in the area on Monday.
As of Tuesday evening, both vessels remained south of the shoal and close to each other, according to the satellite information from open source tracking website vesselfinder.com
Meanwhile, the Philippine coastguard vessel BRP Cape San Agustin was patrolling east of the shoal on Friday and Saturday, returning again on Monday.
Scarborough Shoal has become one of the main flashpoints in the two countries’ long-running dispute over the South China Sea.
China effectively seized control of it in 2012, while the Philippines says it falls within its 200-nautical mile (370km) exclusive economic zone.
Last Monday, a Chinese coastguard ship and navy destroyer were filmed colliding while apparently chasing a Philippine coastguard vessel. Video and photos of the incident suggested the smaller coastguard ship suffered severe damage as a result of the collision.
The United States, a treaty ally of the Philippines, sent a guided-missile destroyer on Wednesday to the waters for a “freedom of navigation” operation, an attack China criticised as a “provocation”.
Bao Yinan, an associate research fellow at the Huayang Centre for Maritime Cooperation and Ocean Governance in Hainan, said the deployment of research vessels might signal that Beijing was considering using underwater drones or related equipment in the area.
“Currently, China does not have fixed installations on Scarborough Shoal, putting it at a disadvantage regarding intelligence gathering and maintaining situational awareness there,” Bao said.
He added that establishing a network of underwater surveillance and information gathering could significantly improve China’s ability to monitor the shoal and conduct law enforcement activities.
But he suggested that Beijing would “stop short of engaging in land reclamation” as such a move would contradict Beijing’s commitment to “self-restraint” as outlined in the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea – an agreement signed between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in 2002.
Bao said China could “easily” build facilities or deploy troops on any unoccupied feature.
But he argued that Beijing’s lack of response to Vietnam’s large-scale land reclamation on disputed features elsewhere in the South China Sea and the measured response to a flag-waving contest on Sandy Cay suggested land reclamation was “not part of [its] immediate strategy”.
Hu Bo, director of the South China Sea Strategic Situation Probing Initiative, played down Chinese actions near the shoal, saying what the research vessels were doing was “normal”, as China was “undoubtedly working to strengthen” its presence in the area.
“This effort includes enhancing its understanding of the features’ conditions, such as hydrogeological features and marine environmental situations,” Hu added.
In recent years, scientific research ships have sometimes served as a spearhead for China’s maritime interests.
In the South China Sea, where its claims overlap with those of several neighbours, their activities are highly sensitive and have sometimes led to stand-offs.
The Xiang Yang Hong 10 has been circling the reef repeatedly in recent days, coming within a few hundred metres of the maritime feature, satellite tracking images show.
The Zhuhai Yun, the world’s first ship of its type, is designed to carry and control a range of aerial, surface and underwater drones. Although it can be remotely operated, it is usually crewed.
Chinese jeweller Laopu Gold shines as earnings nearly triple on sales bump at home, abroad
https://www.scmp.com/business/companies/article/3322514/chinese-jeweller-laopu-gold-shines-earnings-nearly-triple-sales-bump-home-abroad?utm_source=rss_feedRobust growth at home and abroad nearly tripled Laopu Gold’s earnings in the first half of the year, with managers predicting even stronger momentum in the second half.
Net profit soared 290.6 per cent from a year earlier to 2.35 billion yuan (US$327 million) in the six months ended June 30, the Beijing-based company said in a statement on Wednesday. Revenue surged 251 per cent to 12.4 billion yuan.
The Hong Kong-listed jeweller attributed its rapid growth to its premium positioning, noting that 77.3 per cent of its customers also shopped for international luxury brands such as Louis Vuitton and Cartier, citing data from Frost & Sullivan. The high-end strategy also boosted gross margins, which climbed despite higher costs from rising gold prices.
Like its high-end peers, Laopu uses a relatively fixed pricing model, adjusting prices only two or three times a year to reflect fluctuations in gold rather than daily movements. Gold prices have jumped more than 20 per cent this year to around 760 to 780 yuan per gram, as investors seek safe-haven assets amid geopolitical risks and bet on a Federal Reserve rate cut in September.
Dubbed “the Hermes of gold” by Chinese consumers, the company recorded a 455 per cent jump in overseas revenue in the first half to 1.6 billion yuan, while sales at home increased 233 per cent to 10.8 billion yuan.
The bulk of Laopu’s sales comes from retail stores, which are situated in premium shopping centres in top-tier Asian cities to tap high-spending customers. As of June 30, the company owned and operated 41 stores across 16 cities, according to the statement.
The company expanded its footprint in Hong Kong with a location in IFC Mall in Central in April. It also opened a shop in Singapore in June.
Momentum in Singapore was likely to pick up as customer traffic rises during the summer holiday season, Goldman Sachs analysts said in a report on Wednesday. Overseas expansion was likely to accelerate further with new store openings and stronger engagement with non-Chinese customers, they added.
New sales channels and store optimisations would boost revenue and net profit in the second half, company executives said.
Inventory turnover days – a metric of how fast a company’s inventory moves – dropped to 150 in the first half from 195 in 2024. The company could raise prices for a second time this year this month, which would further support its gross profit margins, Goldman analysts said.
Laopu declared an interim dividend of 9.59 yuan per share, implying a 72.1 per cent dividend payout ratio, versus the US investment bank’s estimate of no dividend.
Shares in Laopu jumped 8.8 per cent to HK$782 on Wednesday. The stock has gained 196 per cent in 2025 and more than 800 per cent over the past 12 months.
China expands regulatory arsenal in fight against solar industry price wars
https://www.scmp.com/economy/china-economy/article/3322512/china-expands-regulatory-arsenal-fight-against-solar-industry-price-wars?utm_source=rss_feedBeijing has signalled stronger action against price wars, convening a high-level symposium of enterprises and regulators – including many left out of previous meetings – to tackle cutthroat competition in the solar sector.
Authorities vowed to tighten oversight of new project investments, phasing out outdated capacity through market-based and rule-of-law approaches, according to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), one of the meeting’s hosts.
“Efforts will focus on improving price monitoring and product pricing mechanisms, as well as cracking down on illegal practices such as selling below cost and engaging in false advertising,” it said in a statement.
More actions would also be taken to ensure product quality, including cracking down on false performance ratings and intellectual property infringements. Industry discipline would be encouraged and associations urged to promote fair competition, drive technological innovation and uphold quality and safety standards, according to the statement.
“The meeting called on all parties in the photovoltaic industry to fully recognise the critical importance of regulating competition for the high-quality development of the sector and to work jointly towards its healthy and sustainable growth,” the ministry said.
Amid continued deflationary pressures, Beijing has stepped up its campaign to curb excessive competition, which has threatened profit margins across several bedrock industries.
The producer price index, which tracks factory gate prices, fell in July by 3.6 per cent year on year, marking the 34th consecutive month of contraction.
The solar industry is one of the sectors most prominently mired in ruthless competition – or “involution” in official rhetoric – after briefly emerging as a potential growth engine. Prices across the entire supply chain have plummeted, with losses reported by smaller firms and industry leaders alike.
On July 1, the Central Financial and Economic Affairs Commission – the Communist Party body supervising economic matters – recommended stronger government action, with President Xi Jinping identifying “disorderly low-price competition” as a regulatory priority.
Two days later, the MIIT held a meeting with the heads of China’s top solar panel manufacturers to gather insights and suggestions.
But despite the July symposium, solar module prices have continued to sell below cost, according to a board secretary at a solar manufacturer based in Jiangsu province, who spoke to the Post on condition of anonymity. One possible reason, the person added, is that stakeholders responsible for downstream operations, investment and regulation were absent from the discussions.
In contrast, Tuesday’s session included more powerful regulatory bodies than the last symposium, such as the National Development and Reform Commission, the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, the State Administration for Market Regulation and the National Energy Administration.
Representatives from power generation enterprises and local authorities, along with solar manufacturers and industry associations, also attended.
“With Tuesday’s meeting, this part of the chain now seems to be connected. So going forward, the entire industrial chain is expected to see rising prices,” the board secretary said.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Kabul for 3-way talks as Afghan-Pakistan tensions ease
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy/article/3322511/chinese-foreign-minister-wang-yi-kabul-3-way-talks-afghan-pakistan-tensions-ease?utm_source=rss_feedChinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi has arrived in Kabul to meet his counterparts from Afghanistan and Pakistan.
It is Wang’s first trip to the country since a surprise visit March 2022.
China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed he had arrived in Afghanistan on Wednesday. The ministry had earlier said he would travel to Pakistan later in the day for a three-day visit that will include talks with Ishaq Dar, Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister.
According to Geo News, a Pakistani media outlet, the Kabul meeting will focus on counterterrorism efforts and extending the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) – a project under China’s flagship Belt and Road Initiative – to Afghanistan.
The three-way meeting takes place against the backdrop of intensive trade and security discussions between Kabul and Islamabad in recent months, signalling a warming of ties that were once shaped by concerns about terrorism.
Although China and Pakistan have not formally recognised the Taliban government, Beijing has acted as a facilitator behind the scenes.
In May, the three foreign ministers met in Beijing, where Wang invited Afghanistan to join the CPEC. Shortly afterwards Pakistan sent its first ambassador to Kabul since the Taliban returned to power in 2021.
Wang said in May that the three countries should “carry out law enforcement and security cooperation” and “stay vigilant” against “external interference”.
Last month, China’s special envoy on Afghan affairs, Yue Xiaoyong, visited both Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Cooperation between Afghanistan and Pakistan has been accelerating. In April, Dar made his first visit to Kabul.
The main source of friction between Afghanistan and Pakistan has been the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), an anti-government militant group that Islamabad accuses the Afghan Taliban of sheltering.
The TTP has also threatened Chinese interests, particularly in the CPEC corridor. Following recent high-level engagements, the Taliban has reportedly pledged it would not allow Afghan territory to be used for TTP operations.
Pakistan and Afghanistan’s cooperation has also expanded on the economic front. Last month, the deputy commerce ministers of both countries signed a trade deal in Islamabad to cut tariffs on agricultural exports.
Afghanistan, Pakistan and Uzbekistan also agreed to launch a feasibility study for a railway that would connect Central Asia to Pakistan’s ports and join the China–Kyrgyzstan–Uzbekistan railway and CPEC.
Wang’s Kabul trip followed his first visit to India in three years, which included a meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, where he pledged deeper cooperation on a range of issues ranging from the long-running border dispute to economic ties.
Modi is also scheduled to visit China at the end of the month for the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit, his first trip in seven years.
But although relations are improving after reaching a nadir following a deadly border clash in 2020, China’s close partnership with Pakistan, its long-term rival, is a persistent source of mistrust in India.
New Delhi, which views Afghanistan as an important part of its strategic sphere, also opposes the expansion of CPEC.
Islamabad has just concluded its landmark engagement with Washington, with the United States agreeing to deepen counterterrorism cooperation with Pakistan following Islamabad’s charm offensive to court greater American investment.
Last week, the US designated the Balochistan Liberation Army, a group responsible for a series of terrorist attacks in Pakistan, including some aimed at Chinese targets, to its list of foreign terrorist organisations.
Meanwhile, Islamabad has agreed to receive more investment from the US, including to develop its resources, such as oil. The two countries even reportedly touched on potential reserves of rare earths, a group of critical minerals at the centre of the US-China trade war.
After Shaolin Temple scandal, China’s Buddhists urged to obey the law and pay taxes
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/politics/article/3322500/after-shaolin-temple-scandal-chinas-buddhists-urged-obey-law-and-pay-taxes?utm_source=rss_feedBuddhists should obey the law, be patriotic, pay taxes and “play an active role in building the nation and society”, China’s Buddhist regulator said on Tuesday, speaking out for the second time this month about the disgraced abbot of Shaolin Temple.
In a statement on its website, the Buddhist Association of China said that Shi Yongxin, the former abbot, had misappropriated and embezzled funds and temple assets, violated Buddhist regulations, and was suspected of criminal offences.
“This has tarnished the reputation of the Buddhist community in China. Therefore, Buddhist clergy, especially leading figures, must strengthen their awareness of the rule of law, remain vigilant and never cross the legal red line,” the statement said.
It said Buddhists were citizens of China first and foremost and should be bound by law. According to the statement, committing crimes creates evil karma, so compliance with the law is a fundamental requirement of Buddhist teachings.
It also referred to some specific religious prohibitions, without saying whether Shi had violated them.
“Buddhist scripture requires the ordained to not betray the nation, not slander the country’s leaders, not evade taxes and not violate laws,” the statement said.
The Communist Party’s policy of “Sinicising religion” aims to bring all doctrines and practices into line with its ideology and ensure loyalty to the party and state.
In a 2021 national conference on religious affairs, President Xi Jinping said that religious groups should strengthen their self-management and emphasised the need to improve the rule of law in religious affairs governance.
Shi, known as the “CEO monk”, is facing a criminal investigation over accusations that he embezzled project funds and temple assets. He is also accused of maintaining improper relationships with multiple women and fathering children with them, according to a statement released by the temple last month.
The association has cancelled Shi’s ordination certificate.
Shi is known for transforming the 1,500-year-old temple in central China’s Henan province into a multibillion-dollar global brand. Under his leadership, the temple appeared in films and launched a Taobao shop, and Shaolin kung fu was the subject of multiple books.
His critics had accused him of over-commercialising the Shaolin brand, including his plans to build a complex in Australia that includes a temple, four-star hotel, kung fu academy and educational facilities.
Shi Yinle, who was leader of the White Horse Temple, also in Henan, for 20 years, has been appointed the new abbot of Shaolin Temple.
In media reports, he has been portrayed as a sharp contrast to his predecessor. During his time at White Horse Temple, he kept a low profile and was photographed operating a bulldozer during wheat planting season. When asked to comment on the commercialisation of Shaolin, he said that White Horse Temple had “insisted on following Buddhist traditions to preserve Buddhist culture”.
In a visit to Shaolin last week, Guangzhou-based Time Weekly magazine reported that the temple had stopped taking donations from tourists, and QR codes posted in the temple had been disabled. Incense has also become free of charge to temple visitors, according to the report.
China’s EV industry expands ‘going global’ strategy, latest Tesla Model 3: 7 EV reads
https://www.scmp.com/business/china-evs/article/3322482/chinas-ev-industry-expands-going-global-strategy-latest-tesla-model-3-7-ev-reads?utm_source=rss_feedWe have put together stories from our coverage on electric and new energy vehicles from the past two weeks to help you stay informed. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider .
The electric vehicle (EV) industry, formerly one of China’s most inward-focused industrial sectors, is now leading a push overseas, carrying the government’s hopes of forging an offshore economic empire to sidestep cutthroat competition at home.
Tesla has begun offering its longer-range Model 3 variant to Chinese customers as it fights to regain market share from local rivals amid intense competition in the country’s premium EV segment.
EV sales in mainland China hit a speed bump last month, sparking worries about the industry’s growth momentum as more carmakers heed Beijing’s call to hold back on discounts and focus on profitability.
Chinese carmakers have refrained from offering steep discounts to align with Beijing’s efforts to protect a vital industry, but an end to the prolonged price war remains elusive, as the sector grapples with overcapacity and weak consumer demand for high-ticket items.
Chinese EV manufacturer BYD is targeting first-time buyers in Hong Kong with the launch of a competitively priced car model, building on its recent ascension as the local market leader, overtaking Tesla.
Geely Auto, mainland China’s second-largest carmaker, reported a 14 per cent drop in first-half profit even as revenue surged on sales of EVs to budget-conscious consumers aided by heavy discounts.
Contemporary Amperex Technology’s suspension of production at a major lithium mine in mainland China is a clear sign of Beijing’s aggressive stance towards curbing overcapacity in the EV battery sector, according to analysts.
China-India talks: Narendra Modi praises ‘stable, predictable, constructive ties’
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy/article/3322471/china-india-talks-narendra-modi-praises-stable-predictable-constructive-ties?utm_source=rss_feedChina’s top diplomat Wang Yi highlighted to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi how dialogue mechanisms between their countries have been revived when the two met on Tuesday, following their latest cautious overture amid a rapidly evolving global landscape.
In New Delhi, Wang said that during border talks he and India’s National Security Adviser Ajit Doval had reached a consensus on regular management and control to maintain peace in border areas, properly handling sensitive points and advancing delimitation talks in specific regions, when conditions permitted.
Wang said they also agreed to revive dialogue mechanisms across various sectors, according to a Chinese foreign ministry statement.
In the meeting, Modi commended the “steady progress” achieved in mending the bilateral ties, noting that it was guided by “respect for each other’s interests and sensitivities”.
“Stable, predictable, constructive ties between India and China will contribute significantly to regional as well as global peace and prosperity,” the Indian leader wrote on X after his meeting with Wang on Tuesday.
Modi is set to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping during the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit in Tianjin in late this month, which would be his first visit to China in seven years.
The Chinese diplomat arrived in India on Monday and held discussions with Doval and Foreign Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, focusing on the long-standing border dispute in the Himalayan region.
Among outcomes achieved during Wang’s trip, the two countries agreed to set up an expert group to push for early results in “boundary delimitation”, and to establish general-level mechanisms to address border issues in the eastern and middle sectors, according to a statement by India’s Ministry of External Affairs.
These mechanisms would complement the existing framework for the western sector, which includes Ladakh – the focal point of a stand-off that persisted for more than four years. Additionally, the two nations have committed to convening an early meeting of the mechanism for the western sector.
China and India also agreed to use diplomatic and military mechanisms to advance border management and begin discussions on de-escalation, starting with the establishment of principles and modalities, according to a Chinese statement on the consensus reached during the talks.
The deadly clash between troops in the Ladakh region in 2020 cast a deep chill over relations, affecting trade, diplomacy and air travel, but the two countries have increased official visits in recent months and eased some restrictions.
Reflecting on the ups and downs of Sino-Indian relations, Wang underscored the importance of learning from past experience and the need to value hard-won improvements and developments in bilateral ties.
“Regardless of the circumstances, both nations should view each other as partners rather than adversaries, handle differences with prudence and ensure that border disputes do not overshadow the larger bilateral relationship,” Wang said.
The renewed engagement comes as New Delhi’s relationship with Washington is showing signs of strain. The United States has imposed a 50 per cent tariff on Indian goods, including an additional 25 per cent penalty for India’s purchase of Russian crude oil, which is set to take effect on August 27.
In an apparent reference to the US trade policies that have caused geoeconomic turmoil, Wang said the two sides had reached a consensus on “deepening mutually beneficial cooperation, upholding multilateralism, jointly addressing global challenges and opposing unilateral bullying”.
New Delhi has been a long-standing US partner often viewed as a counterbalance to China’s influence in Asia. India remains a key member of the Quad security alliance alongside the US, Australia and Japan.
However, Washington is strengthening its engagement with Islamabad – India’s key rival – through a deal that sets tariffs on Pakistani goods at 19 per cent, security cooperation on counterterrorism and also an energy deal to jointly develop Pakistan’s oil reserves.
Ex-China diver becomes merman performer, creates stunning underwater routines with artistry
https://www.scmp.com/news/people-culture/article/3321726/ex-china-diver-becomes-merman-performer-creates-stunning-underwater-routines-artistry?utm_source=rss_feedA Chinese diving athlete turned oceanarium merman performer has gone viral for his physical presence and self-taught underwater dance routines that blend strength with beauty.
Xiao Songyi, a 22-year-old from Wuhan in central China’s Hubei province, was once a professional diver and is now a university student at Wuhan Sports University.
Despite his deep passion for water, which led him to start swimming and diving training aged just seven years, he was forced to retire from professional diving at the age of 19 because of an injury.
“I was lost at the time, but I felt that going to university would allow me to continue learning and growing,” he told Jiupai News.
By chance, he came across the mermaid performance industry and saw it as an unexpected and promising opportunity in a promising new field.
“In 2023, I was performing in a diving show in Harbin. Coincidentally, there was also a mermaid performance, and they happened to be short one male performer. I had just obtained the necessary certification, so they invited me to give it a try,” said Xiao.
“I was nervous and worried I would not do well in front of the audience. But it was that experience that opened my eyes to new possibilities in underwater performance,” Xiao said.
However, his career transition has been far from smooth.
Lacking experience and recognition, few companies were willing to work with him.
Xiao remained committed to training and bodybuilding, even teaching himself ethnic and classical dance to choreograph underwater routines and refine his performance.
He has now completed between 300 and 500 performances.
Xiao balances his studies with gigs, sometimes rushing to early morning events in other cities before hurrying back for classes and working weekends during the school term.
During the summer, his monthly income can reach 10,000 yuan (US$1,400), while commercial gigs pay him a daily rate of 2,500 yuan (US$350).
Currently, Xiao performs at the Xiaopinmao Oceanarium in Wuhan, where his shows have become a major attraction with many tourists travelling specifically to see the “male mermaid”.
During peak summer periods, he performs five 10 to 15-minute shows per day, holding his breath for about 40 seconds each time.
His performances draw a predominantly female audience, while many children even press their faces against the glass to watch.
He also interacts with the children by drawing hearts in the water, waving and blowing kisses.
“It feels like I am helping bring their fairy tale dreams to life,” he said.
He also focuses on blending softness with masculine strength in his routines, aiming to “convey male power through tenderness”.
“In the mermaid performance industry, male performers are still quite rare. I believe male mermaids create a strong contrast that brings freshness to the audience and showcases the diversity of mermaid shows,” he said.
His performances have attracted widespread attention online, with many netizens praising his physical presence.
One person said: “Self-disciplined men are truly attractive. That muscle definition is incredible!”
While another asked: “I want to go! Where is this aquarium?”
How the Philippines forced China to adjust historic mission to moon’s far side
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3322331/how-philippines-forced-china-adjust-historic-mission-moons-far-side?utm_source=rss_feedChinese space engineers made small but deliberate changes to last year’s historic sample retrieval mission to the far side of the moon to avoid political friction in the South China Sea, according to a new paper.
The Chang’e-6 spacecraft left the Wenchang spaceport on Hainan Island on board a Long March-5 rocket in May 2024, returning to Earth the following month with the world’s first lunar samples from the moon’s hidden side.
According to the paper published last month by China’s Journal of Astronautics, the Long March-5 flew southeast after lifting off and engineers delayed the release of the rocket’s nose cone by several dozen seconds, nudging the splashdown of debris further out to sea.
An accompanying map showed the original debris drop zone off the east coast of Luzon – the Philippines’ largest and most populous island – with the revised zone shifted further into the Philippine Sea to avoid waters considered by Manila to be under its jurisdiction.
“In response to new domestic regulations and evolving claims over foreign territorial sea baselines, we fine-tuned the launch trajectory timing,” Wang Qiong, the mission’s deputy chief designer, and his team wrote.
Without naming the Philippines, the authors said the delay pushed debris away from “sensitive maritime areas”.
The decision to alter the rocket’s trajectory followed years of complaints from Manila over Chinese rocket debris falling near its islands.
In 2022, fragments from Long March-5B rockets – which delivered modules for the Tiangong space station to low Earth orbit – washed ashore near Palawan and Mindoro, prompting the Philippine Space Agency to warn of hazards to ships and aircraft.
Earlier this month, debris from a Long March-12 rocket carrying China’s Guo Wang internet satellites landed near the same island. No injuries occurred, but Philippine officials again condemned the incident, noting risks to people, ships and aircraft.
The paper also revealed the complex adjustments that were made to the Chang’e-6 craft, originally built as a backup for Chang’e-5 and repurposed for the more complex task after the success of that mission in 2020.
While much of the design remained intact, the Chang’e-6 needed major adjustments to its planned trajectory to reach the lunar far side, the team wrote.
To line up with the landing site, the spacecraft needed to fly against the moon’s spin in a retrograde orbit that stretched the journey from 23 to 53 days, according to the paper.
Instead of relying on a single fixed path, the team designed multiple launch windows and trajectories, since even tiny timing errors would have compounded over the 53-day journey, it said.
Wang and his colleagues noted that this flexibility was crucial because the route to the lunar far side left almost no margin for error – a small slip at lift-off could have prevented the spacecraft from reaching its landing site, they said.
Another adjustment was made upon the return to Earth, after engineers found that the original path would have skirted the airspace of an unnamed West Asian country, according to the paper.
To avoid any potential diplomatic concerns, the engineers fine-tuned the craft’s re-entry angle by just 0.2 degrees – a tiny tweak that ensured the Chang’e-6 would safely return without crossing into restricted skies, it said.
Just under 2kg (4lb 6.5 oz) of samples retrieved from the moon’s far side by Chang’e-6 are now being studied by Chinese scientists, with Beijing pledging to share some with international partners – a move that could shape lunar science for years to come.
Australia, Philippines stage largest-ever drills: ‘denial of China’s aggression’
https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/politics/article/3322450/australia-philippines-stage-largest-ever-drills-denial-chinas-aggression?utm_source=rss_feedOff the shores of Palawan, more than 3,600 troops from Australia and the Philippines are taking part in their largest-ever military drills, marking a decisive shift in Canberra’s Indo-Pacific security strategy.
Exercise Alon, launched on Friday, is taking place less than 300 nautical miles (555km) from the Philippine-held Thitu Island in the Spratly archipelago – an area at the heart of escalating territorial disputes in the South China Sea.
Beijing claims the Spratly island group alongside almost all of the contested waterway – claims disputed by the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei, among others.
Named after the Filipino word for “wave”, Alon encompasses live-fire drills, amphibious landings, air support operations and special forces manoeuvres. Among the Australian assets deployed are a guided-missile destroyer, F/A-18 fighter jets, Javelin anti-tank missiles and C-130 transport aircraft.
Observers from the US, Canada, Japan, South Korea, New Zealand and Indonesia are attending the drills, which are scheduled to conclude on August 29.
“This exercise reflects Australia’s commitment to working with partners to ensure we maintain a region where state sovereignty is protected, international law is followed and nations can make decisions free from coercion,” Australia’s Vice-Admiral Justin Jones said in a statement.
The combat drills were “an opportunity for us to practice how we collaborate and respond to shared security challenges and project force over great distances in the Indo-Pacific”, he added.
Exercise Alon follows hot on the heels of the Philippines’ first-ever participation in last month’s Exercise Talisman Sabre, Australia’s largest bilateral military drill with the United States.
Under a visiting forces agreement in place since 2012, Australian and Filipino troops can be deployed to each other’s territory for joint exercises. The Philippines has a similar arrangement with the US.
Bilateral ties between Canberra and Manila were elevated to a strategic partnership in 2023, encompassing defence, maritime security, counterterrorism, law enforcement and cooperation on climate action, education and development.
Analysts say the back-to-back military exercises reflect Australia’s drive to strengthen defence collaboration with regional allies in the face of China’s expanding maritime presence.
The drills come against a backdrop of repeated incidents in the South China Sea. In the latest, a Chinese navy ship collided with a Chinese coastguard vessel while pursuing a Philippine coastguard ship near Scarborough Shoal on August 11, with both sides accusing the other of dangerous manoeuvres.
“If Chinese behaviour remains unchecked in the disputed waters, Beijing will soon legitimise its de facto control,” Mark Manantan, director of cybersecurity and critical technologies at the Pacific Forum, told This Week in Asia.
“Thus, conducting maritime exercises with the Philippines, as well as other claimant states in the South China Sea, will become the norm.”
Earlier this year, Australia lodged concerns with Beijing over what it described as “unsafe and unprofessional” actions by a Chinese fighter jet towards an Australian maritime patrol aircraft.
A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman dismissed Canberra’s account of the February incident, describing the jet’s “expulsion measures” as “legitimate, professional and restrained”.
“As China’s belligerent behaviour in the West Philippine Sea escalates, I think Australia will continue to maximise its long-standing partnerships with the Philippines and Japan alike,” Manantan said, using Manila’s terms for the parts of the South China Sea that it claims as its own.
“Australia’s purchase of the Mogami-class frigates and Exercise Alon 25 underscore Canberra’s increasing direct engagement and proactive partnerships with Manila and Tokyo.”
With the Philippines on the front lines of the pushback against Chinese claims, any weakening of Manila’s resolve would have “serious ramifications in countering China’s efforts to legitimise its claims”, Manantan said.
Gary Ador Dionisio, dean of the Benilde School of Diplomacy and Governance in Manila, echoed these views, noting that Australia “considers the Philippines an important and strategic ally for their denial strategy of China.”
Australia saw its Indo-Pacific partnerships as key to maintaining the regional security balance and safeguarding vital trade routes, Dionisio said, with about two-thirds of the country’s maritime trade passing through the South China Sea.
For the Philippines, Exercise Alon provided “an opportunity to further strengthen its partnership with all the countries utilising the Indo-Pacific corridor, including Australia”, he said, adding that it also helped “to promote regional security balance and stability and denial of China’s aggression”.
Beijing has repeatedly protested against exercises involving the US and its allies in the South China Sea, accusing Washington of militarising the region.
But Manantan said uncertainty over Washington’s continued commitment to the region’s security had caused partnerships among US allies to deepen.
Australia and the Philippines were looking to “future-proof the depth and scope of the partnership as initial concerns of Sara Duterte’s bid for presidency can reset the current stance of Manila against China”, he said, referring to the current vice-president of the Philippines, whose father ex-president Rodrigo Duterte was notably friendly with China.
Manantan said there was “a growing concern of foreign interference in the Philippines that seeks to curry a pro-China stance”.
“As a fellow democracy, this is concerning for Canberra’s national interest, but more so on the implications in regional security and stability,” he said.
Manantan added that a comprehensive approach would be needed, spanning information warfare, influence operations and cybersecurity, given the Philippines’ “alarming exposure to cyberattacks and data breaches”.
“Both countries can share best practices and interventions, especially on foreign interference by hostile actors,” he said. “Other key issues like humanitarian and disaster response must also be further enhanced.”
China says it will highlight joint combat groups in next month’s military parade
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/military/article/3322448/china-says-it-will-highlight-joint-combat-groups-next-months-military-parade?utm_source=rss_feedThe joint combat capabilities of the People’s Liberation Army – a key focus of reforms that began a decade ago – will be showcased during next month’s Victory Day military parade in Beijing.
Wu Zeke, deputy head of the warfare bureau at the Central Military Commission’s Joint Staff Department, told reporters on Wednesday there would be “combat-oriented joint formations” made up of land combat, maritime combat, air defence and missile defence groups, as well as information warfare, unmanned combat, rear support and strategic strike groups.
He said aircraft flying over Tiananmen Square during the parade on September 3 would be in “modular” and “systematic” formations.
“Advanced early warning and command aircraft, fighter jets, bombers, transport aircraft and others” will take part in the event – many of them highly anticipated “star” weaponry, some of which will be seen in public for the first time, according to Wu.
A major overhaul of the PLA initiated by President Xi Jinping in 2015 has sought to streamline its command structure, with five theatre commands set up to enable joint operations across the military branches, while a modernisation drive has also been under way.
Wu said the parade and march-past was expected to run for 70 minutes.
But he did not say if war veterans from the Kuomintang – the Communist Party’s rival during the Chinese civil war that ended in 1949 – would attend the event as they did 10 years ago, when the last Victory Day parade was held.
The PLA choir will perform songs about the war of resistance against Japan before the parade begins.
Beijing announced in June that it would hold the parade and a ceremony to mark the 80th anniversary of China’s triumph over the Japanese invasion and the global victory against fascism.
Foreign leaders including Russian President Vladimir Putin, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto and Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim are expected to travel to Beijing to attend the event.
Preparations for the parade are in full swing, with rehearsals held in the Chinese capital for the last two weekends and onlookers posting images and videos on social media of advanced weaponry such as hypersonic anti-ship missiles, drones and next-generation tanks spotted on the streets of Beijing.
From mining to tourism, space ambitions of China’s Guangdong rival those of Elon Musk
https://www.scmp.com/economy/china-economy/article/3322444/mining-tourism-space-ambitions-chinas-guangdong-rival-those-elon-musk?utm_source=rss_feedSouth China’s Guangdong province has announced its ambition to join the country’s commercial space sector race, promising financial and policy support for companies wanting to build low-orbit satellite constellation systems and promote their application in futuristic industries including space mining and space tourism.
Guangdong plans to use government procurement to support key innovative products and application scenarios for satellite constellation systems, which also include telecommunications and logistics, according to a commercial space policy statement released by the provincial government on Tuesday.
“Companies will be supported in continuously scaling up the satellite application industry and in purchasing computing power services, while relevant local governments are encouraged to provide rewards in accordance with regulations,” it said.
As part of a three-year development plan, the provincial government will also push companies to expand overseas in the fields of satellite navigation and remote sensing.
Guangdong has pledged to provide a fast track for approving satellite constellation projects, promising specially designated government funding to help with rocket and satellite development, as it tries to play catch-up with peers such as Beijing and Shanghai.
Beijing pioneered the construction of the state-backed Guowang national network, and Shanghai is leading the efforts to build Qianfan, which means “a thousand sails”, with the Chinese Academy of Sciences. But Guangdong, which boasts the country’s biggest provincial-level economy, has yet to produce a local champion in satellite constellation systems or the space economy in general.
China had been ramping up its efforts to build satellite constellation systems that could rival Elon Musk’s Starlink. Guangdong’s ambitious plan is the latest sign those efforts are accelerating, something also evidenced by an increase in rocket launches since late July.
There was a one- to two-month gap between launch missions for the first five sets of satellites used to build Guowang, but that was reduced to just three to five days for the launch of the three most recent sets, according to a note issued earlier this month by analysts at China Securities.
“The pace of network deployment has accelerated significantly, which may indicate that China’s satellite internet has entered a rapid buildout phase,” they said.
While the construction of Shanghai’s Qianfan system has slowed recently, with no launches since March, a new seven-launch programme was announced last month, and analysts expect launches to accelerate in the second half of the year.
To cope with the increasing number of commercial rocket launches, the commercial launch site in Wenchang, Hainan province, began building two more launch pads in January that will double capacity.
Several high-capacity commercial liquid-fuel rockets are also set for their maiden launches in the second half of the year. They are expected to “gradually become an important force in building China’s low-orbit satellite networks”, according to the China Securities note.
As launches become more frequent, China has also encountered setbacks in its endeavours. A test launch by Beijing-based LandSpace, a pioneer in reusable rocket development, failed on August 15.
India-China thaw: rare earths, border headway as Trump turns up tariff heat
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy/article/3322436/india-china-thaw-rare-earths-border-headway-trump-turns-tariff-heat?utm_source=rss_feedThe world’s two most-populous countries made significant progress on the diplomatic front recently, and those championing such moves may have Washington to thank.
India has agreed to a long-standing Chinese proposal to ease border tensions while also resuming direct flights and business links, as both sides explore trade cooperation – particularly in strategic sectors like rare earths – in a bid to reset their strained ties.
Experts highlight that even as deep mistrust lingers, the Asian powers view mounting US tariff pressure as an opportunity to show Washington that they can push back and have other options.
India’s Ministry of External Affairs on Tuesday said the two sides would create an “expert group” to explore an “early harvest” approach to boundary delimitation in disputed areas. This marks a shift from New Delhi’s earlier opposition to prioritising settlement in less contentious sectors, particularly in the Sikkim region, in favour of a comprehensive resolution. There are three other disputed sectors along the Sino-India border: western, middle and eastern.
The two sides also pledged to take “concrete” steps to boost trade and investment flows.
The joint statement underscored both countries’ intent to “enhance communication on major international and regional issues”, uphold a “rules-based multilateral trading system”, and “promote a multipolar world, that safeguards the interest of developing countries”.
Beijing has also cleared rare earth exports to India ahead of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to China later this month, according to Indian media reports. Modi will attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit in Tianjin, where he will meet President Xi Jinping.
China’s Foreign Ministry on Tuesday signalled openness to deeper cooperation, saying Beijing was ready to “strengthen dialogue and cooperation” to “jointly maintain the stability of global industrial and supply chains”, when asked if Foreign Minister Wang Yi had assured his Indian counterpart Subrahmanyam Jaishankar of support for India’s rare earth needs.
Wang travelled to New Delhi on Monday for a two-day visit, during which he also met national security adviser Ajit Doval and Modi.
Ties between India and China, strained since the deadly 2020 Galwan clash, have shifted rapidly amid US President Donald Trump’s tariff offensive. Earlier this month, Trump imposed a 25 per cent tariff on Indian goods after trade talks stalled following five rounds since April, with the US pushing for full market access. He soon followed with another 25 per cent tariff targeting India’s purchases of Russian oil, singling out New Delhi.
Trump’s public rebukes over India’s ties with Russia and Brics membership have left New Delhi shocked and increasingly resentful. With Beijing, Washington has agreed to reduce tariffs to 55 per cent in exchange for China issuing new rare-earth export licences. However, Beijing argues the rate remains too high, especially with an additional 20 per cent tariff imposed by the US in February in response to the fentanyl crisis.
Against this backdrop, the recent tentative thaw between China and India reflects New Delhi’s frustration with stalled trade talks and rising demands from Washington, prompting a reassessment of its economic alliances.
Experts say while mutual distrust between New Delhi and Beijing remains deep, recent diplomatic overtures signal a pragmatic attempt by both sides to gain leverage in a shifting global order increasingly shaped by US protectionism and geopolitical rivalry.
Akshobh Giridharadas, a geopolitical analyst based in Washington, noted that both India and China “see themselves as geopolitical rivals” and “have been over the past few years in the competing arenas” as the US aimed to position New Delhi as Beijing’s counterweight in the Indo-Pacific.
He added that despite the history, both sides had “an economic incentive for closer ties, to rebuild some of the trust deficit and economic linkages in an era where the global economy is being reshaped by tariffs”.
According to Dhruva Jaishankar, executive director of the Observer Research Foundation America, a think tank in Washington, “obviously India is unhappy with US tariffs and threats and is seeking options, including with China”.
Sourabh Gupta, of the Institute for China-America Studies, said that from an “optical standpoint, it is a golden opportunity for New Delhi to show that it is pushing back and has other relationship options”.
Analysts view the resumption of rare-earth exports as a brief respite ahead of a Xi-Modi meeting. Other experts highlight that rare earths, in particular, are emerging as a strategic incentive for improving ties with China.
According to a State Bank of India report in July, India has spent US$33 million annually over the past four years importing rare earths vital for sectors like renewable energy, electronics, and other key industries.
Jaishankar called Beijing’s decision to lift restrictions on exports to India as “short term relief”, noting that “there’s also knowledge that that tap can be turned off again”.
“It still seems far-fetched to imagine Beijing helping to finance India’s rare earth processing capability and integration with global rare earth supply chains,” he added, noting that issues – like China’s ties with Pakistan and its building of a hydropower dam opposed by New Delhi – remain.
David Abraham, a natural resource strategist and author of the book The Elements of Power, described rare earths as India’s “reward for easing tensions with China”.
“Approvals and exemptions are now bargaining chips, and in this case, rare earths are framed as a peace bounty,” he said on social media, adding that critical materials and components were “no longer just traded; they’re deployed as diplomatic tools, offered as rewards or withheld as punishment”.
“It’s deal-making, and everyone is doing it,” he stressed.
Gupta of ICAS described the rare earth easing as “certainly part” of the confidence-building process, “wherein both sides hurt each other less on the economic and people-to-people side too”.
He added that in return, there was hope that New Delhi would “reciprocally unblock access for Chinese electric vehicles and EV-linked investment in its domestic marketplace”.
But he stressed that “New Delhi doesn’t trust China and has an anti-China policy at every turn; just as importantly, Xi has lost confidence in Modi”.
“The era of cold peace in China-India relations is well upon us and here to stay,” Gupta said.
As the US and China compete, Asean could play arbiter
https://www.scmp.com/opinion/asia-opinion/article/3322211/us-and-china-compete-asean-could-play-arbiter?utm_source=rss_feedAs Asean celebrates its 58th anniversary, it is inhabiting a liminal moment, one that straddles the unmarked border between two international eras. One era is lingering but on its way out as another is hobbling its way in. The Cold War is long gone and the subsequent period of American unipolar primacy is drawing to a close, albeit without a new global order to replace it.
The great powers are in the throes of an inevitable transition. The United States and China each believe that history is on its side. Southeast Asian countries do not believe that the global highways of military and financial power have bypassed the US forever or that they should put all their eggs in China’s basket. History is still in flux.
The rules-based global order is like a highway under tensile stress, particularly in the Indo-Pacific region, perhaps the most congested junction on the highway between the US and China. The Association of Southeast Asian Nations stands at the heart of that junction. The safety of the highway depends on its structural integrity. The safety of regions along the highway depends on great powers following the rules of the road.
However, there is no longer one set of rules. The traffic laws of international affairs now have many different interpretations. Increasingly, the US and China insist on adherence to a rules-based order on their own respective terms and for their respective interests. Interpretations must be reconciled so international traffic can flow safely and smoothly.
Asean can encourage both sides to adopt a common highway code for mutual security. Of course, Asean is no global policeman. But it’s precisely because Asean poses no economic, political or military threat to either the US or China, or to anyone else, that it can act as an informal and impartial interlocutor between the two great powers.
That should be Asean’s diplomatic purpose: to be an arbiter in the Indo-Pacific region. Southeast Asia is still a price-taker in international relations. However, the escalating Sino-US rivalry has turned the world from a seller’s market into a buyer’s one. The more intense that rivalry gets, the more that great powers feel the need to “sell” themselves to others.
In this scenario, small and middle powers thus have more leeway to “buy” into a sphere of influence by judging which economic and political offer suits them best. Strategic autonomy should remain a core goal of Asean’s foreign policy.
The new cold war could promote Asean’s autonomy by creating space for choice, but only so long as the bloc exhibits strategic coherence. Asean member states should display a convincing degree of unanimity in their attitude and approach to the great powers amid the growing rivalry.
Strategic unanimity is built on internal unity, which itself rests on how much Asean member states can integrate their economies, align foreign policies and foster the kind of trust and goodwill that define relations among Southeast Asian societies.
Asean’s successful diplomatic intervention in the border conflict between Thailand and Cambodia showed its capacity to contribute to regional and thus world peace. Great powers must take Asean seriously, particularly when the world is being divided between the contrarian pulls of their rivalry.
This is where Indonesia comes in as Asean’s long-running de facto leader. It is the bloc’s largest country by territory, population and economy. Indonesia also reflects the diversity within many of Asean’s member states – from the ethnic affiliations of its inhabitants to the skyscrapers that rise in cities surrounded by green villages to a developmental system that seeks to empower different social classes in joining the march of economic, political and social progress. Indonesia is a microcosm of Asean.
Jakarta’s regional and international leadership must be substantiated by its political and economic development. Indonesia’s success since the late 1990s has shown that democracy is the true basis of political stability, which forms the bedrock of sustainable socioeconomic development.
Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto is pushing for policies that will underpin the country’s economic growth, such as a free nutritious meal scheme for students, the construction of new homes and support for co-operatives to uplift the village economy. If implemented well, these reforms could pave the way for inclusive and sustainable economic development by helping the marginalised members of Indonesian society.
A revitalised Indonesia is the key to a rejuvenated Asean, whose signposts are taken seriously by great powers travelling on their well-paved highways. Those highways might pass from one centre of power to another. But they pass through lands and peoples who are by no means peripheral. That is true of Asia, as it is of Africa and the Americas. Everywhere, transitional times demand nuanced responses. Liminality constitutes Asean’s strength.
‘Beautiful’ gun-toting China tactical police officer goes viral after hitting 10 bullseyes
https://www.scmp.com/news/people-culture/trending-china/article/3321706/beautiful-gun-toting-china-tactical-police-officer-goes-viral-after-hitting-10-bullseyes?utm_source=rss_feedA Chinese police officer, who first gained online fame for her role in an anti-fraud miniseries, has hit the headlines again, this time for her exceptional marksmanship.
Ying Weimin, 26, from Wangchun Police Station, Haishu District Branch, Ningbo Municipal Public Security Bureau, in eastern China’s Zhejiang province, has become an internet sensation thanks to a training video.
It showcases her exceptional marksmanship – she hit the bullseye with all 10 available shots – and composed demeanour, which has captivated millions online.
Ying has dreamed about becoming a police officer since her childhood.
In 2017, she entered the Zhejiang Police College, majoring in police command and tactics.
Upon graduating in 2021, she volunteered for frontline police work, where she underwent rigorous training in investigation, making arrests and case handling.
Recently, she rose to national fame online when Zhejiang police released training footage.
The video shows her in tactical gear, swiftly assembling her firearm and, in one fluid motion, transitioning from drawing the gun and loading ammunition to aiming and firing, hitting the bullseye with all 10 shots.
Netizens have marvelled at the entire shooting sequence, describing it as “smooth as flowing water”.
However, her impressive competence extends far beyond sharpshooting skills.
In March 2023, Ying played a crucial role in cracking a complex cross-border e-commerce agency case.
As part of the special task force, she travelled to the scene, charged forward to subdue suspects on-site, and carefully preserved critical electronic evidence.
A year later, she successfully cracked a series of theft cases, arresting the entire criminal gang and recovering tens of thousands of yuan.
In recognition of her efforts, the public presented her with a banner which read: “Prompt response like a tiger, precise search and reliable capture of thieves.”
“We must take the initiative. Only by staying closer to the people can police officers keep them further away from being deceived!” said Ying.
After taking part in multiple telecoms fraud investigations, Ying developed her own approach to anti-fraud public education.
In October 2024, she incorporated real scam tactics into a script and starred in a miniseries to raise public awareness of fraud prevention.
Netizens were full of praise.
“Anti-fraud knowledge just entered my brain in the strangest way,” said one online observer.
However, Ying remains humble: “Thanks to the public and netizens for their attention and support to us. It motivates me to stay passionate, work diligently, and do my job even better,” she said.
Online observers have been quick to express their admiration.
One person said: “Such a cool policewoman, so heroic!”
“Beautiful and cool, I have already watched the video dozens of times!” said another.
While a third wrote: “Amazing! Behind every bullet that hits the target is a vow to protect life with life.”
Is China poised to lead the world with combat-ready ‘loyal wingman’ FH-97 stealth drone?
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/military/article/3322417/china-poised-lead-world-combat-ready-loyal-wingman-fh-97-stealth-drone?utm_source=rss_feedThe People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is likely to showcase a new type of advanced stealth attack drone during September’s Victory Day parade in Beijing, rehearsal images circulating online suggest.
The FH-97, a single-engine, ground-attack uncrewed aircraft, has been described as potentially China’s first combat-ready stealth drone, capable of coordinated aerial warfare alongside crewed jets.
Photos leaked online over the weekend appeared to show an FH-97 takng part in the rehearsals for the massive military parade on September 3, which will commemorate the 80th anniversary of Japan’s surrender and the end of World War II.
The official debut of the model would make China the first country to have such a drone – dubbed a “loyal wingman” in crewed-uncrewed team-up warfare – ready for combat.
The parade’s second full rehearsal was held from Saturday evening into Sunday morning near Tiananmen Square, involving around 40,000 personnel.
Although the aircraft was covered and mounted on a military truck, enough design features were revealed to suggest it was the FH-97, or Feihong-97, developed by a subsidiary of the state-owned China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (AVIC).
The angular shaping of its vertical stabilisers further aligns with the FH-97.
A scale model of the FH-97 was first unveiled at the premier Zhuhai Air Show in 2021. Chief designer Deng Shuai told state-run Global Times the following year that the drone “acts as both a sensor and an ammunition depot, as well as an intelligent assistant for pilots”.
He added that it had earned the “loyal wingman” moniker because it flew alongside crewed aircraft “like an armed bodyguard”.
An article on military website The War Zone said on Sunday that the newly sighted drone “might be a further addition to the FH-97 line” rather than the 2021 version, referring to newer variants. The AVIC arm unveiled an air-to-air variant called the FH-97A in 2022.
An FH-97 debut at the parade would make China the first country to publicly announce the deployment of fully operational loyal wingman drones. While several nations have advanced to late-stage testing, none has yet confirmed their combat deployment.
“All weapons and equipment to be displayed in the [Victory Day] parade are domestically produced, active-duty main battle gear,” Major General Wu Zeke, the deputy head of the parade organising committee, said in June.
Collaborative combat aircraft (CCA) drones or loyal wingmen are designed to work alongside advanced stealth fighters, their crewed-uncrewed teaming multiplying combat effectiveness while reducing pilot workload and risk to human life.
The United States’ XQ-58A loyal wingman combat drone is expected to be combat ready by 2029.
Australia is the other military close to deploying loyal wingman drones, specifically Boeing’s MQ-28 Ghost Bat, recognisable by its side-mounted air intakes. Market reports say eight Block 1 prototypes have been already delivered to the Royal Australian Air Force and have logged more than 100 flight hours as of this month.
Additional PLA rehearsal images emerging over the weekend also showed two previously unknown drone designs with tailless, modified delta wings. One featured a slender nose leading into a wider fuselage, while the other had a broader nose and central section.
Both remained under covers, obscuring details such as engine placement. But based on their truck-mounted scale, both designs appeared significantly larger than the FH-97-style drones, hinting at higher performance levels.
The War Zone concluded that “all of this reflects China’s clear pursuit of multiple CCA and/or [Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicle] designs for land-based use, as well as operations from aircraft carriers and big-deck amphibious warfare ships.”