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China Jails Pastor Nine Years for Calling Communist Party ‘Morally Incompatible With the Christian Faith’

A Chinese court sentenced a priest to prison for nine years after the priest called the Chinese Communist Party “morally incompatible with the Christian faith.”

The court sentenced 46-year-old Pastor Wang Yi, who led the Protestant Early Rain Covenant Church in the Chinese city of Chengdu, for incitement of subversion of state power and for illegal business operations, according to The Wall Street Journal. The Chinese government often uses those charges against religious leaders and against those who disagree politically with the government, according to the WSJ.

Wang wrote a 2018 essay titled “Meditations on the Religious War” in which he wrote that the ideology of the Chinese Communist Party is “morally incompatible with the Christian faith and with all those who uphold freedom of the mind and thought.”

Wang’s church had been one of the most politically active churches in China for years, holding a service every year commemorating the 1989 massacre at Tiananmen Square, even though the government severely restricts the observance of this massacre, the WSJ reports. But the church was closed in 2018 as the Chinese government cracked down on religious houses of worship. (Read more from “China Jails Pastor Nine Years for Calling Communist Party ‘Morally Incompatible With the Christian Faith’” HERE)

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Here’s How Impeachment Obsession Is Allowing Big Tech to Build a China-Like Surveillance State

Lawmakers are too busy wrestling with matters related to President Donald Trump’s impeachment to address issues related to the government’s deployment of facial recognition technology.

Big tech is selling such technological know-how to police agencies and embedding it in smartphones while lawmakers remain distracted, Politico reported Monday. Other issues are also taking precedent, namely the death of one lawmaker who led efforts to regulate artificial intelligence. . .

“We don’t want any more money being used, no money used to expand what we have or to purchase any new ability to impact or use this technology,” GOP Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio told Politico. “I’ve been all focused all on impeachment,” so working with Republicans on sticky parts of such a bill is difficult, he noted.

Meanwhile, San Francisco officials are taking matters into their own hands. The city’s Board of Supervisors voted 8-1 in May to make San Francisco the first American city to block police from using the tool.

Facial recognition technology is not without its supporters, who say it can be a useful tool to nab criminals. Authorities, for instance, used a similar piece of technology to identify a person who shot and killed several people in 2018 at the Capital Gazette newsroom in Annapolis, Maryland. (Read more from “Here’s How Impeachment Obsession Is Allowing Big Tech to Build a China-Like Surveillance State” HERE)

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For China’s Underground Churches, This Was No Easy Christmas

Li Chengju glared at her prison interrogator as he pressed her to renounce her Christian church and condemn her pastor. . .

“I’m a citizen who has faith,” she told the interrogator. “God knows everything you are doing and he will judge you one day.”

Then she repeated a saying she’d heard at church about the Chinese president: “Xi Jinping is sinning against God. If he doesn’t repent, he will be judged by God.” . . .

The government calls its campaign “Sinicization” — a euphemism for turning faith into a tool for indoctrination in Chinese Communist Party ideology. The official five-year plan, issued in 2018, calls for inserting “patriotic education” and “socialist core values” into churches, revising the Bible and using church sermons to enforce party leadership and reject foreign influences. . .

“Every day, we’re in a battle with fear,” she said. “But we can pray, and God will be faithful.” (Read more from “For China’s Underground Churches, This Was No Easy Christmas” HERE)

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Trump Win: China to Lower Import Tariffs

China will lower tariffs on products ranging from frozen pork and avocado to some types of semiconductors next year as Beijing looks to boost imports amid a slowing economy and a trade war with the United States.

Next year, China will implement temporary import tariffs, which are lower than the most-favored-nation tariffs, on more than 850 products, the finance ministry said on Monday. That compared with 706 products that were taxed at temporary rates in 2019.

The tariff changes were made to “increase imports of products facing a relative domestic shortage, or foreign specialty goods for everyday consumption,” the ministry said in a statement on its website.

China and the United States cooled their drawn-out trade war earlier this month, announcing a Phase 1 agreement that would reduce some U.S. tariffs in exchange for more Chinese purchases of American farm products and other goods.

The finance ministry said the tariff rate for frozen pork will be cut to 8% from the most-favored-nation duty of 12%, as China copes to plug a huge supply gap after a severe pig disease decimated its hog herd. (Read more from “Trump Win: China to Lower Import Tariffs” HERE)

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Chinese Researcher Accused of Trying to Smuggle Vials of ‘Biological Material’ out of U.S.

By SCMP. A Chinese medical researcher was arrested in Boston earlier this month on suspicion of trying to take stolen biological samples back to China, according to an affidavit by an FBI agent. . .

FBI Special Agent Kara Spice said 21 wrapped vials containing a “brown liquid” that appeared to be “biological material” were found in a sock during an inspection of his checked baggage.

He is now under investigation for attempting to bring undeclared biological samples back to China and making “false, fictitious and fraudulent statements” to US customs. . .

The New York Times reported last month that the National Institutes of Health and the FBI had started a major effort to root out scientists who are stealing biomedical research for other countries from institutions across the US.

Almost all of the incidents they uncovered and that are under investigation involve scientists of Chinese descent, including naturalised American citizens, acting on behalf of China, the report said. (Read more from “Chinese Researcher Accused of Trying to Smuggle Vials of ‘Biological Material’ out of U.S.” HERE)

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‘Sonic Attack’ Impacted ‘at Least 20 Regions’ of U.S. Diplomat’s Brain

By The Independent. An independent analysis of the brain of diplomat Mark Lenzi has found that the 2017 so-called “sonic attack” on the US diplomat in China has impacted at least 20 regions of his brain, but a cause of the damage has still not been determined.

Mr Lenzi was stationed in Guanzhou when he began experience unexplained symptoms including a headache, memory problems, difficulty reading, and sleep issues.

The new analysis, according to doctors, has determined through MRI that roughly 20 regions of the brain have “abnormally low” volumes of function, including areas that involve emotion, motor skills, and memory function.

The doctors, in announcing the results of the study into around 170 regions of Mr Lenzi’s brain, found that at least three regions had higher than usual activity.

They said that the lower levels of brain activity could indicate brain damage, and that the higher activity in other areas could indicate that other parts of the brain have compensated. (Read more from “‘Sonic Attack’ Impacted ‘at Least 20 Regions’ of U.S. Diplomat’s Brain” HERE)

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Retired U.S. Air Force General Says China Is ‘Building a Navy in Space’

A recently retired U.S. Air Force general has said that China is building a ‘navy in space’ and warned that America must act quickly to avoid losing in a new space race.

Lieutenant General Steven L. Kwast, who retired from the Air Force in September, made the remarks in a speech last month at Hillsdale College in Michigan.

‘They are building a navy in space, with the equivalent of battleships and destroyers, that will be able to maneuver and kill and communicate with dominance, and we are not,’ Kwast said of China.

According to Kwast, China is developing ‘nuclear thermal power propulsion systems’ for space flight, technology that he says the U.S. is capable of developing but is not pursuing.

‘The stuff they’re building is not better than what we could build,’ Kwast added, saying that the U.S. needs to act quickly before China asserts dominance in space. (Read more from “Retired U.S. Air Force General Says China Is ‘Building a Navy in Space'” HERE)

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U.S. Secretly Expelled Chinese Officials Suspected of Spying After Breach of Military Base

The American government secretly expelled two Chinese Embassy officials this fall after they drove on to a sensitive military base in Virginia, according to people with knowledge of the episode. The expulsions appear to be the first of Chinese diplomats suspected of espionage in more than 30 years.

American officials believe at least one of the Chinese officials was an intelligence officer operating under diplomatic cover, said six people with knowledge of the expulsions. The group, which included the officials’ wives, evaded military personnel pursuing them and stopped only after fire trucks blocked their path.

The episode in September, which neither Washington nor Beijing made public, has intensified concerns in the Trump administration that China is expanding its spying efforts in the United States as the two nations are increasingly locked in a global strategic and economic rivalry. American intelligence officials say China poses a greater espionage threat than any other country. (Read more from “U.S. Secretly Expelled Chinese Officials Suspected of Spying After Breach of Military Base” HERE)

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Trade War Breakthrough: U.S. and China Reach Phase-One Deal

China and the US have made a breakthrough in trade negotiations, with a consensus agreement reached for a phase-one deal that will halt further tariff increases and lower some already in place, Vice-Minister of Commerce Wang Shouwen announced on Friday.

Speaking in a late-night press conference in Beijing, Wang said the agreement covered a wide range of issues, including intellectual property protection, technology transfer, purchase of agricultural products and expanding trade.

The Office of the United States Trade Representative confirmed the agreement on Friday, saying in a statement: “The United States and China have reached an historic and enforceable agreement on a Phase One trade deal that requires structural reforms and other changes to China’s economic and trade regime in the areas of intellectual property, technology transfer, agriculture, financial services, and currency and foreign exchange.”

Both countries will proceed to detailed translations and legal review of the text and discuss arrangements for signing the agreement. US President Donald Trump’s chief economic adviser, Larry Kudlow, said that process should take “inside of a few weeks”, and that the final signing would be between US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Chinese Vice-Premier Liu He.

“The deal can help expanding economic and trade cooperation between the two nations and effectively manage the trade disputes,” Wang said. (Read more from “Trade War Breakthrough: U.S. and China Reach Phase-One Deal” HERE)

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Former NBA Player Fined for Not Looking at Chinese Flag During Anthem in China

Former NBA player Guerschon Yabusele has been fined for bowing his head and not looking at the Chinese flag during the national anthem before a game on Dec. 6.

Yabusele, who plays for the Chinese Basketball Association’s (CBA) Nanjing Monkey Kings, was fined 10,000 yuan ($1,422) by the basketball association, CNN reported.

“I have the same routine, I’ve been doing this my whole career and I wanted to apologize for the people that took it Personnal [sic] because it was not my point,” Yabusele told TMZ Sports. “I will show my respect during the Chinese national anthem and keep my head up for now on, Love you guys.”

The former Boston Celtics was born in France and had a brief career in the NBA from 2016 to 2019. He was waived by the team this year, after which he joined his current team in China.

The fine comes amid controversy of forcing NBA players to have to stand for the Communist flag when they play their games in the country, which the NBA desperately wants. In order for that to happen, players cannot protest the Chinese government in any way. (Read more from “Former NBA Player Fined for Not Looking at Chinese Flag During Anthem in China” HERE)

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Former Chinese Labor Camp Prisoner Tells His Heartrending Story

While the world has slowly turned its attention to the communist Chinese government’s human rights abuses over the last few months, Tahir Hamut has been painfully aware of them for many years.

Hamut — a Uighur filmmaker and poet — was born in China’s Uighur Autonomous Region in 1969 and worked as a teacher before his life was changed forever in 1996.

“I was detained on my way to study in Turkey and accused of attempting to escape from China with sensitive state materials,” Hamut explained via an interpreter. After that, he said, he was in a Chinese prison for 18 months and was sentenced to three years in a labor camp. That sentence was handed down in 1997.

He said that, at the time of his incarceration, “nearly 350” prisoners were in the same labor camp, 230 of which were political prisoners.

Hamut made the remarks to lead off a Tuesday panel discussion on Capitol Hill about the Chinese government’s human rights abuses against the country’s Uighur Muslim minority — e.g., the mass internment of Uighurs in concentration camps and subsequent forced labor.

“In the beginning, along with other labor camp prisoners, I dug gravel in an uninhabitable place which was not far from the labor camp,” Hamut recalled. “Every day, excluding Sundays, each person must complete a task of digging 2 cubic meters of gravel; everyone worked very hard to make this requirement, otherwise they would get punished by torture.”

Hamut said that prisoners would often have serious health problems as a result of the “excessive hard labor” but often went without proper medical treatment in the camps, leaving them to suffer for the rest of their lives, while others died as a result.

“I was in the labor camp for more than a year, around 18 months, and my weight dropped to 45 kilograms” or just under 100 lbs., Hamut recalled.

“I thought I would die there, but I managed to survive with the help of other prisoners.”

Later, Hamut said, he was transferred from the gravel work to a brick factory, where his job was to bake bricks. In addition to those duties, he noted that he and others had to plant crops, pick cotton, and even do domestic work for policemen. He also says that the labor camp used prisoner labor to make money.

Hamut was eventually released and, years later, would escape to the United States in August 2017. But getting out of China didn’t mean he was free of the effects of Chinese repression. He said that multiple members of his family, including two of his wife’s brothers and his own brother, have been detained by Chinese authorities and placed in the concentration camps that made international headlines earlier this year.

“For the past two years we have been thinking of them and are concerned for their safety,” Hamut said. “I hope they are safe.”

He added that he learned that earlier this year, two members of his wife’s family were released from the concentration camps, but they are only allowed to go home two days per week and are forced to work at a factory during the other five.

“My wife’s brothers and other family members have no idea how long this forced labor will last, and we also don’t know what kind of factories they are,” Hamut concluded. “We still hope that they will be safe.” (For more from the author of “Former Chinese Labor Camp Prisoner Tells His Heartrending Story” please click HERE)

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