2011年6月26日星期日

US 'very pleased' with China's release of dissident (AFP)

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WASHINGTON (AFP) – The United States on Friday welcomed the release from prison of Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei but voiced deep concern over China's broader crackdown on critics.

"We are very pleased with the release of Ai Weiwei, and we welcome that step," Kurt Campbell, the assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, told reporters.

"However, the United States continues to be deeply concerned by the trend of forced disappearances, arbitrary arrests and detentions and convictions of public interest lawyers, writers, artists, intellectuals and activists in China for exercising their internationally recognized human rights," he added.

He said he intended to raise these issues when he holds talks Saturday with his Chinese counterparts in Honolulu.

Ai was freed late Wednesday because of his "good attitude" in confessing to tax evasion, his willingness to repay taxes he owes, and on medical grounds, the government said.

His detention in April during a major government crackdown on activists launched in February sparked criticism led by rights groups and Western governments.


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Chinese prime minister offers support for euro (AP)

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BUDAPEST, Hungary – Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao has offered his country's support for Europe and its common currency amid the eurozone's debt crisis.

Wen says China is a long-term investor in the European sovereign debt market and has purchased a "not small" amount of euro-denominated bonds in the past years.

Wen says China will offer "consistent support for Europe and the euro."

Wen, on a five-day tour of Hungary, Britain and Germany just as Europe hammers out a plan to battle the eurozone debt crisis, met Saturday in Budapest with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.

Wen says China is also willing to purchase bonds issued by Hungary, which does not yet use the euro, and offered Hungary a loan of 1 billion euros ($1.4 billion).


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China's Baidu invests $306 mln in travel website (AFP)

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BEIJING (AFP) – Chinese search engine Baidu has agreed to invest $306 million in domestic travel website Qunar as it seeks to cash in on the booming tourism market in China.

Baidu, which dominates the Chinese search market after Google retreated following a spat with Beijing over censorship and cyberattacks last year, will take a majority stake in the travel search engine, Baidu said late Friday.

"Travel has long been one of the top categories on Baidu, and the number of travellers in China has been growing very rapidly, so this is a market of obvious strategic importance to us," chief financial officer Jennifer Li said in a statement.

Chinese tourism has ballooned in recent years along with blistering economic growth as an increasingly wealthy middle class travels around the country and overseas for leisure.

The country's air travel market is growing fast with a total of 267 million air passenger trips in 2010, up 15.8 percent from the previous year, according to official figures.

Qunar will operate as an independent company, with both firms cooperating on certain areas of online travel search, the statement said.

"By working with Baidu, we can focus on enhancing our search technology and the quality of our products and services," said Zhuang Chenchao, co-founder and chief executive of Qunar.

China is the world's biggest online market, with 477 million Internet users, according to official data.

Baidu had a 75.8-percent share of the overall search market in the first quarter of 2011, dwarfing Google's dwindling 19.2 percent, according to figures from research firm Analysys International.


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China to remain long-term investor in Europe's debt (Reuters)

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BUDAPEST (Reuters) – Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said on Saturday he was "still confident" that Europe can overcome the debt crisis and said China would remain a long-term investor in Europe's debt market.

The Chinese Premier spoke at a press conference with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban during a visit to Hungary.

"I have confidence in European economic development," he said. "China is a long-term investor in Europe's sovereign debt market. In recent years we have increased by a quite big margin holdings of euro bonds."

"In the future, as we have done in the past, we will support Europe and the euro," Wen added.

He said China stood willing to help Europe "work for expeditious recovery and stable growth," but did not give exact figures on how much euro zone sovereign debt China might buy.

Wen also said China was willing to buy a "certain amount" of Hungarian government bonds and aims to boost bilateral trade to $20 billion by 2015. He did not specify the amount of Hungarian bonds China would be willing to purchase either.

He said China's state development bank would provide 1 billion euros for development projects between Hungary and China.

The Chinese premier is visiting Europe as the euro zone grapples to contain Greece's worsening debt crisis and possible default which analysts fear could roil global markets and trigger another financial crisis.

China has large holdings of euro-denominated assets in its vast $3.05 trillion foreign reserves and is desperate to do what it can to preserve the value of its holdings, though analysts say the extent to which China may commit fresh funds toward purchasing distressed European debt as a market-calming gesture, will likely be limited.

Wen Jiabao, the first Chinese head of government to visit Hungary for 24 years, is also seeking to explore greater trade ties with the country given its strategic location and increasing role as a logistics and trade processing hub in Eastern Europe for Chinese goods.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said China's buying of Hungarian government bonds would increase the security of debt financing for Hungary in the medium term.

"The purchase of government bonds is also important for Hungary as Hungary is able to finance itself from markets but the fact that China will buy further will bring huge security," Orban said.

While Wen is expected to face a barrage of protests and criticism from governments in Britain and Germany over China's human rights record and its recent clampdown on dissent, the release of prominent activist and artist Ai Weiwei on the eve of Wen's visit could ease some pressure on this front.

The 54-year-old artist Ai was freed on bail on Wednesday, while a batch of Ai's associates and other activists have also been freed since then, marking a climbdown of sorts by Chinese authorities, who have rarely flinched in prosecuting critics of Party rule.

The 27-member EU bloc is now China's largest trading partner with bilateral trade worth nearly 400 billion euros ($573 billion).

(Writing by Krisztina Than and James Pomfret; Editing by Toby Chopra)


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China's Communist Party members grow to 80 mln (AFP)

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BEIJING (AFP) – China's ruling Communist Party topped 80 million members last year, a yearly increase of nearly three percent, a top official said Friday as the party gears up for its 90th anniversary next week.

More than half of the party's 80.27 million members were 46 years or older and more than a quarter were over the age of 60, said Wang Qinfeng, deputy chief of the party's Organisation Department, which handles personnel matters.

But the party was seeing continued applications by and recruitment of young people, college students, and women, Wang told reporters at a press briefing.

More than three million people applied or were targeted for recruitment into the world's largest political party in 2010, he said.

Of these, 81.8 percent were under the age of 35 and 38.5 percent were women, Wang said.

The percentage of full party members in 2010 who were under 35 was 24.3 percent, while 22.5 percent were women.

"The ranks of party members and grassroots party organisations have continuously developed" since the 1949 founding of communist China, he said.

The briefing was one of a series recently to extol the ruling party's history and accomplishments ahead of the July 1 anniversary of its founding.

China has pushed in recent years to expand the party's membership beyond the traditional make-up of government functionaries, retirees, blue-collar workers and farmers.

In particular, talented youths have been targeted, many of whom view membership as a prerequisite for a coveted civil service job.

Members of the business community, who have only been allowed into the party over the past decade, are seen as eyeing a party card as a good business move due to the connections it can spark.

Aspirants from "private sector organisations" made up 4.3 percent of all applicants and recruits last year, Wang said.

Another 40 percent in 2010 were college students.

The actual net increase in the party's total membership in 2010 was 2.23 million.

There were 4.5 million Communist Party members at the time of the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949.


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China's Wen says prices under control: report (Reuters)

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LONDON/BEIJING (Reuters) – China Premier Wen Jiabao sounded his most upbeat note this year on Beijing's fight against inflation, saying he expects price pressures to decline steadily even as the country keeps up its brisk economic growth.

In an opinion piece published in Friday's edition of the Financial Times newspaper, Wen wrote he was "confident price rises will be firmly under control this year," and that China is "fully capable of sustaining steady and fast economic growth."

Wen's remarks came as he kicks off a visit to debt-stricken Europe and is a timely response to investor worries that China, in its struggle to tame near three-year high inflation, could over-tighten monetary policy at the expense of economic growth.

"There is concern as to whether China can rein in inflation and sustain its rapid development," Wen wrote. "My answer is an emphatic yes."

"China has made capping price rises the priority of macroeconomic regulation and introduced a host of targeted policies. These have worked," he said.

"The overall price level is within a controllable range and is expected to drop steadily."

But some analysts said it was too early for China to declare victory in its fight against inflation, and warned investors against thinking that Wen was signaling an imminent change in monetary policy.

Ting Lu, an economist at Merrill Lynch-Bank of America, argued Wen might have deliberately sounded so positive as he knew he was addressing foreign readers of the Financial Times.

In Chinese culture, there is a tendency to play up one's achievements when speaking to the outside world, and swing the pendulum the other way to emphasize challenges when speaking to one of your own, Lu said.

"Readers should read the article with some grain of salt," he said. "Despite these positive messages from Wen, it could be wrong to expect the Chinese government to change its policy stance soon."

Lu said he still expects China to raise interest rates once more this year. That is roughly in line with market forecasts for a 25-basis-point rise in benchmark lending rates, and a 50-basis-point increase in deposit rates.

On the global economy, Wen said it was recovering from the turmoil seen in the financial crisis, but said many uncertainties remained and that the recovery was fragile.

He pointed to uneven global growth, stubbornly high unemployment in developed economies, mounting debt risks and inflationary pressures.

"While the shock of the crisis has yet to end, new risks have emerged," Wen wrote. "The world must co-operate closely to meet the challenges."

STILL EYEING RATE RISE

Wen's latest remarks on China's inflation were a marked shift from his comments in March when he warned about rising price expectations, and likened inflation to a tiger that is hard to cage once it is let out.

China's inflation ran at a 34-month high of 5.5 percent in the year to May, and is expected to quicken to 6 percent in June or July.

That would be well above China's 2011 inflation target of 4 percent, which Wen did not mention on Friday.

Some analysts have noted, however, that China's official inflation target is among some malleable objectives that the central bank can breach. For instance, Beijing has for years trounced its official economic growth target of 8 percent.

Given wages in China are expected to climb in coming months and a stubbornly buoyant property market that has kept house prices at record highs, economists doubted China can rest easy in its anti-inflation campaign anytime soon.

"Inflation may peak in June or July, but there are many underlying factors that could push up prices such as labor cost and agricultural product inflation," said Hua Zhongwei, an analyst with Huachuang Securities in Beijing.

Still, shares in Hong Kong and Shanghai bounced on Friday morning after Wen's remarks on inflation. China shares have been among the worst performers in Asia this year on persistent worries of further policy tightening to combat price pressures.(.HK)

(Reporting by Paul Hoskins in LONDON, Koh Gui Qing and Zhou Xin in BEIJING; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)


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Analysis: Sino saga shows flaws in Canada's regulatory regime (Reuters)

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TORONTO (Reuters) – Canadian regulators are under fire for their disappearing act as shares of Chinese forestry company Sino-Forest melted down, raising new questions about a regulatory regime that's long been criticized for lacking teeth.

Sino-Forest, which three weeks ago had a market capitalization of about C$4.7 billion, is now worth just C$700 million, after accusations of fraud leveled by Hong Kong-based short-seller Carson Block and his one-man firm Muddy Waters sent its shares and bonds into a downward spiral.

Regulators said they had launched an investigation, but then stayed silent, doing nothing to quell the speculation, halt the stock or drill down into the problems.

There were similar complaints of inaction during the huge Bre-X stock fraud of the 1990s, while shareholder activists noted bitterly that press baron Conrad Black was successfully prosecuted in the United States and not in Canada.

"We have a system in Canada that is 80 years behind the times," said Al Rosen, a forensic accountant with Rosen & Associates, who said Canada's current reporting standards serve the interests of auditors more than investors.

He said Ontario regulators, responsible for Mississauga, Ontario-based Sino-Forest under Canada's patchwork of provincial regulators, have let investors down, and Canada would be better served by a single securities regulator, with separate prosecution and regulation arms.

"If you don't have these people with proper supervision and leadership and guts and courage you've got nothing," he said.

The Ontario Securities Commission, the biggest of Canada's provincial regulators, did not return repeated phone calls seeking comment.

"The OSC's policy all the time is to not comment, which is a convenient policy, right?" said Rosen. "So when the OSC say, we're giving it the same treatment we've given everything else, you can read anything you want into that. I read into it that they're doing nothing again."

Joseph Groia, a securities lawyer and former director of enforcement at the OSC, also believes regulators were slow to respond in the Sino-Forest saga.

"As best I can tell, they've done nothing. My view is that the horse is out of the barn and there is probably no point in them doing anything now," he said.

MARKET 1; REGULATORS 0

Block, in his fifth successful assault against the stock of a North American-listed Chinese company, said Sino-Forest had fraudulently overstated its assets in a gigantic Ponzi scheme.

Sino-Forest denies the charges.

But while some experts said the OSC should have halted Sino-Forest shares pending probes into the allegations, others said the market should decide the company's fate.

"With 20/20 hindsight you can always say regulators should have done more. But that doesn't mean that at the time there were any warning signs, or red flags that suggested they should have done more," said Cristie Ford a University of British Columbia professor and an expert on securities regulation.

Ford is less sure that U.S. regulators would have been more proactive in their response than their Canadian counterparts and said the Canadian framework is more "compliance-oriented."

"It's about trying to catch things before they require enforcement action rather than hitting the company with the big stick after they've done the bad thing," she said.

"The Americans are very much outliers when it comes to how much enforcement and how much strong action they take in these kinds of situations, relative to everybody, not just Canada."

Sino-Forest's collapse has prompted parallels with Canada's 1997 Bre-X mining scandal, when rock samples were salted with gold to create the impression of a massive gold strike.

That scandal led to a whole new regulatory framework to govern how miners outline mineral resources, and some said Sino-Forest's woes could prompt new rules on other matters, regardless of whether the accusations turn out to be true.

"It is very likely that once the matter of Sino is fully determined one way or the other, the regulators will take a more proactive role in closing any gaps that might have occurred," said Darryl Levitt, a lawyer with Macleod Dixon.

WHO'S IN CHARGE?

But for now, investors burned by the scandal are left to wonder who is actually in charge.

"There are quite a few regulatory bodies in Canada and it would appear that the buck is being passed," said Levitt.

Federal government officials defer to provincial regulators, while officials at IIROC, which oversees trading activity, and the Toronto Stock Exchange operator TMX Group point to the OSC as the organization that handles cases like this.

"I think they've been lax right across the board," said Rosen, author of the book "Swindlers," which says Canadian regulators who should watch corporations and protect investors are all too often missing in action, or asleep at the wheel.

"It's like having signs on the highway that say it's 50 km/h. But there's never any police, there's never any radar, there's never any helicopters. How many people are going to treat it seriously?"

BLAME THE ANALYSTS

The Sino-Forest case and accounting scandals at other North American-listed Chinese companies have also shone a spotlight on the murky world of reverse takeovers, that let small private entities go public via listed shell companies with far less scrutiny than through an initial public offering.

"For certain types of transactions, even if they are done via RTO's, regulators may ask for a prospectus, as opposed to an information circular and thus up the nature of disclosure required," said a lawyer who asked not to be named due to a conflict of interest.

Even as class action lawsuits pile up against Sino-Forest, its directors, its management and its auditors, some say analysts and short-sellers like Muddy Waters should also be held accountable for their actions.

"There are eight research analysts covering this company, all of whom had a buy or an outperform rating on this stock. It's their job to kick the tires in a way that regulators never do," said UBC's Ford.

"If you're going to lay this at the foot of the regulators for not having put a cease trade on this company it seems a little bit misplaced. What about all those research analysts? Why weren't they doing the job they were meant to be doing?"

Any case against analysts who touted the stock, or others that have slammed the company is unlikely to proceed until the allegations are proven, or quashed by an independent probe.

Groia said regulators should watch short-sellers like Muddy Waters too.

"This ought to be a lesson that the regulators learn from, so that they put more liability on the Muddy Waters of this world," he said. "They are not doing this because they are altruists; they are doing it because they are capitalists."

(Additional reporting by Louise Egan and Randall Palmer; Editing by Janet Guttsman)


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