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New Chinese Film Praises Wuhan Ahead of Lockdown Anniversary

Youths wearing masks to protect from the coronavirus chat near a screen showing a trailer for the film "Days and Nights in Wuhan" in a cineplex in Wuhan in central China's Hubei province on Friday, Jan. 22, 2021. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

WUHAN, China (AP) — China is rolling out a state-backed film praising Wuhan ahead of the anniversary of the 76-day lockdown in the central city where the coronavirus was first detected.

The documentary “Days and Nights in Wuhan” features contributions from 30 filmmakers portraying the suffering and sacrifices made by the city’s 11 million residents, medical staff and front-line workers as they battled the virus that began racing through the city in December 2019.

The film is one of at least three documentaries released about the Wuhan lockdown, including “Coronation” by activist artist Ai Weiwei, who now lives abroad following a campaign of harassment by China’s ruling Communist Party.

While “Days and Nights in Wuhan” may benefit from strong state support, Ai’s “Coronation” has been rejected by festivals, theaters and streaming services. He attributes the phenomenon to fears over offending the ruling party, which controls both what movies can be shown in China and what Chinese films can be displayed abroad.

The lockdown imposed on Jan. 23, 2020, was eventually extended to surrounding areas in Hubei province, confining some 56 million people to their homes.

The film directed by Cao Jinling debuted in Wuhan and goes into general release in other Chinese cities on Friday. It’s not clear if there are plans to show it overseas.

“We wanted to record the journey of battling against the COVID-19 epidemic via motion picture. Some of the details, including the intense care, anxious waiting, heartbreaking farewells and hopeful rebirths, might strike a chord with viewers,” Cao was quoted as saying by state broadcaster CCTV.

In the trailer, medical staff repeatedly express their determination to prevail over the outbreak. “I have a burning love for me hometown and I will do whatever I can to save it,” says one ambulance driver.

Hospitals and morgues were overwhelmed at the height of the crisis and Wuhan accounts for the bulk of China’s death toll of 4,635.

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In this March 23, 2020 photo released by Xinhua News Agency, workers disinfect a subway train in preparation for the restoration of public transport in Wuhan, in central China’s Hubei province. (Xiao Yijiu/Xinhua via AP)

Following a thinly attended showing in Wuhan on Friday, Wang Yu said the movie had awakened both memories of the trauma of lockdown and fears for what might still lie ahead.

“It’s hard to describe. It’s been a year since then, and to think back now, it’s still painful,” said Wang, 31, who said relatives of her husband who died in the outbreak appeared in the film.

“There is the mutated virus, there’s fear. It’s the second Lunar New Year holiday that we have to pass like this,” she said. “Things are little better than last year but I’m worried, its not completely over. You’re still under the effect of the virus, the fear and the terror.”

The film echoes China’s official line that the measures it took, including the lockdown, bought precious time for the world to prepare for the pandemic. Critics say habitual Communist Party secrecy and weak control measures allowed the virus’ initial spread.

The preponderance of opinion among experts is that the coronavirus emerged from Wuhan, possibly from a wholesale food market where live wild animals that could carry the virus were sold.

China’s government, however, has sought to cast doubts on the concept of Wuhan as the source of the pandemic, pushing fringe theories that the virus was actually brought from outside the country, possibly by U.S. soldiers.

The line seems to have gone down well among many Wuhan residents, who maintain the virus came from elsewhere and see themselves purely as victims.

After months of negotiations, China finally gave permission last week for the World Health Organization to send a team of international experts to begin investigating the virus’ origins. They are currently undergoing two weeks of quarantine.

A panel of experts commissioned by the WHO criticized China and other countries this week for not moving to stem the initial outbreak earlier, prompting Beijing to concede it could have done better but also to defend its response.

Wuhan has been largely free from the virus since the end of lockdown while smaller outbreaks have set off renewed containment measures in many Chinese cities.

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Associated Press photographer Ng Han Guan contributed to this report.

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Japan Denies Reports That 2020 Games Will Be Canceled, Postponed

Kyodo file photo.

TOKYO (Kyodo) — Japan on Friday denied a news report that the government has privately concluded the Tokyo Olympics will have to be canceled due to the coronavirus and it is seeking to host them in 2032, the next available year.

British daily The Times quoted a senior member of the ruling coalition as saying there is agreement the games, already postponed a year from the summer of 2020, are doomed, and the aim now is to find a face-saving way of announcing the cancellation that leaves open the possibility of Tokyo playing host at a later date.

Continue reading the story here

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Bernie Sanders Spawns Splash of Memes With Inaugural Attire

"Great Joe, don't get cocky"

MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — Wearing mittens made out of recycled materials and a warm winter jacket, U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders pulled off a casual inauguration outfit — and vibe — that only he could.

Many people quickly highlighted the 79-year-old independent Vermont senator’s look, and created endless memes, from Wednesday’s inauguration of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, which he said was more about keeping warm than fashion.

“You know in Vermont, we dress warm, we know something about the cold, and we’re not so concerned about good fashion, we want to keep warm. And that’s what I did today,” Sanders told CBS on Wednesday.

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Attendees including Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., listen during the 59th Presidential Inauguration at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 20, 2021. (Caroline Brehman/Pool via AP)

People were particularly enthralled with Sanders’ mittens, which were made by a Vermont elementary school teacher who has a side business making mittens out of recycled wool.

“I love it that he loves them, and that he wears them,” Jen Ellis, an elementary school teacher, told NECN-TV. “And I’m totally honored that he wore them today.”

Ellis has never met Sanders. But when her daughter went to a child care center owned by one of his relatives, she was able to slip a pair into Sanders’ hands.

“I think people like a heartwarming story — especially now,” she said when asked about the all the attention the mittens were getting on social media.

The widespread interest in the mittens prompted Ellis to tweet Wednesday that there were “no more” of the coveted hand warmers.

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Sanders has donned the mittens before while running for president in 2020 and in interviews with Vermont journalists, the station reported.

Sanders’ inauguration look, including a brown winter jacket made by Burton snowboards, has spawned countless memes since Wednesday including the former presidential candidate on the subway, on the moon, sitting on the couch with the cast of “Friends”.

In memes spreading across Indian Country, Sanders is draped with a Pendleton blanket sitting alongside the parade route during a tribal fair, next to the fire during a ceremony and riding in the back of a pickup truck across remote land. Even before inauguration day, he was dubbed “cheii,” the Navajo word for “grandfather.”

Ryan Leclerc, a hard goods buyer for Onion River Sports in Montpelier, Vermont, said Sanders is more about substance than style. Leclerc noted the senator’s inauguration attire emulated what is “great” about the him.

“Those are the mittens you might see when you’re sipping cider around a fire. Sanders doesn’t care and it’s not important to him,” Leclerc said.

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The Community Development Department Raises Standard of Premium OTOP Souvenirs and Taps Into E-Commerce Channels To Support Entrepreneurs During the COVID-19 Pandemic

The Community Development Department, under the supervision of The Office of Local Wisdom and Community Enterprises Promotion, recently launched a promotional activation for premium OTOP souvenir developed by 4 to 5-star OTOP entrepreneurs all over Thailand via popular e-commerce channels such as Facebook, Lazada and Shopee to support entrepreneurs affected by the pandemic. The activation, which was launched during the New Year holiday, made more than half a million baht in sales.

Mr. Suttipong Juljarern, Director-General of Community Development Department, said that the Community Development Department under the Ministry of Interior, recently raised the standard of OTOP products to become premium souvenirs from selected 50 entrepreneurs nationwide to participate in the campaign that helps further develop their products and packaging to appeal to the current market trend, while maintaining the integrity of the local identities and at the same time accommodating online distribution and modern logistics.

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The Community Development Department has committed to raise the standard of various categories of OTOP products to international level. However, the ongoing situation of the COVID-19 pandemic has gravely affected Thailand’s economy in many aspects, especially tourism where visitors from overseas are still not allowed to travel to Thailand. The devasting affect, starting prior to New Year holiday until presently, cripples the souvenir OTOP business that normally gains income from tourism. The department sees the opportunity to support this business segment through e-commerce channels, namely Facebook, Lazada and Shopee, where 9 souvenir sets are promoted to specific target groups. The selection includes “Northern Charm” that comprises 7 pieces of souvenir from northern provinces and “Auspicious 9” that compiles souvenirs with auspicious meanings to be given as gifts. During the trial period, the products generated up to half a million baht in sales.

For more details of featured products, please visit OTOP go Premium page on Facebook and OTOP go Premium online shops at Shopee Thailand and Lazada.co.th.

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In a First, Thai FDA Clears COVID Vaccine From AstraZeneca

In this undated file photo issued by the University of Oxford, a volunteer is administered the coronavirus vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University, in Oxford, England. (John Cairns/University of Oxford via AP, File)

BANGKOK — British pharmaceutical AstraZeneca became the first company to receive approval from the Food and Drug Administration to sell and distribute coronavirus vaccine for domestic use in Thailand.

In an announcement made on Thursday evening, FDA sec-gen Paisarn Dunkum said the approval was granted to AstraZeneca on Wednesday after deliberating on more than 10,000 pages of documents filed by the British company.

The decision means that Thai companies and hospitals can now import vaccines from AstraZeneca for their own uses, though Paisarn said officials from the Department of Medical Sciences will conduct a random test on the doses once they arrive in Thailand before they can be handed out to the public.

Paisarn added that the first shipment of vaccine from AstraZeneca is due to arrive “in February,” consisting of 50,000 doses. More shipments, containing up to 150,000 doses in total, will follow in March and April, he said.

Millions of doses will also be manufactured locally by Siam Bioscience, a company wholly owned by the palace, per an agreement with AstraZeneca, according to the government.

Paisarn estimated that the first batch of coronavirus vaccine made by Siam Bioscience will be available by May.

The FDA has yet to grant an approval for the vaccine developed by Chinese pharmaceutical Sinovac. Officials have previously said 2 million doses from Sinovac will be distributed to frontline health workers and vulnerable populations in the five provinces most affected by the new wave of the coronavirus outbreak.

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Massage Spas, Gyms Among Venues to Reopen in Bangkok

PM Prayut Chan-o-cha receives a shoulder massage at Government House on Dec. 17, 2019, during an event to promote traditional Thai massage.

BANGKOK — Starting Friday, a number of business venues including spas and fitness centers will be allowed to open in the capital after closing down for three weeks in a bid to curb the pandemic.

Bangkok Metropolitan Administration spokesman Pongsakorn Kwanmuang said on Thursday that up to 13 types of businesses will be covered in the first phase of reopening. 

They include beauty clinics, tattoo parlors, fitness centers and gyms, spas, Thai massage parlors, game arcades, internet game shops, elderly care centers, and Buddhist amulet markets. 

Boxing schools and other sport centers, including skating rinks, bowling alleys, and martial arts schools, can also reopen, but tournaments cannot be held.  

While banquet halls can return to operation, they must seek city permission to hold events with more than 300 people in attendance.

“Soapy massage,” a euphemism for commercial sex venues, will remain closed, along with schools, boxing stadiums, horse race tracks, and nightlife entertainment venues. 

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Thanathorn Claps Back at Lese Majeste Accusation, Bail Denied in Historic 112 Case

Thanathorn Juangroonruangkit at a press conference on Jan. 21, 2021.

BANGKOK — Opposition politician Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit said on Thursday the public has every right to question the government’s efforts to secure a coronavirus vaccine through a company owned by the palace.  

The former Future Forward Party leader was speaking at a press conference in response to the government’s attempt to prosecute him with the royal defamation law, or lese majeste, for raising his concerns over the transparency of the vaccine deal. A woman sentenced to a record 43-year jail term for lese majeste was also denied bail by the court on Thursday. 

“Prayut has always used the royal institution to hide the inefficiency of his administration, saying that he is loyal to the monarchy and protecting it,” Thanathorn said. “Is this not why many people are raising issues with the monarchy institution?”

He added, “The person bringing up the monarchy in the vaccines issue is not me, but Prayut.” 

Read: Questioning Vaccine Transparency? That’s Royal Insult, Gov’t Says

Government representatives on Wednesday filed police complaints against Thanathorn, accusing him of making 11 separate counts of “insulting” the monarchy in his Facebook Live video posted on Monday, in which he questioned why Siam Bioscience was granted a monopoly in the production of COVID-19 vaccine in Thailand.  

The company is wholly owned by the Crown Property Bureau, who in turn answers directly to King Vajiralongkorn, without any civilian oversight. 

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Government representatives file a complaint to the Technology Crime Suppression Division against Thanathorn Juangroongruagkit on Jan. 20, 2021.

“Is it right or not, that by raising issues with the government like this, I am being accused of these crimes? Will other people critiquing the government also be accused in the same way?” Thanathorn said today. “Is criticizing the government tantamount to being an enemy of the monarchy?” 

Lese-majeste is punishable by up to 15 years in prison per count. Although the letter of the law only bans insults or threats made to the King, Queen, Heir Apparent, and Regent, the offense has been routinely used by the authorities to silence any discussions about the monarchy. 

Monopoly? 

Thanathorn said that the secured doses of AstraZeneca and Sinovac vaccines account for only about 21 percent of the population. He also said the government’s timeline for vaccine distribution is lagging behind other countries, such as Israel’s

“Since Thailand is acquiring and distributing vaccines at a slower rate than other countries, what do you think will happen to our economy? Having vaccines is like having a light at the end of the tunnel, and finally being released from the terrible economy caused by COVID,” the politician said. 

“But as of today, we are still in the tunnel,” he went on. “As long as not enough Thais have gotten vaccinated, we are still in the dark.” 

Thailand has secured 2 million doses of vaccines from Sinovac, a private firm in Beijing where a Thai-Chinese conglomerate owns 15 percent of its stock. The government said another 61 million shots will be manufactured by Siam Bioscience per a tech sharing agreement with British pharmaceutical AstraZeneca.

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Thanathorn Juangroonruangkit poses for photos with a supporter on Jan. 21, 2021.

Several transparency activists have questioned why a company with no prior experience in making vaccines was given such a lucrative deal, reportedly worth 6 billion baht. 

“There is only one major deal for acquiring vaccines, and it is a private company. A private company, therefore, wants profit,” Thanathorn said. “When we raise issues about vaccines that don’t cover the population and are slow in being distributed, we have to ask if the government is extending benefits to one private company.”

Apart from the lese majeste, Thanathorn was also slapped with a complaint on Computer Crime Act violation for allegedly spreading false information about the vaccine agreement. The cybercrime charge carries a maximum penalty of three years in jail. 

No Bail

A court on Thursday also denied a bail release to a former civil servant who was given a record prison term of 43 years and six months for lese majeste earlier this week. 

The appeal court said there is a possibility that the defendant, 64-year-old Anchan Preelert, may flee the country due to the lengthy jail term she received. The court also said the crimes she was found guilty of “hurts the emotion” of many Thais.

“The behavior in the case causes damage to the revered and worshipped institution of the monarchy. It hurts the emotion of the loyal subjects,” the court said in its statement. 

Anchan reportedly filed for a bail release on Wednesday. She is now being imprisoned while the court deliberates on her appeal. 

She was convicted on Tuesday of 29 counts of lese majeste for posting audio clips to Facebook and YouTube with comments deemed critical of the monarchy. The jail term handed down to Anchan – which was already halved from the initial punishment of 87 years in jail – is the harshest sentence associated with lese majeste in recent history. 

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Trump-Appointed US Ambassador to Thailand Quits Post

Ambassador Michael George DeSombre and Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha poses for photos at Government House in Bangkok on Jan. 19, 2021. Image: USAmbThailand / Twitter

BANGKOK — The U.S. Ambassador to Thailand appears to have left his post on Thursday after less than a year in office.

Michael George DeSombre, who was appointed by then-President Donald Trump in early 2020, announced his departure on the embassy’s official social media platform on Wednesday, moments after Joe Biden was formally inaugurated as the new U.S. President.

“It has been a privilege serving as the United States Ambassador to the Kingdom of Thailand,” DeSombre wrote. “I am exceedingly proud of all we have done to strengthen the US-Thai relationship. I am signing off now from this account and leaving it in the good hands of our Embassy staff.”

A day earlier, DeSombre also met with PM Prayut Chan-o-cha to “thank the Royal Thai Government” – as is habitual with departing ambassadors.

DeSombre was sworn into office as Trump’s political appointee on March 2, 2020, succeeding the previous ambassador, career diplomat Glyn Davies, who served as ambassador from Oct. 2015 to Sept. 2018.

It is common for politically appointed ambassadors to resign when a new U.S. administration steps in on Inauguration Day. Although it is possible for political appointees who serve as diplomats to stay on for a short time, for reasons such as completing a child’s school term or dealing with family health issues, they rarely ask for such extension.

The U.S. Embassy official website now lists Chargé d’Affaires Michael Heath as its current diplomatic mission leader.

Like the president who appointed him, DeSombre had no previous experience in holding a public office. He worked as a partner in the law firm of Sullivan and Cromwell based in Hong Kong from 2004. He was also a 19-year member of the American Club in the southern Chinese city, according to an official bio

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Ambassador Michael DeSombre speaks at a panel with Thai CEOs on Jan 21, 2021. Photo: USAmbThailand / Twitter

Shortly after taking his post, DeSombre raised eyebrows among the diplomatic circles by publishing a series of op-ed lambasting the Chinese government, from its handling of the coronavirus to alleged incursions in the South China Sea. The attacks were in line with the hawkish policy toward China mandated by the Trump administration.

In October, DeSombre also appeared to criticize Thailand’s strategy of imposing strict measures to contain the coronavirus, which he said results in widespread damage to the economy.

“The evidence over the last six months shows that the costs of a really extreme shutdown are generally worse than the benefits and it is better to keep the economy running,” the ambassador was quoted as saying on Oct. 2 – the same day Trump tested positive for the coronavirus. 

It is unclear when the new ambassador will be chosen by the Biden administration. Thailand and the U.S. established relations in 1818 and later formalized the ties in 1833.

Note: The article was amended to reflect the fact that politically appointed U.S. ambassadors installed by the incumbent President typically resign on Jan. 20, when the new administration is sworn in.

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Analysis: Biden Faces a More Confident China After US Chaos

In this Dec. 4, 2013, file photo, Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, shakes hands with then U.S. Vice President Joe Biden as they pose for photos at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. (AP Photo/Lintao Zhang, Pool, File)

BEIJING (AP) — As a new U.S. president takes office, he faces a determined Chinese leadership that could be further emboldened by America’s troubles at home.

The disarray in America, from the rampant COVID-19 pandemic to the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, gives China’s ruling Communist Party a boost as it pursues its long-running quest for national “rejuvenation” — a bid to return the country to what it sees as its rightful place as a major nation.

For Joe Biden, sworn in Wednesday as the 46th president, that could make one of his major foreign policy challenges even more difficult as he tries to manage an increasingly contentious relationship between the world’s rising power and its established one.

The stakes are high for both countries and the rest of the world. A misstep could spark an accidental conflict in the Western Pacific, where China’s growing naval presence is bumping up against America’s. The trade war under President Donald Trump hurt workers and farmers in both countries, though some in Vietnam and elsewhere benefited as companies moved production outside China. On global issues such as climate, it is difficult to make progress if the world’s two largest economies aren’t talking.

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In this Sept. 25, 2015, file photo, a military honor guard await the arrival of President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping for a state arrival ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)

The Chinese government expressed hope Thursday that Biden would return to dialogue and cooperation after the divisiveness under Trump.

“It is normal for China and the United States to have some differences,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said. “Countries with different social systems, cultural backgrounds and ideologies should and can coexist … and work together to achieve peace and stability and development in the world.”

But Kurt Tong, a former U.S. diplomat in Asia, sees a stalemate in the coming few years in which China keeps doing what it has been doing and the U.S. is not happy about it.

“I think it’s going to be a tough patch, it’s just going to be more disagreements than agreements and not a lot of breakthroughs,” said Tong, now a partner with The Asia Group consultancy in Washington, D.C.

A more confident China may push back harder on issues such as technology, territory and human rights. Analysts draw parallels to the 2008 global financial crisis, from which China emerged relatively unscathed. The country’s foreign policy has grown increasingly assertive since then, from staking out territory in disputed waters in the South China Sea to its more recent use of Twitter to hit back at critics. China’s relative success in controlling the pandemic could fuel that trend.

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A newsstand vendor looks through his display near a magazine with a cover depicting U.S. President Joe Biden near U.S. and Chinese flags in Beijing on Thursday, Jan. 21, 2021. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

The U.S. has also shifted, with wide support among both Republicans and Democrats for treating China as a competitor, and embracing the need for a tougher approach to China, if not always agreeing with how Trump carried it out. Biden needs to be wary of opening himself up to attacks that he is soft on China if he rolls back import tariffs and other steps taken by his predecessor.

His pressing need to prioritize domestic challenges could give China breathing room to push forward its agenda, whether it be technological advancement or territorial issues from Taiwan to its border with India.

Biden has pointed to potential areas of cooperation, from climate change to curbing North Korea’s nuclear weapons development, but even in those areas, the two countries don’t always agree.

The pandemic, first viewed as a potential threat to President Xi Jinping’s leadership as it spiraled out of control in the city of Wuhan in early 2020, has been transformed into a story of hardship followed by triumph.

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Registered nurse Nikki Hollinger cleans up a room as a body of a COVID-19 victim lies in a body bag labeled with stickers at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in the Mission Hills section of Los Angeles, Saturday, Jan. 9, 2021. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

The Communist Party has sought to use the pandemic to justify its continued control of the one-party, authoritarian state it has led for more than 70 years, while rounding up citizen-journalists and others to quash any criticism of its handling of the outbreak.

That effort has been aided by the failure of many other nations to stop the spread of COVID-19. Biden takes over a country where deaths continue to mount and virus-related restrictions keep it in recession. China is battling small outbreaks, but life has largely returned to normal and economic growth is accelerating.

“It would have been more difficult for them to push that narrative around the world if the United States had not done such a poor job,” said Bonnie Glaser, director of the China Power Project at the Center for Strategic & International Studies in Washington, D.C. “That’s a theme that runs through many issues, that China’s just able to point to the United States and democracy in general as not delivering good governance.”

It’s impossible to gauge support for the Communist Party in a country where many would be unwilling to criticize it publicly, for fear of repercussions. But Niu Jun, an international relations professor at Peking University, said that objectively, public trust should rise given China’s faster recovery from the outbreak.

“To ordinary people, the logic is very simple,” he said, predicting the pandemic would spark public thinking and discussion about which system of governance is more effective.

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In this May 22, 2020, file photo, delegates applaud as President Xi Jinping arrives for the opening session of China’s National People’s Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, Pool, File)

“The party’s policies are good, our policies are not like the ones in foreign countries, ours are good,” said Liu Shixiu, strolling with her daughter in Wuhan, the city that bore the brunt of the pandemic in China. “We listen to the party.”

It is unclear whether the Communist Party foresees exporting its way of governance as an alternative to the democratic model. For now, Chinese officials note that countries choose different systems and stress the need for others to respect those differences.

“As China becomes more and more confident, maybe they’ll try to shape the internal operations or ways of thinking of other countries,” Tong said. “But to me, it feels more like they don’t want anyone to be able to say that China is bad and get away with it.”

The leadership wants China to be seen and treated as an equal and has shown a willingness to use its growing economic and military might to try to get its way.

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Associated Press video journalist Emily Wang Fujiyama contributed to this report.

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Foreign Visitors To Japan in 2020 Plunge 87.1%, Biggest Drop on Record

Kyodo file photo.

TOKYO (Kyodo) — Foreign visitors to Japan in 2020 plunged 87.1 percent from a year earlier, the biggest drop since 1964 when comparable data became available, the Japan Tourism Agency said Wednesday, as the coronavirus pandemic threw cold water on the country’s inbound tourism boom.

The number of foreigners visiting the country last year plummeted to 4.12 million, the agency said, in a devastating blow to the government’s ambition to welcome 40 million foreign visitors in 2020 when the country was originally scheduled to host the Olympic and Paralympic Games.

Continue reading the story here

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