Thursday, December 29, 2011

China could learn and gain from Nordic Democracy to govern progressive diverse nation - best of both worlds for capitalism and socialism in practice

While many Finnish are knowledgeable, wise and analytical, there are some who do not read widely and become susceptible to hearsay from journalists promoting sensational news and ill disciplined liberalism without regard for history, culture and national sovereignty and international peace.

http://www.eaea.org/index.php?k=12041
The truth about Tibet and Dalai Lama

By Eirik Granqvist (China Daily)


http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/opinion/2011-12/21/content_14297105.htm

Most Finns (Swedes and Swiss) are well educated, widely read and well travelled people.

Chinese are pragmatic people. Its government and intellectuals are better off studying the Nordic democratic models which suit China than looking at the elusive and failed American and Greek models of democracy.

In the past, religions such as Buddhism have been imported into China and given a Chinese cultural identity. The same can be said of growing Christian foothold in China which play an important social role while not forgetting practices that are traditionally Chinese.

Some visionary forecasters are placing their bets on a cohesive multicultural Chinese surviving the odds and challenges of globalisation and development than say "democratic" divisive and sectarian  India.

At the end of the tunnel, China will find its way to build a unique model of democracy suited to its own needs. It will not benefit much from a foreign formula that is out of place with Chinese culture.

Monday, December 26, 2011

Beijing's Coalition of the Willing not a one track single way zero sum game

China has steered an independent path from the US and the Soviet Union evident from the Sino-Soviet split, Sino-American normalisation and post-Mao modernisation and open door policy.

Rather than viewing China's rising stars to reach the limitless sky and imposition of authoritarianism, China has adapted and bent to suit international norms.  Entry to WTO has been back breaking even to the extent of bankrupting many inefficient businesses.  China has come a long way and absorbed many western ideas, economic management and cultures to come to this day and stage of development.

Unlike plundering by previous and continuing colonialist/ imperialist industrial-military collaboration, China has given aid without strings attached to Third World countries.

The learning process is a dual carriageway. China is adept at imitating and adopting practices and even values that would promote its economic and national interests. It is a unique model that is still evolving, but which has so far shown to be working successful. You can't blame many developing nations from wanting to choose a better model over the high sounding "free" world's which has a poor track record.

From emperor with his cabinet, to chaotic elitist Republic, social egalitarianism, Mao dictatorship to the present day collective leadership and local elections. Isn't that change?

The Greek model of democracy was elitist and universal franchise was non-existent until the turn of the century. European countries which boast of liberalism today took hundreds of years to allow commoners and women to vote.

Going by the frank admission by Chinese leadership that the country must relax its controls, China will but not overnight as many had hoped for. Neither would it bail out irresponsible western governments and unethical businesses without conditions, scrutiny and accountability. The bottomline is to preserve stability as it has for thousands of years for it to survive as a civilisation on earth.

http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/society-and-culture/china-marks-the-route-on-new-global-roadmap-20111223-1p8hu.html

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2010/06/21/beijings_coalition_of_the_willing?page=full

Friday, December 23, 2011

Risks of Doing Business in China - avoiding pitfalls and horrors : Contract Law 101

Do your homework : due diligence is crucial in any business venture, especially the legal protection and liability of doing business in a foreign country.


China: Contract Management – Avoiding the Horror Stories

20 December 2011
Article by Matthew McKee
Source : Mondaq : Corporate / Company Law

There are very many stories about doing business in China – some exceptionally successful, others diabolical failures. These include foreign companies entering into contracts with Chinese companies that do not exist or the joint venture partner who was a "friend" that appropriates all the assets; unknowingly the joint venture was setup in a way to leave the foreign company with no legal recourse.

Our experience is that what makes these disaster stories worse is that they are usually easily avoidable. Whilst some fear that the enforcement of legal rights in China is somewhat of a hopeless endeavour, our experience is that in reality obtaining a just result is very achievable.

Practice Point 1 – Know who you are contracting with.

Practice Point 2 – Obtaining judgment in an Australian court may be worthless

Practice Point 3 – Avoiding Chinese Courts

Practice Point 4 – Be aware of limitation periods

Practice Point 5 – Proper documentation

Thursday, December 22, 2011

China's Property Market : Bust? Freefall? Soft landing?

Chinese property markets are not fully sheltered from the global gloom. Nevertheless, steady government fiscal policies will steer it from going into a downward trend. The bottomline is that the economy would not be near what EU and US have and will be experiencing. 


Are China's Property Prices In Freefall?
There certainly has been a great deal of commentary on China’s real estate market recently, and it’s very difficult to separate fact from fiction. I’ve spent 70 percent or more of my time each and every year for the past 20 in China, have traveled extensively throughout the country and spoken to many government and business leaders in the course of a year, and I must admit that I am often confused when I listen to what the experts have to say in the press and on television. Most of the time, I just scratch my head and wonder if they are talking about the same China.
For example, the talking heads worry whether China will have a “hard” or “soft” landing, but I see steady 8 percent to 9 percent growth for as far as the eye can see. They opine that bad loans in China’s banks could be a problem, yet Standard & Poor’s recently upgraded its ratings for Bank of China and China Construction Bank, giving the two Chinese lenders higher grades than most of their largest U.S. rivals. They describe “ghost” cities and buildings in China, and I have yet to see one.At times like this, when the commentary seems so disconnected from my own experience, I like to do a reality check by speaking with as many Chinese business leaders as I can—people that have a real stake in the economy, not economists, government officials or foreign commentators. After all, it’s possible that there is a piece of information that I may have missed and not taken into account.Fortunately, I had an opportunity to do just that last week while on a bit of a road show in Shanghai, Wuhan, Hangzhou, Wuxi, Ningbo and Hangzhou with one of our clients. In Wuxi, we met with the head of a company that is at the heart of China’s economy. In fact, the company is so pivotal that the general manager apologized for having to leave the meeting for a brief period to take a call from Beijing. Referring to the recent meeting of China’s senior leadership in the capital city, he explained that the government was very interested in hearing his views on the state of the economy.
He began by saying that China has some unique characteristics that many foreigners don’t understand, and that they tend to rely too heavily on the observations of other foreign experts. That often causes the foreign press to get the wrong take. In his opinion, internal demand in China is so large that he doesn’t see any problem with the Chinese economy remaining stable and continuing to grow. On property prices, he noted that there has been some softening, but also pointed out that many prices had gone up too quickly. He certainly didn’t see a total collapse, or anything like a freefall.
What are the unique characteristics about China that he referenced? For one, the Chinese government, unlike those in the large developed economies, has full control of all the monetary and fiscal levers and has proven to be particularly adept at pulling on them. Like other countries, China can raise interest rates and bank reserve requirements. It can also, though, take administrative measures and tell banks not to lend, or quickly implement restrictions on residential property purchases or down payment requirements. Unlike just about every other major government in the world, China can also control fiscal policy, making key decisions based on economic, not political, considerations. When concerned about an overheated economy that was growing at 13 percent, China put infrastructure projects on the shelf in late 2007, only to take them off again in the final quarter of 2008 in response to the global economic crisis. For better or for worse, actions like these are very difficult to implement in most countries.
In answer to the question from our reader: No, property prices in China are not in freefall.
China is a big country, and it’s possible to find a statistic that supports any given theory at any given point in time. Rather than referring to anecdotes about Hong Kong developers slashing asking prices in Beijing or Shenzhen, we should instead look at figures for a greater cross-section of the country. The China Real Estate Index System measures prices in 100 cities across China. In November, the average home price at 8,832 yuan ($1,385) a square meter was 0.28 percent lower than October. The November average price was the lowest since May, when it was 8,819 yuan. That doesn’t sound like a freefall to me either!
Very simply, residential property prices have been softening recently in response to measures that the Chinese government has been taking over the past 18 months to stem the rapid rise in property prices that occurred in the aftermath of the global crisis. The government’s policies have worked, and we are now seeing the effects of those policies. With inflation under control, and the steam taken out of spiraling property prices, the Chinese government is now becoming more accommodating and the economy is in transition. In addition to looser credit, many expect housing restrictions in China to be lifted in 2012.
Read more :
http://www.forbes.com/sites/jackperkowski/2011/12/20/are-chinas-property-prices-in-freefall/

Monday, December 19, 2011

China keeps fingers cross for a stable nuclear North Korea

What other option does China have but to wish its neighbour well. Good luck to another Kim reign?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/dec/19/kim-jong-il-successor-endorsed-china?newsfeed=true

China unlike US and NATO loathes at military intervention in other countries.

It is not in China's tradition and style to arm twist and force medicine down its friends' throat what it does not want to do. Behind the scenes, China has kept North Korea in line and averted potential conflicts when US/ NATO forced it to the brink.

Armed forces (military and police) are meant for defending its territorial integrity and maintaining domestic stability when forced by circumstances, just like the pre-world war USA until Truman came along and that was when exceptionalism by spreading democracy through military means began.

As the Chinese saying goes, wealth and power will not last beyond the third generation.

Perhaps the Chinese are hoping for a quiet evolution instead of volatile revolution next door.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Islam in China - understanding history and evolution of the much maligned multicultural policy

Islam in China


A lot of global political attention in recent years has been on China as it emerges as a heavyweight in the global economy. Mention is often made of its Muslim minorities in the West of China and their push forindependence, but not many people know much about the background to Islam’s emergence in China.


The Chinese started to absorb ‘formal religion’ at a time when prophets were active throughout the world. At a time when Socrates(as) was active in Athens, Krishna(as)in India, Zoroaster(as) in Persia, in China, Kung Fu-Tsu(as) (Confucius(as), 551-479 BCE) began to preach on the means of social harmony.


Confucius(as) was followed by Lao Tzu(as) who laid the seeds of Daoism. So for many centuries, Buddhism, Confucianism and Daoism gained popularity across China. This began to change as China opened its doors to foreign cultures largely as a result ofthe openinof trade routes such as the Silk Route.


Seek knowledge even if from China.’
Although there has always been robust debate about the authenticity of this quote, there is little doubt that the Holy Prophet(saw) would have been aware of China, as the Arabs had strong trading links with China via the Sri Lanka and Malaysia sea routes.
Islam entered China through Arab and Central Asian traders. Actually, the first ‘official’ delegation went in 651 CE under the auspices of the 3rd Caliph, Hadhrat ‘Uthman(ra) who despatched Sa’d ibn abi Waqqas, the Prophet’s maternal Uncle.
He sent a message of peace to the Chinese Emperor encouraging him and his people to embrace Islam. The Emperor Yong Hui, in the second year of his reign, had no interest in adopting these foreign ideas and beliefs, but out of respect, responded by ordering the building of the Memorial Mosque in Canton City (Guangzhou), China’s first Mosque which still stands today. The Annals of the T’ang Dynasty make the first mention of the Muslim Arabs.
Often the Muslims adopted the names of their Han wives or the nearest Chinese name or letter to their original Arabic names; for example settlers with the name Muhammad or Mustafa would often adopt the name Mu or Mo, those named Hasan would become Ha, Said would become Sai and so gradually, the names became integrated into Chinese culture.
A century later, the Annals again record that an ambassador called Sulaiman was sent by the Muslim Caliph Hisham in 726 CE to the Chinese Emperor Hsuan Tsung. Many years later in 756 CE, his son Su Tsung called upon the Abbasid Caliph al-Mansur to help him recover his capital cities. The Arab troops that assisted him remained in China, married local women and settled.
Up to now, the Muslims were tolerated as foreign guests, but in the 13th century, having already taken control of the Muslim Middle East, the Mongol hoards devastated China. At this time, many Muslims from Central Asia were forced by the Mongols to migrate to Western China to assist with the administration of their empire. When Kublai Khan became the Emperor in 1259 CE in Khanbaliq (Beijing), he appointed ‘Umar Shams al-Din (commonly known as Syed Ajall) from Bukhara as his treasurer, and eventually as Governor of Yunnan, the region in the South-West towards Vietnam.
There had been a period of instability when the Mongols were removed from China as the Muslims were seen as their administrators. Ming Emperor Hung-Wu offered the Muslims many privileges and as their conditions improved, they were provided with new facilities and many new Mosques were built. These conditions continued to flourish throughout the Ming Dynasty (1368 – 1644 CE).
In the late 17th century, the great Chinese Muslim scholars Wang Daiyu, Ma Zhu and Liu Jielien wrote many books in Chinese on Islam and the Holy Prophet(saw). These books helped to increase the knowledge of the Chinese Muslims, although the wider population were still largely ignorant about Islam as the Muslims did not preach publicly.
There was an uprising of Hui and other ethnic Muslim groups against the Qing Dynasty from 1862 to 1877 in the provinces of Shaanxi, Gansu, Ningxia and Xinjiang. There were many grievances and to some extent, the coming together of the different sects and ethnic groups was out of convenience, but it is claimed that they wanted to create an independent Muslim country west of the Yellow River.
Whatever their motivation, the rebellion was crushed, and estimates of the number of Muslims killed vary from 1-8 million. Many Hui and other ethnic Muslims migrated from Western China to neighbouring Russia, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan from 1878 and their descendents still live there whilst maintaining their Chinese roots.
Things stabilised again after the fall of the Qing Dynasty when Sun Yat Sen established the Republic of China and told the people that the country belonged equally to all citizens, including the Han, Hui Muslims, Tibetans and the Mongols.


Modern Islam in China
As mentioned previously, China is a Communist state, and as such, faith was not encouraged and went underground for many years. The China Islamic Association was formed in 1952 but was forced to go underground in 1958. It was the reform years from 1978 that brought religion back to the surface. Five religions wereofficially recognised in China: Buddhism, Catholicism, Taoism, Protestantism andIslam.
The religions and their Mosques, Churches and Temples were revived, and many new converts were attracted to them. By 2000 CE, official estimates claimed that there were now 200 million religious believers in the country, 11% of those being Muslims. The largest community is the 9.8 million Hui Muslims, followed by the 8.4 million Muslims of the Uyghur in the West of the country.
Across the country, there are ten main Muslim groups: Hui, Uyghur, Kazakh, Kirghiz, Uzbek, Tatar, Tadjik, Dongxiang, Salar and Bao’an. In many parts of the country, they live separately and have limited interactions with each other in the same way that religious sects co-exist, but in the major cities where the Muslims are a minority, theyoften come together in unity realising that they have more in common than their theological differences.
In cities such as Beijing or Shanghai, the Muslims cannot be distinguished from ordinary Chinese as beards are not exclusive to Muslims, nor is modest dress exclusive to Muslim women. Perceptions of Muslims from the mainstream population are that they eat lamb kebabs and do not eat pork, and observe strict cleanliness. In Beijing, the Muslims of the city live in several pockets and are often involved in the butchery trade where they provide Qing Zhen (Halal) meat for their own communities and also ‘clean’ meat for the wider population who respect Qing Zhen.
China has over 45,000 Mosques, most with a hybrid style of Arabic and Chinese. A typical example is the Niujie Mosque in the Hui district of Beijing which looks like a Chinese Temple from the outside, and on the inside has decorated pillars, walls and ceilings with red and other traditional colours, and gold Qur’anic lettering. The mosque dates from the 10th century and indeed the graves of two Arab missionaries are within the compound.
The main features of a mosque are there: a mihrab (niche), prayer mats facing Makkah, an ablutions hall, and a nearby Qur’anic School. The style is definitely Chinese and the minarets are built as pagodas and not that tall. One account describes that the Muslims did not build tall minarets so as not to offend the superstitious locals.
The mosque stands on a major crossroads in a Muslim area of Beijing not far from the Temple of Heaven, and across the road, there are Muslim shops and boutiques selling Halal meat, books and Islamic clothing (hijabs, hats etc).
However, the State is still wary of religion as a catalyst in breaking up the country (memories of the rebellion of the 19th century remain strong), and so maintains tight control over all clergy and religious instruction. Imams in China are educated at oneof ten Qur’anic Schools where they are also educated in state law and religious policy. Imams attend regular meetings at the ChinIslamic Association and are also encouraged to attend inter-faith meetings to promote understanding and goodwill.  Indeed many of the Imams are aged 20-40 unlike in the Middle East where they are often from the elders of the community.
China has also had some innovations such as women Imams who lead congregationsof women in Mosques, but in general, the Muslims follow the same basic worship as Muslims elsewhere, and 10,000 attend the Hajj pilgrimage to Makkah every year.
There are many cities and regions in China that have maintained a significantIslamic heritage and a strong Muslim population to this day including Xi’an and the Xinjiang autonomous region.
Influential Chinese Muslims
Zheng He
Yusuf Ma Dexin
Osman Chou

Chinese Muslim Cities
Xi’an
Kashgar
Nanjing
Conclusion
The much-maligned Chinese are a very thoughtful, respectful and spiritual people. Although the political engine of China is facing criticism, the Chinese themselves are very disciplined and considerate and embrace spiritual concepts very easily.
It is interesting that despite being forced to go underground for decades under Communist rule (as did the Muslims of Central Asia under Soviet rule), since restrictions were lifted, the Muslims are back in strong numbers and with their culture and understandinof Islam intact.
Regular contact with the Middle East and South Asia has also ensured a continuous flow of information and active experience back into the Chinese Muslim community and a revival of religious zeal, though there is a difference amongst the Western Chinese who seek political leverage and the Eastern Chinese Muslims who seek to assimilate into main-stream society and practise their faith quietly.
Extracts from
http://www.reviewofreligions.org/1595/islam-in-china/

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Sino-Indian border disputes and US encirclement of China, Australian uranium exports and continuation of deceptive and deluded foreign policies

Sino-Indian border disputes

Despite availability of documents and first hand revelations by insiders, many still did not know that India started the Sino-Indian border clash in 1962 with the help of western powers.

An Australian diplomat (Gregory Clark) then knew the truth and did the right thing. However, he forced was forced to carry out orders from seniors in foreign office to perpetuate myths and lies of Chinese aggression in the Sino-India border dispute 40 years ago.

The facts are :

- China was protecting its territorial integrity in the dispute.

" ... both the Dho La Strip and the Thag La Ridge were indeed north of where the McMahon Line was supposed to be. In which case, India was clearly the aggressor." 

- China aggressor label / image propaganda was part of the US/NATO/ west Cold War gameplan

- Tibet was the front to Nehru's nationalistic frontier policy

References :

Gregory Clark, Remembering a War - the 1962 India China Conflict (Landsdowne  )
http://gregoryclark.net/redif.html

Nevill Maxwell, India's War with China (1972)

Australian uranium exports

Some governments (Australia in this case) however do not learn from past mistakes nor do they foresee the dangerous of nuclear arms race and risk of war that would end mankind / humanity. This has created controversy not only in the region but domestically in Australia.

The ban to export uranium to India has been lifted supposedly as a check to China's growing power in the region. But given the irresponsible, dishonest and expansionist tendencies of some states, this is not a wise move. It will also encourage more states, such as Islamist terrorist infested Pakistan, to seek lifting of uranium ban to boost its nuclear power vis-a-vis India.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-16027509
http://www.economist.com/node/9687637?story_id=9687637
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2011-12/04/c_131287540.htm



Does Falungong qualify as a cult? Similar to Scientology? Ban cults to protect public interests?

A cult is one that is not accountable to its members, the government and the public. It's main objective is to serve the material and spiritual interests of leadership / personality without regard for public health and order.

Yet FLG receives funding from various foreign sources and networks bent on frustrating the Chinese authorities. Majority are aware that cults attract gullible and impressionable followers who are oblivious of Li Hongzhi's agenda because they are mere pawns to boost the numbers of FLG.

It is a one-way traffic. What Falungong wants, it will fight to achieve. It accuses the lack of freedom in China but it forbids freedom of speech of others who hold different and alternative views and do not stand up to criticisms.

There are many similarities between Scientology and FLG. Beliefs in alien invasion, rejection of modern medicine and personality cult.

Anyone who personally knows loved ones fallen victims and suffered irreparable damage to these scams would appreciate why cults need to be checked and dismantled.

Why do Germany and some governments  and organisations seek to ban Scientology? Others fear because the cult supported by movie stars has grown to powerful to be reined in. The same can be said of FLG.

http://www.cultnews.com/?p=2409

http://xahlee.org/Periodic_dosage_dir/t2/scientology_falun_gong.html

http://www.religionnewsblog.com/14782/falun-gong-not-so-innocent

Monday, December 5, 2011

Half Asian Half White Students get around Discrimination by American Universities - check the white box

Do Asians have to hide their complete identity and change family names to be truly accepted as American?


Only Asians with surnames with Caucasian sounding name are able to get around the unfair system, not for those with Asian fathers.  


Being born in America in a family that has lived there for generations do not help them to be regarded as assimilated full-fledged Americans.  It is a mixed bag - some are more Asian and others more American / westernised. 


An Asian has to compete unfairly, requiring hundreds of points higher compared to other races.


Since discrimination clearly exists in education, it would not be far off the mark to guess that injustice permeates to other areas such as employment in the government and promotion prospects? High achievers being penalised, are victims of their success. 


It is a no-win situation. American universities that discriminate (including Harvard) will stand to lose out if mediocrity, purposeful discrimination by stereotyping form the guiding "principles".


Some amount of proactive and affirmative action to promote egalitarianism (not equality) is a commendable social policy. Reserving a small percentage for disadvantaged groups has been a longstanding policy of many organisations.


On the other hand, wealthy parentage and alumni connections will get a student ahead of the rest, overlooking scores in SAT.  So the egalitarian argument is defeated and biased elitism is exposed. The extent and pervasiveness of favouring some groups over others by some American universities is disgraceful. 

Quote :


For years, many Asian-Americans have been convinced that it's harder for them to gain admission to the nation's top colleges.
Studies show that Asian-Americans meet these colleges' admissions standards far out of proportion to their 6 percent representation in the U.S. population, and that they often need test scores hundreds of points higher than applicants from other ethnic groups to have an equal chance of admission. Critics say these numbers, along with the fact that some top colleges with race-blind admissions have double the Asian percentage of Ivy League schools, prove the existence of discrimination.
The way it works, the critics believe, is that Asian-Americans are evaluated not as individuals, but against the thousands of other ultra-achieving Asians who are stereotyped as boring academic robots.
Now, an unknown number of students are responding to this concern by declining to identify themselves as Asian on their applications.
For those with only one Asian parent, whose names don't give away their heritage, that decision can be relatively easy. Harder are the questions that it raises: What's behind the admissions difficulties? What, exactly, is an Asian-American - and is being one a choice?

Immigration from Asian countries was heavily restricted until laws were changed in 1965. When the gates finally opened, many Asian arrivals were well-educated, endured hardships to secure more opportunities for their families, and were determined to seize the American dream through effort and education.
These immigrants, and their descendants, often demanded that children work as hard as humanly possible to achieve. Parental respect is paramount in Asian culture, so many children have obeyed - and excelled.


Of course, not all Asian-Americans fit this stereotype. They are not always obedient hard workers who get top marks. Some embrace American rather than Asian culture. Their economic status, ancestral countries and customs vary, and their forebears may have been rich or poor.
But compared with American society in general, Asian-Americans have developed a much stronger emphasis on intense academic preparation as a path to a handful of the very best schools.
Top schools that don't ask about race in admissions process have very high percentages of Asian students. The California Institute of Technology, a private school that chooses not to consider race, is about one-third Asian. (Thirteen percent of California residents have Asian heritage.) The University of California-Berkeley, which is forbidden by state law to consider race in admissions, is more than 40 percent Asian - up from about 20 percent before the law was passed.
Highly selective colleges do use much more than SAT scores and grades to evaluate applicants. Other important factors include extracurricular activities, community service, leadership, maturity, engagement in learning, and overcoming adversity.
Admissions preferences are sometimes given to the children of alumni, the wealthy and celebrities, which is an overwhelmingly white group. Recruited athletes get breaks. Since the top colleges say diversity is crucial to a world-class education, African-Americans, Latinos, Native Americans, and Hawaiian/Pacific Islanders also may get in despite lower scores than other applicants.

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/fearing-discrimination-asian-college-applicants-declare-ethnicity-article-1.986416

More readings :

http://www.asianamericanalliance.com/Statistics-on-Reverse-Discrimination.html



In contrast ethnic minorities in China such as Tibetan are given much leeway : offering lower university entry and generous scholarships. 


We wonder why Big Brother / Uncle Sam is still supporting exiled rebels who are westernised in their appearances and outlook and have lost much of their cultural heritage.