miércoles, 30 de octubre de 2019

Editor-in-chief's picks

October 25, 2019


HONG KONG'S KEYBOARD 

RESISTANCE TAKES ON 

CHINA'S PROPAGANDA

 MACHINE

Our magazine this week focuses on the media
 war being waged by the Hong Kong protesters.
 As the cover story notes, their social
-network-led leaderless resistance appears 
 to be working so far, at least in Hong Kong 
and in the Western world.

The city's authorities have withdrawn the 
extradition bill, and some Western media report 
that Chief Executive Carrie Lam may soon leave office. 
The notion that she could be removed 
by "people power" poses a potentially huge threat 
to Beijing's rule in the mainland.

We should not, however, underestimate Beijing's 
ability to control the mainland media.
 Observers have reported that the protesters 
in Hong Kong receive little sympathy in the mainland.
 Public opinion is divided along the border. Given that Beijing controls military forces in Hong Kong, 
we cannot rule out the possibility of a forceful 
crackdown by the People's Liberation Army, the People's Armed Police, or both.

The average mainland citizen has very little access to information on the situation in Hong Kong. 
Their window on events is limited mainly to
 televised reports by the state media showing brutal
 scenes of destruction of public facilities and shops, or violence against police officers.

Such a skewed interpretation of what is actually 
happening could prompt ordinary Chinese citizens
 to support a possible crackdown in the future. 
 If the protest movement is to be more successful,
 the activists in Hong Kong need to increase 
their efforts to win the moral support of the 
 mainlanders.

In other China-related news, we bring you two
 interesting stories on Beijing's control over the 
media- and tech-related industries. 
Big Brother's gaze is falling even on the video 
games of the mighty Tencent and the content 
being shared over TikTok, the short-video unicorn.

Although China has overtaken the U.S. in the
 number of tech unicorns, those Chinese giants 
are always under the control of the authorities
 to some extent -- a situation that is only exacerbated
 by the ongoing tech war between 
Beijing and Washington. Huawei's attempt
 to be less dependent on U.S. engineers is
 also a development well worth watching.
 The Great Decoupling is underway, indeed.


Shigesaburo Okumura
Editor-in-chief, Nikkei Asian Review

This Week's Highlights

From Hong Kong to the NBA, how China is losing

 the media war

As tired tactics undermine Beijing's propaganda machine, protesters build a nimble digital operation

Hong Kong formally withdraws extradition bill

Fugitive suspect who prompted government to propose law is released from prison

Beijing draws up plan to replace Carrie Lam as

 Hong Kong chief

Chief executive would resign by March under proposal that needs Xi's sign off

Mainland Chinese lack sympathy for Hong Kong protesters

Emerging from its shadow, mainlanders feel city has become selfish and unruly

Anti-Hong Kong sentiment runs deep in China

Mainlanders feel they are being looked down upon as protests intensify

No blood, no guts: China's game sector undergoes 

mass sanitization

Censorship of $36bn industry pushes developers into US, Japan and Southeast Asia

TikTok risks becoming new front in China's

 information war

Beijing wants social media to tell stories which support its narrative

China overtakes US with highest number of tech unicorns:

 report

Along with India and UK, the four countries account for 89% of 494 startups

Sources: Fearing spies, Huawei redeploys

 US-linked executives

China's biggest tech group moves on senior research scientists following US crackdown